First
Ace Printing: September 1973 Printed in U.S.A.
CONTENTS
THE
HALFLING 7
THE
DANCING GIRL OF GANYMEDE 39
THE
CITADEL OF LOST AGES 77
ALL
THE COLORS OF THE RAINBOW 143
THE
SHADOWS 171
ENCHANTRESS
OF VENUS 193
THE
LAKE OF THE GONE FOREVER 274
THE HALFLING
Chapter I
Primitive
Venus
I WAS watching the sunset. It was something
pretty special in the line of California sunsets, and it made me feel swell,
being the first one I'd seen in about nine years. The pitch was in the
flatlands between Culver City and Venice, and I could smell the sea. I was bom
in a little dump at Venice, Cal., and I've never found any smell like the clean
cold salt of the Pacific—not anywhere in the Solar System.
I
was standing alone, off to one side of the grounds. The usual noises of a
carnival around feeding time were being made behind me, and the hammer gang was
pinning the last of the tents down tight. But I wasn't thinking about Jade
Greene's Interplanetary Carnival, The Wonders of the Seven Worlds Alive Before Your Eyes.
I
was remembering John Damien Greene running barefoot on a wet beach, fishing for
perch off the end of a jetty, and dreaming big dreams. I was wondering where
John Damien Greene had gone, taking his dreams with him, because now I could
hardly remember what they were.
Somebody said softly from
behind me, "Mr. Greene?"
I
quit thinking about John Damien Greene. It was that kind of a voice—sweet,
silky, guaranteed to make you forget your own name. I turned around.
She matched her voice, all right. She stood
about fivethree on her bronze heels, and her eyes were more
purple than the hills of Malibu. She had a funny little button of a
nose and a pink mouth, smiling just enough to show her even white teeth. The
bronze metal-cloth dress she wore hugged a chassis with no flaws in it
anywhere. I tried to find some.
She dropped her head, so I could see the way
the last of the sunlight tangled in her gold-brown hair.
"They
said you were Mr. Greene. If I've made a mistake. . . ."
She had an accent, just
enough to be fascinating.
I
said, "I'm Greene. Something I can do for you?" I still couldn't find
anything wrong with her, but I kept looking just the same. My blood pressure
had gone up to about three hundred.
It's
hard to describe a girl like that. You can say she's five-three and beautiful,
but you can't pass on the odd little tilt of her eyes and the way her mouth
looks, or the something that just comes out of her like light out of a lamp,
and hooks into you so you know you'll never be rid of it, not if you live to be
a thousand.
She said, "Yes. You
can give me a job. I'm a dancer."
I shook my head.
"Sorry, miss. I got a dancer."
Her
face had a look of steel down under the soft kittenish roundness. "I'm
not just talking," she said. "I need a job so I can eat. I'm a good
dancer. I'm the best dancer you ever saw anywhere. Look me over."
That's
all I had been doing. I guess I was staring by then. You don't expect fluffy
dolls like that to have so much iron in them. She wasn't bragging. She was just
telling me.
"I
still have a dancer," I told her, "a green-eyed Martian babe who is
plenty good, and who would tear my head off, and yours too, if I hired you."
"Oh,"
she said. "Sorry. I thought you bossed this carnival." She let me
think about that, and then grinned. "Let me show you."
She was close enough so I could smell the faint, spicy perfume she wore. But she'd stopped me from being just a guy chinning with a pretty girl. Right then I was Jade Greene, the carny boss-man, with scars on my knuckles and an ugly puss, and a show to keep running.
Strictly Siwash, that show, but my baby—mine to feed and paint and fuel. If this kid had something Sindi didn't have, something to drag in the cash customers-well, Sindi would have to take it and like it. Besides, Sindi was getting so she thought she owned me.
The girl was watching my face. She didn't say anything more, or even move. I scowled at her.
"You'd have to sign up for the whole tour. I'm blasting off next Monday for Venus, and then Mars, and maybe into the Asteroids."
"I don't care. Anything to be able to eat. Anything to-"
She stopped right there and bent her head again, and suddenly I could see tears on her thick brown lashes.
I said, "Okay. Come over to the cooch tent and we'll ha>ve a look."
Me, I was tempted to sign her for what was wrapped up in that bronze cloth—but business is business. I couldn't take on any left-footed ponies.
She said shakily, "You don't soften up very easily, do you?" We started across the lot toward the main gate. The night was coming down cool and fresh. Off to the left, clear back to the curving deep-purple barrier of the hills, the slim white spires of Culver, Westwood, Beverly Hills and Hollywood were beginning to show a rainbow splash of color under their floodlights.
Everything was clean, new and graceful. Only the thin fog and the smell of the sea were old.
We were close to the gate, stumbling a little in the dusk of the afterglow. Suddenly a shadow came tearing out from between the tents.
It went erratically in lithe, noiseless bounds, and it was
somehow not human even though it went on two feet. The girl caught her breath
and shrank in against me. The shadow went around us three times like a crazy
thing, and then stopped.
There was something eerie about that sudden
stillness. The hair crawled on the back of my neck. I opened my mouth angrily.
The
shadow stretched itself toward the darkening sky and let go a wail like Lucifer
falling from Heaven.
I
cursed. The carny lights came on, slamming a circle of blue-white glare against
the night.
"Laska, come here I" I yelled.
The girl screamed.
I
PUT my arm around her. "It's all right," I said, and then, "Come
here, you misbegotten Thing! You're on a sleighride again."
There
were more things I wanted to say, but the girl cramped my style. Laska slunk in
towards us. I didn't blame her for yelping. Laska wasn't pretty.
He
wasn't much taller than the girl, and looked shorter because he was drooping.
He wore a pair of tight dark trunks and nothing else except the cross-shaped
mane of fine blue-gray fur that went across his shoulders and down his back,
from the peak between his eyes to his long tail. He was dragging the tail, and
the tip of it was twitching. There was more of the soft fur on his chest and
forearms, and a fringe of it down his lank belly.
I
grabbed him by the scruff and shook him. "I ought to boot your ribs inl We got a show in less than two hours."
He
looked up at me. The pupils of his yellow-green eyes were closed to thin
hairlines, but they were flat and cold with hatred. The glaring lights showed
me the wet whiteness of his pointed teeth and the raspy pink-ness of his
tongue.
"Let me go. Let me go, you human!"
His voice was hoarse and accented.
"I'll
let you go." I cuffed him across the face. "I'll let you go to the
immigration authorities. You wouldn't like that, would you? You wouldn't even
have coffee to hop up on when you died."
The
sharp claws came out of his fingers and toes, flexed hungrily and went back in
again.
I dropped him.
"Go on back inside. Find the croaker and
tell him to straighten you out. I don't give a damn what you do on your own
time, but you miss out on one more show and I'll take your job and call the
I-men. Get it?"
"I
get it," said Laska sullenly, and curled his red tongue over his teeth. He
shot his flat, cold glance at the girl and went away, not making any sound at
all.
The
girl shivered and drew away from me. "What was—that?"
"Cat-man from Callisto. My prize performer.
They're pretty rare."
"I—I've
heard of them. They evolved from a cat-ancestor instead of an ape, like we
did."
"That's
putting it crudely, but it's close enough. I've got a
carload of critters like that, geeks from all over the System. They ain't
human, and they don't fit with animals either. Moth-men,
lizard-men, guys with wings and guys with six arms and antennae. They
all followed evolutionary tracks peculiar to their particular hunks of planet,
only they stopped before they got where they were going. The Callistan kitties
are the aristocrats of the bunch. They've got an I. Q. higher than a lot of humans,
and wouldn't spit on the other halflings."
"Poor
things," she said softly. "You didn't have to be so cruel to
him."
I
laughed. "That What's-it would as soon claw my in-sides out as soon as
look at me—or any other human, ineluding you—just on general principles.
That's why Immigration hates to let 'em in even on a work permit. And when
he's hopped up on coffee. . . ."
"Coffee? I thought I must have heard wrong."
"Nope. The caffeine in Earthly coffee berries works
just like coke or hashish for 'em. Venusian coffee hits 'em so hard they go
nuts and then die, but our own kind just keeps 'em going. It's only the hoppy
ones you ever find in a show like this. They get started on coffee and they
have to have it no matter what they have to do to get it."
She shuddered a little. "You said
something about dying."
"Yeah. If he's ever deported back to Callisto his
people will tear him apart. They're a clannish bunch. I guess the first humans
on Callisto weren't very tactful, or else they just hate us because we're
something they're not and never can be. Anyway, their tribal law forbids them
to have anything to do with us except killing. Nobody knows much about 'em,
but I hear they have a nice friendly religion, something like the old-time
Thugs and their Kali worship."
I paused, and then said uncomfortably,
"Sorry I had to rough him up in front of you. But he's got to be kept in
line."
She
nodded. We didn't say anything after that. We went in past the main box and
along between the burglars readying up their layouts—Martian getak, Venusian shalil and the game the Mercurian hillmen play with
human skulls. Crooked? Sure—but suckers like to be fooled, and a guy has to
make a living.
I
couldn't take my eyes off the girl. I thought, if she dances the way she walks. . . .
She
didn't look much at the big three-dimensional natural-color pictures
advertising the geek show. We went by the brute top, and suddenly all hell
broke loose inside of it. I've got a fair assortment of animals from all over.
They make pretty funny noises when they get started, and they were started now.
They
were nervous, unhappy noises. I heard prisoners yammering in the Lunar
cell-blocks once, and that was the way this sounded—strong, living things shut
up in cages and tearing their hearts out with it—hate, fear and longing like
you never thought about. It turned you cold.
The
girl looked scared. I put my arm around her again, not minding it at all. Just then Tiny came out of the brute top.
Tiny
is a Venusian deep-jungle man, about two sizes smaller than the Empire State
Building, and the best zooman I ever had, drunk or sober. Right now he was mad.
"I tell that Laska stay 'way from
here," he yelled. "My kids smell him. You listen!"
I
didn't have to listen. His "kids" could have been heard halfway to
New York. Laska had been expressly forbidden to go near the brute top because
the smell of him set the beasts crazy. Whether they were calling to him as one
animal to another, or scared of him as something unnatural, we didn't know. The
other half-lings were pretty good about it, but Laska liked to start trouble
just for the hell of it.
I
said, "Laska's hopped again. I sent him to the croaker. You get the kids
quiet again, and then send one of the punks over to the crumb castle and tell
the cook I said if he ever gives
Laska a teaspoonful of coffee again without my say-so I'll fry him in his own
grease."
Tiny
nodded his huge pale head and vanished, cursing. I said to the girl,
"Still want to be a carny?"
"Oh,
yes," she said. "Anything, as long as you serve food!"
"That's a pretty
accent you got. What is it?"
"Just about everything. I was bom on a ship between Earth and Mars,
and I've lived all over. My father was in the diplomatic corps."
I said, "Oh. Well, here's the place. Go to
it."
SINDI
was sitting cross-legged on the s^age, sipping thil and listening to sad Martian music on the juke box behind the screen of
faded Martian tapestry. She looked up and saw us, and she didn't like what she
saw.
She
got up. She was a Low-Canaler, built light and wiry, and she moved like a cat.
She had long emerald eyes and black hair with little bells braided in it, and
clusters of tiny bells in her ears. She was wearing the skin of a Martian
sand-leopard, no more clothes than the law forced her to wear. She was
something to look at, and she had a disposition like three yards of barbed
wire.
I said, "Hi, Sindi. This kid wants a try-out. Climb down, huh?"
Sindi
looked the kid over. She smiled and climbed down and put her hand on my arm.
She sounded like a shower of rain when she moved, and her nails bit into me,
hard.
I
said between my teeth, "What music do you want, kid?"
"My
name's Laura—Laura Darrow." Her eyes were very big and very purple.
"Do you have Enhali's Primitive Venus?"
Not more than half a dozen dancers in the
System can do justice to that collection of tribal music. Some of it's subhuman
and so savage it scares you. We use it for mood music, to draw the crowd.
I
started to protest, but Sindi smiled and tinkled her head back. "Of
course, put it on, Jade."
I
shrugged and went in and fiddled with the juke box. When I came out Laura Darrow was up on the stage and we had an audience. Sindi
must have passed the high sign. I shoved my way through a bunch of Ve-nusian lizard-men
and sat down. There were three or four little moth-people from Phobos roosting
up on the braces so their delicate wings wouldn't get damaged in the crush.
The
music started. Laura kicked off her shoes and danced.
I
don't think I breathed all the time she was on the stage. I don't remember
anyone else breathing, either. We just sat and stared, sweating with nervous
ecstasy, shivering occasionally, with the music beating and crying and'surging
over us.
The
girl wasn't human. She was sunlight, quicksilver, a leaf riding the wind—but
nothing human, nothing tied down to muscles and gravity and flesh. She was—oh,
hell, there aren't any words. She was the music.
When
she was through we sat there a long time, perfectly still. Then the Venusians,
human and half-human, let go a yell and the audience came to and tore up the
seats.
In
the middle of it Sindi looked at me with deadly green eyes and said, "I
suppose she's hired."
"Yeah. But it doesn't have anything to do with you, baby."
"Listen, Jade. This suitcase outfit
isn't big enough for two of us. Besides, she's got you hooked, and she can have
you."
"She hasn't got me hooked. Anyway, so what? You don't own me." "No. And you
don't own me, either." "I got a contract."
She told me what I could do with my contract.
I
yelled, "What do you want me to do, throw her out on her ear? With that talent?"
"Talent!"
snarled Sindi. "She's not talented. She's a freak."
"Just
like a- dame. Why can't you be a good loser?" She explained why. A lot of
it didn't make sense, and none of it was printable. Presently she went out,
leaving me sore and a little uneasy. We had quite a few Martians with the
outfit. She could make trouble.
Oh, hell! Just another dame
sore because she was outclassed. Artistic
temperament, plus jealousy. So what? Let her try something. I could
handle it. I'd handled people before.
I jammed my way up to the stage. Laura was
being mobbed. She looked scared—some of the halflings are enough to give a tough guy nightmares—and she was crying.
I said, "Relax, honey. You're in."
I knew that Sindi was telling the truth. I was hooked. I was so hooked it
scared me, but I wouldn't have wiggled off if I could.
She
sagged down in my arms and said, "Please, I'm hungry."
I half carried her out, with the moth-people
fluttering their gorgeous wings around our heads and praising her in their
soft, furry little voices.
I
fed her in my own quarters. She shuddered when I poured her coffee and refused
it, saying she didn't think she'd ever enjoy it again. She took tea instead.
She was hungry, all right. I thought she'd never stop eating.
Finally
I said, "The pay's forty credits, and found." She nodded.
I said gently, "You can tell me. What's
wrong?" She gave me a wide, purple stare. "What do you mean?"
"A dancer like you could write her own
ticket anywhere, and not for the kind of peanuts I can pay you. You're in a
jam."
She
looked at the table and locked her fingers together. Their long pink nails
glistened.
She
whispered, "It isn't anything bad. Just a—a passport
difficulty. I told you I was born in space. The records got lost
somehow, and living the way we did—well, I
had to
come to Earth in a hurry, and I couldn't prove my citizenship, so I came
without it. Now I can't get back to Venus where my money is, and I can't stay
here. That's why I wanted so badly to get a job with you. You're going out, and
you can take me."
I
knew how to do that, all right. I said, "You must have had a big reason to
take the risk you did. If you're caught it means the Luna cell-blocks for a
long time before they deport you."
She
shivered. "It was a personal matter. It delayed me a while. I—was too
late."
I
said, "Sure. I'm sorry." I took her to her tent, left her there and
went out to get the show running, cursing Sindi. I stopped cursing and stared
when I passed the cooch tent. She was there, and giving.
She stuck out her tongue at me and I went on.
That
evening I hired the punk, just a scrawny kid with a white face, who said he was
hungry and needed work. I gave him to Tiny, to help out in the brute top.
Chapter II
Voice
of Terror
WE
PLAYED in luck that week. Some gilded darling of the screen showed up with
somebody else's husband who wasn't quite divorced yet, and we got a lot of free
publicity in the papers and over the air. Laura went on the second night and
brought down the house. We turned 'em away for the first time in history. The
only thing that worried me was Sindi. She wouldn't speak to me, only smile at
me along her green eyes as though she knew a lot she wasn't telling and not any
of it nice. I tried to keep an eye on her, just in case.
For five days I walked a tightrope between heaven
17 and hell. Everybody on the pitch knew I was a dead
duck where Laura was concerned. I suppose they got a good laugh out of it—me, Jade Greene the carny boss, knocked softer than a cup
custard by a girl young enough to be my daughter, a girl from a good family, a
girl with talent that put her so far beyond my lousy dog-and-pony show. . . .
I knew all that. It didn't do any good. I
couldn't keep away from her. She was so little and lovely; she walked like
music; her purple eyes had a tilt to them that kept you looking, and her mouth—
I
kissed it on the fifth night, out back of the cooch tent when the show was
over. It was dark there; we were all alone, and the faint spicy breath of her
came to me through the thin salt fog. I kissed her.
Her
mouth answered mine. Then she wrenched away, suddenly, with a queer fury. I let
her go. She was shuddering, and breathing hard.
I said, "I'm
sorry."
"It isn't that. Oh, Jade, I—" She
stopped. I could hear the breath sobbing in her throat. Then she turned and ran
away, and the sound of her weeping came back to me through the dark.
I
went to my quarters and got out a bottle. After the first
shot I just sat staring at it with my head in my hands. I haven't any idea
how long I sat there. It seemed like forever. I only know that the pitch was
dark, sound asleep under a pall of fog, when Sindi screamed.
I
didn't know it was Sindi then. The scream didn't have any personality. It was
the voice of terror and final pain, and it was far beyond anything human.
I
got my gun out of the table drawer. I remember my palm was slippery with cold
sweat. I went outside, catching up the big flashlight kept for emergencies near
the tent flap. It was very dark out there, very still, and yet not quiet. There
was something behind the darkness and the silence, hiding in them, breathing
softly and waiting.
The pitch began" to wake up. The stir and rustle spread out from the
scream like ripples from a stone, and over in the brute top a Martian sand-cat
began to wail, thin and feral, like an echo of death.
I
went along between the tents, walking fast and silent. I felt sick, and the
skin of my back twitched; my face began to ache from being drawn tight. The
torch beam shook a little in my hand.
I
found her back of the cooch tent, not far from where I'd kissed Laura. She was
lying on her face, huddled up, like a brown island in a red sea. The little
bells were still in her ears.
I
walked in her blood and knelt down in it and put my hand on her shoulder. I
thought she was dead, but the bells tinkled faintly, like something far away on
another star. I tried to rum her over.
She
gasped, "Don't." It wasn't a voice. It was hardly a breath, but I
could hear it. I can still hear it. I took my hand away.
"Sindi-"
A
little wash of sound from the bells, like rain far off— "You fool,"
she whispered. "The stage. Jade, they stage—"
She stopped. The croaker
came from somewhere behind me and knocked me out of the way, but I knew it was
no use. I knew Sindi had stopped for good.
Humans
and halflings were jammed in all round, staring, whispering, some of them
screaming a little. The brute top had gone crazy. They smelt blood and death on
the night wind, and they wanted to be free and a part of it.
"Claws," the croaker said.
"Something clawed her. Her throat-"
I said, "Yeah. Shut
up." I turned around. The punk was standing there, the white-faced kid,
staring at Sin-di's body with eyes glistening like shiny brown marbles.
"You,"
I said. "Go back to Tiny and tell him to make sure all his kids are there.
. . . All the roustabouts and every man that can handle a gun or a tent stake, get armed as fast as you can and stand by. . . .
Mike, take whatever you need and guard the gate. Don't let anybody or anything
in or out without permission from me, in person. Everybody else get inside somewhere and stay there. I'm going to call the
police."
The punk was still there, looking from
Sindi's body to me and around the circle of faces. I yelled at him. He went
away then, fast. The crowd started to break up.
Laura Darrow came out of it
and took my arm.
She
had on a dark blue dressing-gown and her hair was loose around her face. She
had the dewy look of being freshly washed, and she breathed perfume. I shook
her off. "Look out," I said. "I'm all—blood."
I
could feel it on my shoes, soaking through the thin stuff of my trouser legs.
My stomach rose up under my throat. I closed my eyes and held it down, and all
the time Laura's voice was soothing me. She hadn't let go of my arm. I could
feel her fingers. They were cold, and too tight. Even then, I loved her so much
I ached with it.
"Jade,"
she said. "Jade, darling. Please—I'm so frightened."
That helped. I put my arm around her and we
started back toward my place and the phone. Nobody had thought to put the big
lights on yet, and my torchbeam cut a fuzzy tunnel through the fog.
"I
couldn't sleep very well," Laura said suddenly. "I was lying in my
tent thinking, and a little while before she screamed I thought I heard
something—something like a big cat, padding."
The
thing that had been in the back of my mind came out yelling. I hadn't seen
Laska in the crowd around Sindi. If Laska had got hold of
some coffee behind the cook's back. . . .
I said, "You were
probably mistaken."
"No. Jade."
"Yeah?" It was dark between the tents. I wished somebody
would turn the lights on. I wished I hadn't forgotten to tell them to. I
wished they'd shut up their over-all obbligato of gabbling, so I could hear. .
. .
"Jade. I. couldn't
sleep because I was thinking—"
Then she screamed.
HE
CAME out of a dark tunnel between two storage tents. He was going almost on all
fours, his head flattened forward, his hands held in
a litde to his belly. His claws were out. They were wet and red, and his hands
were wet and red, and his feet. His yellow-green eyes had a crazy shine to
them, the pupils slitted against the light. His lips were peeled back from his
teeth. They glittered, and there was froth between them—Laska, coked to hell
and gone!
He didn't say anything. He made noises, but
they weren't speech and they weren't sane. They weren't anything but horrible.
He sprang.
I
pushed Laura behind me. I could see the marks his claws made in the dirt, and
the ridging of his muscles with the jump. I brought up my gun and fired, three shots.
The heavy slugs nearly tore him in two, but
they didn't stop him. He let go a mad animal scream and hit rne, slashing. I
went part way down, firing again, but Laska was still going. His hind feet
clawed into my hip and thigh, using me as something to push off from. He wanted
the girl.
She
had backed off, yelling bloody murder. I could hear feet running, a lot of
them, and people shouting. The fights came on. I twisted around and got Laska
by die mane of fur on his backbone and then by the scruff.
He was suddenly a very heavy weight. I think
he was dead when I put the fifth bullet through his skull. I let him drop.
I said, "Laura, are you all right?"
I saw her brown hair and her big purple eyes like dark stars in her white face.
She was saying something, but I couldn't hear what it was. I said, "You
ought to faint, or something," and laughed.
But it was me, Jade Greene,
that did the fainting.
I
came out of it too soon. The croaker was still working on my leg. I called him
everything I could think of in every language I knew, out of the half of my
mouth that wasn't taped shut. He was a heavy man, with a belly and a dirty
chin.
He laughed and said, "You'll live. That
critter damn near took half your face off, but with your style of beauty it
won't matter much. Just take it easy a while until you make some more
blood."
I said, "The hell with that. I got work
to do." After a while he gave in and helped me get dressed. The holes in
my leg weren't too deep, and the face wasn't working anyway. I poured some
Scotch in to help out the blood shortage, and managed to get over to the
office.
I walked pretty well.
That
was largely because Laura let me lean on her. She'd waited outside my tent all
that time. There were drops of fog caught in her hair. She cried a little and
laughed a little and told me how wonderful I was, and helped me along with her
small vibrant self. Pretty soon I began to feel like a kid waking up from a
nightmare into a room full of sunshine.
The
law had arrived when we got to the office. There wasn't any trouble. Sindi's
torn body and the crazy cat-man added up, and the Venusian cook put the lid on
it. He always took a thermos of coffee to bed with him, so he'd have it first
thing when he woke up—Venusian coffee, with enough caffeine in it to stand an
Earthman on his head. Enough to finish off a Callistan cat-man.
Somebody had swiped it when he wasn't looking. They found the thermos in
Laska's quarters.
THE
SHOW went on. Mobs came to gawk at the place where the killing had happened. I
took it easy for one day, lolling in a shiny golden cloud with Laura holding my
head.
Along
about sundown she said, "I'll have to get ready for the show."
"Yeah. Saturday's a big night. Tomorrow we tear down, and then Monday we head
out for Venus. You'll feel happier then?"
"Yes.
I'll feel safe." She put her head down over mine. Her hair was like warm
silk. I put my hands up on her throat. It was firm and alive, and it made my
hands burn.
She whispered, "Jade, I—" A big hot
tear splashed
down on my face, and then she was gone. 11
I
lay still, hot and shivering like a man with
swamp-fever, thinking, Maybe. . .
.
Maybe Laura wouldn't leave the show when we
got to Venus. Maybe I could make her not want to. Maybe it wasn't too late for
dreaming, a dream that John Damien Greene had never had, sitting in a puddle of
water at the end of a jetty stringer and fishing for perch.
Crazy,
getting ideas like that about a girl like Laura. Crazy like
cutting your own throat. Oh, hell. A man never really grows up, not past
believing that maybe miracles still happen.
It was nice dreaming for a
while.
It
was a nice night, too, full of stars and the clean, cool ocean breeze, when
Tiny came over to tell me they'd found the punk dead in a pile of straw with
his throat torn out, and the Martian sand-cat loose.
Chapter III
Carnival of Death
WE
JAMMED our way through the mob on the midway. Lots of people
having fun, lots of kids yelling and getting sick on Mercurian jitsi-beans and bottled Ve-nusian fruit juice.
Nobody knew about the killing. Tiny had had the cat rounded up and caged before
it could get outside the brute top, which had not yet opened for business.
The punk was dead, all right—dead as Sindi,
and in the same way. His twisted face was not much whiter than I remembered it,
the closed eyelids faintly blue. He lay almost under the sand-cat's cage.
The
cat paced, jittery and snarling. There was blood on all its six paws. The cages
and pens and pressure tanks seethed nastily all around me, held down and quiet
by Tiny's wranglers.
I said, "What
happened?"
Tiny
lifted his gargantuan shoulders. "Dunno. Everything
quiet. Even no yell, like Sindi. Punk kid all
lonesome over here behind cages. Nobody see; nobody hear. Only Mars kitty
waltz out on main aisle, scare hell out of everybody. We catch, and then find
punk, like you see.
I turned around wearily. "Call the cops
again and report the accident. Keep the rubes out of here until they pick up
the body." I shivered. I'm superstitious, like all carnies.
They
come in threes—always in threes. Sindi, the punk —what next?
Tiny
sighed. "Poor punk. So
peaceful, like sleeper with shut eye."
"Yeah." I started away. I limped six paces and stopped and limped back again.
I said, "That's funny. Guys that die
violent aren't tidy about their eyes, except in the movies."
I
leaned over. I didn't quite know why, then. I do now. You can't beat that
three-time jinx. One way or another, it gets you.
I pushed back one thin, waxy- eyelid. After a
while I pushed back the other. Tiny breathed heavily
over my shoulder. Neither of us said anything. The animals whimpered and
yawned and paced.
I
closed his eyes again and went through his pockets. I didn't find what I was
looking for. I got up very slowly, like an old man. I felt like an old man. I
felt dead, deader than the white-faced kid.
I said, "His eyes were
brown."
Tiny
stared at me. He started to speak, but I stopped him. "Call
Homicide, Tiny. Put a guard on the hody. And send men with guns. . .
."
I
told him where to send them. Then I went
back across the midway.
A
couple of Europeans with wiry little bodies and a twenty-foot wing-spread were
doing Immelmans over the geek top, and on the bally stand in front of it two
guys with six hands apiece and four eyes on movable stalks were juggling. Laura
was out in front of the cooch tent, giving the rubes a come-on.
I
went around behind the tent, around where I'd kissed her, around where Sindi
had died with the bells in her ears like a wash of distant rain.
I lifted up the flap and
went in.
The
tent was empty except for the man that tends the juke box. He put out his
cigarette in a hurry and said, "Hi, Boss," as though that would make
me forget he'd been smoking. I didn't give a damn if he set the place on fire
with a blowtorch. The air had the warm, musty smell that tents have. Enhali's Primitive Venus was crying out of the juke box with a rhythm like
thrown spears.
I pulled the stage master, and then the
whites. They glared on the bare boards, naked as death and just as yielding.
I stood there a long time.
After a while
the man behind me said uneasily, "Boss, what—" "Shut up. I'm
listening."
Litde bells,
and a voice that was pain made vocal.
"Go
out front," I said. "Send Laura Darrow in here. Then tell the rubes
there won't be a show here tonight."
I
heard his breath suck in, and then catch. He went away down the aisle.
I
got a cigarette out and lit it very carefully, broke the match in two and
stepped on it. Then I turned around.
LAURA
came down the aisle. Her gold-brown hair was caught in a web of brilliants. She
wore a sheath-tight thing of sea-green metal scales, with a short skirt
swirling around her white thighs, and sandals of the shiny scales with no heels
to them. She moved with the music, part of it, wild with it, a way I'd never seen a woman move before.
She
was beautiful. There aren't any words. She was —beauty.
She
stopped. She looked at my face and I could see the quivering tightness flow up
across her white skin, up her throat and over her mouth, and catch her breath
and hold it. The music wailed and throbbed on the still, warm air.
I
said, "Take off your shoes, Laura. Take off your shoes and dance."
She
moved then, still with the beat of the savage drums, but not thinking about it.
She drew in upon herself, a shrinking and tightening of muscles, a preparation.
She said, "You
know."
I nodded. "You shouldn't have closed his
eyes. I might never have noticed. I might never have remembered that the kid
had brown eyes. He was just a punk. Nobody paid much attention. He might just
as well have had purple eyes—like yours."
"He stole them from me." Her voice
came sharp under the music. It had a hiss and a wail in it I'd never heard
before, and the accent was harsher. "While I was in your
tent, Jade. I found out when I went to dress. He was an I-man. I found
his badge inside his clothes and took it."
Purple eyes looking at me—purple eyes as
phony as the eyes on the dead boy. Contact lenses painted purple to hide what
was underneath.
"Too
bad you carried an extra pair, Laura, in case of breakage."
"He
put them in his eyes, so he couldn't lose them or break
them or have them stolen, until he could report. He threw away the little
suction cup. I couldn't find it. I couldn't get the shells off his eyeballs.
All I could do was close his eyes and hope—"
"And
let the sand-cat out of his cage to walk through the blood." My voice was
coming out all by itself. It hurt. The words felt as though they had fishhooks
on them, but I couldn't stop saying them.
"You
almost got by with it, Laura. Just like you got by with
Sindi. She got in your way, didn't she? She was jealous, and she was a
dancer. She knew that no true human could dance like you dance. She said so.
She said you were a freak."
That
word hit her like my fist. She showed me her teeth, white,
even teeth that I knew now were as phony as her eyes. I didn't want to see her
change, but I couldn't stop looking, couldn't stop.
I
said, "Sindi gave you away before she died, only
I was too dumb to know what she meant. She said, 'The stage.'"
I think we both looked, down at the stark
boards under the stark lights, looked at the scratches on them where Laura had
danced barefoot that first time and left the marks of her claws on the wood.
She nodded, a slow,
feral weaving of the head.
"Sindi
was too curious. She searched my tent. She found nothing, but she left her
scent, just as the young man did today. I followed her back here in the dark
and saw her looking at the stage by the light of matches. I can move in the
dark, Jade, very quickly and quietly. The cook tent is only a few yards back of
this one, and Laska's quarters close beyond that. I smelt the cook's coffee. It
was easy for me to steal it and slip it through the tent flap by Laska's cot,
and wake him with the touch of my claws on his face. I knew he couldn't help
drinking it. I was back here before Sindi came out of the tent to go and tell
you what she'd found."
She
made a soft purring sound under the wicked music.
"Laska
smelt the blood and walked in it, as I meant him to do. I thought he'd die
before he found us—or me —because I knew he'd find my scent in the air of his
quarters and know who it was, and what it was. My perfume had worn too thin by
then to hide it from his nose."
I
felt the sullen pain of the claw marks on my face and leg. Laska, crazy with
caffeine and dying with it, knowing he was dying and wanting with all the
strength of his drugged brain to get at the creature who
had killed him. He'd wanted Laura that night, not me. I was just something to
claw out of the way.
I wished I hadn't stopped
him.
I
said, "Why? All you wanted was Laska. Why didn't you kill him?"
The
shining claws flexed out of her fingertips, under the phony plastic nails—very
sharp, very hungry.
She said huskily, "My tribe sent me to
avenge its honor. I have been trained carefully. There are others
like me, tracking down the renegades, the dope-ridden
creatures like Laska who sell our race for human money. He was not to die
quickly. He was not to die without knowing. He was not to die without being
given the chance to redeem himself by dying bravely.
"But
I was not to be caught. I cost my people time and effort, and I am not easily
replaced. I have killed seven renegades, Jade. I was to escape. So I wanted to
wait until we were out in space."
She
stopped. The music hammered in my temples, and inside I was dead and dried up
and crumbled away.
I said, "What would
you have done in space?"
I
knew the answer. She gave it to me, very simply, very quietly.
"I would have destroyed your whole
filthy carnival by means of a little bomb in the jet timers, and gone away in
one of the lifeboats."
I
nodded. My head felt as heavy as Mount Whitney, and as lifeless. "But
Sindi didn't give you time. Your life came first. And if it hadn't been for the
punk. . . ."
No, not just a punk—an Immigration man. Somewhere Laura had slipped, or else her
luck was just out. A white-faced youngster, doing his job
quietly in the shadows, and dying without a cry. I started to climb down
off the stage.
She
backed off. The music screamed and stopped, leaving a silence like the feel of
a suddenly stopped heart
Laura whispered, "Jade, will you believe
something if I tell you?
"I
love you, Jade." She was still backing off down the aisle, not making any
sound. "I deserve to die for that. I'm going to die. I think you're going
to kill me, Jade. But when you do, remember that those tears I shed-were
real."
She turned and ran, out onto the midway. I
was close.
I caught her hair. It came free, leaving me
standing alone just inside the tent, staring stupidly.
I
HAD men out there, waiting. I thought she couldn't get through. But she did.
She went like a wisp of cloud on a gale, using the rubes as a shield. We didn't
want a panic. We let her go, and we lost her.
I
say we let her go. We couldn't heir) it. She wasn't bothering about being human
then. She was all cat, just a noiseless blur of speed.
We couldn't shoot without hurting people, and our human mucles were too slow to
follow her.
I
knew Tiny had men at the gates and all around the pitch, anywhere that she
could possiblv get out. I wasn't worried. She was caught, and pretty soon the
police would come. We'd have to be careful, careful as all hell not to start
one of those hideous, trampling panics that can wreck a pitch in a matter of
minutes.
All
we had to do was watch until the show was over and the rubes were gone. Guard
the gates and keep her in, and then round her up. She was caught. She couldn't
get away. Laura Darrow. . . .
I
wondered what her name was, back on Callisto. I wondered what she looked like
when she let the cross-shaped mane grow thick along her back and shoulders. I
wondered what color her fur was. I wondered why I had ever been born.
I went back to my place and got my gun and
then went out into the crowd again. The show was in full swing; lots of people
having fun, lots of kids crazy with excitement; lights and laughter and
music—and a guy out in front of the brute top splitting his throat telling the
crowd that something was wrong with the lighting system and it would be a while
before they could see the animals.
A while before the cops
would have got what they wanted and cleaned up the mess under the sand-cat's
cage.
The
squad cars would be coming in a few
minutes. There wasn't anything to do but wait. She was caught. She couldn't
escape.
The
one thing we didn't think about was that she wouldn't try to.
A
Mercurian cave-tiger screamed. The Ionian quags took it up in their deep, rusty
voices, and then the others chimed in, whistling, roaring, squealing,
shrieking, aiid doing things there aren't any names for. I stopped, and
gradually everybody on the pitch stopped and listened.
For
a long moment you could hear the silence along the midway and in the tents.
People not breathing, people with a sudden glassy shine of fear in their eyes
and a cold tightening of the skin that comes from way back beyond humanity.
Then the muttering started, low and uneasy, the prelude to panic.
I
fought my way to the nearest bally stand and climbed on it. There were shots,
sounding small and futile under the brute howl.
I
yelled, "Hey, everybodyl ListenI There's nothing wrong. One of the cats is
sick, that's all: There's nothing wrong. Enjoy yourselves."
I
wanted to tell them to get the hell out, but I knew they'd kill themselves if
they started. Somebody started music going again, loud and silly. It cracked
the icy lid that was tightening down. People began to relax and laugh nervously
and talk too loudly. I got down and ran for the brute top.
Tiny
met me at the tent flap. His face was just a white blur. I grabbed him and said, "For God's sake, can't you keep
them quiet?"
"She's
in there, Boss—like shadow. No hear, no see. One man dead. She let my kids out. She—"
More
shots from inside, and a brute scream of pain. Tiny
groaned.
"My
kids! No
lights, Boss. She wreck 'em."
I said, "Keep 'em inside. Get lights
from somewhere. There's a blizzard brewing on the pitch. If
that mob gets started."
I went inside. There were torchbeams spearing
the dark, men sweating and cursing, a smell of hot,
wild bodies and the sweetness of fresh blood.
Somebody
poked his head inside the flap and yelled, "The cops are here!"
I yelled back, "Tell 'em to clear the
grounds if they can, without starting trouble. Tell—"
Somebody screamed. There was a sudden spangle
of lights in the high darkness, balls of crimson and green and vicious yellow
tumbling towards us, spots of death no bigger than your fist—the stinging
fireflies of Ganymede. Laura had opened their case.
We
scattered, fighting the fireflies. Somewhere a cage went over with a crash.
Bodies thrashed, and feet padded on the packed earth—and somewhere above the
noise was a voice that was sweet and silky and wild, crying out to the beasts
and being answered.
I
knew then why the brute top went crazy when Laska was around. It was kinship,
not fear. She talked to them, and they understood.
I called her name.
Her voice came down to me out of the hot
dark, human and painful with tears. "Jade! Jade, get
out; go somewhere safe!"
"Laura, don't do this!
For God's sake—"
"Your
God, or mine? Our God forbids "s to know humans
except to kill. How, if we kept men as you kept Laska?"
"Laura!"
"Get
out! I'm going to kill as many as I can before I'm taken. I'm turning the
animals loose on the pitch. Go somewhere safe!"
I fired at the sound of her
voice.
She said softly, "Not
yet, Jade. Maybe not at all."
I
beat off a bunch of fireflies hunting for me with their poisoned stings. Cage
doors banged open. Wild throats coughed and roared, and suddenly the whole side
wall of the tent fell down, cut free at the top, and there wasn't any way to
keep the beasts inside any more.
A long mob scream went up from outside, and
the
panic was on. *
I
COULD hear Tiny bellowing, sending his men out with ropes and nets and guns.
Some huge, squealing Ihing blundered around in the dark, went past me close
enough to touch, and charged through the front opening, bringing part of the
top down. I was close enough behind it so that I got free.
I climbed up on the remains of the bally
stand. There was plenty of light outside—blue-white, glaring light, to show me
the packed mass of people screaming and swaying between the tents, trampling
toward the exits, to show me a horde of creatures sweeping down on them, caged
beasts free to kill, and led by a lithe and leaping figure in shining green.
I couldn't see her clearly. Perhaps I didn't
want to. Even then she moved in beauty, like wild music—and she had a tail.
I never saw a worse panic, not even the time
a bunch of Nahali swamp-edgers clemmed our pitch when I was a pony punk with
Triangle.
The morgues were going to be full that night.
Tiny's
men were between the bulk of the mob and the animals. The beasts had had to
come around from the far side of the tent, giving them barely time to get set.
They gave the critters all they had, but it wasn't enough.
Laura
was leading them. I heard her voice crying out above all that din. The animals
scattered off sideways between the tents. One Martian sand-cat was dead, one quag kicking its life out, and that was all. They
hadn't touched Laura, and she was gone.
I fought back, away from the mob, back into a
temporarily empty space behind a tent. I got out my whistle and blew it, the
rallying call. A snake-headed kibi from Titan sneaked up and tried to rip me
open with its double-pointed tail. I fed it three soft-nosed slugs, and then
there were half a dozen little moth-people bouncing in the air over my head,
squeaking with fear and shining their great eyes at me.
I
told them what I wanted. While I was yelling the Europans swooped in on their
wide wings and listened.
I
said finally, "Did any of you see which way she went?"
"That way." One of the mothlings pointed back across the
midway. I called two of the Europans. The moth-lings went tumbling away to
spread my orders, and the bird-men picked me up and carried me across, over the
crowd.
The animals were nagging at their flanks,
pulling them down in a kind of mad ecstasy. There was a thin salt fog, and
blood on the night wind, and the cage doors were open at last.
They
set me down and went to do what I told them. I went alone among the swaying
tents.
All
this hadn't taken five minutes. Things like that move fast. By the time the
Europans were out of sight the mothlings were back, spotting prowling beasts
and rolling above them in the air to guide men to them—men and geeks.
Geeks
with armor-plated backs and six arms, carrying tear-gas guns and nets;
lizard-men, fast and powerful, armed with their own teeth and claws and
whatever they could pick up; spider-people, spinning sticky lassos out of their
own bodies; the Europans, dive-bombing the quags with tear gas.
The geeks saved the day for us. They saved
lives, and (lie reputation of their kind, and the carnival. Without lliem, God
only knows how many would have died on (he pitch. I
saw the mothlings dive into the thick of I he mob and pick up fallen children
and carry them lo safety. Three of them died, doing that.
I went on, alone.
I
was beyond the mob, beyond the fringe of animals. I was remembering Laura's
voice saying, "Not yet, Jade. Maybe not at all."
I was thinking of the walls being clown and all California free outside. I was
hearing the mob yell and the crash of broken tents,
and the screams of people dying—my people, human people, with the claws bred
out of them. I was thinking-Guns slamming and brute throats shrieking, wings
beating fast against the hot hard glare, feet pounding on packed earth. I
walked in silence, a private silence built around me like a shell. . . .
Four big cats slunk out of the shadows by the
tent. There was enough light left to show me their eyes and (heir teeth, and
the hungry licking of their tongues.
Laura's
voice came through the canvas, tremulous but no softer nor more yielding than
the blue barrel of my gun.
"I'm going away, Jade. At first I didn't
think there was any way, but there is. Don't try to stop me. Please don't
try."
I
COULD have gone and tried to find a cop. I could have called men or half-men
from their jobs to help me. I didn't. I don't know that I could have made
anybody hear me, and anyway they had enough to do. This was my job.
My job, my carnival, my heart. I walked toward the tent flap, watching the
cats. They slunk a little aside, belly down, making hoarse,
whimpering
noises.-One was a six-legged Martian sand-cat, about the size of an Earthly
leopard. Two were from Venus, the fierce white beauties of the high plateaus.
The fourth was a Mercurian cave-cat, carrying its twenty-foot body on eight
powerful legs and switching a tail that had bone barbs on it.
Laura
called to them. I don't know whether she said words in their
language, or whether her voice was just a bridge for thought transference, one
cat brain to another. Anyway, they understood.
"Jade, they won't
touch you if you go."
I fired.
One of the white Venusians took the slug
between the eyes and dropped without a whimper. Its mate let go a sobbing
shriek and came for me, with the other two beside it.
I snapped a shot at the Martian. It went over
kicking, and I dived aside, rolling. The white Venusian shot over me, so close
its hind claws tore my shirt. I put a slug in its belly. It just yowled and dug
its toes in and came for me again. Out of the tail of my eye I saw the dying
Martian tangle with the Mercurian, just because it happened to be the nearest
moving object.
I kicked the Venusian in the face. The pain
must have blinded it just enough to make its aim bad. On the second jump its
forepaws came down on the outer edges of my deltoids, gashing them but not
tearing them out. The cat's mouth was open clear to its stomach.
I should have died right then. I don't know
why I didn't, except that I didn't care much if I did. It's the guys that want
to live that get it, seems like. The ones that don't care go on forever.
I
got a lot of hot bad breath in my face and five parallel gashes in back, where
its hind feet hit me when I rolled up. I kicked it in the belly. Its teeth
snapped a half inch short of my nose, and then I got my gun up under its jaw
and that was that. I had four shots left.
I
rolled the body off and turned. The Martian cat was dead. The Mercurian stood
over it, watching me with its four pale, hot eyes, twitching its barbed tail.
Laura stood watching us.
SHE
looked just like she had the first time I saw her. Soft
gold-brown hair and purple eyes with a little tilt to them, and a soft pink
mouth. She was wearing the bronze metal-cloth dress and the bronze
slippers, and there was still nothing wrong with the way she was put together.
She glinted dully in the dim light, warm bronze glints.
She was crying, but there
was no softness in her tears.
The
cat flicked its eyes at her and made a nervous, eager whine. She spoke to it,
and it sank to its belly, not wanting to.
Laura said, "I'm
going, Jade."
"No."
I raised my gun hand. The big cat rose with
it. She was beyond the cat. I could shoot the cat, but a Mercurian lives a
long time after it's shot.
"Throw down your gun,
Jade, and let me go."
I
didn't care if the cat killed me. I didn't care if Death took me off piggy-back
right then. I suppose I was crazy. Maybe I was just numb. I don't know. I was
looking at Laura, and choking on my own heart.
I said, "No."
Just
a whisper of sound in her throat, and the cat sprang. It reared up on its four
hind feet and clawed at me with its four front ones. Only I wasn't where it
thought I was. I know it was going to jump and I laded—not far, I'm no
superman—just far enough so its claws raked me without gutting me. It snapped
its head down to bite.
I
slammed it hard across the nose with my gun. It hurt, enough to make it wince,
enough to fuddle it just for a split second. I jammed the muzzle into its
nearest eye and fired.
Laura was going off between the tents, fast,
with her head down, just a pretty girl, mingling with the mob streaming off the
pitch. Who'd notice her, except maybe to whistle?
I didn't have time to get away. I dropped
down flat on my belly and let the cat all on top of me. I only wanted to live a
couple of seconds longer. After that, the hell with itl
The cat was doing a lot of screaming and
thrashing. I was between two sets of legs. The paws came close enough to touch
me, clawing up the dirt. I huddled up small, hoping it wouldn't notice me there
under its belly. Everything seemed to be happening very slowly, with a cold
precision. I steadied my right hand on my left wrist.
I
shot Laura three times, carefully, between the shoulders.
The
cat stopped thrashing. Its weight crushed me. I knew it was dead. I knew I'd
done something that even experienced hunters don't do in nine cases out of ten.
My first bullet had found the way into the cat's little brain and killed it.
It
wasn't going to kill me. I pulled myself out from under it. The pitch was
almost quiet now, the mob gone, the animals mosdy under control. I kicked the
dead cat. It had died too soon. -
My
gun was empty. I remember I clicked the hammer twice. I got more bullets out of
my pocket, but my fingers wouldn't hold them and I couldn't see to load. I
threw the gun away.
I
walked away in the thin, cold fog, down toward the distant beat of the sea.
THE DANCING GIRL OF GANYMEDE
Chapter I
The
Wanderer
TONY
HARRAH came into the bazaar of Komar, heading for the Street of the Gamblers.
The sour wine was heavy in him and his pockets were light and he was in no
hurry. Win or lose, there was nothing to be in a hurry about. He was on the
beach and Komar is a far lost beach for an Earthman.
The
wind blew slowly through the narrow streets, stirring the torch flames that
burned eternally under the dim red sky. It smelled of heat and sulphur, of the
volcanic heart of Ganymede. Even here on the plateau, a thousand feet above
the jungle, there was no escape from it. The sliding roofs of the houses were
open wide to receive it for there was no other breath of air.
Above
the tumult of the bazaar the great yellow star that was the Sun blazed
splendidly in the far darkness of space. Jupiter filled half the sky, misty,
banded with crimson and purple and grey. Between Sun and Jupiter raced the
thronging moons, catching light now from one, now from the other, burning,
flashing, glorious.
Harrah
took no joy in that magnificence. He had looked at it too long.
He
shouldered his way toward the square where the Street of the Gamblers joins the
Street of Maidens and the Street of Thieves and at his heels like a furry
shadow came Tok the aboriginal, the lemur-eyed child of the forests, who was
Harrah's and who loved him utterly.
39
It was on the edge of the square that Harrah
caught the first wild rhythms of the music. And it was there that Tok reached
out one sudden hand-like paw and caught his master's shirt and said,
"Lord—wait!"
Harrah
turned, startled by the urgency in Tok's voice. He opened his mouth to speak
but he did not speak. The look in Tok's eyes stopped him. A
queer blank look, luminous with some great fear.
The aboriginal moved forward, past Harrah,
and then became a motionless shape of darkness between the torches and the
moons. His head was lifted slightly into the wind. His nostrils quivered and
gradually the quivering spread over his whole slim body as though he breathed
in terror with every breath. Imperceptibly his flesh seemed to shrink in upon
itself until all the look of humankind was gone from him and he was an animal
poised for flight.
"Lord,"
he whispered. "Evil, Lord—evil and death. It is
in the wind."
Harrah
repressed a shiver. He could see nothing but the crowded square—the polyglot
life of Komar, the landless, the lawless, the unwanted and forgotten, the
mingled off-scourings of the Inner Worlds, mixed with the dark native-human
folk of Ganymede. The only unusual thing was the music and there was nothing
fearsome in that. Pipe and drum and a double-banked harp, raw and barbaric but
stirring to the blood.
Yet
Tok half turned and looked at him with the eyes of one who has seen forbidden
things and cried out, "Go! Go back, Lord. The wind is full of death!"
And
as «he spoke others of his land came running from the square, furry man-things
far from their native jungles, and one of them whimpered as he ran, "Demons.
Demons with the eyes of darkness!"
"Go, Lord,"
whispered Tok.
The
power of suggestion was so strong that Harrah almost obeyed. Then he caught
himself and laughed.
"What is it, Tok?" he demanded, in
the simple aboriginal speech. "I see no demons." "They are
there. Please, Lord I"
"Nonsense." He jingled the coins in his pocket. "Either I win some money or
you steal to feed us. Go back yourself."
He
patted Tok's quivering shoulder and went on into the square, forging his way
through the crowd. He was curious now. .He wanted to see what had frightened
Tok and set the aboriginals to flight.
HE
saw the dancing girl, whirling crimson and white across the dirty stones, to
the music of pipe and drum and harp, played by three men who might have been
her brothers.
She was a Wanderer, from her ornaments and her ragged dress—a sort of
interplanetary gypsy, one of the vast worldless tribe of space who travel from
planet to planet but are citizens of none. Their blood is a mixture of every race in the System capable of cross-breeding and they
are outcaste below the lowest.
There
had been a few of them in Komar but this girl was new. If Harrah had seen her
before he would not have forgotten. He thought that no man could ever forget
her. There was something about her eyes.
Half
naked in her bright rags she went on swift white feet through the tossing glare
of the torches. Her hair was tawny gold and her face was the face of a smiling angel and her eyes were black.
They
did not smile, those dark, deep eyes. They had no
kinship with the lithe gaiety of her body. They were sorrowful and smouldering
and full of anger—the most bitter raging eyes that
Harrah had ever seen.
He
pushed forward, farther still, until he stood in the open space where she
danced, so close that her loose mane of hair almost brushed him as she passed.
And as he watched he became aware of an odd thing.
The music was sensuous and the very steps of
the
dance were an invitation as old as humankind. Yet in
some peculiar way the girl took the primitive animal
rhythms and transmuted them into something cool and
lovely. An old old memory came back to Harrah, of
silver birches dancing in the wind. 1
Then,
abruptly, she came to a halt before him, her arms high above her head, poised
on a quivering note of longing from the reed pipe. She looked at him, the dark,
sinewy Earthman with a handful of coins, and her look was a curse.
He could feel the hatred in her as a personal
thing, alive and thirsting. The violence of it shook him. He was about to
speak, and then she was gone again, blown like a leaf on the surging music.
He stood where he was, waiting, in the grip
of a sudden fascination that he had no wish to break. And between his feet as
he watched a small brown cur slunk snarling.
The dogs of Komar are like many
another pack on worlds far from their parent Earth. Lost, strayed or abandoned
from the ships that land there out of space, they have thriven in the gutters
and the steaming alleys. And now, quite suddenly, Harrah became aware of a new
sound in the bazaar.
The
narrow streets were as full of noise as ever and the wild oblique rhythms of
the music filled the square. But the little brown cur lifted his muzzle to the
sky and howled, a long savage wail, and somewhere close by another dog-throat
picked it up, and another, and still another, until the square rang with it.
Harrah heard the cry spreading out and away, running through the twisting
alleys and the dark ways of Komar, howl answering howl, desolate and full of
fear, and a coldness crept along the Earthman's spine.
There
was something terrible about that primitive warning out of Earth's far past,
unchanged even on this alien moon.
The
music faltered and died. The girl stopped her dancing, her body half bent,
poised and still. A silence fell across the square and gradually the sound of
human voices ceased entirely as the city listened to the howling of its dogs.
Harrah
shivered. The crowd began to stir uneasily and a little.muttering began to
creep under the wailing of the dogs. The dancing girl relaxed very slowly from
her pose, gathering herself.
A
rough body brushed Harrah's knee. He looked down to see a great lurcher moving
half-crouched into the open space. He realized then that the square was full of
dogs, furtive shadows gliding between the legs of the men. They had stopped
howling, these dogs. They growled and whimpered and their white fangs gleamed.
The
small brown cur moaned once. Then he went with a rush and a scrabble out across
the stones and leaped straight for the dancing girl's throat.
Chapter
II The Brothers
SHE
did not scream. She moved, as swiftly as the dog, ;ind
caught the wiry brown body in mid-leap, between lior two hands. Harrah saw her
stand so for a split second, holding the frenzied beast that was shrieking now
lo get at her, and her eyes had narrowed to two slits of cold fire, utterly
black and without fear.
Then
she threw the dog into the jaws of the lurcher, lli at had started a rush of
his own, and the two went down in a snarling tangle.
After that there was bedlam. The one act of
violence was all that was needed. The crowd turned and rolled in upon itself in
a panic desire to be quit of the square. Dogs and humans were mixed in a
trampling screaming turmoil. Something had set the beasts mad and in their
madness they snapped and tore at whatever got in their way. There began to be
blood on the stones and weapons flashed in the torchlight and the voice of fury
bayed in the hot wind.
Dogs and men only fought there. The
aboriginals were gone.
Harrah managed to stand his ground for a
moment. He saw the girl run past him and brought the barrel of his gun down
across the head of a long-jawed brute that came at her from behind. When he
looked again she had disappeared.
The press of the crowd bore him on then, the
way she had gone. After a few paces he stumbled and looked down to see scarlet
cloth and white flesh between his feet. She was trying to get up. He fought a
clear space for her, battering with fists and elbows. In a second she was up,
tearing like a wildcat with her long nails at the bodies that threatened to
crush her down again.
She was still not afraid.
Harrah grinned. He caught her up and tossed
her over his shoulder. She was small, and surprisingly light. Me let the tide
carry them, concentrating only on keeping his feet, clubbing dog and man alike.
The girl had drawn a little knife from
somewhere in her rags. Hanging head down over his shoulder, she plied it and
laughed. Harrah thought that it was fine to be brave but he thought she needn't
have enjoyed it so much. Her body was like spring steel, clinging around him.
An
alley mouth opened before him. He went down it with a rush of escaping humanity
and raging dogs, making for the wall. The houses were irregularly built and
presently he found a crevice between two of them that had once housed a stall.
He dodged into it, set the girl on her feet behind him and stood getting his
breath back, watchful of the crowd still streaming by not a foot away from him.
He knew that the girl was looking at him. She
was very close in that cramped space. She was not trembling nor
even breathing hard.
"Why
did you glare at me like that, in the square?" he asked her. "Was it
personal or do you just hate all men?"
"Did you pick me up just to get the
answer to that question?" She spoke English perfectly, without a trace of an accent, and her voice was as beautiful as her body, very
clear and soft.
"Perhaps."
"Very well then. I hate all men. And women too—especially
women."
She was matter-of-fact about it. It came to
Harrah with a small qualm that she meant it. Every word of
it. He was suddenly uneasy about having her little knife where she could
use it on his back.
He
turned around, catching her wrist. She let him take the knife, smiling a
little.
"Fear,"
she said. "Always fear, no matter where you go"
"But you're not
afraid."
"No."
She glanced past him, into the alley. "The crowd is thinning now. I will
go and find my brothers."
A
big rusty-red mongrel thrust his head into the crevice and snarled. Harrah
kicked him and he slunk back reluctantly, his lips winkled, his red-rimmed eyes
fixed on the girl.
"I
wouldn't," said Harrah. "The dogs don't seem to like you."
She
laughed. "I haven't a scratch on me. Look at yourself."
He looked. He was bleeding
in a number of places, and his clothes were in shreds. He shook his head.
"What the devil got
into them?" he demanded.
"Fear," said the
girl. "Always fear. I will go now."
She moved to pass him, and he stopped her. "Oh, no. I saved your life, lady. You can't walk away
quite so easily."
HE
put his hands on her shoulders. Her flesh was cool and firm,
and the strands of her tawny mane curled over it between his fingers. What
mingling of alien strains had bred her he could not guess but she was like no
one he had ever seen before, inexpressibly lovely in the light of the flashing
moons. She was like moonlight herself, the soft gleam of it in her hair, her
skin, her great haunted eyes.
Outcaste,
dancer in the public streets, pariah in crimson rags, there was a magic about
her. It stirred Harrah deeply. Some intuition warned him to take his hands from
her and let her go, because she was a stranger beyond his knowing. But he did
not. He could not.
He bent and kissed her lightly between the
brows. "What's your name, little Wanderer?"
"Marith."
Harrah
knew that word, in the lingua
franca of the thieves'
markets. He smiled.
"And why should you be called
'Forbidden?'"
Her
dark gaze dwelt upon him sombrely. "I am not for any man to love."
"Will you come home
with me, Marith?"
She whispered, "I warn
you, Earthman—I am death!"
He
laughed and gathered her into his arms. "You're a child and children
should not be full of hate. Come home with me, Marith. I'll only kiss you now
and then and buy you pretty things and teach you how to laugh."
She did not answer at once. Her face was
distant and dreaming as though she listened to some far-off voice. Presently
she shrugged and said, "Very well. I will come."
They
started off together. The alley was deserted now. There were lingering sounds
of turmoil in the bazaar but they were far away. Harrah led the girl toward
his house and the streets were empty and still under the thronging moons.
He
kept his arm around her. He was full of a strange excitement and his bored
ill-temper had left him completely. Yet as he walked he became aware again of
a gulf between him and Marith, something he could not understand. A pang of
doubt that was almost fear crossed his heart. He did
not know what he held, child, woman or some alien, wicked creature, close in
the hollow of his arm.
He
remembered the aboriginals, who had cried of death and demons. He remembered
the howling of the dogs. And he wondered because of what he felt within
himself.
But
she was very lovely and her little white feet stepped so lightly in the dust
beside his and he would not let her go.
They had left the bazaar behind them. They
came to a quiet place, surrounded by the blank walls of houses, and suddenly, without
sound, as though they had taken form ghostlike from the shadows, two men
stepped out and barred their way.
One
was an Earthman, a large man, heavy-shouldered, heavy-faced, with a look of
ponderous immovability about him. The other was a Venusian, slim and handsome,
with bright pale hair. Both men were armed. There was something infinitely
ominous about the way they stood there, neither moving nor speaking, with the
moonlight touching a hard blue glitter from their guns.
Harrah stopped, his hands half raised, and
Marith moved forward, one step, away from him. Then she too stopped, like a
crouching cat.
Harrah said, "What is
this? What do you want?"
The
Earthman answered, "We want the—the girl, not you." His slow, deep
voice hesitated oddly over that word, "girl."
Marith turned. She would have fled past
Harrah, back the way they had come, but again she came to a dead halt.
"There is someone behind you," she
said. Her eyes looked at Harrah and he was startled to see that they were full
of terror. She was afraid now—deathly afraid.
"Don't
let them take me," she whispered. "Please don't let them take
me!" And then, as though to herself, "Hurry.
Oh, hurry!"
Her head moved tensely from side to side, the
head of an animal seeking escape, but there was no escape.
HARRAH
glanced over his shoulder. A third man had come from somewhere to stand behind
them with a gun, a yellow-eyed Martian with a smiling, wolfish face. Deep
within Harrah a small chill pulse of warning began to beat. This was no
spur-of-the-moment holdup. This was ambush, carefully planned. He and Marith
had been deliberately followed, headed and trapped.
"Marith," he
said. "Do you know these men?"
She
nodded. "I know them. Not their names—but I know them." It was
terrible to see her so afraid.
It
seemed to Harrah that he knew the men also, an intuitive knowledge based on
long experience.
"You
smell of law," he said to them. He laughed. "You've forgotten where
you are. This is Komar."
The
large man shook his head. "We're not law. This is—personal."
"Let us have no
trouble, Earthman," said the Martian. "We have no quarrel with you.
It is only the girl-thing we want." He began to move closer to Harrah,
slowly, like a man approaching a dangerous animal. At the same time the others
moved in also.
"Unfasten
your belt," said the large man to Harrah. "Let it drop."
"Don't let them take
me," whispered Marith.
Harrah lowered his hands to
his belt.
