THE LOVELIEST GIRL IN TWO WORLDS
—AND
THE DEADLIEST!
Under Eddie Burton's management the ambitious
starlet Lorna Maxwell seemed headed for the top of Broadway's glamorous world
of make-believe. And then she vanished—through a wall where there was no door.
Eddie found himself plunging after her into a city beyond reality.
In that weird twin city to New York, Eddie became
a hunted fugitive while his girl friend turned up as an ever-present face and
and all-pervading voice that awed and mystified the inhabitants. And Eddie
learned that between him and return to his natural home stood her new manager,
a mysterious figure who ruled by a tyrannical combination of super-scientific
miracle and brute force.
A
unique new novel of strange dimensions by a top science-fantasy writing team.
Turn this book over for second complete
novel.
CAST
OF CHARACTERS
EDDIE
BURTON—He stepped out of the
limelight of one world to the sinister darkness of another.
LORNA MAXWELL—This
Broadway doll underwent a miracle to become a synthetic goddess.
THE HIERARCH—A master
of mass psychology, he propped up his empire with a borrowed beauty.
CORIOLE—He
knew revolt meant death, but where life itself was hell there could be no
choice.
FALVI—A
skeptical priest who
experimented with the gates to heaven.
JIMMERTON-He was a myth that could send men into the
flames of damnation.
LEWIS PADGETT and
C.
L. MOORE
ACE
BOOKS, INC.
23 West 47th St., N. Y. C. 36
Beyond Earth's Gates Copyright, 1954, by Ace Books, Inc. All
Rights Reserved
Daybreak-2250 A.D. (Star Mans Son) Copyright, 1952, by Harcourt, Brace &
Co., Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
SHE
called herself Malesca. Her agent called her the "Loveliest Girl in the
World" and I suppose he wasn't far wrong, at that. If I'd known she was
playing the Windsor Roof that night I'd have gone somewhere else.
But
by the time I was at the table, having a sandwich and a highball, it was too
late. The lights dimmed, the spot went on and there stood Malesca, bowing to
the storm of applause. I wasn't going to let her spoil my drink. I could always
look somewhere else while she was on. I ate white meat of chicken, drank my
highball and thought about other things — until the famous velvet voice began
to sing.
I listened to her sing. A chair creaked. In
the dimness someone sat down beside me. I peered through the gloom, recognizing
the man, a top figure in show business.
"Hello, Burton," he said.
"Hello."
"Mind if I join you?"
I
waved my hand and he gave his order to the waiter who slid up noiselessly.
Malesca was still singing.
The man beside me watched her, as rapt and
intent as everybody else in the club except me.
Two encores later, when the lights went up, I
realized that he was staring at me curiously. My disinterest in the singer must
have been pretty obvious.
"No like?" he asked in a puzzled
voice.
Even before Korzybski that particular
question would have been meaningless. I couldn't answer him and I knew it. So I
didn't bother. I just didn't say anything. I could see Malesca from the corner
of my eye, hear the rustle of her stiff skirts as she came through the tables
toward me. I sighed.
She
was wearing some light flowery scent I knew she hadn't picked out for herself.
She put her hand on the table edge and leaned toward me.
"Eddie," she said.
"Well?"
"Eddie, I haven't seen you for
ages." "That's right."
"Listen, why don't you wait around? Take
me somewhere after my last show. We could have a drink or something. How about
it, Eddie?"
Her voice was pure magic. It had been magic
on radio and records and video. It would soon be magic in the movies. I didn't
say a word.
"Eddie — please."
I picked up my glass, emptied it, brushed
crumbs off my coat, laid the napkin beside the plate. "Thanks," I
said. "Wish I could."
She stared at me, the familiar, searching
stare full of incomprehension. I could hear the applause still echoing.
"Eddie — "
"You
heard me," I said. "Take a walk. Take an encore. Go on, beat
it."
Without a word she turned away and went back
to the floor, her skirts frothing and hissing as she squeezed between the
tables. The man beside me said: "Eddie, are you crazy?"
"Probably," I
said. I wasn't going to explain to him.
"All
right, Eddie. You know the answers, I suppose. But something must be wrong. The
most beautiful woman in the world throwing herself at your feet — and you won't
even look at her. That just isn't sensible."
"I'm
not a very sensible guy," I told him. It was a lie, of course. I'm the
most sensible guy in the world — in any world.
"Don't give me clichés," he said. "That's no answer."
"Clichés!" I said and choked in my glass. "Okay, okay, never mind. Nothing
wrong with clichés,
you know. They're just
truths that happen so often they're trite. It doesn't make them any less true,
does it?" I looked at Malesca squaring off at the mike, getting ready to
sing again.
"I
knew a man once who tried to discredit clichés," I
went on thoughtfully, knowing I was probably saying too much. "He failed.
He had quite a time, that guy."
"What happened?"
"Oh, he found a fabulous land and
rescued a beautiful goddess and overthrew a wicked high priest and — forget
it. Maybe it was a book I read."
"What fabulous land was that?" my
friend inquired idly.
"Malesco."
He lifted an eyebrow at me and glanced across
the room at the Most Beautiful Girl in the World. "Malesco? Where's that?"
"Right behind you," I said.
Then
I picked up my fresh highball and buried my nose in it. I had nothing more to
say — to him. But a chord in the music just then woke a thin shivering wire of
sound at the back of my brain, and for an instant the barrier between this
world and the worlds outside was as thin as air.
Malesco,
I thought. I shut my eyes and tried to make the domes and towers of that
rose-red city take shape in the darkness while the chord still sounded in my
ears. But I couldn't do it. Malesco had gone back into
the fable again and the gates were shut forever.
And yet, when I think about it now even the
sense of wonder and disbelief is suspended and I have no feeling at all that it
was in some dream I walked those streets. They were real. I've got the most
convincing kind of proof that they were real.
It all happened quite a
while ago . . .
CHAPTER I
REMEMBER
the story of the blind men and the elephant? Not one of them ever found out it
was an elephant. That's the way it was with me. A new world was opening right in front of me and
I put it down to eyestrain.
I
sat there in my apartment with a bottle and watched the air flicker.
I
told myself to get up and switch off the lights because Lorna had got in the
habit of dropping by if I didn't show up at the ginmill where she worked, and I
didn't want to talk to her. Lorna Maxwell was a leech. She had attached herself
to me with all the simple relentlessness of her one-track mind and short of
killing her I knew no way to pry her loose.
It
all seemed so easy to Lorna. Here I was, rising young actor Eddie Burton with a
record of three straight Broadway hits and a good part in something new that
all the critics liked. Fine.
Here
she was, that third-rate young ginmill singer Lorna Maxwell with no record at
all that she admitted to. Don't ask me how we met or how she got her hooks into
me. I'm a bom easy mark. Children, animals and people like Lorna can spot
people like me a mile away.
She'd
got it into her addled little head somehow that all I had to do was say the
word and she'd be right up there beside me, a success, the darling of the
columnists. Only selfishness kept me from saying the magic word to somebody in
authority and turning her into Cinderella. Arguments wouldn't move her. It
seemed simpler to turn off the lights when I was at home alone and not answer
the door.
The
air flickered again. I squinted and shook my head. This was getting a little
alarming. It couldn't be the Scotch. It never happened outside the apartment.
It never happened unless I was looking at that particular wall.
There
was a Rousseau picture on it, Sleeping Gypsy, something
Uncle Jim had left me along with the apartment. I made a great effort to focus
on the blue-green sky, the lion's blowing mane, the striped robe of the black
man on the sand.
But all I got was a blur. And then I knew I
must be drunk because a sound seemed to go with the blur, a roaring that might
have been the lion except that the lion had entirely vanished and I seemed to
be seeing a dome of shining rosy-red light that moved like water.
I squeezed my eyes shut. This was crazy.
Uncle
Jim had left me the apartment in his will. It was one of those deals where you
pay a fabulous sum down and a high rental for life and call the apartment
yours. I wouldn't have got into it myself, but Uncle Jim did and it was nice to
have a place the landlord couldn't throw me out of when somebody offered him a
higher bribe.
This is probably the place for a word about
Uncle Jim Burton. He was a Character. He had red hair, freckles and a way of
losing himself in foreign parts for months at a stretch. Sometimes for years.
He used to visit us between trips when I was
a kid, and of all the people I knew in those days he was my favorite because he
took me in on a secret.
It
started out as bedtime stories. All about a marvelous land called Malesco that
followed the pattern for all marvelous lands. There was a beautiful princess
and a wicked high priest and a dashing young hero whose adventures kept me
awake for all of fifteen minutes sometimes after the lights were put out.
Those
were the pre-Superman days, so I didn't picture myself soaring through Malesco
in a red union suit. But sometimes I wore a lion skin like Tarzan and sometimes
the harness of an intrepid Martian warrior who looked like John Carter.
I
even learned to speak Malescan. Uncle Jim made it up, of course. He had a
restless mind, and he was recovering from some sort of illness during those
months he stayed with us when the Malesco stories began. He made up a
vocabulary of the language. We worked out a sort of primer together and
jabbered away to each other in Malescan with a good deal of fluency before the
episode came to an end and he went away again.
I sat there, watching the wall flicker,
looking at the blurred rose-red globe on the wall and something like roofs
beyond it, lit with a brilliant sunset. I knew I was imagining most of it. What
I saw was the red blur you get when you rub your eyes hard and my imagination
was making it into something very much like the tales of Malesco Uncle Jim
used to tell.
The
whole thing had sunk far back into my mind in the many years since. But when I
groped I seemed to dredge up a memory of a city lit with crimson sunsets. In
the center of the city was a great dome from which reflected the light from a
surface of — had it been water? Had it been —
The doorbell rang.
"Eddie!" Lorna's voice called
loudly. "Eddie, let me in a minute."
I
knew if I didn't she'd rouse the neighbors with her knocking and shouting. I
heaved myself out of the chair and sidled cautiously around that blur which was
pure imagination between me and the wall where the Rousseau hung. It was odd,
I thought, that the hall wasn't blurred, or the front door, or even Lorna's
pretty, cheap little face when I let her in.
"I
waited for you, Eddie," she said reproachfully, slipping in fast before I could
change my mind. "What kept you? Eddie, I had to see you. I've got a new
idea. Look, how would it be if I could dance a little too? Would that help?
I've worked out a sort of routine I wish you'd — "
"Have a drink," I said wearily.
"Let's not talk about it now, Lorna. My head aches. I think I've got eye
trouble. Things keep blurring."
"—look while I just run through
it," she went right on as soon as I finished speaking. It was one of her
less endearing tricks.
I
shut my ears and followed her back into the living room, hoping she'd go away
soon. The Rousseau Gypsy had come back anyhow. That was a comfort. The red blur
which my imagination made into a vision of Malesco was entirely gone. I sat
down in the same chair, sipped my Scotch and looked morosely at Lorna.
It
doesn't matter what she was saying. I heard about every tenth word. She fixed
herself a drink and perched girlishly on the arm of a chair, making graceful
gestures with her glass, telling me all about how I was going to help her become
a great dancer if I'd only say the right word to the right man.
I'd
heard it all before. I yawned, looked crosseyed at the ice in my glass, drained
the last of the Scotch and glanced up at the opposite wall.
This time it was pure hallucination. Instead
of the Rousseau it was another kind of picture on the wall and it moved as
though I were looking at a pull-down movie screen, stereoscopic,
technicolored.
There
it all was, clear and perfect. No imagination about it this time. Malesco —
exactly as Uncle Jim had told me. A black line that looked like an iron bar ran across one corner of the
picture. Beyond it, small and far away, was the city lit with sunset.
Domes, soaring columns, a shining globe that
moved like water in one enormous sphere, surrounded by curved arches that
seemed to support it though they too had a flowing upward motion. And all the
intricate pattern of arches and bubbles was on fire with reflected light.
A
rose-red city, half as old as time.
"Eddie, look at me!"
I didn't stir. This was like hypnosis. I
couldn't turn my eyes away from that incredible hallucination. I knew Lorna
hadn't seen it, for the pitch of her voice didn't change.
Maybe she couldn't see it. Maybe I was crazy.
Or maybe she just hadn't glanced that way.
She was babbling something about taking her
shoes off so she could show me the dance and I realized vaguely that she was
thumping heavily about the floor. I knew I ought to rub my eyes and try to make
that vision go away.
"Eddie, look at me!"
she insisted.
"All right, all
right," I said, not looking. "It's fine."
I rubbed my eyes.
Then Lorna screamed.
My head jerked up. I remember the coldness of
ice spilling across my hand, I stared at the spot where she should have been
and all I could see across the room was that picture: the sunset city with its
globe of burning water and the black bar across the foreground. The whole city
quivered.
I
heard her scream fade. It diminished and grew thin and ceased so gradually it
still seemed to ring in my ears long after I thought it had stopped. Then the
air's flickering steadied. The rose-red city blurred again and in the next
moment the lion crouched above the sleeping gypsy and the Rousseau painting was
unchanged there on the solid wall.
"Lorna,"
I said. No answer. I stood up, dropping the glass. I took a step forward and
stumbled over her shoes. I ran across to the door and jerked it open. The
corridor was empty outside. No footsteps sounded.
I came back and tried the kitchen, the
bedroom. No Lorna.
An
hour later I was down at police headquarters, trying to tell the cops I hadn't
murdered her. An hour after that I was in jail.
I'D
RATHER deal with a crook than a fanatic any day. The Assistant D.A. was a
fanatic about his own theories, and I found myself in a difficult spot in less
than no time. This isn't the story of how circumstantial evidence can make mistakes
and I won't go into detail. It was just that Lorna had left a friend waiting in
the lobby, the neighbors heard Lorna call and heard me let her in — and where
was she?
I didn't try to tell the truth. I said she'd
gone out. I was too rattled to remember the shoes and that was a strong point
against me. The Assistant D.A. was bucking for his boss' job, and he got
himself so thoroughly convinced of my guilt that toward the end I think he'd
have been willing to stretch a point or two, legally speaking, if he could
bring a murderer to justice — me.
Maybe
you remember the newspaper stories about it. I lost my part in the hit play. I
got a lawyer who didn't believe me because I couldn't tell him the truth. Time
went by and all that saved me was the fact that Lorna's body never did show up.
Eventually they let me go.
What
would you have done in my spot? In the movies I'd instantly have gone to see
Einstein, and he'd have figured it all out and whipped up a super-machine that
would bring Lorna back or send me into a world like King Kong's.
Or
in another kind of movie there'd have been gangsters hammering at the door
while I climbed down the fire escape, looking like Dick Powell. Or there'd have
been sliding panels or something to explain things at the end of the movie. But
Lorna had vanished into a pibture on the wall, and I was beginning to worry
about my own sanity.
The
only hope was that the shimmer in the air might come again and I could somehow
lean through and haul Lorna back. I'd come to accept that hope definitely by
the time a few months had gone by. I'd thought it all over and been to an
optometrist and a psychiatrist and found out all the things it couldn't have
been. Not hallucination. Not visual disturbance. Not madness.
No,
it had simply been — Malesco.
I went through Uncle Jim's books and papers
after that. I found a lot of notes in a shorthand I never was able to read,
then or later. I found quite a lot of stuff on alchemy, of all odd things. And
I found the old Malescan primer and vocabulary. This was the one thing I really
got some good out of — but not then.
That
came much later when everything broke at once. It was night again. I was
sitting at home drinking Scotch again. And again a bell rang, but this time it
was the phone. It was my attorney. He talked fast and carefully.
"Listen,
Burton," he said. "A body's been picked up in the Sound. A floater.
Your friend Thompson's got the lab working on it. He thinks it's the Maxwell
woman."
"Lorna's not dead," I said
stupidly. "At least not — "
"All
right. Take it easy. It's just that I'm a little worried. This is what
Thompson's been waiting for, you know."
"They can't possibly
identify — "
"After
this long it's mostly guesswork anyhow. But Thompson's got the experts working
for him, and juries have a way of believing experts. They might — just might —
make it stick, Burton."
So that was that — crisis. And what could I
do? If I ran they'd pick me up. If I stayed, they'd probably convict me. I hung
up the phone and went back to my chair, pausing on the way to tap with insane
hopefulness at the Rousseau. If I tore my way through that wall would I come
out on the other side into Malesco? Would Lorna be there or was she that floater
after all?
"Lorna?" I said inquiringly into
the empty air. "Lorna?"
1
waited. No answer. And yet there was something more than silence. My voice had
a curious echoing quality as if I'd spoken in a tunnel. Malesco, of course,
didn't exist. It was a fairy-tale land like Oz and Wonderland out of a
childhood story. But I had a sudden, compelling certainty that my voice echoed
when I called to Lorna and echoed in Malesco.
"Lorna!" I said it louder. "Lorna!" This time it was a shout. But it was a hollow
and ghostly shout, echoing and reechoing down a long invisible tunnel, dying
away at the far end — in Malesco.
"Lorna!"
The shrill hum of the doorbell cut through
the echoing of my voice. The police? I spun around. But as I moved, the walls
tilted sickeningly. Either I couldn't stop turning or the room was falling
sidewise — no, collapsing in a direction I didn't understand.
The
doorbell sang its thin, shrill summons, over and over, farther and farther away
. . . For I was falling.
I
saw a man's face whirl by in darkness. He wore a queer headdress and his mouth
was wide open with a look of surprise and terror. He was pointing a weapon at
me.
He
slid sidewise and vanished. I slipped down a wire of singing sound, clinging to
it as to a lifeline, pausing, falling, sliding into an abyss. Then the ringing
wire of sound grew thinner. It began to fade. It no longer supported me.
I was falling.
A
black horizontal line whipped up, vertical bars appeared. And I saw suddenly
that my hands were gripping them, sliding down slowly. Instinct had sent its
red warning flashing through my body: "Grab! Hang onl Hang on!"
This was real. There was no singing void around
me any more. But there was a very real void under me and a terribly real
pavement a million feet straight down. I was clutching the outside of a
balcony rail with both hands and dangling over a drop I couldn't let myself
think about.
Was
this, I wondered frantically, the usual method of entering Malesco? If it was
the way Lorna came then I was wasting my time. Lorna would be a long time dead
by now, down there on that horribly distant, horribly hard-looking pavement, in
the pink sunset light.
I couldn't
see anything except the bars I clung to, the wall in front of me and a
sickening angle of vertical building ending in pavement far down. I didn't see
the city. The onlj important things were very near ones — real, vital, beautifu
things like a ledge in the wall or a cornice I could brace nrj foot against.
If
I'd been sent back to New York right then I'd hav< had exactly this to say
about Malesco: one, railings are mad* of some hard slick metal too thin and
slippery to hold or long. Two, building walls are stone or plastic or metal 01 something, maybe pre-fab, and there aren't
any joints or cracks and it's a very poor way to build a wall.
I
simply didn't have the strength to get over that balcony rail. But I got over
it. My simian progenitors sent me a cable along the instinct channel, my feet
became prehensile in spite of my shoes. And the ancient basic terror of the
long drop spurred me on. I don't like to think about it even now. I don't know
how I did it.
But eventually I levered myself over and felt
the balcony floor under my feet. The simian strength went back where it came
from, millions of years in my biological past. My remote ancestor, Bandar-Log
Burton, returned to hunting his antediluvian fleas and a still older ancestor,
a mere blob of protoplasm, became dominant.
I
felt like jelly. My protoplasm carried me with reeling rapidity across the
balcony and through an open window. I found myself in a medium-sized room with
the guy who had tried to shoot me.
CHAPTER III
THE
room was empty except for my new acquaintance. I mean empty. There wasn't a thing in it except that in the four upper
corners were good-sized cups of corroded steel or iron. The walls were
blue-green, and the floor was darker green and gave slightly underfoot. The
pink light of sunset cast my shadow ahead of me across the walls.
There
were two doors. At one of them was my friend with the odd headdress, which v/as
perched at a drunken angle so that one flap hung over his eye and the other at
the back of his head. He had his ear against the door panel, listening, paying
no attention to me.
I
got an impression of a thin middle-aged face alert with apprehension, a shirt
with what looked like a coffee stain on it and long red-flannel drawers. I had
just time to realize that it was the sunset light which made them look so
crimson. Then the man heard my footstep, twisted around, saw me and fell into a
fit of violent indecision.