He
moved, then, very swifdy. But they were swift too and there were three of them.
Harrah had not quite cleared his gun from the holster when the Martian's
weapon took him club-fashion across the side of the head. He fell. He heard his
gun clatter sharply against stone, far away where someone had kicked it. He
heard Marith cry out.
With
infinite effort he raised himself on his hands. Wavering bands of blackness and
intense light obscured his vision. But he saw dimly that the Venusian had
caught the girl and that the other two were struggling to subdue her, and that
her struggle was beyond belief, the small white body fighting to be free.
He
tried to rise and could not. In a minute they had borne her down, the three of
them. The slender wrists were snared and bound. One of the men produced a cloth
that gleamed like metal and raised it above her head.
They
seemed to recede from Harrah, gliding away down a street curiously lengthened
into some dark dimension of pain. The echoes of their grunts and scufnings
rang queeily muffled in his ears. But he saw, quite clearly, the last
despairing look that Marith gave him before llie shining cloth descended and
hid her face.
His
heart was wrenched with sorrow for her and a terrible rage rose in him against
the men. He tried to get up and go after her and for a time he thought he had
but when his sight cleared a little he realized that he had only crawled a few
inches. How long the effort had taken him he did not know but the street was
empty and there was no sound. "Marith," he said. "Marith!"
Then he looked up, and saw that her brothers
were standing over him, immensely tall, their beautiful strange faces very
white in the shifting light of the moons.
Chapter III
A Broken Edge
ONE
of the Wanderers reached down and gathered Harrah's shirtfront into his hand.
Without effort, he lifted the Earthman to his feet. He looked into Harrah's
face with eyes that were like Marith's, black and deep, charged with some cruel
anger of the soul.
"Where
is she?" he demanded. "Where have they taken her?"
"I don't know." Harrah found that
he could stand up. He tried to shake off the Wanderer's grip. "Where did
you come from? How did you—"
"Find
her." The hand that would not be shaken off tightened on Harrah's shirt
until the cloth was drawn close around his throat. "You took her away,
Earthman. Between you and the dogs something has happened that was not meant to
happen. You took her—now find her!"
Harrah said between his
teeth, "Let go."
"Let
him go, Kehlin," said one of the others. "He will be no use
dead."
Almost
reluctantly the throttling grip relaxed and was gone. Harrah stepped back. He
was furious but he was also more than a little frightened. Again, as with
Marith, he had touched something strange in this man Kehlin.
The
terrible relentless strength of that strangling hand seemed more than human.
Then
he swayed and nearly fell and realized that he was still dizzy from the blow
and probably not thinking very clearly.
The
man called Kehlin said, with iron patience, "She must be found quickly. At
once, do you understand? She is in great danger."
Harrah
remembered his last sight of Marith's face. He remembered her fear and the
quiet deadly urgency with which the three strangers had gone about the taking
of her. He knew that Kehlin spoke the truth.
"I'll
get Tok," said Harrah. "He can find out where she is."
"Who is Tok?"
Harrah
explained. "The aboriginals know everything that goes on in Komar almost
before it happens."
He
turned, suddenly in a hurry to get on to his lodgings and look for Tok, but
Kehlin said sharply, "Wait. I can do it more quickly."
Harrah stopped, a cold tingle sweeping across
his skin. Kehlin's face had the same look that he had seen on Marith's before,
the odd expression of one listening to distant voices. There was a moment of
silence and then the Wanderer smiled and said, "Tok is coming."
One
point of mystery cleared up for Harrah. "Tele-paths.
That's how you found me, how you knew what had happened to Marith. She was
calling to you to hurry."
Kehlin
nodded. "Unfortunately it's a limited talent. We can communicate
among-ourselves when we wish, and we have some control over minds of the lower orders, that are animal or very near it, like Tok's. But I
cannot read or even trace the minds of the men who have taken my sister—and she
is being prevented from using her own ability to talk to me."
"They put a cloth over her head,"
said Harrah. "A shining sort of cloth."
"Thought waves are electrical in
nature," said Kehlin. "They can be screened."
After
that no one spoke. They stood in the empty space under the blank walls of the
houses and waited.
Presently
among the shadows a darker shadow moved. Slowly, with a terrible reluctance, it
came toward them into the moonlight and Harrah saw that it was Tok. Tok,
creeping, cringing, bent as though under a heavy burden—not wanting to come
but drawn as a fish is drawn unwilling by hook and line.
The hook and line of Kehlin's mind. Harrah glanced from the Wanderer's still
face to the awful misery of fear in Tok's eyes and a wave of anger swept over
him, mingled with a certain dread.
"Tok," he said
gently. "Tok!"
The aboriginal turned his head and gave
Harrah one look of hopeless pleading—just such a look
as Marith had given when the strangers took her away. Then he crouched down at
Kehlin's feet and stayed there, shivering.
Impulsively, Harrah started forward and one
of Kehlin's brothers caught him by the arm.
"If you want to save
her—be stilll"
Harrah
was still, and felt the aching of his flesh where the man had gripped it, as
though with five clamps of steel instead of human fingers.
Kehlin
did not speak and the only sound that came from Tok was a sort of unconscious
whimpering. But after a minute or two Kehlin said, "He knows where she is.
He will guide us."
TOK
had already turned to go. The men followed him. Harrah saw that Tok's step was
swift now, almost eager. But the terror had not left him.
Kehlin watched him and his eyes were black
and deep as the spaces beyond the stars.
Demons. Demons with the eyes of darkness.
A
shiver of superstitious fear went over Harrah. Then he looked again at the
Wanderers in their tawdry rags —outcasts of an outcaste tribe, selling their
sister's beauty in the marketplace for the sake of a few coins, and his awe
left him.
He
had caught too much of it from the aboriginals, who could make an evil spirit
out of every shadow.
He
began to think again of Marith, and the yellow-eyed Martian who had cracked his
skull, and his knuckles itched.
He
had no weapon now except a knife he carried under his shut but he felt that he
could make shift.
Abruptly
he asked a question that had been on the top of his mind. "What did the
men want with her?"
One of the Wanderers
shrugged. "She is beautiful."
"That
was not in their minds," said Harrah. "Nor is it yours."
"An old feud," said Kehlin harshly.
"A blood feud." Something about his voice
made Harrah shiver all over again.
There was something strange about Komar now.
After that brief violence of the dogs, nothing stirred. The sound of voices
came from the roofless houses, a sort of uneasy muttering that burst into
sharper cadence around the wineshops.
But
no man walked in the streets. Even the dogs were gone.
Harrah
was sure that eyes watched them from the darkness, as Marith and her captors
had been watched. But it was only a feeling. The aboriginals themselves were
intangible as smoke.
Tok
led the way swiftly, doubling back toward the lower side of the bazaar. Here
was a section that Harrah never visited—the Quarter of the Sellers of Dreams.
Poetic name for a maze of filthy rat-runs stinking with the breath of
nameless substances. The sliding roofs were always closed and what few voices could be heard
were beyond human speech.
They came to a house that stood by itself at
the end of an alley. It looked as though it had stood a long time by itself,
the fecund weeds growing thick around the door, rooting in the chinks of the
walls.
There
was no light, no sound. But Tok stopped and pointed.
After a moment Kehlin nodded. With that
gesture he dismissed Tok, forgot him utterly, and the aboriginal went with
three loping strides into the shadows and was gone.
KEHLIN
moved forward, treading noiselessly in the dust.
The others followed. Around at the side was a
wing, partially destroyed in some old quake. A thick stubby tree had sprouted
in the dirt floor, its branches spreading out over the broken walls.
Without
waiting for Kehlin's orders Harrah swung up into the tree and climbed from
there to the coping of the house, where he could look down upon the roof.
The
sliding sections were closed. But they were old and rotted and through the gaps
Harrah saw a dim glow of light. Somewhere below a lantern burned and a man was
talking.
The
Wanderers were beside him now on the coping, moving with great care on the
crumbling brick. Their eyes caught the lantern-glow with a feral glitter,
giving them a look unutterably cruel and strange.
Harrah
thought they had forgotten him now as completely as they had forgotten Tok.
He
shifted position until he could see directly down through a hole in the roof.
Kehlin was beside him, very close.
The man's voice came up to them, slow,
deliberate, without pity.
"We've
come a long way for this. We didn't have to. We could have stayed safe at home
and let somebody else do the worrying. But we came. One man from each world—men, hear me? Human men."
His
shadow fell broad and black across the floor, across Marith. A
large shadow, ponderous, immovable. The girl lay on the floor. The
metallic cloth still covered her head and a gag had been added outside it, to
keep her from screaming. She was still bound but the cords had been replaced by
metal cuffs, connected by wires that led to a little black box. A tiny portable
generator, Harrah thought, and was filled with fury.
"You're
tough," said the man. "But we're tough too. And we won't go away
empty handed. I'll ask you once more. How many—and where?"
Marith shook her head.
A lean dark hand that could only have belonged
to the Martian reached out and pressed a stud on the black box. The body of the
girl stiffened, was shaken with agony.
Harrah gathered himself. And in the instant
before he jumped Kehlin moved so that his shoulder struck the Earthman a hard
thrusting blow and sent him plunging head foremost through the roof.
There was a great splintering of rotten wood.
The whole room was suddenly revealed to Harrah—the three men looking upward,
the girl scarlet and white against the brown floor, the small black box, all
rushing up, up to meet him.
He
grasped at a broken edge of roof. It crumbled in his hands, and he saw the
Venusian step back, it seemed very slowly, to get out of his way. The momentary
breaking of his fall enabled Harrah to get his feet under him and he thought
that he was not going to die at once, he would surely
live long enough to break Keh-lin's neck instead of his own.
He hit the floor in a shower of dust and
splinters. Half siniling the Martian drew his gun.
Chapter IV
As Leopards . . .
AFTER
that for a moment no one moved. The dust of years sifted down on them. Another
board fell with a crash. Harrah gasped for the breath that had been knocked out
of him and the girl writhed in her uninterrupted pain. A
brief moment of stillness in which the Earrhman, the Martian and the Venusian
stared at Harrah and thought of nothing else.
Then,
very stealthily and swiftly, the Wanderers dropped through the open roof as
leopards drop on their quarry from above. In a way, it was beautiful to watch
—the marvelous grace and strength with which they moved,
the flashing of the three bright silent blades. A ballet with
knives. The Martian's gun went off once. It didn't hit anything. The big
Earthman turned to grapple with Kehlin and grunted as the steel went home
between his ribs.
Harrah
got up. There didn't seem to be any place for him in that fight. It was over
too fast, so fast that it seemed impossible that three men could die in so few
seconds. The faces of Marith's brothers were cold with a terrible coldness that
turned Harrah sick to look at them.
He
stepped over the body of the Venusian, noting how the curling silver hair was
mottled with crimson and dark dust. He cut the power from the black box and
Marith relaxed slowly, her flesh still quivering. He tore the gag and the metal
cloth from her head, and thought that men who could do this thing to a girl deserved
to die. And yet he took no joy in it.
Marith looked up at him and he thought she
smiled. He lifted her and held her in his arms, touching her with awkward gende
hands.
The
big Earthman raised his head. Even death he would meet on his own time,
refusing to be hurried. He saw what'had been done, and there was something now
in his broad stolid face that startled Harrah—a grim and shining faith.
He looked at the Wanderers with a look of
bitter fury in which there was no acknowledgment of defeat
"All
right," he said. "All right. You're safe for
a while now. You set a trap and you baited it with her and it worked—and you're safe now. But you can't hide. The very dogs
know you. There's no place for you in earth, heaven or hell. If it takes every
drop of human blood in the System to drown you we'll do it."
He
turned to Harrah, kneeling in the dirt with Marith in his arms.
"Don't you know what they are?" he
demanded. "Are you in love with that and you don't
know what it is?"
Harrah
felt Marith shudder and sigh against him and before he could speak Kehlin had
stooped, smiling, over the big man. The Wanderer's knife made one quick dainty
motion and there were no more words, only a strangled grunting such as a
butchered pig makes when it falls. Then silence.
Marith's
fingers tightened on Harrah's wrist. She tried to rise and he helped her up and
steadied her.
Still
smiling, Kehlin came across the room, the knife swinging languidly in his hand,
Marith said,
"Wait."
Kehlin's
smile turned into something sardonic. As one who is in no hurry he waited,
coming only far enough so that the blood of the big Earthman would not touch
his sandals.
Marith looked up into Harrah's face. There
was no hatred in her eyes now.
"Is it true?" she
asked. "Do you love me?"
Harrah could not answer. He looked at the
dead men and the three silent beings that stood over them and there was a
sickness in him, a sickness beyond the fear of death.
"What are you?" he said to them.
"The dogs know you. Tok knows you. But I don't know you."
His
gaze came back to Marith. She had not taken her eyes from him. They broke his
heart.
"Yes," he said, with a queer
harshness. "Yes, I guess I love you as much as you can make any meaning
out of the word." The smell of blood lay heavy and sweet on the air and
the blade gleamed in Kehlin's hand and it seemed a strange word to be speaking
in this place. It had a jeering sound of laughter.
Marith whispered,
"Kiss me."
STIFFLY,
slowly, Harrah bent and kissed her on the mouth. Her hps were cool and very
sweet and a queer wild pang rang through him so that his flesh contracted as
though from pain or fear and his heart began a great pounding.
He stepped back and said,
"You're not human."
"No,"
she answered softly. "I am android." Presently she smiled. "I
told you, Earthman. I am Marith. I am Forbidden."
She
did not weep. She had no human tears. But her eyes were heavy with the sadness
of all creation.
"From
time to time," she murmured, "men and women have loved us. It is a
great sin and they are punished for it and we are destroyed. We have no souls
and are less than the dogs that tear at us. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust—even
that is denied us for we are not bom of the earth, of Adam's clay. The hand of
man made us, not the hand of God, and it is true that we have no place in
heaven or hell."
"We
will make a place," said Kehlin, and his fingers played with the shining
knife. There was no sadness about him. He looked at the dead men, the man of
Earth, the man of Venus, the man of Mars.
"On
their worlds we will make a place. Heaven has no meaning, for us nor hell. Only
the life we have now, the life man gave us. You, Earthman! How long have you
been out here beyond the Belt?"
"A long time,"
said Harrah. "A long, long time."
"Then
you haven't heard of the war." Kehlin's white teeth glittered. "The
secret quiet war against us—the slaves, the pets, the big wonderful toys that
grew so strong we frightened the men who made us. It's not strange you haven't
heard. The governments tried to keep it secret. They didn't want a panic,
people killing each other in mistake for runaway androids. We were so hard to
detect, you see, once we shed our uniforms and got rid of our tattoo
marks." He stirred the Martian with his foot, the dark face turned upward,
snarling even in death.
"It
took men like this to recognize us," he said. "Men trained in the
laboratories before they were trained against crime. We thought we were safe
here, far beyond the law, but we had to be sure. Law wouldn't matter if word
got back to the Inner Worlds. They would come out and destroy us." He
laughed "Now we're sure."
"For a time," said Marith.
"There will be others like them."
"Time," said
Kqhlin. "A little time. That's all we need."
He
moved again toward Harrah, casually swift, as though one more thing needed to
be done.
Harrah
watched him come. He did not quite believe, even now. He was remembering
androids as he had known of them long ago—Kehlin had named them. The slaves, the pets, the big wonderful toys. Synthetic creatures
built of chemical protoplasm, moulded in pressure tanks, sparked to intelligent
life by the magic of cosmic rays drawn pure from outer space.
Creatures made originally to do the work that
human flesh was too frail for—the dangerous things, the experiments with
pressure and radiation, the gathering of data from places where men could not
go, the long lonely grinding jobs that tear human nerves to pieces.
For man had built better than Nature. The
androids were not hampered by the need of food, air and water. A few ounces of
chemicals every year or so kept them going. Their lungs were ornamental, for
the purpose of speech only. They had no complicated internal structure to break
down and their flesh was tough-celled, all but indestructible.
And
because they could be made beautiful, because they had strength and grace and
endurance beyond the human, their uses had widened. Entertainers,
household servants, fashionable adjuncts to expensive living. Things. Objects to be bought and sold like machines. And
they had not been content.
Kehlin's
eyes were brilliant with the glory of hate. He was as splendid and inevitable
as the angel of death and, looking at him, Harrah became aware of a bitter
truth—the truth that the big Earthman had denied with his dying breath. Man had
wrought too well. These were the natural inheritors of the universe.
Marith said again,
"Wait."
This time Kehlin did not
stop.
Marith
faced him, standing between him and Harrah's vulnerable body.
"I have earned this right," she said. "I demand it."
Kehlin
answered without a flicker of emotion. "This man must die." And he
would not stop.
Marith would not move and behind her back
Harrah drew his own knife into his hand. Futile as it was he could not submit
to butchery without at least the gesture of fighting back. He looked into
Kehlin's face and shuddered, ah inward shudder of the soul.
MARITH spoke.
"This man has already helped us
greatly—perhaps he has saved us by saving me." She pointed to the bodies.
"We're not free of their kind and what we have to do can't be'done in a
minute. We need supplies from Ko-mar—metals, tools, chemicals, many things. If
we get them ourselves we run the risk of being recognized. But if we had an
agent, a go-between—" She paused, then added,
"A human."
Kehlin
had at last halted to listen. One of the other men—Harrah could not, somehow,
stop thinking of them as men—spoke up.
"That
is worth thinking about, Kehlin. We can't spend all our time in the public
squares, watching for spies."
Kehlin
looked across Marith's white shoulder at the Earthman, and shook his head.
"Trust a human?"
He laughed.
"There
are ways to prevent betrayal,"' said Marith. "Ways you know of."
And
the android who had spoken before echoed, "That is so."
Kehlin played with the knife and continued to
watch Harrah but he did not move. Harrah said hoarsely, "To the devil with
you all. No one has asked me whether I'm willing to betray my own kind."
Kehlin
shrugged. "You can join them quite easily," he said, and glanced at
the bodies. Marith turned and took Harrah by the arms. Her touch sent that
queer pang through his flesh again, and it was strangely sweet.
"Death
is yours for the asking, now or later. But think, Earthman. Perhaps there is
justice on our side too. Wait a little before you die."
She had not changed, he thought. Her little white feet that had walked beside his in the dust of
Komar, her voice that had spoken to him through the moonlight—they had not
changed. Only her eyes were different.
Marith's eyes and himself, because of what he
knew. And
yet he remembered.
He did not know what he held—child, woman or
some alien wicked creature, close in the hollow of his arm. But she was very lovely and he would not let her go.
He
drew a long breath. Her eyes, searching his, were a beauty and a pain so
poignant that he could neither bear it nor look away.
"All right/' he said. "I'll wait."
Chapter V
The Same Beauty
THEY
had come a long way down from the plateau of Komar, into the jungle that laps
around it like a hungry ocherous sea. They had come by steep and secret ways
that were possible only to an aboriginal—or an android.
Harrah,
who had been handed bodily down the dizzy cliffs, was more conscious than ever
of his human inferiority. He was exhausted, his bones ached with wrenching,
and his nerves were screaming. But Marith, so small and sweetly made, had
dropped over the precipices like a little white bird, unaided, and she was
quite unwearied.
Once
during the descent Kehlin had paused, holding Harrah without effort over a
thousand feet of sheer space, between the wheeling moons and the darkness.
He
had smiled, and said, "Tok is following. He is afraid but he is following
you."
62
Harrah himself was too much afraid even to be
touched.
Now
they stood, the four androids and the man from Earth,
in the jungle of Ganymede. Vapor from some hidden boiling spring drifted
through the tangle of branches and flowering vines, the choking wanton growth
of a hothouse run wild. There was a taste of sulphur in the air and a smell of
decay and a terrible heat.
Kehlin
seemed to be listening to something. He turned slightly once, then again as
though getting his direction. Then he started off with complete certainty and
the others followed. No one spoke. No one had told Harrah where they were going
or why.
Only
Marith kept close to him and now and again he would meet her gaze and she would
smile, a smile
wistful and sad as far-off music. And Harrah hated her because he was weary
and drenched with sweat and every step was a pain.
He hoped that Tok was still following them.
It was comforting to think of that furry shape gh'ding noiselessly along, at
home in the jungle, part of it. Tok was not human either. But he too could
feel pain and weariness and fear. He and Harrah were brothers in blood.
The sky was blotted out. The eternal
moonlight sifted through the trees, restiess, many-hued, tinged here and there
with blood from the red glow of Jupiter. The forest was very still. It seemed
as endless as the dark reaches of the dreams that come with fever, and Harrah
fancied that it held its breath and waited.
Once they came to a place where the trees
were slashed by a vast sickle of volcanic slag. To the north a gaunt cone stood up against the sky, crooked, evil, wearing a plume of
smoke on its brow. The smell of sulphur was very strong and heat breathed out
of the mountain's flanks with a hissing sound like the laughter of serpents.
Lightly,
swiftiy, the white-skinned beautiful creatures sped across that blasted plain
and the man came staggering after them.
Three times they passed through rude
villages. But the huts were empty. Word had gone through the jungle as though
the wind carried it and the aboriginals had vanished.
Kehlin smiled. "They have hidden their
women and children," he said, "but the men watch us. They crouch in
the trees around our camp. They are afraid and they watch."
At length through the stillness Harrah began
to hear a sound very strange in this primal forest—the clangor of forges. Then,
quite suddenly, they came to the edge of a place where the undergrowth had been
cleared away and their journey was over.
The
picked bones of a rusty hull lay among the trees and beneath its skeletal
shadow there was motion. Long sheds had been built. Lights bumed in them and
figures passed to and fro and vast heaps of metal torn from the ship lay ready
to be worked.
Kehlin
said softly, "Look at them, Earthman. Thirty-four,
counting ourselves. All that are left. But the
finest, the best. The lords of the world."
Harrah
looked. Men, a few women or creatures made in their semblance, all stamped with
the same beauty, the same tireless strength. There was something wonderful
about them, working, building, untouched by their environment, apart from it,
using it only as a tool to serve them. Something wonderful,
Harrah thought, struggling for breath in the bitter heat. Wonderful and frightening.
Kehlin
had apparently given them the whole story telepathically, for they did not
pause from their work to ask questions. Only they glanced at Harrah as he
passed and in their eyes he saw the shadow of fate. Kehlin said, "We will
go into the ship."
SOME
of the inner cabins were still intact. The ship had been old and very small.
Stolen, Harrah guessed, the best that they could do, but they had made it good
enough. No more than ten men could have survived in its cramped quarters. Yet
thirty-four androids had ridden it across deep space. Darkness, lack of air and
food, did not bother them.
"We
brought what equipment we could," said Kehlin. "The rest we must
fashion for ourselves." The sound of the forges echoed his words. He led
Harrah into what had been the captain's cabin. It was crammed with delicate
electronic apparatus, some of which Harrah recognized as having to do with
encephalographs and the intricacies of thought-waves.
There
was no room for furniture. Kehlin indicated a small clear space on the
deck-plates. "Sit down."
Harrah
did not obey at once and the android smiled. "I'm not going to torture you
and if I had wished to kill you I could have done so long ago. We must have
complete understanding, you and I." He paused and Harrah was perfectly
aware of the threat behind his words. "Our minds must speak, for that is
the only way to understanding."
Marith
said sofdy, "That is so, Earthman. Don't be afraid."
Harrah studied her. "Will I be able to
understand you then?" "Perhaps."
Harrah
sat down on the hard iron plates and folded his hands between his knees to hide
their trembling. Kehlin worked smoothly for a time. Harrah noted the infinite
deftness of his movements. A distant humming rose in the cabin and was lost to
hearing. Kehlin placed round electrodes at the Earthman's temples and Harrah
felt a faint tingling warmth.
Then the android knelt and looked into his
eyes and he forgot everything, even Marith, in the depths of that passionate
alien gaze.
"Seventy-three years ago I was
made," said Kehlin. "How long have you lived, Earthman? Thirty years?
Forty? How much have you done, what have you learned?
How is the strength of your body? How is the power of your mind? What are your
memories, your hopes? We will exchange these things, you and I—and then we will
know each other."
A
deep tremor shook Harrah. He did not speak. Two sharp
movements of Kehlin's hands. The cabin darkened around him. A swift
reeling vertigo, an awful plunging across some unknown void, a loss of identity
. . .
Harrah
cried out in deadly fear and the voice was not his own.
He could not move. Vague images crowded his
mind, whirling, trampling, unutterably strange.
Memories coming back, confused, chaotic, a painful meshing of realities.
Silence. Darkness. Peace.
He
lay at rest. It seemed that there had never been anything but this bodiless
negation in the very womb of sleep. He had no memories. He had no identity. He
was nothing. He was without thought or trouble, wrapped in the complete
peacefulness of not-being. Forever and forever, the timeless sleep.
Then,
from somewhere out of the void, vast and inescapable as the stroke of creation
upon nothingness, a command came. The command to wake.
He awoke.
Like
a comet, cruel and bright across the slumbrous dark, awareness came. A sudden explosion of being, leaping full upon him with a blaze
and a shriek. Here was no slow gentle realization, softened by the long
years of childhood. Here was inundation, agony-self.
The little part of Harrah that remained
cringed before
that
terrible awakening. No human brain could have borne it. Yet it was as though
the memory were his own. He felt the flood tide of
life roar in and fill his emptiness, felt the fabric of his being shudder,
withstand and find itself.
He knew that he was remembering the moment of
Kehlin's birth. He opened his eyes.
Vision
keen as an eagle's, careless of darkness, of shadows,
of blinding light. He saw a tall Earthman with a haggard face, who sat before
him on the rusty deck and regarded him with strange eyes. An Earthman named
Tony Harrah. Himself. Yet it was Kehlin the android
who looked out of his eyes.
He
started up, wavering on the brink of madness, and Marith's hands were on his
shoulders, holding him steady.
"Don't be afraid. I am
here."
It
was not her voice speaking to him but her mind. He could hear it now. He could
feel it touching his, sweet and full of comfort. Quite suddenly he realized
that she was no longer a stranger. He knew her now. She was— Marith.
Her mind spoke gently. "Remember,
Earthman. Remember the days of Kehlin." He remembered.
Chapter
VI
Lords
of the World
HE
remembered the laboratory, the birthplace, the doorway to the world of men. He
remembered the moment when he first rose up from the slab where he had lain and
stood before his makers, embodied and alive. He
67
remembered the fine smooth power of his limbs, the
bright newness of sounds, the wonderful awareness of intellect.
Brief vivid flashes, the highlights of
seventy-three years of existence, coming to Harrah as though they were his own. The long intensive training—Kehlin, Type A, technical expert. The ease of learning, the memory that never faltered, the
growth of mental power until it overtopped the best of the human teachers.
He
remembered the moment when Kehlin first looked upon the redness of human blood
and realized how frail were the bodies of men.
He watched the gradual
development of emotion.
Emotion
is instinctive in natural life. In the android, Harrah saw it grow slowly from
the intellect. An odd sort of growth, like a tree of crystal
with clear, sharp branches —but alive and no less powerful than the blind
sprawling impulses of man. Different, though. Very
different.
One
great root was lacking—the root of lust. Kehlin's hungers were not of the flesh
and because he was free of this he was free also of greed and cruelty and—this
came to Harrah with a shock of surprise—of hate.
In
this uncanny sharing of another mind he remembered testing experimental ships
at velocities too great for human endurance. He had enjoyed that, hurtling
across infinity like a rogue asteroid with a silent shriek of speed.
He
remembered being cast adrift in space alone. He wore no protective armor. The
cold could not harm him and he had no need of air. He looked at the naked blaze
of the universe and was not awed- The magnificence of space did not crush him
with any sense of his own smallnesss.
He
did not expect to be as big as a star. Rather, for the first time, he felt
free. Free of the litde worlds, the little works of men. They were bound but he
was not. Distance and time were no barriers to him. He was brother to the
roving stars because both had been made, not born. He wanted to go out to them.
The
rescue ship came and took him in but he never forgot his dream of the other
suns and his longing to go among them, clear out to the edge of the universe.
Instead
he gathered data for the scientists in the forbidden places of the Solar System.
He walked the chasms of Mercury's Darkside, where the human mind will crack in
the terrible night, where the black mountain ranges claw at the stars and.no life
has ever been or ever will be. He went deep into the caverns of the Moon. He
went into the Asteroid Belt and charted a hundred deadly little worlds alone
while his masters waited safely in the shelter of their ship.
And still he was outcaste—a thing, an
android. Men used him and ignored him. They were human and he was an object out
of nature, vaguely repulsive, a little frightening. He had not even any contact
with his own kind. As though they had some foreknowledge of trouble men kept
their androids apart. Harrah was aware, in Kehlin's mind, of a piercing
loneliness.
There's
no place for you in earth, heaven, or hell!
Marith's
thought crossed his like the falling of tears. "For us there was no
comfort, no hope, no refuge. We were made in your
image, man and woman. Yet you were cruel gods for you made a he and gave us the
intelligence to know it. You denied us even dignity. And —we did not ask to be
made."
Kehlin said, "It is
enough."
Once
again Harrah was flung across a reeling darkness. This time the change was not
so frightening but in a way it was worse. He did not realize that until he was
again fully aware of himself. Then he was conscious of a bitter contrast, a
thing both saddening and shameful.
The
mind of the android, that he had shared for that brief time,
had been as a wide space flooded with light. His own
seemed cluttered and dark to him now, haunted by ugly shapes that crept along
the borders of consciousness. All the splendid strength was gone. The crushing
weariness of his body descended upon him, and he looked down almost with
disgust at his unsteady hands.
He
did not ask what Kehlin had found in him. He did not want to know.
"Can you understand now how we
felt?" asked Kehlin. "Can you understand how we learned to hate
men?"
Harrah
shook his head. "You don't hate," he said. "You don't know the
meaning of hate as we do. What I mistook for hatred in you was something much
bigger. I'd call it pride."
He
had seen so much in Kehlin's mind. Pity for man in his
weakness, admiration for his courage because he had survived and built in spite
of his weakness. Perhaps even gratitude.
BUT
Kehlin had called his fellow androids the lords of the world, and he was right.
They were proud and their pride was just and they would not live in chains.
Kehlin
shrugged. "Call it what you will, it doesn't matter." He looked at
Harrah, and for the first time the Earthman saw in the android a softening,
almost a weariness.
"It
isn't that we want to rule men. It isn't that we want powerl It's only that men
have driven us through fear. Should we go down into nothingness because men
fear us? Remember, we don't even have the hope of a hereafter to soften our
going!"
He
shook his head. "It will be a long fight and a bitter one. I don't want
it, none of us do. But we must survive
and to do that we must rule and perhaps men will come out the better for it.
There will never be any peace or real advancement until these wretched little
worlds are governed by those who are not of the mass but above it, not driven
by every wind that blows."
He was silent a moment, brooding, and then he
echoed Marith's words.
"Fear. Always fear. The human race is ridden with it. Lust
and fear and greed and sorrow. If only they had not been afraid of
us!"
The
old blaze of anger came again into his eyes. "With acid and with fire they
destroyed us, Earthman. Thirty-four, all that are left. But
not for long. Human reproduction is slow and clumsy, but not ours. Only
a little time and there will be more of us, many more, and we will go back and
take what is ours."
He
said it very quietly and Harrah heard truth in his voice like the tolling of a
bell—the passing-bell for the mastery of human kind.
"Will you help us,
Earthman, or will you die?"
Harrah
did not answer and Marith said, "Let him rest."
Kehlin
nodded. He left and Harrah was hardly aware of his going. The girl spoke to him gently and he rose and stumbled after
her, out of the ship.
She
led him to a space apart from the main sheds, an unfinished lean-to where only
a dim light filtered from Ihe work-lamps.
It was dark under the trees and hot. Terribly hot.
Harrah sat down on the moist ground and put his head between his hands and
there was still no answer in him, only a great blankness.
Marith waited and did not
speak.
After
awhile Harrah lifted his head and looked at her. "Why did you save me from Kehlin's knife?"
She
answered slowly, "I'm not like Kehlin. I was made only for beauty, a
dancer. My mind won't reach so high. It asks questions but they're little ones,
of small account."
"What questions, Marith?"
"I have been alive for nineteen years.
My owner was very proud of me and I made him a great deal of money.
And
everywhere I went, in every city, on every world, I watched men and women. I
saw the way they looked at each other, the way they smiled. Many of the women
were not beautiful or talented. But men loved them and they were happy."
Harrah remembered her words—I hate all men and women also. Especially women.
"When I was through working," she
said, "my owner put me away like a dancing doll until it was time to work
again. I had nothing to do but sit alone and think and wonder."
She was close to Harrah. Her face was
indistinct in the gloom, a shadowy thing of dreams.
"When you thought that I was human you
said you loved me. I think that is why I saved you from the knife."
There was a long silence and then Harrah said
the words she was waiting for, wanting to hear, and they were the truth.
"I love you now."
She said, very softly, "But not as you
would love a woman."
He remembered her dancing in the bazaar, the
ancient sensual dance that became in her a thing of sheer loveliness.
"No," he said. "But that's
because you're more than human, not less."
He took her into his arms and he knew now
what he held there. Not child nor woman nor any wicked thing but a creature
innocent and beautiful as the moonlight and as far beyond him.
He
held her close and it was as though for a moment he held his own youth again,
the short bright days before he had learned the things Kehlin had named-lust
and fear and greed and sorrow. He held her close and there was no passion in
him, only an immense tenderness, a longing and regret so deep that his heart
was near to breaking. He had his answer.
MARITH
drew away from him and rose, turning her face into the darkness so that he
could not see her eyes. She said, "I should have let you die in Komar. It
would have been easier then for both of us."
An
eerie chill ran over Harrah. "You can read my mind now." He got up,
very slowly.
She
nodded. "Kehlin more than I because he shared it fully.
That was what I meant when I reminded him that there were ways to prevent
betrayal. If I were human I would tell you to run quickly and hide yourself
from Kehlin and I would hope. But I am not human and I know there is no
hope."
She
turned toward him then, clear in the barred moonlight.
"Like
to like," she whispered. "You have your burden and your pride and you
would not be free of either. Kehlin was right. And yet I wish—oh, I wish . .
."
Quite
suddenly she was gone and Harrah was reaching out his hand to emptiness.
For a long moment he did not move. He heard
the sound of movement in the camp and knew that the telepathic warning had gone
out and that within a few seconds he would be dead but he could only think that
Marith was gone and he had lost her.
Then
from the dark jungle, swift with love and terror, Tok came crying out to his
lord.
Harrah
had forgotten Tok, who had followed him down from the safety of Komar. He had
forgotten a number of things. Now he remembered. He remembered Kehlin's words
and the three men who had died in Komar and why they had died.
He
remembered that he was human and could hope where there was no hope.
"Come, Lord! Run!"
Harrah ran. And it was already too late.
The androids came, the fleet lithe creatures heading him off. Tok stood
not thirty feet away, but he knew that he could never make it.
He stopped running. He saw Kehlin among those
who came to trap him and he saw the gun the android carried now in place of
the knife.
With acid and with fire they destroyed us . .
.
With
fire.
It
was Harrah's turn to cry out to Tok, to the unseen watchers in the trees. He
shouted with all his strength in the split second before he fell and his words
carried over even the sound of the shot.
He
thought that Tok was gone. He thought that there was an answer from the jungle
but he was not sure. He was not sure of anything but pain.
HE lay where he had fallen and he knew that
he would continue to lie there because his leg was broken above the knee. He
looked incuriously at the dark blood seeping around the wound, and then up
into the face of Kehlin, wondering why the android had aimed so low.
Reading
his thought Kehlin answered, "You had already spoken. And—I preferred you
should die with
99
us.
For a long time after that he did not speak
and there was a great silence on the clearing. The androids stood, the thirty-four
tall splendid beings who were the last of their kind,
and they made no sound.
The
jungle also was very still. But the aboriginals had done their work well and
already there was a taint of smoke on the air and the wind blew hot. The naked
bones of the ship mocked them with the shelter they might have had. There was
no refuge, no escape, and they knew it.
Harrah saw how Kehlin looked up at the sky,
at the distant suns that
light the edges of the universe. The jungle sighed and flames stood up among
the trees all around them like a ring of spears. Harrah thought that humans
were not alone in their knowledge of sorrow. Kehlin turned abrupdy and called, "Marith!"
She
came out from among the others and stood before him.
"Are
you happy, Marith? You have done a human thing. You have behaved like a woman,
wrecking empires for love."
He
flung her down beside Harrah and then he shook Iiis head slowly and said,
"No, the blame is mine. I was the leader. I should have killed the
man."
He
laughed suddenly. "And so this is the end—and it does not come to us from
the hands of man but from the paws of apes who have
learned no more than the making of fire I"
Harrah nodded. "Apes," he said.
"Yes. That's the gulf between us. That's why we fear you. You were never
an ape."
He
watched the ring of fire brighten and draw in. The pain in his leg was very
great and he was bleeding and his mind seemed distant from his body and full of
profound thoughts.
"We distrust anyone who is
different," he said. "We always destroy them, one way or
another."
He
looked up at Kehlin. "Apes. A restless, unruly
bunch, driven by passions and hungers you could never understand. You would not
have been able to rule us. No one ever has. We can't even ourselves. So in the
end you would have destroyed us."
Kehlin's
eyes met his, the black, deep eyes, brilliant now with
some terrible emotion that Harrah could not read.
"Perhaps,"
he said softly. "Perhaps. And you're proud,
aren't you? The weakling has pulled down his betters and it makes him feel
strong. You're proud to die because you trunk you've put an end to us. But you
have not, Earthmanl You have not!"
Standing
very tall beneath the banners of red light that shook from the flaring trees
Kehlin cried out strongly, shouting to the stars, to all creation.
"You
made us once, you little men who love to feel like gods! You will make us
again. You can't keep from it—and we will inherit the universe!"
Harrah knew now what was in Kehlin's mind. It
was faith. He saw it in the faces of all those who stood with Kehlin, the
beautiful creatures trapped and waiting under the crimson pall.
A
great curtain of flame and falling ash swept between them, hiding the androids from
Harrah's sight. A bitter pang struck through him, a wild regret, and he tried
to call out, to say that he was sorry. But the words would not come and he felt
ashamed and very small and full of a black and evil guilt. He bowed his head
and wept.
MARITH'S
voice spoke close beside him. "They are gone and soon we will be too and
it is better so."
Harrah
turned. He was amazed to see that there was a strange look of joy about her as
though she had been released from some dark prison.
"Do
you love me, Marith? Do you love me still after what I've done?"
She answered, "You
have set me free."
He
took her in his aims and held her and it came to him that only this way, only
now, could they two have been joined. And he was happy.
THE CITADEL OF LOST AGES
Chapter I
Strange
Awakening
DARKNESS—nothingness—a void
and a voice that spoke to him across the muffled deeps. "Remember! Think, and remember! Who are
you?"
It
was painful to be thus aroused. And yet he tried to answer and could not. He
said, "I don't know."
"Yes,
you know. You can remember if you will. Who are you?"
The
voice continued to torture him, calm and insistent, and in order to quiet it
he tried desperately to remember. It seemed that he should know. He had known,
once.
"I am . . ."
A pause, a groping and
then, "I am—Fenway."
"Ah!"
said the voice. "Good!
You see, you do know— you
can remember. Now—where
are you, Fenway? Where?"
Again
he answered, "I don't know." The mists were thick and he was growing
tired.
But
the voice went on. "You are walking, Fenway. There is a street, buildings,
people. Where are you going?"
Suddenly
he knew. Of course he knew! He must have been asleep or dreaming not to know.
He was walking down the Avenue of the Americas. He had just left his office in
Rockefeller Center. It was dusk and a thin snow was falling. He could see the
immense towers of the city
leaping skyward, their ledges rimmed with white,
their myriad windows blazing and above them in the smother the blinking lights
of the airways.
He
said, answering the voice, "I am in New York. It is winter and I am going
home."
"GoodI
Now the year.
What year, Fenway?"
"I'm tired," he
said. "I want to sleep."
"Tell me the year,
Fenway. The yearl"
He said uncertainly, "The year I was
born, the year I married, the year my son was born. The year,
this year. I don't . . . Yes, nineteen hundred and eighty-seven."
He was tired. The voice was growing faint, the restful dark increasing.
"Fenway!" It seemed to him that the voice quivered with a terrible excitement.
"Fenway, the Citadell Do you know of the Citadel?"
"The Citadel?" Some chord within him stirred to the touch of that word, a chord of
fear, of doom and desolation.
"Perhaps
it won't happen," he murmured. "Perhaps they're wrong. The Citadel—I
can't think about the Citadel. Let me sleep!"
He
let himself drift into the enfolding darkness. From far off he heard the voice
clamoring his name and another voice that cautioned, "Softly. Don't force
him! You know the danger of force."
For
a brief instant, blurred and gigantic in the void above him, he thought he saw
their faces, bearded, bright and hateful—the faces of torment. He thought he
heard the voice say softly in triumph, "One more time. Once
more and he will remember!"
Then
it was all gone—sight and sound and sense. There was only slumber, the deep
deep night of silence and forgetting.
DAYLIGHT—a narrow shaft of it, red and rusty on the
78
stone floor. He lay for a long time looking at the
light, not understanding it, not understanding anything. His head was heavy, as
though weighted with iron bands.
He
was enclosed in a small chamber of stone. It was, very still. Except for the
single spear of light it was dark. He could not remember having seen this place
before. He looked at the light, and wondered, and his wondering was slow and
vague.
He wondered who he was and
where he was and why.
Once
he had known. Once he had had a name and a place and a reason.
They
were gone beyond remembering. He felt that this should have frightened him but
it did not. He was puzzled and worried but not afraid. Not very much afraid.
He
stood up suddenly, trembling, bathed in a chill sweat. Dim broken images
whirled across his mind; too formless for grasping, and he cried out, "I
can't remem-berl"
The
cry was only a groan. It echoed dully from the stones with a sound like heavy
laughter.
He
looked down at himself. He saw his feet, shod in rawhide sandals. His legs,
brown and long-thighed and muscular, were marked here and there with old scars.
A strip of white cloth was wound tight around narrow loins, above that was a
flat brown midriff.
He
studied his hands. They were strong but they had no meaning for him. He lifted
them and felt his face, the hard high ridges of bone, the
hollow planes of flesh. He ran his fingers through short-cropped hair and did
not know the color of it nor the color of his eyes—
nor his name.
It
was an evil thing, to be shut in a place of stone without a name. He stood
still until the spasm passed.
The
narrow shaft of light drew him, three slow unsteady steps. H? leaned his face to the slit in the wall and looked out—out
and down and far away. And again there came the chill sweat and the trembling,
the poignant sense of memory hiding just beyond the threshold of his mind.
A
copper Sun hung in the sky and the sky was coppery and thick, streaked with
clouds of reddish dust that deepened into crimson where they touched the
far-off hills.
He
looked at the sky and something said within him, The sky is wrong. It did not tell him how.
Below
him, at the foot of granite cliffs that seemed to fall forever down from where
he stood, there was a city.
It
was a great city. There were many buildings, some huge and built of stone, some
built of wood, some of clay brick and endless crowding masses of little huts
that seemed like lumps of earth itself. It was a bright city, blazing with
sullen color under the copper sky.
It
was a rich city. He could see the market places, the patterns of the streets
and lanes and huddled alleys thronged with men and beasts, the pens and
paddocks and the roads that led in and out. The sound of it rose up to him,
soft with distance—the speaking of many voices and of much motion.
A
large rich busy city—but again the inner something told him, It is wrong. And he visioned white towers rearing
godlike, thundering with light and sound, roaring with a great voice of wheels
and motors and swift wings in the sunset sky.
He
visioned them as a man sees a wisp of smoke erased by the wind. And they were
gone, without form or meaning, as though they had never been.
He
stood where he was, gazing dully at the city and the wide land that spread
beyond it, patched with forest and cleared meadows and the roofs of villages.
There were streams and three broad roads that led away toward the hills. The
roads were hung with dust where men and horses moved.
The
shadows did not change. The Sun hung unmoving in the sky. He did not know how
long he stood. There was no time. And that too was somehow wrong, that red
unstirring Sun in a dusty sky.
From somewhere above him, as though on the roof
of whatever place this was, there came the brazen thunder of a gong.
The
stone walls shuddered with it. He could hear the echoes rolling out across the
land, solemn and fierce, and he thought it must be a great gong indeed,
fashioned by giants. When the ringing strokes were ended the world seemed
filled with silence.
Below
him the city quieted. The voices were stilled, the
streets and the market places grew empty. Out on the plain the caravans left
the roadways and lay down under the shelter of the trees. The villages were
silent. The world slept.
And still the sun had not
shifted in its place.
HE
began to be afraid again. The city and the plain seemed deathly, too quiet in
the unchanging sunlight. He turned from the narrow window-place. There was an
iron door in one wall, a low thing heavily made. He hammered on it with his
fists and shouted. He did this again and again until he was hoarse and his
hands were bruised. There was no answer, not the slightest sound from beyond.
He
went back to the couch where he had wakened. He saw a water jug on a ledge
beside it and an earthen plate with meat and black bread. He was not hungry. He
drank from the jug and then sat down and put his head between his hands and set
himself to remember, to know. And that was as useless as the pounding.
His
eyes fell again on the food and water. They glittered with a sudden
realization.
"Someone
will come," he whispered. "Sooner or later, someone will come with
food. They will know. They will tell me who I ami"
He would make them tell him—who he was, where he was and why. He shivered again but
now it was not with fear but with hope. He waited, his brown hands curved and
sinewy and cruel.
He waited.
The wall and the iron door must have been
very thick for he heard nothing until there came to him the. sound
of a bolt drawn softly. He lay back on the couch as though in heavy sleep. A second bolt, a third. The door swung in.
Light footsteps crossed the stones. Peering
through his lashes in the half dark he could see only a blurred small shape
that came and bent over him.
He reached up and caught
it.
Chapter
II Arika
WHATEVER
it was he had hold of, it behaved like a small panther. He clamped one hand
over its face to keep it from crying out and then he rose and dragged it,
struggling, into the red shaft of daylight.
He saw that he had caught a
girl.
Her
hair was black and her eyes were two dark points of fire looking at him over
the rim of his hand. He held her so for a moment, watching the empty doorway,
listening. Then he whispered:
"Stop
struggling and I'll take my hand away. But if you make a sound I'll kill
youl"
She
nodded. Cautiously he lifted his hand from her face. He saw a pointed chin, a
red mouth drawn into what was almost a snarl—a cat-face, predaceous, startled,
capable.
Only for a moment did he see that face. Then
it softened and the cat-look was gone, and the hardness, so that he thought he
had only imagined them. Her expression now was as sweet and plaintive as the
voice that whispered:
"Why do you treat me so? Don't you
remember me —Arika?"
"Arika,"
he repeated slowly. And again, "Arika?" His
fingers tightened on her arms. "No, I don't remember you, Arika." He
began to shake her, not meaning to, hardly knowing that he did so. "I
don't remember you. I don't remember anything. Who am I? Tell me who I
ami"
Soft pity welled in the dark eyes. "It
was so before. But I thought you would remember me. I came only four nights ago
to tell you that your escape was arranged."
She
touched him, pleading. "Don't shake me so. I don't know who you are or
where you came from or even why you're here. I only know you're human and a
captive and—I hate the Numi."
With
a part of his mind he heard that and was conscious of a crushing
disappointment. But his brow was drawn and he stared at her, saying,
"Night? This is night?"
"You must have heard the gong."
"Nightl" His gaze turned to the shaft of light. Tentatively he
formed the word, "darkness."
HE
felt the girl quiver. "Don't say that word. It's evil like the Numi. Let
me go—we'll talk later when it's safe. Come now, we have a long way to go
before the day-gong."
Slowly
he released her. The full impact of what she had said about escape reached him.
He had a terrible desire to be out of this cage of stone, yet he was afraid
somehow of the world he had seen below the
window-slit, the world that seemed so strangely wrong.
"Night," he said again.
Sunset, dusk and dark. A man walking in tlie dusk, going—somewhere. . . .
His head swam and for a moment he thought the
veil had lifted. He cried out hoarsely, "Fen . . . my name . . .
Fen!" Then he covered his face with his hands and whispered, "I don't
know. I can't remember. It's all gone."
She
picked up that syllable and used it. "You will remember—Fenn. But you
must come now. I'm only a temple slave. If they catch me . . ." She
finished with a shudder and added, "You'll never have another
chance."
She
pulled at his hand and he suffered himself to be led through the iron door into
a corridor shrouded in utter darkness. In his mind he turned the word Fenn over
and over and still he did not know.
Somehow
it was worse than being nameless to be called by a name that had no meaning.
The
girl Arika guided him surely. The corridor was short, little more than a
landing. Then there were steps, cut in the living rock and leading steeply
downward.
When
they reached the foot of the steps Arika's hand stayed him. "Make no
sound," she whispered. "There is danger here."
She
moved forward a few cautious steps. Fenn could see nothing in the complete
blackness. Then a crack of sombre light appeared and widened slowly and he saw
that a block of stone had swung soundlessly on a pivot, revealing an opening
large enough for a man to pass through.
Arika
made again an intense gesture of silence. She stepped through the doorway and
Fenn followed. Behind him the block of stone swung shut and became an
indistinguishable part of a massive walL
Arika
gave him a quick bright glance as though seeking acknowledgement of her
cleverness and he gathered that the stone block, with the passage and cell
beyond it, were very secret things that she should not have known existed.
They stood now in a space no more than three
feet wide. Behind them was the wall. Before them was a hanging of some heavy
black stuff. Overhead both wall and hanging vanished upward into shadow.
The
girl beckoned him on, keeping close to the wall lest she should brush against
the hangings and disturb them. Fenn copied her every movement with great care.
The air was heavy and still and there was a quality in the silence that set
his nerves prickling.
The
wall curved and curved, it seemed, without end and they crept mouselike in that
narrow space behind the black curtain that was as endless as the wall.
Fenn
was consumed with a great curiosity as strong as his unease. At last Arika
stopped and he brought his mouth close to her ear, pointing to the curtain.
"What is beyond
it?" he breathed.
SHE
hesitated. Then she smiled, a rather wicked smile.
Without touching the hanging she studied it until she found the place where two
sections overlapped. Very slowly, very carefully, she drew the edges apart the
merest crack so that he might see through.
He
looked out into a vault of glimmering darkness. How large it was, how high, he
could not tell but it seemed to stretch up and away as high as the sky and as
wide as half the Earth. And again painful submerged memories wrenched at him.
He
knew that it was all a cheat. The black hangings covered ordinary walls of
stone and the upper vault also would be shrouded in the sombre cloth. But the
black "sky" burned with points of diamond fire, blazing, magnificent
and sown so thick that all the space below was filled with a pale shining,
reflected back from peaks and plains of purest white.
Fenn knew that the peaks were only painted on
the black cloth and that beneath the white substance underfoot there was only
stone. But a shivering of awe and recognition ran through him and a terrible
giddiness that made him reel.
Somewhere, sometime before he had seen those fires in the night sky and known a whiteness on the Earth!
Arika's
voice whispered in his ear, softer than thought. "This is the Temple of
Eternal Night. See them sleeping there, the Numi priests, trying to appease
their own dark gods?"
He saw them then and all sense of recognition
or kinship vanished. Whatever night or winter he had known, it had no part
with this I
On pallets
of white fur they slept, row upon row, the ones she had called the Numi
priests. And they were not men.
Or were they? Their form was like his own
except that the bodies of the Numi had a look of tremendous toughness and
strength, more like the bodies of Hons than of men. And like lions they were
furred. He could see the soft gleaming pelts of them, their long hair and their
silken beards. They were beautiful, lying there in their sleeping strength.
Some
were light and some were dark and some were reddish and some gray, exactly as
color runs in the human hair. And in spite of their strength and their gleaming
fur there was nothing beastlike about them. Rather they seemed to Fenn to be
above men like himself, as he was above the brutes.
It
was their faces, he thought—their cold wise cruel beautiful faces, so full of
knowledge and power even in sleep.
A
terrible anger swept suddenly over him. He had seen faces like that before. His
clouded mind could not remember where but he knew that they were the faces of
torment, of pain, of loss.
He lifted up his eyes then to the fireshot
vault, the darkness and the glistening hills. He saw the awful savagery of that
cunningly wrought landscape, the remote uncaring sky and the white peaks sharp
as fangs to rend the flesh—a landscape that hated man.
A revulsion of fear and loathing shook him. He stepped back, turning his face away,
and Arika dropped the edges of the curtain. He saw that she was still smiling
that strange smile full of secret thoughts.
She
turned, her fingers gliding surely over the stones of the wall. Presently
another silent door swung open and he followed her onto yet another lightless
stairway, going down.
The descent was very long. Arika counted the
treads with great care. Several times she guided him over traps, balanced
stones that would have triggered death upon him had he stepped on them. Once he
thought he heard her drop some soft thing as though deliberately but he did not
speak to disturb her counting.
When
at last they stood on the level again she laughed a little shakily and said,
"The Numi built the temple with human slaves and then took care to kill
them all so that the passages should be unknown. But we humans are clever too
in our way."
She
was proud of herself. Fenn laid a grateful hand on her shoulder. But his mind
was on other things.
"Arika," he said,
"what are the Numi?"
He
could feel her staring at him and when she spoke her tone held incredulity.
"Surely you haven't forgotten them?'
"But I have," he said. I have forgotten them and the world and
myself. I live now but did I live before? When and where and how did I live
before?
His
hand tightened on Arika's shoulder. She seemed to understand and she did not
rebuke him. "Numi means in their language New Men," she told him
quietly. "They are the race that came from out of the Great Dark to
conquer us. And you and I aren't free of them yet."
They came to the end of the short passage.
Arika stopped and he heard her draw a deep breath. "Go carefully,
Fenn," she whispered. "If we can pass the tomb of the Numi kings
we'll be safe."
She opened the third
pivoted door of stone.
Fenn
stepped after her into a low square chamber lighted by a golden lamp that
burned upon a tripod. The dressed blocks of the wall were hung with golden
wreaths and inscribed with the names of men. Fenn thought at first this was the
tomb Arika had mentioned. Then he looked through an archway that had been hidden
from him by the outswung door.
Arika's
murmur reached him. "In here are the names of the honored ones, the
favorites. There
is the place of the
kings."
Fenn
glided forward to peer cautiously around the side of the arch. The space beyond
was empty of life, steeped in a drowsing silence and a haze of red-gold light
that came softly through hidden openings.
It
was a large space. It was grand and strong and somehow insolent in its sheer
lack of adornment, as though the Numi needed nothing but themselves.
And around its walls of sombre stone were ranked the kings of the New Men,
embalmed and dressed in their crimson robes, buried upright in pillars of
clear-shining crystal, a solemn company too proud to bend their necks even to
the Lord of Death.
It
seemed to Fenn that the bearded kings looked at him from out their upright
crystal coffins and smiled with their handsome mouths, a chill and secret
smile.
He
heard Arika breathe a deep sigh. "The gods are with us, Fenn. Come
on."
He
had no desire to linger there. The human-unhu-man faces of the dead filled him
with a kind of horror'. He followed more than halfway to the great arch at the
far end when they heard the stamp of hoofs and the jingle of harness outside
and then the sound of voices.
They remained poised for a moment, frozen.
There were a number of voices. Many feet moved sharply in the dust and the
horses stamped and snorted. Fenn glanced at Arika.
Her
dark eyes had the fear of death in them but her mouth was set hard. "Back
into the alcove, Fenn—and prayl"
Chapter
III The Trap
RIGID
and still as the dead kings they stood, pressed back into the corners on either
side of the arch. By moving his head a little Fenn could see a part of what
went on in the tomb.
They
were all Numi who entered. Some of them wore the harness of soldiers and these
remained by the outer door. Two came on, a man and a woman, walking slowly
along the lines of crystal pillars.
The
man was golden-bearded, dressed in black robes frosted with silver. The woman
held herself regally, moving with the deliberate pace of age. She was gowned
and cloaked in purple and her hair was white. Fenn noted that her face was as
smooth as Arika's. It was haughty and sorrowful and her eyes were quite mad.
Neither
of them spoke. They came on until Fenn thought surely they were not going to
stop short of the alcove. Then the man—Fenn guessed from his robes that he was
a priest—inclined his head and drew back, leaving the woman standing alone
before the crystal-sheathed body of a tall king, big and black-bearded, with an
eagle look about him even in death.
For
what seemed an endless time she stood there, her mad eyes studying the face of
the dead king. Then.she
89
spoke.
"You never change, my husband. Why do you not
change? Why do you not grow old as I do?"
The
king regarded her with a lightless agate gaze and did not answer.
"Well," she said, "no matter.
I have much to tell you. There is trouble in your kingdom, trouble, always trouble,
and no one will listen to me. The human cattle grow insolent and your son, who
does not fill your
throne, my lord, is soft
and will not punish them."
Her
voice droned on and on, full of disquiet. An eerie qualm crept over Fenn. It
began to seem to him that the dead king had a curious air of listening.
The
priest had withdrawn himself beyond Fenn's vision. The soldiers stood
motionless by the outer door, bored and heavy-eyed. Fenn looked at Arika. The
expression of catlike ferocity he had surprised before in the cell was on her
face again—and this time there was no mistaking it. Her hands opened and closed
like the flexing of claws and her body was drawn with tension.
Fenn began to sweat.
The
Numi queen talked. She told of endless slights and injuries, of the misdeeds
and follies of the courts. She was a vain
spiteful old woman, mad as a March
wind, and she would not have done with talking.
Arika's
lips moved. She made no sound but Fenn could read the words as she shaped them.
"Be
still, be still 1 Gods above, make her be still and gol If
we don't get into the city before the day-gong we are lost, both of us, and all
because she won't shut up!"
Presently
she went from prayers to curses and still the old queen talked.
Arika
glanced from time to time at Fenn and her eyes were desperate. Fenn himself
began to feel the pressure of moments passing. He did not clearly understand'
the reason but Arika's fury was convincing enough.
Fenn's
legs began to ache with standing in one place. The sweat trickled down his
breast and back. It came to him that the air was hot and the old queen's
unending words filled it like a swarm of bees.
Abruptly
she said, "I am tired. And I do not think you listen. I shan't stay any
longer. Good night, my lord!"
She
turned and moved away in a whispering of purple robes. The priest appeared,
hovering discreetly at her elbow. The guard formed ranks.
Fenn
glanced at Arika and her eyes warned him to be still. He found time to wonder
what sort of girl she was and why she should be taking these risks for him.
The
woman, the priest and the guards went out of the tomb.
Fenn's
knees grew weak with relief. He remained where he was, listening to the sounds
that reached him from outside. At last he sighed.
"They've gone now, Arika. Hear the
horses?"
She
nodded. "The old sowl I've heard that she comes here often at night to
talk to him.
But
why, of all nights—!"
"We're all right now," said Fenn
soothingly. And as he spoke the priest returned alone into the temple.
HE
was moving fast, a man who has got rid of a confining duty and is on his way
to better things. He reached out and struck one of the crystal pillars so that
it rang and all the others picked up the sound and gave it back like the
distant chiming of bells. The priest laughed. He strode on, straight for the
alcove, and this time there was no hope. He was going up into the temple by the
stairway in the rock.
As
though they were doing it of themselves Fenn felt his muscles twitch and
tighten. He held his breath that there should be no warning sound. Arika's eyes
were two black narrow sparks and he saw that one hand had fallen to the girdle
of yellow cloth she wore above her waist.
The priest came through the archway, and Fenn
made his leap from behind.
He got one arm around the Numi's neck and his
thighs locked tight around his loins. He had gauged the strength of the priest
by the strength of a strong man and any man would have been borne over forward
by the rush and the weight. But Fenn had forgotten that the Numi were not men.
He had not realized that anything living
could be so strong. The body under the black robes seemed not of flesh, but of
granite and whalebone and steel. Instead of falling as he should have done the
priest threw himself backward, crushing Fenn beneath him on the stone floor.
The
breath went out of him in a sickening grunt. His skull rang on the stone and
for a moment he thought he was done for. From somewhere above him he heard
Arika's voice and knew it had a deadly urgency but he could not grasp the
words.
He
was suddenly aware that he hated this golden-furred creature he had between his
hands.
It
was a hatred without memory or reason. But it was so
red and furious that he found himself growling like a beast, forgetful of
everything except that he was going to kill. New strength poured into him and
a terrible excitement. He locked his thighs tighter and made of his arm an
iron vise to shut off voice and breath and the moving blood. He was no longer
conscious of Arika. He had forgotten escape. There was nothing in the world but
this straining powerful golden body that he was going to destroy.
They
were out of die alcove, thrashing among the crystal pillars where the red-robed
kings looked down and watched them. The strength of the Numi priest was a
wonderful thing. Fenn thought it was like trying to pinion a storm wind or ride
the crest of a flood.
Their
lunging bodies rolled and crashed against the ringing pillars. The robes of the
Numi wrapped them both and presently there were stains of crimson against the
black and silver. Fenn would not relax his grip. He was oblivious to pain. He
knew that if he once let go he was lost and he would not let go.
The
fingers of the priest clawed at his legs, threatened to tear the living muscle
from his arms. He set his teeth in the gold-furred flesh and tasted blood and
tightened, tightened, tightened the pressure of his limbs.
"Fermi"
It was Arika's voice, far off. Arika,
calling, touching him, urging. He was getting tired. He could not hold on much
longer. Why did she bother him now before the priest was dead?
He
turned his head to snarl at her. And he realized then that the Numi was very
still in his arms, that there was no slightest movement between his straining
thighs.
"Let
him go, Fenn. He's dead. He's been dead for minutes. Oh Fenn, wake up and let
him go!"
Very
slowly, Fenn relaxed. The body of the Numi slipped heavily away from him. He
watched it. After awhile he tried to rise. His muscles were palsied with
tremors like the muscles of an old man. Dark streams of blood ran from his torn
wrists and down his thighs and his bones ached.
Arika
helped him. She looked at him now with a kind of awe, mingled with something
else that he was too tired to read. Doubt, perhaps, or even fear—a shrewd calculating
something he did not like. It occurred to him to wonder again why she was so
bent on his escape from the Numi.
The
dead priest wore a gown of fine white linen under his robe. Working very
swiftly Arika ripped it and gave the worst of Fenn's wounds a hasty binding.
"You'd
leave a trail a blind man could follow," she explained. "Now
come!"
She
led him out of the tomb into the glare of the sullen copper Sun that never
moved. A strong wind blew. It smelled of heat and dust and the edges of the world
were veiled in crimson.
High
above him Fenn could see the .half-monolithic temple crowning the cliff. It
looked an evil place to be prisoned in. Why had the Numi had him there? What
did they want with him?
WHAT
did Arika want with him? He was glad to be free of the temple.
He stumbled after Arika down a slope clothed
in tall trees that thrased in the wind. The tomb of the kings was built on a
ledge of the cliff itself and almost beneath it the city began. It must still
be night for no one was stirring in the streets.
Again
that world "night" evoked a sense of wrong-ness and Fenn glanced at
the burning sky and shook his head.
Halfway
down the slope Arika stopped and brought forth from its hiding place in a thicket
a bundle of cloth. "Here," she said, "wrap this around you. Over
your head, Fenn! Keep your face hidden."
He
struggled clumsily with the garment—a large shapeless length of cotton much
smeared with dust and gray ash. Arika draped her own around her and helped him
impatiently with his.
"What are these?" he asked her.
"Mourners' cloaks. Since humans are allowed to visit their burying grounds only at night
no one will pay any attention to us if we're seen in the streets." She
added wryly, "There are always mourners!"
"But why only at
night?"
"Would
you have them go by day and waste the time they should be working? The Numi
don't keep humans just for pets!"
She
led off down the slope again, going almost at a run. Fenn could not keep up
with her. A number of times she came back to him and urged him on, snapping at
him, cursing him in an agony of worry. Now and again she glanced upward at the
temple and as the angle changed Fenn could see the cause of her apprehension—a
great gong as tall as several men, glinting dully in the sunlight upon the
temple roof.
They
entered the city, slowing their pace to a walk. These were the mean quarters,
the vast huddle of huts that girdled the magnificence of the palace and the
opulent dwellings of the Numi like a muddy sea. Here were refuse and filth and
the scuttering feet of rats. Here were twisting lanes and the ancient smells of
humanity crowded and unwashed. Fenn snorted in disgust and Arika shot him a
smouldering glance from under her ash-smeared hood.
"The
air was cleaner in the cell, Fenn, but you'll live to breath this longer!"
They
did not speak again. The crumbling mud-brick houses slept under the dusty wind,
their windows covered with bits of cloth or hide. Here and there a child cried
and an occasional cur-dog barked. They did not pass anyone in the bewildering
tangle of lanes and if anyone saw them there was no sign of it. Arika's face
was drawn and anxious and Fenn knew that she held herself from running only by
the greatest restraint She was cursing the old queen under her breath.
Up
on the temple roof two black-robed priests appeared,
tiny dolls in the distance.
Arika
turned into an even narrower way, hardly more than a crack between the walls.
Here she risked a faster pace, dragging Fenn without pity.
The
distant priests bent and a second later a great hammer swung on counterweights
and the day-gong sent its first harsh sonorous stroke echoing over the land.
A
low doorway curtained with greasy cloth appeared on Fenn's right. Arika thrust
him through it, into a stifling dusk that was blinding after the light
Something large stirred in the shadows and a
man's voice whispered, "All right?"
Arika said, "He killed a priest."
And then to Fenn, "Stay herel"
The curtain rose and fell again. Fenn turned,
reaching out for her. But the mourner's cloak lay on the earthen floor, and
Arika was gone.
Again the large bulk moved, very lightly for
its size. The shadow of a man came between Fenn and the curtain. He bent
slowly and picked up the fallen cloak and as he straightened Fenn caught a
glimpse of his face in the dusty gloom.
It was the face of a Numi.
Chapter IV
Remembered
Doom
A KIND of bleak fury came over Fenn. He had had
it in the back of his mind that Arika was engineering some treachery but this
he had not expected. His two hands reached and encircled a corded throat, and
under the vast booming of the gong he said the one word: "Numi!"
The
voice of the man said harshly, "Wait!" The curtain was lifted to
admit a single beam of light. Gasping against Fenn's grip the
man said, "Look again!"
Fenn
looked. Uncertainly his fingers loosened. The man was beardless, his cheeks
shaven close to smooth skin. His hair was cropped and his body, naked except
for a twist of cloth, showed only a fine down and not the silken fur of the New
Men.
And
yet in the eyes, the shape of the head, the unmistakable
cast of the features . . .
The man lifted his arms and struck Fenn's
hands away. "I'm Malech. I'm Arika's brother."
"Arika's
brother? And who is Arika? What does she want with me?" Fenn's hands were
still raised, and hungrily curved. "What do you want with me, Malech? And why do you look like a Numi, a Numi plucked
and stripped?"
"I'm
a half-blood," Malech said sourly. "So is Arika. I can assure you we
have no love for our fathers, who give us their blood and then despise us for
it. As for the rest of it, it will have to wait until tonight.
"I'm
a slave. I work in the palace gardens. If I don't go there at once I shall be
flogged, with ten stripes extra because I'm half the breed of the masters.
Arika has the same problems at the temple. Besides, she might draw suspicion by
her absence. So . . ."
He
thrust Fenn ahead of him, into another room. It was not large but it was clean.
There was a hearth, two box-beds filled with straw, a table, three or four
rough benches.
"This is the house," said Malech.
"All of it. Stay in it. Don't even look out the
window. You'll find water, wine and food. Be quiet and trust us if you can. If
you can't, after all we've risked to get you free—why,
the priests will be delighted to have you back."
He
swung on his heel to go, and then paused, turning to look again at Fenn as
though he found in him something of special interest.
"So
you killed a priest." Malech's eyes, which were lighter than Arika's,
almost tawny, gleamed with an evil joy. "With a knife?
A strangling cord? How?"
Fenn shook his head slowly.
"I had no weapons."
"With your hands? Don't tell me with just your hands!" Malech's smile was the feral
grin of a tiger. "May the gods of the humans beam upon you, my
friend!"
At the door into the lean-to he said over his
shouder, almost casually, "As half-blood Numi, my sister and
I—particularly my sister—share some of the mental peculiarities of our
illustrious fathers. It's quite possible, if you do decide to trust us, that we
can restore the memory Arika tells me you have lost."
He was gone before the
odier could speak.
Fenn
stood where he was for some time without moving, his gaze fixed upon the
doorway. The mighty voice of the gong was stilled and in its place came the numberless
tongues of the waking city, jarring, clattering, settling at last to a steady
beehive drone, punctuated by the shrill cries of children.
But
Fenn was conscious of nothing except those words of Malech's that were still
ringing in his ears. . . we can restore the memory Arika tells me you have lost."
He
sat down and tried to think but he was very weary. His wounds were stiffening
and his body ached beyond endurance. He did not like Malech. He did not trust
Arika. He understood nothing—why he had been imprisoned, why he was free. But
whatever else happened he did not want to be taken back to the temple. And—if
he could remember again, if he could have a name he knew was his own and a past
that was longer than yesterday . . .
If
Malech had been a homed demon and Arika his sister Fenn would not have left
that place.
He
washed his cuts with wine and then drank off a good bit of what remained. He
was seized with a desire to go after Malech, to drag him back and force him to
do his magic now. He felt he could not wait for night. But he realized that was
folly speaking. He lay down in one of the straw-filled beds but he could not
sleep.
To remember! To be again a man with a whole mind, a whole life!
What kind of memories would they be? How
would he appear to himself after he remembered? What stains would he find upon
his hands?
Even evil memories would be better than none,
better than his terrible groping into nothingness.
Suppose that Malech lied?
IT
was hot and the fumes of the wine were clouding his thoughts. His body wanted
rest even if his mind did not. The world began to slip away from him. He
thought how strange it was that Arika was half Numi—such a handsome girl for
all he did not trust her. Very handsome . . .
He slept and in his dreams ghostly towers
brightened against a dusky sky and the word "night" returned to
plague him.
Twice he spoke aloud,
saying, "I am Fenway."
Arika
woke him. He had not heard the gong that marked off night from day nor had he
heard the others return. Yet they must have been there for some time. A pot
bubbled fragrantly on the hearth and the cloth was laid for supper. Outside the wind howled in the alleys, filling the air with dust.
He
rose, feeling stiff and sore but otherwise normal and ravenously hungry. Yet he
hardly thought of food. He was shaken with an eager half-fearful excitement. He
told Arika what Malech had said and demanded, "Is that true? Can you do
it?"
"Not all at once perhaps—but I can try.
You must eat now; Fenn. Otherwise the body will disturb the mind."
That
seemed reasonable and he curbed his impatience. He watched the others for
awhile in silence, trying to judge them, but there was something about their
strange breed that was beyond his grasp.
He demanded abruptly, "Why did you
rescue me?"
"As
I told you," answered Arika. "You were human and a captive of the
Numi. This isn't the first time a human has vanished out of the Numi
dungeons—though not, I'll admit, out of the temple. That was a brilliant feat,
Fenn. You should appreciate it" "I'd still like to know why."
"Does
there have to be a reason?" asked Malech. "Haven't you ever done
anything without a reason except that it was a good thing to do?"
Fenn
shot him a hard glance. "You don't have to remind me that I don't know
the answer to that. However, I won't quarrel with your motives—not now."
He turned to Arika again. "What did the priests want of me? Why was I
there?"
She
shook her head. "I couldn't find out. RhamSin— he was your special jailor,
Fenn—is a very brilliant man. He rules in the temple as the king rules in the
palace and there is great rivalry between them.
"Whatever
purpose he had with you, it was something of great importance to him,
something he wanted to keep secret from the king and even from the other
priests. Else you would not have been hidden away in that cell. The Numi are
free to use humans in any way they wish, just as we use cattle, so there could
be no other reason."
She
met Fenn's gaze directly. "Perhaps that's why I rescued you, Fenn. I hate
RhamSin. Remember, I've been a temple slave since I was old enough to climb
there. Perhaps I wanted simply to cheat him of whatever success he was after
just to make him sweat."
An
expression of such diabolical hatred crossed her face that Fenn was convinced
she had told at least a part of the truth.
Suddenly
she smiled. "All that being so—have you wondered why RhamSin hasn't
searched the city for you?"
"Perhaps it's easier just to get another
human." "Maybe. But I made sure—partly, of
course, to clear myself. Only the priests and the royal family and some
of the nobles are supposed to know about those
temple passages. So on the stair I dropped a girdle belonging to a man of the
royal house—which Malech managed to steal for me. Therefore it will appear to
RhamSin that he stole you away and took you directly to the
palace. So I am safe and you are safe—at least for a while."
"You're
a clever girl," said Fenn admiringly. "Very clever indeed." Arika's smile broadened. And Fenn wondered
silently, Just how
clever are you, Arika? Too clever to trust? In one thing he was forced to trust, whether
he would or not.
He
got up with sudden violence. "I can't wait any longerl Get to work, blast
you, do your magic—I can't wait any longer!"
"Softly, Fenn," said Arika. "All right." She pointed to the bed. "Lie
down. Let your body relax. You'll have to help me, Fenn. I'm not like the Numi,
who can do what they want to with the minds of men and beasts. You'll have to
open the way for me Fenn. Don't fight me. Let your mind be easy."
HE stretched out. He tried to do as she said,
to relax his limbs and let his mind go free. Her face hovered above him, white
in the shrouded light from the windows. She was handsome. Her eyes had strange dark fires in them. Her voice spoke to him softly.
"You'll
have to trust me, Fenn, if you want
to remember." Malech handed her a drinking cup and she held it to Fenn's
hps. "There is a drug in this wine. It will not hurt you. It only makes
the way easier and the time shorter. Drink it, Fenn."
He
would not drink it. His muscles tensed again and he looked at her with
narrow-eyed suspicion, almost ready to strike her aside and run. But she only
took the cup away and said, "It's up to you. Your memory is your loss, not
mine."
After a minute he said,
"Give me the cup."
He drank it. Again he lay still, listening to
her voice, and now it was easier to relax. Gradually he lost all sense of time.
Arika's eyes were huge and dark and full of little dancing lights. They drew
him. They compelled him. Soft folds of colorless mist slowly blotted out the
face of Malech in the background, the mud-brick walls, the roof, Arika
herself—all except her eyes.
Just
at the last he felt the power that lay behind them but it was too late. They
willed him into the final darkness and he could not but go.
Deep,
deep, timeless dark.
A voice .
, .
Under the prodding of that voice he roused a
bit as though from slumber. Another voice had spoken once, asking, asking—but
this time it was easier to answer.
"My
name is Fenway," he told the voice. "I am in New York."
Yes,
it was much easier to answer. He told about Times Square on a summer night, the
blaze of light and the crowd. He told about Central Park in the morning after
rain.
"And
pretty soon it will all be gone," he said. "All the buildings and the
subways and the people—gone, erased, forgotten."
He
laughed. "They're working on the Citadel. They're burying it deep in the
rock above the Palisades. It's almost finished—and for what? What good is a
citadel without men?"
He
laughed again, dreadful laughter. " 'Repent ye,
for the end is at hand!' I repent me that I had a son. I repent me, I repent me that I begot him just for death!"_
"Fenway—Fenway!" The voice shook him, brought him to himself. "You must
remember—yourself, New York, the Palisades. Draw it, Fenway. Draw the size and
shape of New York, of the Palisades, so that when you wake you will
remember."
Dully under the urging of the voice he began
to draw. Whether he had pencil and paper he neither knew nor cared. He drew as
one does in a dream, the familiar outlines, and as he did so he was filled with
sadness and a sense of loss and he began to weep.
"I
will not draw," he said. "What good is drawing on the evening of
Destruction?"
The
voice called to him. It called again and again and he fled away from it. He was
running beside the wide gray river. Night was closing down and from the
darkling water the mist rose thick and cold, clinging round him, drowning out
the world that was so soon to die.
Chapter
V
Secret of Ages
THERE was a drawing, done with charcoal on a
slab of wood. It was lopsided and clumsy and unfinished, showing a long, narrow
little island between two rivers near the sea.
Fenn
stared at it. His hands trembled. Arika said softly, "You told me its name
was New York. Do you remember?"
, "I—I don't know." His mouth was dry and it was difficult to
talk. "My head feels queer. It's full of smoke. Sometimes I see things and
then they're gone again."
He
looked up, almost pleadingly, from Arika to Mal-ech and back again. "Where
is this place I called New York?"
Malech shook his head.
"I never heard of it."
There was an odd tone to his voice. Arika
rose and removed two bricks from the wall above the bed. From the cavity behind
them she drew a bundle of parchment scrolls. Even in his distress Fenn could
see that she was laboring under some great excitement. She spread the scrolls
beside him on the bed.
"When the Numi came out of the Great
Dark and into the human part of the world they made pictures of the lands they
passed through. I stole these from the temple long ago. Let us see if the
pictures of the Numi show your island."
Fenn
studied the maps. Strange maps of a strange Earth. The
Numi must have traveled far. The names and inscriptions were in a tongue he did
not know but Arika pointed out desert and jungle and mountains, forest land and
sea, and there was nothing that resembled the island he had drawn while in
that uncanny sleep.
"No," he said.
"It isn't here."
A
quick glance passed between Arika and Malech. She unrolled another scroll, the
last.
"This,"
she said, "is the birthplace of the Numi. You remember the Hall of Eternal
Night in the temple, Fenn? All their birthland is like that, I have heard,
white and cruel and very cold. It is what humans call the Great Dark."
"I
don't understand," said Fenn. "What is the Great Dark?"
"The
other side of the world," she answered. "Its face is turned always
away from the Sun, toward the black gods of night that men say spawned the
Numi."
Fenn
concentrated on that last map. Endless areas of whiteness,
broken here and there by the dim outlines^ of continents. In
imagination, remembering that hall that he had glimpsed, he could see the
jagged mountains rearing under a black sky shot with fire and at their feet
the wrinkled ice of oceans.
It was Malech's quick eye that saw it first.
"Herel" he said. "Look here, see it!" He traced with his
strong finger. "Away from the Sun, beyond even the
Shadow, well into the Great Dark itself. Here is the edge of the sea and
here—two rivers and an island!"
He
laughed, a short harsh burst of merriment, and then was still.
Arika
whispered, "This is a thing of wonder. It is a miracle from the
gods."
And Fenn said, as he seemed always to be
saying, "I don't understand."
"Nor
do I! Listen to me, Fenn—listen carefully and try to
remember." Her hand had caught his now, gripping it almost cruelly, as
though she would grip his mind that way.
"I
tried to call your memory back. I gave you the drug to throw down all your
conscious barriers and I tried to draw aside the bars that keep your memory
prisoned. I called to you and you answered, naming yourself Fenn-way, and you
talked quite readily.
"But
the things you spoke of were not of this world you stand in now! You told of
great buildings and of things that roared in the sky and in the streets and under
the earth. You told of day and night, of the things we have never seen—the
moon, the stars, dawn, sunset."
Her
fingers tightened until her nails brought blood. "Fenn, your memories were of the world that was before the coming of the dark star—the world before Destruction!"
He
was glad of her hand holding him. Because suddenly the solid earth dissolved
beneath him and he was falling, spinning, crying through a reeling vortex.
He whispered, "I
remember, I remember."
He
put his face between his hands. He shivered, a shallow rippling of the flesh,
and presently the palms of his hands were wet with a salty
moisture.
I remember.
But did he? He still had no full memory of a
past life. He had only flashes of a life, disjointed, infinitely
strange—painful and yet somehow distant, somehow not of his flesh.
He asked hoarsely, "If I remember that
far past, does that mean that I belong to
that past? That RhamSin somehow dragged me out of it?"
Arika
shook her head. "It seems impossible. And yet the powers of the Numi
priests are great."
Malech
interrupted, asking him passionately, "Where are the Palisades?"
Fenn
was too numbed with horror to answer. He felt suspended over an abyss that
yawned between two worlds, himself a stranger to them
both.
Malech's
hands rose in a fierce aborted gesture and Arika warned him back. She said in
the compelling voice that Fenn had answered in his dream, "Fenn, show me
the Palisades."
Without
thought or volition, he placed a finger on the charcoal map.
MALECH'S
eyes suddenly blazed. He said in an exultant whisper, "It was what
RhamSin was trying to get from him—the secret of the Citadel's location. And
now we have it. In Fenn we have it!"
Fenn
had begun to talk. It was like a dead man slowly speaking.
"The dark star," he said to no one.
"They looked
at it through their telescopes. They watched it rushing
closer and they told us that the world as we knew it
would die. A dark star, coming out of space to kill the
world." ,
Arika whispered, "Do
you remember the Destruction?"
"No.
It was not to be—not just yet. The dark star would pass the Sun. They had it charted, they knew what it would do. It would take away some
of the planets, the
outer
ones, and go on—and the worlds that were left would be torn and changed."
He
added slowly, "There was a terrible fear on the world. Not for ourselves
but for our children. Sometimes we would not believe it could happen. We
looked at the great cities and the mountains and the green land. We looked at
the sea and we did not believe it could ever change."
"But
it did," Arika said somberly. "Legend tells how it did—how when the
dark star passed all Earth was rent and shaken and its
spinning slowed, so there was no more day and night. How the cities were thrown
down and the mountains moved and the seas ran wild and millions died."
"They
knew what was coming," said Fenn in his dead strange voice. "It was
why they built the Citadel, to preserve man's knowledge and power for those
who might survive."
Malech
was shaken with bitter mirth. "And the Numi have hunted for that legended
Citadel without dreaming that it lay in the Great Dark from which they camel
They mapped this place New York and didn't know the Citadel was there 1 And
now, with Fenn's help, we shaU find it!"
Fenn
looked at him and at Arika with hopeless eyes. "What difference does it
make to me who wins the Citadel? The only world I can remember perished—how
many thousand years ago?"
Arika's
face flashed and she took his hands warmly, strongly, into hers. "Fenn,
don't you realize what you can do? You are human—all human. You've seen a
little of how humans five in this world—slaves of the Numi here in the cities
or as outlaw tribes in the wilds. That has gone on since the Numi first came
out of the darkness that bred them.
"But you can change all that, Fenn. You
can free us 107 from the Numi. You can make the world as it was before the
Destruction—a good world for men to live in. You can give men back all their
lost knowledgel"
"Or
would you prefer," Malech said, "to give the Citadel to the Numi so
that with the knowledge in it they can rivet fetters on us forever?"
A
blaze of anger leaped up in Fenn's mind. "Nol Men built the Citadel, men
like us—for men like us!"
He
was remembering again the tragic last hope of that doomed world, the hope
centered in 1116
Citadel that was to be
man's answer to the coming night.
"Then help us find it, that its secrets
may belong to man!" Arika pressed. "We can get you out of the city
and the outlaw humans out in the wilds will aid us in this quest. Will you lead the way?"
Fenn
felt iron resolution hardening swiftly in his mind, a resolve bom as much of bitter hatred of the Numi as of loyalty to his
own kind.
He said between his teeth, "I will lead
you. And if the Citadel has power in it—it will be used to destroy the Numi or
to drive them back into their darkness."
He
added eagerly, "And it may be that there at the Citadel, at the place New
York that I remember so strangely, I shall remember all my past!"
Malech
was on his feet, his face flaring with excitement. "I'll begin
preparations at once! Well need to have horses ready and slip out of the city
tomorrow 'night!'"
He
swung aside the curtain to leave. As he did so, with startling suddenness, a
man stumbled in from outside. He came as though the howling wind had brought
him—a quite human man, with the marks of the lash on his back.
"Temple
soldiers are searching the quarters!" he cried and then he caught sight of
Fenn. His eyes widened and his mouth became an open oblong in his seamy face.
He started to speak.
Malech stepped between them, reaching one
hand to the small man's shoulder, turning him around as he demanded,
"Which way are they coming?"
"From the tomb of the kings, ransacking every house. We're spreading the word."
The edge of Malech's free hand took him in a
slicing blow under the ear. The little man folded quietly over his own middle
and Malech shoved him behind a water cask in the lean-J:o.
Fenn
crossed the room. He gripped Malech by the shoulders. "That man knew
me," he said harshly. "Why would you not let him speak?"
"Don't
be a fooL" snapped Malech. "He saw a stranger and was surprised. He
would have sold you to the Numi for a sack of corn."
Arika's
face was white with fury and despair. "Rham-Sin was too cunning to be
completely deceived by my trick! If we had had but one day more. . . ."
FENN'S
hard new determination would not let him share their despair. He said, "We
are going to find the Citadel! Since we can't wait until tomorrow night we go
now."
"But horses—"
Malech objected.
Fenn
cut him short. "I saw paddocks of horses near the gates. We can steal
mounts. Quickly!"
Arika
gave him a startled glance as though revising her estimate of him. But she
caught fire from his resolution. "He is right, Malech—we must risk it
now!"
She
brought forth the mourner's cloaks for them. While Malech was hastily
improvising one for himself from a length of cotton smeared on the hearth,
Arika rolled the map-scrolls and tied them in her girdle.
Fenn
led the way out. The narrow valley was deserted but in the distance they saw
furtive figures run-ing from house to house with the warning. The parching
wind enveloped them in clouds of dust and the
Sun
burned red and evil in an ochre sky.
"Which gate?" snapped Fenn.
"This way," said Malech. "The Desert Gate."
The
driven dust made everything obscure as they went swiftly, their heads down.
Temple and cliffs were veiled by the blowing haze. Fenn could see no soldiers
yet.
They
skirted the edge of a market square, deserted except for a few folk sleeping
huddled in the stalls. Beyond the market were the great stock pens and the
quartering places of the caravans lying inside the Desert Gate.
Next
to the wall of the caravan building was the fenced horse-paddock. There were at
least fifty horses in it, shaggy creatures patiently standing with their heads
away from the wind-driven dust. There were also a half dozen saddled horses,
powerful sleek animals, tethered separately.
"There are our mounts,
waiting for us," Fenn said.
"They're
Numi horses!" Malech warned. "They don't like human riders and you'll
have trouble. . . ."
"Don't
worry—I'll manage," Fenn snapped. "But first I want a look at the
gate."
From
around the corner of the paddock fence he peered. He saw the road, hollowed
deep by the wind, and the posts that marked the gateway and beyond them the way
that led over the hills to the desert and freedom.
A
dozen Numi soldiers guarded the gate and their big, sleek steeds were picketed
within the gateway.
"We
can't ride through them!" Malech said. "It's hope-lessl"
Fenn's
eyes had begun to gleam with an unholy light. He said to Arika, "Give me
your dagger—and then you two mount and hold a horse ready for me."
Arika stared, then
gave him the weapon. She and
Malech
slipped back to the corner of the paddock where the saddled Numi horses were
tethered.
Fenn
sprang to the bars of the paddock gate. He took them down silently. Then he
went through the shaggy horses to the rear of the paddock.
He suddenly drew the dagger point in a long
shallow scratch down the quarter of the nearest horse. The animal recoiled
with a whinnying scream of pain and terror.
Fenn
scratched another horse. It too screamed. The shaggy herd began to mill
frightenedly, scared by the outcries and the smell of blood.
Fenn
suddenly cried out, a long shrill howl with an eerie wolf note in it, and
leaped forward at the herd with his reddened dagger upraised. Instantiy, the
whole herd bolted out of the paddock.
There
was only one way for them to go. They poured out with a great thundering of
hoofs and an explosion of dust—fifty horses, stampeding in panic toward the
Desert Gate.
The
Numi had no chance against that onslaught. It came too suddenly even to give
them time to run. The wild-eyed herd crashed over them, broke their
picket-line, carried their own steeds out with them.
And
close on the heels of that stampede, so close that they were almost a part of
it, came Fenn and Malech and Arika.
Fenn
had been fighting the Numi horse since the instant he had leapt on its back
and only the fact that it too was panicky kept it from setting itself to throw
him.
"Swords!" he yelled to Malech. "Get swords!"
Ahead
of them in the gate sprawled the broken furry bodies of the Numi soldiers
caught by the stampede. They would need the weapons that lay there but Fenn
dared not check his own steed now.
Malech heard him and with catlike deftness
pulled 111 up
his steed long enough to reach down for two of the Numi blades.
"Soldiers come!" warned Arika's
cry.
A half-dozen Numi were running out from the
horse-paddock, after them. Fenn laughed, as he caught the sword Malech tossed
him and gave his bolting steed its head.
"We have their horses—let them catch
us!"
They
went full gallop down the road. The forefront of the stampede had gone on to
wear itself out among the villages.
The road climbed to a low pass through the
hills. Beyond the pass lay desolation—of copper Sun and coppery sky and under
them the rusty barren earth.
"It
is far to the Great Dark—and RhamSin will follow!" Arika warned. "He
will follow to the world's end for the Citadel!"
Chapter VI
The Quest of Yesterday
THEY
had left the caravan track and struck out across the open desert. They had no
guide but the gossip of the drovers that Malech had heard in the market place.
"Where
or how far the place of the outlaw tribesmen may be I don't know," he told
Fenn. "But it lies in this direction, away from the Sun." He pointed
to his shadow stretching out before him.
Fenn
asked, "How do you know these men will help us?"
"They
have all suffered from the Numi. Every living human has in one way or another. And to find the Citadel-they'U help!"
Fenn looked at the barren earth and said,
"We had better find them soon."
They
went on, keeping their shadows always before them, pushing the horses as hard
as they dared.
Fenn
rode silently, withdrawn in his own thoughts. He had had it out with the Numi
horse and won his battle and after that brief violence his mind had turned
again to himself. He thought of the things that had been said between himself
and Arika and Malech and the decision that he had made so swiftly and with such
conviction.
His mood was not one of doubt or hesitation.
It was only a hardening and clarifying of what was in his mind. In the city he
had felt confused and driven, tortured by the blankness of his memory, raging
against a world he could not understand. Here, where he was free of walls and
houses, he could think again.
He
still did not know who he was or where he came from or how. He had a feeling
that when he reached New York he would remember. But even if he did not he
remembered other things—the world that was before the dark star and the Numi,
the pride and the courage of the men who had built the Citadel so that knowledge
might not perish from the Earth.
It
holds all the past of man, they said,
and it will hold the future. The Citadel will stand forever, man's challenge to
the coming night.
Men
had built it and it should be given back to man. A deep anger rose in Fenn
against RhamSin, who had tried to steal knowledge that did not belong to him
—human knowledge to use against humankind! Fenn's hatred of the Numi was a
towering thing and it stood large over everything else—larger even than his
passionate desire to know himself.
He
looked. He looked ahead across the desert, and he thought, Once this earth was green and men lived upon it
and were free. It shall be so again!
He smiled at Arika and urged his horse a
little faster, impatient of every step that lay between him and his goal.
Here there was no temple gong to tell them
day and night. The angry Sun burned forever in the sky. The fierce wind lashed
them and the dust-clouds rolled in red and ochre across the land and there was
no time. They hungered and they thirsted. and now and
again they stopped to rest the horses and to sleep.
They had slept twice when Fenn looked back
and saw atop a distant rise a plume of dust that was not made by any wind.
He said,
"RhamSin."
Malech nodded. "They will have spare
horses, food and water. They will push hard and the Numi are stronger than
men."
Fenn
smiled, an ugly smile. He began to lead by devious
ways, covering and confusing the track, going on bare rock or on loose earth
where the wind would blow away the prints of the horses' hoofs. And for a time
they lost the distant plume of dust.
But
Malech said, "They know our direction. They will follow without a track.
And remember, RhamSin is a Numi and a priest. He may be able to touch our minds
with his enough to guide him."
Fenn's
mouth hardened. He said nothing and they went on across the bitter land. Hunger
became a gnawing pain and then a weakness and an agony but it was forgotten in
the pangs of thirst. The splendid horses began to falter. Arika rode bowed and
silent and the men were not much better.
At
rare intervals Fenn would stop and dig, wherever there was a shadow of green
life in some sunken spot or the hollow of a dead watercourse. Sometimes a few
drops of muddy water welled up to keep them alive.
They
stopped for the third time to rest. Fenn did not sleep. He sat looking over the
desert with red-rimmed
eyes,
thinking of the Citadel and feeling an iron determination not to die.
The
plume of dust showed itself again on the horizon. He cursed it and rose to wake
the others.
They
started on again. The wind blew, never ceasing, and all at once Fenn's horse lifted
his head and snorted, pulling against the rein. The others snuffed the wind and
they too began to go aside from the straight line they followed. A kind of
madness seemed to have come over them. Their dragging pace quickened to a
shambling gallop.
A RAW
scarp of rock lifted from the desert. The ground sloped downward to form a
ragged basin at its foot. Fenn saw that a sullen river ran from a cleft in the
scarp and spread into a great marsh before the thirsty desert drank it up. He
set his heart on that vivid patch of green that seemed so far away and would
not come closer.
Then
he saw the men riding toward them—leathery sun-bitten men, well mounted and
riding fast, carrying long spears that glinted red in the angry daylight.
There
were half a dozen of them. They swept up and ringed the three fugitives round
and made them stand, holding the plunging horses. They looked at Fenn and Arika
and Malech and when they saw Malech their hps drew back as though they were
wolves about to tear their prey.
One said, harshly, "Numi!"
"Half-blood—slave." Malech's voice was a croaking whisper. He
turned to let them see the old scars of the lash across his back and Fenn tried
to crowd between him and the hungry spears.
"They
saved my life," he said. He too was almost mute with thirst. "They
saved me from the temple." Then, angrily, "Let us drink!"
They studied Fenn a long time without
answering. 115
Their
hesitation alarmed him and he knew that Malech was the cause of it—Malech, who
looked so much like the hated creature that had fathered him. The green marsh
tortured Fenn with the promise of water. He looked at Arika's drawn face and
the suffering horses and he became so furious that he lost all caution.
He
reached out to the man who was holding his horse and caught him by his long
hair and pulled him out of the saddle, shouting as loud as he could out of his
swollen throat, "If we die, no one will ever find the Citadel! I know
where it is. Do you hear that? I know!"
Arika whispered, "The Numi priests are
hunting us to get the secret. We ask protection." She managed the ghost of
a laugh. "What are you afraid of? We are only three."
The
cold suspicion did not leave the face of the outlaws but Fenn saw that they
were uncertain now. The leader said, "No one knows that secret."
Fenn
met his hard gaze fairly. "All right. Kill us.
Let the Numi rule forever over slaves and outiaws. You haven't the courage to
be free."
The
leader looked again at Malech, saying, "You travel in bad company for an
honest human. But I'll let Lan-nar decide this one. Give me your swords."
When he had them he reined his horse around. "Come on."
They
started on again toward the marsh. It spread for several miles along the base
of the scarp, wide, lush, dotted with islands of higher ground on which there
were trees and thick scrub. It was beautiful, green, soft and moist under the
red haze of the desert.
They
were allowed to stop beside a shallow pool, to drink and wallow in brackish
water that tasted to Fenn like the wine of heaven. Then they were made to mount
again.
"Keep
your horses exactly in line," said the outlaw. "One slip and you'll
never be found again."
He began to thread an invisible path through
mud arid quaking bog and green water. Here and there submerged bridges had
been laid, narrow things of slippery planks that could be taken up, Fenn
guessed, to make the marsh impassable.
At
first he saw no sign of any dwelling places. Then as they got deeper and deeper
into the marsh he saw there were huts of mud and watde under the trees of the
larger hammocks. Men and women watched the strangers pass and naked children
splashed out through the mud to shout at them.
They
came onto dry ground again, on a long narrow island close under the scarp. A
man stood waiting for them. There were others behind him but Fenn saw only the
one, a lean dark laughing man who looked all fire and acid and steel,
controlled and shaped by a keen intelligence.
Fenn knew that this must be Lannar. He began
to hope again. The man who had brought them in from the desert dismounted and
began to speak. While he talked Lannar's gaze moved slowly over the three.
The
man finished, pointing to Fenn, "He says
he knows the secret of the Citadel."
Imperceptibly the muscles of Lannar's face
tightened until the fines of it were hard as iron. He looked up at Fenn, a
gaunt parched man sitting on a jaded horse and waiting now with a strange sort
of patience.
"Is that true?"
asked Lannar.
"It is true."
A muscle began to twitch in Lannar's cheek.
"Dismount. I want to talk to you." His gesture included all three.
He turned away toward a large hut, first giving a rapid order or two that Fenn
could not hear.
FENN
and the others got stiffly down and followed him. The men who had been with
Lannar stared at them
117
with a
mixture of hostility and wolfish eagerness as they went with the three into
Lannar's house.
The
shadowy interior was furnished with a haphazard richness. Bright silks, rugs
and furs and bits of ornate furniture and dishes of crystal and gold—the loot
of the caravans that went between the Numi cities, consorting oddly with the
mud walls and floor of beaten earth.
Women
came from somewhere in the back, bringing bread and dried meat, water and wine.
Fenn and the others ate and drank voraciously. The portions seemed very small.
"You can have more later,"
Lannar said. 'Too much now will make you sick." He leaned forward, his
wiry body poised and unrelaxed in a gilded chair. "Now!
What is this about the Citadel?"
Fenn
told him, speaking without haste. Lannar listened. His eyes glowed with a
still hot light. The men in the shadows listened too. Fenn could hear their
breathing, tense and short. From time to time Arika spoke and
Malech. At last the scroll was spread out at Lannar's feet, showing the
island that was lost in the Great Dark.
"There is the
Citadel," Fenn said and was silent.
Lannar
voiced a harsh sigh. He rose and began to move back and forth, a catlike man
suddenly drunk with hope but suspicious none the less, too old and hard to take
anything for granted.
Abruptly
he took Fenn's head by the hair and bent it back, studying his face with those
hot shrewd eyes that saw everything.
"You
tell the truth," said Lannar. "But perhaps it is a truth these Numi
spawn have put into your head, so that you believe it."
"It is the
truth," said Fenn steadily.
"Memories—dreams!" said Lannar, and let him go. "You cannot
prove these things. There is no bone and flesh in them for a man to get his
hands on."
Arika said, "I can open his mind again.
Then you can hear him speaking of the past he knows."
He
glanced at her half contemptuously. "I know the tricks of the Numi, the
things they can do with a man's mind. I would hear words but they would not
prove themselves."
Malech
asked quietly, "What have we to gain by such a deception?"
"I don't know. I cannot see a gain now
but there may be one that is hidden from me." He faced the half-blood,
saying with a vicious softness, "I learned so long ago, with so much blood
and pain, never to trust a Numi!"
"Numi,"
whispered Malech. "Numi!" He
got up. He was a big man. He towered over Lannar. His eyes blazed with such a
passion of fury that it seemed he would take the smaller man between his hands
and tear him to bits. He laughed.
"Numi. That's funny, Lannar. You don't know the humor of it. All my life I
have lived with that joke. The Numi spit upon me because I'm human and the
humans want to kill me because I'm Numi."
He
glanced at Arika with a flash of sheer hatred that startled Fenn. "My
sister is more fortunate. She' looks human."
He turned again to Lannar, who had not moved or even raised his hands. Malech
seemed to sense contempt in that very lack of fear. He laughed again, a short
harsh ugly sound.
"If I stood over you, full-furred and bearded and wearing the
trappings of a Numi, it would be different, Lannar. Oh, yes! But I am naked and shorn and
therefore nothing." He sat down again abruptly, hunched sullenly over his
knees. "Try your courage on RhamSin, Lannar. See if you can face him down!"
* Lannar said, "RhamSin?" From the
tone of his voice it was obvious that he held that name in great respect. Fenn
rose.
"Yes,"
he said. "RhamSin. I have told you all the story,
119 and it's a true one. RhamSin will prove it to you. He has followed me from
the city to get the secret back."
He
paused to let that sink in. And Lannar said to himself, "He would not do
that for any ordinary captive nor for any
slave."
He began to pace again, more slowly. Fenn
moved to stand before him. "Give us the things we need, Lannar, and we'll
go on alone."
"No," said Lannar. He was silent
for a time, looking up into Fenn's gaunt face, his gaze narrowed and withdrawn.
Then he murmured, "He has the stamp of the deserts on him, the same as
I." He laughed. "No, Fenn —we'll go together. After all I gamble my
life against every caravan I plunder—and even the chance of finding the
Citadel is worth the risk. There are others here who will think so too."
Arika
leaped up. She looked at Lannar but it seemed she could not speak. Her eyes
were" very bright and Fenn saw that there were tears in them. She turned
suddenly and put her arms around him.
"The gods are with
you, Fenn," she whispered.
He
found that he had caught her to him almost without knowing it. Over her
shoulder he said fiercely to Lannar, "We will find it!"
From
outside came the heavy splashing of a horse through mud and water and a man's
voice crying, "Lannar! Lannarl The
Numi come!"
Chapter
VII
The
Great Dark
THE
harsh braying of horns spread the alarm across the swamp. Two or three more
riders came in from the desert, the last of the patrols. The bridges were taken
120 up. From among the trees of the island Fenn
watched the company of the Numi come down to the edge of the green water and
stop. Lannar laughed with savage humor.
"They have done this for generations,
trying to wipe us out. But they can't pass the swamp." He pointed among
the hammocks. "See how our bowmen are placed? Even if, by treachery or
miracle, the Numi were able to come in our arrows would kill them on the path.
So they come and threaten us and offer bribes and go away again when their food
runs out."
His brows drew down. "All
in the black and silver of the temple, eh? It seems you were not lying,
Fennl"
He turned aside, talking with rapid urgency
to his chieftains. Fenn remained, watching the Numi. They were too far away to
distinguish details. But there was one commanding figure robed in black and
riding a black horse, and Fenn shivered.
Arika was close beside him.
Her face was worried.
A
captain of the Numi began to speak, using a trumpet of bark that magnified his voice. In the name of Rham-Sin, he
offered pardon, power, and reward for the return of a runaway slave who had
murdered a priest.
There was no answer from the marsh. He
repeated the offer three times and still there was no answer.
The
distant figure that was RhamSin reached out and took the speaking tube.
The
voice of RhamSin spoke, carrying clear across the silent marsh.
"Fenwayl
There is no escape from me. I brought forth your mind and it belongs to me.
When the time comes I will call—and you will obey!"
That
voice seared into Fenn's brain like fire. He had heard it before, commanding,
torturing. He had heard it and obeyed.
RhamSin
wheeled his horse and galloped away and his men turned to follow.
Fear rose up and caught Fenn by the throat.
He tried to shout defiance after the Numi priest but the words would not come.
The hot Sun burned him but he was cold and his face was damp with a clammy
sweat.
"He
lies, Fenn. He lies I" cried Arika but Fenn shook his head.
He muttered, "I am not sure that RhamSin
lies."
He
turned to Lannar and his eyes had a strange look. "How long will it take
to be ready?"
"My men are already gathering horses and
supplies." Lannar gave him a side-long glance that seemed to penetrate
him like a sword-thrust but he did not mention RhamSin's words. He nodded
toward the retreating Numi.
"They have drawn off so that we may feel
free to go where we will. But they will watch and follow. However, we have a
back door—a way up the scarp, hacked out long ago in
case of need. The Numi will have to go many miles around to get up onto the
plateau, so we'll have that much start of them."
He
smiled, a nervous, vulpine baring of the teeth and
Fenn knew that Lannar, too, was eager to be moving.
"I
can't spare many men," he said. "But a light force moves faster and
is easier to feed. But in the end we'll need help. The Numi are twice our
number and better armed. So I have ordered messengers to go among the other
outlaw tribes, asking them to follow."
He
paused, and added, "This is all madness, Fenn. We can't live long in the
Great Dark without warmth or sight of the Sun. But the Numi will be on their own ground. Even though RhamSin's generation may never
have seen the homeland, it is the place that bred them as they are."
He
shrugged. "Well, we shall see what madmen can dol And
now you had better sleep while you can."
In Lannar's house Fenn slept—a nervous
slumber plagued with ugly dreams. He was glad when the time came to mount and
go. Malech was of the party. No one had suggested otherwise. But he rode a
litde apart with a proud sullen look, speaking to no one, and Fenn saw that
Lannar kept a close eye upon him.
They
scrambled up the steep trail to the plateau, twenty men armed with sword and
bow and axe, and from every island in the swamp the eyes of men and women
watched in fear and hope and wonder.
At
the crest of the scarp,. Fenn looked back across the
vast emptiness of the desert, a wind-tom desolation
under a copper sky. He had survived it and now it seemed familiar to him. He
felt almost a sadness at leaving it to go into the
trackless dark that was forbidden to humankind.
He
saw the dusty plume that marked the march of the Numi following the scarp, knew
that they had already begun the chase.
Ahead,
the plateau stretched to the short horizon. The rusty clouds seemed lower here,
scudding close over the earth. Stiff grasses bent before the wind. They had
climbed a long way up from the desert and it seemed to Fenn that the wind had
an edge to it, a memory of cold.
They formed their ranks for the long trail,
twenty men and forty horses, heading outward toward the Shadow and the Great
Dark.
It
was a strange and timeless journey. For some distance the way was known to
Lannar. There was game on the plateau and good forage at certain times of the
year and the men of the marshes made use of both. But they were soon beyond
those limits, plodding across an endless dreary upland of tumbled hills. The
shadows grew longer and the Sun sank lower and lower
at their backs and the teeth of the whistling wind grew sharper.
The country was too rough to let them see far
along their backtrail.
But they would spot from time to time the distant smoke of cooking fires and
Fenn thought that they drew always closer.
The desert horses were small but tough and
enduring and more used to short rations and hard work than the Numi beasts.
Fenn loved the rough ill-tempered little brutes and that gave them this one
advantage over the Numi.
"Wait though," said Lannar.
"Wait until we are all on foot."
The wind boomed ever stronger and colder and
there were bursting storms of rain and then, at one sleep period, Fenn roused
to find the whole earth mantled with a chill whiteness. From that time on the
men grew more morose and silent and he knew that they were afraid.
He was beginning to be
afraid himself.
AFJKA clung close to him. She seemed very
strong for her slight body, riding as long as the men and never complaining. When they slept, huddled together around the fires, it seemed
natural that she should be near Fenn. They did not talk much—no one did.
They rode and ate their meagre rations and slept and were too weary for
anything else.
Malech
kept always apart. He seemed to have taken a dislike even to his sister, who
was tolerated if not welcomed by the humans. His beard had grown and his hair
was longer. He was wrapped in fur and leather like the others and with his body
covered it was impossible to tell him now from a true Numi. He did not seem to
need the warmth of the fire and he slept alone with an air of contemptuous
strength.
And
as Malech grew more like a Numi the tribesmen's distrust and hatred of him
deepened. But Mal-ech's strength and unhuman endurance helped enormously in
the tight places of the trail. That held their aversion to him in check.
One of the horses died. They flayed him and
dried the meat.
"They will all die," said Lannar
grimly. "They will give us hides and food for the rest of our
journey." He was a desert man and did not like to watch the death of
horses.
The Sun became a red ember on the horizon behind them. They went down into a valley filled
with snow and darkness and when they reached the other side the Sun was gone
beyond the higher hills. Arika whispered. "This is what men call the
Shadow."
There
was still light in the sky. The land began to slope gradually downward,
flattening out. Here there were no trees, nor even the stunted scrub that had
grown to the edge of the Shadow. The wind-swept rocks were covered with
wrinkled lichens and the frozen earth was always white.
One
by one the horses died. The frozen meat was hidden by the way so that there
should be food for the return march—if there was to be one. The men suffered
from the cold. They were used to the dry heat of the deserts. Three of them
sickened and died and one was killed by a fall.
The
Shadow deepened imperceptibly into night. The rolling rusty clouds of the
dayside had become the greyer clouds of storm and fog. The men toiled through
dimming mist and falling snow that turned at last to utter darkness.
Lannar
turned a lined and haggard face to Fenn.
"Madmen!" he muttered. And that was all.
They
passed through the belt of storm. There came a time when the lower air was
clear and a shifting wind began to tear away the clouds from the sky.
The
pace of the men slowed, then halted altogether. They
watched, caught in a stasis of awe and fear too deep for utterance. Fenn saw
that there was a pallid eerie radiance somewhere behind the driving clouds.
Arika's hand crept into his and clung there.
But Malech stood apart, his head lifted, his shining eyes fixed upon the sky.
A rift, a great ragged valley sown with
stars. It
widened, and the clouds were swept away, and the sky crashed down upon the
waiting men, children of eternal day who had never seen the night.
They
stared into the black depths of space, burning with a million points of icy
fire. And the demoniac face of the Moon stared back at them, pocked with great
shadows, immense and leering, with a look of death upon it.
Someone voiced a thin, wavering scream. A man
turned and began to run along the backtrail, floundering, falling, clawing his way back toward the light he had left forever.
Panic
took hold of the men. Some of them fell down and covered their heads. Some
stood still, their hands plucking at sword and axe, all sense gone out of them.
And Malech laughed. He leaped up on a hummock of ice, standing tall above them
in the cold night so that his head seemed crowned with blazing stars,
"What are you afraid of? You foolsl It's the moon and stars. Your fathers
knew them and they were not afraidl"
The
scorn and the strength that were in him roused the anger of the men, giving
their fear an outlet. They rushed toward him and Malech would have died there
in the midst of his laughter if Fenn and Lannar together had not turned them
back.
"It's
true!" Fenn cried. "I have seen them. I have seen the night as it was
before the Destruction. There is nothing to fear."
But he was as terrified as
they.
Fenn
and Lannar and the bearded Malech who had shed every trace of humanity, beat
the men into line again and got them moving, fifteen of the twenty who had
started, alone in the Great Dark. Tiny motes of
life,
creeping painfully across the dead white desolation under the savage stars. The
cold Moon watched them and something of its light of madness came into their
eyes and did not go away.
Fifteen—twelve of these lived to see the
riven ice of the ocean, a glittering chaos flung out across the world. Malech
looked toward the east, where the Moon was rising.
Fenn heard him say, "From beyond the
ocean, from the heartland of the Great Dark—that is where we came from, the New
Men who conquered the earth!"
Following
the tattered map they turned northward along the coast. They were scarecrows
now, half starved, half frozen, forgetting diat they had ever lived another
life under a warm Sun—almost forgetting why they had left that life behind
them.
Nine
of them lived to see an island between two frozen rivers near the frozen sea
and on that island the skeletal towers of a city buried in the ice.
Nine of them lived to see
New York.
Chapter
VIII The Citadel
FENN
stood alone with Arika on the high cliff above the river. The others waited at
a distance and their waiting was a cruel thing. Their faces made him feel
afraid.
Then
he forgot them. He looked out across the white river, across white snow and
reaches of gleaming ice to the island city lying silent under the stars and the
black sky.
There
was no light in that city now but the cold shining of the Moon. No voice spoke
there but the voice
127 of the wind. Yet even in death the grandeur was not gone
from it. The shattered towers stood up proudly from the ice that shrouded them,
the massive bulk and size were not lessened. New York was not a city. It was a
dream of titans and the destruction of half a world had not effaced it.
A feeling of pride and sorrow came over Fenn,
mixed with a despair so deep that he could not bear
it. Memories crowded in on him, fleeting pictures of another time, half seen
but poignant with regret and longing.
He
whispered, "Once it lived!" And the tears ran down his cheeks and
froze in glittering drops.
Arika
said, "Remember, Fenn. Remember those days when the city lived. Remember
this place and the building of the Citadel."
Her
face came before him, pale in its dark frame of fur. Her eyes were huge, filled
with the frosty moonlight, compelling, inescapable.
"Here you can remember, Fenn-way. Here
is your past. Look at the city. Remember!"
Her
eyes probed deep into his brain and her voice spoke, ringing down dark hidden
corridors. Fenn looked past her at the city. His face changed slowly. He was no
longer Fenn. He was another man, seeing another world.
He
had come to see the Citadel. Everyone came. It was the ninth wonder, the
greatest work of mankind. It drew them with an ugly fascination. It was the symbol
of death but a death that would not come in their time and so they could find
in it excitement and a gratifying pride.
There
were lights on the Palisades. There were crowds, children shouting in the
summer night, vendors, music. Across the Hudson loomed the immense and blazing
bulk of New York, thrusting giant shoulders against the sky.
He began to walk. And as he walked he thought
he saw also a phantom landscape, a place of ice and desolation, with the wreck
of a city lifting broken girders through the snow.
He
had come to see the Citadel. Floodlights, many people, many voices, guards in
uniform, a man talking through a loudspeaker.
"Sunk a half mile deep in solid rock—area larger than the Empire State Building—lined and reinforced with steel—earthquake-proof, floodproof—heat and air supplied by sealed atomic generators with an efficiency period of five thousand years . . ."
There wasn't much to see on the surface. Only
the great uplifted valve of the door, a core of rustproof alloy many feet thick
that fitted into a seat of similar metal sunk into the rock.
The
voice of the loudspeaker talked on, explaining that valve, the compressed-air
mechanism that would outwear time, the system of levers that would open the
door again after it was sealed—after the Destruction.
A system that needed no tool but the human
hand and the intelligence to use it. An intelligence
capable of operating that door would be on a level high enough to profit by the
things that were behind it.
The crowd moved on toward the entrance to go
down into the Citadel. He moved with them. The doorway was before him. But he
could not reach it. There was a barrier between him and die door, something
cold and hard and shining.
He thought
he must have fainted then. It was all very strange. He heard the sound of axes
and sometimes there were glimpses of things flowing like smoke across his
vision. He was frightened. He thought he must be very ill.
Voices—shouting, laughing, sobbing, praying. The voices of crazy men.
The axes and the chopping sounds had stopped.
Another voice, saying clearly,
"Fenn-way, open the door!"
He could see it, then. It was closed. It had
never been closed before. The round metal gleamed at the bottom of a ragged
pit, hacked out of ice.
Ice? But it was summer!
He slid down into the pit. The levers were
countersunk, sealed against freezing. But they were frozen. He put all his
strength into it and one by one they moved, stiff, protesting. He heard the
shrill hissing of compressed air . . .
The great valve swung slowly upward.
He
saw light in the opening below it. Warm air touched his face. And then the
world blanked out.
When
his mind cleared again he found himself lying on a metal floor. Someone had
taken off his furs. It was warm, blessedly warm—almost hot, after the gelid
cold. Above him he could see a web of girders mighty enough to hold a mountain.
There was light.
Arika
bent over him. Her eyes shone with a feral joy. "You've done it,
Fenn," she whispered. "We're in the Citadel!"
His
heart began to pound. He sat up, remembering that he had dreamed. Lannar was
standing near him. He had been weeping, the hard man of the desert.
"I
would have killed you," he said. "If you had failed I would have
broken you in my hands."
HE
reached out to Fenn and Fenn nodded. "I knew that." He took Lannar's
hand and rose and the men crowded around him. They blazed now. They knew what
they had done and it was a great thing. They were proud. But they looked at
Fenn with an awe that was close to veneration.
Lannar
said, "I have set guards at the door. The stair tiiat leads down is
narrow, and if the Numi come, they must do it one at a time." He frowned
uneasily. "Is there no other entrance?" "None."
"I don't like a place with only one
door," said Lannar.
Fenn
laughed. "We have the Citadel. Let us not worry about doors!" He
caught Arika to him. He was wild with elation. He looked at the long still
corridors that rayed away from the central place where they stood. He thought
of the many levels below this one, and of all the knowledge and the strength
that waited there, to build the world again. Tears stung his
own eyes, and there was no room in him now for fear.
He
started to walk, and the others came with him. Like men in a dream they went
through the silent halls of the Citadel that had waited twelve hundred years
for their coming.
Twelve
hundred years ago they had sealed this place, those men of the past who had
known they were doomed. This was their gift—their last great offering to the
future.
Fenn's mind wavered uncertainly between that
time and this. Sometimes he was Fenn-way, going with a guided group through the
myriad rooms. Sometimes he was Fenn, holding a half-Numi girl in the hollow of
his arm, walking with the naked riders of the desert. Sometimes he understood
fully all that he saw and again only native intelligence enabled him to guess
at the nature and uses of the complex things about him.
But
whether he was Fenn or Fenn-way the sense of awe did not leave him. It grew and
deepened with every step he took. And with the awe came pride—not for himself but for the blood that was in him, and Lannar and
every son of man. He felt the heavy obligation they owed to those long-dead
builders of the Citadel. He felt the challenge that was inherent in their gift.
Knowledge is a two-edge stoord, they seemed to say.
We
gave ourselves deep wounds. How will you use knowledge, you men of the future? To build
or to destroy?
They had done their work well, the builders
of the Citadel. There were books, countless microfilm volumes stored in
countless rooms. There were objects, from the first crude axe of stone to a
tiny complex model of a cyclotron. There were a million working models of every
conceivable type of machine. There were films.
Whole
levels had been devoted to chemistry and physics, to engineering and
agriculture, to medicine, to every science man had learned to help him live. The
art and the music and the thought of a world were stored there too and the
records of man's history and his hopes and dreams and follies. Only one thing
had been left out.
There were no weapons.
Thinking
of the Numi they searched for weapons, for strong implements of war to use
against RhamSin and the conquerors they would have to fight after him. And
there was nothing.
Frowning,
groping for memory, Fenn said slowly, "I think—they said that in all the
Citadel there would be no instrument of death."
Lannar's
hand tightened on his bow. He laughed, a bitter sound.
"That was noble. But they reckoned without the Numi!"
A
shadow of dread began to grow in all their minds. Fenn saw how carefully the
incredible multitudes of books and models and diagrams had been arranged so
that one could grasp the simple things first and use them as steps to climb on.
Some knowledge still lived in the world. If nothing had survived but man's own
vigor and intelligence the treasures of the Citadel could still have been used,
so magnificently had every step been planned.
They
did not see more than a hundredth part of that colossal monument to the faith
and courage of man.
Their
own faith and courage had brought them half across a world to find it. They
were tired and they had an enemy at their backs. Dazed, stricken with awe and
wonder, they returned to the central hall.
The guards at the stairway
had seen nothing.
'They
will come," said Malech. He walked over to a globe of the world as tall as
two men that occupied the center of the hall. Idly he set it spinning, watching
the play of light and shadow on the countries and the seas. He had shed his
wrappings and Fenn saw that the light down on his body had grown thicker. It was
as though the intense cold had brought out the last of the latent Numi
characteristics in Malech.
Fenn
went to him. He asked a question he had asked before. "Malech—what are the
Numi?"
Malech's
large hand stopped the globe from spinning. His fingers rested on a land that
had once been called Europe.
"Here," he said. "When the
Earth's spinning slowed, all this side of it turned its face forever away from
the Sun and was trapped in the Great Dark. The air here did not freeze, for
there was still warmth from Earth's heart. But all else here froze and died.
"All except a very few men and women—a few strong enough to
survive.
These few survivors gathered together and found ways to live. They adapted themselves
to the dark and cold, even growing furred against it and their minds sharpened
by necessity."
Malech
smiled and spun the globe again. "They were the New Men—the Numi. But they
were men still and they remembered the Sun! And they came at last to take their
place under ft!"
Lannar
had come soft-footed up behind them. "So they
did," he said. "And where is your place,
Malech? With the Numi or with us?"
Malech
turned slowly. Fenn thought of another time they two had faced each other and
now Malech towered
over the smaller man, arrogant—and strong. The journey had not told on him too
much.
"I made my decision long ago," he
said to Lannar.
"Tell me,
Malech."
But the tall man laughed and did not answer.
He stood there looking down at Lannar and the globe spun round and round behind
him. The hand of the desert man dropped to his sword.
Fenn
had gripped his own blade. And then there came the swift sharp twang of a
bowstring, and a cry and a man pitched head first down the stairs.
He
was a Numi, wearing the black and silver of RhamSin.
Chapter
IX
The Courage of Fenn
ANOTHER soldier of the temple died on the
stairway, and a third retreated with an arrow through his thigh. Then there was
silence. Fenn sprang to the foot of the narrow well.
"Come
down!" he shouted. He cursed the Numi and bade them come and die. Above in
the outer darkness, the voice of RhamSin spoke.
"When
it is time we'll come!" He laughed. "What will you do with the
Citadel now that you have it?"
"Keep
it for mankind!" cried Fenn defiantly, and again RhamSin laughed.
"Mankind," he
said, "is a long way off."
He
seemed to withdraw and Fenn heard the Numi making camp in a circle around the
doorway.
Lannar
plucked with hard fingers at his bowstring, making it thrum
like the string of a harp. He looked angrily around the great hall, including
by inference the whole Citadel.
Tn all this place, not a weapon. NothingI"
He had counted on the strength of the Citadel. Fenn realized that they all had.
Lannar continued bleakly, "They can't
get in, we can't get out. They have food and snow to make water. We have a
little food. They're cold and we're warm and the toughest hide will hold out
the longest. I only hope the tribesmen don't linger on the way."
"If,"
said Fenn, "they had faith enough to come at all."
He turned from the mocking stair, desperately
searching his mind and the fragments of memory
for something, anything, that could be used to help them. And he saw something
huddled on the floor near the great globe of the world.
It was Arika.
She
stirred in his arms as he lifted her and whispered, "Malech. I tried to
stop him." There was a reddening welt on her temple where an iron fist had
struck her.
Savagely
angry Fenn looked around at the knot of men by the stair, at the huge empty
hall.
Malech had disappeared.
A
twang and hiss from somewhere up above and the man next to Lannar fell with an
arrow through his body. Fenn thought that Lannar would have died then except
that he was sheltered by the stair.
Malech's
voice cried, "Clear the stair, you human dogsl Stand awayl"
The
men scattered then, wildly, taking cover where they could behind the pillars
that upheld the girders of the roof, and as they went a second shaft took one
tribesman through the leg. A cat-squall of sheer animal rage came from Lannar
and Fenn dragged the still-dazed Arika close under the bulge of the globe.
He
unslung his bow and set an arrow to the string and then he peered into the cold
upper light of the hall, following the sound of Malech's voice.
Some distance from the narrow well of the
stair, a steel ladder climbed the wall to a small blind gallery set high among
the sockets of the girders. Fenn guessed that behind that gallery was the
chamber of the valve mechanism. The gallery itself was little more than a
platform but it was large enough for Malech.
He
glimpsed the dark bulk of Malech's body, half hidden in the shadows of the niche.
He raised his bow, then let it drop. He could not hope
to hit him at that angle.
He called to Lannar, and Lannar and his men
answered with a flight of arrows that rattled against the corners and the
railing of the gallery.