He
tried to do several things at once. He seemed to want to open the door and run.
He wanted to yell for help. He wanted to pull out his equivalent of a Police
Positive and kill me.
What
he did was run at me, grip me around the waist and shove me back on the
balcony. Before I knew what was happening, the guy had stuffed me halfway over
the rail again. Don't think I wasn't resisting. I was. But what can an amoeba
do?
A
couple of times he could simply have let go and I'd have fallen. But he didn't
let go. To him, it seemed, I was a square peg and he was frantically trying to
find a square hole in space to fit me. He was trying to hit the lucky number on
a punchboard and using me to do it.
All
the while he was looking around in a worried fashion, glancing down, trying to
prevent my falling, looking over his shoulder, up at the sky and shaking at the
flap of his headdress, which had twisted around even farther so that he could
scarcely see at all.
As
for me, I was in a nightmare. There was a ridiculous temptation to stay passive
and wait till I'd been stuffed into that square hole in space. Maybe he could find it, I thought. I never had exactly in thirty-odd years. All
I'd found were round holes.
On that philosophical point I got a grip on
myself. I grabbed my friend around the neck and hauled myself back to safety.
Neither of us was in a state suitable for a ten-round scrap. I hit him
somewhere. He snatched at his belt and brought up a weapon that looked like a
little dumbbell and I hit him again.
He gripped the ends of the dumbbell in each
hand and pulled it apart. A silent flash of blue light streamed between his
clenched fists. He looked at me. I could see only half his face because of that
striped flap, but in his one visible eye there was desperation. Then it looked
past me. A shadow fell on us. The man hesitated.
I knocked the weapon out of his hand. As the
two globes fell they snapped together and the blue light was gone. My opponent
must have gone crazy, because he stooped to pick up his gadget and I gave him a
fast rabbit punch. I had just enough strength left me to make it effective. He
kept on stooping until he lay flat on his face, motionless.
I looked around and saw some kind of aircraft
moving between me and what was left of the sun. It was a good distance away
and for an instant it reminded me of a galleon. It had a cobwebby filigree
appearance as it slid across the red bisected sphere.
Beneath
it lay the city with its domes and swooping roads and spires. And there was the
fiery ball of moving light or water, supported by its shifting arches. So this
was Malesco.
I knew Malesco. Uncle Jim had told me about
it too often for me not to know the place when I saw it.
I
was just glancing shudderingly down at a formal garden below, in a sort of
clear, shadowy well of air lit by sunset, when a deep sigh from my fallen enemy
made me turn abruptly.
He
hadn't moved. But I went rapidly back into the room and stood listening. Once I
thought I heard footsteps outside, but they ceased and there was only silence
except for an occasional muffled distant murmur of voices. I opened the door,
the one my murderous friend had been listening at, and peered out through a
narrow crack. I saw a hall well lighted.
I
closed that door and tried the other one across the room. Beyond was another
chamber of the same size with the same rusty cups in the upper corners. The
wall opposite the door was a machine. At any rate it was solid with dials and
panels and levers and things. It had a round flat face about as tall as I was.
I looked at it. It looked at me. Nothing happened.
For
the rest of the room, there was a curtain across one corner that screened a
sort of clothes closet. In the middle of the floor was a small table. On the
table was the remnant of a meal. There was a crust of bread, the green dregs of
liquid in a cup and a fruit or vegetable the size of a radish with a wormhole
in its pink skin.
On
the floor by the table, lying as if someone had dropped it, was a crumpled
black robe. Beside the bread crust lay a tablet with circles drawn on it, most
of them connected by straight lines, and the whole thing irritably crossed out
with a few heavy strokes. I don't
know why I thought of tic-tac-toe.
I walked back and forth, studying the machine
hopefully from several angles. It made not the slightest sense to me. However,
it would have made just as much sense if it had been a Ford motor or a vacuum cleaner,
so I let it go and went back to see if my victim had wakened.
He
hadn't. I rolled him over and investigated. He wore a light tunic, heavy brown
sandals, tight ankle-length trousers, pure white except for the dirt, and the
striped headdress.
Oh,
yes — he wore á bracelet and a ring on his left wrist and
middle finger, and they were connected by a flexible band of the same metal —
bluish-green. There was a pouch in his belt and, as I touched it — just before I touched it — the thing made a noise at me,
like a rattlesnake giving warning.
Then
it said something in a language I automatically translated and understood
before I realized what that language was.
"Temple
Headquarters," it
remarked. "From
the Priest of the Night. Falvi!"
Two
thoughts collided inside my head. One of them brought my gaze down to my
victim's striped headdress and the other made my lips move silently as I
repeated the words I had just heard spoken. One and one are two. One and one
are — Malesco.
All
of a sudden, I was remembering Uncle Jim's bedtime stories and how striped
headdresses had occasionally figured in those tales. Those who wore them bore
the rank of — what had it been? Priest. And that meant —
My
mind clamped down and rejected such an impossibility. I stood up, took a deep
breath and wished I hadn't.
For this was the moment I'd been avoiding —
the moment when I couldn't keep moving and would have to start thinking and
realizing. I was in another world. (What world? Oh, no! I wasn't quite ready to
believe that
yet.)
The only other explanation was that I'd gone
crazy and was really in a bed in Bellevue with doctors looking at me
thoughtfully and remarking, "Obviously a hopeless case. Shall we try shock
treatment, or should we experiment with that new method, the one that killed
all the Rhesus monkeys?"
Meanwhile at my feet was an unconscious
priest and beyond the railing lay the city, no longer rose-red, but darkening
into evening. The sun had gone. Night came quickly here. I looked out over the
eerily familiar view I'd dreamed of so often as a child.
The
sense of wonder hadn't hit me yet. I wasn't even incredulous — yet. Anybody
pitched headforemost into Oz or Graustark or any other familiar unreal world
and finding it a real place after all would expect to be half-stunned by disbelief.
I wasn't. There was no use disbelieving in Malesco — here it was. After a
while, I told myself, I'll start being surprised. Then, there wasn't time.
The thing that I wanted to think about most
when I got a moment was Uncle Jim. It had been no series of bedtime tales he'd
told me then. He knew
Malesco. All right — had he
been here in person?
Had he just found some way to open the door
between the worlds and look through, maybe listen, since he'd learned the
language? I wanted time to think about it, but I hadn't any to spare right now.
Too much was going on. - One thing was certain: the Malesco that Uncle Jim described
to me had been the description of an eyewitness. There was the great flowing
dome with its spires of bright water. He hadn't mentioned the patterns of
lights visible all over the city after dark, though. Some of them were colored,
some of them formed words. I could read Malescan. I knew advertising when I saw
it.
This isn't happening, this isn't real, this
is a dream I'm having and I'm ten years old again and Uncle Jim made the whole
thing up.
The pouch at the priest's belt buzzed. Then
it said something in a thin, inquiring voice.
"Falvi!
Responde!"
Responde was pronounced the way it was written. I knew
what it meant. Falvi
I didn't know. It might be
a proper noun. It might be the name of my priest. If so, Falvi wasn't going to responde and 1 guessed
what would probably happen.
I
thought I might be safer, somehow, out there ip the city. Since there were
lights, there would be darkness, too.
BECAUSE
I was in a hurry, I probably wasn't too logical. I'd wasted time. Since the
priest had tried to kill me at sight — or at least to stuff me back where I
came from through a hole in space and had not seemed to care much whether I
fell to the pavement below in the process — I could probably expect similar
treatment from other priests. At any rate it was hardly safe to assume I
wouldn't get similar treatment.
I
went into the room where the machine was, gazed up stupidly at its enigmatic
round flat face and turned away, looking for that black cloak. I shook it out,
snapped it around my throat, and discovered there were little magnetic clasps
all along the front of it, so that when I pulled it down it fell neatly shut.
Then
sudden panic seized me. What was I doing here anyway? What were my chances of
finding Lorna in a bedtime-story world which I was probably dreaming up as I
went along? The place for me was back in New York, where I came from. I turned
rapidly and trotted back to the balcony, the cloak flapping at my heels.
I
leaned out over the rail and the emptiness and began to grope in the air. But I
didn't feel New York. What a hole in space would feel like was uncertain, of
course. Rather like the hole in a doughnut, maybe. I had no real hope that I
could get hold of something in my own apartment that was solidly anchored and
haul myself home that way. It was too much like trying to lift myself by my
bootstraps.
And
yet I found myself violently reluctant to leave that balcony and go out in a
world I didn't know at all. In a curious sort of way I'd been born into Malesco
at this spot and I was too young in Malescan experience to like the prospect
of seeking fame and fortune in a world I never made.
/
was a stranger and afraid — in a world I never made . . .
I had made Earth, you know. Everyone shapes a
little part of his environment, and his parents and ancestors shaped other
parts. Maybe that's why it will take a long time for people to get used to
living on Venus or Mars. Anyhow, there was a queer sort of silver-cord feeling
that held me to the balcony.
Suddenly
I thought with some bitterness of the tales written about just such miracles as
the one I was undergoing. Burroughs, in particular, and Haggard. But I wasn't
on Barsoom now and I wasn't John Carter. He was made of the stuff of mythical
heroes. He was indestructible.
I
didn't feel specially heroic, but of course one never knows. And the heroism of
one society is the rank cowardice of another. Malescan ethics might differ
considerably from terrestrial ones. I didn't really think they would, but you
never know.
My trouble was that I could
be killed.
I hadn't thought much about such things back
home. You don't lean too far out of high windows, you don't step in front of
speeding cars and you don't touch hot wires because you've heard of
electricity. Okay. In Malesco there was gravity and it seemed the usual kind. I
could allow for that. But what about the unknown forces like electricity?
A Malescan in a subway in New York might very
well sit on the third rail because it locked innocuous. In Malesco, I might sit
on an atomic power plant without recognizing it. The priest's dumbbell-shaped
weapons seemed to indicate some non-electrical force activating it, and the
machine in the other room might operate on some power I'd never heard of.
Luckily I could read Malescan. I decided to keep my eyes open for signs reading
CAVE! No, that was Latin — Malescan would be CAVEO.
I
wasn't getting very far, leaning over this rail searching the air. The priest
might wake up at any moment, and I would have to make up my mind whether to
run, hide or throw myself on his mercy, such as it was.
I
went back thoughtfully into the room and looked down at him. He was starting to
twitch a little. Even in repose his face looked irritable and impulsive. It had
better be either run or hide, I told myself. Preferably hide — but where?
There
was the alcove with a rack of cloaks and robes behind a curtain. There wasn't
any other cover I could think of, and I didn't dare go out into the hall and
take a chance on other priests coming at me with dumbbells flashing blue fire.
This
was the point at which the heroes of the conventional tales perform some
miracle of physical or mental prowess and get the upper hand with the ease of
long practice. But it was all new to me. I didn't feel heroic and I had no
resources whatever.
In
the room where the priest lay I heard a thin voice call, "Falvi!" again. A groan answered it. The prostrate
priest moved his hand. I was as good as caught and I knew it. This was the spot
where John Carter would have sprung easily to the top of a ten-foot wall that
providentially didn't quite reach the ceiling, there to lie hidden while his
enemies searched in vain.
In the tales the enemies never looked up, of
course. But all the walls here reached to the ceiling, and even if they hadn't
I gravely doubled my ability to dart up them like a startled cat. I wasn't as
resourceful as Carter. The best thing that occurred to me was to dive into that
clothes closet and burrow my way among the robes into the corner. If I squatted
down, the black cloak I was wearing would hide my feet.
It wasn't very good. Fortunately for me it
didn't have to be. If I wasn't a resourceful hero, neither was my adversary a
very resourceful villain. He was just an ordinary guy who'd been knocked out
and felt rattled and confused when he finally came to.
Between two garments and the edge of the
curtain I saw him sit up, groan and put his head in his hands. The voice at his
waist said irritably, "Falvi!
Responde!"
He shook his head a couple of times, looked
dizzily around, and then suddenly muttered something and scrambled to his feet.
His face was frightened. It was worse than frightened. For some reason he was
on a spot so bad that things couldn't possibly get worse and somehow or other I
was responsible.
I
knew that. I knew by the way he looked around the room, obviously searching for
me. I was very glad I wasn't in plain sight. My refuge seemed pitiably
inadequate now, but it was too late to change it. Luckily the priest seemed to
be an amateur too at this sort of thing.
He scuttled out on the balcony, and I watched
his back as he bent over the edge and peered hopefully downward. Since I wasn't
visible, either climbing down the wall or spread out on the pavement below, he
came back again and this time his eye caught the half-open door to the hall.
It was sheer luck that I had left it open. He
must have jumped to the conclusion that I had fled. Of course he had no way of
knowing how long he'd been unconscious. It might have been hours and I might
have got clear away a long time ago.
He hurried to the door and I heard him take a
few uncertain steps outside. But he came back in a moment and shut the door
firmly. By the look on his face I was sure he had ulcers. He was the kind of
guy who always does have ulcers.
The
little voice at his belt called again and this time he took a thing like a
white waffle out of his pouch and did something very odd. He yawned into it.
That is, he made the noises a man makes when he's slowly waking out of deep
sleep.
I was surprised, but not entirely, by the
yawn. A light had gone on beyond his shoulder, out there in the slowly lighting
city. Sheer astonishment made me blank to everything but the thing I saw spread
across the whole side of a building about a block away.
It was a picture of Lorna's face.
It
must have been huge, though from where I crouched I could see it all and it
looked small in perspective. The picture was illuminated and was on something
like stained glass, though not formalized the way stained glass pictures
usually are. I knew it was Lorna's face, but for a long moment I just didn't believe it.
It
was Lorna's face, all right, but glamorized as though Arden had collaborated
with Rubinstein and then turned it over to a Romney who's become a religious
idealist. Just as Romney had on canvas given Lady Hamilton qualities that
essentially bird-brained woman never possessed, so this super-electric sign
changed Lorna Maxwell into a very beautiful woman with a strangely etherealized
appearance.
Over the portrait head was a huge golden A — a rather mystifying letter which I noticed standing
alone in gold lights elsewhere here and there through the city. It seemed to
mean something. Under Lorna's portrait was the word or name CLIA. "Falvi!"
I'd almost got used to that thin urgent
voice. It was the answering voice that brought my attention back — a drowsy startled murmur, then the falsely brisk tone of a man suddenly
awakened.
"In the name of the Phoenix. Falvi to
the Hiërarch. There is peace in the Earth-Gates watchroom." "Were you asleep?"
"I — ah — I was
contemplating the mysteries."
"You'll
have a chance to contemplate the mysteries in solitude when I report this to
the Hiërarch." There was a pause. Then: "Falvi, if you're sleepy I'll
put someone else on. But I'm supposed to be responsible tonight. If there's
trouble the Hiërarch will devour my — " There followed a.word I didn't
understand.
"Sorry," Falvi said. "Could
you get some other priest to take over? I — I think I'm sick."
"Right
away," the thin voice agreed and there was silence, in which I could hear
Falvi's hard breathing.
I stood perfectly motionless, waiting.
Curiously, though Falvi and his communicant sounded nothing at all like Uncle
Jim, I'd had a ghostly feeling that it was Uncle Jim who
spoke. For their language was Malescan and it was only in his voice that I had
ever heard that tongue spoken before.
Of
course I hadn't understood every nuance of meaning. But obvious shades of
inflection in the voices made the sense unmistakable. Malescan is a simple
language, though until now I had never realized just how simple it really was.
I'd never questioned it any more than you question pig-Latin or any childhood
memory of a code.
Malescan
is pronounced the way it's spelled, or at least the way Uncle Jim spelled it in
his notes. And the illuminated signs I'd seen confirmed most of his spelling.
Then too it seemed based on Latin and anybody who remembers his high-school
Latin can make a good guess at the meanings of any language that stems from it.
Falvi came to the doorway and looked out
across the city. He said a low word under his breath. Then I realized that
Malescan stems partly from Anglo-Saxon, too.
"Obscenity
New York!" Falvi said furiously, and before I could realize the full
implications of that reference, he turned back into the room and disappeared.
New York — he had said New York.
I gazed across the city at the beautiful
transfigured face of Lorna Maxwell and longed for the safe familiar environment
of Barsoom.
Falvi was speaking again.
"Coriole," he said quietly.
"Dom Coriole!"
There was a wild buzzing which ended in a
squeaky voice that said " — wanted me to make the robe for her and I'm
just too good-natured to say no, but where I'll get time to — "
"Private
beam!" Falvi snapped — or perhaps it was "line" or
"circuit." I couldn't translate literally. But I got the sense of the
words and heard them as colloquial rather than formalized because I was used to
thinking colloquially myself.
There
was a pause during which Falvi's gaze moved uneasily about the room. I shrank
back shyly among the cloaks. Then an oily giggle sounded.
"I
am in spasms," said a thin voice. "Yes, positively in spasms.
Purdelor has told me the funniest quip I've heard in years. I nearly split
myself laughing. I laughed till I cried. Do you remember Dom Pheres? He always
insisted — "
"Coriole,
listen! This is Falvi. Somebody else has come through."
" — insisted that his name ought to be
pronounced Peres — don't interrupt, I must tell you this."
Falvi
was trying to mention somebody named or called the Hierarch.
"Be
quiet," Coriole said with thin cheerfulness. "Insisted that his name
ought to be pronounced Peres — you have that? So Morander, one evening over
dinner, said, 'If you please, Dom Peres, will you hand me the paselae?' Paselae! Oh, ha, ha, ha, ha!" There were wild
giggles.
"Darnnatio!"
Falvi said, presumably
seeing no more point to the joke than I did. I felt a twinge of sympathy for
the harassed priest. What Coriole needed was an appreciative studio audience, I thought. But I was underestimating the man.
Falvi
said with furious patience, "I was guarding the Earth-Gates tonight and
another one came through — a man, this time — and he knocked me out and got
away. Ha, ha."
Coriole's chuckles died.
"Well,"
he said, "I suppose you were playing with the Earth-Gates — "
never touched them."
"Lie
to the Hiërarch if you like but don't try it with me, Falvi. What was the man
like, eh?"
It
was a curious sensation to me, cowering in the clothes closet, hearing myself
accurately described. I had a momentary sense of having been discovered, as
though the shadows had been driven away by a bright light. I stared at Lorna's face beyond Falvi and the balcony. That steadied me.
Very
often in Malesco I needed that steadiness. I kept finding myself inclined to
slip over into an odd state in which everything seemed quite unreal and it was
difficult for me to move or even think.
A
touch of that helpless passivity gripped me now, and for a second Falvi seemed
unimportant and unreal. The fact that he was announcing his decision to find
and kill me had an abstruse interest, no more than that.
"If
you harm him I'll break your neck," Coriole said. "You hear me?"
"All
right, I won't touch him," Falvi said in an unconvincing tone. "If
any of the other priests have found him he may be dead already. I don't
know."
"He
sounds like the man you say Clia described. Well, meet me at the Baths
immediately."
"But this is the night the — "
"Bless me, this is the night I thought I
was on horseback," Coriole said and chuckled again. A humorist, part of my
mind said. The other part was considering Lorna's face a block away and the
name CLIA under it. So I sounded like the man Clia described, did I? That meant
Clia was Lorna, a deduction which required little brilliance on my part.
"It's nothing to joke about," Falvi
said. "The Hierarch won't believe I didn't touch the Earth-Gates."
"Naturally
he won't," Coriole said. "He knows you're a liar. Meet me at the
Baths immediately. Hurry along. This man who came through may be exactly what
we need. If you harm him I'll be inclined to wash my hands of you."
"Listen, if he's wandering through the
Temple in the clothes he had on he'll be stopped before — "
"There's been no alarm yet, has there?
Come along. Leave the thinking to me. I'm qualified for it. And don't try to
act on your own. You're not indispensable."
"Perhaps you're not
either."
At this Coriole burst into wild thin giggles,
sounding rather like a disembodied goblin, and gasped, "Saturn mend you,
indeed! It would be less trouble to make a new one. Oh, hurry along. When I
explain you'll see why we need this man alive. Less trouble to make — "
The giggling died.