Malech shouted, "Shoot
awayl"
He
sounded as though he were enjoying himself. He had everything on his side, the
light, the angle, the elevation. He covered the whole area around the
stairway. He could keep it clear so that the next time the Numi could come down
without too much interference.
He said as much, and Lannar
cursed him for a traitor.
Malech
answered, "I was born to be one. The only choice I had was to betray—my
mother or my father." He laughed. "Arika decided for the mother's
blood and cast her lot with you humans. She told me on the trail and I knew it
was because she loves Fenn.
"So,
since she had ruined our plans, I too made my choice on the trail. I knew which
blood was strongest in me. I left a message, scrawled in charcoal on a
strip of hide. RhamSin was sure to find it. Let the humans do the work, I told
him. What matter? They are weak, and they will be weaker. I promised him the
Citadel."
"What
was your price?" asked Lannar bitterly. "What was the price of the
human world?"
"To
let it be forgotten that my blood is tainted! To be accepted for what I am—a
Numil"
Again
his humming bow sent a shaft through the breast of a man who exposed himself to
shoot.
FENN reached up and set the world-globe to
whirling.
Arika
caught his arm but he flung her hand aside. He went low and fast, belly down,
keeping the globe between him and the gallery.
Malech
called his name. "Will you die now, Fenn-way? Fenn-ivay! All that talk about time and the past and how
the Citadel belonged to men. Listen to me, man without a memoryl Do you know who
found the Citadel? Not men, who had lost it! No. The Numi found it. Numi
wisdom, Numi science! You were only the little tool in the hands of
RhamSin."
He
paused. Fenn had gained the far wall. He crouched behind a pillar, measuring
the distance to the next. Malech said, "Don't bother, Fenn. Come here,
where you want to be. I won't harm you."
Fenn did not move. Lannar
shouted, "Don'tF
"Why
not?" asked Malech. "It's his only chance. I will have killed him by the third pillar, if
he works his way around."
Under the spinning globe Arika crouched and
looked at Fenn with eyes that hurt him, full of fear and sorrow and none of it
for herself.
Fenn
stepped out from behind the pillar. He began to walk toward the gallery, across
the wide still hall. He held his bow slack, the arrow nocked point down. Malech
kept back in the angle and the shadows. He did not show himself.
He
talked. "You told me once that you wanted to remember. Very well, you
shall. Why do you stop, Fenn? Are you afraid to remember?"
Sweat
glistened on Fenn's drawn face, on his naked breast. The muscles of his arms
stood out like ropes.
"Or,"
asked Malech softly, "are you afraid to have the others know the truth?
They're watching you, their great god Fenn-way, who led them to the Citadel.
Don't you want them to know the truth about you, about humanity?"
Fenn started on again. He said, "I am
not afraid." And it was a lie.
"Then I'll tell you the real story of
the finding of the Citadel. You had lost it, you humans, and it would have been
lost forever if it had not been for RhamSin. He took a rebel tribesman off the
desert—another such as Lannar there, captured in a
raid—and used his science on him, so carefully, so patiently, making the little
mind of the captive a mirror of the past."
He laughed softly. "Are you faltering
again? You don't like to hear this, do you? You're so proud of your achievement!"
The bowstring burned Fenn's fingers. His
heart was pounding. Somewhere in him was a sickness that grew and grew. He went
on toward the gallery. Malech's voice continued relentlessly, like the biting
of salt in a raw wound.
"Arika
knew. She watched. She watched RhamSin blot out the memories of this
tribesman's own life, closing the channels of his own remembrances. That opened
the way. RhamSin probed back then into memories that were not the tribesman's own—the memories of his fathers who had lived before
him, ancestral memories, the inherited books of knowledge we do not know we
possess but which are there, buried deep in the secret parts of the brain.
"Arika
waited. And just before this raw sun-bitten rat of the deserts, under the power
of RhamSin's mind, was about to speak with the voice of his long-dead
ancestors, telling the secrets of the Citadel, she stole him away from the
temple. And why? You wondered about that, Fenn. I will
tell you. So
that the Numi powers that she and I possess
might gain that secret for ourselves to sell to the highest bidder!"
Fenn
had stopped entirely. He stared up at Malech. Malech's bow was ready with an
arrow aimed at his heart and his own arrow was on the string. But Fenn was not
concerned with killing in this moment. His mind was lost in a dark turmoil.
It seemed that he could remember dimly the agony of that probing into his mind. RhamSins voice, forbidding, commanding, opening hidden doors . . .
Ancestral memory—the Fenn-way of the past had
known that term. There was a word to go with it—hypnosis.
Malech cried, "Look at your hero, you
humans! We were only slaves and half-breeds, my sister and I—but he was a tool
in our hands! Now tell me who has the best right to the Citadel?"
A
cold bleak anger took possession of Fenn. It drove away all thought and
emotion, all concern with himself. He began to raise his bow.
"It's
too late, Fenn," said Malech, laughing. His own shaft pointed unwaveringly
at Fenn's heart, ready to fly. "Too late—your masters are already
here!"
IT
was true. From the corner of his eye Fenn saw the Numi soldiers coming one by
one, swiftly down the narrow stair. Lannar and what men he had left had fallen
back. Their arrows killed a few but they could not stop the Numi rush. Their only
hope had been to hold the stair and Malech had prevented that. Malech!
Fenn's
eyes glittered with a hard malevolence. He dropped to one knee to let fly his
arrow, knowing that Malech would instantly shoot.
He
expected instant death. But in that second a black shaft suddenly stood out
from Malech's breast. The bow of the half-breed fell from his hands unused. He
stood for a moment with the long arrow in'him, staring over Fenn's head with a
look of shocked incredulity.
Fenn
heard the voice of RhamSin speak to Malech. "The man's mind can still be
useful to me. And your usefulness
is done."
MALECH went down on his knees. And Fenn
laughed.
Two
long strides took him to the ladder. He went up it with a bound and crouched
behind the railing. Ma-lech looked at him, still with that hurt unbelief.
He was quite dead. Fenn began to shoot into
the ranks of the Numi around the stair.
He shouted, "Lannar!
Up here!"
They made a bolt for it, Lannar and his men
and Arika. From his vantage point Fenn gave them what cover he could. Lannar,
Arika, and three men made it. Lannar and two others were wounded.
They
were crowded on the gallery. Fenn shoved the body of Malech down the ladder and
there was room enough for them to crouch together behind the railing.
"What
use?" asked Lannar grimly. "We have shot away our arrows."
"Because," Fenn said with a queer
desperate hope in his voice, "there may still be a weapon here! One that I can't quite remember."
He
was looking down into the hall at the Numi who were gathering there, at the
globe of cold light that hung above them.
Cold light? What was it that he could not remember? He looked at the globe and the
web of girders close above his head and his brows knit in a cruel effort.
The last of the Numi came down the stairs. RhamSin
said, "Will you come down peaceably or must we come up after you?"
"Come
if you will," snarled Lannar. "We still have our swords."
Fenn
turned to Arika. His fingers bit into her flesh. He whispered, "Help me to
remember! The Citadel— the guide that took us through—something he said . .
."
RhamSin's
voice rang in her ears like the voice of doom. "I told you once that I
would call you and you would come. I call you now. And I warn you—your usefulness
will not save your life if you anger me too far."
Arika said, "Don't
listen, Fenn! Remember!"
Her
eyes burned deep into his. The voice of RhamSin called and Fenn felt a terrible
compulsion to obey. But there was an iron fury in him and he would not yield.
The Citadel, the crowd, the guide, talking—Cold light. Radioactive dust suspended in an
inert liquid. Deadly compound, harnessed for the peaceful use of man. Bulbs of plastic that screened out harmful rays—absolutely safe —will
give light almost forever.—
"Stay
here," said Fenn to the others very softly. "Keep down. Don't move or
lean out to look!"
He
leaped up and caught the girder overhead, swinging himself upon it. Balancing
precariously on that narrow bridge of steel he began to run.
RhamSin shouted.
Arrows
began to fly around Fenn—black arrows with barbed tips. But he was a hard mark
to hit, running high among the interlacing shadows of the girders. And he had
not far to go.
Below him he could see the Numi, their angry
faces looking up, tall proud lords of conquest in a citadel of peace. He flung himself down across the girder. Here were
bolted the chains that held the globe of radioactive light.
He took his sword, a good keen blade of
tempered Numi steel. With every ounce of strength and madness that was in him
he struck downward at a single chain.
It
parted, helped by the weight of the massive bracket it upheld. And Fenn found
it in his heart to laugh a little
bitterly. Even in a citadel of peace the ingenious mind of man could find a
means of killing!
The
globe of light fell with the snapping of the chain. Out of the round bracket
that swung now by one edge it fell—down, down, to smash upon the metal floor below.
Fenn hugged the girder. There was a crash and
a burst of vicious light, a hissing, snarling explosion, and then . . .
He thought that even Numi did not deserve to
die that way, in such corrosive agony of the body, in such shocked terror of
the mind.
He waited until the last one had stopped
screaming. He did not look again at the seared scored twisted bodies. He
worked his way back along the girder and this time he did not run. He was sick
and shaken and full of a sense of guilt.
AFiIKA
and Lannar helped him back
down onto the gallery. They too looked sick and pale from what they had seen on
thé floor below. "They are all dead," whispered Arika. "But
how—"
Fenn said heavily, "The men of the far
past built this Citadel to be a light in the darkness, a light of hope and
peace and knowledge. And now war and death have come into it. And my hands are
red."
"You were forced to do
it, Fenn!"
He
knew that she was right. And men would be forced to war against the Numi, and
the. knowledge of the Citadel would free them from
that alien yoke. But after that . . .
He
spoke and his whisper was not for those beside him but for men dead twelve
hundred years, the men who had bequeathed them this heritage of the ages.
"After that," he whispered, "we will learn to build and not
destroy. I will redeem my guilt, men of the past."
He
would not be alone. There was Arika—and Lannar, a desert man like himself.
His
own memories, of his life before RhamSin, might never return. But that did not
seem to matter now. He could start a new life when before them lay a whole new
world.
ALL THE COLORS OF THE RAINBOW
It
had rained in the valley, steadily and hard, for thirty-six hours. The ground
was saturated. Every fold in tlie rough flanks of the hills spouted a muddy
torrent and the torrents flowed in sheets over the flat country below and
poured through raw self-gouged channels into the river. And the river, roused
from its normal meek placidity, roared and rolled like a new Mississippi,
tearing away its banks, spreading wide and yellow across the fields, into the
orchards and over the roads, into the streets of Grand Falls where the people
had left their houses and fled to the safety of
higher land. Uprooted trees and broken timbers knocked at the walls of the old brick buildings on the main
street. In the lobby of tlie Grand
Falls Hotel the brass spittoons floated ever higher, clanging mournfully when
they struck their sides together.
High
on the ridges that enclosed the valley to the northeast and the southwest,
hidden by a careful hand, two small
mechanisms hummed quietly, ceaselessly. They were called miniseeders and they
were not part of Earth's native
technology. Their charges would run out in a matter of days, but in the meantime they were extremely efficient,
hurling a steady stream of charged
particles into the sky to seed the clouds moving 'over the ridges.
In the valley, it continued
to "rain. . . .
IT
WAS HIS FIRST BIG JOB'ON his own responsibility, with no superior closer than
Galactic Center, which was a long way off. He was not at all sure he was going
to be able to do it.
He said so to Ruvi, slowing down the
cumbersome ground car so she could see what he meant.
"Look at it. How can this mess ever be
made into a civilized continent?"
She turned her head in the quick way she had
and said, "Scared, Flin?"
"I guess I am."
He was ashamed to say it, particularly since
it was not really the difficulty and importance of the job that daunted him but
the planet itself.
He
had studied weather-control engineering on his home-world at Mintaka, which was
one of the science's earliest triumphs, and he had done research and field work
on five other worlds, at least two of which were in fairly early stages of
control. But he had never been anywhere before that was so totally untouched
by galactic civilization.
Peripheral Survey had made contact with these
fringe systems only in the last couple of decades and that was far too short a
time to make much of an impress on them. Even in the big urban centers an alien
like himself could hardly walk down the street yet without attracting an
unwelcome amount of attention, not all of it polite. Coming from the Federation
worlds with their cosmopolitan populations, Flin found this hard to take.
But
Galactic Center was enthusiastic about these fringe worlds because quite a few
of them had an amazingly high, if highly uneven, degree of civilization which
they had developed literally in their several vacuums. Center was in a rush to
send them teachers and technicians and that was why he, far ahead of his due
time, had been pitchforked into the position of leading a four-man
planning-and-instruction team of weather-control experts.
It was a splendid opportunity with splendid
possibilities for the future, and the raise in pay had enabled him to take on
Ruvi as a permanent mate much sooner than he had hoped. But he hadn't bargained
for the loneliness, the constant uncertainty in relationships, the lack of all the vast solid background he was used to on
the Federation worlds.
Ruvi
said, "All right then, I'll admit I'm scared too. And hot. Let's stop this
clumsy thing and get a breath of air. Right over there looks like a good
place."
He
eased the car off the narrow road, onto a point
of land with a few big stones around the edge to mark the drop-off. Ruvi got
out and went to stand by them, looking out over the valley. The breeze pressed
her thin yellow tunic against her body and ruffled the soft short silvery mass
of curls around her head. Her skin glistened even under this alien sun with the
dark lovely green of youth and health. Flin's heart still turned over in him
every time he looked at her. He did not suppose this would last forever but as
long as it did it was a beautiful sort of pain.
He made sure he had done the required things
to keep the car from bolting away over the cliff and then joined her. The
breeze was hot and moisture-laden, full of strange smells. The valley wound
away in a series of curves with a glint
of water at the bottom. On either side of it the rough ridges rolled and
humped, blue in the distance where the heat haze covered them, rank green
closer at hand with the shaggy woods that grew wild on them, the trees pushing
and crowding for space, choked with undergrowth and strangling vines, absolutely
neglected.
"I
suppose," said Ruvi, "they're full of wild animals, too."
"Nothing very dangerous, I
believe." '
Ruvi shivered slightly. "Whenever I get just a little way out of
the cities I begin to feel that I'm on a truly savage world. And everything's
wrong. The trees, the flowers, even the grass-blades are the wrong shape, and
the colors are all wrong, and die sky isn't at all the way it ought to
be."
She laughed. "Anyone would know this was
my first trip away from home."
Two huge birds came into sight over one of
the ridges. They hung in the sky, wheeling in slow circles on still gray-brown
wings. Instinctively Flin put his arm around Ruvi, uncertain whether the birds
would attack. They did not, drifting on down over the valley where the air
currents took them. There was no sign of human habitation and except for the
narrow road they might have been in a complete wilderness.
"It is rather beautiful, though,"
Ruvi said, "in its own way."
"Yes."
"I guess that's the only standard you
really should use to judge things, isn't it? Their own."
Flin
said sourly, "That's easier to do when you know what 'their own' standard
is. They seem to have thousands of them here. That's why Sherbondy keeps
telling us to get out and see the country, to learn what his people are really
like." Sherbondy was their contact with the local Government, a big hearty
man with an enormous enthusiasm for all the things that were going to be done.
"The only trouble with that is that it would take a lifetime to—"
There
was a noise like an avalanche behind them. Flin jumped and turned around, but
it was only a huge red vehicle roaring by, spouting smoke from a pipe behind
the driver's compartment. The driver noticed them just before the truck passed
out of sight and Flin thought the man was going to drive it right into the
woods while he was staring.
He sighed. "Let's
go."
They
got back into the car and Flin managed to get it back onto the road and headed
in the direction he wanted to go without mishap—always, he felt, a minor
triumph. The primitive vehicles that were subject to everybody's
individual whim of operation on these equally primitive road systems still
frightened the wits out of him after nearly six months.
> It was just as hot as ever. As a gesture
of courtesy, and to avoid attracting any more attention than was necessary, he
had adopted the local variety of shirt and pants. Most of the men in the
various instruction groups did this soon after landing. It didn't seem to
matter what the women of the groups wore as long as certain puritanical tabus
were observed, but the men found it less embarrassing to conform. Flin thought
the garments abominably uncomfortable and envied Ruvi her relatively cool
tunic.
She seemed
wilted and subdued, leaning back in the corner of the wide overstuffed seat,
her eyes half closed, the graceful tilted contours of her face accentuated by
the gleaming of sweat on the delicate ridges.
"I
think of home," she said, "and then I think of the money."
"It's something to
think of."
The
woods rolled by, clotted underneath with deep shadow, full of rustlings and
rank dusty smells. Sometimes they passed a kind of food-raising station that
had not been seen in the Federation for centuries, where part of the land was
in several kinds of crops and part of it in pasture and the whole thing was
operated by one man and his family. Sometimes they passed through little towns
or villages with very strange names, where the people stared at them and the children
pointed and yelled, Green
niggers, lookit the green niggersl
Flin
studied the houses. They were different from each other, and quite different
from tlie ones he had grown used to in the cities, but they were all built on
the same hut-based principle. He tried to imagine what life would be like in
one of these towns, in one of these wooden or stone or brick houses with the
queer decorations and the pointed roofs. Probably Sherbondy was right.
Probably all the Federation people should try to get closer to the everyday
life of the planet, familiarize themselves with what the people thought and
felt, how they coped with their environment. The next few decades would see
changes so radical and complete that this present life would soon begin to be
forgotten. . . .
The
change had already begun. This planet—the native name for it was Earth, a
rather pretty one, Flin thought—had been making its first wobbling steps into
space on its own when the Survey ships arrived. With Federation technicians and
techniques that process had been enormously accelerated. The first manned ships
built on Earth and operated by Federation-trained but native-born personnel had
been licensed for limited service within the last seven or eight years.
Planning surveys were under way, guided by groups like his own, not only in
weather-control but in global unification, production, education, and above all
pacification—the countless things that would have to be accomplished to make
Earth a suitable member of the Federation.
But
these things had not yet made themselves felt on the population as a whole.
Most of Earth was going along just as it always had, and Flin knew from experience
that many of the natives even on the administrative level were extremely
touchy and proud, not inclined to accept any sudden alterations in their thinking;
probably die more provincial masses were even more so. It would be necessary to
win them over, to make them feel that they were equals in the task and not
merely the recipients of gifts from an older and wider culture.
It
would be a long, interesting business. An energetic young man who stuck with it
could make a career out of it, a satisfying and very profitable one.
The only trouble was—
Ruvi's thoughts seemed to have paralleled his
own, because she said, "Are we going to stay on here?"
"We
have to stay until we've finished our immediate job."
"But
after that? I know some of the men have already decided to."
"The
offers these people make are very good," Flin said slowly. "They'll
need technicians and educators for a long time yet, and Center is in favor of
it because it'll speed up integration." He reached out and patted her.
"We could be rich and famous."
She
smiled, very fleetingly. "All right," she said in a quiet voice,
"I'll start making myself like it."
She
began to stare grimly at the queerly shaped and colored trees, the peculiar
houses that looked so dreadfully functional, the
crowds of chattering natives in the towns. Finally she shook her head and gave
up, lying back with her eyes closed.
"I'll try it again
sometime when it isn't so hot."
"Weather-control will fix that."
"But not for
years."
They
drove in silence. Flin felt vaguely ill at ease and unhappy, but he kept
thinking of Sherbondy's offer and the things it might lead to for them, and he
did not say anything. He did not want to commit himself with Ruvi yet, one way
or the other.
About
mid-afternoon there was a violent downpour of rain accompanied by thunder and
lightning. As a weather expert Flin knew perfectly well what caused the
disturbance, but the knowledge did nothing to decrease the effect of it on himself. Ruvi simply hid her head in the corner and shook.
Flin kept on driving. If you let the natives know that you were afraid of their
weather, they would never believe that you would be able to control it. He made
it a practice in Washington to walk out in storms that had even the natives
cowering. He could barely see the road well enough to stay on it and he was
nervous about floods, but he trundled resolutely ahead.
Eventually he ran out of the storm, or it
passed over. The sun came out again, boiling and steaming the saturated air.
It was difficult to breathe. Great black clouds still bulked in the sky,
presaging more trouble later. In the strange light the countryside took on a
look completely alien and somehow ominous, the little scattered houses
crouching among their weird trees like suspicious gnomes with hostile eyes, the
empty fields and dripping woods suggestive of infinite loneliness.
"I'm tired and hungry," Ruvi said.
"Let's stop."
"The next town that has accommodations." Flin was tired himself. He found driving a
strain and yearned for the fleet litde air-cars that darted so easily and
safely through the peaceful skies of the Federation worlds. They would not be
practical here until global weather-control was an actuality.
The
next town was a long way off. The road lifted and wound through low rough
mountains and over brawling stream beds. The villages they passed through were
very tiny, sometimes with only two or three dwellings.
The
shadows grew heavy in the valleys. Ruvi began to fret a bit. Flin knew that it
was only because the shadows and the wild country made her nervous, but it
irritated him. He was having trouble enough of his own. An animal of some sort
scuttered across the road and he nearly went into the ditch avoiding it. The
light was bad. He was worried about the fuel gauge, which was low. And the road
seemed to go on forever through a steadily darkening tunnel of trees.
They
passed a tiny wooden temple next to one of the absolutely barbaric native
burying grounds that always horrified them, the ritual stones gleaming pallid
among uncut grass and briar roses. It all flashed by so quickly that Flin
realized he had pushed the speed of the big car beyond the limit of safety. So
he was already slowing down when he swung around a curve and came light onto a
farm vehicle moving very slowly in the road, lie managed to go around it
without hitting anything but it gave him a sharp fright. The man driving the I lung shouted after them. Flin could not hear exactly what he said but
there was no doubt he was angry. After that Flin went carefully.
There
began to be painted signs along the edge of the road.
Ruvi
read them off. "Restaurant. Hotel.
Garage. There is a town ahead. Grand Falls, I
think."
The
road passed suddenly over a crest and there was a wide irregular valley below
them, full of light from the low sun which shone through a gap in the west.
1'erhaps Flin was in an exceptionally receptive mood but it struck him as one
of the loveliest places he had seen. There was a river flashing with curious
dull glints from the setting sun, rolling smoothly over a pretty litde falls
that burst into bright foam at the bottom. The white houses of the town were
bowered in trees and blooming vines, slumbrous and peaceful in the hot evening,
with one tall white spire standing over them.
"Look,
I see the hotel," said Ruvi, pointing. "Oh glorious,
how I will love a cool bath before dinner!"
She
ran her fingers through her silvery curls and sat up straight beside him,
smiling as he drove down the hill into Grand Falls.
It
had rained here recently. The pavements still glistened and the air steamed
with it. There was a fragrance of nameless flowers, very sweet and heavy. On
the shadowy porches of the houses along the way there was a sound of voices and
hidden laughter, and the small scurrying shapes of children moved under the
dripping trees.
The
road became the main street splashed with the crude colors of neon signs, the
lighted windows showing yellow in the dusk. On both sides now there were curious
low buildings, apparently quite old, built tight together so that each row
looked like one building except its front was broken up into narrow vertical
sections with different cornices and different patterns of wood or brickwork
around the windows. They were mostly of red brick, which seemed to be a common
building material, and not above two stories high.
The
shops and offices were closed. The eating and drinking places were open and
busy, and somewhere inside there was music playing, a strong simple beat with
a high-pitched male voice wailing over it. The smell of flowers was drowned out
by the pungence of hot wet brick and hotter, wetter asphalt. A few couples
walked toward the gaudily lighted entrance of a theatre farther along the
street, the women wearing bright-colored dresses, their long hair done in
elaborate coiffures, their thick sturdy legs and arms bare. Knots of young men
lounged against the walls near the drinking places. They were smoking the
universal cigarettes and talking, looking after the women.
Seen
close up now the town was less beautiful than it had looked from the crest. The
white paint was dirty and peeling, the old buildings poorly kept up.
"Well,"
Flin muttered, "Sherbondy said to get off the beaten track and see the
real native life undiluted."
"The
hotel looks charming," Ruvi said determinedly. "I am not going to
quarrel with anything."
Even
in the dusk they were beginning to draw attention. First the little knots of
idlers were attracted by the long gleaming car with the Government plates, and
then by Flin and Ruvi themselves. There were other cars in the street, both
moving and parked along the curb, but the one Flin was driving seemed to be
newer and fancier than most. He could see people pointing and looking at them.
He swore silently and wondered if they could have dinner sent up to their room.
The hotel was on the comer of the main
intersection. It was three stories high, built of the red brick, with a
crudely ornate cornice and long narrow windows. A balcony ran around its two
exposed sides at the second floor level, extending over the street and
supported on slender metal pillars which had once been painted white. A second
tier of pillars on the balcony itself supported a roof. There were five or six
oldish men sitting in chairs on'the balcony, and several more below on the
covered portion of the street.
Flin looked at it doubtfully. "I wonder
if it has a bath."
Her own enthusiasm somewhat cooled, Ruvi
said, "It'll do for one night. It might be a long way to the next one and
I don't suppose it would be any better."
Flin grunted and pulled the car in to the
curb and stopped.
There
was a scraping of chair legs as the men sat forward or rose to come closer.
Flin got out and walked around the car. He smiled at the men but they only
stared, blowing strong smoke and squinting through it at him and the car and
the license plates and then at Ruvi.
Flin
turned and opened the door for her. He noticed over the low roof of the car
that men were beginning to come from across the street, and already a number of
boys had sprung from nowhere and were clustering like insects, their eyes
bright and excited.
He
helped Ruvi out, slim in her yellow tunic, her silver
curls picking up the light from the tall front door of the hotel.
One
of the men said in a high shrill voice. "Green as grass,
by God!" There was laughter and somebody whistled.
Flin's
face tightened but he did not say anything nor look at the men. He took Ruvi's
arm and they went into the hotel.
They walked on a faded carpet, between
islands of heavy furniture in worn leather and dusty plush. Fans turned slowly
against the ceiling, barely disturbing either the hot air or the moths that had
come in to flutter around the lights. There was a smell that Flin could not
fully identify. Dust, the stale stink of dead tobacco, and something else—age,
perhaps, and decay. Behind the large wooden desk a gray-haired man had risen
from a chair and stood with his hands spread out on the desk top, watching them
come.
The men from the sheet followed, crowding
quickly through the doors. On particular man seemed to lead them, a red-faced fellow wearing an amulet on a gold chain across his broad paunch.
Flin
and Ruvi stood in front of the desk. Once more Flin smiled. He said, "Good
evening."
The
gray-haired man glanced past them at the men who had come in, bringing with
them a many-faceted odor of sweat to add to what was already inside. They had
stopped talking, as though they were waiting to hear what the gray-haired man
would say. The fans in the ceiling creaked gently as they turned.
The
gray-haired man cleared his throat. He, too, smiled, but there was no
friendliness in it.
"If
you're wanting a room," he said, with unnecessary
loudness as though he were speaking not to Flin but to the others in the lobby,
"I'm sorry, but we're filled up."
"Filled up?" Flin
repeated.
"Filled up." The gray-haired man took hold of a large book which lay open in front
of him and closed it in a kind of ceremonial gesture. "You understand now.
Im not refusing you accommodations. I just don't have
any available."
He
glanced again at the men by the door and there was a little undertone of
laughter.
"But—" said Ruvi, on a note of protest. Flin pressed her arm and she stopped. His
own face
was
suddenly hot. He knew the man was lying, and that his He had been expected and
was approved by the others, and that he and Ruvi were the only two people
there who did not understand why. He also knew that it would do them no good to
get into an argument. So he spoke, as pleasantly as he could.
"I see. Perhaps then you could tell us
of another place in town—"
"Don't know of any," said the gray-haired
man, shaking his head. "Don't know of a single place."
"Thank
you," said Flin and turned around and walked back across the lobby, still
holding Ruvi's arm.
The
crowd had grown. Half the people in Grand Falls, Flin thought, must be gathered
now on that one corner. The original group of men, reinforced to twice its
size, blocked the doorway. They parted to let Flin and Ruvi through but they
did it with a certain veiled insolence, staring hard at Ruvi who bent her head
and did not look at them.
Flin
walked slowly, refusing to notice them or be hurried. But their nearness, the
heat and smell of them, the sense of something menacing about them that he did
not understand, twisted his nerves to a painful tightness.
He passed through the door, almost brushing
against a young girl who squealed and jumped back out of his way with a great
show of being afraid of him. There was a bunch of young people with her, both
boys and girls, and they began a great cackling and shoving. The crowd had
become more vocal as it grew. There were a lot of women in it now. Flin waited
politely for them to separate, moving a step at a time toward the car, and the
voices flew back and forth over his head, at him, around him.
—ain't even human!
Hey,
greenie, can't you afford to feed your women where you come from? Lookit how
skinny—
Are they kidding with that
crazy hair?
—just
like I seen on the teevee, and I says to Jack then, Jack Spivey I says, if you ever see anything like them coming
down the road—
Hey, greenie,is it true your women lay eggs?
Laughter. Derision. And something deeper. Something evil. Something he did not understand.
He
reached the car and got Ruvi into it. As he bent close to her he whispered in
her ear, in their own language, "Just take it
easy. We're getting out."
Mama, how come them funny niggers got a
bigger earn we got?
Because the Government's payin them big money
to come and kindly teach us what we didn't know before. "Please hurry," whispered Ruvi.
He
started around the car to get in and found his way blocked by the red-faced man
with the gold chain, and beyond him a solid mass in the street in front of the
car. He sensed that they were not going to let him through, so he stopped as
though he had intended to do so and spoke to the man with the chain.
"I beg your pardon—could you tell me how
far it is to the next city?"
The girls were giggling loudly over Ruvi's
tunic and the way she looked generally. They were all the fat-hipped,
heavy-breasted local type, with thick legs and thick faces. Flin thought they
had very litde to criticize. Just beyond the man with the gold chain were four
or five younger men standing together. They had very obviously come out of one
of the taverns. They were lean rangy young men with their hair slicked down and
their hips thrust forward in a curiously insolent slouch. They had eyes, Flin
thought, like animals. They had been by the door when he came out. They were
still looking at Ruvi.
"The next city?" said the man with
the gold chain.
He accented the word city as Flin had. He had a deep, ringing voice, apparently well used to
addressing crowds. "A hundred and twenty-four
miles."
A long way at night through strange country. A great anger boiled up in Flin but he kept
it carefully inside.
"Thank
you. I wonder where we might get something to eat before we start?"
"Well
now, it's pretty late," the man said. "Our restaurants have just
about now stopped serving. Am I right, Mr. Nellis?"
"You are, Judge
Shaw," said a man in the crowd.
This
too was a He, but Flin accepted it. He nodded and said, "I must have fuel.
Where—"
"Garage
is closed," Shaw said. "If you got enough to get you down the road
apiece there's a pump at Patch's roadhouse. He's open late enough."
"Thank you," said
Flin. "We will go now."
He
started again, but Shaw did not move out of Flin's way. Instead he put up his
hand and said, "Now just a minute there, before you go. We've been reading
about you people in the papers and seeing you on the teevee but we don't get
much chance to talk to celebrities here. There's some
questions we'd Hke to ask."
The
rangy young men with the animal eyes began to sidle past Shaw and behind Flin
toward the car, leaving a heavy breath of Hquor where they moved.
"A
damn lot of questions," somebody shouted from the back, "like why the
hell don't you stay home?"
"Now,
now," said Shaw, waving his hand, "let's keep diis friendly.
Reverend, did you have something to say?"
"I
certainly do," said a fat man in a soiled dark suit, shouldering his way
through the crowd to stand peering at Flin. "I bet I've preached a sermon
on this subject three Sundays out of five and it's the most important question
facing this world today. If we don't face it, if we don't answer this question
in a way that's acceptable to the Almighty, we might just as well throw away
all these centuries of doing battle with Satan and admit we're licked."
"Amen," cried a woman's voice.
"Amen to that, Reverend Tibbsl"
Reverend Tibbs thrust his face close to
Flin's and said, "Do you consider yourselves human?"
Flin knew that he was on dangerous ground
here. This was a religious man and religion was strictly a local affair, not
to be discussed or meddled with in any way.
So
he said cautiously, "On our own worlds we consider ourselves so. However,
I am not prepared to argue it from your viewpoint, sir."
He moved toward the car, but the crowd only
pulled in and held him tighter.
"Well
now," said die Reverend Tibbs, "what I want to know is how you can call yourselves human when it says right in Scriptures that God created
this good Earth here under my feet and then created man—human man —right out of that self-same earth. Now if you—"
"Oh,
hell, save that stuff for the pulpit," said another man, pushing his way
in front of Tibbs. This one was sunburned and leathery, with a lantern jaw and
keen hard eyes. "I ain't worried about their souls and I don't care if
they're all pups to the Beast of the Apocalypse." Now he spoke directly to
Flin. "I been seeing faces on my teevee for
years. Green faces like yours. Red ones, blue ones, purple ones, yellow
ones—all the colors of the rainbow, and what I want to know is, ain't you got
any white folks out there?"
"Yeahl"
said the crowd and nodded its collective heads.
The
man they called Judge Shaw nodded too and said, "I reckon you put the
question for all of us, Sam."
"What
I mean is," said the lantern-jawed Sam, "this here is a white town.
In most other places nowadays,
I
understand, you'll find blacks and whites all run together like they were out
of the same still, but we got kind of a different situation here, and we ain't
the only ones, either. There's little pockets of us
here and there, kind of holding out, you might say. And we ain't broken any
laws. We didn't refuse to integrate, see. It was just that for one reason or
another what colored folks there was around—"
Here the crowd snickered
knowingly.
"—decided
they could do better somewheres else and went there. So we didn't need to
integrate. We don't have any color problem. We ain't had any for twenty years.
And what's more, we don't want any."
A shout from the crowed. ^
Shaw
said in his big booming voice, "The point we'd like to make clear to you,
so you can pass it on to who-ever's interested, is that some of us like to run
our lives and our towns to suit ourselves. Now, this old Earth is a pretty good
place just as she stands, and we never felt any need for outsiders to come and
tell us what we ought to do. So we ain't any too friendly to begin with, you
see? But we're not unreasonable, we're willing to
listen to things so as to form our own judgments on them. Only you people had
better understand right now that no matter what goes on in the big cities and
other places like that, we aren't
going to be told anything by a bunch of colored folks and it doesn't matter one
damn bit what color they are. If—"
Ruvi gave a sudden cry.
Flin
spun around. The young men who smelled of liquor were beside the car, all
crowded together and leaning in over the door. They were laughing now and one
of them said, "Aw now, what's the matter? I was just—"
"Flin, please!"
He could see her over their
bent backs and bobbing heads, as far away from them as she could get on the
seat. Other faces peered in from the opposite side, grinning, hemming her in.
Somebody said in a tone of mock reproach.
"You got her scared now, Jed, ain't you ashamed?"
Flin
took two steps toward the car, pushing somebody out of the way. He did not see
who it was. He did not see anything but Ruvi's frightened face and the backs of
the young men.
"Get away from
there," he said.
The laughter stopped. The young men
straightened slowly. One of them said, "Did I hear somebody say
something?"
"You heard me," said Flin.
"Get away from the car."
They
turned around, and now the crowd was all quiet and watching. The young men were
tall. They had big coarse hands, strong for any task. Their mouths hung open a
little to show their teeth, and they breathed and smiled, and their eyes were
cruel.
"I
don't think," said the one they called Jed, "I liked the tone of your
voice when you said that."
"I don't give a damn
whether you liked it or not."
"You
gonna take that, Jed?" somebody yelled. "From a nigger, even if he is
a green one?"
There
was a burst of laughter. Jed smiled and tilted his weight forward over his bent
knees.
T
was just trying to talk friendly with your woman," he said. "You
shouldn't object to that."
He
reached out and pushed with his stiffened fingers hard against Flin's chest.
Flin
turned his body and let the force of the thrust slide off his shoulder. Everything
seemed to be moving very slowly, in a curiously icy vacuum which for the moment
contained only himself and Jed. He was conscious of a new and terrible feeling
within him, something he had never felt before. He stepped forward, lightly,
strongly, not hurrying. His feet and hands performed four motions. He had done
them countless times before in the gymnasium against a friendly opponent. He
had never done them like this before, full force, with hate, with a dark evil
brute lust to do injury. He watched the blood spurt from Jed's nose, watched
him fall slowly, slowly to the pavement with his hands clutching his belly and
his eyes wide open and his mouth gasping in astonishment and pain.
Outside this center of subjective time and
hate in which he stood Flin sensed other movement and noise. Gradually, then
with urgent swiftness, they came clear. Judge Shaw had thrust himself in front
of Flin. Others were holding Jed, who was getting up. A swag-bellied man with a
badge on his shirt was waving his arms, clearing people away from around the
car, Jed's friends among them. There was a confused and frightening clamor of
voices and over it all Shaw's big authoritative voice was shouting.
"Calm
down now, everybody, we don't want any trouble here."
He
turned his head and said to Flin, "I advise you to be on your way just as
fast as you can go."
Flin
walked around the car where the policeman had cleared the way. He got in and
started the motor. The crowd surged forward as though it was going to try and
stop him in spite of Shaw and the policeman.
Suddenly he cried out at
them.
"Yes,
we have white folks out there, about one in every ten thousand, and they don't
think anything of it and neither do we. You can't hide from the universe.
You're going to be tramped under with color—all the colors of the
rainbow!"
And
he understood then that that was exactly what they feared.
He
let in the drive and sent the big car lurching forward. The people in the
street scattered out of his way. There were noises as thrown objects struck the
top and sides of the car and then the street was long and straight and clear
ahead of him and he pushed the throttle lever all the way down.
Lights flashed by. Then there was darkness
and the town was gone.
Flin eased back on the throttle. Ruvi was
bent over in the seat beside him, her hands covering her face. She was not
crying. He reached out and touched her shoulder. She was trembling, and so was
he. He felt physically sick, but he made his voice qiiiet and reassuring.
Tt's all right now. They're
gone."
She
made a sound—a whimper, an answer, he was not sure. Presently she sat erect,
her hands clenched in her lap. They did not speak again. The air was cooler
here but still oppressive with moisture, almost as clammy as fog against the
skin. No stars showed. Off to the right there were intermittent flashes of
lightning and a low growling of thunder.
A clot of red light appeared on the night
ahead, resolving itself into a neon sign. Patch's. The roadhouse with the pump.
Ruvi whispered, "Don't
stop. Please don't stop."
"I have to," he said gently, and pulled off
the road onto a wide gravelled space beside a
ramshackle frame building with dimly lighted windows. Strongly rhythmic music
played inside. There was a smaller building, a dwelling-house, beside the
tavern, and midway between them was a single fuel pump.
Flin stopped beside it. Hardly realizing what
he was doing, he turned and fumbled in the back seat for his hat and jacket and
put them on, pulling the hatbrim down to hide his face as much as possible.
Ruvi had a yellow shawl that matched her tunic. She drew it over her head and
shoulders and made herself small in the comer of the seat. Flin switched off
the dashboard lights.
A
raw-boned lanky woman came out of the dwelling.
Probably
the man ran the tavern, leaving her to tend to smaller matters. Trying to keep
his voice steady, Flin asked her to fill the tank. She hardly glanced at him
and went surlily to the pump. He got out his wallet and felt with shaking hands
among the bills.
On
the dark road beyond the circle of light from the tavern, a car went slowly
past.
The
pump mechanism clicked and rang its solemn bells and finally was still. The
woman hung up the hose with a clash and came forward. Flin took a deep breath.
He thrust a bill at her. "That'll be eight-eighty-seven," she said
and took the bill and saw the color of the hand she took it from. She started
to speak or yell, stepping back and bending suddenly in the same movement. He
saw her eyes shining in the light, peering into the car. Flin had already
started the motor. He roared away in a spurt of gravel, leaving the woman
standing with her arm out, pointing after them.
"We
won't have to stop again until we reach the city. It'll be all right
there."
He
threw his hat into the back seat. Ruvi let the shawl fall away from her head.
"I've never wanted to hide my face
before," she said. "It's a strange feeling."
Flin muttered savagely, "I've got a lot
to say but I can't
say it now, not if I'm going to drive."
The road
was narrow and black beneath the thunderous sky, between the empty fields and
dark woods.
There
was another car in the road ahead, moving slowly.
Flin overtook it.
It
was well out in the middle. He waited a moment for the driver to see that he
wanted to pass and make room for him. The car continued to block the road. He
sounded his horn, politely at first and then loudly. The car stayed where it
was, moving slower and slower so that he had to brake to keep from hitting it.
"What are they
doing?" whispered Ruvi. "Why won't they let us by?" Flin shook
his head. "I don't know." He began to be afraid.
He
pulled as far as he could to the left, riding on the rough berm. He sounded the
horn and tramped on the throttle.
The other car swerved too. Its rear fender
struck his front one. Ruvi screamed. Flin steadied the wildly lurching car.
Sweat prickled like hot needles all over his skin. He stamped his foot hard on
the brake.
The
other car skidded on ahead. Flin swung the wheel sharp right and pushed the
throttle down, whipping the big car across the road and onto the berm on the
other side.
For
one brief moment he thought he was going to make it. But the other car swayed
over with ruthless speed and punched and rebounded and punched again with its
clattering fenders like a man pushing another with his shoulder. Holes and
stones threw Flin's car back and forth. He fought to control it, hearing the
voices of men shouting close by . . .
Hit
tlie sonofabitch, knock his goddam ass off the road, That's
the way-There was a tree ahead. His headlights picked it
up, brought it starkly into view, the rough-textured bark, the knots and
gnarls, the uneven branches and dark leaves. Flin spun the wheel frantically.
The lights made a wide slicing turn across meadow grass and weeds. The car
bounded, leaped, sprang over uneven ground and fell with a jarring crash into
the ditch of a little stream and died.
Silence,
dazed and desperate.
Flin looked back. The other car had stopped
at the side of the road. Men were getting out of it. He counted five. He
thought he knew what men they were.
He reached across Ruvi and opened the door
and pushed her ahead of him. "We're going to run now," he said,
surprised at the flat banality of his voice, as though he were speaking to a
child about some unimportant game. The car tilted that way and Ruvi slid out
easily. Flin came behind her into mud and cold water that lapped around his
ankles. He half helped, half threw her up the low steep bank and followed,
grabbing her hand then and pulling her along.
He did not look back again. He did not have
to. The men called as they ran, laughing, hooting, baying
like great hounds.
Crooked
fire lighted a curtain of black cloud. Flin saw trees, a clump of woods. The
fire died and was followed by a hollow booming. The woods vanished. He continued
to run toward them. The grass and weeds tangled around his legs. Ruvi lagged,
pulling harder and harder against his grip, sobbing as she ran.
They were among the trees.
He let go of her. "Go on. Hide yourself
somewhere. Don't make a sound no matter what happens." "No. I won't
leave—"
He
pushed her fiercely, trying not to scream at her aloud. "Go on!"
The
young men came loping through the long grass, into the trees. They had a light.
Its long white beam probed and poked.
See anything?
Not yet.
Who's got the bottle? I'm
dry from runnin.
See anything?
They're in here somewhere.
Breath
rasping in big hard throats, legs ripping the undergrowth, feet trampling the
ground.
I'm
gonna find out, by God. After I take
care of that sonofabitch I'm gonna find out.
Whatcha gonna find out,
Jed?
If it's true they lay eggs or not.
Laughter.
Who's got the goddam
bottle?
Wait a minute, hey, right there, swing that
light back, I hear the bastards moving— Hey!
Flin turned, straightening his shoulders,
standing between them and Ruvi.
One of them held the light in his face. He
could not see them clearly. But he heard the voice of the one called Jed
speaking to him.
"All right, greenie, you're so anxious
to teach us things —it ain't fair for us to take and not give, so we got a
lesson for you."
"Let my wife go," said Flin
steadily. "You have no quarrel with her."
"Your
wife, huh?" said Jed. "Well now, how do we know she's your wife? Was you married here under the laws of this land?"
"We were married under
our own laws—"
"You
hear that, boys? Well, your laws don't cut any ice with us, greenie, so it don't seem that you are man and wife as we would say.
Anyway, she stays. That's part of the lesson."
Jed laughed. They all
laughed.
In their own language Flin
said to Ruvi, "Run now."
He'sprang
forward at the man holding the light.
Another
man moved quickly from the side and struck him across the shoulders and neck
with something more than the naked hand. A tree branch,
perhaps, or a metal bar. Flin went down, stunned with pain. He heard
Ruvi cry out. He tried to tell her again to run but his voice had left him.
There were scuffling sounds and more cries. He tried to get up and hard-shod
feet kicked him and stamped him down. Iron knuckles battered his face. Jed bent
over him and shook him.
"Hold him up there, Mike, I want to be
sure he hears this. You hear me, greenie? Lesson One. Niggers always keep to
their own side of the road."
Crash. Blood in the mouth, and
pain.
Ruvi?
"Hold him, Mike, goddam it. Lesson Two.
When a white man takes a mind to a female nigger, she ain't supposed to get
uppity about it. It's an honor, see? She's supposed to be real nice and happy
and flattered. See?"
More blood, more pain.
Ruvi, Ruvi I
"Lesson
Three. And this one you better remember and write out and hang up where all the
other red, blue, green, and purple niggers can see it. You never lay a hand on a white man. Never. No matter what."
Ruvi was quiet. He could not hear her voice.
"You understand that? No matter
whatl"
Hya-hool
Give it to him, Jed. Tell him so he don't forget. Dark, night, thunder, red fire, red blood,
silence, distance, one long fading echoing voice.
—just
like a real human woman by God what
do you know-Laughter. Ruvi— Gone.
There was a great deal of public indignation
about it. Newspapers all over the world had editorials. The President made a
statement. The Governor made a formal apology for his state and a sincere promise
to find and punish the handful of men responsible for the outrage.
Grand Falls protected its own.
No
witnesses could be found to identify the men involved in the incident that had
occurred in town. Judge Shaw was sure he had never seen them before. So was the
policeman. The attack itself had taken place out in the country, of course, and
in the dark. Flin did not remember the license number of the car nor had he
seen the faces of the men clearly. Neither had Ruvi.
They could have been anyone from anywhere.
The name "Jed" by itself meant
nothing. There were a number of Jeds in the neighborhood but they were the
wrong ones. The right Jed never turned up, and if he had Flin could only have
identified him definitely as the man he himself had struck in front of the
Grand Falls Hotel. ("Mighty hot tempered, he seemed," Judge Shaw
said. "Took offense where I'm sure none was meant. Like
he just didn't understand our ways.")
So there was no finding and
no punishment.
As
soon as the doctors told him he was fit to travel, Flin informed his group that
he was returning home. He had already been in contact with Galactic Center.
Someone else would be sent to take his place. They were very angry about the
whole thing at home and various steps were being considered. But since Earth
was not a member planet she was not subject to galactic law, and since the
fut"re of a world was considerably more important than the actions of a
few individuals or the feelings of their victims, probably nothing very drastic
would be done. And Flin recognized that this was right.
Sherbondy came to see him.
"I
feel responsible for all this," he said. "If I hadn't advised that
trip—"
"It would have happened sooner or
later," Flin said. "To us or to somebody else.
Your world's got a long way to go yet."
"I
wish you'd stay," said Sherbondy miserably. "I'd like to prove to you
that we're not all brutes."
"You
don't have to prove that. It's obvious. The trouble now is with us—with Ruvi
and me."
Sherbondy looked at him,
puzzled.
Flin said, "We are not civilized any more. Perhaps we will be again some day. I hope so. That's
one reason we're going home, for psychiatric treatment of a kind we can't get
here. Ruvi especially . . ."
He
shook his head and began to stride up and down the room, his body taut with an
anger he could only by great effort control.
"An act like that—people like that—they foul and degrade
everything they touch. They pass on some of themselves. I'm full of irrational
feelings now. I'm afraid of darkness and trees and quiet places. Worse than
that, I'm afraid of your people. I can't go out of my rooms now without feeling
as though I walk among wild beasts."
Sherbondy sighed heavily. "I can't blame
you. It's a pity. You could have had a good life here, done a lot—"
"Yes," said Flin.
"Well,"
said Sherbondy, getting up, "I'll say good bye." He held out his
hand. "I hope you don't mind shaking my hand—"
Flin
hesitated, then took Sherbondy's hand briefly.
"Even you," he said, with real sorrow. "You see why we must
go."
Sherbondy
said, "I see." He turned to the door. "God damn those
bastards," he said with sudden fury. "You'd think in this day and
age—Oh, hell . . . Goodbye, Flin. And
the best of luck."
He went away.
Flin
helped Ruvi with the last of the packing. He checked over the mass of equipment
the weather-control group had brought with them for demonstration purposes,
which he would be leaving behind for his successor.
Then
he said quietly, "There is one more thing I have to do before we go. Don't
worry about me. Ill be back in plenty of time for the
take-off."
She
looked at him, startled, but she did not ask any questions.
He got into his car and
drove away alone.
He
spoke as he drove, grimly and bitterly, to someone who was not there.
"You
wanted to teach me a lesson," he said. "You did. Now I will show you how well you taught me, and how well I learned."
And
that was the real evil that had been done to him and Ruvi.
The
physical outrage and the pain were soon over, but the other things were harder
to eradicate—the sense of injustice, the rankling fury, the blind hatred of all
men whose faces were white.
Especially the hatred.
Some
day, he hoped and prayed, he could be rid of that feeling, clean and whole
again as he had been before it happened. But it was too soon. Far too soon now.
With
two fully charged miniseeders in his pockets he drove steadily toward Grand
Falls. . . .
THE SHADOWS
FOR COUNTLESS numbers of
its years there liad been no sight or sound or sense of man upon the world of the little blue star. But now, without
warning, a remembered thing had come suddenly into the air again—a quiver, a
subtle throbbing that meant only one kind of
life. The Shadows felt it, the
Shadows that had waited so long and patiently. They began to stir among the
ruined walls. They rose and shook themselves, and a soundless whisper ran
among them, a hungry whisper, wild and eager. "Manl Manl Man has come again!"
THE
GALACTIC SURVEY ship lay in an expanse of level plain, ringed on one side by
low mountains and on the other by a curving belt of forest. A river ran across
the plain and there was much grass. But nothing cropped it, and there were no tracks
in the mud of the river bank to show that anything had.
Hubbard
sniffed the warm air and dug his feet into the soil, which was rich and dark.
He grinned broadly. "This is something like it," he said. "A pretty world. Real pretty."
He
was a young man. His field was anthropology, and this was his first voyage out.
For him, the stars still shone brightly. Barrier looked at him between envy and
sadness. He said nothing. His gaze roving off across the plain and the forest,
studied the sky—a suspicious, sombre gaze. He was old enough to be Hubbard's
father and he felt every year of it, pressed down and running over.
"Of
course, the colors are all wrong," said Hubbard, "but that's nothing.
After they'd lived with a blue sun for a while people would think it was the only kind to have."
Barrier
grunted. "What people?"
"Why, the colonists,-
the people that will live here some dayl" Hubbard laughed suddenly.
"What's the matter with you? Here at last we've found a beautiful world,
and you're as glum as though it were a hunk of dead rock."
"I
guess," said Barrier slowly, "that I've seen
too many hunks of dead rock, and too many beautiful worlds that-"
He broke off. This was no time to talk. In
fact, it was not his place to talk at all. If he didn't like what he was doing
any more he could go home to Earth and stay there, and leave the stars to the
young men who had not yet lost their faith.
The
mountains, the plain, and the forest were very still in the bright blue
morning. Barrier could feel the stillness. No wing cut the sweet air, no paw
rustled the tangled grass, no voice spoke from among
the curious trees. He moved restlessly where he stood, looking rather like an
old hound that scents danger where there should be game. That was Barrier's
job, his science, the oldest science of mankind—to venture into strange country
and feel the invisible, sense the unknown and survive. He was head of the
Ground Exploration team, and an expert on exploring. He had been at it all his
life. Too long.
Hubbard
said, "I wish Kendall would come back. I want to get started."
"What do you think you're going to
find?"
"How
do I know? That's the fun of it. But on a world like this there's bound to be
life of some kind."
"Human fife?"
"Why not?"
Again Barrier grunted, and again he said
nothing. They waited. Other men were scattered about the plain and the river bank, taking samples of
soil, rock, water, and vegetation. They stayed close to the ship, and all were
armed. The technical staff, after checking solar radiation, atmospheric
content, temperature, gravitation, and the million and one other things that
go to make a world habitable or otherwise for Earthmen, had rated this planet
Earth-Type A, and in obedience to Survey ruling the ship had landed to
determine surface conditions. So far, they had all been favorable. So far.
Barrier fidgeted, and
listened to the silence.
PRESENTLY
a speck appeared far off in the sky. It gave off a thin droning, coming closer,
and developed into a small 'copter which settled down beside the ship, a gnat
alighting beside a whale. Kendall and his observer and cameraman got out.
Barrier went up to him.
"What did you find?"
"More of the same," said Kendall, "and nothing in it. Except—" He hesitated.
"Except
what?"
"Over
there beyond the forest. I thought it might be the ruins of a city."
"Therel" cried
Hubbard. "You see?"
Kendall shrugged. "The boys said no, it was just a
bunch of rocks grown over with the woods. I don't know.
You can decide for yourselves when you see the pic-
tures." —
The men who were out on the plain and the
river bank had come running up. They were all young men, like Hubbard. Only the
Captain, the chief of Technical, a couple of research scientists and Barrier
were old. There was an uproar of voices, all talking
at once. The Survey ship had made few landings, and it had been a long time
since the last one. They were like youngsters let out of confinement, bursting
with excitement and pride at what they had found.
Barrier went with them into the ship, into
the main salon. There was a brief wait while the film, which had been developed
automatically on exposure, was fed into the projector. The lights were cut. The
small screen came to life.
They all watched, with intense interest. The
panorama unfolded in natural color, like and yet unlike Earth. On closer
inspection, the forest trees were not trees at all, but monstrous flowers with
stems as thick as trunks, bearing clusters of brilliant and improbable blooms.
Barrier caught a glimpse of something that might have been a butterfly or a
drifting petal, but other than that, nothing moved.
He asked, "Were there
any signs of animal life?"
Kendall shook his head.
"No."
Impatiently,
Hubbard said, "The 'copter probably frightened it away."
"Frightened
things run," said Barrier. "There's nothing running."
Hubbard
swore under his breath, and Barrier smiled. It had become a personal necessity
for Hubbard to discover life here, and no wonder. He had had very little
chance to practice his anthropology, and the voyage was almost over. His
insistence on animals arose from the fact that without them there were not
likely to be men.
"There,"
said Kendall, and held up his hand. The film was stopped, on a frame showing an
area of tree-flowers and clambering vines rather more open than the forest
proper. Humps and ridges of stone showed here and there among the tangled
growths.
"You
see what I mean," said Kendall, and gestured again. The film rolled,
repeating the long low swings the 'copter had made across the area. "I got
as close as I could, and I still couldn't figure it."
"It
sure looks like a city," said Hubbard. He was quivering with excitement.
"Look there. See how regular those lines are, like streets, with houses
fallen down on either side."
Two other voices spoke up. Aiken, the expert
on planetary archaeology, admitted cautiously that it might be a city.
Caffrey, the geologist, said that it might just as well be a natural rock
formation.
"What do you think,
Barrier?" asked Captain Verlaine.
"Can't tell from the picture, sir. I'd have to examine the stones."
"Well," said Verlaine, "that
seems to settle it. Make that area your first objective. Don't you agree,
Cristo-fek?"
Cristofek, who was Chief of Technical, nodded
emphatically. "And Barrier, in case it does turn out to be a ruin, make
every effort to discover what sort of inhabitants it had and, above all, what
happened to them."
Barrier
stood up. "All right," he said. "Let's be on our way."
The seven men of his team joined him—all,
like Hubbard, specialists, young men picked for physical condition and
trained in the use of arms. Aiken and Caffrey were
among them, also a lad named Moms who was in charge of the walkie-talkie.
Barrier consulted Kendall about bearings, and then went with the others to get
his gear. Within a quarter of an hour they were marching off across the plain.
BARRIER
felt a twinge of nostalgia so strong as to be a physical pain—nostalgia for the
days when he had been green and eager like the rest, leaving the ship, which he
hated, for the uncrossed horizons of new worlds, full of a shivering
fascination, full of hope. The hope had been the first to go, and then the
fascination.
Now,
looking at the bright landscape, beautiful in spite of its unearthly tints, he
found himself thinking that he would like to be in a certain bar he remembered
in Los Angeles, not worrying about anything, not pondering meanings and
significances and the shapes of alien leaves, forgetting completely the dark
conviction that had grown in him over the years.
Schmidt,
the entomologist, was chattering with Gordon, whose field was zoology, about
worms and insect forms, of which many had been found. Hubbard speculated with
Aiken on The City. They already called it that. The high grasses swished
against their boots. The wind blew softly and the sun was warm. But apart from
the eight invading humans there was nothing sentient to enjoy these blessings.
Barrier disliked the empty silence. It was unnatural in such a lush and joyous
setting.
His eyes roved constantly, grey eyes set in a
face the color of old leather and surrounded by the complex wrinkles that come
from squinting against numberless foreign suns. For a long time they saw
nothing. And then, more and more, they narrowed and watched a certain sector to
their left.
Barrier lifted his hand, and the little
column stopped.
"Over there," he said. "Do you
see those shadows?"
They all stared.
Hubbard laughed. "Cloud shadows."
"There are no clouds."
"Well,
then, it's the wind making ripples in the grass." He glanced sidelong at
Barrier. "What's the difference what makes them? They're only
shadows!"
Barrier
said heavily, speaking to them all, "Will you please try to remember that
you are not on Earth? In a strange world anything, a shadow, a blade of grass,
may be alive and deadly."
Their
faces regarded him, intelligent, uncomprehending, trying not to show that they
thought he was being a trifle ridiculous. He knew that they now felt hardened
veterans of the star-worlds, with the vast experience of their four or five
landings behind them, and all on planets that had had only normally dangerous
life-forms. He could not make them understand the things he had seen, the
inimical stealthy things that hated man.
He
motioned them on again. They had already forgotten the shadows, but he had
not. There seemed to be a number of them—how do you count shadows? Smallish
clots of darkness they were that flitted along some distance away, losing
themselves in the waving grass, difficult to see in the brilliant sunshine, but
unmistakably there. They seemed to be running parallel with the men. They
looked like perfectly normal shadows and Barrier would not have given them a
second thought-except that in his experience a shadow must be thrown by
something, and here there was nothing, not even so much as a patch of cloud or
a bird's wing.
They
marched on across the beautiful, empty, silent plain. And then, again, Barrier
called a halt.
They had come to the edge of a stream that
ran down toward the river, cutting itself a cleft in the soil of the plain.
Caffrey immediately scrambled down the steep bank and began to study the layers
of silt and sand and clay. Gordon followed him, casting back and forth along
the edge of the water. He became vastly excited when he discovered a hideous
small creature that resembled a purple prawn. Something else, that might have
been a snake or an eel, went off with a ropy slither between the wet rocks.
Hubbard
danced up and down. T told you there was life here!"
Barrier said gently,
"I never denied it."
He
glanced upstream. The shadows were bunched together, hovering over the cleft.
They had not come any closer, but they were watching. He could not see with his
eyes that they were watching, for they were only featureless blobs of gloom.
But he felt it, in every nerve, in every pore of his prickling skin. There was
something ugly about being watched by shadows.
ABRUPTLY,
Caffrey began to dig like a terrier in the soft ground midway up the bank.
Presently he held up an object like a blackened, broken stick that was knobbed
at one end. He handed it to Gordon, who voiced a sharp exclamation and cried
out for Barrier.
"It's
a bone," said Gordon. "The leg bone of a large deer, I should say, or
a small horse. You know what I mean, the equivalents thereof."
Hubbard was quite beside himself. "Vertebrate life! That proves that evolution here has
followed practically the same path it did on Earth." He looked around, as
though he expected to see a man materialize from among the rocks.
Barrier said to Gordon,
"How old is that bone?"
Gordon
shook his head. "It's been in the ground a long time. How long would you
say, Caffrey?"
Caffrey
squinted at the bank. "Judging from its depth under the present topsoil, I
should guess five or six hundred years, maybe more. That's only a guess of
course. There are so many factors I haven't any data for."
"In other words," said Barrier, "a long time." H» frowned at the ancient bone, and then at
the deserted landscape around him.
Morris
sent word of their find back to the ship. They marched on.
The shadows followed.
There
were several miles of the flat grassland now between them and the ship. It lay
glinting dully in the blue light, Leviathan at rest. The outposts of the
forest, solitary clumps and little clustered groves of the giant flowers and
equally lofty fems, sprang up around the men, gradually screening off both the
plain and the sky, until they walked in a warm blue gloom shot through with the
brilliant spectral colors of the blooms.
At first
they went slowly, on the watch for dangerous plant-forms. Apparently there were
none. Hansen, the botanist, chanted aloud with wonder at every step. Schmidt
was entranced by huge butterflies and numerous insects that crept and flew and
made tiny buzzings. Gordon and Hubbard peered eagerly, but there was nothing
for them to see.
Barrier
walked ahead, going with a lanky noiseless stride like an Indian. His eyes were
anxious, and his nerves on edge.
It
was very lovely in the forest, with the blooms of many colors nodding overhead.