"Damned
comedian," Falvi said under his breath, then, louder, "Your jokes smell.
You're a fool, Coriole. Nobody thinks you're funny. And if I find that man I'll
kill him so fast he won't even notice. Maybe it doesn't matter to you whether
or not I get in trouble but — "
His words became mutters. I gathered that the
"walkie-talkie" had been turned off before Falvi began his diatribe.
This seemed to indicate that Falvi was both sensible and cautious.
Then a door slammed and it was time for me to
decide what to do next.
CHAPTER V
THAT
was not difficult to figure out but the trouble was to put any sort of plan
into action. Any move I made might reveal my identity to enemies. And I had
excellent reason to suspect that this temple, or palace, or skyscraper was full
of potential enemies — all quite willing to kill me on sight once they
discovered I was no Malescan.
So I
had to find Lorna. I was completely blindfolded. What I needed most of all was
information. What I most wanted was information about how to get home.
Meanwhile I badly needed to be briefed. Lorna — going under the name of Clia, I
gathered — had found a safe spot in Malesco. I couldn't tell how she'd done it
nor, naturally, did I know exactly how safe that spot might be. But if some
sesame existed I wanted to know it.
It was
quite simple: I was in a dark labyrinth, full of pitfalls and traps, and there
was a gleam of light in the distance. So I had to reach that light, which meant
information and perhaps help. My immediate goal was Lorna, and I didn't dare
think beyond that. While I hated the idea of leaving the room which connected,
somehow, with my New York apartment, finding Lorna would mean a very real
contact with my own world.
It
took me no time at all to make sure the room was empty, cautiously emerge from
the closet and, on second thought, dive back into it and search till I located
a headdress with flaps such as Falvi wore. It had blue stripes and shadowed my
face effectively when I donned it. Then I went to the outside door and peeped
out in time to see Falvi walk through a doorway down the hall and disappear.
That
left the hall quite empty. I stepped boldly out and hurried after Falvi,
passing a few closed doors. Along the ceiling there were more of the metal
cups, pouring out light, a milky flowing glow that dissolved in the air and
gave a gentle daylight illumination.
Several I passed were burned out and another
one was flickering wanly. On the doors themselves I noticed symbols engraved: a
formalized bird and a trident on each one and Roman numerals, XVI, XVII, and so
forth.
Where
Falvi had vanished was an opening in the wall, as large as a doorway. It seemed
to be a small elevator shaft, lighted from within. A foreshortened Falvi was
twenty feet below, floating down very gently.
I supposed it was Falvi, but all I could see
were the headdress and his feet. He resembled a squashed dwarf. He didn't look
up and I laid one hand on the wall to brace myself and stared down at him.
There seemed to be no cables nor other
mechanical elevator devices, though of course Falvi might be standing on a
perfectly transparent floor that was slowly sinking beneath him. I noticed his
shadow appear on the wall behind him and vanish as he went on down.
When I looked up I saw part of my own shadow
— the deformed head startled me till I remembered the flaps of my headdress —
across the shaft, so I understood that Falvi was dropping past similar openings
on other floors.
I leaned farther out and counted the brighter
patches of illumination. Falvi went down seven levels before he stepped out.
Then the shaft was empty and it seemed to go on down for quite a distance.
I
was considering the possibility of tossing something into the shaft as a test
to see if it would float or plunge when my shadow on the opposite wall blurred
slightly and became suddenly double. My state of mind by now was such that I
found myself seriously considering whether I could possibly have two heads. In
the same instant I turned to see what had cast the second shadow.
I
found myself looking into a pair of very bright expectant eyes on a level with
mine. Another priest had come up behind me without a sound and was watching me
with a look that reminded me uncomfortably of a cat watching a mouse.
There were extraordinary alertness and
anticipation in the face between the flaps of the priestly headdress. He was
young and there was a faintly dissipated air about him as though
he'd had a big night recently. He wore his robes with a certain negligent
elegance that was far from ecclesiastic.
I
went into a state of concealed shock. How long had he been following me? From
Falvi's door? And why? That expectancy on his face was frightening. He was so
clearly waiting for me to do something. But what? From the penetrating
interest of his eyes I was ready to believe that he was reading my innermost
thoughts and finding them, on the whole, rather amusing.
I
had no idea what one priest did when he met another. Before I could come to any
decision about how to save my hide, though, he saved it for me by murmuring, "Pardae-se," in a polite voice and squeezing past me into
the shaft, still not taking that ironic gaze from mine.
I
had a strong impression that he knew exactly what had been happening and was
simply waiting for me to give myself away. He lifted one eyebrow at me as he
slowly sank, a quizzical look that seemed to ask what I was waiting for.
That
decided me. After all, what would John Carter have done? The priest was about
ten feet down, his head still tilted back to watch me and a grin was beginning
to broaden upon his face. I took a deep breath and stepped out into emptiness,
confidently expecting a sort of antigravity skyhook to grip me and lower me
gently down the shaft.
This
did not happen. I dropped like a bullet, head over basket, with the full
velocity and acceleration of a free-falling body. I had a glimpse of the priest
floating down calmly beneath me — he seemed to be standing still — and then I
hit him and we were in a wild Laocoon group, with me playing the python.
He grabbed
me, not that it was necessary, because I was hanging on to him like a frantic
cat. There was a brief, mad scuffle, which subsided gradually. Clinging
together, we drifted slowly downward.
Our faces were quite close now, naturally
enough, and the priest's was full of triumphant excitement. I had an idea that
I had given myself hopelessly away and that this was just what he'd expected.
The look on his face said he knew I was from New York, knew I'd come through
Falvi's forbidden Earth-Gates, whatever they were, and the next stop would be
the ecclesiastical firing squad.
Just
to clinch the matter he spoke to me. It was, of course, Malescan and it meant
nothing at all. My ears were ringing anyhow and I was shaking all over with
shock and sheer un-heroic fright. The shaft below us looked bottomless. I
breathed hard and stared into the bright triumphant eyes about six inches from
mine.
He repeated himself more slowly and this time
I understood.
"You're lucky I caught you," he
said. "You might get reported."
I had heard enough of the spoken Malescan
tongue to catch the right emphasis and accent. But I still wasn't sure I could
speak it naturally. I had to try though. My words came out in a series of gasps
— an excellent way of disguising unfamiliarity with a language, by the way.
"I was thinking of something else,"
I said.
The
effect on him was tremendous. I think if I hadn't been clutching him so tightly
he might have let me drop in his surprise. For a moment I wondered if I'd made
some astounding error in speech. Then I realized that the fact I'd spoken at
all — in Malescan — was what startled him so much. He hadn't expected it. His
face went perfectly blank for a moment.
When
expression came back to it he allowed only the slightest glimmer of what must
have been great disappointment to show through before he pulled himself
together and spoke again. This time the malicious expectancy and the
penetrating intentness of his look had vanished.
"What did you say?" he asked
politely.
"I said I was thinking
of something else."
A
flicker of the keen suspicion came back into the quick gaze he turned on me. I
realized then that I simply didn't know Malescan well enough to pass as a
native.
"Well,
you'd better think of the Hierarch next time," the priest said, his eyes
never swerving from mine. "What are you talking like that for?"
"I bit my
tongue," I said hastily.
"Bit
your nose?" he asked. "How could you do that? Oh, your tongue."
I
met his bright stare briefly and then glanced aside at the walls, slipping up
slowly around us. Was he simply amusing himself with me? I wasn't sure and I
didn't think he was either. Certainly he was suspicious, but he had nothing
definite to go on. The fact that I could speak Malescan even passably seemed
to knock the bottom out of whatever theory he had formulated about me. Still .
. .
"Where
do you want out?" he asked, still politely, his tone making a rather
insolent contrast to the look on his face.
"I'm going to the Baths," I
hazarded.
"Oh,
are you? I'll let you off at the main floor, then. I don't know you, do I? You must be fresh from the Crucible."
I nodded.
"No?" the priest
said. "But — "
"I mean yes," I
corrected, making a mental note on the permutations of symbolic gestures in
various cultures. "I'm still fresh from the Crucible."
"A
little too fresh," he told me. "You must be from Ferae. Nothing
personal but the Feraen dialect is suitable only for talking to dogs. I'm Dio
and I know the best" — he used a word
I didn't catch — "in the city if you need advice."
"Thanks," I said, wondering if I
should tell him my name and finding my mind totally blank when it came to
choosing a Malescan nom-de-guerre. I didn't know enough about proper nouns. I
might ignorantly call myself the equivalent of Santa Claus or Little Bo Peep.
I grimaced and said my tongue hurt.
He
seemed to be thinking. "Did / bite your nose?" he asked suddenly.
"I don't remember doing it. But when you fell on me that way — "
"It's all right," I said.
"Where's your
pouch?"
"I forgot it."
"Don't
they teach you anything at the Ferae crucible?" He glanced up the shaft.
"Here we are." He lunged forward, carrying me, and we found ourselves
standing in a room the size of Grand Central, quite as noisy and crowded and
busy. To the left was a great open archway with darkness beyond. The fresh wind
blowing in told me it was the open air.
"No
use going back for your pouch now," the priest Dio said, reaching toward
his belt. "I'll lend you some grain." He put a few coins into my
hand. "Don't forget to pay it back. I'm Dio, remember, on the twenty-third
Goose of Hermo-genes at the fifth Cherub."
"Well
— thanks," I said. He looked at me blandly. His dissipated young face had
lost its brilliant intentness now and was a little sleepy, as if with
satisfaction. Sometime during our brief conversation he had come to a decision
about me.
I
couldn't understand him at all. If Falvi's prognosis were right any priest who
recognized me for a newcomer from Earth was pretty certain to shoot first and
ask questions later. Why, I didn't know yet.
Dio's behavior was simply confusing the issue
still further. If he knew me for a stranger, he ought to report me. If he
didn't, why was he looking so complacent now? He was the cat that had swallowed
the canary, and found it more than satisfying.
"I hope they taught you honesty at the
Ferae Crucible," he said.
Was
he really going to let me go? I could hardly believe it. There might even be
time to catch up with Falvi, given a little luck.
"I'll pay you back," I said.
"Don't worry."
He shrugged and I started to turn away,
hardly believing my own good fortune. Either Falvi had exaggerated the danger
that waited me from the priests or —
"Just a minute, you," Dio's voice
hailed me over the half-dozen steps that parted us. I knew by the tone of it,
even before I turned, that he was grinning. The bright malice was on his face
again as our eyes met.
"I
think there's something you ought to know," he said. "There haven't
been any Crucibles in Ferae for thirty years." He beamed at me.
"Well, good night," he said and stood there, smiling.
I felt exactly as if he'd kicked me in the
stomach. There was danger. If I'd ever seen danger in my life I
saw it in his face. He knew all about me or enough about me to get me killed.
And yet he was still standing there, still smiling, waiting for me to go.
I
took a tentative backward step as soon as I could breathe again. He was
perfectly capable of letting me get to the very door before he raised a shout
and set the pack on me. It was open season for Earthmen, all right, and Dio
liked the idea.
I
thought, "He'll give me sixty seconds, then he'll yell," and I turned
and walked toward the door with long, firm steps. The best I could hope for was
to get out into the dark before he started the alarm. It wasn't much, but it
offered a better chance than this crowded hall.
I
glanced around nervously at the thronging priests. They were all dressed alike
here except that some didn't wear the outer robes and others were bareheaded.
Even in my alarm I noticed the surprisingly atypical haircuts of Malesco.
One
priest had a ruff of red hair rising up like a rooster's comb, another had the
front of his head shaved and long ringlets hanging down the back. A third had a
shaved parting down the center, more than an inch wide. They looked funny to
me then, but if Dio raised the alarm before I got to the door they'd probably
cease to look funny and become wholly frightening.
I
was six steps from the door. I was one step from the door. I stepped out under
it onto the lighted steps. I couldn't help glancing back as I hurried down into
the darkness. Dio's glance had flicked away from me as he lifted a hand and
nodded casually to a passing priest. As I turned I saw his eyes come back to
me, and he stroked his jaw in an affectionate way.
I
kept going, heading toward the open archway ahead. I was feeling foolish again
in the uncertain letdown. Was there any danger, after all? Had Falvi known what he was talking about? Certainly Coriole, whoever he
was, seemed to take my danger seriously. If I could find Falvi and follow him
to Coriole, maybe I could find out the truth.
Beyond
the arch was a formal garden, stretched out into a park that ended at a high
wall. But from the threshold itself a paved road ran straight to another gate
in the wall, and a line had formed there. I hurried in that direction, trying
to accustom my eyes to the night.
Just at the gate was a splash of light from
one of the overhead metal cups. I saw a priest standing casually behind a tall
crystal vase as high as his waist. As the line moved forward and each priest
came abreast of the vase he tossed a coin into it. The cashier seemed too bored
to pay much attention to his job though he kept one steady eye on the vase.
I joined the line, looking back. Through the
open arch leading into the great hall I could see the moving throngs, but I
couldn't see Dio now. That didn't mean anything. I felt very very anxious to
get on the other side of the temple wall. What I would do there I didn't know
yet but . . .
There
were a dozen priests ahead of me, moving forward slowly. I heard the clink of
coins. How much should I contribute? Why had Dio given me the — grain? Most of
all, who was he? How much did he know and what was his game?
Someone pushed me roughly
from behind. I started to swing around and one of the flaps of my headdress
swung across my face so that I was momentarily blinded. In that second of
darkness. I heard Falvi's familiar voice say, "Keep moving, will you?"
I
turned my head back again toward the front, faster than I'd. turned it toward
Falvi. He was standing right behind me. I hurriedly moved forward, closing the
gap between me and the next priest. I heard Falvi's feet scuffle behind me.
Fine — wonderful! Of course it was a lucky
break that I hadn't lost Falvi after all, that I could still depend on him to
lead me to Lorna. But my back felt singularly unprotected. I could feel rings
being drawn concentrically on the back of my robe, with a bull's-eye just in
the center, where a knife would be most effective. Inevitably I was moving
closer to the splash of light by the cashier.
There were six priests ahead of me . . . five
. . . four. I looked rigidly ahead, the coins clutched in my hot little palm.
Automatically, I noted the size and shape of the "grain" being tossed
into the vase. Automatically, I opened my hand and selected a coin that seemed
identical. Then there were two men ahead of me . . . one . . . nobody at all.
I
bent my head forward, so that the flaps fell forward too, and hoped my profile
wouldn't be visible to Falvi. I dropped a coin in the vase. The cashier glanced
at me sharply, ran his eyes down toward my legs ■— my shoes and trousers!
"Wait
a bit!" he said, meeting my eyes again. "You're out of uniform."
That wasn't his exact phrase, but the meaning was identical.
And then Falvi yelled in my ear,
"Blast
it, Vesto, keep your nose clean! I'm in a hurry! Step it up, step it up."
He
shoved me through the gate and as I hastily moved to one side, I heard a violent
altercation begin between Vesto and Falvi. It ended in a perfect scream of rage
from Falvi, and the next thing I knew he was through the gate too and hurrying
into the shadows.
Vesto
appeared briefly and swore after him. I moved away in the opposite direction.
When Vesto retreated I circled and began to trail Falvi, being doubly careful
till we were both past the huge brightly lit open square that faced the temple.
IT'S
no more difficult than a Chicago man suddenly finding himself in Bombay, or
Lhasa, or Moscow, dressed in the appropriate local costume. But the boy from
State Street has seen newsreels of those places, he's read about them and he
knows there are French and English in Bombay. And, anyway, there's not much
basic difference between a rickshaw and a Dynaflow.
All
the same he'll get a queer picture of Bombay, just as I did of this Malescan
city. One reason was that I was afraid to try anything new that might unmask me
by revealing my ignorance. A Martian might follow the crowds down a B.M.T.
subway entrance and he'd get along fine till he ran up against the
coin-operated turnstile. Then he'd start frantically wondering what peculiar
ritual was required.
He
might figure out how the change booths worked; but unless he had some U. S.
currency, he'd be sunk. Even if he spoke English there'd still be trouble,
since nobody in one of those New York subway change booths has ever been known
to speak in human tongues.
I
certainly couldn't make much of the coins Dio had loaned me. I took them out
and examined them as I went along. They all bore Roman numerals — I, II, V, XX
— as well as puzzling symbols like those I had seen on the doors in the
Temple. But none was of a recent enough mintage for me to make out details.
They all had ornamental curlicues on the edges, like our own milled edges, so I
guessed that Malesco had its coin shavers too.
Malesco
— oh, it was a rose-red city, all right. But some of the walls had graffiti
scrawled on them — words my uncle hadn't listed in his vocabulary, though it
was easy to figure some of them out — and the streets weren't especially clean.
The
city wasn't crowded, though. I didn't see any throngs except once. A gang of
people had got a man in gray coveralls backed up against a building and were
yelling at him. That should have been my cue to spring to the victim's aid. He
should have been the prince of some neighboring country and have been suitably
grateful for my help.
But when an air-car swooped down and grounded
gently not far away, I hastily joined the crowd and yelled with them. Men in
uniform were getting out of the air-car, which was built like a chariot,
ornately decorated with scrolls and gilded curlicues.
The
police dragged their victim away and, from what I overheard, I decided the
"prince" was a pickpocket who'd been caught. So that was all right.
Falvi seemed to know where he was going. I
never lost sight of that hurrying figure with its flapping headdress. I had a sense
of immediate urgency for I remembered Dio very clearly. He knew who I was. Or
did he?
I didn't form a complete picture of the city
as I trailed Falvi. All I got were flashes, like the way a moving light slipped
along one of the overhead causeways, the luminous jewelry some of the people
wore, men and women both, and a flutter of confetti that blew past me down the
street. One coil wrapped itself around my neck and as I pulled it free I saw
lettering on the paper. Come To The Bath Of The
Divine Water, it
said in Malescan.
Well, that was what I meant to do if I could
find the place.
A few aspects of the city stood out even
above my preoccupation: one was the curious attitude of the populace toward
the priests. The first time a man stepped off the sidewalk into the gutter and
bowed to me, with a touch of masochistic abasement in the gesture, I almost
stopped in my tracks.
My first thought was that he'd seen through
my disguise and was staging some elaborate joke before he hit me over the head
and dragged me back to my doom. Then I saw he meant it. But what was expected
of me in response I had no idea.
I looked ahead at Falvi. All I could see was
the top of his head bobbing along in a straight hasty course. If this were
happening to me, maybe it was happening to him too and he seemed to pay no
attention. I took a chance and stalked haughtily by the bowing man. I didn't
dare look back to see what his reaction was. Nothing happened, so that was all
right, too. And luckily not every person I passed felt, quite that pious.
But they did get out of my way with
respectful glances. I began after a while to check on the expression they
turned on me, trying to figure out what was going on. Most of them looked just
respectful — stupid and awed. Some glowered but stood aside. Some gave me looks
of sheer hatred.
Now and then somebody would all but throw
himself at my feet in the same abject deference the first man had shown. Maybe
it was consciousness of sin. Maybe these men had some guilt on their minds they
thought I could read in their faces and were showing penitence by groveling in
the gutter when I passed.
I
didn't like it, and I didn't like the idea of a priesthood that would encourage
such an attitude, but, after all, Malesco wasn't my responsibility. All I
wanted was to get out of it, and take Lorna with me if I could find her.
I
can't begin to tell you all the mystifying things I saw in that quick walk
through the streets of Malesco. It wasn't like our cities. If it wasn't a place
out of the Arabian Nights, neither was it the equivalent of New York and Chicago.
There were shops, but their displays were mostly hidden and what I could see
was arranged in ways that didn't make sense to me.
There
were vehicles in the streets, but they didn't make much sense either beyond the
fact that they moved, carried passengers and seemed to obey traffic laws of a
sort. Once in a while I saw moving lights in the sky and remembered the
aircraft I'd already encountered.
There were no newspapers. You'd be surprised
how you can miss commonplace things like that. Until you do miss them you don't
realize what a big part newspapers play in normal city life. There was no
litter of torn printed pages in the gutter, no noisy newsboys yelling on
corners, no stands of magazines and dailies, nobody with a folded paper under
his arm.
But what I did see every few blocks, which as
I later learned was the equivalent, was a long rack against buildings which
held on slanting shelves rows of big looseleaf paper volumes about the size of
the average tabloid. Each rack had several people reading with their elbows on
the shelf, turning the pages.
You paid a penny and read your daily news
right out in public. I wished for time to stop and see what was new in Malesco
myself, but Falvi was moving fast ahead of me. There was no time to do more
than steal a glance as I passed the stands, earning a look of resentment from
the penny collector when I did so.
If 1 had known my rights as a priest I could
simply have put one of the volumes under my arm and walked off and nobody would
have dared to complain. But I didn't know that and I hadn't time then anyhow.
I went on after Falvi.
Strange things continued to happen all around
me. I was getting used to the looks of awe, hatred or abject deference on the
faces I passed. But I had a lot of other things to get used to, too. For
instance, a voice suddenly and urgently whispered in my ear, "Listen!"
I
halted where I was. I looked around over my shoulder, but there was no one near
me. The only suspicious sight was a man in the priestly robe and headdress
across the street, hurrying in the same direction that I was. But he was too
far away to be the —
"Listen!" the whisper came again.
"It's important! Your life may depend on it!"
For
a second I dithered like a skeleton hung on wires. There just wasn't anyone
near enough to me to whisper in my ear. And the whisper had a strange fading
quality like a voice on the radio when you play with the dial.
"This
is the secret," said the voice, brightening. "Drink Elixir, the
refreshing tonic that makes you live longer." Then it broke into song.
"Elixir, Elixir, Mother Ceres' fixer," it caroled and changed to a
conspiratorial whisper again. "Listen! Listen! It's important — "
I
cursed quietly and took up the trail again. Falvi was just turning a comer. I
walked faster, occasionally running into a gust of auditory advertising that
seemed to blow invisibly past me like confetti streamers. My first glimpse of
Malesco, with the glamorous rose-red city gleaming in the sunset, hadn't prepared
me for the uses of publicity as practiced there.
I
rounded the corner and there was Falvi, safely ahead. He hadn't once looked
back. He was hurrying along the curving street, moving from dimness to
brightness as light from shop windows irregularly shone on him.
I
remembered what I'd seen when I'd looked around a moment ago. I'd seen a
priest on the opposite side of the street. It meant nothing, of course, but I
couldn't help glancing around again. And there, turning the corner, was Dio.
He
was dodging a group of adolescents walking arm in arm across half the sidewalk
and he didn't seem to see me looking back at him. He didn't seem to see the
adolescents either except as objects to be avoided. I had a clear view of his
face through the pedestrians, and I saw with unpleasant clarity the fierce
anticipatory joy he was not even trying to conceal.
I
spun back again, remembering Falvi, wondering how much of that anticipating
triumph applied to Falvi and how much to me. The thin priest was just vanishing
around a corner ahead and I hurried after him, feeling those concentric rings
making a target of my back again. I knew Dio was behind me and I knew he meant
me anything but good.
Yet what could I do about it? I couldn't lose
him without losing Falvi and my only hope of reaching a potential friend. And
yet I was leading Dio straight to Coriole. I couldn't get to Coriole at all
unless I led Dio, too.
And from what I'd overheard I suspected
Coriole's safety depended on secrecy. Coriole discovered might be Coriole
liquidated for all I knew. What good would he be to me liquidated? There didn't
seem any way out of the noose I was running my neck into.
So we all trudged on through the rose-red
city in our little game of follow-the-leader. Meanwhile, I was busily turning
over schemes for thwarting Dio, by-passing Falvi and joining forces with
Coriole.
The smart thing would have been to warn Falvi
about our mutual follower. No doubt he would have some resource at his
fingertips for dealing with spies. I could catch up with him easily. I could
tap him on the shoulder and say:
"Listen!
It's important! Drink Elix — " No, that was something else entirely. I
felt a little drunk. I was not made of the indestructible stuff of heroes.
Already I was getting tired, my head ached and I was wondering where my next
meal would come from. If I warned Falvi of our mutual follower, he could fix
Dio easily enough. But first he'd fix me. So the two of us diligently led Dio
directly toward Coriole.
After
about three turns, Falvi hit a broad thoroughfare that led straight to a
familiar sight. Now I could see a sign glowing in colored lights ahead of us
that said Bath Of The Divine Waters, in crawling Malescan letters and I knew 1
couldn't miss the place. You could see the Divine Water for miles. It was that
huge globe of fiery liquid movement I had first glimpsed from my apartment —
the rose-red globe that had formed a background for Lorna's fall into another
world.
-Lorna,
I thought, Lorna Maxwell. It had to be Lorna I had got myself into Malesco to
find — not a beautiful princess dripping with jewels. Not a lovely heiress from
an old titled family whose life hung on my dashing accomplishments with sword
and pistol. No, I was here to find Lorna Maxwell. It confirmed still further my
uneasy suspicion that I was not the hero of this drama.
We
were halfway down the thoroughfare to the Baths when a minor miracle happened.
A chord of music sounded from nowhere, almost inaudible at first and then
swelling upon the air until every other sound of the city was temporarily
drowned out. Everybody stopped dead still in the streets. Everybody looked up.
I
looked up, too, in time to see an expanding circle of light dawn like a ghostly
sun upon a cloud straight overhead. It was full dark by now and there was no
moon. But the sky was full of stars, though I could see only the brightest of
them because the city's illumination drowned out all the rest.
I
was a little startled to see the Dipper, practically the only constellation I
know. Things hadn't changed as much as I'd thought if the stars were still in
their familiar places over Malesco.
Then
a face began to take shape in the luminous sun that glowed upon the cloud. An
enormous sigh breathed up from the city, almost inaudible, a breath from every
man and woman of all these thousands around me in the streets. The face grew
clearer. It took on familiar features.
Another
few seconds and Lorna Maxwell was smiling down at me from the clouds, a vast
luminous Lorna idealized like the poster I'd seen on the side of a building.
She looked lovely. She looked tender and sweet. Her smile was exquisite. She
just couldn't be Lorna Maxwell.
The
smile faded slowly. This was no poster, it was a reflection on the cloud of
the woman herself, whoever she was. The vast, shining blue eyes, each as large
as a good-sized swimming pool, beamed softly down upon Malesco. The music fell
silent and the lovely lips on the cloud parted. Lorna's voice spoke to the
breathless city.
It
was Lorna, all right. The voice, like the face, was idealized almost out of all
recognition — but not quite. Just enough of the old Lorna's inflection and tonal
qualities remained to make me sure I knew her. Down from the sky the gentle
music of the voice floated softly.
"It
is the hour for my withdrawal now," Lorna informed the city. "Now I
go to my meditation and all of you, my faithful friends, go out to your
evening's pastimes. Go with my blessing, Malescans. Remember your priests and
their teachings.
"Drop your tithe without fail into the
Temple box when you pay your entrance fees tonight. Be virtuous, be happy.
Ensure your reincarnation into higher calling by your conduct tonight and
every night. I will await you in Paradise, my friends. I will await you in the
sacred pathways of New York."
I heard a tremendous breath of murmured
response all around me as the image began to fade. I couldn't believe what the
words were that every man and woman within hearing said as Lorna grew dimmer
upon the cloud. And yet I couldn't mistake it. What everyone in the city was
murmuring in hushed devout accents was an echo of Lorna's last words.
"New York! New York!"
all Malesco whispered, and
the light faded from overhead.
CHAPTER VII
FALVI
hurried up the broad steps under the dome of the Baths. The colored lights that
said Bath Of The Divine Waters cast changing reflections on the street and
shimmered in the glass of the change-maker's booth beside the entrance. I saw
Falvi drop a coin in the glass bowl on the side of the booth and the man at the
door clicked a turnstile and let him in.
In a daze I followed him up the steps,
fumbling for the "grain" Dio had lent me. I felt both bewildered and
heartened by what I had seen in the sky. It still made no sense, but I felt
much more important than I had fifteen minutes earlier.
It didn't add up, of course. One person fell
through into Malesco from Earth and were given some sort of super-beauty
treatment and enthroned as a goddess mouthing what I couldn't help regarding as
rather chauvinistic gibberish from the clouds. Another person fell through — me
— and was instantly set upon by priests and hounded like a criminal through the
streets.
The
New York angle of this very materialistic religion in Malesco I wouldn't let
myself think about. It was too entirely impossible. Later, maybe someone would
explain it to me. Until then I couldn't allow myself to speculate. I would
pretend it never happened. The sacred pathways of New York!
The effect of that vision on the clouds had
been enormous. When it faded the city had buzzed with awed murmurings, and even
now the normal noises of crowds and traffic were not yet back to their previous
volume. I overheard enough on the streets to realize that Lorna's visitation
was accepted as something like a miracle. Nobody understood or attempted to
understand how such a thing could be achieved mechanically.
This
confused me still more. A city of the technological level that Malesco seemed
to enjoy ought not to be rendered speechless with awe at the projection of a
television image or the broadcasting of a human voice.
Naturally
I didn't know how the priests had done the job. Maybe by drawing a pentagram
and working black magic. But I knew how it could be done, so the only awe I felt was amazement at the change in Lorna.
Falvi
vanished under the great arched entrance above me. He was certainly an
inefficient conspirator. It seemed to me anybody who glanced at him would know
without looking twice that here was a spy on the way to plot with a mastermind
ringleader for the overthrow of the government.
The way he kept looking nervously over his
shoulder was in itself a complete giveaway. He glanced again without seeing me
— even that showed what a failure he was as a secret agent — and then
disappeared into the building.
I
wasn't any too sure of myself. My trouser cuffs and shoes showing under the
priestly robes made me nervous. If they'd been lit up with neons I couldn't
have felt any more conspicuous. I was afraid of losing Falvi, but I just
didn't dare walk up to that booth and try to bluff my way in.
So I waited until a group of five or six men
came along, just cheerful enough to be careless, and fell in behind them as
they climbed the steps. One of the men threw several coins in the glass bowl
beside the booth.
They
started to file in through the turnstile and the man in the booth called
something after them that I didn't hear very clearly. But the head man looked
back, grinned sheepishly, then threw another coin into a box on the wall.
The
Temple box, I thought — the priestly jackpot that Lorna had plugged in her
commercial from the clouds. I wondered wildly how much was due bowl and box.
Then 1 remembered that Falvi hadn't contributed to the box. The flapping of my
headdress against my cheek reminded me why. I was a priest too. We didn't have
to contribute to our own support.
I
tossed a coin at random into the glass bowl and shoved through the turnstile
after the party ahead. Nobody stopped me. Nobody paid me any attention. I
couldn't help looking back as I passed the turnstile and, sure enough, Dio was
just starting up the steps from the street.
When
I got into the vast rotunda inside, Falvi was nowhere in sight. I had lost him.
It seemed unnecessarily ironic. I had managed
to keep him in sight from the moment of my entrance into Malesco, only to lose
him about five minutes short of Coriole. The big hall was full of people, all
of them in the brightly colored tunics and short cloaks which the well-dressed
man was wearing in Malesco that night. If there were women here they must have
had a separate entrance. This crowd was exclusively male.
Because I had no alternative I let myself
drift with them.
The
newcomers seemed to be heading in a steady stream for a row of arches on the
far side of the room. Hoping Falvi had gone that way too, I drifted with them.
Under easier circumstances I'd have enjoyed the experience.
The
big room was cool and pleasant. Music was floating through the air from some
Malescan version of Muzak; colored lights made layers of rose and green and
violet above us, sinking on what looked like drifts of fog in the air overhead.
Row upon row of balconies climbed the high
dome of the rotunda, and laughter and music and the clink of dishes and glasses
drifted down from above. Now and then a slow shower of the advertising confetti
sprinkled down through the air or streamers of coiling serpentine spiraled
gently downward among the colored mists.
I wondered why my uncle had never told me
about the Baths of the Divine Water. The outer shell of it I remembered from
his bedtime tales. Maybe he had never been here. Maybe the Baths were new since
his time, though the outer globe of shining fire was not.
Again I wondered, with consuming curiosity,
just what had been his part in Malescan history, whether he'd really entered
the place. It was rather like walking through Wonderland and looking for a
handkerchief Alice had dropped seventy years ago or the print of her foot on
the path through the woods where the Cheshire Cat sat waiting in a tree.
The
Baths were enormous. I knew it was going to be hopeless to run across Falvi by
accident or to find Coriole without being actually led up to him and
introduced. All I could do was stroll with the crowd and try to ignore the
occasional curious glance cast my way.
A
streamer of purple paper wound round my face and commanded me to Call
For Aliette In The Crystal Grotto. I wondered if Aliette were a girl, a drink, a song or something
completely Malescan and strange to me.
Beyond
the arches was a long narrow hall which looked glamorous for a moment and then
on second glance turned into a fairly commonplace locker room. The lockers were
a wall of shining green stone checkered with white squares, and instead of
benches there were rows of individual padded stools. As I stood hesitating, the
crowd parted for a moment and there, halfway down the room, I saw a familiar
flapped headdress and Falvi's anxious thin nose in profile.
It seemed too good to be true for a moment.
Then common sense took over and I realized that if everyone who entered came
first to the locker room it was no miracle that I had found Falvi.
I
edged down the room toward him. He was sitting on a padded stool, one ankle
crossed over his knee, working on the lacings of a calf-high boot, and he was
talking earnestly to the man on the next stool. The man wore nothing but an
orange towel knotted around his waist.
But
he was clothed permanently in a head-to-foot garment of freckles that patterned
every inch of his skin as if he had been tattooed with them. He had
characteristic stiff reddish hair, cut in a sort of brush on top of his head,
and the orange towel looked hideous on him.
The
freckled man laughed, a thin giggle that struck a responsive chord in my mind.
Coriole! But I couldn't get near enough to eavesdrop without some better
disguise than a priest's robe and headdress. Falvi would know me.
What
better disguise, I realized suddenly, than nothing at all? Clothes make the
Malescan, but nakedness in a public bath ought to break down all barriers of
fashion. Without my clothing I would be as good a Malescan as anybody so long
as I kept my mouth shut.
I watched what the others were doing, found
out and walked along till I located an empty locker. There was a three-inch
square of white on the front of it, a blank square. I pushed my thumb against
it and the locker slid open. When I took my thumb away, there was a black
indentation of whorls and lines left on the white square.
I stripped in a hurry, having a little
difficulty because I wanted to keep my robe on till last. If anyone noticed my
garments weren't Malescan, I suppose my entirely fallacious air of
self-assurance got me over that hump. Stripped, I stopped feeling conspicuous.
There was a large sheet of toweling hanging
in the locker and, following the precedent I saw around me, I draped myself in
the thing before I pushed the locker door shut and heard it click briskly into
place. I realized that only my thumb, pressed into the indented print, would
unlock it again. My towel was blue, a more fortunate color than Coriole had
drawn.
When
I looked again for Falvi I saw him just putting his headdress into the locker.
There was a purple towel around his thin shoulders and his thin shanks were
meager beneath its lower edge. He was alone.
In
momentary panic I looked around the room, finally spotting an orange towel and
a freckled back receding down the hall toward an archway at the end through
which steam drifted fragrantly now and then. My job, I realized, was to get to
Coriole now and introduce myself before Falvi could intervene.
If
he recognized me, Falvi was perfectly capable of doing something disastrous to
us both out of sheer nervous inefficiency. For all I knew he had some deadly
weapon hidden in his locker or carried in a fold of the purple towel. Why he
was so anxious to kill me I wasn't quite sure, but the fact that he was seemed
evident. It was not mine just then to question why.
I
was about to follow Coriole and trust to luck when from the corner of my eye I
caught a flash of striped and flapping headdress near the entrance by which I
had come. Dio stood there, boldly surveying the hall. I turned my back hastily,
thanking heaven for my protective coloration in this hall of nakedness and
colored towels.
Dio
would not, I thought, know me unless I were careless. But I was fairly sure he
would know Falvi. And then a flash of brilliant wisdom shot through my head and
I conceived the perfect scheme for getting rid of both Dio and Falvi.
Barefooted,
I pattered down the warm tiled floor after Falvi, who was now making for the
far archway. I caught up with him about where I'd intended, beyond that misty
threshold. The room beyond might have been any size, for it was filled with a
dry tingling kind of steam or smoke, hot and perhaps electrically charged. My
hair stirred a little and a vibration ran along my skin.
Shapes moved dimly in that curtained dimness.
Falvi had blurred to a skinny shadow and I walked faster, timing myself
carefully. I had to say something to him, but I didn't want to give him time
enough to recognize my face.
Just
behind him, I hissed in his ear, "Listen! It's important! Your life may
depend on it!"
He
kept right on walking. As I'd hoped he was thoroughly conditioned to Malescan
commercials.
I
spotted a group of shadows near me and just before I drifted toward them I
whispered, "Dio's following you, Falvi!"
He
did a double-take. It wasn't what he'd been expecting to hear. Probably his
mind assumed for a second or two that he was being ordered to drink Elixir.
Then he snapped to a halt and turned round wildly.
But
by then I was safely concealed among that shadowy group of Malescans. I could
see Falvi, though not clearly. But he couldn't see me because he didn't know
where to look. In that dim room one figure was exactly like another.
I
saw the vague shape that was Falvi hesitate, take a few steps in one direction,
pause again. Then the priest made an indistinct gesture with his arms and
plunged away, back toward the locker room. I drifted in that direction, but I
didn't leave the concealment of the dry steam. There was no sign of Dio, but
Falvi was getting dressed again with furious haste.
I
retreated into the mist. I started looking for Coriole. There are few
red-haired, freckled men in any single social group. At least, I found only one
in the series of interlocking steam rooms here — and that one, of course, was
Coriole.
I
located him after a rather nightmarish sequence in which I floated in ghostly
fashion through what gradually became an Elysian Fields, peopled with
apparitions. I was considering following Ulysses' example and opening a vein in
my arm to attract the ghosts when I unexpectedly saw a pair of freckled legs.
They were covered with red hair, floating in the fog, the soles of two feet
staring up at me with an odd air of black expectancy.
Luckily the air was thicker than ever here.
All I could see was Coriole's legs, but the rest of him was presumably reclining
on a couch. I clutched the towel around me and dithered slightly for a bit. Now
that I'd found the man, I didn't know what came next.
I
was going on a very tenuous assumption after all. Maybe it would be better to
feel him out a little before I gave myself away. I saw the dim outlines of an
empty couch beside Coriole's and I sat down on it tentatively. It had a firmly
yielding surface, slick and warm. I sat staring at Coriole's dim outlines,
revolving opening lines in my mind and discarding them. There was a long
pause. Then Coriole stirred.
"Falvi?" he asked. "Is that
you?"
It
was all the cue I needed. I tried to remember what little I heard of Falvi's
intonation. I pitched my voice to the front of my mouth, spoke thinly and a
little through my nose like Falvi and ventured one brief word.
"Yes."
Then
I held my breath. Apparently it worked for Coriole rolled over to face me and
said, "Lie down then. Relax and tell me what happened."
Willingly
I lay down because it hid my face better. However, my scheme was not to do the
talking but to get Coriole started. I said experimentally, "Well — "
Somebody blundered past us in the steam.
Coriole laughed the already familiar thin chuckle and said loudly:
"Did
you hear the story about Blandus? He was complimented on his stable and he
said it was because his horses ate such fine pargani. Even the Hierarch didn't
get anything better. The joke was of course, that it's exactly what did happen on Tuesdays!"
I forced
a polite laugh. The blunderer stubbed his toe, swore and receded. Coriole, an
orange-shrouded ghost in the steam, got up and nudged me.
"There's
an empty clear-room at the end of the row," he said. "This is too
public. Come on."
I
made a great effort to put myself in Falvi's mental shoes and said in Falvi's
voice, as we stumbled through the dimness:
"Coriole, what am I going to do?" I
put some of Falvi's panic into the query. "Do what Dom Corbi did,"
Coriole said with dreadful joviality. "Call it a nolli secundo and the second race won't be run today."
I
was silent, wondering just how well I really understood Malescan.
"The
first thing I want you to do," my guide said in a lower voice, "is to
find that man from New York. The second thing is to stop playing with fire. You
had no business fiddling with the Earth-Gates and you ought to know it by now.