Barrier thought of a garden at the bottom of the sea. The glades were full of
blueness like still water. There began to be wisps of mist along the ground.
He
thought for a time that they had lost the shadows. Then he saw them again, low
down, slipping along between the rough, pale flower-trunks. They had changed
their formation. They were all around the men now, in a circle. They had come
closer. Much closer.
Barrier
made the men bunch up. He pointed out the shadows to them, and this time they
were less inclined to shrug them off.
"Better
let me talk to the ship," he said, and Morris clicked the switch on the
walkie-talkie. He did that several times, repeating the call letters, and then
he shook his head.
"Sorry,"
he said nervously, "I'm blanked out. There's some electrical disturbance,
very strong . . ."
Barrier
glanced at the shadows. Creatures of force? They must
be, since they were not solid matter. Electronic discharge from their bodies
might well disrupt the small transmitter.
He
considered turning back. They were now about equidistant from the ship and the
area of the possible ruins, and if the shadows had anything evil in mind,
turning back could not stop them. The ship was well out of reach. Besides, he
had his orders, and if these shadows were a native life-form, it was his duty
to find out about them.
They had made no hostile move as yet. Hostile
or not, could shadows hurt men? And if so, how did you fight them?
The ground mists were thickening. They must
be approaching swampy ground, although he had not noticed any on Kendall's
films. Tenuous wreaths and veils hung in the blue glades, each separate droplet
glittering with diamond fires in the filtered sunlight. The breeze rippled them
to and fro very prettily. They were not fever mists. Barrier forgot them,
returning his watchful attention to the shadows.
Within
the past few minutes they had drawn their circle in until they were only a few
feet away from the men. They glided round and round, utterly silent, in a kind
of nervous dance. The men were all watching them now. Hubbard spoke to Barrier,
and his voice had an edge of fright.
"What are they? What
do they want?"
"They're
only shadows," said Barrier irritably. "What does it matter what they
want?" Then he called out to the others, "Keep together. If things
get rough we'll turn back. But no matter what happens, don't bolt. If you do,
there won't be any way to help you."
THEY
WENT on, treading on each other's heels staring around them. The shadows wove
and bounded. Quite suddenly, Schmidt screamed. His gun went off with a snarling
hiss. It flared again and again into a clot of darkness, which did not flinch.
"It touched me," Schmidt shuddered.
"It touched me!"
He
began to run, not very far, because there was no space with the ring of shadows
to run in. Barrier caught him by the arm.
"Shut up," he snarled. "Shut
up!"
Schmidt stood shivering. "It was cold. Cold as death."
"You're
not dead, are you?" "No."
"You're
not hurt?" T-No."
"Then shut up." Barrier glared at
Schmidt, at the others. "The next one of you that panics, I'll knock him
flat."
He was afraid himself. Miserably
afraid. But he said, "They haven't hurt us yet. Maybe they can't. Anyway,
let's wait a while before we blow our tops."
The
young men swallowed and straightened their faces out into stiff lines and tried
hard not to see the shadows. Schmidt twitched as he walked. Barrier wished
there was a sound in the forest. A squeak, a grunt, a roar
that meant something warm-blooded and alive. There wasn't. Even their
own footfalls were deadened on the soft ground.
The
mists thickened, sparkling, bright. The alien sun was blotted out. The shadows
skulked and clung. Sweat poured down the cheeks of the men, stained their drill
jackets. Hubbard said, licking his lips, "How much farther?"
"Another
mile or two."
Barrier
wished the mists were not there. They made him feel shut in and suffocated. He
worried about bogs. The blue daylight was maddening. He thought of the honest
yellow glare of Sol and wondered what madness it was that sent men out to the
ends of the galaxy seeking other suns.
He
stumbled suddenly, and looked down. At first he thought the obstacle was a
rounded stone half buried in the mold of fallen petals. And then he knew it
wasn't. He stooped and lifted it up and held it out to Hubbard.
"You wanted man,"
he said.
Hubbard rubbed his palms up and down along
his 181
thighs. He stared at the thing in Barrier's hands, and the others stared over their shoulders, and the thing grinned at them with a single gaping line of teeth.
Hubbard reached out and took it.
"It's very old," he said. "As old as that." He pointed to Gordon's trophy.
Schmidt said in a curiously shrill voice, "There were men here once, and animals. Now there aren't any. They're all dead, and I know what killed them." He stared hard at the shadows.
Barrier swore. "That's fine talk from a scientist. I thought you people were trained not to jump to conclusions."
Hubbard muttered, "Barrier is right." He looked at the skull and repressed a shiver. "Come on, I want to see those ruins."
They went on, so close together that their shoulders rubbed. The mists grew denser and brighter and heavier. The men sweated, ignoring the shadows, desperately ignoring them.
Without any warning, the shadows sprang.
There was a moment's terrible screaming from the men, and then there was silence, and after that a few stifled, horrid sounds. The skull fell from Hubbard's grasp and rolled away, grinning a wise grin as it went. Barrier swayed where he stood, clawing blindly with his hands at his own flesh.
He could see the others. Through a veil of shadowy gloom he could see them, dimly, and the gloom was behind his eyes and not before them. Some of the men had tried to run, and the shadows had caught them as they ran. Two of them kicked and grovelled on the ground. Their outlines were indistinct, blurred over. Their eyes were crazy. So were Barrier's.
The shocking swiftness of that leap, the noiselessness, the awful cold that poured in suddenly upon the flesh
—the loathsome sense of an intruder grasping at mind and body, taking them over from
within. . . .
It was inside him. The shadow was inside him. Its icy substance interpenetrated his warm and living flesh, its alien and unreadable intelligence was clinging tight against his own, and it was shaking him, driving him, and he was going to die. . . .
They're
dead, all the men and animals, and I know what killed
them—Schmidt was gone, plunging off into the mist, taking with him the terrible invader in his flesh. There were still shadows, a lot of them, running loose, for there had not been enough men. Some of these went after Schmidt.
Barrier forgot his orders, his command, his pride. Blind black terror overwhelmed him and he ran. He wanted to outrun the thing that held him, to shake it free and lose it utterly, and go on running right off this filthy blue-lit world. But he couldn't. It was part of him. He would not lose it till he died.
He ran, through the silent forest, where the nodding blossoms were shrouded thick in mist and the flower-trunks were hidden, and there was nothing but himself and the nightmare that dwelt in his flesh, and a darkness in the air around him.
Several times he fell, but something forced him up and on again. He had lost all track of the other men. He had almost forgotten them. Once, far off, he heard a shriek and knew that someone was dying, but he did not care. His mind was lost inside the shadow.
He was only distantly aware that suddenly the mists were gone and he was staggering over ground that had once been cleared but now was overgrown, though not so thickly as the forest. He stumbled among stones, reeled and scrambled around great hummocks from which peeped shattered cornices, and crossed an open space where his feet brought forth a sound of dry sticks cracking. He looked down and saw that the sticks were human bones.
He sobbed and turned his head to see the
little group of shadows that hovered at his heels.
"Are you waiting your turn?" he
yelled at them, or tried to yell, and made only a hoarse whispering. His face,
so strangely blurred and dimmed, twisted into an insensate mask of rage. He
bent and picked up the old bare bones from around his feet and threw them at
the shadows, and cursed, and sobbed, and then he ran again, five paces, ten,
across the crackling open space, and there was a hummock too high to climb and
too wide to go around. He butted himself against it, into a knee of stone that
thrust out between the creepers, and then he fell. His body jerked
convulsively, and was still. . . .
HE
WAS looking at a moon. It was a red moon, small but very close. There were
mountains on it, and gouged-out hollows. His mind made idle pictures of them, a
face, a crouching rabbit. There were stars. He did not
recognize them. Presently another moon came up, a larger one, and pallid green.
He tired of making pictures on the moons.
Someone was moaning, close at hand.
Mildly curious, Barrier turned his head. He
saw a man, lying curled up with his knees against his chest and his arms
clasped over his head. He seemed to know the man. He studied the partly visible
face. Of course he knew him, it was young Hubbard, who
had been looking for men. . . .
Barrier sprang up. Cold sweat burst out on
him and his body trembled, standing rigid in the moonlight. He searched inside
himself as a man will search for a remembered pain, sick and praying not to
find it.
It was gone. The shadow was gone. He clutched
at Hubbard, and saw that the unholy dimness had left his features. He shook
Hubbard and shouted at him, and then he saw that there were other men huddled on the ground, two, three, four of them. He ran from one to the other, and they
looked up at him with empty, frightened eyes. Schmidt was not among them, nor
Morris.
Six. Six living out of eight. And the shadows had gone away out
of their flesh.
For
one short second he was hopeful. Then he looked out across the open space where
the bones were and saw the company of dark and restless blots that moved among
the spiky ribs and tumbled, careless limbs. He almost laughed that he had
considered hope.
He
returned to Hubbard. "How did you get here?" he asked, and slapped
the young man's face until he answered.
"I
don't know. I—just ran." Hubbard gave a racking shiver. "Oh God,
Barrier, that thing inside me just like smoke blows through a bush, and cold. . . ."
Barrier
slapped him again. "Where're Schmidt and Morris?"
"I don't know"
Barrier
set about getting the others on their feet. None of them knew precisely how
they had gotten there. None of them knew what had happened to Morris, but Aiken
said:
"I
saw Schmidt. I was running and I passed by Schmidt lying on the ground, at
least I think it was Schmidt, it had his specimen case still strapped around
it, and it was dead. Oh yes, there wasn't any doubt at all about its being
dead."
He turned away suddenly and
tried hard to be sick.
Barrier
said slowly, "So they finished off two of us, and brought the rest of us
here. I suppose they want to complete the job at their leisure. So here we
are. We can't communicate with the ship, and they won't send Kendall out to
look for us before morning. And if we're still alive by then, and Kendall does
happen to find us, and lands—what do you think they'll do about it?"
He
glanced toward the shadows. Nobody answered.
T
wonder," said Barrier at last, "if fire would keep them off."
The others stared at him. They they scurried
about, gathering dead creepers, dry grass, anything that would bum. They made
fires, a ring of them across the mouth of the cul-de-sac where they were
caught. They waited, breathless with hope.
The shadows crept up toward the flames. Then,
as though delighted with them, they began to flit back and forth around the
fires, frolicking over and through them, almost, it seemed, playing tag among
the columns of smoke.
Hubbard
wept.
Mist was crawling up out of the forest. The
small red moon was sinking, and the larger pale green one shed a ghastly light.
The fires burned low and the shadows danced around them.
"They
look real cute there, don't they?" said Barrier viciously. "Having fun."
The
flames died down, became beds of embers. Some of the shadows began to make
tentative small rushes toward Barrier and the five who were left of his team.
Coffrey
whispered, "I guess they're coming for us." He still had a withered
blossom stuck in his buttonhole.
The
shadows darted nervously, toward the men and then back to the glowing red
embers. Beyond them tenuous arms of mist advanced and coiled between the
ruins. They began to obscure the remaining moon, and as the light faded the
shadows moved more swifdy, with a greater eagerness.
Aiken
had been rooting among the creepers that shrouded the hummock. Suddenly he
bleated, "There s a passage here, a doorway. Maybe we could get inside
and—and barricade it."
"Against
shadows?" said Barrier, and laughed.
"It's better than nothing," Hubbard
said. "Anything's better than just sitting here."
HE
SCRAMBLED toward Aiken, who had disappeared, and the others followed. All at
once, Barrier began to laugh. They stared at him, their faces round and startled.
Barrier shouted at them, laughing.
"You
still don't get it, do you? You still think you can run and hide, and put up
little defences, and win out somehow in the end because you're men and man
always wins out. You haven't learned yet, have you?"
"Learned what?"
asked Hubbard, in a low, queer voice.
Barrier
studied the shadows. "Why should I tell you, though? It took me half a
lifetime and a lot of worlds to learn the truth. Why shouldn't I keep it to
myself, and let you die happy?"
Abruptly,
Hubbard sprang at him. He was like an enraged child, boiling with a confused
furry of which the greater part was the fear of death. Barrier caught his
wrists.
"You
dirty yellow-belly," Hubbard squealed. "You're supposed to be our
leader, you're supposed to show us what to do, and what do you do? You give
up." He called Barrier a number of evil names. "The
great explorer, the big brave leader, hell! You're just an old man with
all the guts run out of you. You should have gone back to Earth and let
somebody that could fight take over."
Barrier thrust him away, quite hard but
without anger.
"All
right," he said, "I'll let you in on it. Earth was a soft planet. Oh, she tried to put her foot down—ice ages, volcanoes,
plagues, floods, droughts, and famines—but it was too late, and it wasn't
enough, and now we've got the upper hand of her. But the other worlds are
tougher. Sooner or later, they find a way. . . .
"We aren't welcome in the universe. I don't know why. Maybe it's because we aren't content to be the animals
we are, but must always be pretending that we're something else, prying about
and upsetting things, grasping after stars, making trouble and screaming because
it hurts. I don't know. I only know that we're hated. Everywhere I've been,
wherever there was a man, they'd been gotten rid of somehow."
He
glanced up at the alien stars, dimming now with the mist that rolled across
them.
"They
hate us," he said softly. "Their children hate us. Everywhere we have
enemies, but never any friends."
Then
he sighed. "You're right, Hubbard. I am an old man, with the guts worn out
of me. You run on in and hide, now, and I wish you luck. Me, I don't like
holes."
The
shadows were hard upon him now. One brushed against him, and its touch was
cold, cold as the bones that lay in the open space. Swiftly, so swiftly that
none of the men could stop him, Barrier whirled and leaped through them,
running like a deer.
He took them by surprise, the small dark
blots that hung so close to him. He got past them, trampling on the brittle
bones. And then the shadows followed, spreading out fanwise behind him, with
three or four racing on to catch him.
He
was some distance ahead of them. He heard Hubbard's voice shrieking after him,
but not the words it said. He put out every ounce of strength that was in him,
rushing between the heaped-up ruins, into the arms of mist that reached along
the ground.
The
shadows were closing in. But it was the mist that sprang.
It
rolled around and wrapped him in, and where it touched his flesh he knew that
the glittering droplets were not drops of mist at all but tiny flecks of life,
separate, sentient, gathered together in formidable colonies of cloud. And he
knew two other things, in that second when it was too late for knowledge—that
the mist had not touched him nor the others in the
forest, and that it had moved into the ruined city after them, against the
wind.
Tiny
flecks of life, glittering like powdered gems. And they hated man with a
curious, inherited enmity.
There
was a numbing agony in Barrier, an ecstasy of curious anguish that made his
body twitch and dance. His throat convulsed, but no sound came out of it, and
his eyes were filled with motes of fire. He tried to run again, and could not, and somewhere far away in another world, Hubbard was
still shouting.
The
shadows came. A broken thought went tumbling into the stricken emptiness of
his mind—They
work together, damn them, and they both hate man. Then there was the horrid cold, the alien
presence sweeping through him, and this was death. . . .
The
mists drew back. The tearing anguish left him, and the chill darkness that
possessed him was somehow healing to his seared nerves. It was like being
shocked with icy water, so that suddenly he could see and think again, even
through the gloomy veil that dimmed his sight and mind.
The
shadows leaped and swirled around him, and where they leaped the mists that
were not mists at all drew back, sullen and reluctant, but coiling all the same
upon themselves. And the shadow-thing that was inside of Barrier made him tum
and go back toward the ruins, not fast this time, but slowly because he had
been hurt, giving Barrier, in some unfathomable way, of its own strength.
The
others came behind, a rear guard, dodging, weaving, pouncing on the stealthy
tentacles of mist that sought to reach around them to the men who stood gaping
by the great hummock. Here and there a glistening cloud engulfed a single
shadow, and suddenly it was not.
Barrier's
face, obscured by the dim aura, took on a strange expression.
He sat down at Hubbard's feet and the Shadow
left him, and they were as they had been before, the men, the shadows, the
little beds of ash still glowing, and the wavering mist beyond.
Hubbard swore meaningless oaths meant to
conceal his shame. "Were you crazy, Barrier? Did you think you could draw
them all away from us?"
Aiken
said, "He was trying to get away, to get a warning to the ship so maybe
they could save us." He bent over. "Barrier, listen. Barrier. . .
."
He paid them no attention. He was watching
the shadows that hovered between them and the mist. A few of them were darting
as they had before, from the burned-out fires to the men and back again.
"They
want us to put on more fuel," he said slowly. "The fires help them
keep the mist away." He turned abruptly to the others. "They saved
me, did you see that? They came after me, and one protected me with its own
body, and some of them died." He was shaking a little. "We were wrong
about them. They were trying to help us in the forest. They followed us
like—"
A
word hovered on his tongue and he considered it, thinking of his boyhood and a
small soiled terrier who had eaten his boots and loved
him and once had interposed his body between Barrier and a fearsome hissing
thing. It had only been a gopher snake, but the idea was the same.
"I
think," he said, "that those shadows were
the dogs, the protectors, of the men who lived here once. Different from our own,
but trained to hunt down and turn aside enemies from their men. It was the mist
that killed Schmidt and Morris, of course. We didn't keep together, and the
shadows couldn't save us all."
The
men stared at the shadows. It was hard to change their minds now, but they
could not deny what they had seen. Their faces softened, just a little, losing
some of the hard fear. Then Hubbard said:
"But what about tlietn?" and he pointed at the bones.
Barrier
shook his head. "Whatever killed them, it wasn't the shadows." His
voice had an odd far-away note. His mind was very busy with something, taking
it apart and studying the pieces intently and then putting it back together a
different way. At last he' smiled a little and went toward the shadows. He
began to talk to them, putting out his hands, and they clustered around him,
bounding-up playfully.
"They
must have been lonesome all this time," he said, "guarding their
masters' bones."
Aiken
said, "Down there in that passage—it's built of solid rock and hasn't
crumbled a bit—there are some symbols cut in the wall. I haven't really looked
at them, but—well, it seems as though all the people in the city gathered here
to die at once, and it could be that they left a message or two in the
strongest places."
"Let's look," said
Hubbard.
They
went down through the opening Aiken had found, all except Barrier, who was
still playing with the shadow-dogs, and smiling. He was only mildly interested
when they came back, Aiken and Hubbard both flushed and joyous.
"Those symbols," said Aiken.
"They're pictographs, so simple and clear that anyone could read them.
They must have hoped, those people, that someone would
come along sooner or later. Anyway, they told what happened to them, or rather,
what was going to happen. The planet had already entered the edges of a cloud
that was death for lung breathers. That's why the animals died too, and only
the lungless creatures lived. And Barrier. . .
"Yes?"
"They
mentioned the dogs. They drew quite clear pictures of them at work, so that
strangers would know."
Barrier
nodded. He looked at the dark blots romping about his feet. "They've
waited all this time. Well, they can wait a little longer."
Then he straightened up, still with that odd,
wry smile.
"Seems
like I spoke too soon," he said. "Maybe there's enough worth in us
that here and there some little world will give us another chance. Anyway, it's
nice to know there's one place where we have some friends."
They
heaped fuel on the fires, and the shadows danced. Barrier watched them, looking
somehow younger, like
a man who has rediscovered
hope.
ENCHANTRESS OF VENUS
Chapter I
THE
SHIP MOVED SLOWLY across the Red Sea, through the shrouding veils of mist, her
sail barely filled by the languid thrust of the wind. Her hull, of a thin light
metal, floated without sound, the surface of the strange ocean parting before
her prow in silent rippling streamers of flame.
Night
deepened toward the ship, a river of indigo flowing out of the west. The man
known as Stark stood alone by the after rail and watched its coming. He was
full of impatience and a gathering sense of danger, so that it seemed to him
that even the hot wind smelled of it.
The
steersman lay drowsily over his sweep. He was a big man, with skin and hair the
color of milk. He did not speak, but Stark felt that now and again the man's
eyes turned toward him, pale and calculating under half-closed lids, with a
secret avarice.
The
captain and the two other members of the little coasting vessel's crew were
forward, at their evening meal. Once or twice Stark heard a
burst of laughter, half-whispered and furtive. It was as though all four
shared in some private joke, from which he was rigidly excluded.
The
heat was oppressive. Sweat gathered on Stark's dark face. His shirt stuck to
his back. The air was heavy with moisture, tainted with the muddy fecundity of
the land that brooded westward behind the eternal fog.
There
was something ominous about the sea itself. Even on its own world, the Red Sea
is hardly more than legend. It lies behind the Mountains of White Cloud, the
great barrier wall that hides away half a planet. Few men have gone beyond that
barrier, into the vast mystery of Inner Venus. Fewer still have come back.
Stark
was one of that handful. Three times before he had
crossed the mountains, and once he had stayed for nearly.a year. But he had
never quite grown used to the Red Sea.
It
was not water. It was gaseous, dense enough to float the buoyant hulls of die
metal ships, and it burned perpetually with its deep inner fires. The mists
that clouded it were stained with the bloody glow. Beneath the surface Stark
could see the drifts of flame where the lazy currents ran, and the little
coifing bursts of sparks that came upward and spread and melted into other
bursts, so that the face of the sea was like a cosmos of crimson stars.
It
was very beautiful, glowing against the blue, luminous darkness of the night. Beautiful, and strange.
There
was a padding of bare feet, and the captain, Malthor, came up to Stark, his*
outlines dim and ghosdy in the gloom.
"We
will reach Shuruun," he said, "before the second glass is run."
Stark nodded.
"Good."
The
voyage had seemed endless, and the close confinement of the narrow deck had
got badly on his nerves.
"You
will like Shuruun," said the captain jovially. "Our
wine, our food, our women—all superb. We don't have many visitors. We
keep to ourselves, as you will see. But those who do come . . ."
He
laughed, and clapped Stark on the shoulder. "Ah, yes. You will be happy in
Shuruun!"
It
seemed to Stark that he caught an echo of laughter from the unseen crew, as
though they listened and found a hidden jest in Malthor's words.
Stark said, "That's
fine."
"Perhaps," said Malthor, "you
would like to lodge with me. I eould make you a good price."
He
had made a good price for Stark's passage from up the coast. An
exorbitantly good one.
Stark said, "No."
"You
don't have to be afraid," said the Venusian, in a confidential tone.
"The strangers who come to Shuruun all have the same reason. It's a good
place to hide. We're out of everybody's reach."
He
paused, but Stark did not rise to his bait. Presently he chuckled and went on,
"In fact, it's such a safe place that most of the strangers decide to stay
on. Now, at my house, I could give you . . ."
Stark said again, flatly,
"No."
The
captain shrugged. "Very well. Think it over, anyway."
He peered ahead into the red, coiling mists. "Ah! See there?" He
pointed, and Stark made out the shadowy loom of cliffs. "We are coming
into the strait now."
Malthor
turned and took the steering sweep himself, the helmsman going forward to join
the others. The ship began to pick up speed. Stark saw that she had come into
the grip of a current that swept toward the cliffs, a river of fire racing ever
more swiftly in the depths of the sea.
THE
dark wall seemed to plunge toward them. At first Stark could see no passage.
Then, suddenly, a narrow crimson streak appeared, widened, and became a gut of
boiling flame, rushing silently around broken rocks. Red fog rose like smoke.
The ship quivered, sprang ahead, and tore like a mad thing into the heart of
the infemo.
In
spite of himself, Stark's hands tightened on the rail. Tattered veils of mist
swirled past them. The sea, the air, the ship itself, seemed <lrenched in
blood. There was no sound, in all that wild sweep of current through the
strait. Only the sullen fires burst and flowed.
The
reflected glare showed Stark that the Straits of Shuruun were defended. Squat
fortresses brooded on the cliffs. There were ballistas,
and great windlasses for the drawing of nets across the narrow throat. The men
of Shuruun could enforce their law, that barred all
foreign shipping from their gulf.
They had reason for such a law, and such a defense.
The legitimate trade of Shuruun, such as it was, was in wine and the delicate
laces woven from spider-silk. Actually, however, the city lived and throve on
piracy, the arts of wrecking, and a contraband trade
in the distilled juice of the vela poppy.
Looking
at the rocks and the fortresses, Stark could understand how it was that Shuruun
had been able for more centuries than anyone could tell to victimize the
shipping of the Red Sea, and offer a refuge to the outlaw, the wolfs-head, the breaker of tabu.
With
startling abruptness, they were through the gut and drifting on the still
surface of this all but landlocked arm of the Red Sea.
Because
of the shrouding fog, Stark could see nothing of the land. But the smell of it
was stronger, warm damp soil and the heavy, faintiy rotten perfume of vegetation
half jungle, half swamp. Once, through a rift in the wreathing vapor, he
thought he glimpsed the shadowy bulk of an island, but it was gone at once.
After
the terrifying rush of the strait, it seemed to Stark that the ship barely
moved. His impatience and the subtle sense of danger deepened. He began to pace
the deck, with the nervous, velvet motion of a prowling cat. The moist, steamy
air seemed all but unbreathable after the clean dryness of Mars, from whence he
had come so recently. It was oppressively still.
Suddenly he stopped, his
head thrown back, listening.
The
sound was borne faintly on the slow wind. It came from everywhere and nowhere,
a vague dim thing without source or direction. It almost seemed that the night
itself had spoken—the hot blue night of Venus, crying out of the mists with a
tongue of infinite woe.
It faded and died away, only half heard,
leaving behind it a sense of aching sadness, as though all the misery and
longing of a world had found voice in that desolate wail.
Stark
shivered. For a time there was silence, and then he heard the sound again, now
on a deeper note. Still faint and far away, it was sustained longer by the vagaries
of the heavy air, and it became a chant, rising and falling. There were no
words. It was not the sort of thing that would have need of words. Then it was
gone again.
Stark turned to Malthor.
"What was that?"
The
man looked at him curiously. He seemed not to have heard.
"That wailing
sound," said Stark impatiently.
"Oh,
that." The Venusian shrugged. "A trick of the wind.
It sighs in the hollow rocks around the strait."
HE
YAWNED, giving place again to the steersman, and come to stand beside Stark.
The Earthman ignored him. For some reason, that sound half heard through the
mists had brought his uneasiness to a sharp pitch.
Civilization
had brushed over Stark with a light hand. Raised from infancy by half-human
aboriginals, his perceptions were still those of a savage. His ear was good.
Malthor
lied. That cry of pain was not made by any wind.
"I
have known several Earthmen," said Malthor, changing the subject, but not
too swifdy. "None of them were like you."
Intuition
warned Stark to play along. "I don't come from Earth," he said.
"I come from Mercury."
Malthor
puzzled over that. Venus is a cloudy world, where no man has ever seen the Sun,
let alone a star. The captain had heard vaguely of these things. Earth and Mars
he knew of. But Mercury was an unknown word.
Stark explained. "The
planet nearest the Sun. It's very hot there. The Sun blazes like a huge
fire, and there are no clouds to shield it."
"Ah. That is why your skin is so
dark." He held his own pale forearm close to Stark's and shook his head.
"I have never seen such skin," he said admiringly. "Nor
such great muscles."
Looking up, he went on in a tone of complete
friendliness, "I wish you would stay with me. You'll find no better
lodgings in Shuruun. And I warn you, there are people in the town who will take advantage of strangers—rob them, even slay
them. Now, I am known by all as a man of honour. You could sleep soundly under
my roof."
He
paused, then added with a smile, "Also, I have a
daughter. An excellent cook—and very beautiful."
The
woeful chanting came again, dim and distant on the wind, an echo of warning
against some unimagined fate.
Stark said for the third
time, "No."
He
needed no intuition to tell him to walk wide of the captain. The man was a
rogue, and not a very subtle one.
A
flint-hard, angry look came briefly into Malthor's eyes. "You're a stubborn
man. You'll find that Shuruun is no place for stubbornness."
He
turned and went away. Stark remained where he was. The ship drifted on through
a slow eternity of time. And all down that long still gulf of the Red Sea,
through the heat and the wreathing fog, the ghostly chanting haunted him, like
the keening of lost souls in some forgotten hell.
Presently
the course of the ship was altered. Malthor came again to the afterdeck, giving
a few quiet commands. Stark saw land ahead, a darker blur on the night, and
then the shrouded outlines of a city.
Torches blazed on the quays and in the
streets, and 198 the low buildings caught a ruddy glow from the burning sea
itself. A squat and ugly town, Shuruun, crouching witch-like on the rocky
shore, her ragged skirts dipped in blood.
The ship drifted in toward
the quays.
STARK
heard a whisper of movement behind him, the hushed and purposeful padding of
naked feet. He turned, with the astonishing swiftness of an animal that feels
itself threatened, his hand dropping to his gun.
A
belaying pin, thrown by the steersman, struck the side of his head with
stunning force. Reeling, half blinded, he saw the distorted shapes of men
closing in upon him. Malthor's voice sounded, low and hard.
A second belaying pin whizzed through the air and cracked against Stark's
shoulder.
Hands
were laid upon him. Bodies, heavy and strong, bore his down. Malthor laughed.
Stark's
teeth glinted bare and white. Someone's cheek brushed past, and he sank them
into the flesh. He began to growl, a sound that should never have come from a human throat. It seemed to the startled Ven-usians that the man they had
attacked had by some wizardry become a beast, at the first touch, of violence.
The
man with the torn cheek screamed. There was a voiceless scuffling on the deck,
a terrible intensity of motion, and then the great dark body rose and shook
itself free of the tangle, and was gone, over the rail, leaving Malthor with
nothing but the silken rags of a shirt
in his hands.
The
surface of the Red Sea closed without a ripple over Stark. There was a burst of
crimson sparks, a momentary trail of flame going down like a drowned comet, and then—nothing.
Chapter II
STARK
DROPPED SLOWLY downward through a strange world. There was no difficulty about
breathing, as in a sea of water. The gases of the Red Sea support life quite well, and the creatures that dwell in it have almost normal
lungs.
Stark
did not pay much attention at first, except to keep his balance automatically.
He was still dazed from the blow, and he was raging with anger and pain.
The
primitive in him, whose name was not Stark but N'Chaka, and who had fought and
starved and hunted in the blazing valleys of Mercury's Twilight Belt, learning
lessons he never forgot, wished to return and slay Malthor and his men. He
regretted that he had not torn out their throats, for now his trail would never
be safe from them.
But
the man Stark, who had learned some more bitter lessons in the name of
civilization, knew the unwisdom of that. He snarled over his aching head, and
cursed the Venusians in the harsh, crude dialect that was his mother tongue,
but he did not turn back. There would be time enough for Malthor.
It struck him that the gulf
was very deep.
Fighting
down his rage, he began to swim in the direction of the shore. There was no
sign of pursuit, and he judged that Malthor had decided to let him go. He
puzzled over the reason for the attack. It could hardly be robbery, since he
carried nothing but the clothes he stood in, and very little money.
No.
There was some deeper reason. A reason connected with Malthor's insistence
that he lodge with him. Stark smiled. It was not a pleasant smile. He was thinking
of Shuruun, and the things men said about it, around the shores of the Red Sea.
Then
his face hardened. The dim coiling fires through which he swam brought him
memories of other times he had gone adventuring in the depths of the Red Sea.
He
had not been alone then. Helvi had gone with him —the tall son of a barbarian
kinglet up-coast by Yarell. They had hunted strange beasts through the crystal
forests of the sea-bottom and bathed in the welling flames that pulse from the
very heart of Venus to feed the ocean. They had been brothers.
Now Helvi was gone, into Shuruun. He had
never returned.
Stark
swam on. And presently he saw below him in the red gloom something that made
him drop lower, frowning with surprise.
There
were trees beneath him. Great forest giants towering up into
an eerie sky, their branches swaying gently to the slow wash of the currents.
Stark
was puzzled. The forests where he and Helvi had hunted were truly crystalline,
without even the memory of life. The "trees" were no more trees in
actuality than the branching corals of Terra's southern oceans.
But
these were real, or had been. He thought at first that they still lived, for
their leaves were green, and here and there creepers had starred them with
great nodding blossoms of gold and purple and waxy white. But when he floated
down close enough to touch them, he realized that they were dead—trees,
creepers, blossoms, all.
They
had not mummified, nor turned to stone. They were pliable, and their colours
were very bright. Simply, they had ceased to live, and the gases of the sea had
preserved them by some chemical magic, so perfectly that barely a leaf had
fallen.
Stark
did not venture into the shadowy denseness below the topmost branches. A
strange fear came over him, at the sight of that vast forest dreaming in the
depths of the gulf, drowned and forgotten, as though wondering why the birds
had gone, taking with them the warm rains and the light of day.
He thrust his way upward, himself like a huge
dark bird above the branches. An overwhelming impulse to get away from that
unearthly place drove, him on, his half-wild sense shuddering with an
impression of evil so great that it took all his acquired common-sense to assure
him that he was not pursued by demons.
HE
BROKE the surface at last, to find that he had lost his direction in the red
deep and made a long circle around, so that he was far below Shuruun. He made
his way back, not hurrying now, and presently clambered out over the black
rocks.
He stood at the end of a muddy lane that
wandered in toward the town. He followed it, moving neither fast nor slow, but
with a wary alertness.
Huts
of wattle-and-daub took shape out of the fog, increased in numbers, became a
street of dwellings. Here and there rush-lights glimmered through the slitted
windows. A man and a woman clung together in a low doorway. They saw him and
sprang apart, and the woman gave a little cry. Stark went on. He did not look
back, but he knew that they were following him quiedy, at a little distance.
The
lane twisted snakelike upon itself, crawling now through a crowded jumble of
houses. There were more lights, and more people, tall white-skinned folk of the
swamp-edges, with pale eyes and long hair the colour of new flax, and the faces
of wolves.
Stark
passed among them, alien and strange with his black hair and sun-darkened skin.
They did not speak, nor try to stop him. Only they looked at him out of the red
fog, with a curious blend of amusement and fear, and some of them followed him,
keeping well
behind. A
gang of small naked children came from somewhere among the houses and ran
shouting beside him, out of reach, until one boy threw a stone and screamed
something unintelligible except for one word—Lhari. Then they all stopped, horrified, and fled.
Stark
went on, through the quarter of the lacemakers, heading by instinct toward the
wharves. The glow of the Red Sea prevaded all the air, so that it seemed as
though the mist was full of tiny drops of blood. There was a smell about the
place he did not like, a damp miasma of mud and crowding bodies and wine, and
the breath of the vela
poppy. Shuruun was an
unclean town, and it stank of evil.
There was something else about it, a subde
thing that touched Stark's nerves with a chill finger. Fear.
He could see the shadow of it in the eyes of the people,
hear its undertone in their voices. The wolves of Shuruun did not feel safe in
their own kennel. Unconsciously, as this feeling grew upon him, Stark's step
grew more and more wary, his eyes more cold and hard.
He
came out into a broad square by the harbour front. He could see the ghostly
ships moored along the quays, the piled casks of wine, the tangle of masts and
cordage dim against the background of the burning gulf. There were many torches
here. Large low buildings stood around the square. There was laughter and the
sound of voices from the dark verandas, and somewhere a woman sang to the melancholy lilting of a reed pipe.
A
suffused glow of light in the distance ahead caught Stark's eye. That way the
streets sloped to a higher ground, and straining his vision
against the fog, he made out very dimly the tall bulk of a castle crouched on the low cliffs, looking with bright eyes upon the
night, and the streets of Shuruun.
Stark hesitated briefly. Then he started
across the square toward the largest of the taverns. There were a number of
people in the open space, 203 mostly sailors and their women. They were loose
and foolish with wine, but even so they stopped where they were and stared at
the dark stranger, and then drew back from him, still staring.
Those who had followed Stark came into the
square after him and then paused, spreading out in an aimless sort of way to
join with other groups, whispering among themselves.
The woman stopped singing
in the middle of a phrase.
A
curious silence fell on the square. A nervous sibi-lance ran round and round
under the silence, and men came slowly out from the verandas and the doors of
the wine shops. Suddenly, a woman with disheveled hair pointed her arm at Stark
and laughed, the shrieking laugh of a harpy.
STARK
found his way barred by three tall young men with hard mouths and crafty eyes,
who smiled at him as hounds smile before the kill.
"Stranger," they
said. "Earthman."
"Outlaw,"
answered Stark, and it was only half a lie.
One
of the young men took a step forward. "Did you fly like a dragon over the
Mountains of White Cloud? Did you drop from the sky?"
"I came on Malthor's ship."
A
kind of sigh went round the square, and with it the
name of Malthor. The eager faces of the young men grew heavy with
disappointment. But the leader said sharply, "I was on the quay when
Malthor docked. You were not on board."
It
was Stark's turn to smile. In the light of the torches, his eyes blazed cold
and bright as ice against the sun.
"Ask
Malthor the reason for that," he said. "Ask the man with the torn
cheek. Or perhaps," he added softly, "you would like to learn for
yourselves."
The
young men looked at him, scowling, in an odd mood of indecision. Stark settled
himself, every muscle loose and ready. And the woman who had laughed crept
closer and peered at Stark through her tangled hair, breathing heavily of the
poppy wine.
All
at once she said loudly, "He came out of the sea. That's where he came
from. He's . . ."
One
of the young men struck her across the mouth and she fell down in the mud. A
burly seaman ran out and caught her by the hair, dragging her to her feet
again. His face was frightened and very angry. He hauled the woman away,
cursing her for a fool and beating her as he went. She spat out blood, and said
no more.
"Well,"
said Stark to the young men. "Have you made up your minds?"
"Minds!"
said a voice behind them—a harsh-timbered, rasping voice that handled the
liquid vocables of the Venusian speech very clumsily indeed. "They have no
minds, these whelps! If they had, they'd be off about their business, instead
of standing here badgering a stranger."
The
young men turned, and now between them Stark could see the man who had spoken.
He stood on the steps of the tavern. He was an Earthman, and at first Stark
thought he was old, because his hair was white and his face deeply lined. His
body was wasted with fever, the muscles all gone to knotty strings twisted over
bone. He leaned heavily on a stick, and one leg was crooked and terribly
scarred.
He
grinned at Stark and said, in colloquial English, "Watch me get rid of
'em!"
He
began to tongue-lash the young men, telling them that they were idiots, the
misbegotten offspring of swamp-toads, utterly without manners, and that if they
did not believe the stranger's story they should go and ask Malthor, as he
suggested. Finally he shook his stick at them, fairly screeching.
"Go
on, now. Go away! Leave us alone—my brother of Earth and II"
The young men gave one hesitant glance at
Stark's feral eyes. Then they looked at each other and shrugged, and went away
across the square half sheepishly, like great loutish boys caught in some
misdemeanor.
The
white-haired Earthman beckoned to Stark. And, as Stark came up to him on the
steps he said under his breath, almost angrily, "You're in a trap."
Stark glanced back over his shoulder. At the edge of the square the three young
men had met a fourth, who had his face bound up in a rag. They vanished almost
at once into a side street, but not before Stark had recognized the fourth man
as Malthor.
It was the captain he had
branded.
With
loud cheerfulness, the lame man said in Venu-sian, "Come in and drink with
me, brother, and we will talk of Earth."
Chapter III
THE
TAVERN WAS OF THE standard low-class Ven-usian pattern—a single huge room under
bare thatch, the wall half open with the reed shutters rolled up, the floor of
split logs propped up on piling out of the mud. A long low bar, little tables,
mangy skins and heaps of dubious cushions on the floor around them, and at one
end the entertainers—two old men with a drum and a reed pipe, and a couple of
sulky, tired-looking girls.
The
lame man led Stark to a table in the comer and sank down, calling for wine. His
eyes, which were dark and haunted by long pain, burned with excitement. His
hands shook. Before Stark had sat down he had begun to talk, his words
stumbling over themselves as though he could not get them out fast enough.
206
"How is it there now? Has it changed
any? Tell me how it is—the cities, the lights, the paved streets, the women,
the Sun. Oh Lord, what I wouldn't give to see the Sun again, and women with
dark hair and their clothes on!" He leaned forward, staring hungrily into
Stark's face, as though he could see those things mirrored there. "For
God's sake, talk to me—talk to me in English, and tell me about Earth!"
"How long have you
been here?" asked Stark.
"I
don't know. How do you reckon time on a world without a Sun, without one damned
little star to look at? Ten years, a hundred years, how should I know? Forever. Tell me about Earth."
Stark
smiled wryly. "I haven't been there for a long time. The police were too
ready with a welcoming committee. But the last time I saw it, it was just the
same."
The
lame man shivered. He was not looking at Stark now, but at some place far
beyond him.
"Autumn woods," he said. "Red and
gold on the brown hills. Snow. I can remember
how it felt to be cold. The air bit you when you breathed it. And the women
wore high-heeled slippers. No big bare feet tramping in the mud, but little
sharp heels tapping on clean pavement."
Suddenly
he glared at Stark, his eyes furious and bright with tears.
"Why
the hell did you have to come here and start me remembering? I'm Larrabee. I
live in Shuruun. I've been here forever, and I'll be here till I die. There
isn't any Earth. It's gone. Just look up into the sky,
and you'll know it's gone. There's nothing anywhere but clouds, and Venus, and
mud."
He
sat still, shaking, turning his head from side to side. A man came with wine,
put it down, and went away again. The tavern was very quiet. There was a wide
space empty around the two Earthmen. Beyond that people lay on the cushions,
sipping the poppy wine and watching with a sort of furtive expectancy.
Abruptly, Larrabee laughed, a harsh sound
that held a certain honest mirth.
"I don't know why I should get
sentimental about Earth at this late date. Never thought much
about it when I was there."
Nevertheless, he kept his gaze averted, and
when he picked up his cup his hand trembled so that he spilled some of the
wine.
Stark was staring at him in unbelief.
"Larrabee," he said. "You're Mike Larrabee. You're the man who
got half a million credits out of the strong room of the Royal Venus."
Larrabee nodded. "And got away with it,
right over the Mountains of White Cloud, that they
said couldn't be flown. And do you know where that half a million is now? At the bottom of the Red sea, along with my ship and my crew, out
there in the gulf. Lord knows why I lived." He shrugged.
"Well, anyway, I was heading for Shuruun when I crashed, and I got here.
So why complain?"
He drank again, deeply, and
Stark shook his head.
"You've
been here nine years, then, by Earth time," he said. He had never met
Larrabee, but he remembered the pictures of him that had flashed across space
on police bands. Larrabee had been a young man then, dark and proud and
handsome.
Larrabee
guessed his thought. "I've changed, haven't I?"
Stark said lamely,
"Everybody thought you were dead."
LARRABEE laughed. After that, for a moment,
there was silence. Stark's ears were straining for any sound outside. There was
none.
He said abruptly,
"What about this trap I'm in?"
"I'll
tell you one thing about it," said Larrabee. "There's no way out. I
can't help you. I wouldn't if I could, get that straight. But I can't,
anyway."
"Thanks," Stark said sourly.
"You can at least tell me what goes on."
"Listen,"
said Larrabee. "I'm a cripple, and an old man, and Shuruun isn't the
sweetest place in the Solar System to live. But I do live. I have a wife, a
slatternly wench I'll admit, but good enough in her
way. You'll notice some little dark-haired brats rolling in the mud. They're
mine, too. I have some skill at setting bones and such, and so I can get drunk
for nothing as often as I will —which is often. Also, because of this bum leg,
I'm perfectiy safe. So don't ask me what goes on. I take great pains not to
know."
Stark said, "Who are
the Lhari?"
"Would
you like to meet them?" Larrabee seemed to find something very amusing in
that thought. "Just go on up to the castle. They
live there. They're the Lords of Shuruun, and they're always glad to meet
strangers."
He
leaned forward suddenly. "Who are you anyway? What's your name, and why
the devil did you come here?"
"My
name is Stark. And I came here for the same reason you did."
"Stark," repeated Larrabee slowly,
his eyes intent. "That rings a faint bell. Seems to me I saw a Wanted flash once, some idiot hat had led a native
revolt somewhere in the Jovian Colonies—a big cold-eyed brute they referred to
colorfully as the wild man from Mercury."
He nodded, pleased with himself. "Wild
man, eh? Well, Shuruun will tame you down!"
"Perhaps,"
said Stark. His eyes shifted constantly, watching Larrabee, watching the
doorway and the dark veranda and the people who drank but did not talk among
themselves. "Speaking of strangers, one came here at the time of the last
rains. He was Venusian, from up coast. A big young man.
I used to know him. Perhaps he could help me."
Larrabee snorted. By now, he had drank his own wine and Stark's too. "Nobody can help
you. As for your friend, I never saw him. I'm beginning to think I should never
have seen you." Quite suddenly he caught up his stick and got with some
difficulty to his feet. He did not look at Stark, but said harshly, "You
better get out of here." Then he turned and limped unsteadily to the bar.
Stark rose. He glanced after Larrabee, and again his nostrils
twitched to the smell of fear. Then he went out of the tavern the way he had
come in, through the front door. No one moved to stop him. Outside, the square
was empty. It had begun to rain.
Stark
stood for a moment on the steps. He was angry, and filled with a dangerous
unease, the hair-trigger nervousness of a tiger that senses the beaters
creeping toward him up the wind. He would almost have welcomed the sight of
Malthor and the three young men. But there was nothing to fight but the silence
and the rain.
HE
STEPPED out into the mud, wet and warm around his ankles. An idea came to him,
and he smiled, beginning now to move with a definite purpose, along the side
of the square.
The
sharp downpour strengthened. Rain smoked from Stark's naked shoulders, beat
against thatch and mud with a hissing ratde. The harbour had disappeared behind
boiling clouds of fog, where water struck the surface of the Red Sea and was
turned again instantly by chemical action into vapour. The quays and the
neighboring streets were being swallowed up in the impenetrable mist.
Lightning came with an eerie bluish flare, and thunder came rolling after it.
Stark
turned up the narrow way that led toward the castle.
Its
lights were winking out now, one by one, blotted by the creeping fog. Lightning
etched its shadowy bulk against the night, and then was gone. And through the
noise of the thunder that followed, Stark thought he heard a voice calling.
He
stopped, half crouching, his hand on his gun. The cry came again, a girl's voice,
thin as the wail of a sea-bird through the driving rain. Then he saw her, a
small white blur in the street behind him, running, and even in that dim
glimpse of her every line of her body was instinct with fright.
Stark
set his back against a wall and waited. There did not seem to be anyone with
her, though it was hard to tell in the darkness and the storm.
She
came up to him, and stopped, just out of his reach, looking at him and away
again with a painful irresolute-ness. A bright flash showed her to him clearly.
She was young, not long out of her childhood, and pretty in a stupid sort of
way. Just now her mouth trembled on the edge of weeping, and her eyes were very
large and scared. Her skirt clung to her long thighs, and above it her naked
body, hardly fleshed into womanhood, glistened like snow in the wet. Her pale
hair hung dripping over her shoulders.
Stark said gently,
"What do you want with me?"
She
looked at him, so miserably like a wet puppy that he smiled. And as though that
smile had taken what little resolution she had out of her, she dropped to her
knees, sobbing.
T
can't do it," she wailed. "He'll kill me, but I just can't do it!"
"Do what?" asked
Stark.
She
stared up at him. "Run away," she urged him. "Run away nowl You'll die in the swamps, but that's better than
being one of the Lost Ones!" She shook her thin arms at him. "Run awayl"
Chapter IV
THE
STREET WAS EMPTY. Nothing showed, nothing stirred anywhere.
Stark leaned over and pulled the girl to her feet, drawing her in under the
shelter of the thatched eaves.
"Now
then," he said. "Suppose you stop crying and tell me what this is all
about."
Presently, between gulps and hiccoughs, he
got the story out of her.
"I am Zareth," she said. "Malthor's daughter. He's afraid of you, because of
what you did to him on the ship, so he ordered me to watch for you in the
square, when you would come out of the tavern. Then I was to follow you, and .
. ."
She broke off, and Stark
patted her shoulder. "Go on."
But
a new thought had occurred to her. "If I do, will you promise not to beat
me, or . . ." She looked at his gun and shivered.
«t • »
I promise.
She studied his face, what she could see of
it in the darkness, and then seemed to lose some of her fear.
"I
was to stop you. I was to say what I've already said, about being Malthor's
daughter and the rest of it, and then I was to say that he wanted me to lead
you into an ambush while pretending to help you escape, but that I couldn't do
it, and would help you to escape anyhow because I hated Malthor and the whole
business about the Lost Ones. So you would believe me, and follow me, and I
would lead you into the ambush."
She
shook her head and began to cry again, quietly this time, and there was nothing
of the woman about her at all now. She was just a child, very miserable and
afraid. Stark was glad he had branded Malthor.
"But I can't lead you into the ambush. I
do hate 212
Malthor,
even if he is my father, because he beats me. And the Lost Ones . . ." She
paused. "Sometimes I hear them at night, chanting way.out there beyond the
mist. It is a very terrible sound."
"It is," said Stark. "I've
heard it. Who are the Lost Ones, Zareth?"
"I can't tell you that," said
Zareth. "It's forbidden even to speak of them. And anyway," she
finished honestly, "I don't even know. People disappear, that's all. Not
our own people of Shuruun, at least not very often. But strangers like you—and
I'm sure my father goes off into the swamps to hunt among the tribes there, and
I'm sure he comes back from some of his voyages with nothing in his hold but
men from some captured ship. Why, or what for, I don't know. Except
I've heard the chanting."
"They live out there in the gulf, do
they, the Lost Ones?"
"They must. There are
many islands there."
"And what of the Lhari, the Lords of Shuruun? Don't they know what's going on? Or are they
part of it?"
She
shuddered, and said, "It's not for us to question the Lhari, nor even to
wonder what they do. Those who have are gone from Shuruun, nobody knows
where."
Stark
nodded. He was silent for a moment, tliinking. Then Zareth's little hand
touched his shoulder.
"Go,"
she said. "Lose yourself in the swamps. You're strong, and there's
something about you different from other men. You may live to find your way
through."
"No.
I have something to do before I leave Shuruun." He took Zareth's damp fair
head between his hands and kissed her on the forehead. "You're a sweet
child, Zareth, and a brave one. Tell Malthor that you did exactly as he told
you, and it was not your fault I wouldn't follow you."
"He
will beat me anyway," said Zareth philosophically, "but perhaps not
quite so hard."
"He'll have no reason to beat you at
all, if you tell him the truth—that I would not go with you because my mind was
set on going to the castle of the Lhari."
THERE
was a long, long silence, while Zareth's eyes widened slowly in horror, and the
rain beat on the thatch, and fog and thunder rolled together across Shuruun.
"To the castle," she whispered. "Oh, no! Go into the swamps, or let Malthor take
you—but don't go to the castlel" She took hold of his arm, her fingers
biting into his flesh with the urgency of her plea. "You're a stranger,
you don't know .
. Please, don't go up there!"
"Why
not?" asked Stark. "Are the Lhari demons? Do they devour men?"
He loosened her hands gently. "You'd better go now. Tell your father where
I am, if he wishes to come after me."
Zareth
backed away slowly, out into the rain, staring at him as though she looked at
someone standing on the brink of hell, not dead, but worse than dead. Wonder
showed in her face, and through it a great yearning
pity. She tried once to speak, and then shook her head and turned away,
breaking into a run as though she could not endure to look upon Stark any
longer. In a second she was gone.
Stark
looked after her for a moment, strangely touched. Then he stepped out into the
rain again, heading upward along the steep path that led to the castle of the
Lords of Shuruun.
The
mist was blinding. Stark had to feel his way, and as he climbed higher, above
the level of the town, he was lost in the sullen redness. A hot wind blew, and
each flare of lighting turned the crimson fog to a hellish purple. The night
was full of a vast hissing where the rain poured into the gulf. He stopped once
to hide his gun in a cleft between the rocks.
At length he stumbled against a carven pillar
of black 214 stone and found the gate that hung from it, a massive thing
sheathed in metal. It was barred, and the pounding of his fists upon it made
little sound.
Then
he saw the gong, a huge disc of beaten gold beside the gate. Stark picked up
the hammer that lay there, and set the deep voice of
the gong rolling out between the thunder-bolts.
A
barred slit opened and a man's eyes looked out at him. Stark dropped the
hammer.
"Open up I" he
shouted. "I would speak with the Lhari!"
From
within he heard an echo of laughter. Scraps of voices came to him on the wind,
and then more laughter, and then, slowly, the great valves of the gate creaked
open, wide enough only to admit him.
He
stepped through, and the gateway shut behind him with a ringing clash.
He stood in a huge open court. Enclosed
within its walls was a village of thatched huts, with open sheds for cooking,
and behind them were pens for the stabling of beasts, the wingless dragons of
the swamps that can be caught and broken to the goad.
He
saw this only in vague glimpses, because of the fog. The men who had let him in
clustered around him, thrusting him forward into the light that streamed from
the huts.
"He
would speak with the Lhari!" one of them shouted, to the women and children
who stood in the doorways watching. The words were picked up and tossed around
the court, and a great burst of laughter went up.
Stark
eyed them, saying nothing. They were a puzzling breed. The men, obviously, were
soldiers and guards to the Lhari, for they wore the harness of fighting men. As
obviously, these were their wives ■ and children, all living behind the
castle walls and having litde to do with Shuruun.
But
it was their racial characteristics that surprised him. They had interbred with
the pale tribes of the
Swamp-Edges
that had peopled Shuruun, and there were many with milk-white hair and broad
faces. Yet even these bore an alien stamp. Stark was puzzled, for the race he
would have named was unknown here behind the Mountains of White Cloud, and
almost unknown anywhere on Venus at Sea-level, among the sweltering marshes and
the eternal fogs.
THEY
stared at him even more curiously, remarking.on his skin and his black hair and
the unfamiliar modelling of his face. The women nudged each other and whispered,
giggling, and one of them said aloud, "They'll need a barrel-hoop to
collar that neck!"
The
guards closed in around him. "Well, if you wish to see the Lhari, you
shall," said the leader, "but first we must
make sure of you."
Spear-points
ringed him round. Stark made no resistance while they stripped him of all he
had, except for his shorts and sandals. He had expected that, and it amused
him, for there was little enough for them to take.
"All right," said the leader.
"Come on."
The
whole village turned out in the rain to escort Stark to the castle door. There
was about them the same ominous interest that the people of Shuruun had had,
with one difference. They knew what was supposed to happen to him, knew all
about it, and were therefore doubly appreciative of the game.
The
great doorway was square and plain, and yet neither crude nor ungraceful. The
castle itself was built of the black stone, each block perfectly cut and
fitted, and the door itself was sheathed in the same metal as the gate,
darkened but not corroded.
The
leader of the guard cried out to the warder, "Here is one who would speak
with the Lhari!"
The
warder laughed. "And so he shall! Their night is long, and dull."
He flung open the heavy door and cried the
word 216 down the hallway. Stark could hear it echoing hollowly within, and
presently from the shadows came servants clad in silks and wearing jewelled collars,
and from the guttural sound of their laughter Stark knew that they had no
tongues.
Stark
faltered, then. The doorway loomed hollowly before him, and it came to him
suddenly that evil lay behind it and that perhaps Zareth was wiser than he when
she warned him from the Lhari.
Then
he thought of Helvi, and of other things, and lost his fear in anger. Lightning bumed the sky. The last cry of the dying storm
shook the ground under his feet. He thrust the grinning warder aside and strode
into the castle, bringing a veil of the red fog with him, and did not listen to
the closing of the door, which was stealthy and quiet as the footfall of
approaching Death.
Torches
burned here and there along the walls, and by their smoky glare he could see
that the hall way was like the entrance—square and unadorned, faced with the
black rock. It was high, and wide, and there was about the architecture a calm
reflective dignity that had its own beauty, in some ways more impressive than
the sensuous loveliness of the ruined palaces he had seen on Mars.
There
were no carvings here, no paintings nor frescoes. It seemed that the builders
had felt that the hall itself was enough, in its massive perfection of line and
the sombre gleam of polished stone. The only decoration was in the window
embrasures. These were empty now, open to the sky with the red fog wreathing
through them, but there were still scraps of jewel-toned panes clinging to the
fretwork, to show what they had once been.'
A
strange feeling swept over Stark. Because of his wild upbringing, he was
abnormally sensitive to the sort of impressions that most men receive either
dully or not at all.
Walking
down the hall, preceded by the tongueless 217 creatures in their bright silks
and blazing collars, he was struck by a subde difference in the place. The casde itself was only an
extension of the minds of its builders, a dream shaped into reality. Stark felt
that that dark, cool, curiously timeless dream had not originated in a mind
like his own, nor like that of any man he had ever
seen.
Then the end of the hall was reached, the way
barred by low broad doors of gold fashioned in the same chaste simplicity.
A soft scurrying of feet, a shapeless tittering from the servants, a
glancing of malicious, mocking eyes. The golden doors swung open, and Stark was
in the presence of the Lhari.
Chapter
V
THEY
HAD THE APPEARANCE in that first glance, of creatures glimpsed in a
fever-dream, very bright and distant, robed in a misty glow that gave them an
illusion of unearthly beauty.
The place in which the Earthman now stood was
like a cathedral for breadth and loftiness. Most of it was in darkness, so that
it seemed to reach without limit above and on all sides, as though the walls
were only shadowy phantasms of the night itself. The polished black stone under
his feet held a dim translucent gleam, depthless as water in a black tarn.
There was no substance anywhere.
Far
away in this shadowy vastness burned a cluster of lamps, a galaxy of little
stars to shed a silvery light upon the Lords of Shuruun.
There
had been no sound in the place when Stark entered, for the opening of the
golden doors had caught
218 the attention of the Lhari and held it in
contemplation of the stranger. Stark began to walk toward them in this utter
stillness.
Quite suddenly, in the impenetrable gloom
somewhere to his right, there came a sharp scuffling and a scratching of
reptilian claws, a hissing and a sort of low angry muttering, all magnified and
distorted by the echoing vault into a huge demoniac whispering that swept all
around him.
Stark whirled around, crouched and ready, his
eyes blazing and his body bathed in cold sweat. The noise increased, rushing
toward him. From the distant glow of the lamps came a woman's tinkling
laughter, thin crystal broken against the vault. The hissing and snarling rose
to hollow crescendo, and Stark saw a blurred shape bounding at him.
His
hands reached out to receive the rush, but it never came. The strange shape
resolved itself into a boy of about ten, who dragged
after him on a bit of rope a young dragon, new and toothless from the egg, and
protesting with all its strength.
Stark
straightened up, feeling let down and furious— and relieved. The boy scowled at
him through a forelock of silver curls. Then he called him a very dirty word
and rushed away, kicking and hauling at the litde beast until it raged like the
father of all dragons and sounded like it, too, in that vast echo chamber.
A
voice spoke. Slow, harsh, sexless, it rang thinly through the vault. Thin—but a
steel blade is thin, too. It speaks inexorably, and its word is final.
The voice said, "Come
here, into the light."
Stark
obeyed the voice. As he approached the lamps, the aspect of the Lhari changed
and steadied. Their beauty remained, but it was not the same. They had looked
like angels. Now that he could see them clearly, Stark thought that they might
have been the children of Lucifer himself.
There were six of them, counting the boy. Two men, about the same age as Stark, with some complicated
gambling game forgotten between them. A woman,
beautiful, gowned in white silk, sitting with her hands in her lap, doing
nothing. A woman, younger, not so beautiful perhaps,
but with a look of stormy and bitter vitality. She wore a short tunic of
crimson, and a stout leather glove on her left hand, where perched a flying
thing of prey with its fierce eyes hooded.
The
boy stood beside the two men, his head poised arrogantly. From time to time he
cuffed the little dragon, and it snapped at him with its impotent jaws. He was
proud of himself for doing that. Stark wondered how he would behave with the
beast when it had grown its fangs.
Opposite him, crouched on a heap of cushions,
was a third man. He was deformed, with an ungainly body and long spidery arms,
and in his lap a sharp knife lay on a block of wood, half formed into the shape
of an obese creature half woman, half pure evil. Stark saw with a flash of surprise
that the face of the deformed young man, of all the faces there, was truly
human, truly beautiful. His eyes were old in his boyish face, wise, and very
sad in their wisdom. He smiled upon the stranger, and his smile was more
compassionate than tears.
THEY
looked at Stark, all of them, with restless, hungry eyes. They were the pure breed, that had left its stamp of alienage on the
pale-haired folk of the swamps, the serfs who dwelt in the huts outside.
They
were of the Cloud People, the folk of the High Plateaus, kings of the land on
the farther slopes of the Mountains of White Cloud. It was strange to see them
here, on the dark side of the barrier wall, but here they were. How they had
come, and why, leaving their rich cool plains for the fetor of these foreign
swamps, he could not guess. But there was no mistaking them—the proud fine
shaping of their bodies, their alabaster skin, their eyes that were all colours
and none, like the dawn sky, their hair that was pure warm silver.
They did not speak. They seemed to be waiting
for permission to speak, and Stark wondered which one of them had voiced that
steely summons.
Then it came again. "Come here—come
closer." And he looked beyond them, beyond the circle of lamps into the
shadows again, and saw the speaker.
She lay upon a low bed, her head propped on
silken pillows, her vast, her incredibly gigantic body covered with a silken
pall. Only her arms were bare, two shapeless masses of white flesh ending in
tiny hands. From time to time she stretched one out and took a morsel of food
from the supply laid ready beside her, snuffling and wheezing with the effort,
and then gulped the tidbit down with a horrible voracity.
Her
features had long ago dissolved into a shaking formlessness, with the exception
of her nose, which rose out of the fat curved and cruel and thin, like the bony
beak of the creature that sat on the girl's wrist and dreamed its hooded dreams
of blood. And her eyes . . .