For a man as timid as you, Falvi, you do run the most terrible risks."
"I
meant to kill him," I said, remembering Falvi's defense on the
communicating waffle I had watched him use.
"I
know you did. I'm inclined to have you killed
if you do. Fortunately for me he did get away. The next thing's to find
him."
"Why?" I asked.
"He
needs me and I need him," Coriole said illuminatingly, taking me by the
arm. He paused for a moment. Then he said, "Here's the passage. Look
out!" He stumbled heavily and fell against me, gasping an apology as we
both reeled.
"Sorry," I said
mechanically as I regained my balance.
Coriole
stood perfectly still in the mist. He did not speak and he did not move. I
couldn't even hear him breathing. There was something terrifying about that
sudden immobility. I didn't understand it for a long moment. Then it came to
me. I heard the echo of my own apology still hanging in the air, and it was not
in Malescan I had spoken.
I had spoken English.
Coriole
laughed very softly. My mind went blank with dismay. Why had I done it? The
answer was slow in coming, but when I realized what it was I felt my jaw drop
and I gaped stupidly at the dim outlines of my companion. I'd had a good reason
for speaking in English, after all. Coriole had spoken in English too. When he
said "Look out!" he'd said exactly that, no "Se-garde," which is the Malescan equivalent.
Coriole
was still laughing, still almost silently. Now he said, "Name of Burton,
by any chance?" and this time he spoke Malescan again.
There wasn't any use in trying to keep up the
game any longer. I said, "That's good. How did you know?"
"Falvi
talked to Clia. And not all the priests idolize Hiërarch."
"Do I know Clia?"
"You knew her as Lorna Maxwell."
"Oh," I said. "Did — who
taught you English? Falvi?"
"No,
my father taught me that. I don't know much of it — he went away when I was
only ten. Here, come on in where we can look at each other."
He groped forward, guiding me by the arm.
"My
Falvi wasn't so good, eh?" I inquired, rather hurt, as I followed him.
"On
the contrary, my friend. You took me in until I touched your arm." He
slapped me gently on the shoulder. "If you'd ever taken Falvi by the arm
you'd know the difference. Falvi worries too much. Your arm would make two of
his. I didn't know you weren't a spy from the Hiërarch, of course, but I had a strong
conviction and it's proved itself. Here we are. Come along."
The room was small. Coriole shut the door
behind us and locked it while I glanced at the furnishings of the place. There
was no fog here though the air tingled as it had done outside. There were two
low couches with the same slick warmish padding on them.
There
was a table between them. Above it on the wall was a large blank screen with
dials set in a row across the bottom, each stamped in gilt with Roman numerals.
I think I realized then for the first time that I hadn't seen Arabic numbers
anywhere in Malesco, only the angular and, to me, confusing Roman numerals.
Then
I turned around and saw Coriole's face. For a second or so the bottom dropped
out of my stomach and I could only stare. After a while I heard myself
murmuring tentatively, "Uncle Jim? Uncle Jim?"
Coriole
grinned blankly at me. He didn't understand. And of course he wasn't really
Uncle Jim. But the likeness was so strong it couldn't be coincidence. Most
red-headed men with freckles look alike — it's a familiar mold of countenance
that seldom varies much. But this was a closer likeness than you could explain
that way.
Coriole had the same long-jawed, raw-boned
face, the same heavy freckling, the same pale blue eyes, the same bristle of
red hair growing to the same line on the forehead. He was younger than I by a
few years, I thought. I counted back rapidly and the idea that struck me then
has probably been obvious for some time now in this narrative. But at the
moment it rocked me back on my heels.
"What
was your father's name?" I demanded.
"Jimmerton," he said promptly.
"He came from Paradise."
I
sat down heavily on the nearer couch. "His name," I said, "was
Jim Burton, and he came from New York."
"I said he came from Paradise," Coriole nodded agreeably. "Jim
Burton? Burton?
But you — "
"That's right," I said numbly.
"He was my uncle."
Coriole
sat down heavily too and we stared at each other in silence. After a while he
shook his head dubiously. He had more reason than I for doubts. After all, I
had the likeness to go on and Uncle Jim's tales. Coriole had nothing but my
word. I offered what facts I could.
"Jim
Burton looked just like you. He disappeared about thirty years ago and was gone
for ten years. When he came back he lived with us for a while, quite a few
years, in fact. He taught me Malescan, when I was a kid. How else could I be
speaking it?
"He never had much to say about where
he'd been, but he was ill for a long time and I think he'd had a lot of trouble
during the time he'd been away. He died three years ago. He left me his
apartment. That was how — "
"Of
course!" Coriole said suddenly. "Jimmerton came through the
Earth-Gates from his own library in New York. I remember that much. It was how
you came too and Clia. What a fool I am! I never connected her with Jimmerton
at all. She didn't know the name and I supposed the entry between the worlds —
the nexus — had shifted since my father's day. But it didn't! And you — we're
cousins, aren't we?"
"I
guess so," I agreed, looking at him in a dazed way. Malesco was real, of
course. I couldn't doubt that any more.
But
somehow this finding of relatives in the place brought it a lot closer than I'd
been able to realize before. It was like finding cousins in Graustark or
through the looking glass. Coriole was staring at me with the same dazed
wonder.
"Think of that!" he murmured,
scanning my face. "Think
of it! A cousin from
Paradise!"
"Look,"
I said firmly, "let's get this straight right now. What makes you people
think New York is Paradise? Believe me, I know better!"
Coriole grinned crookedly. He glanced at the
locked door.
"Yes,
I know better too. But if anybody else hears you saying so you'll find your
head off your shoulders before you finish speaking. The Hierarch doesn't
encourage heresy, you know."
I leaned back on the couch, settled the blue
towel comfortably around me, and crossed my legs. "I don't know anything,"
I said. "You've got a long session of explaining before you. But first —
I'm hungry. Have I got enough money here to buy myself a meal?"
I held out the handful of coins Dio had given
me. Coriole smiled and punched a button in the wall without rising.
"Refreshments
go with the admission fee," he said. "I want to know a few things,
too, such as where you got that grain and how you found your way here to start
with. I ought to warn you — " He gave me a pale blue stare, quite coldly.
"I'm
not taking you entirely at your word. I think you're telling me the truth, but
if you are you can't prove it. You fooled me back there in the steam-hall into
saying enough to hang me if you're a spy, so I've got to go on the assumption
you aren't. We'll pretend we believe each other, shall we?"
"Play it from there," I said.
"Maybe something will come out that will convince you. I can't blame you
for suspecting the worst, I suppose. My speaking the language ought to be the
best convincer I can offer."
"It
is. I'll admit that had me puzzled for a moment. But — "
A tap at the door interrupted him. He gave me
a wary glance.
"You
answer it," he said. "I can't work the lock."
He
reached out to slip the handle of the door sidewise, then sank back. I opened
the door. Fog drifted in. There was a man in pink shorts outside, pushing a
three-tiered cart that jingled.
"Refreshments,
sir," he said. "You rang?"
"Oh yes," I said and accepted the
tray he handed me. Coriole silently shut and locked the door as I set down the
tray.
There
was a basket of rolls that looked very much like the bread I was accustomed to.
There was a dish of boiled eggs differing from Earthly eggs only in the bluish
pattern on the shells. There was a pot of cheese and a pot of something
steaming that smelled like tea and a big bowl of some chopped-up stuff that
smelled pungent.
There was a tray of apples, peaches, some
bunches of bright red grapes and two other fruits I didn't recognize. It was
not what I'd have ordered, but it looked good and I was hungry. We helped
ourselves, munching away from opposite couches, glancing warily at each other
from time to time, talking as we ate.
And
I found out at last under what circumstances New York could be Paradise.
CHAPTER VIII
BEFORE
the wall opened to pitch me through into another world, Malesco had in my mind
been one with GraUstark, Ruritania, Oz, Islandia, Gormenghast, Erewhon, the
Utopias of Plato, Aristotle and Sir Thomas More, all the other imaginary
worlds I had assumed existed only in human minds. Now — I wonder.
It may be that every one of them is as real
as Malesco or only a little less real, in the plane of what Coriole called the mudi mutabili. He also referred to the same theory under the
name of orbis
inconstans and probabilitas-universitas-rerum. But with Malescans it was no theory — it was
fact.
I'd
read enough about the alternative futures theory to understand him without much
trouble, though he took it for granted that I knew somewhat more than I did. I
had to pull him up now and then and get a fuller explanation. Bat briefly, this
is what happened at the point of split-off between
Earth
and Malesco, away back in the Claudian times of first-century Rome.
Up
to the end of the reign of Caligula there was no Malesco. As a world it had
never existed, never even been thought of. Our past and its were identical. But
when Caligula died something definitive happened and there was a split between
Malesco and Earth. Instead of Claudius a man named Rufus Agrícola mounted the Roman throne. After that men with
unfamiliar names ruled Rome until it fell to the barbarian invaders and its own
inept policies.
In
our world a religion which Caligula had persecuted spread until it controlled
all of Europe. In Malesco a religion Caligula had encouraged spread instead
like wildfire until it submerged every other faith. It was an extremely
practical religion, originating in Egypt, and it had ruled all Malesco ever
since until the present day.
Its name was Alchemy.
Alchemy had made a utopia of Malesco and there is nothing worse than a utopia, though very few people seem to realize it.
Only in Butler's Erewhon and Huxley's Brave New World is it suggested that the
standard utopia
can be a version of hell
itself.
For
in most utopias
it's taken as a matter of
course that the stability of the community is the goal of mankind. Private
happiness is unimportant, rigid caste systems are enforced and total paralysis
of society is the prime condition without which the utopia wouldn't last half an hour.
Maybe Alchemy's coming out of Egypt had some
connection with what happened to Malesco because Egypt for two thousand years
was the most rigid "utopia"
in history. Like Egypt,
Malesco reached a peak of growth early in its career. And like Egypt its priesthood
got so firm a hold upon the government that though all growth ceased long
before, the society continued in a sort of deathless rigor mortis far beyond
the normal life-span of a civilization.
Malesco
for the past five hundred years had stood dead still, a society frozen into
stasis and operated solely for the benefit of the priesthood and that of
whatever conqueror briefly seized control. The priests let the tides of
rebellion wash over the country, carry a conqueror to a throne and maintain him
there until somebody else pushed him off — but it was the priests who
manipulated all the wires and collected all the benefits.
There
was conflict between church and state, of course. But in Malesco the powers of
science were with the church, for Alchemy was based on practical science. In
Malesco, Galileo would have been a priest, not a heretic. Gunpowder once
conquered vast countries. In Malesco, only priests of Alchemy could possibly
have discovered the uses of gunpowder; the only textbooks on chemistry were in
the temples.
As
in Egypt, for a long, long time there was no promise of relief even in the
hereafter for the hoi polloi. Only the priests and the kings could expect to
survive and enjoy the benefits of heaven.
About three hundred years ago, while in our
world America was being colonized and Shakespeare was getting drunk at the
Mermaid Tavern and Eastern Europe was falling piece by piece into the hands of
the Turks, Malesco had a worldwide revolution. The priests for the first time
found themselves face to face with a real problem.
Malesco
is a smaller world than ours. A lot of it is ocean and a lot more unexplored
wilderness. But on every inhabited continent there were tremendous waves of
terrorism as the common man got mad enough to let himself go. They weren't very
wise or intelligent men because they'd never been allowed to be.
They had no more knowledge of self-control
than so many angry children because they'd never been trusted with
self-control. When they ran wild they instituted a reign of terror all over
Malesco, taking out their anger and frustration on each other when no priests
were handy.
It was just what you'd expect — look at the
French Revolution ■— and it made a very ugly blot in Malescan history.
The blame was all the priests' and they easily managed to shift it right back
on the revolutionists.
And the priests, as usual, found a clever way
to pacify the people and still get their own way. The same thing happened in
Egypt. A profound social revolution was neatly transferred to the plane of
religion and solved there without making a ripple in the course of real human
living. If it hadn't actually happened in Egypt, you'd find it hard to believe
it could happen anywhere outside the pages of romance.
The
priests simply promised the people that if they would be good and go home they
could look forward to seeing Paradise, too, some day after they were dead. It
worked. The Egyptians accepted the Osiris cult without a murmur and went on
building pyramids. The Malescans went right on under the heavy yoke of the
Alchemic priesthood and accepted the promise of New York as their future
Paradise.
At
that point in the story I choked over my supper and Coriole had to pound me on
the back. He also showed symptoms of telling me another joke which my
contretemps reminded him of, but I shut him off quickly.
"Go on," I urged. "I want to
hear more about Paradise."
Coriole
went back to the egg he'd been eating. The blue patterns on the shell gave it a
festive Easter-egg look and apparently the shell was edible too. He was
crunching it between his teeth in a way that gave me gooseflesh.
"You're
sure," he inquired, crunching, "that nobody in your world knows about
Malesco? Because from the very first we've known about Earth. The split wasn't
very sharp at first. The priests, the clairvoyants and oracles and people like
that made contact very easily.
"We
figured out about what happened long ago. From then on the priests kept telling
us that Earth had taken the right path and we'd taken the wrong one and were
going to be punished for our sins."
He
dipped the egg in sugar and tossed what remained of it in his mouth with a
flourish.
"The
letter A," he said, "is the symbol of the mundi mutabili, the variable worlds. You've noticed it in the
city, I expect. The priests make an A with their fingers and thumbs when they
talk about New York. The apex of the letter represents the point where Malesco
and Earth divided.
"The
two shanks are the separate, diverging paths as the worlds draw apart. The
crossbar, of course, represents the bridge by which the virtuous go to their
reward in Paradise. It's also the bridge by which you and Clia and Jimmerton
came to Malesco."
He grinned at me suddenly. "Would you
like to see Paradise?" he asked. "I would."
Coriole
got up, shaking crumbs from his orange towel and fiddled with one of the
gilt-numbered dials under the screen.
A
large glowing A dawned slowly on the wall. Then it faded, music swelled
impressively in the little room and a priest's voice began to chant some solemn
words I couldn't understand very well. I imagine it was archaic Malescan, but I
caught the name of New York repeated several times.
Then
the clouds which had been rolling luminously over the screen cleared and a
shining city took place. I leaned forward. We were looking down at an angle
from several thousand feet up and, sure enough, we were looking at New York.
I
could see the Battery and the fringe of wharves lying out in the rivers all
around the lower edges of the city. I could see Central Park making a flat
rectangle of green in the distance and the tall midtown buildings stuck up
like monoliths above the patterned streets.
I
could even see the angle Broadway makes out of the welter of the Village, and
down at the tip of the island a magnificent cluster of dazzling white
skyscrapers shot out continuous streamers of gold light.
It
seemed a little odd that the Eiffel Tower should be standing in the vicinity
of Chatham Square and something like the Pyramid of Cheops cast a huge
triangular shadow across the approaches to the Brooklyn Bridge. But otherwise
the city was unmistakable.
"I don't seem to remember," I told
my cousin dubiously, "that the City Hall has a halo like that. And the
Empire State isn't really gold-plated, you know. And —"
"I believe you," Coriole said.
"This isn't a real reflection of New York. It's something the priests
worked up for public release."
"But how did the Eiffel Tower get
there?" I asked. "That's in Paris."
"Don't quibble. It's sacrilege to
question the Alchemic version of Paradise."
"As a matter of fact," I said,
eying the streets of Paradise with fascinated attention, "I've been
wondering why they picked New York at all. It's such a young city, historically
speaking. Why, three hundred years ago when you had your uprising it wasn't
even called New York."
"Oh, Paradise used to be London,"
Coriole explained. "Then there was a shake-up in the priesthood and after
that all the best people went to New York when they died. Only the priests are
reincarnated in Paradise, you know. Did I tell you that?"
"Reincarnation is the keystone of the
religion. You've got to work your way up by virtuous living until you get reborn
a priest. When a priest dies — flash! — he
finds himself driving up Fifth Avenue in a golden chariot drawn by dragons.
It's a fact!"
I looked at him narrowly, wondering if this
were another of his terrible jokes.
"You'd like to see it?" he asked,
leaning toward the screen.
"No, no, I don't think I could stand
that," I told him hastily.
"All
right," Coriole said. He paused and his grin faded. "It's funny when
you look at it objectively like this," he went on, "but it's tragic
when you consider how many generations have lived and died in what amounts to
slavery, with no more reward than the prospect of an impossible after-life like
that to keep them quiet. In one way maybe the Alchemists are right, though.
Earth can't have gone any farther astray than we. Perhaps theirs was the better
course after all."
"I
doubt it," I said. "The Industrial Age was bad enough but the Atomic
Age looks pretty grim too, from where I sit." It reminded me of something.
"What about industrialism in Malesco?" I asked. "You've got a
mechanistic civilization, but the people seem to take some perfectly obvious
gimmicks awfully seriously. That projection of Lorna on the clouds, for
instance — "
"You know how it was done?" Coriole
leaned forward suddenly, his pale blue eyes shining. "Do you know?" "I know one way. There may be
others." "Then it was no miracle?"
I snorted. Coriole's
freckled face wreathed itself in smiles.
"We need you, cousin," he said.
"The priesthood has controlled all the devices for what you call
'mechanistic society' ever since they began to appear. These things are
officially known as miracles. Everything a man can't do with his own bare hands
or tools he can make himself out of raw materials is classed as a miracle.
"If
you punch a button and a hidden bell rings — that's a miracle. This screen that
brings pictures out of the air is a miracle. Nobody but an Alchemist is allowed
to question how they work. You see?"
I sat back and tried to picture life in New
York operating by miraculous subway, miraculous taxis, miraculous electric
power. I couldn't do it.
"And the people put up with that?"
I asked incredulously.
Coriole shrugged.
"People
put up with a lot," he said. "Now and then they stage a revolution
and thrones change hands, but it never shakes the hold the priests have. That
revolt three hundred years ago came nearest to it, and you know what happened
then.
"The people have been trained to be
fools for too long to outwit the priesthood. About a generation ago, though,
something did happen that had the Hiërarch worried for a while." He
paused and looked at me quizzically.
"What happened?"
"My father came to Malesco,"
Coriole said. "He must have been a great man, Jimmerton. I wish I'd known
him better."
I looked at him in silence, thinking of the
red-headed boy who had been growing up in Malesco all the while I was growing
up in Colorado, each of us learning the language and customs of Malesco and
cherishing the memories we had of Jim Burton, who had vanished out of both our
lives.
"Go on," I said.
"What happened?"
"He came through from Earth during one
of the Equinoctial Ceremonies. Stepped right through the Earth-Gates into the
Temple while the Hiërarch was chanting about New York. The people were all worked
up to a great pitch of emotion and they were ready to accept Jimmerton as a god
from another world.
"If the Hiërarch had had any sense he'd
have let them do it. But he began yelling about red-haired devils and the
priests dragged Jimmerton off to jail."
Coriole
looked wistful. "Those were the days," he said. "I wish I'd been
alive then. I wish somebody'd been ready to grab the opportunity when it came.
The people of Malesco were wild. They'd have risen against the Alchemists in
one mass if they'd had any leadership at all. But they didn't.
"There
were people among the jailors who weren't afraid of the consequences, though.
My grandfather was one of them. So was my mother. They smuggled Jimmerton out
and took him to one of the East Bay villages and people made pilgrimages to see
him. Oh, those were great days!
"The
priests couldn't keep the news quiet. And they couldn't catch Jimmerton,
either. They tried hard. They tried for ten years. Jimmerton lived in the
mountains and organized his followers for an all-out attack on the Alchemists.
They say he never slept twice in the same place for months at a time.
"My
mother traveled with him and helped with the organization and training. I was
born in a rushing boat on the Gonwy within sight of the Alchemists' campfires
at the height of a campaign against the revolutionaries."
He
paused again, his face darkening with introspection in the way I'd seen Uncle
Jim's face darken so many times when he sat silent, thinking about things 'I couldn't
imagine. Now I knew. And this time I realized that all my wild fancies about
the hero from Earth battling against fearful odds were not so wild and fanciful
after all.