Stark
looked into her eyes and shuddered. Then he glanced at the carving half formed
in the cripple's lap, and knew what thought had guided the knife.
Half woman, half pure evil. And strong. Very strong.
Her strength lay naked in her eyes for all to see, and it was an ugly strength.
It could tear down mountains, but it could never build.
Her
saw her looking at him. Her eyes bored into his as though they would search out
his very guts and study them, and he knew that she expected him to turn away,
unable to bear her gaze. He did not. Presently he smiled and said, "I have
outs tared a rock-lizard, to determine which of us should eat the other. And
I've outstared the very rock while waiting for him."
She
knew that he spoke the truth. Stark expected her to be angry, but she was not.
A vague mountainous rippling shook her and emerged at length as a voiceless
laughter.
"You see that?" she demanded,
addressing the others. "You whelps of the
Lhari—not one of you dares to face me down, yet here is a great dark creature
from the gods know where who can stand and shame you."
She
glanced again at Stark. "What demon's blood brought you forth, that you
have learned neither prudence nor fear?"
Stark
answered sombrely, "I learned them both before I could walk. But I
learned another thing also— a thing called anger."
"And you are angry?"
"Ask Malthor if I am,
and why!"
He saw the two men start a little, and a slow
smile crossed the girl's face.
"Malthor,"
said the hulk upon the bed, and ate a mouthful of roast meat dripping with fat.
"That is interesting. But rage against Malthor did not bring you here. I
am curious, Stranger. Speak."
"I will."
STARK
glanced around. The place was a tomb, a trap. The very air smelled of danger.
The younger folk watched him in silence. Not one of them had spoken since he
came in, except the boy who had cursed him, and that was unnatural in itself.
The girl leaned forward, idly stroking the creature on her wrist so that it
stirred and ran its knife-like talons in and out of their bony sheathes with
sensuous pleasure. Her gaze on Stark was bold and cool, oddly challenging. Of
them all, she alone saw him-as a man. To the others he was a problem, a
diversion—something less than human.
Stark said, "A man came to Shuruun at
the time of the last rains. His name was Helvi, and he was son of a little king
by Yarell. He came seeking his brother, who had broken tabu and fled for his
life. Helvi came to tell him that the ban was lifted, and he might return.
Neither one came back."
The
small evil eyes were amused, blinking in their tallowy creases. "And so?"
"And so I liave come
after Helvi, who is my friend."
Again
there was the heaving of that bulk of flesh, the explosion of laughter that
hissed and wheezed in snakelike echoes through the vault.
"Friendship
must run deep with you, Stranger. Ah, well. The Lhari are kind of heart. You
shall find your friend."
And
as though that were the signal to end their deferential silence, the younger
folk burst into laughter also, until the vast hall rang with it, giving back a
sound like demons laughing on the edge of Hell.
The cripple only did not laugh, but bent his
bright head over his carving, and sighed.
The girl sprang up. "Not
yet, Grandmother! Keep him awhile."
The cold, cruel eyes shifted to her.
"And what will you do with him, Varra? Haul him about on a string, like
Bor with his wretched beast?"
"Perhaps—though I think it would need a
stout chain to hold him." Varra turned and looked at Stark, bold and
bright, taking in the breadth and the height of him, the shaping of the great
smooth muscles, the iron line of the jaw. She smiled. Her mouth was very
lovely, like the red fruit of the swamp tree that bears death in its pungent
sweetness.
"Here
is a man," she said. "The first man I have seen since my father
died."
The two men at the gaming table rose, their
faces 223 flushed and angry. One of them strode
forward and gripped the girl's arm roughly.
"So
I am not a man," he said, with surprising gentleness. "A
sad thing, for one who is to be your husband. It's best that we settle
that now, before we wed."
Varra
nodded. Stark saw that the man's fingers were cutting savagely into the firm
muscle of her arm, but she did not wince.
"High time to settle it all, Egil. You have borne enough from me. The day is
long overdue for my taming. I must learn now to bend my neck, and acknowledge
my lord."
For a moment Stark thought she meant it, the
note of mockery in her voice was so subtle. Then the woman in white, who all
this time had not moved nor changed expression, voiced again the thin, tinkling
laugh he had heard once before. From that, and the dark suffusion of blood in
Egil's face, Stark knew that Varra was only casting the man's own phrases back
at him. The boy let out one derisive bark, and was cuffed into silence.
Varra
looked straight at Stark. "Will you fight for me?" she demanded.
Quite
suddenly, it was Stark's turn to laugh. "Nol" he said.
Varra
shrugged. "Very well, then. I must fight for myself."
"Man,"
snarled Egil. "I'll show you who's a man, you scapegrace little
vixen!"
He
wrenched off his girdle with his free hand, at the same time bending the girl
around so he could get a fair shot at her. The creature of prey, a Terran
falcon, clung to her wrist, beating its wings and screaming, its hooded head
jerking.
WITH
a motion so quick that it was hardly visible, Varra
slipped the hood and flew the creature straight for Egil's face.
He let go, flinging up his arms to ward off
the tal6ns and the tearing beak. The wide wings beat and hammered. Egil
yelled. The boy Bor got out of range and danced up and down shrieking with
delight.
Varra
stood quietly. The bruises were blackening on her arm, but she did not deign to
touch them. Egil blundered against the gaming table and sent the ivory pieces
flying. Then he tripped over a cushion and fell flat, and the hungry talons
ripped his tunic to ribbons down the back.
Varra
whistled, a clear peremptory call. The creature gave
a last peck at the back of Egil's head and flopped sullenly back to its perch
on her wrist. She held it, turning toward Stark. He knew from the poise of her
that she was on the verge of launching her pet at him. But she studied him and
then shook her head.
"No,"
she said, and slipped the hood back on. "You would kill it."
Egil
had scrambled up and gone off into the darkness, sucking a cut on his arm. His
face was black with rage. The other man looked at Varra.
"If
you were pledged to me," he said, "I'd have that temper out of
you!"
"Come and try
it," answered Varra.
The
man shrugged and sat down. "It's not my place. I keep the peace in my own
house." He glanced at the woman in white, and Stark saw that her face,
hitherto blank of any expression, had taken on a look of abject fear.
"You
do," said Varra, "and, if I were Arel, I
would stab you while you slept. But you're safe. She had no spirit to begin
with."
Arel
shivered and looked steadfastly at her hands. The man began to gather up the
scattered pieces. He said casually, "Egil will wring your neck some day,
Varra, and I shan't weep to see it."
All this time the old woman had eaten and
watched, watched and eaten, her eyes glittering with interest.
"A
pretty brood, are they not?" she demanded of Stark. "Full of spirit,
quarrelling like young hawks in the nest. That's why I keep them around me,
so—they are such sport to watch. All except Treon
there." She indicated the crippled youth. "He does nothing. Dull and soft-mouthed, worse than Arel. What a grandson to
be cursed with! But his sister has fire enough for two." She munched a
sweet, grunting with pride.
Treon raised his head and spoke, and his
voice was like music, echoing with an eerie liveliness in that dark place.
"Dull I may be,
Grandmother, and weak in body, and without hope. Yet I shall be the last of the
Lhari. Death sits waiting on the towers, and he shall gather you all before me.
I know, for the winds have told me."
He
turned his suffering eyes upon Stark and smiled, a smile of such woe and
resignation that the Earthman's heart ached with it. Yet there was a thankfulness in it too, as though some long waiting was
over at last.
"You,"
he said softly, "Stranger with the fierce eyes. I saw you come, out of the darkness, and where you set foot there was a
bloody print. Your arms were red to the elbows, and your breast was splashed
with the redness, and on your brow was the symbol of death. Then I knew, and
the wind whispered into my ear, 'It is so. This man shall pull the castle down,
and its stones shall crush Shuruun and set the Lost Ones free'."
He
laughed, very quietly. "Look at him, all of you. For he
will be your doom!"
There
was a moment's silence, and Stark, with all the superstitions of a wild race
thick within him, turned cold to the roots of his hair. Then the old woman said
disgustedly, "Have the winds warned you of this, my idiot?"
And
with astonishing force and accuracy she picked up a ripe fruit and flung it at
Treon.
"Stop your mouth with that," she told
him. "I am weary to death of your prophecies."
TREON
looked at the crimson juice trickling slowly down the breast of his tunic, to
drip upon the carving in his lap. The half formed head was covered with it.
Treon was shaken with silent mirth.
"Well,"
said Varra, coming up to Stark, "what do you think of the Lhari? The proud
Lhari, who would not stoop to mingle their blood with the cattle of the swamps. My half-witted brother, my worthless cousins, that
little monster Bor who is the last twig of the tree-do you wonder I flew my
falcon at Egil?"
She waited for an answer, her head thrown
back, the silver curls framing her face like wisps of storm-cloud. There was a
swagger about her that at once irritated and delighted Stark. A hellcat, he
thought, but a mighty fetching one, and bold as brass. Bold—and
honest. Her hps were parted, midway between anger and a smile.
He
caught her to him suddenly and kissed her, holding her slim strong body as
though she were a doll. He was in no hurry to set her down. When at last he
did, he grinned and said, "Was that what you wanted?
"Yes,"
answered Varra. "That was what I wanted." She spun about, her jaw set
dangerously. "Grandmother . . ."
She
got no farther. Stark saw that the old woman was attempting to sit upright, her
face purpling with effort and the most terrible wrath he had ever seen.
"You,"
she gasped at the girl. She choked on her fury and her shortness of breath, and
then Egil came soft-footed into the light, bearing in his hand a thing made of
black metal and oddly shaped, with a blunt, thick muzzle.
"Lie back, Grandmother," he said. "I had a mind to
use this on Varra—"
Even as he spoke he pressed a stud, and Stark
in the act of leaping for the sheltering darkness, crashed down and lay like a
dead man. There had been no sound, no flash, nothing, but a vast hand that
smote him suddenly into oblivion.
Egil finished,—"but I
see a better target."
Chapter VI
RED. RED. RED. THE
COLOR of blood. Blood in his eyes. He was
remembering now. The quarry had turned on him, and they had fought on the bare,
blistering rocks.
Nor had N'Chaka killed. The Lord of the Rocks
was very big, a giant among lizards, and N'Chaka was
small. The Lord of the Rocks had laid open N'Chaka's
head before the wooden spear had more than scratched his flank.
It was strange that N'Chaka still lived. The
Lord of the Rocks must have been full fed. Only that had saved him.
N'Chaka groaned, not with pain, but with
shame. He had failed. Hoping for a great triumph, he had disobeyed the tribal
law that forbids a boy to hunt the quarry of a man, and he had failed. Old One
would not reward him with the girdle and the flint spear of manhood. Old One would
give him to the women for the punishment of little whips. Tika would laugh at
him, and it would be many seasons before Old One would grant him permission to
try the Man's Hunt.
Blood
in his eyes.
He
blinked to clear them. The instinct of survival was prodding him. He must
arouse himself and creep away, before the Lord of the Rocks returned to eat
him.
The redness would not go away. It swam and
flowed, strangely sparkling. He blinked again, and tried to lift his head, and
could not, and fear struck down upon him like the iron frost of night upon the
rocks of the valley.
It
was all wrong. He could see himself clearly, a naked boy dizzy with pain,
rising and clambering over the ledges and the shale to the safety of the cave.
He could see that, and yet he could not move.
All
-wrong. Time, space, the universe, darkened and turned.
A
voice spoke to him. A girl's voice. Not Tika's and the
speech was strange.
Tika
was dead. Memories rushed through his mind, the bitter things, the cruel things. Old One was dead,
and all the others . . .
The
voice spoke again, calling him by a name that was not his own.
Stark.
Memory shattered into a kaleidoscope of
broken pictures, fragments, rushing, spinning. He was adrift among them. He
was lost, and the terror of it brought a scream into his throat.
Soft hands touching his face, gentle words, swift and soothing. The redness cleared and steadied, though it
did not go away, and quite suddenly he was himself again, with all his memories
where they belonged.
HE
WAS lying on his back, and Zareth, Malthor's daughter, was looking down at
him. He knew now what the redness was. He had seen it too often before not to
know. He was somewhere at the bottom of the Red Sea—that weird ocean in which a
man can breathe.
And
he could not move. That had not changed, nor gone away. His body was dead.
The terror he had felt before was nothing to
the agony that filled him now. He lay entombed in his own flesh,
staring up
at Zareth, wanting an answer to a question he dared not ask.
She understood, from the
look in his eyes.
'It's
all right," she said, and smiled. "It will wear off. You'll be all
right. It's only the weapon of the Lhari. Somehow it puts the body to sleep,
but it will wake again."
Stark remembered the black object that Egil
had held in his hands. A projector of some sort, then, beaming a current of
high-frequency vibration that paralyzed the nerve centers. He was amazed. The
Cloud People were barbarians themselves, though on a higher scale than the
swamp-edge tribes, and certainly had no such scientific proficiency. He
wondered where the Lhari had got hold of such a weapon.
It didn't really matter. Not just now. Relief
swept over him, bringing him dangerously close to tears. The effect would wear
off. At the moment, that was all he cared about.
He
looked up at Zareth again. Her pale hair floated with the slow breathing of the
sea, a milky cloud against the spark-shot crimson. He saw now that her face was
drawn and shadowed, and there was a terrible hopelessness in her eyes. She had
been alive when he first saw her—frightened, not too bright, but full of
emotion and a certain dogged courage. Now the spark was gone, crushed out.
She wore a collar around her white neck, a
ring of dark metal with the ends fused together for all time. "Where are
we?" he asked.
And
she answered, her voice carrying deep and hollow in the dense substance of the
sea, "We are in the place of the Lost Ones."
Stark
looked beyond her, as far as he could see, since he was unable to turn his
head. And wonder came to him.
Black
walls, black vault above him, a vast hall filled 230 with the wash of the sea
that slipped in streaks of whispering flame through the high embrasures. A hall that was twin to the vault of shadows where he had met the
Lhari.
"There
is a city," said Zareth dully. "You will see it soon. You will see
nothing else until you die."
Stark
said, very gently, "How do you come here, little one?"
"Because of my father. I will tell you all I know, which is little enough. Malthor has been
slaver to the Lhari for a long time. There, are a number of them among the
captains of Shuruun, but that is a thing that is never spoken of—so I, his
daughter, could only guess. I was sure of it when he sent me after you."
She laughed, a bitter sound. "Now I'm here, with the collar
of the Lost Ones on my neck. But Malthor is here, too." She laughed again,
ugly laughter to come from a young mouth. Then she looked at Stark, and her
hand reached out timidly to touch his hair in what was almost a caress. Her
eyes were wide, and soft, and full of tears.
"Why
didn't you go into the swamps when I warned you?"
Stark
answered stolidly, "Too late to worry about that now." Then,
"You say Malthor is here, a slave?"
"Yes."
Again, that look of wonder and admiration in her eyes.
"I don't know what you said or did to the Lhari, but the Lord Egil came
down in a black rage and cursed my father for a bungling fool because he could
not hold you. My father whined and made excuses, and all would have been
well—only his curiosity got the better of him and he asked the Lord Egil what
had happened. You were like a wild beast, Malthor said, and he hoped you had
not harmed the Lady Varra, as he could see from Egil's wounds that there had
been trouble.
"The
Lord Egil turned quite purple. I thought he was going to fall in a fit."
"Yes,"
said Stark. "That was the wrong thing to say." 231
The
ludicrous side of it struck him, and he was suddenly roaring with laughter.
"Malthor should have kept his mouth shutl"
"Egil called his guard and ordered them
to take Malthor. And when he realized what had happened, Malthor turned on me,
trying to say that it was all my fault, that I let you
escape."
Stark stopped laughing.
Her voice went on slowly, "Egil seemed
quite mad with fury. I have heard that the Lhari are all mad, and I think it is
so. At any rate, he ordered me taken too, for he wanted to stamp Malthor's seed
into the mud forever. So we are here."
There was a long silence. Stark could think
of no word of comfort, and as for hope, he had better wait until he was sure he
could at least raise his head. Egil might have damaged him permanently, out of
spite. In fact, he was surprised he wasn't dead.
He
glanced again at the collar on Zareth's neck. Slave. Slave to
the Lhari, in the city of the Lost Ones.
What
the devil did they do with slaves, at the bottom of the sea?
The
heavy gases conducted sound remarkably well, except for an odd property of
diffusion which made it seem that a voice came from everywhere at once. Now,
all at once, Stark became aware of a dull clamor of voices drifting towards
him.
He
tried to see, and Zareth turned his head carefully so that he might.
The
Lost Ones were returning from whatever work it was they did.
OUT
of the dim red murk beyond the open door they swam, into the long, long
vastness of the hall that was filled with same red murk, moving slowly, their
white bodies trailing wakes of sullen flame. The host of the
damned drifting through a strange red-litten hell, weary and without hope.
One by one they sank onto pallets laid in
rows on the black stone floor, and lay there, utterly exhausted,
their pale hair lifting and floating with the slow eddies of the sea. And each
one wore a collar.
One man did not lie down. He came toward
Stark, a tall barbarian who drew himself with great strokes of his arms so that
he was wrapped in wheeling sparks. Stark knew his face.
"Helvi," he said,
arid smiled in welcome.
"Brother!"
Helvi crouched down—a great handsome boy he
had been the time Stark saw him, but he was a man now, with all the laughter
turned to grim deep lines around his mouth and the bones of his face standing
out like granite ridges.
"Brother,"
he said again, looking at Stark through a glitter of unashamed tears.
"Fool." And he cursed Stark savagely because he had come to Shuruun
to look for an idiot who had gone the same way, and was already as good as
dead.
"Would you have
followed me?" asked Stark.
"But
I am only an ignorant child of the swamps," said Helvi. "You come
from space, you know the other worlds, you can read and write—you should have
better sensel"
Stark
grinned. "And I'm still an ignorant child of the rocks. So we're two fools
together. Where is Tobal?"
Tobal
was Helvi's brother, who had broken tabu and looked for refuge in Shuruun.
Apparently he had found peace at last, for Helvi shook his head.
"A
man cannot live too long under the sea. It is not enough merely to breath and eat. Tobal over-ran his time, and I am close to
the end of mine." He held up his hand and then swept it down sharply,
watching the broken fires dance along his arms.
"The mind breaks before the body,"
said Helvi casually, as though it were a matter of no importance.
Zareth
spoke. "Helvi has guarded you each period while the others slept."
"And not I alone," said Helvi.
"The little one stood with me."
"Guarded mel"
said Stark. "Why?"
For answer, Helvi gestured toward a pallet
not far away. Malthor lay there, his eyes half open
and full of malice, the fresh scar livid on his cheek.
"He feels," said Helvi, "that
you should not have fought upon his ship."
Stark felt an inward chill of horror. To he here helpless,
watching Malthor come toward him with open fingers reaching for his helpless
throat . . .
He
made a passionate effort to move, and gave up, gasping. Helvi grinned.
"Now
is the time I should wrestle you, Stark for I never could throw you
before." He gave Stark's head a shake, very gentle for all its apparent
roughness. "You'll be throwing me again. Sleep now, and don't worry."
He
settled himself to watch, and presently in spite of himself Stark slept, with
Zareth curled at his feet like a little dog.
There
was no time down there in the heart of the Red Sea. No daylight, no dawn, no
space of darkness. No winds blew, no rain nor storm
broke the endless silence. Only the lazy currents whispered by on their way to
nowhere, and the red sparks danced, and the great hall waited, remembering the
past.
Stark
waited, too. How long he never knew, but he was used to waiting. He had learned
his patience on the knees of the great mountains whose heads lift proudly into
open space to look at the Sun, and he had absorbed their own contempt for time.
Little
by little, life returned to his body. A mongrel guard came now and again to
examine him, pricking
Stark's
flesh with his knife to test the reaction, so that Stark should not malinger.
He reckoned without Stark's control. The
Earthman bore his prodding without so much as a twitch
until his limbs were completely his own again. Then he sprang up and pitched
the man half the length of the hall, turning over and over, yelling with
startled anger.
At
the next period of labour, Stark was driven with the rest out into the City of
the Lost Ones.
Chapter
VII
STARK
HAD BEEN IN PLACES before that oppressed him with a sense of their strangeness
or their wickedness—Sinharat, the lovely ruin of coral and gold lost in the
Martian wastes; Jekkara, Valkis—die Low-Canal towns that smell of blood and
wine; the cliff-caves of Arianrhod on the edge of Darkside, the buried
tomb-cities of Callisto. But this—this was nightmare to haunt a man's dreams.
He
stared about him as he went in the long line of slaves, and felt such a cold
shuddering contraction of his belly as he had never known before.
Wide
avenues paved with polished blocks of stone, perfect as ebon mirrors. Buildings, tall and stately, pure and plain, with a calm strength
that could outlast the ages. Black, all black, with no fripperies of
paint or carving to soften them, only here and there a window like a drowned
jewel glinting through the red.
Vines
like drifts of snow cascading down
the stones. Gardens with close-clipped turf and flowers lifting bright on their
green stalks, their petals open to a daylight that was gone, their head
bending as though to some forgotten breeze. All neat, all tended, the branches pruned, the fresh soil turned this morning—by whose hand?
Stark remembered the great forest dreaming at
the bottom of the gulf, and shivered. He did not like to think how long ago
these flowers must have opened their young bloom to the last light they were
ever going to see. For they were dead—dead as the forest,
dead as the city. Forever bright—and dead.
Stark
thought that it must always have been a silent city. It was impossible to
imagine noisy throngs flocking to a market square down those immense avenues.
The black walls were not made to echo song or laughter. Even the children must
have moved quietly along the garden paths, small wise creatures
bom to an ancient dignity.
He was beginning to understand now the
meaning of that weird forest. The Gulf of Shuruun had not always been a gulf.
It had been a valley, rich, fertile, with this great city in its arms, and here
and there on the upper slopes the retreat of some noble or philosopher— of
which the castle of the Lhari was a survivor.
A
wall or rock had held back the Red Sea from this valley. And then, somehow, the
wall had cracked, and the sullen crimson tide had flowed slowly, slowly into
the fertile bottoms, rising higher, lapping the towers and the tree-tops in
swirling flame, drowning the land forever. Stark wondered if the people had
known the disaster was coming, if they had gone forth to tend their gardens
for the last time so that they might remain perfect in the embalming gases of
the sea.
THE
columns of slaves, herded by overseers armed with small black weapons similar
to the one Egil had used, came out into a broad square whose farther edges were
veiled in the red murk. And Stark looked on ruin.
A
great building had fallen in the centre of the square. The gods only knew what
force had burst its walls and
tossed the giant blocks like pebbles into a heap.
But there is was, the one untidy thing in the city, a
mountain of debris.
Nothing else was damaged. It seemed that this
had been the place of temples, and they stood unharmed, ranked around the sides
of the square, the dim fires rippling through their open porticoes. Deep in
their inner shadows Stark thought he could make out images, gigantic things
brooding in the spark-shot gloom.
He
had no chance to study them. The overseers cursed them on, and now he saw what
use the slaves were put to. They were' clearing away the wreckage of the fallen
building.
Helvi whispered, "For sixteen years men
have slaved and died down here, and the work is not half done. And why do the
Lhari want it done at all? I'll tell you why. Because they are mad, mad as
swamp-dragons gone musth
in the spring!"
It
seemed madness indeed, to labour at this pile of rocks in a dead city at the
bottom of the sea. It was madness. And yet the Lhari, though they might be
insane, were not fools. There was a reason for it, and Stark was sure it was a
good reason—good for the Lhari; at any rate.
An
overseer came up to Stark, thrusting him roughly toward a sledge
, already partly loaded with broken rocks. Stark hesitated, his eyes
turning ugly, and Helvi said,
"Come
on, you fool! Do you want to be down flat on your back again?"
Stark
glanced at the little weapon, blunt and ready, and turned reluctantly to obey.
And there began his servitude.
It
was a weird sort of life he led. For a while he tried to reckon time by the
periods of work and sleep, but he lost count, and it did not greatly matter
anyway.
He laboured with the others, hauling the huge
blocks 237 away, clearing out the cellars that were partly bared, shoring up weak walls underground. The slaves clung to their
old habit of thought, calling the work-periods "days" and the
sleep-periods "nights".
Each "day" Egil, or his brother
Cond, came to see what had been done, and went away black-browed and
disappointed, ordering the work speeded up.
Treon
was there also much of the time. He would come slowly in his awkward crabwise
way and perch like a pale gargoyle on the stones, never speaking, watching with
his sad beautiful eyes. He woke a vague foreboding in Stark. There was
something awesome in Treon's silent patience, as though he waited the coming of
some black doom, long delayed but inevitable. Stark would remember the
prophecy, and shiver.
It
was obvious to Stark after a while that the Lhari were clearing the building to
get at the cellars underneath. The great dark caverns already bared had
yielded nothing, but the brothers still hoped. Over and over Cond and Egil
sounded the walls and the floors, prying here and there, and chafing at the
delay in opening up the underground labyrinth. What they hoped to find, no one
knew.
Varra came, too. Alone, and often, she would
drift
down through the dim mist-fires and watch, smiling a
secret smile, her hair like blown silver where the cur-
rents played with it. She had nothing but curt words for
Egil, but she kept her eyes on the great dark Earthman,
and there was a look in them that stirred his blood. Egil
was not blind, and it stirred his too, but in a different
way. *
ZARETH
saw that look. She kept as close to Stark as possible, asking no favours, but
following him around with a sort of quiet devotion, seeming contented only when
she was near him. One "night" in the slave barracks she crouched
beside his pallet, her hand on his bare knee. She did not speak, and her face
was hidden by the floating masses of her hair.
Stark turned her head .so that he could see
her, pushing the pale cloud gently away.
"What troubles you,
little sister?"
Her eyes were wide and shadowed with some
vague fear. But she only said, "It's not my place to speak."
"Why
not?"
"Because . . ." Her mouth trembled,
and then suddenly she said, "Oh, it's foolish, I know. But the woman of
the Lhari ..."
"What about her?"
"She watches you. Always she watches
youl And the Lord Egil is angry. There is something in
her mind, and it will bring you only evil. I know it!"
"It
seems to me," said Stark wryly, "that the Lhari have already done as
much evil as possible to all of us."
"No,"
answered Zareth, with an odd wisdom. "Our hearts are still clean."
Stark smiled. He leaned over and kissed her.
"I'll be careful, little sister."
Quite
suddenly she flung her arms around his neck and clung to him tightly, and
Stark's face sabered. He patted her, rather awkwardly, and then she had gone,
to curl up on her own pallet with her head buried in her arms.
Stark
lay down. His heart was sad, and there was a stinging
moisture in his eyes.
The
red eternities dragged on. Stark learned what Helvi had meant when he* said
that the mind broke before the body. The sea bottom was no place for creatures
of the upper air. He learned also the meaning of the metal collars, and the
manner of Tobal's death.
Helvi explained.
"There
are boundaries laid down. Within them we may range, if we have the strength and
the desire after work. Beyond them we may not go. And there is no chance of
escape by breaking through the barrier. How this is done I do not understand,
but it is so, and the collars are the key to it.
"When
a slave approaches the barrier the collar brightens as though with fire, and
the slave falls. I have tried this myself, and I know. Half-paralyzed, you may
still crawl back to safety. But if you are mad, as Tobal was, and charge the
barrier strongly . . ."
He made a cutting motion
with his hands.
Stark
nodded. He did not attempt to explain electricity or electronic vibrations to
Helvi, but it seemed plain enough that the force with which the Lhari kept
their slaves in check was something of the sort. The collars acted as
conductors, perhaps for the same type of beam that was generated in the
hand-weapons. When the metal broke the invisible boundary line it triggered
off a force-beam from the central power station, in the manner of the obedient
electric eye that opens doors and rings alarm bells. First a
warning—then death.
THE
boundaries were wide enough, extending around the city and enclosing a good bit
of forest beyond it. There was no possibility of a slave hiding among the
trees, because the collar could be traced by the same type of beam, turned to
low power, and the punishment meted out to a retaken man was such that few
were foolish enough to try that game.
The
surface, of course, was utterly forbidden. The one unguarded spot was the
island where the central power station was, and here the slaves were allowed to
come sometimes at night. The Lhari had discovered that they lived longer and
worked better if they had, an occasional breath of air
and a look at the sky.
Many
times Stark made that pilgrimage with the others. Up from the red depths they
would come, through the reeling bands of fire where the currents ran, through
the clouds of crimson sparks and the sullen patches of stillness that were like
pools of blood, a company of white ghosts shrouded in flame, rising from their
tomb for a little taste of the world they had lost.
It
didn't matter that they were so weary they had barely the strength to get back
to the barracks and sleep. They found the strength. To walk again on the open
ground, to be rid of the eternal crimson dusk and the oppressive weight on the
chest—to look up into the hot blue night of Venus and smell the fragrance of
the liha-trees borne on the land wind . . . They found the
strength.
They sang here, sitting on the island rocks
and staring through the mists toward the shore they would never see again. It
was their chanting that Stark had heard when he came down the gulf with
Malthor, that wordless cry of grief and loss. Now he was here himself, holding
Zareth close to comfort her and joining his own deep voice into that primitive
reproach to the gods.
While
he sat, howling like the savage he was, he studied the power plant, a squat
blockhouse of a place. On the nights the slaves came guards were stationed
outside to warn them away. The blockhouse was doubly guarded with the
shock-beam. To attempt to take it by force would only mean death for all concerned.
Stark
gave that idea up for the time being. There was never a second when escape was not in his thoughts, but he was too old in the
game to break his neck against a stone
wall. Like Malthor, he would wait.
Zareth
and Helvi both changed after Stark's coming. Though they never talked of
breaking free, both of them lost their air of hopelessness. Stark made neither
plans nor promises. But Helvi knew him from of old, and the girl had her own
subtle understanding, and they held up their heads again.
Then,
one "day" as the work was ending, Varra came smiling out of the red
murk and beckoned to him, and Stark's heart gave a great leap. Without a backward
look he left Helvi and Zareth, and went with her, down the wide still avenue
that led outward to the forest.
Chapter
VIII
THEY
LEFT THE STATELY buildings and the wide spaces behind them, and went in among
the trees. Stark hated the forest. The city was bad enough, but it was dead,
honesdy dead, except for those neat nightmare gardens. There was something
terrifying about these great trees, full-leafed and green, rioting with
flowering vines and all the rich undergrowth of the jungle, standing like
massed corpses made lovely by mortuary art. They swayed and rustied as the
coiling fires swept them, branches bending to that silent horrible parody of
wind. Stark always felt trapped there, and stifled by the stiff leaves and the
vines.
But he went, and Varra slipped like a silver
bird between the great trunks, apparently happy.
"I
have come here often, ever since I was old enough. It's wonderful. Here I can
stoop and fly like one of my own hawks." She laughed and plucked a golden
flower to set in her hair, and then darted away again, her white legs flashing.
Stark
followed. He could see what she meant. Here in this strange sea one's motion
was as much flying as swimming, since the pressure equalized the weight of the
body. There was a queer sort of thrill in plunging headlong from the tree-tops,
to arrow dowji through a tangle of vines and branches and then sweep upward
again.
She was playing with him, and he knew it. The
challenge got his blood up. He could have caught her easily but he did not,
only now and again he circled her to show his strength. They sped on and on,
trailing wakes of flame, a black hawk chasing a silver dove through the forests
of a dream.
But the dove had been fledged in an eagle's
nest. Stark wearied of the game at last. He caught her and they clung together,
drifting still among the trees with the momentum of that wonderful weightless
flight.
Her
kiss at first was lazy, teasing and curious. Then it changed. All Stark's
smouldering anger leaped into a different kind of flame. His handling of her
was rough and cruel, and she laughed, a little fierce voiceless laugh, and gave
it back to him, and remembered how he had thought her mouth was like a bitter
fruit that would give a man pain when he kissed it.
She broke away at last and came to rest on a
broad branch, leaning back against the trunk and laughing, her eyes brilliant
and cruel as Stark's own. And Stark sat down at her feet.
"What do you want?" he demanded.
"What do you want with me?"
She
smiled. There was nothing sidelong or shy about her. She was bold as a new
blade.
"I'll tell you, wild man."
He started. "Where did
you pick up that name?"
"I
have been asking the Earthman Larrabee about you. It suits you well." She
leaned forward. "This is what I want of you. Slay me Egil and his brother
Cond. Also Bor, who will grow up worse than either—although
that I can do myself, if you're adverse to killing children, though Bor is more
monster than child. Grandmother can't live forever, and with my cousins
out of the way she's no threat. Treon doesn't count."
"And if I do—what then?"
"Freedom. And me. You'll rule Shuruun at my side."
Stark's eyes were mocking. "For how long, Varra?"
"Who knows? And what does it matter? The years take care of
themselves." She shrugged. "The Lhari
blood has
run out, and it's time there was a fresh strain. Our children will rule after
us, and they'll be men."
Stark laughed. He roared with it.
'It's not enough that I'm a slave to the
Lhari. Now I must be executioner and herd bull as well!" He looked at her
keenly. "Why me, Varra? Why pick on me?"
"Because,
as I have said, you are the first man I have seen since my father died. Also,
there is something about you . . ."
She pushed herself upward to hover lazily,
her lips just brushing his.
"Do you think it would be so bad a thing
to live with me, wild man?"
She was lovely and maddening, a silver witch
shining among the dim fires of the sea, full of wickedness and laughter. Stark
reached out and drew her to him.
"Not bad," he murmured.
"Dangerous."
He
kissed her, and she whispered, "I think you're not afraid of danger."
"On
the contrary, I'm a cautious man." He held her off, where he could look
straight into her eyes. "I owe Egil something on my own, but I will not
murder. The fight must be fair, and Cond will have to take care of
himself."
"Fair! Was Egil fair with you—or
me?" He shrugged. "My way, or not at
all."
SHE
thought it over a while, then nodded. "All right. As for Cond, you will give him a blood
debt, and pride will make him fight. The Lhari are all proud," she added
bitterly. "That's our curse. But it's bred in the bone, as you'll find
out."
"One more thing. Zareth and Helvi are to go free, and there must be an end to this
slavery."
She stared at him. "You drive a hard
bargain, wild
I |
n
"Yes or no?"
"Yes
or no?"
"Yes and no. Zareth and Helvi you may have, if you insist, though the gods know
what you see in that pallid child. As to the other . . ." She smiled very
mockingly. "I'm no fool, Stark. You're evading me, and two can play that
game."
He
laughed. "Fair enough. And now tell me this,
witch with the silver curls—how am I to get at Egil that I may kill him?"
"I'll arrange
that."
She said it with such vicious assurance that
he was pretty sure she would arrange it. He was silent for a moment, and then
he asked,
"Varra—what are the Lhari searching for
at the bottom of the sea?"
She
answered slowly, T told you that "we are a proud
clan. We were driven out of the High Plateaus centuries ago because of our
pride. Now it's all we have left, but it's a driving thing."
She
paused, and then went on. "I think we had known about the city for a long
time, but it had never meant anything until my father became fascinated by it.
He would stay down he*-e days at a time, exploring, and it was he who found the
weapons and the machine of power which is on the island. Then he found the
chart and the metal book, hidden away in a secret place. The book was written
in pictographs—as though it was meant to be deciphered—and the chart showed the
square with the ruined building and the temples, with a separate diagram of
catacombs underneath the ground.
"The
book told of a secret—a thing of wonder and of fear. And my father believed
that the building had been wrecked .to close the entrance to the catacombs
where the secret was kept. He determined to find it."
Sixteen
years of other jnen's lives. Stark shivered. "What was the secret,
Varra?"
"The manner of controlling life. How it was done I do not know, but with it
one might build a race of giants, of monsters, or of gods. You can see what
that would mean to us, a proud and dying clan." "Yes,"
Stark answered slowly. "I can see." The magnitude of the idea shook
him. The builders of the city must have been wise indeed in their scientific
research to evolve such a terrible power. To mold the living cells of the body
to one's will—to create, not life itself but its form
and fashion . . .
A race of giants, or of gods. The Lhari would like that. To transform
their own degenerate flesh into something beyond the race of men, to develop
their followers into a corps of fighting men that no one could stand against,
to see that their children were given an unholy advantage over all the children
of men . . . Stark was appalled at the realization of the evil they could do if
they ever found that secret.
Varra said, "There was a warning in the
book. The meaning of it was not quite clear, but it seemed that the ancient
ones felt that they had sinned against the gods and been punished, perhaps by
some plague. They were a strange race, and not human. At any rate, they destroyed
the great building there as a barrier
against anyone who should come after them, and then let the Red Sea in to cover
their city forever. They must have been superstitious children, for all their
knowledge."
"Then
you all ignored the warning, and never worried that a whole city had died to prove it."
She
shrugged. "Oh, Treon has been muttering prophecies about it for years.
Nobody listens to him. As for myself, I don't care whether we find the secret
or not. My belief is it was destroyed along with the building, and besides, I
have no faith in such things."
"Besides,"
mocked Stark shrewdly, "you wouldn't care to see Egil and Cond striding
across the heavens of
Venus, and
you're doubtful just what your own place would be in the new pantheon."
She showed her teeth at him. "You're too
wise for your own good. And now good bye." She
gave him a quick, hard kiss and was gone, flashing upward, high above the tree
tops where he dared not follow.
Stark made his way slowly back to the city,
upset and very thoughtful.
As
he came back into the great square, heading toward the barracks, he stopped, every nerve taut.
Somewhere,
in one of the shadowy temples, the clapper of a votive bell was swinging,
sending its deep pulsing note across the silence. Slowly, slowly, like the
beating of a dying heart it came, and mingled with it was the faint sound of
Zareth's voice, calling his name.
Chapter
IX
HE
CROSSED THE SQUARE, moving very carefully through the red murk, and presently he
saw her.
It
was not hard to find her. There was one temple larger than all the rest. Stark
judged that it must once have faced the entrance of the fallen building, as
though the great figure within was set to watch over the scientists and the
philosophers who came there to dream their vast and sometimes terrible dreams.
The
philosophers were gone, and the scientists had destroyed themselves. But the
image still watched over the drowned city, its hand raised both in warning and
in benediction.
Now,
across its reptilian knees, Zareth lay. The temple was open on all sides, and
Stark could see her clearly, a little white scrap of humanity against the black
un-human figure.
Malthor stood beside her. It was he who had
been tolling the votive bell. He had stopped now, and Zareth's words came
clearly to Stark.
"Go away, go away! They're waiting for you. Don't
come in here!"
"I'm waiting for you, Stark,"
Malthor called out, smiling. "Are you afraid to come?" And he took
Zareth by the hair and struck her, slowly and deliberately, twice across the
face.
All expression left Stark's face, leaving it
perfectly blank except for his eyes, which took on a sudden lambent gleam. He
began to move toward the temple, not hurrying even then, but moving in such a
way that it seemed an army could not have stopped him.
Zareth
broke free from her father. Perhaps she was intended to break free.
"Egil!" she
screamed. "It's a trap . . ."
Again
Malthor caught her and this time he struck her harder, so that she crumpled
down again across the image that watched with its jewelled, gentle eyes and saw
nothing.
"She's
afraid for you," said Malthor. "She knows I mean to kill you if I can. Well, perhaps Egil is here also. Perhaps he is not.
But certainly Zareth is here. I have beaten her well, and I shall beat her
again, as long as she lives to be
beaten, for her treachery to me. And if you want to save her from that, you
outland dog, you'll have to kill me. Are you afraid?"
Stark
was afraid. Malthor and Zareth were alone in the temple. The pillared
colonnades were empty except for the dim fires of the sea. Yet Stark was
afraid, for an instinct older than speech warned him to be.
It
did not matter. Zareth's white skin was mottled with dark bruises, and Malthor
was smiling at him, and it did not matter.
Under
the shadow of the roof and down the colonnade he went, swiftly now, leaving a
streak of fire behind
him.
Malthor looked into his eyes, and his smile trembled and was gone.
He crouched. And at the last moment, when the
dark body plunged down at him as a shark plunges, he draw
a hidden knife from his girdle and struck.
Stark had not counted on that. The slaves
were searched for possible weapons every day, and even a sliver of stone was
forbidden. Somebody must have given it to him, someone . . .
The thought flashed through his mind while he
was in the very act of trying to avoid that death blow. Too late, too late, because
his own momentum carried him onto the point . . .
Reflexes quicker than any man's, the
hair-trigger reactions of a wild thing. Muscles straining, the centre of balance
shifted with an awful wrenching effort, hands grasping at the fire-shot redness
as though to force it to defy its own laws. The blade ripped a long shallow
gash across his breast. But it did not go home. By a fraction of an inch, it
did not go home.
While Stark was still off
balance, Malthor sprang.
THEY
grappled. The knife blade glittered redly, a hungry tongue eager to taste
Stark's life. The two men rolled over and over, drifting and tumbling
erratically, churning the sea to a froth of sparks, and still the image
watched, its calm reptilian features unchangingly benign
and wise. Threads of a darker red laced heavily across the dancing fires.
Stark
got Malthor's arm under his own and held it there with both hands. His back was
to the man now. Malthor kicked and clawed with his feet against the backs of
Stark's thighs, and his left arm came up and tried to clamp around Stark's
throat. Stark buried his chin so that it could not, and then Malthor's hand
began to tear at Sfark's face, searching for his eyes.
Stark voiced a deep bestial sound in his
throat. He 249
moved his head suddenly, catching Malthor's hand between his jaws. He did not
let go. Presently his teeth were locked against the thumb-joint, and Malthor
was screaming, but Stark could give all bis attention to what he was doing with
the arm that held the knife. His eyes had changed. They were all beast now, the
eyes of a killer blazing cold and beautiful in his dark face.
There
was a dull crack, and the arm ceased to strain or fight. It bent back upon
itself, and the knife fell, drifting quietly down. Malthor was beyond screaming
now. He made one effort to get away as Stark released him, but it was a futile
gesture, and he made no sound as Stark broke his neck.
He
thrust the body from him. It drifted away, moving lazily with the suck of the
currents through the colonnade, now and again touching a black pillar as
though in casual wonder, wandering out at last into the square. Malthor was in
no hurry. He had all eternity before him.
Stark moved carefully away from the girl, who
was trying feebly now to sit up on the knees of the image.
He called out, to some unseen presence hidden in the shadows under the roof,
"Malthor screamed your name, Egil. Why
didn't you come?"
There was a flicker of movement in the
intense darkness of the ledge at the top of the pillars.
"Why should I?" asked the Lord Egil
of the Lhari. T offered him his freedom if he could kill you, but it seems he
could not—even though I gave him a knife, and drugs to keep your friend Helvi
out of the way."
He came out where Stark could see him, very
handsome in a tunic of yellow silk, the blunt black weapon in his hands.
"The important thing was to bait a trap.
You would not face me because of this—" He raised the weapon. "I
might have killed you as you worked, of course, but my family would have had
hard things to say about that. You're a phenomenally good slave."
"They'd
have said hard words like 'coward', Egil," Stark said softly. "And
Varra would have set her bird at you in earnest."
Egil
nodded. His lip curved cruelly. "Exacdy. That
amused you, didn't it? And now my litde cousin is training another falcon to
swoop at me. She hooded you today, didn't she, Outlander?"
He
laughed. "Ah well. I didn't kill you openly because there's a better way.
Do you think I want it gossiped all over the Red Sea that my cousin jilted me
for a foreign slave? Do you think I wish it known that I hated you, and why?
No. I would have killed Malthor anyway, if you
hadn't done it, because he knew. And when I have killed you and the girl I
shall take your bodies to the barrier and leave them there together, and it
will be obvious to everyone, even Varra, that you were killed trying to
escape."
The
weapon's muzzle pointed straight at Stark, and Egil's finger quivered on the
trigger stud. Full power, this time. Instead of paralysis, death. Stark measured the distance
between himself and Egil. He would be dead before he struck, but the impetus of
his leap might carry him on, and give Zareth a chance to escape. The muscles of
his thighs stirred and tensed.
A
voice said, "And it will be obvious how and why I died, Egil? For if you kill them, you must kill me
too."
WHERE
Treon had come from, or when, Stark did not know. But he was there by the
image, and his voice was full of a strong music, and his eyes shone with a fey
light.
Egil
had started, and now he swore in fury. "You idiotl You
twisted freakl How did you come here?"
"How
does the wind come, and the rain? I am not as other men." He laughed, a sombre sound with no mirth in it. "I am here,
Egil, and that's all that matters. And you will not slay this stranger who is
more beast than man, and more man than any of us. The gods have a use for
him."
He had moved as he spoke, until now he stood
between Stark and Egil.
"Get out of the
way," said Egil.
Treon shook his head.
"Very well," said
Egil. 'If you wish to die, you may."
The
fey gleam brightened in Treon's eyes. "This is a day of death," he
said softly, "but not of his, or mine."
Egil said a short, ugly
word, and raised the weapon up.
Things
happened very quickly after that. Stark sprang, arching up and over Treon's
head, cleaving the red gases like a burning arrow. Egil started back, and
shifted his aim upward, and his finger snapped down on the trigger stud.
Something
white came between Stark and Egil, and took the force of the bolt.
Something white. A girl's body, crowned with streaming hair, and a collar of metal
glowing bright around the slender neck.
Zareth.
They
had forgotten her, the beaten child crouched on the
knees of the image. Stark had moved to keep her out of danger, and she was no
threat to the mighty Egil, and Treon's thoughts were known only to himself and
the winds that taught him. Unnoticed, she had crept to a place where one last
plunge would place her between Stark and death.
The
rush of Stark's going took him on over her, except that her hair brushed softly
against his skin. Then he was on top of Egil, and it had all been done so
swiftly that the Lord of the Lhari had not had time to loose another bolt.
Stark
tore the weapon from Egil's hand. He was cold, icy cold, and there was a
strange blindness on him, so
that he
could see nothing clearly but Egil's face. And it was Stark who screamed this
time, a dreadful sound like the cry of a great cat gone beyond reason or fear.
Treon
stood watching. He watched the blood stream darkly into the sea, and he
listened to the silence come, and he saw the thing that had been his cousin
drift away on the slow tide, and it was as though he had seen it all before and
was not surprised.
Stark
went to Zareth's body. The girl was still breathing, very faintly, and her
eyes turned to Stark, and she smiled.
Stark
was blind now with tears. All his rage had run out of him with Egil's blood,
leaving nothing but an aching pity and a sadness, and
a wondering awe. He took Zareth very tenderly into his arms and held her,
dumbly, watching the tears fall on her upturned face. And presently he knew
that she was dead.
Sometime
later Treon came to him and said softly, "To this end she was born, and
she knew it, and was happy. Even now she smiles. And she should, for she had a
better death than most of us." He laid his hand on Stark's shoulder.
"Come, I'll show you where to put her. She will be safe there, and tomorrow
you can bury her where she would wish to be."
Stark
rose and followed him, bearing Zareth in his arms.
Treon
went to the pedestal on which the image sat. He pressed in a certain way upon a
series of hidden springs, and a section of the paving slid noiselessly back,
revealing stone steps leading down.
Chapter X
TREON
LED THE WAY DOWN, into darkness that was lightened only by the dim fires they
themselves
253
woke in passing. No currents ran here. The red gas lay dull and stagnant,
closed within the walls of a square passage built of the same black stone.
"These are the crypts," he said.
"The labyrinth that is shown on the chart my father found." And he
told about the chart, as Varra had.
He led the way surely, his misshapen body
moving without hesitation past the mouths of branching corridors and the doors
of chambers whose interiors were lost in shadow.
"The history of the city is here. All
the books and the learning, that they had not the
heart to destroy. There are no weapons. They were not a warlike people, and I think that the force we of the Lhari have used differently was
defensive only, protection against the beasts and the raiding primitives of the
swamps."
With
a great effort, Stark wrenched his thoughts away from the light burden he
carried.
"I
thought," he said dully, "that the crypts
were under the wrecked building."
"So
we all thought. We were intended to think so. That is why the building was
wrecked. And for sixteen years we of the Lhari have killed men and women with
dragging the stones of it away. But the temple was shown also in the chart. We
thought it was there merely as a landmark, an identification for the great
building. But I began to wonder . . ."
"How
long have you known?"
"Not
long. Perhaps two rains. It took many seasons to find the secret of this
passage. I came here at night, when the others slept."
"And
you didn't tell?"
"Nol"
said Treon. "You are thinking that if I had told, there would have been an
end to the slavery and the death. But what then? My
family, turned loose with the power to destroy a world, as this city was
destroyed? No! It was better for the slaves to die."
He motioned Stark aside, then, between doors
of gold that stood ajar, into a vault so great that there was no guessing its
size in the red and shrouding gloom.
"This
was the burial place of their kings," said Treon softly. "Leave the
little one here."
Stark
looked around him, still too numb to feel awe, but impressed even so.
They were set in straight lines, the beds of
black marble—lines so long that there was no end to them except the limit of
vision. And on them slept the old kings, their bodies, marvelously embalmed,
covered with silken palls, their hands crossed upon their breasts, their wise
unhuman faces stamped with the mark of peace.
Very
gently, Stark laid Zareth down on a marble couch, and covered her also with
silk, and closed her eyes and folded her hands. And it seemed to him that her
face, too, had that look of peace.
He
went out with Treon, thinking that none of them had earned a better place in
the hall of kings than Zareth.
"Treon," he said.
"Yes?"
"That
prophecy you spoke when I came to the castle —I will bear it out."
Treon nodded. "That is
the way of prophecies."
He
did not return toward the temple, but led the way deeper into the heart of the
catacombs. A great excitement burned within him, a bright and terrible thing
that communicated itself to Stark. Treon had suddenly taken on the stature of a
figure of destiny, and the Earthman had the feeling that he was in the grip of
some current that would plunge on irresistibly until everything in its path was
swept away. Stark's flesh quivered.
THEY reached the end of the corridor at last.
And there, in the red gloom, a shape sat waiting before a black, barred door. A
shape grotesque and incredibly
misshapen, so
horribly malformed that by it Treon's crippled body appeared almost beautiful.
Yet its face was as the faces of the images and the old kings, and its sunken
eyes had once held wisdom, and one of its seven-fingered hands was still slim
and sensitive.
Stark
recoiled. The thing made him physically sick, and he would have turned away,
but Treon urged him on.
"Go closer. It is dead, embalmed, but it
has a message for you. It has waited all this time to give that message."
Reluctantly, Stark went
forward.
Quite suddenly, it seemed
that the thing spoke.
Behold me. Look upon me, and take counsel before you grasp that power which lies beyond the doorl
Stark leaped back, crying
out, and Treon smiled.
"It
was so with me. But I have listened to it many times since then. It speaks not
with a voice, but within the mind, and only when one has passed a certain
spot."
Stark's
reasoning mind pondered over that. A thought-record, obviously, triggered off
by an electronic beam. The ancients had taken good care that their warning
would be heard and understood by anyone who should solve the riddle of the
catacombs. Thought-images, speaking directly to the brain, know no barrier of
time or language.
He
stepped forward again, and once more the telepathic voice spoke to him.
"We
tampered with the secrets of the gods. We intended no evil. It was only that
we love perfection, and wished to shape all living things as flawless as our
buildings and our gardens. We did not know that it was against the Law . . .
"I
was one of those who found the way to change the living cell. We used the
unseen force that comes from the Land of the Gods beyond the sky, and we so harnessed
it that we could build from the living flesh as the potter builds from the
clay. We healed the halt and the maimed, and made those stand tall and straight
who came crooked from the egg, and for a time we were as brothers to the gods
themselves. I myself, even I, knew the glory of perfection. And then came the
reckoning.
"The
cell, once made to change, would not stop changing. The growth was slow, and
for a while we did not notice it, but when we did it was too late. We were
becoming a city of monsters. And the force we had used was worse than useless,
for the more we tried to mould the monstrous flesh to its normal shape, the
more the stimulated cells grew and grew, until the bodies we laboured over were
like things of wet mud that flow and change even as you look at them.
"One
by one the people of the city destroyed themselves. And those of us who were
left realized the judgment of the gods, and our duty. We made all things
ready, and let the Red Sea hide us forever from our own kind, and those who
should come after.
"Yet
we did not destroy our knowledge. Perhaps it was our pride only that forbade
us, but we could not bring ourselves to do it. Perhaps other gods, other races
wiser than we, can take away the evil and keep only the good. For it is good
for all creatures to be, if not perfect, at least strong and sound.
"But
heed this warning, whoever you may be that listen. If your gods are jealous, if
your people have not the wisdom or the knowledge to succeed where we failed in
controlling this force, then touch it not! Or you, and all your people, will
become as I."
THE
voice stopped. Stark moved back again, and said to Treon incredulously,
"And your family would ignore that warning?"
Treon
laughed. "They are fools. They are cruel and greedy and very proud. They
would say that this was a lie to frighten away intruders, or that human flesh
would not be subject to the laws that govern the flesh of reptiles. They would
say anything, because they have dreamed this dream too long to be denied."
Stark shuddered and looked at the black door.
"The thing ought to be destroyed."
"Yes," said Treon
softly.
His eyes were shining, looking into some
private dream of his own. He started forward, and when Stark would have gone
with him he thrust him back, saying, "No. You have no part in this."
He shook his head.
T have waited," he whispered, almost to himself.
"The winds bade me wait, until the day was ripe to fall from the tree of
deadi. I have waited, and at dawn I knew, for the wind said, Now is the gathering of the fruit at hand."
He looked suddenly at Stark, and his eyes had
in them a clear sanity, for all their feyness.
"You
heard, Stark. 'We made those stand tall and straight
who came crooked from the egg'. I will
have my hour. I will stand as a man for the little time that
is left."
He
turned, and Stark made no move to follow. He watched Treon's twisted body
recede, white against the red dusk, until it passed the monstrous watcher and
came to the black door. The long diin arms reached up and pushed the bar away.
The
door swung slowly back. Through the opening Stark glimpsed a chamber that held
a structure of crystal rods and discs mounted on a frame of metal, the whole
thing glowing and glittering with a restless bluish light that dimmed and
brightened as though it echoed some vast pulse-beat. There was other apparatus,
intricate banks of tubes and condensers, but this was the heart of it, and the
heart was still alive.
Treon passed within and
closed the door behind him.
Stark
drew back some distance from the door and its guardian, crouched down, and set
his back against the wall. He thought about the apparatus. Cosmic rays,
perhaps—the unseen force that came from beyond the sky. Even yet, all their
potentialities were not known. But a few luckless spacemen had found that under
certain conditions they could do amazing things to human tissue.
It
was a line of thought Stark did not like at all. He tried to keep his mind away
from Treon entirely. He tried not to think at all. It was dark there in the
corridor, and very still, and the shapeless horror sat quiet in the doorway
and waited with him. Stark began to shiver, a shallow animal-twitching of the
flesh.
He
waited. After a while he thought Treon must be dead, but he did not move. He
did not wish to go into that room to see.
He waited.
Suddenly
he leaped up, cold sweat bursting out all over him. A crash had echoed down the
corridor, a clashing of shattered crystal and a high singing note that trailed
off into nothing.
The door opened.
A
man came out. A man tall and straight and beautiful as an
angel, a strong-limbed man with Treon's face, Treon's tragic eyes. And
behind him the chamber was dark. The pulsing heart of power had stopped.
The
door was shut and barred again. Treon's voice was saying, "There are
records left, and much of the apparatus, so that the secret is not lost
entirely. Only it is out of reach."
He
came to Stark and held out his hand. "Let us fight together, as men. And
do not fear. I shall die, long before this body changes." He smiled, the remembered smile that was full of pity for all
living things. "I know, for the winds have told me."
Stark took his hand and
held it.
"Good,"
said Treon. "And now lead on, stranger with the fierce eyes. For the
prophecy is yours, and the day is
yours,
and I who have crept about like a snail all my life know little of battles. Lead, and I will follow."
Stark
fingered the collar around his neck. "Can you rid me of this?"
Treon nodded. "There are tools and acid
in one of the chambers."
He found them, and worked swiftly, and while
he worked Stark thought, smiling—and there was no pity in that smile at all.
They came back at last into the temple, and
Treon closed the entrance to the catacombs. It was still night, for the square
was empty of slaves. Stark found Egil's weapon where it had fallen, on the
ledge where Egil died.
"We must hurry,"
said Stark. "Come on."
Chapter XI
THE
ISLAND WAS SHROUDED heavily in mist and the blue darkness of the night. Stark
and Treon crept silently among the rocks until they could see the glimmer of
torchlight through the window-slits of the power station.
There
were seven guards, five inside the blockhouse, two outside to patrol.
When
they were close enough, Stark slipped away, going like a shadow, and never a
pebble turned under his bare foot. Presently he found a spot to his liking and
crouched down. A sentry went by not three feet away, yawning and looking
hopefully at the sky for the first signs of dawn.
Treon's
voice rang out, the sweet unmistakable voice. "Ho, there, guards!"
The sentry stopped and
whirled around. Off around
260
the curve of the stone wall someone began to
run, his sandals thud-thudding on the soft ground, and the second guard came
up.
"Who speaks?" one
demanded. "The Lord Treon?"
They
peered into the darkness, and Treon answered, "Yes." He had come
forward far enough so that they could make out the pale blur of his face,
keeping his body out of sight among the rocks and the shrubs that sprang up
between them.
"Make
haste," he ordered. "Bid them open the door, there." He spoke in
breathless jerks, as though spent. "A tragedy— a
disaster! Bid them open!"
One
of the men leaped to obey, hammering on the massive door that was kept barred
from the inside. The other stood goggle-eyed, watching. Then the door opened,
spilling a flood of yellow torchlight into the red fog.
"What
is it?" cried the men inside. "What has happened?"
"Come out!" gasped Treon. "My
cousin is dead, the Lord Egil is dead, murdered by a
slave."
He
let that sink in. Three or more men came outside into the circle of light, and
their faces were frightened, as though somehow they feared they might be held
responsible for this thing.
"You
know him," said Treon. "The great black-haired one
from Earth. He has slain the Lord Egil and got away into the forest, and
we need all extra guards to go after him, since many must be left to guard the
other slaves, who are mutinous. You, and you—" He picked out the four
biggest ones. "Go at once and join the search. I will stay here with the
others."
It
nearly worked. The four took a hesitant step or two, and then one paused and
said doubtfully.
"But,
my lord, it is forbidden that we leave our posts, for any reason. Any reason at
all, my lord! The Lord Cond would slay us if we left this place."
"And you fear the Lord Cond more than
you do me," said Treon philosophically. "Ah, well. I
understand."
He stepped out, full into
the light.
A
gasp went up, and then a startled yell. The three men from inside had come out
armed only with swords, but the two sentries had their shock-weapons. One of
them shrieked,
"It is a demon, who
speaks with Treon's voice!"
And the two black weapons
started up.
Behind
them, Stark fired two silent bolts in quick succession, and the men fell,
safely out of the way for hours. Then he leaped for the door.
He
collided with two men who were doing the same thing. The third had turned to
hold Treon off with his sword until they were safely inside.
Seeing that Treon, who was unarmed, was in
danger of being spitted on the man's point. Stark fired between the two lunging bodies
as he fell, and brought the guard down. Then he was involved in a thrashing
tangle of arms and legs, and a lucky blow jarred the shock-weapon out of his
hand.
Treon
added himself to the fray. Pleasuring in his new strength, he caught one man by
the neck and pulled him off. The guards were big men, and powerful, and they
fought desperately. Stark was bruised and bleeding from a cut mouth before he
could get in a finishing blow.
Someone
rushed past him into the doorway. Treon yelled. Out of the tail of his eyes
Stark saw the Lhari sitting dazed on the ground. The door was closing.
Stark hunched up his
shoulders and sprang.
HE
HIT the heavy panel with a jar that nearly knocked him breathless. It slammed
open, and there was a cry of pain and the sound of someone falling. Stark burst
through, to find the last of the guards rolling every which way over the floor.
But one rolled over onto his feet again, drawing his sword as he rose. He had
not had time before.
Stark
continued his rush without stopping. He plunged headlong into the man before
the point was clear of the scabbard, bore him over and down, and finished the
man off with savage efficiency.
He
leaped to his feet, breathing hard, spitting blood out of his mouth, and looked
around the control room. But the others had fled, obviously to raise the
warning.
The mechanism was simple. It was contained in
a large black metal oblong about the size and
shape of a coffin, equipped with grids and lenses and dials. It hummed softly
to itself, but what its source of power was Stark did not know. Perhaps those
same cosmic rays, harnessed to a different use.
He closed what seemed to be a master switch,
and the humming stopped, and the flickering light died out of the lenses. He
picked up the slain guard's sword and carefully wrecked everything that was
breakable. Then he went outside again.
Treon
was standing up, shaking his head. He smiled ruefully.
"It
seems that strength alone is not enough," he said. "One must have
skill as well."
"The barriers are
down," said Stark. "The way is clear."
Treon
nodded, and went with him back into the sea. This time both carried shock
weapons taken from the guards—six in all, with Egil's. Total
armament for war.
As
they forged swiftly through the red depths, Stark asked, "What of the
people of Shuruun? How will they fight?"
Treon
answered, "Those of Malthor's breed will stand for the Lhari. They must,
for all their hope is there. The others will wait, until they see which side is
safest. They would rise against the Lhari if they dared, for we have brought
them only fear in their lifetimes. But they will wait, and see."
Stark nodded. He did not
speak again.
They
passed over the brooding city, and Stark diought of
Egil and of Malthor who were part of that silence now, drifting slowly through
the empty streets where the little currents took them, wrapped in their shrouds
of dim fire.
He thought of Zareth sleeping in the hall of
kings, and his eyes held a cold, cruel light.
They swooped down over the slave barracks.
Treon remained on watch outside. Stark went in, taking with him the extra
weapons.
The
slaves still slept. Some of them dreamed, and moaned in their dreaming, and
others might have been dead, with their hollow faces white as skulls.
Slaves. One hundred and four,
counting the women.
Stark
shouted out to them, and they woke, starting up on their pallets, their eyes
full of terror. Then they saw who it was that called them, standing collarless
and armed, and there was a great surging and a clamour that stilled as Stark
shouted again, demanding silence. This time Helvi's voice echoed his. The tall
barbarian had wakened from his drugged sleep.
Stark told them, very
briefly, all that happened.
"You
are freed from the collar," he said. "This day you can survive or die
as men, and not slaves." He paused, then asked,
"Who will go with me into Shuruun?"
They
answered with one voice, the voice of the Lost Ones, who saw the red pall of
death begin to lift from over them. The Lost Ones, who had found hope again.
Stark
laughed. He was happy. He gave the extra weapons to Helvi and three others
that he chose, and Helvi looked into his eyes and laughed too.
Treon spoke from the open door. "They
are coming!"
STARK gave Helvi quick instructions and
darted out, taking with him one of the other men. With Treon, they hid among
the shrubbery of the garden that was
outside the
hall, patterned and beautiful, swaying its lifeless brilliance in the lazy
drifts of fire.
The
guards came. Twenty of them, tall armed men, to turn out the
slaves for another period of labour, dragging the useless stones.
And
the hidden weapons spoke with their silent tongues.
Eight of the guards fell inside the hall.
Nine of them went down outside. Ten of the slaves died with blazing collars
before the remaining three were overcome.
Now
there were twenty swords among ninety-four slaves, counting the women.
They
left die city and rose up over the dreaming forest, a flight of white ghosts
with flames in their hair, coming back from the red dusk and the silence to
find the light again.
Light, and vengeance.
The
first pale glimmer of dawn was sifting through the clouds as they came up among
the rocks below the castle of the Lhari. Stark left them and went like a shadow
up the tumbled cliffs to where he had hidden his gun on the night he had first
come to Shuruun. Nothing stirred. The fog lifted up from the sea like a vapour
of blood, and the face of Venus was still dark. Only the high clouds were
touched with pearl.
Stark
returned to the others. He gave one of his shock-weapons to a swamp-lander with
a cold madness in his eyes. Then he spoke a few final words to Helvi and went
back with Treon under the surface of the sea.
Treon
led the way. He went along the face of the submerged cliff, and presently he
touched Stark's arm and pointed to where a round mouth opened in the rock.
"It
was made long ago," said Treon, "so that the Lhari and their slavers
might come and go and not be seen. Come—and be very quiet."
They swam into die tunnel mouth, and down the
dark 265 way that lay beyond, until the lift of the floor brought them out of
the sea. Then they felt their way silendy along, stopping now and again to
listen.
Surprise
was their only hope. Treon had said that with the two of them they might
succeed. More men would surely be discovered, and meet a swift end at the hands
of the guards.
Stark hoped Treon was
right.
They came to a blank wall of dressed stone.
Treon leaned his weight against one side, and a great block swung slowly around
on a central pivot. Guttering torchlight came through the crack. By it Stark
could see that the room beyond was empty.
They stepped through, and as they did so a
servant in bright silks came yawning into the room with a fresh torch to
replace the one that was dying.
He
stopped in mid-step, his eyes widening. He dropped the torch. His mouth opened
to shape a scream, but no sound came, and Stark remembered that these servants
were tongueless—to prevent them from telling what they saw or heard in the
castle, Treon said.
The
man spun about and fled, down a long dim-lit hall. Stark ran him down without
effort. He struck once with the barrel of his gun, and the man fell and was
still.
Treon
came up. His face had a look almost of exaltation, a queer shining of the eyes
that made Stark shiver. He led on, through a series of empty rooms, all sombre
black, and they met no one else for a while.
He
stopped at last before a small door of burnished gold. He looked at Stark once,
and nodded, and thrust the panels open and stepped through.
Chapter
XII
THEY
STOOD INSIDE THE vast echoing hall that stretched away into darkness until it
seemed there was
266
no end
to it. The cluster of silver lamps burned as before, and within their circle of
radiance the Lhari started up from their places and stared at the strangers who
had come in through their private door.
Cond, and
Arel with her hands idle in her lap. Bor, pummelling the
little dragon to make it hiss and snap, laughing at its impotence. Varra, stroking the winged creasure on her wrist, testing with her
white finger the sharpness of its beak. And the old
woman, with a scrap of fat meat halfway to her mouth.
They
had stopped, frozen, in the midst of these actions. And Treon walked slowly
into the light.
"Do you know me?"
he said.
A
strange shivering ran through them. Now, as before, the old woman spoke first,
her eyes glittering with a look as rapacious as her appetite.
"You
are Treon," she said, and her whole vast body shook.
The
name went crying and whispering off around the dark walls, Treon! Treon! Treon! Cond leaped forward, touching his cousin's
straight strong body with hands that trembled.
"You have found
it," he said. "The secret."
"Yes."
Treon lifted his silver head and laughed, a beautiful
ringing bell-note that sang from the echoing corners. "I found it, and
it's gone, smashed, beyond your reach forever. Egil is dead, and the day of the
Lhari is done."
There
was a long, long silence, and then the old woman whispered, "You lie!"
Treon turned to Stark.
"Ask
him, the stranger who came bearing doom upon his forehead. Ask him if I
lie."
Cond's
face became something less than human. He made a queer crazed sound and flung
himself at Treon's throat.
Bor
screamed suddenly. He alone was not much con-267 cerned with the finding or the
losing of the secret, and he alone seemed to realize the significance of
Stark's presence. He screamed, looking at the big dark man, and went rushing
off down the hall, crying for the guard as he went, and the echoes roared and
racketed. He fought open the great doors and ran out, and as he did so the
sound of fighting came through from the compound.
The
slaves, with their swords and clubs, with their stones and shards of rock, had
come over the wall from the cliffs.
Stark had moved forward, but Treon did not
need his help. He had got his hands around Cond's throat, and he was smiling.
Stark did not disturb him.
The
old woman was talking, cursing, commanding, choking on
her own apopletic breath. Arel began to laugh. She did not move, and her hands
remained limp and open in her lap. She laughed and laughed, and Varra looked at
Stark and hated him.
"You're
a fool, wild man," she said. "You would not take what I offered you,
so you shall have nothing—only death."
She slipped the hood from her creature and
set it straight at Stark. Then she drew a knife from her girdle and plunged it
into Treon's side.
TREON
reeled back. His grip loosened and Cond tore away, half throttled, raging, his
mouth flecked with foam. He drew his short sword and staggered in upon Treon.
Furious
wings beat and thundered around Stark's head, and talons were clawing for his
eyes. He reached up with his left hand and caught the brute by one leg and held
it. Not long, but long enough to get one clear shot at Cond that dropped him in
his tracks. Then he snapped the falcon's neck.
He
flung the creature at Varra's feet, and picked up the gun again. The guards
were rushing into the hall now at the lower end, and he began to fire at them.
Treon was sitting on the floor. Blood was
coming in a steady trickle from his side, but he had the shock-weapon in his
hands, and he was still smiling.
There
was a great boiling roar of noise from outside. Men were fighting there,
killing, dying, screaming their triumph or their pain.
The echoes raged within the hall, and the noise of Stark's gun was like a
hissing thunder. The guards, armed only with swords, went down like ripe wheat
before the sickle, but there were many of them, too many for Stark and Treon to
hold for long.
The old woman shrieked and shrieked, and was
suddenly still.
Helvi
burst in through the press, with a knot of collared slaves. The fight
dissolved into a whirling chaos. Stark threw his gun away. He was afraid now of
hitting his own men. He caught up a sword from a fallen guard and began to hew
his way to the barbarian.
Suddenly Treon cried his name. He leaped
aside, away from the man he was fighting, and saw Varra fall with the dagger
still in her hand. She had come up behind him to stab, and Treon had seen and
pressed the trigger stud just in time.
For the first time, there
were tears in Treon's eyes.
A
sort of sickness came over Stark. There was something horrible in this
spectacle of a family destroying itself. He was too much the savage to be
sentimental over Varra, but all the same he could not bear to look at Treon for
a while.
Presently
he found himself back to back with Helvi, and as they swung their swords—the
shock weapons had been discarded for the same reason as Stark's gun— Helvi
panted,
"It
has been a good fight, my brother! We cannot win, but we can have a good death,
which is better than slavery!"
It
looked as though Helvi was right. The slaves, unfor-269 tunately, weakened by
their long confinement, worn out by overwork, were being beaten back. The tide
turned, and Stark was swept with it out into the compound, fighting stubbornly.
The
great gate stood open. Beyond it stood the people of Shuruun, watching, hanging
back—as Treon had said, they would wait and see.
In
the forefront, leaning on his stick, stood Larrabee the Earthman.
Stark cut his way free of the press. He
leaped up onto the wall and stood there, breathing hard, sweating, bloody, with
a dripping sword in his hand. He waved it, shouting down to the men of Shuruun.
"What
are you waiting for, you scuts, you women? The Lhari are dead, the Lost Ones
are freed—must we of Earth do all your work for you?"
And he looked straight at
Larrabee.
Larrabee
stared back, his dark suffering eyes full of a bitter mirth. "Oh,
well," he said in English. "Why not?"
He
threw back his head and laughed, and the bitterness was gone. He voiced a high,
shrill rebel yell and lifted his stick like a cudgel, limping toward the gate,
and the men of Shuruun gave tongue and followed him.
After that, it was soon
over.
THEY
found Bor's body in the stable pens, where he had fled to hide when the
fighting started. The dragons, maddened by the smell of the blood, had slain
him very quickly.
Helvi
had come through alive, and Larrabee, who had kept himself carefully out of
harm's way after he had started the men of Shuruun on their attack. Nearly half
the slaves were dead, and the rest wounded. Of those who had served the Lhari,
few were left.
Stark
went back into the great hall. He walked slowly, for he was very weary, and
where he set his foot there was a bloody print, and his arms were red to the elbows,
and his breast was splashed with the redness. Treon watched him come, and
smiled, nodding.
"It is as I said. And I have oudived
them all."
Arel
had stopped laughing at last. She had made no move to run away, and die tide of
battle had rolled over her and drowned her unaware. The old woman lay still, a mountain of inert flesh upon her bed. Her hand
still clutched a ripe fruit, clutched convulsively in the moment of death, the
red juice dripping through her fingers.
"Now
I am going, too," said Treon, "and I am well content. With me goes
the last of our rotten blood, and Venus will be the cleaner for it. Bury my
body deep, stranger with the fierce eyes. I would not have it looked on after
this."
He sighed and fell forward.
Bor's little dragon crept whimpering out from
its hiding place under the old woman's bed and scurried away down the hall,
trailing its dragging rope.
STARK
leaned on the taffrail, watching the dark mass of Shuruun recede into the red
mists.
The decks were crowded with the outland
slaves, going home. The Lhari were gone, the Lost Ones freed forever, and
Shuruun was now only another port on the Red Sea. Its people would still be
wolf's-heads and pirates, but that was natural and as it should be. The black
evil was gone.
Stark was glad to see the last of it. He
would be glad also to see the last of the Red Sea.
The off-shore wind set the ship briskly down
the gulf. Stark thought of Larrabee, left behind with his dreams of winter
snows and city streets and women with dainty feet. It seemed that he had lived
too long in Shuruun, and had lost the courage to leave it.
"Poor Larrabee," he said to Helvi,
who was standing near him. "He'll die in the mud, still cursing it."
Someone
laughed behind him. He heard a limping step on the deck and turned to see
Larrabee coming toward him.
"Changed my mind at the last
minute," Larrabee said. "I've been below, lest I should see my muddy
brats and be tempted to change it again." He leaned beside Stark, shaking
his head. "Ah, well, they'll do nicely without me. I'm an old man, and
I've a right to choose my own place to die in. I'm going back to Earth, with
you."
Stark glanced at him.
"I'm not going to Earth."
Larrabee
sighed. "No. No, I suppose you're not. After all, you're no Earthman,
really, except for an accident of blood. Where are you going?"
"I
don't know. Away from Venus, but I don't know yet where."
Larrabee's
dark eyes surveyed him shrewdly. " 'A restless,
cold-eyed tiger of a man', that's what Varra said. He's lost something, she
said. He'll look for it all his life, and never find it."
After
that there was silence. The red fog wrapped them, and the wind rose and sent
them scudding before it.
Then,
faint and far off, there came a moaning wail, a sound like broken chanting that
turned Stark's flesh cold.
All
on board heard it. They listened, utterly silent, their eyes wide, and
somewhere a woman began to weep.
Stark
shook himself. "It's only the wind," he said roughly, "in the
rocks by the strait."
The
sound rose and fell, weary, infinitely mournful, and the part of Stark that was
N'Chaka said that he lied. It was not the wind that keened so sadly through the
mists. It was the voices of the Lost Ones who were forever lost—Zareth,
sleeping in the hall of kings, and all the others who would never leave the
dreaming city and the forest, never find the light again.
Stark
shivered, and turned away, watching the leaping fires of the strait sweep
toward them.
THE LAKE OF THE GONE FOREVER
Chapter I
Landing on Iskar
IN
his cabin aboard the spaceship Rohan, Rand
Conway slept—and dreamed.
He
stood in a narrow valley. On both sides the cliffs of ice rose up, sheer and
high and infinitely beautiful out of the powdery snow. The darkling air was
full of whirling motes of frost, like the dust of diamonds, and overhead the
shining pinnacles stood clear against a sky of deepest indigo, spangled with
great stars.
As always the place was utterly strange to Conway and yet, somehow, not
strange at all. He
began to walk forward through the drifting snow and he seemed almost to know
what he was seeking around the bend of the valley.
Fear came upon him then but
he could not stop.
And
as always in that icy place his dead father stood waiting. He stood just as he
had years ago, on the night he died, and he spoke slowly and sadly the words he
had spoken then to his uncomprehending small son.
"I
can never go back to Iskar, to the Lake of the Gone Forever."
Tears
dropped slowly from under the closed fids of his eyes and the echo went to and
fro between the cliffs, saying, ". . . Lake of the Gone Forever . . . Gone
Forever . . ."
Conway
crept on, trembling. Above him the golden 'Stars wheeled in the dark blue sky
and the beauty of
them was
evil and the shimmering turrets of the ice were full of lurking laughter.
He
passed into the shadows under the sheathed rocks that hid the end of the valley
and as he did so the dead man cried out in a voice of agony, T can never to
back to Iskar!"
And the cliffs caught up the name and shouted
it thunderously through the dream.
Iskar! Iskar!
Rand Conway started up in his bunk, wide
awake, shaken and sweating as always by the strangeness of that vision. Then
his hands closed hard on the edge of the bunk and he laughed.
"You
couldn't go back," he
whispered to the man dead twenty years. "But I'm going. By heaven, I'm going, at last!"
It seemed to him that the very fabric of the
ship murmured the name as it rushed on into deep space, that the humming
machines purred it, that the thundering jets bellowed it.
Iskar! Iskar!
A
savage triumph rose in Conway. So many times he had awakened from that dream to
hopelessness—the hopelessness of ever reaching his goal. So many times, in
these years of hard dangerous spaceman's toil, the lost little world that meant
power and riches had seemed remote beyond attainment.
But
he had hung on, too stubborn ever quite to give up. He had waited and planned
and hoped until finally he had made his chance. And he was on his way now to
the place that his father had lost and never regained.
"Iskar!" '
CONWAY
started up, his face swiftly losing its brooding look. That wasn't just an echo
of his dream. Someone was shouting the name outside his cabin door.
"Conway!
Rand Conway! We've sighted Iskar.1" 275
Of course! Why else would the jets be
thundering? He had been half asleep still, not to know it at once. He sprang up
and crossed the dimly-lighted cabin, a tall man, very lean and hard, yet with a
certain odd grace about him, a certain beauty in the modeling of his bones. His
eyes, of a color somewhere between grey and blue, were brilliant with
excitement and full of a wolfish hunger.
He
flung open the door. The glare from the corridor set him to blinking
painfully—an inherited sensitivity to light was his one weakness and he had
often cursed his father for passing it on to him. Through a dancing haze he saw
Peter Esmond's mild good-looking face, as excited as his own.
Esmond
said something, but Conway neither heard it nor cared what it was. He pushed
past him and went with long strides down the passage and up the ladder to the
observation bridge.
It
was dark up there under the huge port. Immediately everything came clear to his
vision—the blue-black sky of the Asteroid Belt, full of flashing golden stars
where ■the little worlds caught the light of the distant Sun.
And
ahead, dead ahead, he saw the tiny misty globe that was Iskar.
He
stood for a long time, staring at it, and he neither moved nor spoke except
that a deep trembling ran through him.
Close
beside him he heard Charles Rohan's deep voice. "Well, there's the new
world. Quite a thrill, eh?"
Instantly
Conway was on his guard. Rohan was no fool. A man does not make forty million
dollars by being a fool and it was going to be hard enough to get away with
this without tipping his hand to Rohan now.
Inwardly
he cursed, not Rohan, but his daughter Marcia.
It
was she who had talked her father into going along to see about opening up
trade with Iskar. Rohan con-
trolled the
lion's share of trade with the Jovian Moons and the idea was logical enough.
Marcia's interest, naturally, was not financial. It was simply that she could
not bear to be parted from Esmond and there was no other way for her to go with
him.
Conway
glanced at Marcia, who was standing with her arm around her fiance. A nice girl. A pretty girl.
Ordinarily he would have liked her. But she didn't belong here and neither did
Rohan—not for Conway's purposes.
Esmond
alone he could have handled easily. Esmond was the Compleat Ethnologist to his
fingertips. As long as he had a brand-new race to study and catalogue he would neither know nor care what other treasures a world might
hold.
Now
that he looked back on it the whole chain of circumstances seemed flimsy and
unsure to Conway— his meeting with Esmond on a deep-space flight from Jupiter,
the sudden inspiration when he learned of Esmond's connection with the Rohans,
the carefully casual campaign to get the ethnologist interested in the unknown
people of Iskar, the final business of producing his father's fragmentary notes
to drive Esmond quite mad with longing to see this inhabited world that only
one other Earthman had ever seen.
Esmond to Marcia Rohan, Marcia to her
father—and now here they were. Esmond was going to get a Fellowship in the
Interplanetary Society of Ethnologists and Rand Conway was going to get what he
had lusted for ever since he had stumbled upon his father's notes and read in
them the story of what lay in the Lake of the Gone Forever, waiting to be
picked up by the first strong pair of hands.
That portion of the notes he had never shown
to anyone.
Here
they were, plunging out of the sky toward Iskar, 277 and it had all been so
easy—too easy. Conway was a spaceman and therefore superstitious, whether he
liked it or not. He had a sudden feeling that he was going to have to pay for
that easiness before he got through.
ESMOND
had pressed forward in the cramped space, staring raptly out at the distant
glittering of silver light that was Iskar.
"I wonder what they're like?" he
said as he had said a million times before. Marcia smiled.
"You'll soon know," she answered.
"It
is odd," said Rohan, "that your father didn't tell more about the
people of Iskar, Conway. His notes were strangely fragmentary—almost as though
he had written much more and then destroyed it."
Conway
tried to detect an edge of suspicion in Rohan's voice, but could not.
"Perhaps
he did," said Conway. "I never could find any more."
With that one exception it was the truth.
Marcia's
face was thoughtful and a little sad, in the
dim glow of that outer sky.
"I've
read those notes over and over again," she said. "I think you're
right, Dad. I think Mr. Conway wrote his whole heart into those notes and then
destroyed them because he couldn't bear to have them read, even by his son.
She put a sympathetic hand on Conway's arm.
"I can understand your wanting to know, Rand. I
hope you'll find your answer."
"Thanks," said Conway gravely.
He
had had to account for his own interest in Iskar
and he had been able to do that too without lying except by omission. The story
of his father was true enough— the dark brooding man, broken in health and
spirit, living alone with a child and a dream. He had died before Rand was ten,
by his own hand and with the name of
Iskar on his lips. I can never go back, to the Lake of the Gone Foreverl
Conway
himself had never doubted what his father's secret tragedy was. He had found a
fortune on Iskar and had not been able to go back to claim it. That was enough
to drive any man mad.
But
it was easy, out of his childhood memories and those strangely incoherent
notes, to build a romantic mystery around the lonely prospector's discovery of
an unknown world and his subsequent haunted death. Marcia had found it all
fascinating and did not doubt for a moment Conway's statement that he was
seeking to solve that mystery which, he said, had overshadowed his whole life.
And it had. Waking or sleeping, Rand Conway
could not forget Iskar and the Lake of the Gone Forever.
He
watched the misty globe grow larger in the sky ahead, and the beating of his
heart was a painful thing. Already his hands ached with longing to close around
Iskar and wring from it the power and the wealth that would repay him for all
the bitter years of waiting.
He
thought of his dream. It was always unpleasantly vivid, and remained with him
for hours after he woke. But this time it was different. He thought of the
vision of his father, standing in the crystal valley, alone with his dark
sorrow, and he said to the vision, You should have waited. You should have had the
courage to wait, like me.
For the first time he was
not sorry for his father.
Then
he forgot his father. He forgot time and Esmond and the Rohans. He forgot
everything but Iskar.
The Rohan shuddered rhythmically to the brake-blasts. Iskar filled the port,
producing a skyline of shimmering pinnacles so like his dream that Conway shuddered
too in spite of himeslf.
The
pinnacles shot up swiftly into a wall of ice and the Rohan swept in to a landing.
Chapter II
The
White City
THE
spaceship lay like a vast black whale, stranded on a spotless floe. Behind it
the ice-wall rose, its upper spires carved by the wind
into delicate fantastic shapes. Spreading away from it to the short curve of
the horizon was a sloping plain of snow, broken here and there by gleaming
tors. In the distance other ranges lifted sharply against the deep dark blue of
the sky.
Rand
Conway stood apart from the others. His face had a strange look. He slipped the
warm hood back, lifting his head in the icy wind.
Great
golden stars wheeled overhead and the air was full of dancing motes of frost.
The wind played with the powdery snow, whirling it up into shining veils,
smoothing it again into curious patterns of ripples.
The
pain, the sky, the frozen spires, had a wondrous beauty of color, infinitely
soft and subtle. There was no glare here to plague Conway's eyes. Iskar
glimmered in a sort of misty twilight, like the twilight of a dream.
Iskar—the bulk of it solid under his feet at
last after all these years. Conway trembled and found it difficult to breathe.
His eyes, black and luminous as a cat's now with the expansion of the pupils,
glistened with a hard light. Iskarl
Quite suddenly he was
afraid.
Fear
rushed at him out of the narrow valleys, down from the singing peaks. It came
in the wind and rose up from the snow under his feet. It wrapped him in a
freezing shroud and for a moment reality slipped away from him and he was lost.
The shadows were deep under the icy cliffs
and the 280 mouths of the valleys were black and full of whispers. It seemed to
him that the lurking terror of his dream was very close, close and waiting.
He
must have made some sound or sign, for Marcia Rohan came to him and took him by
the arm.
"Rand," she said.
"Rand, what is it?"
He caught hold of her. In a moment everything
was normal again and he was able to force what might pass for a laugh.
"I
don't know," he said. "Something came to me just then." He could
not tell her about the dream. He told her instead what he knew must be the
cause of it.
"My
father must have told me somedring about this place when I was a child,
something I can't remember. Something ugly. I—"
He paused and then plunged on. "I thought for a moment diat I had been
here before, that I knew . . ."
He
stopped. The shadow was gone now. To the devil with dreams
and subconscious memories. The reality was all that mattered—the reality
that was going to make Rand Conway richer than the Rohans. He stared away
across the plain. For a moment his face was unguarded and Marcia was startled
by the brief cruel look of triumph that crossed it.
The
others came up, Rohan and young Esmond and Captain Frazer, the well-fed but
very competent skipper of the Rohan. They
were all shivering slightly in spite of their warm coveralls. Esmond looked at
Conway, who was still bare-headed.
"You'll freeze your
ears off," he said.
Conway
laughed, not without a faint edge of contempt. "If you had kicked around
in deep space as many years as I have you wouldn't be bothered by a little
cold."
He
pointed off to where the distant ranges were, across the plain.
"According
to my father's maps the village, or what have you, lies between those
ranges."
"I think," said Marcia, "that
we had better break out the sledges and go before Peter bursts something."
Esmond
laughed. He was obviously trembling with eagerness.
"I hope nothing's happened to
them," he said. "I mean, since your father was here. You know—famine,
plague or anything."
"I imagine they're a pretty hardy
lot," said Rohan, "or they couldn't have survived at all in this
godforsaken place." He turned to Frazer, laughing. "For heaven's
sake, get the sledges."
FRAZER
nodded. The crew had come tumbling out and were
rollicking like schoolboys in the snow, glad to be released from the long
confinement of the voyage. The Second Officer and the engineer were coming up
and Frazer went to meet them. The Second turned back to round up his men.
The
sledges came presently out of the cargo hatch. There were three of the light
plastic hulls—two to carry the exploring party, one to be left with the ship in
case of emergency. They were fully equipped, including radio and the efficient
Samson riot guns, .firing shells of anaesthetic gas.
Rohan
looked at his daughter. "I want you to stay here, Marcia."
The
girl must have been expecting that, Conway thought, because her only reaction
was to set her jaw so that she looked ridiculously like her father—smaller and
prettier but even more stubborn.
"No," said
Marcia.
Esmond said, "Please, darling.. These people may not be friendly at first. You can go
next time." "No," said Marcia.
"Marcia," said Rohan pleasantly.
"I don't want any foolishness about this. Go with Frazer, back to the
ship." Marcia studied him. Then she turned and kissed Es-282 mond lightly
on the cheek and said, "Good luck, darling." She went off with
Frazer. Conway saw that there were tears in her eyes. He warmed to Marcia. She
hadn't been trying to show off. She just wanted to be with Esmond in case
anything happened.
Rohan said, "I guess
we might as well go."
They
climbed in, six men to a sledge, all burly space-hands with the exception of
Rohan and the ethnologist and Conway, who had sweated his way up from the ranks
to Master Pilot.
The small jets hissed, roared and settled
down to a steady thrumming. The sledges shot out across
the trackless plain like two small boats on a white sea, throwing up waves of snowy spray.
Conway
was in the leading sledge. He leaned forward like a leashed hound, impatient
to be slipped. Part of him was mad with excitement and another part, completely
cool and detached, was making plans.
The
spaceship began to grow smaller. Almost imperceptibly the gleaming pinnacles
of ice lengthened into the sky.
Presently the pace of the sledges grew slower
and slower still. Tors, half rock, half ice, rose up out of the snow and here
and there a reef, mailed and capped with the shining armor, was scoured clear
by the wind. The man at the controls thrust his head forward, squinting.
"What's the
matter?" asked Conway. "Why the delay?"
The
man said irritably, "I'm afraid of ramming into something, sir. It's so
bloody dark and shadowy, I can't see.
"Is that all!" Conway laughed and shoved him aside. "Here—let an owl do it."
He
took the controls and sent the sledge spinning ahead. Every reef and tor, every
ripple in the snow, was as clear to him as it would have been to most men in
broad daylight. He laughed again.
"I'm beginning to like Iskar," he
said to Rohan. 283
"I think III start a colony for people
with hemeralopia, and we can all be as happy as bats in the dark. My father
must have loved it here."
Rohan glanced up at him. Conway had forgotten
to put his hood back up. The wind was whipping an icy gale through his hair and
there was rime on his lashes. He seemed to be enjoying it. Rohan shivered.
"I'm
nyctalopic myself," he said. "I'll stick to plenty of sunlight—and heat!"
Esmond did not bother to listen to either one
of them. His dream was as strong as Conway's and at this moment he had room for
nothing else.
The sledges rushed on across the plain, the
one following the tiny jet-flares of the other. The spaceship was lost in the
white distance behind them. Ahead the twin ranges grew against the stars.
Nothing stirred but the wind. It was very lovely, very peaceful, Conway
thought. A cold, sweet jewel of a world.
The
words sang in his ears, the words that had themed his father's death and run
through his own life as a promise and a challenge. "The Lake of the Gone
Forever-Gone Forever . . ."
He
had long ago ceased to wonder what that name meant. Only in his nightmare dream
did it have the power to frighten him. He wanted what was there and nothing
else mattered.
The
Lake of the Gone Forever. Soon—soon—soon!
Yet
it seemed a very long time to Conway before they entered the broad defile between
the twin ranges.
He
was forced to slow his breakneck pace because here the ground was broken and
treacherous. Finally he stopped altogether.
"We'll have to go on
foot from here," he said.
IN a fever of impatience he waited while the
men climbed out, shouldering the Samson guns. They left two to guard the
sledges and went on, scrambling in
single file over the tumbled rocks. The wind howled
between the mountain walls so that the air was blind with snow. There was no
sight of the city.
Conway
was in the lead. He was like a man driven by fiends. Where the others slipped
and stumbled he went over the rough ground like a cat, swift and surefooted
even among the deceptive drifts. Several times he was forced to stop and wait
lest he leave the party too far behind.
Suddenly,
above the organ notes of the wind, there was another sound.
Conway lifted his head to listen. Clear and
sweet and strong he heard the winding of horns from the upper slopes. They
echoed away down the valley, calling one to the other with ringing voices that
stirred Conway's blood to a wild excitement. He shook the snow out of his hair
and plunged on, leaving the rest to follow as best they could.
A jutting shoulder of the mountains loomed
before him. The wind blew and the deep-throated homs
called and called again across the valley. The blown drifts leaped at him and
the icy screes were a challenge to his strength but they could not slow him
down. He laughed and went on around the shoulder and saw the white city
glittering under the stars.
It
spread across the valley floor and up the slopes as though it grew from the
frozen earth, a part of it, as enduring as the mountains. At Conway's first
glance, it seemed to be built all of ice, its turrets and crenellations glowing
with a subtle luminescence in the dusky twilight, fantastically shaped, dusted
here and there with snow. From the window openings came
a glow of pearly light.
Beyond
the city the twin ranges drew in and in until their flanks were parted only by
a thin line of shadow, a narrow valley with walls of ice reaching up to the
sky.
Conway's
heart contracted with a fiery pang. 285
A narrow valley— The valley.
For
a moment everything vanished in a roaring darkness. Dream and reality rushed
together—his father's notes, his father's dying cry, his own waking visions and
fearful wanderings beyond the wall of sleep.
It lies
beyond the city, in a narrow place between the mountains—The Lake of the Gone Forever. And I can never go
back!
Conway said aloud to the wind and the snow
and the crying horns, "But I have
come back. I have cornel"
Exulting,
triumphant, he looked again at the city, the white beauty of it, the wind-carved towers bright beneath the golden stars.
It was a strong place, walled and fortified
against whatever enemies there might be on this world of Iskar. Conway ran
toward it and as he did so the braying of horns rose louder and then was joined
by the shrill war-cry of pipes.
They
went skirling along the wall and through the snow-mist he saw that men were
there above him looking down. The glitter of their spears ran like a broken
line of silver from both sides of the great stone gate.
Chapter
III The Fear
CONWAY'S
blood leaped hot within him. The pipes set him mad and he flung up his arm and
shouted at the men, a long hail. He could see them clearly now. They were tall
lean men with bodies tough as rawhide and strong bone in their faces and eyes
like the eyes of eagles. They wore the white furs of beasts kilted about them,
thrown loosely over their naked shoulders, and they were bareheaded and
careless of the cold. Their spears rose up and menaced him.
286
He stopped. Once again he cried out, a cry as
wild and shrill as the martial pipes. Then he stood
still, waiting.
Slowly behind him came Rohan and the others.
They formed into a sort of knot around him. Some of the men reached nervously
for their riot guns and Rohan spoke sharply. The pipes fell silent and the
sounding homs. They waited, all of them.
There
was movement on the wall and an old man came forward among the warriors, a
cragged gnarled old man with a proud face and fierce eyes, standing strong as a
granite rock.
He
looked down at the alien men below him. His hair and his long beard blew in the
bitter wind, and the white furs whipped around him, and for a long time he did
not speak. His eyes met Conway's and there was hatred in them and deep pain.
Finally
he said, very slowly, as though the words came haltingly from some long-locked
vault of memory, "Men of Earth!"
Conway
started. It had not occurred to him that his father might have left some
knowledge of English behind him.
"Yes,"
he answered, holding out his empty hands. "Friends."
The old man shook his head.
"No. Go, or we kill."
He
looked again at Conway, very strangely, and a little chill ran through the
Earthman. Was it possible that the old man saw in him some resemblance to the
Conway he had known before? He and his father had not looked alike.
Esmond
stepped forward. "Please," he said. "We mean you no harm. We
only want to talk to you. We will obey you, we will
bring no weapons—only let us in!"
He
was very like a child pleading, almost on the verge of tears. It was
unthinkable that he should be denied now.
The old man said again,
"Go."
Rohan spoke. "We have gifts, many things
for your people. We want nothing. We come as friends."
The
old man flung up his head and laughed, and his mirth was like vitriol poured on
the wind.
"Friend! Conna
was my friend. In my house, as my own son, lived Conna, my friendl"
He
cried out something in his own harsh tongue and Conway knew that it was a curse
and he knew that Conna was his own name. They had not forgotten his father on
Iskar, it seemed.
He
was suddenly angry, more terribly angry than he had ever been in his life.
Beyond the city, almost within reach, lay the valley of the Lake and nothing,
not all their spears, not death itself, was going to stop now.
He strode up under the wall and looked at the
old man with eyes as black and baleful as his own.
"We
know nothing of this Conna," he said. "We come in peace. But if you
want war we will make war. If you kill us others will come—many others. Our
ship is huge and very terrible. Its fire alone can destroy your city. Will you
let us in, old man, or must we . .
After
a long time the other said slowly, "What is your name?"
"Rand," said
Conway.
"Rand,"
repeated the old man softly. "Rand." He was silent for a time,
brooding, his chin sunk on his breast. His eyes were hooded and he did not look
again at Conway.
Abrupdy
he turned and issued orders in his own tongue. Then, to the Earthmen, he
shouted, "EnterF'
The great stone was rolled
away.
Conway
went back to the others. Both Esmond and Rohan were furious.
"Who
gave you the right—" Rohan began, and Esmond broke in passionately,
"You shouldn't have threatened them! A
little more talk would have convinced them."
Conway looked at them contemptuously.
"You
wanted in, didn't you?" he demanded. "All right, the gate's open and
they'll think twice about getting tough with us after we're through it."
HE
unbuckled his gun belt and tossed it, holster and all, to a man on the wall. It
was a gesture and no more because he had hidden a small anaesthetic needle-gun
under his coverall in case of need—but it would look good to the Iskarians.
"I'd
do the same if I were you," he said to the others. "Also, I would
send the men back. They're not going to do us any good inside the wall and they
might do us harm. Tell them to bring the trade goods and one of the radios from
the sledges and then return to the ship— and stand by."
Rohan
scowled. He did not like having the command taken from him. But Conway's orders
made sense and lie relayed them. Then he tossed his own gun to
one of (lie warriors. Esmond did not carry one. The men wont away, back to the sledges.
"Remember,"
said Conway, "you never heard of 'Conna', or his son."
The
others nodded. They turned then and went into the city and the stone gate was
closed behind them.
The
old man was waiting for them, and with him a sort of
honor guard of fifteen tall fighting men.
T am Krah," said the old patriarch. He waited politely
until Esmond and Rohan had said their names and then he said, "Come."
The
guard formed up. The Earthmen went—half guest, half captive—into the streets of
the city.
They
were narrow winding streets, rambling up and down over the broken ground. In
some places they were scoured clean to the ice by the whistiing wind, in others
they were choked by drifts. Conway could see now that the buildings were all of
solid stone, over which the cold shining mail had formed for centuries, except
where the openings were kept clear.
The people of the city were gathered to watch
as the strangers went by.
It was a strangely silent crowd. Men, women
and children, old and young, all of them as stalwart and handsome as mountain
trees, with their wide black pupils and pale hair, the men clad in skins, the
women in kirtles of rough woolen cloth. Conway noticed that the women and
children did not mingle with the men.
Silent,
all of them, and watching. There was something disquieting in their stillness.
Then, somewhere, an old woman sent up a keening cry of lament, and another took
it up, and another, until the eerie ochone echoed
through the twisting streets as though the city itself wept in pain.
The men began to close in. Slowly
at first, now one stepping forward, now another, like the first pebbles rolling
before the rush of the avalanche. Conway's heart began to pound and
there was a bitter taste in his mouth.
Esmond
cried out to the old man, "Tell them not to fear usl Tell them we are
friends!"
Krah looked at him and smiled. His eyes went
then to Conway and he smiled again.
"I will tell
them," he said.
"Remember,"
said Conway harshly. "Remember the great ship and its fires."
Krah nodded. "I will
not forget."
He
spoke to the people, shouting aloud, and reluctantly the men drew back and
rested the butts of their spears on the ground. The women did not cease to wail.
Conway
cursed his father for the things he had not written in his notes.
Quite
suddenly, out of a steep side lane, a herd boy drove his flock with a scramble
and a clatter. The queer white-furred beasts milled in the narrow space, squealing,
filling the air with their sharp, not unpleasant odor.
As
though that pungency were a trigger, a shutter clicked open somewhere in
Conway's mind and he knew that he had seen these streets before, known the
sounds and smells of the city, listened to the harsh
staccato speech. The golden wheeling of the stars overhead hurt him with a
poignant familiarity.
Conway
plunged again into that limbo between fact and dream. It was far worse this
time. He wanted to sink down and cling to something until his mind steadied
again but he did not dare do anything but walk behind the old man as though
nothing on Iskar could frighten him.
Yet he was afraid—afraid with the fear of
madness, where the dream becomes the reality.
Beads
of sweat came out on his face and froze there. He dug his nails into his palms
and forced himself to remember his whole life, back to his earliest memory and
beyond, when his father must have talked and talked of Iskar, obsessed with the
thought of what he had found there and lost again.
He
had not spoken so much of Iskar when his son was old enough to understand. But
it seemed that the damage was already done. The formative years, the
psychologists call them, when the things learned and forgotten will come back
to haunt one later on.
Conway
was a haunted man, walking through that strange city. And old Krah watched him
sidelong and smiled and would not be done with smiling.
The
women wailed, howling like shewolves to the dark heavens.
Chapter IV
"Go Ask of Her . .
IT
seemed like centuries to Conway, but it could not have been so long in actual
time before Krah stopped beside a doorway and pulled aside the curtain of skins
that covered it.
"Enter," he said and the Earthmen
filed through, leaving the guard outside, except for five who followed the old
man.
"My sons," said
Krah.
All grown men, far older than Conway, and
scarred, tough-handed warriors. Yet they behaved toward Krah with the deference
of children.
The
ground floor of the house was used for storage. Frozen sides of meat and
bundles of a dried moss-like stuff occupied one side. On the other was a pen and a block for butchering. Apparently there was
no wood on Iskar, for the pen was built of stone and there were no doors, only
the heavy curtains.
Krah
lifted another one of these, leading the way up a closed stair that served as a
sort of airlock to keep out the draughts and the extreme cold of the lower
floor. The upper chamber was freezing by any Earthly standards but a small,
almost smokeless fire of moss burned on the round hearth and the enormously
thick walls were perfect insulation against the wind. Immediately Conway began
to sweat, probably from sheer nervousness.
A
girl sat by the hearth, tending the spit and the cooking pot. Obviously she had
only just run back in from the street, for there was still snow in her silvery
hair and her sandals were wet with it.
She did not lift her head when the men came
in, as 292 though such happenings were not for her to notice. Yet Conway caught
a sidelong glance of her eyes. In the soft light of the stone lamps her pupils
had contracted to show the clear blue iris, and for all her apparent meekness,
he saw that her eyes were bright and rebellious and full of spirit. Conway
smiled.
She
met his gaze fairly for a moment with a curious intensity, as though she would
tear away his outer substance and see everything that lay beneath it—his
heart, his soul, his innermost thoughts, greedily, all in a minute. Then the
old man spoke and she was instantly absorbed in the turning of the spit.
"Sit,"
said Krah, and the Earthmen sat on heaps of furs spread over cushions of moss.
The five tall sons sat also
but Krah remained standing.
"So
you know nothing of Conna," he said and Conna's son answered blandly,
"No."
"Then how came you to
Iskar?"
Conway
shrugged. "How did Conna come? The men of Earth go everywhere."
Unconsciously he had slipped into Krah's ceremonial style of phrasing. He
leaned forward, smiling.
"My
words were harsh when I stood outside your gate. Let them be forgotten, for
they were only the words of anger. Forget Conna also. He has nothing to do with
us."
"Ah,"
said the old man softly. "Forget. That is a word I do not know. Anger,
yes—and vengeance also. But not forget."
He
turned to Rohan and Esmond and spoke to them and answered them courteously
while they explained their wishes. But his gaze, frosty blue now in the light,
rested broodingly on Conway's face and did not waver. Conway's nerves tightened
and tightened and a great unease grew within him.
He
could have sworn that Krah knew who he was and why he had come to Iskar.
Reason told him that this was ridiculous. It
had been many years since Krah had seen his father and in any case they were
physically dissimilar. Nor did it seem likely that he should have preserved
intact any of his father's mannerisms.
Yet he could not be sure and the uncertainty
preyed upon him. The old man's bitter gaze was hard to bear.
The five sons neither moved nor spoke. Conway
was sure that they understood the conversation perfectly and he reflected that,
according to Krah, they had lived with Conna as his brothers. They seemed to be
waiting, quite patiently, as though they had waited a long time and could
afford to wait a little longer.
From
time to time the girl stole a secret smouldering look at Conway and in spite of
bis uneasiness he grew very curious about her, wondering what devil of unrest
lurked in her mind. She had a fascinating little face, full of odd lights and
shadows where the glow of the fire touched it.
"Trade,"
said Krah at last. "Friendship. Study. They are good words. Let us eat now, and then rest, and I will think of these good words, which I have
heard before from Conna."
"Look
here," said Rohan rather testily, "I don't know what Conna did here
but I see no reason to condemn us for his sins."
"We
speak the truth," said Esmond gently. He glanced at Conway, waiting for
him to ask the question that was his to ask. But Conway could not trust himself
and finally Esmond's curiosity drove him to blurt out,
"What was Conna's crime?"
The old man turned upon him a slow and heavy
look. "Do not ask of me," he said. "Ask of her who waits, by the
Lake of die Gone Forever."
THAT name stung Conway's nerves like a whiplash. He
was afraid he had betrayed himself but if he
started no one seemed to notice. The faces of Esmond and Rohan were honestly
blank.
"Thé Lake of the Gone Forever," Esmond repeated. "What is
that?"
"Let there be an end to talk," said
Krah.
He
turned and spoke to the girl in his own tongue and Conway caught the name Ciel.
She rose obediently and began to serve the men, bringing the food on platters
of thin carved stone. When she was done she sat down again by the fire and ate
her own dinner from what was left, a slim, humble shadow whose eyes were no
more humble than the eyes of a young panther. Conway stole her
a smile and was rewarded by a brief curving of her red mouth.
When the meal was finished Krah rose and led
the Earthmen down a corridor. There were two curtained doorways on each side
and beyond them were small windowless cells, with moss and furs heaped soft to
make a sleeping place.
Ciel
came quietly to light the stone lamps and it seemed to Conway that she took
special note of the cubicle he chose for his own.
"Sleep,"
said Krah, and left them. Ciel vanished down a narrow back stair at the end of
the hall.
The
Earthmen stood for a moment, looking at each other, and then Conway said
sullenly, "Don't ask me any questions because I don't know the
answers."
He
turned and went into his chamber, dropping the curtain behind him. In a vile
mood he sat down on the furs and lighted a cigarette, listening to Rohan's low
half-angry voice telling Esmond that he thought Rand was acting very strangely.
Esmond answered soothingly that the situation would be a strain on anyone.
Presently Conway heard them go to bed. He blew out his lamp.
He
sat for quite awhile, in a terrible sweat of nerves, thinking of Krah, thinking
of the narrow valley that lay so nearly within his reach, thinking of his
father, hating him because of the black memories he had left behind on Iskar,
so that now the way was made very hard for his son.
Heaven help him if old Krah ever found outl
He waited for some time after everything was still. Then, very carefully, he
lifted the curtain and stepped out into the hall.
He could see into the big main room. Four of
Krah's brawny sons slept on the furs by the embers. The fifth sat crosslegged,
his spear across his knees, and he did not sleep.
Conway glanced at the back stair. He was
perfecdy sure that it led to the women's quarters and that any venturing that
way would bring the whole house around his ears. He shrugged and returned to
his cell.
Stretched
out on the furs he lay frowning into the dark, trying to think. He had not
counted on the hatred of the Iskarians for Earthmen. He wondered for the hundredth
time what his father had done to make all the women of Iskar wail a dirge when
they were reminded of him. Ask of her who waits, by the Lake of the Gone
Forever . . .
It didn't really matter. All that mattered
was that they were under close watch and that it was a long way through the
city for an Earthman to go and stay alive, even if he could get away from Krah.
Quite
suddenly, he became aware that someone had crept down the hall outside and
stopped at his door.
Without
making a sound, Conway reached into the breast of his coverall and took hold of
the gun that was hidden there. Then he waited.
The
curtain moved a little, then a little more, and Conway lay still and breathed
like a sleeping man. Faint light seeped in, outiining the widening gap of the
curtain, showing clearly to Conway's eyes the figure that stood there, looking
in.
Ciel, a little grey mouse in her hodden
kirtle, her hair down around her shoulders like a cape of moonbeams. Ciel, the mouse with the wildcat's eyes.
Partly
curious to see what she would do, partly afraid that a whisper might attract
attention from the other room, Conway lay still,
feigning sleep.
For
a long moment the girl stood without moving, watching him. He could hear the
sound of her breathing, quick and soft. At last she took one swift step
forward, then paused, as though her courage had failed
her. That was her undoing.
The
big man with the spear must have caught some flicker of movement, the swirl of
her skirt, perhaps, for she had made no noise. Conway heard a short exclamation
from the main room, and Ciel dropped the curtain and ran. A man's heavier
footfalls pelted after her.
There
was a scuffling at the other end of the hall and some low intense whispering.
Conway crept, over and pulled the curtain open a crack.
KRAH'S
son held the girl fast. He seemed to be lecturing her, more in sorrow than in
anger, and then, deliberately and without heat, he began to beat her. Ciel bore
it without a whimper but her eyes glazed and her face was furious.
Conway
stepped silently out into the hall. The man's back was turned, but Ciel saw
him. He indicated in pantomime what she should do and she caught the idea at
once—or perhaps only the courage to do it.
Twisting
like a cat, she set her teeth hard in the arm that held her.
The
man let her go from sheer astonishment rather than pain. She fled down the
woman-stair and he stood staring after her, his mouth wide open, as dumbfounded
as though the innocent stones he walked on had risen suddenly and attacked him.
Conway got the feeling that such a thing had never happened before in the
history of Iskar.
He leaned lazily against the wall and said
aloud, "What's going on?"
Krah's son turned swiftly and the look of
astonishment was replaced instantly by anger.
Conway
made a show of yawning, as though he had just waked up. "Was that Ciel you
were thrashing? She's a pretty big girl to be spanked." He grinned at the
marks on the man s arm. ' By the way, who is she—
Krah's granddaughter?"
The answer came slowly in stumbling but
understandable English.
"Krah's fosterling, daughter of my
sister's friend.
Ciel drank wickedness with mother's milk—wickedness she learn from my sister,
who learn from Conna."
Quite
suddenly the big man reached out and took Conway's jacket-collar in a
throttling grip. Amazingly there were tears in his eyes and a deep, bitter
rage.
"I
will warn you, man of Earth," he said softly. "Go —go swifdy while
you still live."
He
flung Conway from him and turned away, back to the big room to brood again by
the fire. And the Earth-man was left to wonder whether the warning was for them
all or for himself alone.
Hours
later he managed to fall into an uneasy sleep, during which he dreamed again of
the icy valley mid the hidden terror that waited for him beyond the wall of
rock. It seemed closer to him than ever
before, so close that he awoke with a strangled cry. The stone cell was like a
burial vault, and he left it, in a mood of desperation such as he had never
known before. Outside, the wind was rising.
He
came into the big room just as Krah entered from the outer stair. Behind him,
very white-faced and proud, came Marcia Rohan. Her cheek was bleeding and
her
lovely dark hair was wet and draggled and her eyes hurt Conway to look at them.
"Marcia!" he cried and she ran to
him, clinging with tight hands like a frightened child. He held her, answering
her question before she could gasp it out.
"Peter's
safe," he said. "So is your father. They're quite safe."
Old Krah spoke. There was a strange stony
quality about him now, as though he had come to some decision from which
nothing could shake him. He looked at Conway.
"Go," he said. "Call
your—friends."
Chapter V
Warrior
of Iskar
CONWAY
went, taking Marcia with him. Rohan came out at once but Esmond was sleeping
like the dead. Apparently he had worked for hours by the light of the stone
lamp, making notes on the people of Iskar.
Conway
wondered, as he shook him awake, whether any of that data was going to get
safely back to Earth. He knew, as certainly as he knew his own name, that their stay here was ended and he did not like the
look in Krah's eyes.
"It's
nobody's fault," Marcia was saying, over and over. '1 couldn't stand it. I
didn't know whether you were alive or dead. Your radio didn't answer. I stole a
sledge."
"Did you come alone?" asked Rohan.
"Yes."
"My
God!" said Esmond softly, and picked her up in his arms. She laid her
bleeding cheek against his and sobbed out. "They stoned me, Peter, die
women did. The
299
men
brought me through the streets and the women stoned me."
Esmond's mild face became perfectly white.
His eyes turned cold as the snow outside. He strode down the hall bearing
Marcia in his arms, and his very step was stiff with fury. Rohan followed,
crowding on his heels.
Old
Krah never gave them a chance to speak. His five sons were ranged behind him
and there was something very formidable about them, the five tall fair men and
the tall old one who was like an ancient dog-wolf, white with years but still
leader of the pack.
Krah
held up his hand, and the Earthmen stopped. From her place by
the fire Conway saw that Ciel was watching, staring with fascinated eyes at the
alien woman who had come alone across the snow-fields to stand beside her men.
The wind piped loud in the window embrasures, coming down from the high peaks
with a rush and a snarl that set Conway's nerves to quivering with a queer
excitement.
Krah spoke, looking at
Marcia.
"For
this I am sorry," he said. "But the woman should not have come."
His frosty gaze rose then to take in all of them. "I offer you your lives.
Go now—leave the city, leave Iskar and never return. If you do not I cannot
save you."
"Why
did they stone her?" demanded Esmond. He had one thing on his mind, no
room for any other thought.
"Because
she is different," said Krah simply, "and they fear her. She wears
the garments of a man and she walks among men and these things are against
their beliefs. Now, will you go?"
Esmond
set the girl on her feet beside him, leaving his arm around her shoulders.
"We
will go," he said.
"And I will kill the first one who touches her."
Krah
was gentleman enough to ignore the emptiness of that very sincere threat. He
bowed his head.
"That,"
he said, "is as it should be." He looked at Rohan.
"Don't worry," Rohan snapped.
"We'll leave and may you all go to the devil. This is a fit world for
wolves and only wolves live in it!"
He started toward the door with Esmond and
his daughter and Krah's eyes turned now to Conway. He asked softly, "And
you, man who is called Rand?"
.Conway
shrugged, as though the whole thing were a matter of no importance to him.
"Why should I want to stay?" His hands were shaking so that he thrust
them into his pockets to conceal it and little trickles of sweat ran down his
back. He nodded toward the window opening.
"There's a white wind blowing,
Krah." he said. He drew himself erect, and his voice rose and rang.
"It will catch us on the open plain. The woman will surely die and perhaps
the rest of us also. Nevertheless we will go. But let it be told through the
city that Krah has laid aside his manhood and put on a woman's kirde, for he
has slain by stealth and not by an honest spear!"
There
was silence. Esmond stopped and turned in the doorway, the girl held close in
the circle of his arm. Rohan stopped also, and their faces showed the shock of
this new thought.
Conway's
heart beat like a trip-hammer. He was bluffing—with all the resources of the
sledge,, he thought, their chances of perishing were
fairly small, but there was just that germ of truth to pitch it on. He was in
agony while he waited to see if the bluff had worked. Once inside the city
walls he knew that the Lake was lost to him as it had been to his father.
After
what seemed a very long time, Krah sighed and said quietly, "The white
wind. Yes. I had forgotten that the Earth stock is so weak."
A
subtle change had come over the old man. It was almost as diough he too had
been waiting tensely for some answer and now it had come. A deep, cold H<rht
crept into his eyes and burned there, something almost joyous.
"You may stay," he said,
"until the wind drops."
Then
he turned sharply and went away down the stair and his sons went with him.
Esmond stared after them and Conway was
amused to see the wolfish fury in his round, mild face.
"He
would have sent us out to die," said Esmond, as though he wished he could
kill Krah on the spot. Danger to Marcia had transformed him from a scientist
into a rather primitive man. He turned to Conway.
"Thanks.
You were right when you threatened them on the wall. And if anything happens to
us I hope Frazer will make them pay for it!"
"Nothing's
going to happen," said Conway. "Take Marcia back to the sleeping
rooms—it's warmer there and she can he dawn." He looked at Ciel and said
sharply, "Can you understand me?"
She nodded, rather
sullenly.
Conway
pointed to Marcia. "Go with her. Bring water, something to put on that
cut."
Ciel
rose obediently but her eyes watched him slyly as she followed the Earth-folk
out and down the hall.
Conway was left quite
alone.
HE
forced himself to stand still for a moment and think. He forced his heart to
stop pounding and his hands to stop shaking. He could not force either his
elation or his fear to leave him.
His
way was clear now, at least for the moment. Why was it clear? Why had Krah gone
away and taken his sons with him?
The
wind swooped and screamed, lifting the curtains of hide, scattering snow on the
floor. The white wind. Conway sv i ed. He had this chance. He would never have
another.
He turned and went swiftly into the second
corridor that opened opposite the one where the others had gone. It too
contained four small sleeping rooms. One, however, was twice as large as the
others and Conway was sure it belonged to Krah.
He slipped into it, closing the curtain
carefully behind him.
All that he needed was there. All that he
needed to make possible this on,e attempt that he
could ever make upon the hidden valley of his dream.
He
began to strip. The coverall, the thin jersey he wore underneath, the
boots—everything that was of Earth. He must go through the city and he could
not go as an Earthman. He had realized that there was only one way. He was glad
of the white wind, for that would make his deception easier.
It would be cold and dangerous. But he was
contemptuous of cold and beyond caring about danger. He was not going to eat
his heart out and die, as his father had, because his one chance was lost
forever.
In a
few minutes Rand Conway was gone and in the stone chamber stood a nameless
warrior of Iskar, a tall fair man wrapped in white furs, shod in rough hide
goots and carrying a spear.
He
retained two things, hidden carefully beneath his girdle—the little gun and a
small vial, sheathed and stoppered with lead.
He
turned, and Ciel was standing there, staring at him with wide astonished eyes.
She
had slipped in so quietly that he had not heard her. And he knew that with one
loud cry she could destroy all his plans.
In
two swift angry strides he had caught her and put one hand hard over her mouth.
"Why
did you come here?" he snarled. "What do you want?"
Her
eyes looked up at him, steady and fierce as 303 his own. He said, "Don't
cry out or I'll kill you." She shook her head and he took his hand away a
little, not trusting her.
In
slow painful English she said, "Take me with you."
•Where?"
"To
Earth I"
It was
Conway's turn to be astonished. "But why?"
She said vehemently, "Earth-woman proud
like man. Free."
So
that was the smouldering anger she had in her. She was not patient like the
other women of Iskar, for she had had a glimpse of something else. He remembered
what Krah's son had said.
"Did
Conna teach this?"
She nodded. "You take me?" she
demanded. "You take me? I run away from Krah. Hide. You take me?"
Conway
smiled. He liked her. They were the same kind, he and she—nursing a hopeless
dream and risking everything to make it come true.
"Why not?" he said. "Sure, I'll take you."
Her
joy was a savage thing. "If you lie," she whispered, "I kill
you!" Then she kissed him.
He
could tell it was the first time she had ever kissed a man. He could also tell
that it was not going to be the last.
He
thrust her away. "You must help me then. Take these." He handed her
the bundle of his discarded clothing. "Hide them. Is there a back way
from the house?"
"Yes."
"Show
it to me. Then wait for me—and talk to no one. No one. Understand?"
"Where
you go?" she asked him. The look of wonder came back into her eyes, and
something of fear. "What you do, man of Iskar?"
He
shook his head. "If you don't help me, if I die— you'll never see
Earth."
"Come," she said,
and turned.
Esmond
and Rohan were still with Marcia, still full of their fears and angers—too full
to worry about Conway, the outsider. The house of Krah was empty and silent
except for the wind that swept through the embrasures with a shriek of
laughter, like the laughter of wolves before the kill. Conway shivered, an animal twitching of the skin.
Ciel
led him down a little stair and showed him a narrow passage built for the
taking of offal from the slaughtering pen—woman's work, unfit for warriors.
"I
wait," she said. Her fingers closed hard on the muscles of his arm.
"Come back. Come soon!"
Her
fear was not for him but for herself, lest now in this last hour her hope of
freedom should be snatched away. Conway knew how she felt.
He
bent and gave her a quick rough kiss. 'Til come back."
Then he lifted the curtain of hide and slipped out into the darkness.
Chapter VI
Echoes
of a Dream
THE
city was alive and vocal with the storm. The narrow streets shouted with it,
the icy turrets of the houses quivered and rang. No snow was falling but the
thick brown whiteness drove and leaped and whirled, carried across half of
Iskar in the rush of the wind. Above the tumult the stars burned clear and
steady in die sky.
The
cold bit deep into Conway's flesh, iron barbs reaching for his heart. He drew
the warm furs closer. His heartbeats quickened. His blood raced, fighting back
the cold, and a strange exaltation came over him,
305
something
born out of the wild challenge of the wind. His pupils
dilated, black and feral as a cat's. He began to walk, moving at a swift
pace, setting his feet down surely on the glare ice and the frozen stones.
He knew the direction he must take. He had
determined that the first time he saw the city and it was burned into his
memory for all time.
The way to the Lake, the
Lake of the Gone Forever.
There
were not many in the streets and those he passed gave him no second look. The
white wind laid a blurring veil over everything and there was nothing about
Conway to draw attention, a lean proud-faced man bent against the wind, a
solitary warrior on an errand of his own.
Several
times he tried to see if he were being followed. He could not forget Krah's
face with its look of secret joy, nor cease to wonder uneasily why the old man
had so suddenly left the Earthfolk unwatched. But he could see nothing in that
howling smother.
He made sure of the little
gun and smiled.
He
found his way by instinct through the twisting streets, heading always in the
same direction. The houses began to thin out. Quite suddenly they were gone and
Conway stood in the open valley beyond. High above he
could distinguish the shining peaks of the mountains lifting against the stars.
The
full sweep of the wind met him here. He faced it squarely, laughing, and went
on over the tumbled rocks. The touch of madness that had been in him ever since
he reached Iskar grew into an overwhelming thing.
Part
of his identity slipped away. The wind and the snow and the bitter rocks were
part of him. He knew them and they knew him. They could not harm him. Only the
high peaks looked down on him with threatening faces and it seemed to him that
they were angry.
He
was beginning to hear the echoes of his dream but they were still faint. He was
not yet afraid. He was, in some strange way, happy. He had never "been
more alone and yet he d'd not feel lonely. Somethins wild and rough woke within
him to meet the wild roughness of the storm and he felt a heady pride, a
certainty that he could stand against any man of Iskar on his own ground.
The city was lost behind him. The valley had
him between its white wall1; vasue and formless now. closing in upon him imperceptibly beyond the curtain of the
storm. There was a curious timelessness about his journey, almost a spacelessness, as though he existed in a dimension of his
own.
AND
in that private world of his it did not seem strange nor unfitting that Gael's
voice should crv out '•'-My against the wind, t^at he
should turn to see her clambering after him, nimble-footed, reckless with
haste.
She
reached him, spent with running. "Krah," she gasped. "He go ahead with four. One follow. I see. I follow too" She made a quick, sharp
gesture that took in the whole valley. "Trap.
They catch. They kill. Go back."
Conway
did not stir. She shook him, in a passion of urgency. "Go back' Go back now!"
He stood immovable, his head raised, his eyes
questing into the storm, seeking the enemies he only half believed were there.
And then, deep and strong across the wind, came the bavine of a hunter's horn.
It was answered from the other side of the valley. Another spoke, and another, and
Conway counted them. Six—Krah and his five sons around and behind him, so that
the way back to the city was closed.