I'd
just got at them from the wrong end. Things like that do happen, in just the
way Coriole was recounting. You don't often find the dashing hero with the
muscles of a giant, swinging a six-foot sword against overwhelming odds while
the heroine quails lushly in the background, inspiring him to superhuman
efforts. That much was phony.
But
entirely unromantic-looking men like Jim Burton actually do find themselves in
desperate situations sometimes and engage in pure melodrama to escape. I was
glad the heroine had been a brave and intelligent woman who didn't waste her
time quailing in corners. I didn't think Uncle Jim had indulged in any fake
heroics, either.
Our
own segment of current history is full of tales like his, men who lead
guerrilla warfare against intolerable situations and strike no dramatic poses
while they're doing it. 1 couldn't imagine Uncle Jim striking poses.
"What happened
then?" I asked again.
"Oh,
Jimmerton was defeated, of course," Coriole said, and sighed. "What
did you suppose? They caught up with him finally. I was just old enough to
remember him afterward. He and my mother were resting in a mountain village
after a long campaign. I was having a nap that afternoon under a tree by a
spring behind the house. I remember it very well, really."
He sighed again.
"There
was a miracle," he said bitterly. "The whole village — well, no use
going into all that. The real miracle was that both Jimmerton and I did escape.
But he never knew about me. I was badly burned and buried under a sort of
avalanche the explosion started.
"An old shepherd dug me out and brought
me back to life three days after I was buried. When I could ask questions again
I learned Jimmerton had gone back to Paradise. What really happened, do you
know?"
I
shook my head. "He never talked about it. He taught me Malescan and told
me a little about the city, how it looked, what the people were like •— not
much. He was ill for a long time, you know. Maybe he was injured in the —
miracle."
"I suppose he was. My mother was killed
and of course he thought I was dead, too. He must have given up after that. If
he'd come back — " Coriole was silent a while.
Then he said heavily, "Well, maybe I'll
finish the job he started. Maybe you and I together can do it. What do you say,
Burton?"
I blinked at him stupidly. "How do you
mean?"
He made an impatient gesture. His pale eyes
were cold and eager.
"You know the things we need to know.
You're from Paradise too, but you're not a puppet like Clia. You could teach us
— "
"I'm an actor, Coriole," I said
firmly. "That's all — just an actor. I don't know how to whip up an
atom-smasher out of an old washtub and a jury-rigged cigarette lighter. There's
nothing I could teach you."
"You
can count, can't you?" he demanded in a sort of desperation. "You
know the Arabic numerals through zero, don't you?"
I nodded mutely, staring at
him.
"I
don't," he said. "I can't. We aren't allowed to use Arabic numerals.
It's a treasonable offense to learn them. All we have are Roman numerals and
you can't work out anything but the simplest types of problems with that
clumsy system. Do you have any idea what that means?"
I did, dimly. I nodded again, remembering
what I'd read about the invention of zero and all the mathematical intricacies
it had led to. With the old numerals multiplication and division themselves had
been tremendous undertakings. With Arabic numerals the man in the street could
learn arithmetical tricks only Roman scholars could perform — and that
laboriously.
"I
see what you mean," I said. "I don't know much about modern
technology, but I do know how closely the development of physics, for
instance, ties in with mathematics. I can see your problem. Those Alchemists
are pretty smart boys."
"I've got a good organization now,"
Coriole said, still with the strange cold eagerness that rather repelled me.
"Here's the setup. I won't go into details but I got in touch with a lot
of Jimmerton's old lieutenants and we learned by his mistakes.
"We've got to strike at the heart of the
Alchemists — at the Hiërarch himself. We can't win by nagging at the outskirts,
the way Jimmerlon had to. I've got men in key positions everywhere. Like Falvi,
you know. He's one of the top men in Alchemy."
I
nodded dubiously. For my money Falvi was a broken reed so far as conspiracy
went. But it wasn't for me to say so.
1 "The people are with us," Coriole went on, his cold violence
making every word crackle. "Clia's coming was a setback. For a while we
hoped we could use her, but the priests got there first. They're terribly
cunning. They never miss a bet. And they'd learned their lesson when Jimmerton came through."
"What
happened?" I asked yet again. "With Lorna — Clia?"
"I'll
show you," Coriole said, reaching for another gilt dial below the screen.
CHAPTER IX
AGAIN
the golden A began to glow slowly before us. The voice chanted again in the
same archaic Malescan I couldn't follow. After a moment or two fog began to
roll across the screen and music swelled majestically.
The
music sank and an echoing hum and buzz of voices replaced it. We were looking
down a long room, enormous, crowded with men and women, at a high dais at the
far end. It was the voices of the people that hummed above the music.
"That's the Alchemic Temple,"
Coriole said.
It was a vast room and, curiously, you could see
very little of it. The upper walls and all the ceiling were hidden by rolling
fog, no doubt accepted by the congregation as a minor miracle though it was
obvious that concealed pipes must be puffing it out at intervals. You could
even see the disturbances in the clouds now and then where fresh fog came in.
It
gave an air of tremendous mystery to the Temple. Through the shifting veils of
it you could once in a while catch a glimpse of the walls and you could then
see the great colored and gilded images on them. There were stylized animals,
lions in red, green and yellow. There were black eagles, red eagles,
salamanders in gold, all the planets labeled in luminous characters.
I
had a vague memory of the alchemic symbolisms and knew that these figures
represented chemical terms. But to the people they obviously represented only
mysterious secrets of the priesthood. The people were watching the dais.
On
the wall at its back there was a vast round window looking out over the city. I
saw the great globe of water with the fiery fountains playing around it, the
roofs and streets beyond. It was the same view of Malesco I had first glimpsed
through the shimmering air in my apartment. I watched with great interest.
"This
is part of the usual Equinoctial Ceremony," Coriole said, reaching for
another egg. "They give us a glimpse of Paradise and a lecture about how
to get there. Only this time, something went wrong. Watch."
On the dais a great deal of ceremonial
arm-waving was going on. Enormous coiled horns were being blown with solemn
hootings, priests in brilliant robes did some kind of a trudging little dance
before the window and the glass in it began to cloud. Then right down the
middle the cloud quivered and opened like a cat's pupil dilating — and there
was New York.
The horns blatted triumph. The people gave
one enormous emotional sigh. The priests sang out all together on a single
sustained note and then let it quaver down the scale to silence. We all looked
at Paradise.
This was the real thing. There was no Eiffel
Tower or Great Pyramid in this New York. The camera appeared to be moving
rapidly up Fifth Avenue from a considerable height. It was a foggy evening in
Manhattan and the lights of the city shimmered and twinkled spectacularly.
On
the far side of the Park the diamond-studded apartment house peaks floated on
a sea of mist with black treetops silhouetted against its base. I felt
impressed and strangely homesick. I could see what a conviction of Paradise a
sight like that might give people who didn't know New York.
The
vision floated swiftly away beneath us. Traffic made streaks of bright gold
through the fog — sainted priests no doubt, driving fiery dragons along Fifth
Avenue. I could see what they meant.
"This
is only visual, you know," Coriole was explaining at my elbow, crunching
blue eggshell between his teeth as he talked. "They thought it was
perfectly safe. They didn't know about the flaw Jimmerton came through. Look
now — they're going to strike it in a minute. There! You see?"
New
York reeled dizzily sidewise in the temple screen. It was an immensely unsettling
feeling. The whole congregation screamed and appeared to stagger. The horns
gave a series of disorganized hoots.
Fifth Avenue soared straight up the sky and
turned upside down and the priests in Paradise could be seen calmly driving
their dragons across the firmament. Then the whole city blurred like rain on a
window and there was an uncanny moment when I could hear Lorna's voice, very
thin and small.
"Eddie,
look at me! Eddie!"
Then
far away I heard my own voice, growling at her. It was a shocking moment of deja vu. Shadows whirled in the screen. It must have
been a quick glimpse straight into my apartment and my own past, but it
happened too fast to mean anything from this angle.
A
scream welled out of the spinning shadows, a scream that began thin and distant
and swelled like a siren wailing. It was the same scream I had heard
diminishing into nothing from the other side as Lorna fell through the gap
between worlds and vanished from Earth.
The
shadows seethed. Then very clearly I saw Lorna's face, distorted with terror,
spin quite slowly and vanish behind a screen of her swirling hair. There was a
high vibrant note like music that made the eardrums ache. Lorna tumbled out of
the chaos on the screen and sprawled on the dais face down, her hair fanning
across the gilded floor.
"Look!"
Coriole said quickly. "Watch — everything will flicker for a second. There
— see that? It's where the priests cut out a bit from the records. You know
why? Can you guess? Because every man and woman in the congregation breathed
one word when they saw the figure come through. Jimmerton!" He sighed.
"I
wish they'd tried to arrest her and get rid of her. Things would have been easy
for us then. But the Hierarch was too smart for us. That's the Hierarch, in the
gold robes — the fat man. Watch."
A broad, squat figure, built like Friar Tuck
or Santa Claus without the beard, trundled importantly forward and bent above
Lorna. Then he turned and raised both arms toward the people. The rising murmur
of the congregation had a note of menace in it, I thought, but they quieted to
hear what he would say.
"An angel has come down to us from
Paradise," the Hierarch announced importantly in a voice so amplified that
I
felt sure he had a mike somehow concealed in his golden bib.
Lorna lay quiet on the dais. I
could see now that she must have struck her head against something when she
fell. It wasn't like Lorna to stay quiet more than fifteen seconds at a time,
especially when she had the chance of a lifetime to attract attention from a
crowd.
"The shock of emerging in our troubled
and sinful world," the Hiërarch went on with unction, "has proved too
great for the delicate nerves of this heavenly being. We must pray that she
survives the grossness of our sphere — "
The
picture flickered again. Coriole crunched eggshell and said, "A little
more came out there. That was when the congregation began to roar. They
remembered what happened to Jimmerton. Probably the Hiërarch did have some such
thing in mind, but he knuckled under fast enough when he heard the people
protest. He didn't dare risk another uprising. Now watch."
Without an apparent break, the Hiërarch steadied
after his flicker.
"By
the Alembic of the Great Alchemist," he said solemnly, "I swear to
you that this angel will be given every care. Look, she begins to stir — "
He stood back and Lorna was seen twitching slightly.
"We
will prepare her for her sojourn in this humble sphere of ours and obey her
orders in all things," he went on. "You will be summoned again when
she is ready to receive you. And now, my faithful people, let us chant a song
of thanksgiving for this visitation from Paradise."
Dubiously
the people began to sing as the horns started up again.
"That's enough of that," Coriole
said, dusting his fingers and flicking off the screen. "Now I'll show you
something really
interesting. Watch
this."
He
got up and knelt before the screen, feeling under the ledge that held the dials.
His eyes went slightly crossed with concentration. I heard metal squeak faintly
on metal.
Then
Coriole said, "Ah!" and lifted the whole panel of dials neatly off.
Wires strung from its inner face into the intricacies of the mechanisms
within. He laid the panel down on the table, keeping the connections taut, and
began to fiddle delicately with bare copper wires inside. I cringed a little.
"This
has to be done carefully," Coriole announced with some importance.
"Invisible fires can melt your bones if you touch the wrong plates here.
But Falvi showed me how to do it and it isn't hard. Now I've got to twist these
threads here to those over there — like this, and the thing's done. Excellent.
Now you'll see something."
Without
replacing the panel, he twitched a dial again, and this time the screen lit up
abruptly without the golden A, the music and the chanting. There was something
very businesslike about it now.
"This," Coriole told me, "is a
secret known only to the priesthood. The usual talking screens show only a
selected few pictures the priests prepare. But if you know the secret you can
use the same screens to look almost anywhere you like and eavesdrop on anything
that happens in the Temple.
"It's
a miracle," he added wryly, glancing at me. "What would you like to
see now?"
"That
machine," I said promptly. "The thing that opens the gate between the
worlds." I expected to return by it at some very early date if possible,
though there seemed no point in discussing that just now. Still, it would be
useful to know a little more about this vital link in my plans.
"How does the thing
really work, anyhow?" I inquired.
Coriole gave me one of his
pale, oblique glances.
"I
don't even know how they make the lights go on at night," he said
morosely.
"Well,
let's have a look at the machine anyhow. Can you show it to me in operation?
From behind the scenes, I mean."
"Yes, I think so. It's on record. For some
reason they put a sequence on file not long ago. I ran across it just the other
day, eavesdropping. A friend of yours is in it, incidentally."
He grinned at me and worked
diligently at the dials.
Without
fanfare a familiar room began to take shape on the screen. The lines for a
moment were fuzzy and out of focus, then they steadied and I was looking at a
strictly unrehearsed scene in a room I had left a very short while ago.
There
was the wall of instruments that meant nothing to me. There was the curtained
corner where I'd hidden from
Falvi.
The round, blank face of the machine looked emptily into the screen. But this
time it was partially obscured.
The
little room was full of people. The illusion was so perfect that Coriole and I
seemed to be peering secretly down out of some window in the wall which had
escaped my notice when I had been in the room.
Gazing
down on the blue-striped heads and robed shoulders of the men around the
machine, I said, "Just how does this work? I mean — "
"It's
a spy system. The upper priesthood uses it to check on the junior members and
the attendants. You can look into almost any room in the Temple except the
Hierarch's private chambers and the secret rooms. Now and then they make
recordings of something they want to study — like this. Watch."
He
leaned forward a little as a stir of the crowd around the machine heralded
something new. Then the heads and shoulders moved aside, leaving a lane, and
apparently from directly under us a veiled figure moved. Evidently the hidden
lens of the camera was located just over the door.
Coriole leaned still further forward as if he
were trying to see around corners in the reflection itself. I saw the men's
faces turn to the newcomer, anticipation and excitement showing under every
striped headdress.
The
veiled woman lifted her arms and put the silvery gauze back from her face. It
was a familiar gesture. I knew the way her arms moved and the way her head and
neck rose from her shoulders . . . But now there was something different. For
there was a studied grace in every line of this figure, a certain theatrical
self-assurance that had never existed in the original I remembered so well.
"Clia," Coriole
said in a flat voice. "I think you know her?"
I
craned as he had. I wanted very much to see more of this foreshortened and
half-averted face. But all I could glimpse was a flicker of much longer lashes
than the original Lorna ever had, a flash of beautiful nose and much improved
mouth as for an instant she glanced up at the machine.
It
was Lorna, all right — but not the Lorna I knew. This [■ was the Clia of
the cloud picture, with eyes like blue swim-■ ming pools.
"What makes you think I know her?"
I demanded.
"Clia
got a thorough questioning as soon as the priests could give it to her,"
Coriole assured me, still trying to catch sight of the averted, foreshortened
face. He did not take his eyes from the screen, but he went on.
"They
had some trouble but eventually they managed to make her understand the
language. Falvi told me how. Something about abstracting the words she seemed
to grasp and working out a sort of basic Malescan for her. They wanted to know
how she'd happened to fall through and whether anybody else was likely to come
too. That's when we got a description of you. Wait — "
He
held up one hand for silence. I leaned forward again. The reflected synthetic
Lorna in her upward glance had finally realized what this machine was. I think
the intoxication of all those admiring glances had probably slowed down even
farther her naturally slow reactions. But once she grasped what this wall full
of gadgets really was she shrank back a little and said distinctly,
"Oh, no! Let me out of
here!"
"What did she
say?" Coriole demanded with interest.
I
told him. He nodded, still watching. He had not taken his eyes from the screen
since the graceful figure veiled in silvery gauze appeared on it. Now there was
a small turmoil around Lorna, many voices murmured reassurance and they coaxed
her forward a little farther.
"What's going on
here?" I demanded.
"Wait,"
was all Coriole would say. So I waited. We watched the rest of the little
recorded scene play itself out. There wasn't much. Lorna was objecting
violently to the machine and I caught a distinct echo in her new melodious
voice of the old raucousness as her temper mounted.
The
priests soothed her in vain. The picture ran on for a minute or two and then
Lorna whirled with a wide outswing of her veils and stalked from the room,
passing directly under our observation post so that we had one brief glimpse of
her transfigured face.
She
had turned into the Beautiful Princess, all right, I thought morosely. Every
detail was there as nearly as I could tell from glimpses. The limpid eyes, the
lovely features, the melodious voice only a little marred by the old harsh
tinny quality when she was angry.
So,
in spite of myself I was acquiring the attributes of the hero of romance. Here
I was in search of the lovely heroine. I couldn't go back without her. And the
organization of rebels was ready and waiting for me to join them so I could
overthrow the government, release the princess and return home in triumph.
It made me feel very uneasy.
Coriole
sighed as Lorna flounced off the screen and the picture faded.
"Exactly what was happening there?"
I demanded. "Why were they trying to — "
"Suppose you answer a few questions for
a change," my cousin interrupted. "What do you know about Clia? What
are your relations with her? She seems to have come through the Earth-Gates from
your living quarters. Is she your wife by any chance?"
"God forbid," I said.
He
grinned a little, not much. "Good. I see what you mean. She's a fool, of
course. Nobody could mistake that. But they've made the most of her. Falvi
tells me she was a very ordinary-looking woman when she came through. They gave
her some of their miraculous treatments and made a beauty of her and they did a
fine job.
"You
saw how those priests reacted? Falvi says they studied the problem very
carefully and chose exactly the features and attitudes that would be most
appealing to the average man. A sort of visual semantics, Falvi says. And they
called her Clia because —" He
paused and chuckled.
'This shows you how clever they were. They
went through the records of recent deaths in the country and located a deceased
woman who'd had a facial likeness to the new angel. Then they idealized and
beautified her into the sort of being you'd expect from Paradise.
"And
they spread the word that the deceased Clia had led a life of such extreme
virtue she'd gone straight into Paradise, bypassing various incarnations and
the final incarnation of priesthood on the way. They announced that Paradise
had arranged for the transfigured Clia to come back and tell her story as an
inspiration to the rest of humanity."
He was smiling but it seemed to me that his
gaze still lingered on the blank screen as if it searched in retrospect for the
beautiful face which the priesthood's "visual semantics" had
assembled so deftly. Apparently their cleverness had paid off all too well.
I
had an idea that a good many Malescans were about half in love with their
angelic Clia or the idealization that had been handed to them under that name.
I grinned to myself. They ought to know the real Lorna. That would cure anybody
of romantic ideas about Clia.
Coriole
twisted a dial idly and a pale uncertain image of a hospital ward flickered
before us. He twisted again and the ward dissolved into a room seething with
dim translucent children, whose voices came to us in a sort of shrill whispering
yammer tuned down almost to silence.
It
occurred to me that if the priesthood maintained hospitals and kindergartens
it might not be wholly without regard for the welfare of the people, selfish
though the regard probably was.
I
thought in a vague way that before I threw in with Cor-iole's side the least I
could do was try to get some unbiased slant on the opposition, too. Naturally
Coriole was painting his side white and the other side black. If I'd met the
priesthood first no doubt I'd have heard an entirely different story with all
the values reversed.
Then
I remembered it was the priesthood I'd met first with lamentable
results. Falvi's desire to wipe me out had been purely personal, of course, to
cover his own illegal tampering with the machine. Dio, on the other hand, had
seemed rather interesting.
"Do you know a priest named Dio?" I
asked.
"I do." Coriole
sounded grim. "Why?"
Then I told him my little story about the
procession through the streets. He looked thoughtful at the end of it, but he
shrugged.
"Well, I hope Falvi can handle him.
Dio's unpredictable. We've tried to sound him out for joining us, but what he
wants is a sure thing. He never takes chances unless he's sure they'll pay off.
And he isn't quite sure about us.
"Still, I think he has an idea we might
just possibly get somewhere, some day. Dio's for Dio first and the winning side
next. I suppose he'll keep his mouth shut, but it was clever of you to
sidetrack him like that. You're just the man we need, cousin. I'm glad you're
going to join us."
"Am
I? You seem to have it all worked out. Just what plans have you got for me,
Coriole?"
"That
depends on whether you join us willingly or not." He gave me a very chilly
glance. Then I saw an unexpected grin flicker across his face and the Coriole I
had first met showed through for an instant — Coriole in his civilian guise, so
to speak.
"As the lamb said to the curran,"
he added, " 'How's that for High?' "
"Very
funny," I told him unsympathetically. "Suppose I don't join you?"
"Then I'll turn you over to Falvi,"
my cousin said, reverting to his military guise with no perceptible effort.
"I'm supposing you do join. Then we'll take you to the mountains and give
you a course in politics and strategy. You're much too valuable to lose, my
dear cousin. For instance — "
Someone rapped sharply on the door.
Coriole
and I looked at each other. Neither of us moved. The knocking came again, very
loud in this small room. Coriole switched off the screen. Then he got up
cautiously and crossed toward the door. On the way his bare foot came down on a
broken eggshell and he swore in a whisper, hopped a time or two and limped the
rest of the way.
"Who is it?" he demanded.
"It's
me — Falvi," an excited whisper declared through the panels. "Let me
in. They're after me!"
I
could see Coriole's grimace. That was Falvi, all right. Let him in so he could
lead the police right to the vital spot! Coriole, standing on one foot and
brushing at the injured sole, spoke softly.
"What's the
matter?"
"I think I've killed
Dio!"
Coriole
sighed and unlocked the door, opening it just a crack. I saw Falvi's thin nose
thrust eagerly through.
"Let me in, Coriole!"
"Now wait a minute," Coriole said
in a patient voice. "I'm busy here. What makes you think you've killed
Dio? Did you shoot him?"
"No,
I hit him over the head. I tell you they're after me! Let me — "
"What did you hit him
with?"
"My sandal. Coriole,
will you let me — "
"Then
I doubt if he's dead, you fool. You aren't that powerful. Calm down a minute,
will you? Who's after you?"
"Well,
the guards, I think." Falvi's excitement was beginning to subside.
"You're
as safe there as you'd be here," Coriole told him unsympathetically.
"Wait — I'll be with you in a second."
He
shut and locked the door and turned back to me. Then his eye fell on the
dismantled screen and he limped forward and began to work rapidly with the
copper wiring he had just readjusted.
"I've got to calm him down," he
said. "I'll give you fifteen minutes by yourself to think things over. How
about it?"
"Have I got anything
to say?"
"No."
My cousin gave me his ready grin. "Not a word. You sit tight and don't
make any fuss. When I get back we'll start in planning. I'll lock you in so you
won't be bothered."
He
finished the rewiring, snapped the panel into place and straightened, wrapping
himself afresh in the orange towel. "Don't try to get out," he
warned. "Remember, Falvi's right outside."
"Have it your own way," I said,
watching him unlock the door. A drift of the fragrant fog seeped in through the
opening as he looked cautiously out. He spoke to me casually over his freckled
shoulder.
"Clia's our real key," he said.
"You sit here and think of some way you could talk her into joining our
side. We'll have to work fast, you know. Angels from Paradise can get to be a
drug on the market if they hang around too long. The Hierarch's planning to
send her back to New York any day now." He slipped out into the swirling
fog.
"See
you later," he said and shut the door. I heard the lock click.
CHAPTER X
I
HEARD my brain click, too. So Loma was going back to New York any day now.
Well, well, I thought, in a rather dazed fashion, staring at the blank screen.
And I'd had my trouble for nothing, had I? Obviously, that was what the scene
with Lorna at the machine had meant. I thought back, trying to remember exactly
what had been said. Lorna was objecting and the priests were coaxing her. Why?
I
could understand her aversion toward the machine, once she recognized it. That
transition between worlds was a very disagreeable experience. For some reason
it seemed necessary to persuade her to go willingly. Probably they were
planning a big public ceremony when the angel returned to Paradise. It would
spoil the show if she didn't seem to want to go back.
But she was going back. Well, then, what was I sitting here waiting for? All I had
to do was get to the Hierarch and persuade him to send me with her, and
everything would be fine again. Or was it that easy?
I
scratched my ear and tried to think. There was something wrong here. If this
were the familiar melodrama I was reliving, I'd have dived head first into the
excitement my cousin was offering. It seemed to promise unlimited chances to
swing swords, gallop on fiery steeds and lead lost causes at the top of my
voice. But I felt strongly that I was never cut out to be a hero.
For
one thing, the hero never pauses to consider what's in it for him before he
plunges into combat to overthrow the government. And how did I know the
majority of the Malescans wanted their government overthrown? I had only
Coriole's word for it.
Assuming
that everything he'd said was perfectly accurate, even then I knew I was
lacking in the stuff of heroes. It's true that when he was telling me Uncle
Jim's story he seemed to be speaking to a quality in my mind that responded. I
knew then what real heroes are like — and I knew I wasn't one of them.
It takes conviction, for one thing. Maybe it
takes a man who's a misfit in ordinary life and I wasn't a misfit. I was an
up-and-coming young actor with a future in show business. I had everything in
the world to go back to if I could take Lorna with me and clear myself.
I thought of that pickpocket on the street.
The average hero would have bounded to his defense without waiting to get the
facts straight. Before I meddled with Malescan affairs it seemed to me I had
better find out exactly what I was doing.
I told myself flatly, "Eddie, let's not
get romantic about this. Uncle Jim's case was entirely different. For one thing
he was a born adventurer. For another he had a wife and son in Malesco to fight
for. "No," I went on, "not me. It's not my battle."
Then
I poured myself a cup of the cold stuff that had once been hot tea. It had
dregs in it. I -sat there looking at the patterns they made in the cup,
stirring them around and trying to keep my own future from taking permanent
shape just yet.
The
door clicked. Coriole stuck his head in, wreathed in floating fog. He looked
worried.
"I've
got to go and check up on this Dio business," he said. "Maybe the
fool did kill him. You'll be all right for half an hour." It wasn't a
question, it was a statement.
"Think so?" I
asked.
"Oh,
yes. I've got a man watching this door. I really have as a matter of fact. I
know it sounds like a bluff, but it isn't."
"Just what do you think I can do for you
as long as you keep a rope around my neck, Coriole?" I demanded.
"Oh,
I have lots of plans," he assured me cheerfully. "You're going to
help me get rid of the Hierarch."
"Sure, sure," I said. "That
ought to be easy."
"As
a matter of fact," he repeated, "it won't be too hard the way I've
got it figured. Our boys couldn't do it, but you're from Paradise. You could
get to him. We've got his successor all picked out too — one of us. A lot of
the priests are with us, you know. Once the Hierarch's out of the way we'd have
a good chance if we worked fast. Oh, you'll help us all right."
"I think you're crazy," I said.
"No."
"Of course you will. Cheer up, it won't
be as hard as you think. The people are with us. You just sit tight here and
watch the pretty pictures. I'll be back for you in half an hour. Remember,
there's a man with a gun outside, so do as you're told." The word he used
for "gun" was a Malescan word naturally and it didn't mean revolver.
But the intent was obvious.
"Good-by,"
I said, and turned my back to him. He chuckled and the door clicked. I sat
there and stared at the blank screen.
After
a while I got up and squatted in front of the panel, feeling around under it
the way Coriole had done. There were smooth pegs underneath, fastening it to
the wall. One of them was loose. I worked at it and in a minute it fell off
into my hand.
I could get the tips of my fingers under the
panel and I gave it a tentative pull. It came soundlessly away from the wall
and I had to grab to keep it from falling. I laid it on the table as Coriole
had done and squatted there, peering into the thing's innards, wondering just
why I was doing this.
"Maybe
there's something to be said for the priesthood," I thought. "I'd
sort of like to hear their side before I take any permanent steps either way.
There's never been an argument yet where all the right was on one side. It
seems to me I've been brought up on the theory that when a people has an
oppressive government it's the government they really want after all.
"By
and large, they keep it because they want it." I thought that over and
added, "The majority anyhow." Then I said to myself, "Cut out
the hedging, Burton, and see what you can make of this gadget."
Actually,
it wasn't so hard, even without the secret knowledge Falvi had imparted to his
boss conspirator. But being familiar with the "miracle" of
electricity, I handled the Malescan version of a television set with due
caution.
I'm
no expert, but I've had to pick up the rudiments of hook-ups at one-night
stands backstage in the days when I was working with semi-amateur groups. And I
know a little about video, Earth version. Malescan-style video might be
different, but I soon realized it wasn't too different to understand.
Pretty
soon I discovered that Coriole hadn't known what he was doing. Obviously he'd
gone through his routine by rote, without knowing the reasons. Television
occupies a channel 6,000 kilocycles wide against radio's 10 kilocycles and
there's just so much space on the normal band. Back in New York — Paradise,
that is — I knew we were getting around this by shifting video to a higher band
in the spectrum, and doing it with adapters.
This
set had such an adapter. It was what Coriole had rewired, and I went through
the same motions more cautiously, automatically changing the frequencies on
which the set would receive. I went farther than Coriole. His method had missed
a whole band of upper frequencies.
It
seemed almost too easy, but when I thought about it I saw it wasn't, given the
Malescan mentality. Malesco was a religious society — Earth's is a mechanistic
society. Males-cans were conditioned to skip a link in process because they
didn't know it was an important link. They believed in the priesthood as we
believe in machines.
I'd
be the last man to contend that we don't miss a few important links in our own
thinking, of course. How many people on Earth have a real sense of process? How
many can visualize and evaluate the process that goes into the making of a loaf
of bread, for example? Or know the use of the iconoscope with its mosaic light
cells, the real miracle of video?
I
switched the screen on again and as before that businesslike fast light-up
occurred, with no rigmarole of Alchemic A's or background music. I had no idea
how to get what I wanted on the thing or even a very clear notion of what it was
I wanted.
But
I twirled a dial experimentally at random and found myself apparently sailing
over a range of mountains studded here and there with shimmers of lights that
were probably villages. It was night. I could see the stars in their familiar
patterns and, far off at the edge of the sky, a glow that looked like a city.
The one I was in? Probably — maybe there was only one city in this world. Was
Malesco the city, the country, the world? One or all? I never knew.
I
turned the dial again and the picture snapped off like a light and instantly
flickered into a focus on a mountain village. I seemed to be looking down the
main street of the little town, lighted by overhead incandescents that filtered
through the trees lining the street.
It looked like a pleasant small-town street
back home except that the parked cars were missing, and the adolescents
strolling two by two wore strange garments and clustered around a corner
building that was not a drugstore but — perhaps — a temple. I couldn't see
clearly, but I thought I caught a glimpse through the shadows of the leaves
that looked like red and yellow lions and shining salamanders painted on the
walls.
I tried the dial again and was at some club
meeting of middle-aged Malescan women who seemed to be reading poetry to each
other. I visited a theatre where a version of Medea was being staged and it startled me very much until I realized that
Euripides belonged to a period of the past which we and the Malescans held in
common.
It wasn't until much later that Rufus
Agricola edged out Claudius and the two worlds split apart. I wondered briefly
what had really happened at that point of cleavage. In Caligula's time there
were portents in the sky, weren't there? It must have released quite a lot of
energy, that cosmic schism in space-time.
There
seemed to be practically nowhere in Malesco — city, state or world — which this
video screen couldn't picture with the right dialing. I sat there, feeling
like a spider at the center of an endless web reaching out over a world — by
coaxial cable or relay towers or some version of miracle we don't use ourselves
— and spying on every dweller here.
The
priests were missing no bets. The wonder was that they hadn't caught Coriole
already — unless they hadn't cared to. Could that be it? Was he not as
important as he thought, not as dangerous? Or were the Alchemists wise enough
to permit latitude for the blowing off of steam?
For
ten minutes or so I swooped and soared over Malesco, my vision riding the
air-waves of an alien world, moving in vast curves above the heads of
unsuspecting people whom I would never see or know. I tuned in briefly on a
vision of New York, and had again that disorienting feeling of being in two
places at once, the surge of homesickness as I sat in an alien room on an alien
world and looked right down on the familiar streets of my own neighborhood.
It
was when I was trying to find in my fumbling way what kind of screen the New
York scene was projected on that I ran into my fatal error.
New
York without warning went suddenly blank in a blinding dazzle of blue-white
light. The brilliance centered in the lower right-hand quarter of the screen
and seemed to spread from a minor sun which had come into unexpected being
about two feet from my face.
The
light was so strong I couldn't look at it, so curiously compelling that I
couldn't look away. I sat there paralyzed for a moment, feeling jagged
lightning flashes of pain zigzag through my head, helpless to turn my eyes
away.
Then
the sun blinked out and I slapped both hands to my eyes and squeezed my
forehead to keep it from splitting in two. Bright orange after-images swam like
amoebas inside my lids. When the pain subsided a little I began to be able to
hear again and I realized that somebody had been asking me the same question
over and over, with increasingly angry intonations.
"What
are you doing here?" a man was demanding. "Give me the code word
before I — "
I
blinked tearfully at the screen. Through streaming eyes I saw a somewhat
unshaven face between the flaps of the priestly headdress, small squinting eyes
boring into mine and, chest-high between us, gripped in a hairy fist, a glass
cylinder about the size of a pint milk bottle, glowing and fading rather
angrily like a large irritated firefly.
I
started to say, "Don't shoot!" and something told me my voice would
quaver when I did it, for I was scared and I didn't even feel called upon to
hide it, in that first moment. However impossible it may seem that a man at the
other end of a video hookup could shoot and kill me through the relay system,
I'd just had convincing proof that he could certainly do me grave harm. Maybe
that thing would kill, at that.
I
wiped my eyes on a corner of the blue towel and put on as haughty a look as I
could manage with the tears still streaming from my stinging lids. I didn't
know what I was going to say but I knew I'd better say it fast. The priest had
caught me at something I had no business to meddle with, and he'd probably feel
perfectly justified in using the fullest power of his milk bottle to punish me
unless I spoke first — and fast.
It
was time for Allan Quartermain or possibly John Carter to take over. I drew a
deep breath and told myself I was a hero. In a hero's loud decisive bullying
voice I said sharply, "Drop
that, you fool!"
The priest's bristly jaw fell slightly. There
is this to say about wearing nothing but a towel: manners make the man when his
clothes are missing. If I'd been wearing a peasant's outfit or a clerk's apron
I wouldn't have got away with this.
But for all the priest knew I might be a
visiting High Priest from the other side of the world. Certainly the fact that
he'd caught me monkeying with the top-secret video band, known only to the
inner circles of the priesthood, would indicate that I might be important.
He
didn't drop his pint bottle, but he lowered it a little and blinked at me in a
puzzled way.
"Let's
have that code word," he said, somewhat more politely. "You've got no
business on this band."
A
rapid summary of thoughts scampered through my head. I knew now why I had been
dabbling at random in the private television relay of Malesco's rulers. In a
half-aware sort of way I'd been hunting an excuse for the priesthood, so I
could let myself confide in them. Naturally Coriole would paint them dead black
to me. He wanted my help.
I
could join Coriole, overthrow the Hiërarch if we were lucky, risk my neck a
hundred times over and finally win the right to take Lorna back to Earth and
resume my job in peace. Or I could quietly walk back to the Temple I'd recently
left, report to the Hiërarch and the chances were he'd be only too glad to get
rid of me by sending me back where 'I came
from, along with Lorna.
Since he'd probably not read Burroughs or
Haggard he wouldn't realize that all High Priests are supposed to be wicked
from preference and spend all their time persecuting the hero and heroine.
Primarily the Hiërarch was simply a businessman, an executive administering a
very complex organization. It would be a waste motion, really, to do anything
to me but send me back, especially since — unless Coriole lied — he meant to
send Lorna back anyhow.
And
yet there was a nagging indecision in my mind, like a mouse chewing at the
foundation of all this logical construction I'd reared. Was it a moral
conditioning I'd got from reading too many melodramas? Or did I really owe
Coriole and the people of Malesco something?
The
priest with the pint bottle settled the whole question for me.
"There's
a squad on the way to pick you up," he said briskly, evidently having
reached a decision while I was arguing with myself. "Be there in ten
minutes. Don't try to get away or I'll burn you to a crisp."
My
first feeling was relief. That was that, then. The decision had been made for
me. But a few seconds of further thought told me I couldn't take this quietly.
I'd got the upper hand over the priest simply by bullying, but it was a precarious
hold. I'd lose it if I allowed the police to drag me off to a precinct station
and work me over trying to find out my secret.
I gave the screen a brisk
tap that made the priest blur.
"Fool!"
I said in my best bullying
manner. "I'm from New York!" I gave him the A-sign with fingers and
thumbs and grinned arrogantly, trying to show I didn't believe in the sanctity
of Paradise.
"Switch me to the Hiërarch," I
commanded while he was still staggering from the impact of my wisdom and
cynicism. It had a real effect, too. His jaw dropped again and he did three
double-takes in a row. He was obviously not certain whether to blast me where I
stood for sacrilege or kowtow to a visitant from Hierarchical circles if not
from Paradise itself.
I
got away with it. This priest wasn't sure enough of himself to switch me
straight to the top, but he'd had enough trying to deal with me on his own and
he put me through to five or six successively higher officials, each of whom
wavered between bewilderment and rage at my attitude.
Finally,
unlikely as it seems, an obsequious face took shape in the screen, murmured a
few warning platitudes about the great audience I was about to be vouchsafed
and, with a good deal of throat-clearing and harrumphing, the Hierarch himself
looked me in the eye.
Seen
this closely he looked less like Santa Claus and more like a juggernaut than
I'd expected from my long-view glimpse. It shows how far astray you can go when
you try to judge a new world by old-world analogies. I was still a little dazed
by my success in putting across such a colossal bluff on such feeble evidence.
The only explanation must be the very low level of Malescan self-confidence in
sub-ecclesiastical circles. The common man, in other words, must be something
of a worm. Back home I'd never have got away with it. Here nobody seriously
doubted that I could back up my grandiose claims.
So,
looking this fat man firmly in the eye, I told him the simple truth. And I
wasn't obsequious about it. I know that in conversation with the mighty you're
supposed to let them speak first and introduce all the topics, but it didn't
seem to me that this man would be made easier to deal with by polite methods.
"You're
the Hierarch, are you?" I said in my loud bullying voice. "I hope
nobody's listening — this is private." But I didn't wait for him to cover his connections. That was his lookout, not
mine. I went right on.
"I'm
from New York," I said. "The girl Clia came through as Lorna Maxwell.
She came from my chambers in Manhattan. I've got something important to tell
you about your organization, but I'll save it until I'm with you. I understand
there's a squad on the way to pick me up here now. If you're wise you'll see
they act as my escort, not my captors. That's all. What do you say?"
The
Hierarch was a clever man. He didn't gape or blink like the others. Neither did
he puff up with outrage. He just stood there, looking at me reflectively out of
his small eyes rimmed with fat. Then he blew out his cheeks and spoke in a rich rather thick voice.
"Very interesting. Very interesting,
indeed. I'll give the proper orders."
Then he sank his chin into three sub-chins
and looked at me stolidly. I had no idea what he was thinking. He was a
remarkable character, this man. Fat, yes, but not obese — obesity changes when
it's dynamic, and he was dynamic in exactly the same degree a bulldozer is.
He
had the same absolute confidence. I had the impression that, like a bulldozer,
if he actually found himself facing an obstacle, he'd pause, back off and roll
ponderously forward again and again, until the barrier was smashed and ground
under.
He
wasn't going to be easy to fool. I couldn't even tell if I'd impressed him.
Those small thoughtful eyes might be looking right through mine into the
chaotic indecision of my brain. I wondered if they were. I wondered so much
that for an instant I felt my own confidence oozing away, which showed me how
dangerous the Hiërarch was. I took a deep
breath, reminded myself of John Carter and Allan Quarter-main again and began
thinking rapidly.
"Look
here," I said, keeping my voice at its loud confident level, "I've
got my reasons for wanting to reach you quietly. I want to walk out of here
without being noticed. Tell your men to knock quietly and then step back and
let me come out without attracting attention. It's foggy here. They can do it
without starting a commotion. Have you got that?"
The Hiërarch
nodded silenly, his eyes still regarding me without expression.
"Good. I'll go to the locker and dress
and then walk back to the Temple. Your men can follow me, but I want them to
keep their distance. I've got good reasons for all this, but I'd rather tell
you privately what they are."
The Hiërarch cleared his
throat carefully.
"Very
well," he said. "Your orders have gone out. They'll be obeyed."
Tiut the way he looked at me was frightening.