Conway
began to see the measure of the old man's cunning and he smiled, and animal baring of the teeth.
"You go," he said
to Ciel. "They will not harm you."
"What
I do thev punish," she answered grimly. "No. You must live. They hunt
you but I know trails, ways.
Go
many times to Lake of the Gone Forever. They not kill there. Come."
She turned but he caught her and would not
let her go, full of a quick suspicion.
"Why do you care so much about me?"
he demanded. "Esmond or Rohan could take you to Earth as well."
"Against Krah's will?" She laughed. "They are soft men, not
like you." Her eyes met his fairly in the gloom, the black pupils wide and
lustrous, looking deep into him so that he was strangely stirred. "But
there is more," she said. "I never love before. Now I do. And—you are
Conna's son."
Conway
said, very slowly, "How did you know that?" "Krah know. I hear
him talk."
Then
it had been a trap all along, from the beginning. Krah had known. The old man
had given him one chance to go from Iskar and he had not taken it—and Krah had
been glad. After that he had withdrawn and waited for Conway to come to him.
The
girl said, "But I know without hearing. Now come, son of Conna."
She led off, swift as a deer, her skirts
kilted above her knees. Conway followed and behind and around them the horns
bayed and answered with the eager voices of hounds that have found the scent
and will never let it go.
All
down the long valley the hunters drove them and the mountain walls narrowed in
and in, and the ringing call of the horns came closer. There was a sound of joy
in them, and they were without haste. Never once, beyond the white spume of the
blowing snow, did Conway catch a glimpse of his pursuers. But he knew without
seeing that old Krah's face bore a bleak and bitter smile, the terrible smile
of a vengeance long delayed.
Conway
knew well where the hunt would end. The horns would cry him into the throat of
the cleft, and
then
they would be silent. He would not be permitted to reach the Lake.
Again he touched the little gun and his face
could not have been less savage than Krah's. He was not afraid of spears.
The
girl led him swiftly, surely, among the tangled rocks and the spurs of ice, her
skirt whipping like a grey flag in the wind. High overhead the cold peaks
filled the sky, leaving only a thin rift of stars. And suddenly, as though
they were living things, the walls of the valley rushed together upon him, and
the shouting of the horns rose to an exultant clamor in his ears, racing, leaping
toward him.
He
flung up his head and yelled, an angry, defiant cry.
Then there was silence, and through the driven veils of snow he saw the shapes
of men and the dim glittering of spears.
He
would have drawn the gun and loosed its brieht spray of instant sleep into the
warriors. The drug would keep them quiet long enough for him to do what he had
to do. But Ciel gave him no time. She wrenched at him suddenly, pulling him
almost bodily into a crack between the rocks.
"Hurry!" she
panted. "Hurryl"
The
rough rock scraped him as he jammed his way through. He could hear voices
behind him, loud and angry. It was pitch dark, even to his eyes, but Ciel
caught his furs and pulled him along—a twist, a turn, a sharp corner that
almost trapped him where her smallness slipped past easily. Then they were free
again and he was running beside her, following her urgent breathless voice.
For
a few paces he ran and then his steps slowed and dragged at last to a halt.
There was no wind here in this sheltered place. There were no clouds of blowing
snow to blur his vision.
He stood in a narrow cleft between the
mountains. 309
On
both sides the cliffs of ice rose up, sheer and high and infinitely beautiful
out of the powdery drifts. The darkling air was full of whirling motes of
frost, like the dust of diamonds, and overhead the shining pinnacles stood
clear against a sky of deepest indigo, spangled with great stars.
He stood in the narrow valley of his dream.
And now at last he was afraid.
Truth
and nightmare had come together like the indrawn flanks of the mountains and
he was caught between them. Awake, aware of the biting cold and the personal
sensation of his flesh, still the nameless terror of the dream beset him.
He
could almost see the remembered shadow of his father weeping by the sheathed
rocks that hid the end of the cleft, almost hear that cry of loss—/ can never go back to the Lake of the Gone Forever!
tie knew that now he was going to see the end of the dream. He would not
wake this time before he passed the barrier rocks. The agonizing fear that had
no basis in his own life stood naked in his heart and would not go-
He
had known, somehow, all his life that this time must come. Now that it was here
he found that he could not face it. The formless baseless terror took his
strength away and not all his reasoning could help him. He could not go on.
And
yet he went, as always, slowly forward through the drifting snow.
He
had forgotten Ciel. He was surprised when she caught at him, urging him to run.
He had forgotten Krah.
He
remembered only the despairing words whispered back and forth by the cold lips
of the ice. Gone
Forever . . . Gone Forever . . . ! He looked up and the golden stars wheeled above him in the dark blue
sky. The beauty of them was evil and the shimmering turrets of the ice were
full of lurking laughter.
Nightmare—and he walked in
it broad awake.
It
was not far. The girl dragged him on, drove him, and he obeyed automatically,
quickening his slow pace. He did not fight. He knew that it was no use. He went
on as a man walks patiently to the gallows.
He
passed the barrier rocks. He was not conscious now of movement. In a sort of
stasis, cold as the ice, he entered the cave that opened beyond them and looked
at last upon the Lake of the Gone Forever.
Chapter
VII Black Lake
IT was black, that Lake. Utterly
black and very still, lying in its ragged cradle of rock under the arching roof
where, finally, the mountains met.
A
strange quality of blackness, Conway thought, and shuddered deeply with the
hand of nightmare still upon him. He stared into it, and suddenly, as though he
had always known, he realized that the lake was like the pupil of a living eye,
having no light of its. own but receiving into itself
all light, all impression.
He
saw himself reflected in that great unstirring eye and Ciel beside him. Where
the images fell there were faint lines of frosty radiance, as though the
substance of the Lake were graving upon itself in glowing acid the memory of
what it saw.
Soft-footed from behind him came six other
shadows —Krah and his five sons—and Conway could see that a great anger was
upon them. But they had left their spears outside.
"We
may not kill in this place," said Krah slowly, "but we can keep you
from the thing you would do."
"How
do you know what I mean to do?" asked Conway and his face was strange as
though he lis-
311
tened to distant voices speaking in an unknown
tongue.
Krah
answered, "As your father came before you, so you have come—to steal from
us the secret of the Lake."
"Yes," said
Conway absently. "Yes, that is so."
The old man and his tall sons closed in
around Conway and Ciel came and stood between them.
"Wait!" she said.
For the first time they acknowledged the
presence of the girl.
"For your part in this," said Krah
grimly, "you will answer later."
"No!"
she cried defiantly. "I answer no! Listen. Once you love Conna. You leam from him good things. His mate
happy, not slave. He bring wisdom to Iskar—but
now you hate Conna, you forget.
"I
go to Earth with Conna's son. But first he must come here. It is right he come.
But you kill, you full of hate for Rand—so I come to save him."
She
stood up to Krah, the little grey mouse transfigured into a bright creature of
anger, blazing with it, alive with it.
"All
my life—hate! Because of Rand you try to kill memory of Conna, you teach people
hate and fear. But my mother learn from Conna. I learn
from her—and I no forget! Rand happy, free. My mother know—and I no forget."
It
came to Conway with a queer shock that she was not speaking of him but of
another Rand. He listened to the girl and there was a
stillness in him as deep and light-less as the stillness of the lake.
"You
not kill, old man," Ciel whispered. "Not yet. Let him see, let him
know. Then kill if he is evil."
She swung around.
"Son of Conna! Look into the Lake. All the dead of Iskar buried here. They gone
forever but memory lives. All come here in life, so that the Lake remember.
Look, son of Conna, and think of your fatherl"
Still with that strange quiet heavy on his
heart Rand Conway looked into the Lake and did as Ciel told him to do. Krah and
his sons looked also and did not move.
At
first there was nothing but the black infinite depth of the Lake. It is semi-liquid, said his father s notes, the notes he had
kept secret from everyone—and in this heavy medium are suspended particles of some transu-ranic element—perhaps an isotope of uranium itself that is unknown to us.
Incalculable wealth—incalculable pain! My
soul is there, lost in the Lake of
the Gone Forever.
Rand Conway stood waiting and the thought of
his father was very strong in him. His father, who had died mourning that he could never come back.
Slowly,
slowly, the image of his father took shape in the substance of the lake, a
ghostly picture painted with a brush of cold firs against the utter dark.
It
was no projection of Rand Conway's own. memory
mirrored there, for this was not the man he had known, old before his time and
broken with longing. This man was young, and his face was happy.
He turned and beckoned to someone behind him,
and the shadowy figure of a girl came into the circle of his outstretched arm.
They stood together, and a harsh sob broke from old Krah's throat. Conway knew
that his father and the pale-haired lovely girl had stood where he stood now on
the brink of the Lake and looked down as he was looking, that their images
might be forever graven into the heart of the strange darkness below.
They
kissed. And Ciel whispered, "See her face, how it shines with joy."
The
figures moved away and were gone. Conway watched, beyond emotion, beyond fear.
Some odd portion of his brain even found time to theorize on the electrical
impulses of thought and how they could shape the free energy in the unknown
substance of the Lake, so that it became almost a second subconscious mind for
everyone on
Iskar, storehouse from which the memories of a race could be called at will.
The eye of the Lake had seen and now, at the
urging of those intense minds, it produced the pictures it had recorded like
the relentless unreeling of some cosmic film.
RAND
CONWAY watched, step by step, the disintegration of a man's soul. And it was
easy for him to understand, since his own life had been ruled by that same
consuming greed.
Conna came again and again to the Lake,
alone. It seemed to hold a terrible fascination for him. After all he was a
prospector, with no goal before him for many years but the making of a big
strike. Finally he brought instruments and made tests and after that the
fascination turned to greed and the greed in time to a sort of madness.
It
was a madness that Conna fought against and he had
reason. The girl came again. With her this time were Krah and his sons, all
younger and less bitter than now, and others whom Conway did not know. It was
obviously a ritual visit and it had to do with the newborn child the girl
held in her aims.
Rand
Conway's heart tightened until it was hardly
beating. And through the frozen numbness that held him the old fear began to
creep back, the nightmare fear of the dream, where something was hidden from
him that he could not endure to see.
Conna, the girl, and a
new-born child.
I cannot escape. I cannot wake from this.
Conna's
inward struggle went on. He must have suffered the tortures of hell, for it
was plain that what he meant to do would cut him off from all he loved. But he
was no longer quite sane. The Lake mocked him, taunted him with its unbelievable
wealth, and he could not forget it.
The
last time that Conna came to the Lake of the 314
Gone
Forever, he had laid aside the furs and the spear of
Iskar, and put on again his spaceman's leather and the holstered gun. He
brought with him a leaden container, to take back proof of the Lake and what it
held.
But
while he worked to take his sample—the sample that would, in the end, mean the
destruction of the Lake and all it meant to Iskar—the pale-haired girl came,
her eyes full of pain and pleading, and the child was with her, a well-grown
boy now, nearly two years old.
And Conna's' son cried out suddenly and
swayed so that Ciel put out her hand to him, and he clung to it, with the
universe dark and reeling about him.
J know now! I know the fear behind the dream!
Within
the Lake the shadowy child watched with uncomprehending horror how his mother
snatched the litde heavy box from his father's hands—his father who had grown
so strange and violent and was dressed so queerly in black.
He watched how his mother wept and cried out
to his father, pleading with him, begging him to stop and think and not destroy
them all.
But
Conna would not stop. He had fought his fight and lost and he would not stop.
He
tried to take the box again. There was a brief moment when he and the girl
swayed together on the brink of the Lake. And then—quickly, so very quickly
that she had only time for one look at Conna as she fell —the girl fell over
the edge. The disturbed cold fires of the Lake boiled up and overwhelmed her
and there was no sight of her ever again.
The child screamed and ran to the edge of the
rock. He too would have fallen if his father had not held him back.
For
a long while Conna stood there, holding the whimpering child in his arms. The
girl had taken the leaden box with her but Conna had forgotten that. He had
forgotten everything except that his mate was dead, that he had killed her. And
it was as though Conna too had died.
Then he turned and fled, taking the boy with
him.
THE
surface of the Lake was as it had been, dark and still.
Rand Conway went slowly to his knees. He felt
dully as though he had been ill for a long time. All the strength was gone out
of him. He stayed there on the icy rock, motionless and silent, beyond feeling,
beyond thought. He was only dimly aware that Ciel knelt beside him, that he was
still clinging to her hand.
Presently he looked up at
Krah.
"That
was why you gave me my chance to leave Iskar. I was Conna's son—but I was the
son of your daughter, too."
"For
her sake," said Krah slowly, "I would have let you go."
Conway
nodded. He was very tired. So many things were clear to him now. Everything had
changed, even the meaning of the name he bore. Rand. It was all very strange,
very strange indeed.
Ciel's hand was warm and
comforting in his.
Slowly
he took from his girdle the little gun and the leaden vial, and let them drop
and slide away.
"Father
of my mother," he said to Krah, 'let me live." He bowed his head and
waited.
But
Krah did not answer. He only said, "Does Conna live?"
"No. He paid for her
life, Krah, with his own."
"That
is well," whispered the old man. And his sons echoed, "That is
well."
Conway
stood up. His mood of weary submission had left him.
"Krah,"
he said. "I had no part in Conna's crime and for my own—you know. I am of
your blood, old man. I will not beg again. Take your spears and give me mine
and we will see who dies!"
A ghost of a grim smile touched Krah's hps.
He looked deeply into his grandson's eyes and presently he nodded.
"You
are of my blood. And I think you will not forget. There will be no taking of
spears."
He
stepped back and Conway said, "Let the others go. They know nothing of the
Lake and will not know. I will stay on Iskar."
He
caught Ciel to him. "One thing, Krah. Ciel must
not be punished."
Again the grim smile. Some of the frosty cold had gone from Krah's eyes. In time, Conway
thought, the old bitterness might vanish altogether.
"You
have stood together by the Lake," said Krah. "It is our record of
marriage. So if Ciel is beaten that is up to you."
He turned abruptly and left the cavern and
his sons went with him. Slowly, having yet no words to say, Rand Conway and
Ciel followed them—into the narrow valley that held no further terrors for the
man who had at last found his own world.
Behind
them, the Lake of the Gone Forever lay still and
black, as though it pondered over its memories, the loves and hatreds and
sorrows of a world gathered from the beginning of time, safe there now until
the end of it.
THE TRUANTS
Chapter I Prelude to Nightmare
The farmhouse was tall and white. For
eighty-three years it had stood in the green countryside where the shaggy
Pennsylvania hills slope down to the meadows of
Ohio. It was a wise house and
a kindly one. It knew all there was to know oi the wheeling seasons, birth and
death, human passion, human sorrow.
But
now something had come into the night that it did not know. From the starry sky
it came, a sound and presence not of
the Earth. The house listened and was afraid . . .
PRELUDE to nightmare. Hugh Sherwin was to remember very clearly, in the days that followed
every second of those last calm precious minutes before his familiar world
began to fall about him.
He
sat in the old farmhouse living room, smoking and drowsily considering the
pages of a dairy equipment catalogue. From outside in the warm May night came a
chorus of squeals, yelps and amiable growlings where Janie played some
complicated game with the dogs.
He
remembered that the air was soft, sweet with the smell of the rain that had
fallen that afternoon. He remembered the chirping of the crickets. He remembered
thinking that summer was on its way at last.
Lucy
Sherwin looked up from her sewing. "I swear," she
said, "that child grows an inch every day. I can't keep her dresses down
to save me."
318
Sherwin grinned. "Wait another five
years. Then you can really start worrying about her clothes."
His pipe had gone out. He lit it again. Janie
whooped with laughter out on the lawn. The dogs barked. Lucy went on with her
sewing.
Sherwin
turned the pages of the catalogue. After a time he realized, without really
thinking of it, that the sounds from outside had stopped.
The child, the dogs, the
shrilling crickets, all were silent. And it-seemed to Sherwin, in the
stillness, that he heard a vast strange whisper hissing down the sky.
A
gust of wind blew sharp and sudden, tearing at the trees. The frame of the old
house quivered. Then it was gone and Lucy said, "It must be going to
storm."
Janie's
voice lifted up in a sudden cry. "Daddyl Daddy! Come quick!"
Sherwin groaned. "Oh, Lord," he
said. "What now?" He leaned over and called through the open window.
"What do you want?"
"Come here,
Daddy!"
Lucy smiled. "Better go, dear. Maybe
she's found a snake."
"Well,
if she has she can let it go again." But he rose, grumbling, and went out
the door, snapping on the yard light.
"Where are you, Janie?
What is it?"
He
heard her voice from the far side of the yard, where the light did not reach.
He started toward her. The dogs came running to him, a brace of lolloping
spaniels and a big golden retriever. They panted happily. Sherwin called
again.
"Jane!"
She
did not answer. He had passed out of the light now but there was part of a moon
and presently he saw her, a thin intense child with dark hair and very blue
eyes, standing perfectly still and staring toward the west.
She said breathlessly,
"It's gone now, down in the woods."
Sherwin followed her intent gaze, across the
little creek that ran behind the house and the great white dairy barn, across
the wide meadow beyond it, and farther still to the woods.
The thick stand of oak and maple and sycamore
covered acres of marshy bottomland too low for pasture. Sherwin had never
cleared it. The massed darkness of the trees lay silent and untroubled in the
dim moonlight The crickets had begun to sing again.
"What's gone?" demanded Sherwin.
"I don't see anything."
'It came down out of the sky," Janie
said. "A big dark thing, like an airplane without any
wings. It went down into the woods."
"Nonsense. There haven't been any planes around and if one had crashed in the
woods we'd all know it."
"It
didn't crash. It just came down. It made a whistling noise." She all but
shook him in her excitement. "Come onl Let's go
see what it is!"
"Oh, for heaven's sake, Jane! That's ridiculous. You saw a cloud or a big
bird. Now forget it."
HE started back to the house. Janie danced in
the long grass, almost weeping. "But I saw it! I saw itl"
Sherwin
said carelessly, "Well, it'll keep till tomorrow. Go down and make sure
the gate's locked where the new calf is. The cow has been thinking about getting
back to the pasture."
He
had locked the gate himself but he wanted to get Janie's mind off her vision.
She could be very insistent at times.
"All right," she answered sulkily.
"But you wait. You'll
She went off toward the pen. Sherwin returned
to his catalogue and his comfortable chair.
An hour later he called her to go to bed and
she was gone.
He hunted her around the barn and
outbuildings, thinking she might have fallen and been hurt, but she was not
there. The dogs too were missing.
He stood irresolute and then a thought
occurred to him and he looked toward the woods. He saw a tiny gleam of light—a
flashlight beam shining through the black fringes of the trees.
Sherwin went down across the creek into the
meadow. The dogs met him. They were subdued and restless and when he spoke to
them they whined and rubbed against him.
Janie came out from the pitch darkness under
the trees. She was walking slowly and by the torchbeam Sherwin saw that her
face was rapt and her eyes wide and full of wonder. There was such a queer
breathless hush about her, somehow, that he checked his first angry words.
She
whispered, "They came out of the ship, all misty and bright. I couldn't see them very well but they had wings, beautiful fiery wings.
They looked like angels."
Her
gaze turned upon him, not really seeing him. She asked, "Do you think they
could be angels truly?"
"I
think," said Sherwin,
"that you're going to get a thrashing, young lady." He caught her arm
and began to march her back across the meadow. "You know perfectly well
that you're forbidden to go into the woods after dark!"
She wasn't listening to him. She said, in the
same odd distant voice, "Do you think they could be, Daddy?"
"What are you talking about?" "Them Could
they be angels?"
"Angels!"
Sherwin snorted. "I don't know why angels 321 should turn up in our woods and if they did they wouldn't need a ship
to fly around in."
"No," said Janie.
"No, I guess they wouldn't."
"Angels!
If you think you can excuse yourself with a story like that you're
mistaken." He quickened the pace. "March along diere, Miss Jane! My
palm is itching."
"Besides,"
murmured Janie, "I don't think angels laugh—and they were laughing."
Sherwin
said no more. There seemed to be nothing more to say.
He was still baffled at the end of a stormy
session in the living room. Jane clung stubbornly to her story, so stubbornly
that she was on the verge of hysterics, and no amount of coaxing, reasoning or
threatened punishment could shake her. Lucy sent her sobbing off to bed.
"I
can't understand the child," she said. "I've never seen her like this
before."
Sherwin shrugged. "Oh, kids get funny
streaks sometimes. She'll forget it."
He had forgotten it himself by morning. He
saw Janie go off to school with Richard Allerton, the boy from the neighboring
farm. They always walked together, trudging the half mile into the village.
Janie was chattering sixteen to the dozen and now and again she whirled about
in a sort of dance, holding out her arms like wings.
Toward
noon Lucy called him in from the barn. "Miss Harker just phoned," she
told him. "She wanted to know if Janie had come home."-
Sherwin frowned. "You
mean she isn't in school?"
"No—not after recess. Miss Harker said a number of children were missing. Hugh, I'm worried.
You don't suppose—?"
"Nonsense. The little devil's playing hooky, that's all." He said angrily,
"What's got into the kid all of a sudden, anyway? All
that cutting up last night—hey!" He turned and looked at the woods.
After a moment he said, "I'll bet that's
it, Lucy. I'll bet she's taken her pals down to look at the 'angels'."
Lucy said anxiously,
"I wish you'd go and see."
"That," said Sherwin, "is
exactly what I'm going to do—right
now!"
THE dogs came with him, chasing each other
merrily after imaginary rabbits. But when he reached the edge of the wood they stopped and would come no
farther.
He
remembered that they had not gone in with Janie the night before and he could
not understand what was the matter with them. The
woods were full of small game and normally the dogs spent half their time
there, hunting by themselves.
He
called, whistled and swore but they hung back, whimpering. Finally he gave up
and went on alone, shaking his head.
First
his child, now his dogs—everything seemed to have gone queer at once.
The
day was leaden, heavy with the threat of rain. Under the thick-laced branches
of the trees it was almost as dark as though it were night. The air was moist,
dank with the smell of the marshes. Sherwin forced his way through the
undergrowth. From time to time he shouted Janie's name.
Once,
some distance away, he thought he heard a chorus of voices, the shrill laughter
of a number of children. But the trees clashed and rustled in the wind so that
he could not be sure—and Janie did not answer his call.
Gradually, creeping in some- secret way along the channels of
his nerves, the realization came to him that he was not alone.
He
began to move more slowly, looking about him. He could see nothing and yet his
heart pounded and the sweat turned cold on his body. Presendy he stopped.
The
dark woods seemed to close around him, a smothering weight of foliage. He
called again once or twice, quite sharply. And then he caught a flicker of
motion among the trees.
He thought at first that it was the child,
hiding from him, and that he had glimpsed her dress moving. But as he went
toward it there was a subtle stirring in the underbrush that was never made by
human feet. And as the green fronds were disturbed he saw a muted flash of fire
and something, large and misty and glowing bright, darted
swiftly through the lower branches. The leaves were shaken and there was a
sound as of the beating of wings.
He
caught only the briefest glimpse of it. He was not sure of anything about it,
its shape, size or substance. He knew only that it was not Earthly.
Sherwin
opened his mouth but no cry came. Speechless, breathless, he stood for a
moment utterly still. Then he turned and bolted.
Chapter
II
Nightmare
by Daylight
SHERWIN
had not gone very deep into the woods. Within a few minutes he came plunging
out into the open meadow and fetched up in the midst of part of his dairy herd.
The cows went lumbering away in" alarm and Sherwin stopped, beginning to
be ashamed of himself.
He
turned to look back. Nothing had followed. The dogs sighted him—he had come out
of the trees lower down, toward Allerton's land—and ran to greet him. He patted
their rough reassuring bodies with a shaking hand and as his brief panic left
him he became angry.
324
"It was only a trick of light among the
trees," he told himself. "A wisp of ground fog,
with the sun touching it."
But
there was no sun, no fog either. He had seen something.
He would admit that. His pride forced him to
admit it. That he should take to his heels in his own woods . . .1 But his mind, which he had found adequate for forty years
of successful living, began to function normally, to reject the impossible
thing it had thought such a short time before.
The
thing had startled him, the stealthy movement, the
sudden glowing flash. That was why he had— imagined. Some great tropical bird, strayed far north, hiding frightened in the unfamiliar
woods, rocketing away at his approach. That was what he had seen. That had been
Janie's 'angel.' A big, strange bird.
His
mind was satisfied. And yet his body trembled still and some inner sense told
him that he lied. He ignored it. And he started only slightly when a man's
voice hailed him loudly from across the meadow.
He
turned to see Allerton approaching. The man was like a large edition of his
son, stocky, sunburned, with close-cropped head. Sherwin could see on his face
all the signs of a storm gathered and ready to break.
"Saw
you down here, Hugh," said Allerton. "Is Rich at your place? The teacher
says he's cut school."
Sherwin
shook his head.. "Jane's up to the same tricks.
I'm pretty sure they're in the woods, Sam. Jane found something there last
night—"
He
hesitated. Somehow his tongue refused to shape any coherent words.
Allerton
demanded impatiently, "Just what do you mean, she found something?"
"Oh,
you know how kids are. They run a high fever over a new kind of bird. Anyway,
I'm sure they're in there. I heard them awhile ago."
"Well," said Allerton, "what
are we waiting for? That boy of mine has got some questions to answer!"
He started off immediately. Sherwin fought
down a great reluctance to go again into the shadows under the trees and
followed.
"Which way?"
asked Allerton.
"I don't know," Sherwin said.
"I guess we'll just have to call them."
He called. Both men called. There was no
answer. There was no sound at all except the wind in the treetops.
Shouting at intervals the names of their
children the men went deeper and deeper into the heart of the woods. In spite
of himself Sherwin started nervously now and again when the branches were
shaken by a sharper gust, letting the gray daylight flicker through. But he saw
nothing.
After a long time they splashed through an arm of the swamp and
scrambled up onto a ridge covered with a stand of pines. Allerton halted and would go no farther.
"Blast
it, Hugh, the kids aren't in herel I'm going
back."
But
Sherwin was bent forward, listening. "Wait a minute. I thought I
heard—"
The
tall pines rocked sighing overhead. And then, through the rustle and murmur of
the trees there came a burst of laughter and the cries of children busy with
some game.
Sherwin
nodded. "I know now where they are. Come on."
He
scrambled down the far side of the ridge, heading south and west. There was a
knoll of higher ground where some ancient trees had fallen in a winter's storm,
carrying the lighter growth with them. The children's voices had come from the
direction of the clearing.
He
went perhaps a hundred yards and then paused, frowning. He began to work back
and forth in the undergrowth, growing more and more perplexed and somehow
frightened. The heavy gloom melted away oddly between the trees and his vision
seemed blurred.
"I
can't fi^J the clearing," he said.
"You've
ns&» >d it. You took the wrong direction."
"Listen,
these are my woods. I know them." He pointed. "The clearing should be
ahead there but I can't see it. Look at the tree trunks, Sam. Look how they
shimmer."
Allerton
grunted. "Just a trick of the light." Sherwin
had beeun to shiver. He cried out loudly, "Jane! Jane, answer me!"
HE began to thrash about in the underbrush
and as he approached the strangely shimmering trees he was overcome by
dizziness and threw his arm across his eyes.
He
took a step or two forward blindly. Suddenly almost under his feet there was a
crackle and a swish of something moving in haste, a sharp, breathless giggle.
"Hey!"
said Allerton. "Hey,
that's Rich!"
He
plunged forward angrily now, yelling, "Richard! Come here, you!" As
he came up beside Sherwin he too was stricken with the queer giddiness. The two
men clung to each other a moment and there came a squeal of laughter out of
nowhere and the voice of a litde girl whispering.
"They
look so funny.1"
Sherwin
moved back carefully until he and Allerton were out of the space where the
light seemed so oddly distorted. The dizziness left him immediately and he
could see clearly again. A sort of desperate calm came oyer him.
"Jane,"
he called. "Will you answer me? Where are you?"
He heard her voice—the teasing impish voice
of a child having a wonderfully good time. "Come and find me, Daddy!"
"All right," he
said. "I will."
There began an eerie game
of hide and seek.
The children were close at hand. The men
could hear them plainly, the giggling and muffled whispers of a number of boys
and girls, but they were not to be seen or found.
"They're
hiding behind the trees in the undergrowth," said Allerton. He was angry
now, thoroughly angry and baffled. He planted his feet, refusing to hunt any
more. He began to roar at Richard.
"You've
got to come out sometime," he shouted, "and the sooner you do, the
better it'll be for you." He held up his wristwatch. "I'll give you
just two minutes to show up!
He
waited. There was a great whispering somewhere. A small boy's voice said
scornfully, "All right, scairdy-cat! Go on."
Richard's
voice mumbled something in answer and then Richard himself appeared, oddly as
though he had materialized out of the empty space between two maples. He
shuffled slowly up to his father.
Allerton
grabbed him. "Now, then, young man! What are you
up to?"
"Nothing,
Pa."
"What's going on here?
Who's with you?"
"I don't know. I was
just—playing."
"I'll
teach you to play games with me," said Allerton and laid
on. Richard howled.
Without
warning, from out of nowhere, terrifyingly bright and beautiful in the shadowy
darkness, two misty shapes of flame came rushing.
Sherwin
caught a glimpse of Allerton's face, stark white, his mouth fallen open. Then
the men were enveloped in a whirling of fiery wings.
This
time there was no doubt. The creatures were not birds. They were not anything
Sherwin had ever seen or dreamed of before. They were not of this world.
A chill of absolute horror came over him. He
flung up his hands to ward the things away and then the buffeting of the
flaring pinions drove him to his knees. The wings were neither flame nor fire
but flesh as solid as his own. The brightness was in
their substance, a shining of inner light. But even now, close as they were, he
could not see the creatures clearly, could not tell exactly the shape of their
bodies.
Tiny
lightnings stabbed from them at the men. Allerton yelled in mingled pain and
panic. He let go of Richard and the boy fled away into the undergrowth. A
chorus of frightened cries rose out of the blankness among the trees and
Janie's voice screamed, "Don't you hurt my Daddy!"
A
last rough thrashing of the wings, a final warning thrust of the queer small
lightnings and the things were gone. A great silence descended on the woods,
broken only by furtive rustlings where the unseen children crept away. Allerton
stared at his hand, which showed a livid burn across the back.
Presendy he raised his head. Sherwin had
never seen a man so utterly shaken.
"What were they?"
he whispered.
SHERWIN drew a deep, unsteady breath. The
beating of his heart rocked him where he stood. He tried several times before
he could make the words come.
"I
don't know. But they want the kids, Sam. Whatever they are they want the
kids."
"Richard,"
said Allerton. "My boy!" He caught
Sher-win's arm in a painful grasp. "We've got to stop those things. We've
got to get help!"
He
went away, crashing like a bull through the underbrush, tearing at the
branches that impeded him. Sherwin followed. After what seemed an eternity he
saw gray daylight ahead and the open field.
"Sam," he said, "wait a minute. Who are we going to ask for help? Who's going
to believe us?"
"I'm
going to call the sheriff and he blasted well better believe me!"
"He won't," said Sherwin heavily.
"He'll laugh in your face. What are you going to tell him, Sam? Are you
going to say you saw angels or devils or things that came out of the sky in a ship
you can't find and can't see?"
Allerton's jaw set hard. "I'm going to
try anyway. I'm not going to let Them get hold of my kidl"
"All
right," Sherwin said. "My place is closer. Use my phone."
He ran beside Allerton across the meadow but
he was dreadfully afraid and without hope.
Lucy
was waiting in the yard. She gave a little scream when she saw their faces and
Sherwin said sharply, "Jane's all right. Go ahead and make your call, Sam.
I'll wait here."
He
put his arm around Lucy. "The kid's perfectly safe this time. But—"
How
to say it, even to your own wife? How to tell her, without sounding insane even
to yourselfP
"Listen,
Lucy, there's some kind of—animal in the woods. I don't know what it is yet. Something mighty queer. Janie mustn't go in there again, not
for one minute. You've got to help me watch her."
He
was still evading her questions when Allerton came out again, red-faced and
furious.
"He
didn't believe a word of it. He told me to get off the bottle." Something
desperate came into Allerton's eyes. He sat down on the steps. "We've got
to think, Hugh. We've got to think what we're going to do. If it was fall we
could burn the woods."
"But
it isn't fall," said Sherwin quietly, "it's
spring. The kids are coming now. I'm going to talk to them."
A raggle-taggle of small forms had appeared
among the fringe of trees. They dispersed in various directions and Richard and
Jane came on alone toward the house. They walked very close together, bent over
some object that Jane held in her hands.
"Yes,"
said Sherwin, "they're the only ones that can help us. Let me handle this.
I don't want them frightened off."
The
children came on, slowly and reluctantly now that they saw their parents
waiting. They had straightened up rather guiltily and stepped apart a little
and Sherwin noticed that Janie now held one hand behind her back.
Her
face had a peculiar expression. It was as though she looked with pity upon
adults, who had got somehow far beneath her—so far that even their laws and
punishments could not affect her much. "What have you got there,
Jane?" he asked.
"Nothing."
"May I have it,
please?"
He
held out his hand. She hesitated, her chin set stubbornly, and then she said,
"I can't, Daddy. They
made it for me, for my very
special own. It won't even work unless I want it to."
Sherwin
felt a chill contraction of the nerves. He held his voice steady.
"Who are They?"
"Why, Them," she said, and nodded toward the woods.
"I found Them, you know. I was first. That's why They gave me the present." Suddenly she burst out,
"Daddy, They didn't mean to frighten you just now. They're sorry They burned Mr. Allerton's hand. They thought he was hurting
Richard."
Lucy,
whose face had grown quite pale, was on the verge of speaking. Sherwin gave her
a stern look and said to the child, "That's all right, Janie. May I see
your present?"
Still doubtful, but very proud, she extended
her hand. In it was a flat smooth oval of the clearest crystal Sher-win had
ever seen.
"Lean over, Daddy. There, like that. Now
watch. I'm going to make it work."
She placed her hands in a certain way,
holding the crystal between them.
At first he could see nothing but the
reflection of the cloudy sky. Then, slowly, the crystal darkened, cleared . . .
Chapter III
Terror
from Outside
THE Ohio farmland vanished, forgotten.
Sherwin bent closer over the uncanny thing held in the hands of his child.
He was looking at another
world.
Pictured
small and far-away in the tiny oval, he glimpsed a city built all of some
glassy substance as pure and bright as diamond, half veiled in a misty glory of
light.
The
high slim towers swam in a sort of lambent haze, catching soft fire from the
clouds that trailed their low-hung edges over them, rose and purple and burning
gold. Above in the glowing sky two suns poured out muted, many-colored lights
as of an eternal sunset.
And through that shining city that was never built for human kind
shackled to the land, flame-winged creatures soared—creatures large and small,
coming and going between the diamond spires.
As
from a remote distance Sherwin heard Janie's voice, wistful and eager.
"It's where They live, Daddy, way off in the sky.
Isn't it just like fairyland? And look at thisl"
The scene shifted as she spoke. Sherwin
looked into a nightmare gulf of black and utter emptiness. He seemed to be
racing through it at incredible speed, watching the red and green and yellow
stars go plunging and streaming past.
"It's what They
saw on Their way! Oh, Daddy, isn't it beautiful?"
It was the tone of the child's voice, far
more than the unearthly vision in the crystal, that
sent the pang of fear like a knife-into Sherwin's heart. He reached out and
struck the thing from her hands, and when it fell he kicked it away in the long
grass. Before she could cry out her anguish he had caught her fast.
"What
do They want with you?" he demanded. "Why do
They give you things to tempt you? What do They want
with you?"
"They only want to be friends!" She
pulled free of his grasp, her eyes blazing with tears and anger. "Why do
you have to be so mean? Why do you have to spoil everything? They haven't hurt
anybody. They haven't done a thing wrong. They gave me a better present than
anybody ever
gave me before and now
you've gone and broken it!"
She would have hunted for the crystal but
Sherwin stopped her. "Go to your room, Jane. Lucy, go with her. Try to get
her calmed down."
Looking
at his daughter's white rebellious face, Sherwin felt that he had blundered
badly. He had roused her antagonism where he wanted to help. But the unhealthy
excitement in her voice had frightened him. He had not realized that Their hold on her was already so strong.
With
full force the realization of what he had seen in the evil little toy came over
him. He was not an imaginative man. He had never before looked up at the sky
and shuddered, thinking what lay beyond it. He felt suddenly naked and
defenseless, very small before huge unknown powprs. Even the green familiar
land did not comfort him. They were
in the woods. And if They could come, then there were
no barriers against anything.
He
saw Allerton scuffling about in the grass. Presently he found what he was
looking for and stamped it methodically to bits under his heavy boots.
"I
saw into it too," he
said, "over your shoulder. I don't know what kind of devilment it is but
it's no fit thing to have around."
Thud,
thud, went the great
earth-caked boots. Richard was crying.
"They thought pictures into it," he
said. "They were going to make me one too." He glared at his father,
and at Sherwin. "Janie's right. You just want to be mean."
Allerton
finished his task and went to Richard. There was something almost pathetic in
his expression.
"Rich,"
he said, "did They promise you anything else? Did
They ask you to do anything?"
Richard
shook his head, looking sulky and mulish, and Sherwin could not tell whether or
not the boy was holding back.
"Can They talk to you, Rich?" he asked.
"Uh-huh."
"How?"
"I
don't know. You can hear Them, sort of, inside your
head. They can make you see pictures too, anything They
want you to see. Stars and comets and all kinds of funny places with
funny-looking people and animals and sometimes no people at all."
His
round tear-streaked face was taking on that same remote, rapt look that had
upset Sherwin so in Janie. He whispered, "I'd sure like to ride in that
ship, right across the sky. I'll bet it goes faster than a jet plane. I'd go to
all those places and get a lot of things nobody ever saw before and then
I'd—"
He
broke off in the middle of a dream. Allerton had caught him by the arm.
"You're not going anywhere but
home," he said. "And I'll lock you in, if I have to, to keep you
there." His eyes met Sherwin's. "See you later, Hugh."
He took the boy away down the road. Sherwin
went into the house. He locked the door behind him and loaded his shotgun and
set it by. then he sat down and put his head in his
hands and listened dully to the beating of his own heart and wondered.
LUCY
came downstairs. "I gave her some aspirin," she said. "She's
sleepy now." She sat on the floor at Sherwin's feet and put her arms
around his waist. "Hugh, you've got to tell me what's going on!"
He
told her slowly, past caring whether she believed him or not.
"Sam and I both saw Them.
I thought They were going to kill us, but They only
bumed Sam's hand. That's why the kids played truant today, to go to Them. There was a whole bunch there, laughing—"
He
did not tell Lucy that somehow They had made the
children, Themselves and the clearing invisible. Her face was white enough
already.
She
did not say much. She rose and stood for a moment with her hands clasped hard
together. Then she ran back up the stairs and Sherwin heard the door of Janie's
room open and then shut tight.
Toward
evening he called Allerton. T gave Rich a good thrashing," Allerton said.
"He's shut in his room and his mother's with him. They'll be all right,
Hugh. As long as we watch them the kids will be all right."
His
voice did not carry much conviction. Sherwin hung up. He sat in the big chair
in the bay window overlooking the woods. He did not turn on the lights. The
clouds had broken under the rising wind and the moon threw a pale beam into the
high-ceilinged room, touching the ivy wallpaper and the tall white doors.
Sherwin waited, as a man waits in dubious refuge, crouched in the chair,
trembling from time to tome. The silence of the old house was painful in his
ears.
He
must have dozed, for when suddenly he started up in alarm the moon was gone.
And They had come out of the woods.
Even through his hatred and his fear Sherwin
sensed that They were glad to be free of the
confinement of the trees. The wind swept strong across the open meadow and They rose and swooped upon it, a number of Them, their
cloudy wings streaking across the rifted stars in wheeling arcs of fire.
He took the shotgun across his knees. His
hands were quite steady, but very cold. He watched Them
and he could not help thinking, How beautiful They are!—and he loathed Them for their beauty because it was luring his child away
from him.
His child, Allerton's child—the children of the farms, the village, the
other ones who had gone secretly into the woods. What could They
want with the human children, these creatures from outside? What dreadful game
were They playing, the bright-winged demons with Their
hellish toys?
You
can hear them talking inside your head. They can make you see pictures
too—anything They want you to see.
Suppose They could
control the minds of the children? What would you do then? How would you fight
it?
Tears
came into Sherwin's eyes. He sat with the shotgun in his lap and watched Them frolic with the dark sky and the wind and he waited.
But They did not come near the house. Suddenly They darted away, high up, and were gone. He did not see Them again that night.
He
debated in the morning whether to send Jane to school at all. Then he thought
that she would be better there than cooped up brooding in the house, within
sight of the woods. He drove her in himself—a silent, resentful little girl
with whom he found it cWmlt to speak—and passed Allerton's car on the road.
Both men were taking the same precautions.
They took the children into the small white
school-house and spoke to Miss Harker about keeping a careful eye on them.
Then the men went home to their work. The day was oppressive and still with
great clouds breeding ominously in the sultry air. Sherwin's uneasiness
increased as the hours went by. He called the school twice to make sure Jane
was there and he was back again a full hour before the last bell, waiting to
take her home.
He
sat for a time in the car, growing more and more nervous. The leaves of the
trees hung utterly motionless. He was drenched with sweat and the heavy humid
air was stifling.
A thunderhead gathered in the west, pushing
its boiling crest with terrible swiftness across the sky. He watched it spread
and darken to the color of purple ink and then the little ragged wisps of dirty
white began to blow underneath its belly and the wind came with sudden violence
across the land.
He
knew it was going to be a bad one. He left the car and. went into the
schoolhouse. It was already too dark to see inside the building and the lights
came on as he pushed open the door to Janie's classroom. Miss Harker glanced up
and then smiled.
"It's
going to storm," he said rather inanely. "I thought I'd wait
inside."
"Why
of course," she answered and pointed out a chair. He sat down. Miss Harker
shook her head, remarking on the blackness of the sky. Two boys were shutting
the windows. It was very hot and close. Richard and Janie sat in their places
but Sherwin noticed that several seats were emnty.
"More
truanc?" ^e
asked, trying to be casual.
Miss Harker peered sternly
at the class.
"I'm ashamed of them. They've spoiled a
perfect record for attendance and they seem to have infected the whole school.
There are several missing from other classes today. I'm afraid there's going to
be serious trouble unless this stops 1"
"Yes," said
Sherwin. "Yes, I'm afraid there is."
THE first bolt of lightning streaked hissing out of the gloom with
thunder on its heels. The little girls squealed. Rain came in a solid mass and then there was
more lightning, coming closer, the great bolts striking down with a snarl and a
crack. Thunder shook the sky apart and abrupdy the lights went out.
Instantly
there was turmoil in the dark room. Miss Harker's voice spoke out strongly. The
children quieted somewhat. Sherwin could see them dimly, a confusion of small
forms milling about, gathering toward the windows. There was a babble of
excited whispering and all at once a smothered but triumphant laugh that he
knew came from Janie.
Then a positive fury of whispers out of which
he heard the words, "Billy said he'd tell Them we
couldn't come!"
Sherwin
rose. He looked over the crowding heads out the window. A blue-white flare, a
crash that made the walls tremble and then he saw shapes of fire tossing and
wheeling in the sky.
They had come into the village under cover of the storm. They were circling
the schoolhouse, peering in, and the children knew it and were glad.
"What
strange shapes the lightning takesl" said Miss Harker's cheerful voice.
"Come away from the windows, children. There's nothing to be afraid of,
nothing at all."
She
marshalled them to their seats again and Sherwin clung to the window frame,
feeling a weakness he could not control, watching the bright wings play among
the blazing bohs.
They did not try to enter the school. They
moved away as the storm moved, swooping and tumbling along the road and across
the fields, overturning hayricks, putting the frighfened cows to flight,
ripping slates from the roofs of houses and whirling them on the wind. Even
Miss Harker watched, fascinated, and he thought surely she must realize what They were.
But she only said in a rather shaken voice, T
never saw lightning behave like that before!"
The
flashes grew more distant, the thunder lessened and she sighed. "My, I'm
glad that's over."
She went back to ^er desk and began to
straighten up the ends of the day's schoolwork. Even the rain had stopped when
Sherwin took Janie and Richard out to the car and drove them both home. But the
sky was still leaden and fuming and all that afternoon and evening distant
storms prowled on the horizon and the air was heavy with thunder.
Sherwin
watched his daughter. His nerves were drawn unbearably taut as by long tension
growing toward a climax. He smoked his pipe incessantly and started at every
flicker of far-off lightning.
Shordy
after nine, from the village, there came a sound like
the final clap of doom and immediately afterward the trees and even the house
itself seemed to be pulled toward the source of the sound by a powerful suction
of air.
It was all over in a minute or two. Sherwin
ran outside but there was nothing to see except a violent boiling of the
clouds.
He
heard the phone ring and then Lucy cried out, "Hugh, there's been a
tornado in the village!"
Sherwin
hesitated briefly. Then he returned to the house and locked Janie carefully in
her room and gave Lucy instructions about the doors.
"I'll be back as soon as I can," he
told her. "I've got to see what's happened."
He was thinking of Them,
playing in the heart of the storm.
Before he could get his own car out he heard
Allerton sound his hom from the road.
"Tornado,
huh?" said Allerton. "What it looked like, all right. I figured they
might need help. Climb in."
They
had no trouble finding the center of damage. There was a crowd already there
and growing larger every second, shouldering, staring, making a perfect
explosion of excited talk.
The
schoolhouse was gone, lifted clean from the foundations.
Sherwin
felt a cold and heavy weight within him. He looked at Allerton and then he
began to question the men there.
Nothing else had been touched by the freak
tornado —only the schoolhouse and that was not wrecked but gone. Several people
had seen what they took to be lightning striking all around the building just
before it vanished with the clap of thunder and the violent sucking of air.
Sherwin took Allerton by the arm and drew him
aside. He told him what he had seen that afternoon.
"They didn't like the school, Sam. It kept the kids
away from Them." He stared at the bare foundations,
the gaping hole of the cellar. "They didn't
like it, so it's gone."
A
MAN came running up to the crowd. "Heyr he
yelled. "Hey, my wife just got a call from her sister down by the state line. You know
what that wind did? It took the schoolhouse clear down there and sat it on a hdl, just as clean as a whistle!"
A
chill and desperate strength came to Sherwin. "This has got to be stopped,
Sam. The devil alone knows what
They're up to but it'll be the kids next. I'm
going to try something. Are you with me?" "All the
way."
Sherwin fought his way through the crowd. He
got to the center of it and began to yell at the men and women until they
turned to look at him. A story had come into his head—a wild one but less wild
than the truth and he told it to them.
"Listen, while you're all here together!
This doesn't have anything to do with the tornado but it's more important. How
many of you have had kids playing hooky out of school?"
A lot of them had and said
so.
"I
can tell you where they're going," Sherwin said. "Down in my woods.
There's somebody hiding out in there. Escaped convicts maybe, or men running
from the law. They've got the kids bringing them food, helping them out. That's
why they're ducking school. Isn't that so, Sam?"
Allerton
took his cue. 'It sure is! Why, my boy's locked up in his room right now to
keep him out of trouble."
The
crowd began to mutter. A woman cried out shrilly. Sherwin raised his voice.
There was a deadly earnestness about him that carried more conviction than any
mere words.
"I'm
afraid for my daughter," he said. "I'm afraid for all our children
unless we clean those—those criminals out of the woods! I'm going home and get
my gun. Do any of you men want to come with me?"
They roared assent. They forgot the freak
wind and the vanished schoolhouse. This was something that threatened them and
their homes and families, something they could understand and fight.
"Call
the sheriff!" somebody yelled. "Come on, you guys! I'm not going to
have my kids murdered."
"We'll
use my house as a starting point," Sherwin told them. "Come as soon
as you can."
The men of the village and the nearby farms
dispersed, calming their women. Sherwin wondered how they would feel when they
learned the truth. He wondered if bullets would kill Them.
At any rate, it was something to try, a hope.
Allerton drove him home, racing down the dark
road. He dropped Sherwin off and went on to his own place to get his rifle.
Sherwin ran into the house. He found Lucy sitting in the middle of the living
room floor. Her eyes had a dreadful vacant look. He shook her and it was like
shaking a corpse.
"Lucy!"
he cried. "Lucy.1"
He began to slap her face,
not hard, and plead with her.
After
a bit she saw him and whispered, "I heard a little noise, just a littie
noise, and I went upstairs to Janie's room . . ."
Tears
came then. He left her crying and went with great strides up the stairs. The
door to Janie's room was open. He passed through it. The room was in perfect
order, except that the northwest corner had been sheared clean away, making a
narrow doorway into the night.
The child was gone.
Chapter IV
Truant's
Reckoning
HE
had looked for Janie's body on the ground below her room. He had not found it.
He had known it would not be there. He had given Lucy sedatives and talked her
into quietness with words of reassurance he did not feel himself.
Now
the men from the village were coming. The cars blocked the drive, formed long
lines on the road. The men themselves gathered on the lawn, hefting their
rifles
342
and
their shotguns and their pistols, talking in undertones that held an ugly note,
looking toward the black woods.
Some
of them were afraid. Sherwin knew they were afraid but they were angry too and
they were going. They had a peaceful lawful place to live and they were willing
to go into the woods by night with their guns to keep it so.
He came out on the steps and spoke to them.
"They've taken my daughter," he said. "They came and took her
from the house."
They
looked at his face in the glare of the yard light and after their first
outraged cry they were silent. Presently one said, "I called my kid but I
couldn't find him."
There was more than one father then who remembered
that he had not seen his child at home. And now they were all afraid but not
for themselves. Sherwin went down the steps. "Let's go."
He
was halfway across the litde bridge when Allerton
came running, crying Sherwin's name. "They took Richard," he said.
"My boy is gone."
The
men poured out across the meadow, going like an army on the march, running in
the long grass—running to where the cloudy moon was lost beneath the branches
of the trees.
"Head toward the knoll," cried
Sherwin. He told them the direction. "I think that's where They are. And be careful of the swamp."
They
went in among the close-set trees, laboring through the undergrowth, the beams
of their flashlights leaping in the utter dark. Sherwin knew the woods. He
rushed on ahead and Allerton clung close behind him. Neither man spoke.
Lightning still danced faintly on the horizon and now and again there was a
growl of thunder. The mists were rising from the marsh.
Abruptly
Sherwin stopped. From behind him came a yell and then the crash and roar of a
falling tree. There was silence then and he shouted and a distant voice
answered.
"Tree struck by lightning, right in
front of us. No one hurt!"
He could hear them thrashing around as they
circled the fallen tree. And then there was a second crash, and another, and
still another.
Sherwin said, 'It's Them.
They're trying to block the way."
Muffled voices swore. The men were trying to Scramble out of the trap that had been made for them.
Sherwin hurried on, Allerton panting at his side. He could not wait for the
men. He could not wait now for anything.
A
swoop and a flash of light, an ominous cracking— and ahead a giant maple
toppled to the earth, bearing down the younger trees, creating an impassable
barrier.
"All
right," said Sherwin to an unseen presence. "I know another
way."
He
turned aside toward the river. In a minute or two he was ankle deep in mud and
water, splashing heavily along an arm of the swamp. Reeds and saplings grew
thick but there were no bees here to be thrown down against them.
The
men went fast, careless of how they trod, and all at once Allerton cried out
and fell. He floundered in the muck, trying to rise. Sherwin lifted him up and
he would have gone on but he went to his hands and knees again, half fainting.
"I've hurt my ankle. A
loose stone—it turnedl"
He
had lost his rifle. Sherwin got an arm around him and held him up. He was a big
man and heavy. It was hard going after that and very slow. Sherwin would have
left him but he was afraid that Allerton might faint and drown in the inches of
sour water.
The
ridge loomed up before them, the tall pines black against a brooding sky. The
men staggered out onto hard ground and Sherwin let his burden drop.
"Wait here, Sam. I'm going on alone."
Allerton caught at him. "Look!"
Cloudy wings soared above them, swift as
streaming fire and one by one the tall pines went lordly down, struck by the
lightning They carried in Their hands.
The ridge was blocked.
When the night was still again, and empty,
Allerton said, "I guess that does it, Hugh. We're licked."
Sherwin
did not answer. He remained motionless, standing like an old man, his shoulders
bent, his head sunk forward on his breast.
THE
earth began to vibrate underneath his feet. A sound, more felt than heard, went
out across the woods—deep, powerful throbbing that entered Sher-win's heart and
shook it and brought his head up sharply.
"You hear that, Sam?"
"What is it? Thunder?"
"It's
machinery," Sherwin whispered. "Motors, starting
up."
Unfamiliar motors, so strong and mighty that
they could shake the ground and still be silent. Their motors. Their ship!
"They're getting ready, Sam. They're
going to leave. But what about the kids? Sam—what about Janie and the kids?"
He turned and fled back into the swamp, along
the ridge and around it, and faced a wide expanse of stinking mud and mist. He
started out across it.
The
marsh quaked beneath him. Going slowly and by day he would have been afraid,
wary of the bog-holes and the sucking sands. He did not think of them now. He
could not think of anything but that vast and evil thrumming that filled the
air, of what it meant to his child—his child, that
might have died already, or might be . . .
He did not know. That was the worst of it. He
did not know.
He took a straight line toward the knoll,
slipping, floundering, falling now and again and scrambling up, wet to the skin
and foul with ooze, but going on, always going on, and at last there was solid
ground under his feet and only a belt of trees between him and the clearing.
They were not looking for him now. They
thought he was trapped and helpless, back on the ridge. At least They did not try to stop him. He forced himself to go
quietly.
This time he could see the clearing. It
crossed his mind that whatever trick They had used
before to bend and twist the light-rays around that space so that it could not
be seen had depended on some mechanism in the ship, that now They could not
spare the power for it.
A dark and monstrous bulk filled more than
half the opening. The moon had broken clear, and by its light he could see the
metal sheathing of the ship, scored and pitted and worn by unimaginable
voyages. The mighty throb of its motors gave it an illusion of life, as though
it were anxious to be away again. Sherwin remembered the crystal and the
glimpse of streaming Suns and he shuddered, thinking of where this ship had
been.
They
were hovering around an
open hatch in the belly of the ship and the children were there also— Janie,
Richard, a half dozen more, grouped beside the doorway.
And Jane was climbing in.
Sherwin
screamed. He screamed her name and ran out across the clearing. He dropped his
gun. He could not use it anyway for fear of harming the children and this had
gone beyond such things as guns. The child turned and looked at him and then They came.
They did not harm him. They held him fast and
even 346 now, with Their solid strength binding him,
he could see Them only as misty shapes with wings of cloudy fire spread against
his struggles.
Perhaps
the light was different on Their world. Perhaps in
the glow of those twin suns They would be as real as
he was. But here They were like ghosts, alien phantoms
that made him cold with horror.
"Jane!" he cried, "come
back! Come back!"
Reluctantly
she came toward him. "They won't hurt you, Daddy. Don't be scared. Daddy,
I want to go with Them. Just for a litde while!
They'll bring us back. They promised. And I want to go with them—out there"
She
pointed to where the stars burned clear in the valleys between the clouds.
"I
didn't mean to sneak away, Daddy, but I knew you wouldn't let me go and I have
to—oh, I have
to! They came and got me,
so I could."
"No,"
he said. "Oh, no!" They were not words so much as a groan of agony. "Listen, Janie,
please listen. I'll give you anything you want. I'll buy you a pony, I'll take
you clear around the world, I'll do anything."
"But I don't want any
of those things, not now."
"Jane,"
he said, "don't you care anything about your I mother and me at all? Do you want to,kill us both?"
"I
don't see why everybody has to die just because I want to go somewhere!"
But she began to cry a litde and he shouted to the other children, pleading
with them, telling them how their parents felt, trying to make them understand
the danger, the enormity of the thing that they were about to do.
Richard
looked stubbornly at the ground and said, "Well never have a chance again.
Well never see those other places out there if we don't go now. I don't care
what my father says. I'm going."
One
of the little girls said doubtfully, "I'm scared. I think I want to go
home."
Some of them began to waver, thinking of the
things 347
Sherwin
had said. And then Sherwin heard a silent voice speaking within his mind.
He knew that the children could hear it far
more clearly than he. Their minds were young and plastic, open wide to all
things. But he could hear it well enough.
What
are you afraid of? it said. Come on! There are all sorts of
worlds beside this one. We'll show them to you. We'll show you how the stars
look, out beyond your sky. We'll teach you how to run the ship. Think of the fun we can have togetlier, all
across the galaxy!
OTHER
voices joined in, telling of colored Suns and bright strange planets, of toys
and pets and treasures, of adventures unthinkable. Child's talk,
couched in the language of children—cunningly wrought to lure them on with
promises that set their heads whirhng with wonder and delight.
Suppose
you do get punished when we bring you back? Are uou goinp to miss it all just
because you're afraid of a little
punishment?
"That's
right," said Janie, turning to the others. "Think what They're going to catch when They get home and They're not afraid. They didn't let Their parents stop them!"
"No sir!" said Richard. "They weren't scared."
Slowly,
very slowly, Sherwin said, "Their parents? Jane, did you say —Their parents?'
"Yes, Daddy. They
ran away and They've had all kinds of fun and haven't got hurt a bit and
They weren't any older than we are. And if They can do
it, so can We!"
Parents!
They ran away, and They aren't any older than we
Sherwin said nothing for a long moment. At
last he whispered, "Do you mean that They are children, too?"
"Why,
of course," she answered. "I thought you knew." 348
Sherwin began to laugh. It
was not healthy laughter and he made himself stop it at once. Children!
The
fright, the anguish, the pain of the past two days and nights—a whole village
in arms, terrified parents combing the woods for the missing, the awful dread
of the unknown that had beset him and Allerton!
Children. Children had done all thisl
He
looked at Them and he could not believe it. "It's
a lie," he said. "It's a lie They've told
you to lead you on.
Jane
said impatiently, "Don't be silly, Daddy. Why would They
want to play with us if They were grown up?"
He
remembered the winged creatures, large and small, going between the diamond
towers of the city he had glimpsed on the world of a distant star.
Large and small, old and young . . .
Why not?
A race that could build such ships to ply between the Suns, a race that
could put thought into crystals and make themselves unseen, that could cause
whole buildings to vanish and topple trees at will—would not their young be
children still in spite of a vaster knowledge?
He heard Them laugh, soundless gleeful
laughter, as though They had played an excellent trick
upon him to frighten him so, and he knew that it was true.
Children—these unhuman creatures with all
their unholy powers. Truant children, like his ownl
A queer sort of anger came to Sherwin then and with it a faint and
desperate hope. He straightened up and turned to face the two that held him. He
told Them sternly, "Let me go!"
They relaxed their grasp but the others had
come closer now and were around him, mingled with the children of Earth.
Sherwin was thinking, The species doesn't matter, even a lion cub
io:ll obnu. Maybe—Maybe!
He spoke to Them.
"You're telling our children not to be afraid of punishment. What are your
own elders going to say to you when you get back?"
They
rustled Their wings and did not answer. "You're
being very brave, aren't you? You're just going to go on having fun. Well, I
know kids, and I know different. You're afraid. You're afraid to go home!"
Their voices reached him in
defiant chorus.
No! We are not afraid!
"Oh, yes you are. You're scared stiff.
You've stolen a ship and run away and there'll be the devil to pay about it and
you know it."
He stepped toward Them,
forcing himself to be stem and assured, the single adult among a group of children,
the angry adult asserting his authority. He hoped They
could not read the fear that threatened to choke the words in his throat.
"If
I were y~u," he told Them, "I'd get home and
face the music before you make things any worse. The longer you stay away, the
harder it'll be for you. And you might as well know right now, nobody's going
with you!"
He
turned to his own. "Come here to me, Jane. The rest of you, get home as
fast as you can make it. Your fathers are coming and you know what you'll get
if they catch you here!"
He
waited. There was nothing more to do but wait. For a moment no one moved nor
spoke. The children hung their heads and looked at each other sidelong and it
seemed to Sherwin that the wings of the strangers drooped a little.
Imperceptibly the two
groups began to draw apart
The
little girl who had spoken before ran suddenly into the woods, crying. And They commenced to mutter among Themselves.
They were speaking only to each other now and
Sher-win could not hear Their thoughts but it seemed
that They were quarreling, some hanging back, others arguing with flashing
motions of Their wings.
Jane
came slowly and stood beside Sherwin. Her eyes were on the earth. She did not
raise them.
They
began to drift toward the ship. They
were not talking now.
They stopped beside the hatchway and looked
back. Most of the human children had already melted into the darkness between
the trees. Sherwin took Jane's hand and held it. They must have called to her,
for she said good-by and They went slowly and gloomily
into the ship. The hatchway closed.
Sherwin
took his daughter into his arms and carried her away.
Behind
him the heavy throbbing deepened and then seemed to rise and fade. Looking
upward through a rift in the branches he saw a dark shape sweep Out across the stars and vanish, bearing those other
children to their homcplacc far across the sky.
Janic
was crying, her head pressed hard against his shoulder.
A little later he met the other men.
"Whoever
was in the woods has gone away," he said. "Everything's all right now
and the truants—all of them— are going home."
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