And for the first time since I'd fallen through into Malesco, I had the sudden
conviction that this was after all no game. It wasn't a melodrama whose script
I was running through with wisecracking asides whenever I came across a
stereotyped characterization. The Hiërarch fitted no classification I knew. It
wasn't a game with him. He had more confidence than I did, and he frightened
me.
It
was as if I'd been playing soldiers with a bunch of four-year-olds, and
suddenly looked up to find myself face to face with a guy in battle dress,
scowling at me and setting up a bazooka. When the Hiërarch came in, abruptly it
wasn't a game any more. I couldn't fool the Hiërarch long. Maybe I hadn't
fooled him at all.
CHAPTER XI
BUT
HE gave me all the rope I needed. My orders were carried out to the letter. I
put the video screen back in its original condition, ate a few red grapes and much
sooner than I expected I heard a quick soft knock on the door.
"Who's there?" I
demanded quietly through the panels.
"At your orders,
sir," a voice murmured.
"Open the door then," I said.
"I'm locked in."
I thought, "If it's Coriole he won't do
it." But I heard a scraping and clicking outside and then the door swung
inward, letting in a few wreaths of pungent fog.
"Waiting your
commands, sir," the voice said softly.
"All right. Listen." I put my face
into the crack and whispered to the dim unfamiliar face that looked
respectfully into mine. "I think somebody may be waiting in the fog to
shoot me. I've been held prisoner here. Get your men together around the door
to hide me when I come out.
"Once I'm in the fog nobody will
recognize me. Keep close but act as if you weren't following me and make sure
nobody else does. I don't want anybody hurt, you understand — just let me get
out of here without any trouble. Got it?"
"Yes, sir," the face assured me.
And that's the way I got out of the Divine
Baths.
Don't
ask me why I did it that way. I didn't know myself. I could have had Coriole
and his whole gang rounded up and carried away in chains. But all I wanted
right then was to get out without causing any trouble.
I guess I was afraid that Coriole, if he saw me being
openly arrested, might try to rescue me, and I had decided I didn't want to be
rescued. I doubted if he could do it anyhow, but he might try. And dubious
though I felt about my cousin, I didn't want him killed or captured just then.
I wanted everything to stay nice and smooth and quiet until I could get my
brain started again.
And everything did — for
about twenty minutes.
It
took me that long to find the locker room, dress, struggle into my priestly robes
and headdress and start my casual stroll back the way I had come — toward the
Temple.
I
felt like a very different man as I crossed the enormous rotunda of the Baths
toward the front entry. The air still swam with music, voices, confetti,
advertising streamers and drifts of mist. The crowd had not altered except to
increase a little.
Malesco
seemed to be moving toward the peak of its evening entertainment and much of
it seemed to be available right under this spectacular dome. I fought my way
through snowfalls of streamers that wound enticingly around my neck as they
insinuated that I'd enjoy Crescence or a Nip at the Nip Bar.
I knew where I was going this time. I strode
like a hero across the rotunda and out under the arch of the front door. People
were streaming both ways on the broad steps. I went down without looking back.
I felt confident that I was being escorted though I hadn't spotted my faithful
followers in any of several backward glances. Not even Coriole was to be seen
anywhere, and Falvi and Dio — if Dio were still alive — were luckily missing,
too.
I
turned right at the foot of the steps and retraced my path toward the Temple,
which I could see towering above the roofs, a vast white building with a frieze
of the usual colored symbols around its height.
I
had, naturally, no idea that halfway between here and there I was going to
become a hero in sober fact. I was about to perform a deed which would go
ringing down the corridors of Malescan history and alter the course of empire.
But I didn't know it then, nor at the time I did it, nor for some time after.
I wish I could tell you it was a real deed of
heroism. I wish — now — that I could have been immortalized doing something
really dramatic — fighting off fifty men with great sweeps of my trusty sword,
or beheading a dragon at the corner of the Highroad of the Hierarch and
Goldsmith Lane, which is where the thing happened. But it wasn't anything
glorious I did.
I simply lit my cigarette lighter.
Anybody could do it. Most people do daily
without going down in the annals of a world-nation as a deliverer of the
highest quality. I did it absentmindedly, quite without thinking, or I
wouldn't have done it at all.
I was halfway to the Temple. The streets were
crowded and nobody seemed to be paying me the slightest attention. I knew if I
made any false moves things would start happening fast, but I didn't mean to
make any. All I wanted was to get peaceably to the Hierarch and after that back
to New York as quickly and simply as possible.
The
one trouble in my mind was that I'd have to work up some tale for the Hierarch
when I saw him, something worthy of the build-up I'd given over the video
connection. What that would be I had no idea. I'd definitely decided not to
give Coriole away if I could help it.
Of
course if they started limbering up the thumbscrews I'd probably talk. Coriole
had shown no signs of tender feeling for me and I wasn't obligated to undergo
any third degrees for him. He had meant to use me for what I was worth to him.
Since I was, in the abstract, sympathetic toward his cause, I'd protect him if
I could but not at the cost of my own skin.
I was racking my brain for a plausible lie to
tell the Hierarch, and realizing with a cold sensation along my backbone how
hard it would be to put any lies across, when a small baldheaded man came
hurrying toward me through the crowd. His bare crown was lowered as he bored along
busily, not looking up.
I
stepped a little aside to let him pass. He wore, I noticed without interest, a
blue cloak with a flat collar of polished metal made in links. It was so shiny
I could see his lowered lace reflected on his chest in a rather disorienting
way as if he had two heads, one of them upside down and chin to chin.
The
odd thing was that he glanced up suddenly as he neared me. He kept his head
down but looked up from under his brows so that I unexpectedly met two pairs of
his eyes, one in the normal place and one looking up horribly from the middle
of his chest, upside down. I shuddered slightly and made way for him.
He
jostled me a little with his shoulder, reached out to steady me and smacked
something hard, smooth and flat squarely into my palm as he did so. It was pure
stupidity that saved me from lifting it openly to stare at it in the light
shining down from the building along the street.
I was so startled it didn't cross my mind for
a moment that this was standard melodrama straight out of Fu Manchu. I suppose
I didn't think of it because the little man was so completely lacking in
romance, with his bald head and his four eyes. A veiled lady would have found
me with all the proper responses on tap but not a stooped little baldhead with
his eyes in the middle of his chest.
He
hurried on past me and melted into the crowd before I had time for any mental
processes to take place. I just kept stupidly on my way, clutching the fiat
thing and wondering what had happened. Luckily this was exactly what I'd have
done if my mind had been clicking like a Gieger counter all along,- so that was
okay. The trouble started when I tried to look at the thing.
Automatically, when I realized what I'd got,
I thrust the hand that held it into my pocket through a convenient side opening
in the robe I wore. All I could think of was to hide it until I could inspect
the thing in private.
My
fingers told me nothing. It was smooth, square, about the size of a soda
cracker. It could be anything. (It occurs to me at this point that most of my
similes in Malesco seemed to turn around eatables and drinkables, probably an
unconscious reference to the fact that I was undernourished all during my
stay.)
These streets were all too well-lighted. You
think of lights as a sign of civilized progress. But as a matter of fact I
suppose they're really a sign of incipient lawlessness kept firmly in check.
Just as broad straight avenues when first introduced into city planning were
chiefly useful to fire volleys of musketry and cannon down, a thing you
couldn't do in crooked streets.
Malescan lighting consisted of looped and
scrolled tubing that glowed like neon and ran along both sides of the streets,
about ten feet above the sidewalk, on the faces of the buildings. The only
break was at crossings.
It was just the opposite to our systems, in
which the streets furnish the channels of illumination late at night and the
buildings are dark. I suppose this was because Malescan vehicular traffic was
quite light. Malesco is a world of pedestrians — or was then.
I had some vague plan of trying to get a
glimpse of my mysterious object while crossing the street. With this in mind I
palmed the thing and drew it out of my pocket, as I stepped off the low curved
curbing into the lanes of lazy traffic. People .were all around me, but nobody
paid me much heed except to get respectfully out of my way when they realized
what robes I wore.
I got the thing out of my pocket. I got it up
within sight in the dim reflection from the neons. I saw only that it was white
and had several rows of gilt script on it which I couldn't read very well. Then
some clumsy fool behind me pushed past and knocked it out of my hand.
My mind scattered its thoughts broadcast. I
hadn't an idea in my head. I just dived after the thing as it went spinning
among the feet of the passers-by, interested only in getting it back before
anybody noticed I had it. Which hope in itself shows the low state of my
mentality just then.
The white square skittered across the
pavement and vanished under the curve of the curbing on the opposite side. I
wasn't thinking at all. I just groped in my pocket out of pure habit and found
my cigarette lighter in its usual place down at the bottom under everything
else. I pulled it out. My thumb automatically touched the wheel and spun it.
Flame leaped up in my fist and I stooped above the dark overhang of the curb.
There
it was, my little white and gild enigma, twinkling in the light. I reached for
it — and fumbled. My finger gave it a flick and away it sailed into some dark
opening under the sidewalk. I heard a distant splash. The plastic soda cracker
had vanished down a sewer grating, gone on its long voyage home in the
mysterious underground of Malesco. And that, again, was that.
You
may as well know now that the thing had been a message from Coriole. That fancy
gilt writing on white squares is the Malescan equivalent of a scratch pad and
you can use it over and over indefinitely. But just then it seemed to me that
the secret of the ages had been in my hand and I'd lost it.
I
squatted beside the curb, heedless of the crowd, cursing quietly and holding in
my fist the newly ignited flame which, they assure me, will never go out as
long as written history survives in Malesco. The first person to notice it was
a middle-aged man with a stupid face. He tapped me respectfully on the shoulder
and I looked up blankly.
It
was then, with the sudden motion, that I felt a draft around my ears and
realized I had somehow lost my headdress in my wild scramble across the street.
In the same moment I realized that my hair was cut in a very unecclesiastical
fashion and that, as I squatted there, my priestly robe had come apart to
reveal very exotic — for Malesco — trousers and shoes and Argyle socks. I saw
the man take all this in.
"Excuse me," he
said. "Are you a priest?"
"No," I told him.
"Why?"
Note
that I'd have said I was if there seemed any chance to get away with the
masquerade. But my other-worldly garments were a bad giveaway and I didn't
want to get into any arguments. I wondered briefly where my escort was and if
they felt this was all part of my mysterious plan. I hoped so.
"Because,"
the middle-aged man said, "I thought I saw you just make a fire. With a machine! Is that little thing a machine? Will you show me how it works?"
Without considering the consequences I
obliged him by blowing out the flame and igniting it again with a spin of the
wheel that threw out brief sparks. The man leaned closer and sniffed excitedly
at the reek of lighter fluid.
"Miracle-juice!" he said. "I
knew it! I've smelled the same holy smell in the air around the pumping
stations. How does it work? Would you explain to me how it works?"
"The
flint strikes a spark — "I began
cautiously and then paused. A second man was peering over the first man's
shoulder and two more had paused on both sides, looking down with incongruous
excitement at the lighter as I extinguished and kindled the flame anew to
illustrate my simple lecture.
That was all it took.
Nobody
could have imagined the hunger for process which must have been consuming these
people, unsuspected for an unguessably long time. It was function and the
process of function that entranced them.
In
New York a man casually working a miracle on a street corner wouldn't attract
any more of a crowd than I attracted at the corner of Hierarch Highway and
Goldsmith Lane in Malesco by operating a simple mechanism in sight of the
public. Miracles they were used to. Machines were the real miracle to them.
"Show
me how it works!" a shrill voice demanded excitedly at my elbow.
"The little wheel turns — why? What happens then? What makes it
turn?"
"Let
me see!" another voice broke in. "Look out, I want to — "
"The little wheel turns," somebody
was explaining importantly back in the crowd. "Then it makes sparks. Then
the miracle-juice catches fire and the man makes a real flame jump up right out
of his hand!"
"It's
a machine!" I heard voices declaring several heads away in the rapidly
gathering crowd. "A machine! The
man knows how to make it work! Look here, it's like this, the little wheel
turns and — "
"Sacrilege!"
somebody whispered. "Treason! Let me out of here!"
But
the angry mutters which greeted this reaction must have made the prudent
speaker shut up, for no more was heard from him though it did seem to me that I
caught murmurs of fear now and then as an undertone to the general rising
babble. Most of it had to do with the little wheel turning and the
miracle-juice, and everyone seemed to be explaining to everyone else exactly
how the machine worked.
I
stood up and flipped the lighter shut. I dropped it into my pocket.
"All
right, that's enough," I said in my loud bullying hero's voice.
"Stand back there and let me by. That's enough, I said!"
Rather
timidly the crowd parted. These people had been conditioned to obedience for
countless generations and the voice of authority made their reflexes work. But
the light of excitement on their faces was not so easily quenched. I looked
nervously around, trying to spot my escort. They were still obeying orders and
I saw no one I knew.
CHAPTER XII
THERE
seemed nothing to do but go on. I ordered the submissive crowd out of my way
again and strode forward, the robe swirling irritatingly away from my trousered
legs. The colors in my Argyle socks seemed to fascinate every eye. I was as
exotically garbed as if I wore velvet and brocade on a New York street.
The
crowd seemed helpless before the double charm of my socks and my astounding
knowledge of mechanics. I heard awed murmurs about the little wheel sparking as
I pushed through the fringe of my admirers and went hastily on toward the
Temple.
It
should have ended there. Probably it would have, nine times out of ten. But
this was the tenth time. I went about fifteen feet, then glanced uneasily back
— and they were following me. Timidly, respectfully, but determined as so many
pet dogs that have no intention whatever of going home, no matter how often you
shout at them.
For
a moment or two I did shout. I waved them back and told them sternly to leave
me alone, to go back about their business. They looked at me, scared but
stubborn. What had become of my escort I had no idea. Maybe they, too, were
among this irresistibly fascinated throng. Maybe they were watching from the
sidelines. Anyhow, they did nothing to help.
I kept at it until I began to feel too much
like a man trying to send his dog home. I had difficulty keeping my face
straight. There was nothing to do but tum away and ignore them, which I did.
Like a pied piper in Argyle socks I stalked down the Malescan street, hearing
the rising murmur behind me as more and more curious bystanders joined my
following throng. The saga of the little wheel was on every tongue. The sparks
it shot out acquired fresh fame with every step I took.
Then
it got worse. I heard someone say distinctly, "He's leading us to the
Temple. He's going to teach us all how to make fire jump out of the little
wheel."
I
whirled angrily. Whoever had spoken was silent now. The eyes of my followers
met mine eagerly. And what could I do? Shouts hadn't moved them. Denials
wouldn't either. This was sheer determined wishful thinking. It was already
bigger than I was and growing every minute. The starvation of the human mind,
denied process, was a thing I couldn't cope with.
Suddenly I felt sorry for them. And I was
aware of a quick, increasing respect. For all they knew
the squads of the Temple guard might swoop down at any moment and arrest them
all. And yet they followed, hypnotized by the glimpse they'd had of a machine
openly used in the street, where every eye could see and every mind understand
how it worked.
So I went on. The rumors spread. They caught
up with me and began to run ahead and they were fantastic. I was going to teach
all Malesco how every miracle in the city was performed. I was going to
overthrow the Hierarch and administer the Alchemic Mysteries myself.
No,
I was hand in glove with the Hierarch and leading them all to their doom. This
latter rumor had no effect whatever. Curiosity was stronger now than fear and
anyhow this crowd was getting too big to punish. Each man took courage from the
number of his neighbors.
By
the time I reached the great square in front of the Temple the murmuring of my
followers had swelled into a low
insistent roar. Nobody was shouting. Nobody was really talking loudly. But the
combined voices had their own volume, and there was irresistible excitement in
it.
I saw the astonished faces
of priests looking out of the gate and peering over the painted walls. There
were faces at every window on this side of the Temple, and in the houses we
passed women and children peered out with timid exultation, and men came from
every doorway to join our throng.
I
crossed the big flood-lighted square slowly, in spite of myself feeling very
important. Common sense told me that I had done nothing very superlative after
all but the awed admiration of the crowd was insidious. It came to me irresistibly
how much more I knew than they did, how deeply they admired me for my wisdom —
also, perhaps, for my socks.
I
expect I strutted a little. It isn't every man who inspires thousands of people
to follow him, helpless to resist as the children who followed the pied piper,
hypnotized by his ability to spin a small wheel and strike sparks with it. It
isn't every man who —
Suddenly
it came to me what I was doing. I stopped dead still for a second. I was a
hero! I was indubitably leading a vast crowd of inspired followers, obedient to
my every whim. I was advancing on the stronghold of the wicked High Priest who
held the beautiful heroine captive in his toils.
I was on my way to rescue Lorna and force the
Hierarch to send us back to Earth and it was my own skill and knowledge that
had made this possible, my own prowess with a flint and steel. Good heavens, it
had happened after all!
"Quartermain,
move over!" I murmured to myself and crossed the rest of the square at a
rapid stride. I felt imposingly tall. I thrust my elbows out to make my cloak
billow in the wind. It was a perfect setup. All I lacked was the long,
glittering sword.
True,
the cigarette lighter had proved more potent as a weapon, but it lacked a
certain something so far as dash went. Still, you can't have everything. What I
did have was far more than I had ever expected, even in my wildest dreams.
I
came to the flight of steps leading up to the entrance gate. As I set my foot
on the lowest step, a man in a gray tunic and cloak emerged from the crowd just
behind me. Another man in the same uniform appeared suddenly on my other side.
Two more followed them and two after that. Five in all — one squad, Malescan
version. Why they deemed it wise at this particular point to take off their
cloaks of invisibility I didn't know.
"Where
were you?" I demanded of the nearest, remembering his face in the fog at
my door, back there in the Divine Baths. "What happened?"
"Nothing,
sir. We followed our orders. We escorted you here."
I
looked at him in silence. No reasoning processes naturally. He might well
explain in effect, "I seen my duty and I done it," and that was that.
If he'd dispersed the crowd as any rational policeman should have done when it
first showed signs of getting out of control . . .
But
by now I was very glad he hadn't. He might have explanations to make to the Hiërarch,
but I was well satisfied. I knew what I was going to say to the Hiërarch. Now I
had force behind my arguments. I was going back to Earth in style with a
send-off suitable to heroes.
Unfortunately
for my self-esteem, I paused at the top of the steps to look back and bid
farewell to my faithful followers.
There they seethed in their thousands. It's
hard to estimate numbers at night in such volume. They filled most of the
square in front of the Temple.
They
stood solidly together, not wavering, not melting away in the back even though
the priests were eyeing them sternly from every window. I had one final moment
of egocentric pride in which I must have looked rather like Mussolini making
chests from his balcony.
Then I caught a familiar eye in the front
ranks of the crowd. Coriole was grinning up at me cheerfully. Beside him was
the bald head of the man who had slipped the message to me and started this
whole mass movement. And then my ego deflated suddenly and I realized what was
behind this demonstration.
It
hadn't been wholly spontaneous, I felt perfectly sure. It wasn't wholly for the
inspiration of my wisdom that they'd gathered to follow me. Coriole's hand
showed plainly in this — Coriole, who had certainly had training in the
handling of mobs.
It seemed to me now that, as I glanced around
the upturned faces, I could spot here and there the sober eyes of the men and
women who had helped fan the flame I lighted. Most of the people were still
drunk with the unwonted excitement of the mob, but there were quiet faces too
and I assigned them, rightly or wrongly, to Coriole's people.
So
he had outwitted me. He'd used me as a tool to rouse the rabble, taking
advantage of as small an incident as the cigarette-lighter flurry to call half
the city, apparently, to a mustering before the Temple. And what happened now
was up to him.
Or was it up to me?
He
was searching my face with sober interest, the smile gone. I met his gaze
without expression. How could I tell what I was going to do? I gave him a nod
and turned away. The squad of my guards closed in around me. The gate opened. I
could see priests milling excitedly inside as I stepped forward.
Coriole's
voice stopped me. Thin and small in the un-echoing vastness of the square it
soared above the low rumble of the crowd. He was shouting a single word, but it
was a rabble-rouser. It was the most dangerous word a man could shout in
Malescan streets.
"Jimmerton!"
Coriole yelled. "Jimmerton!"
The
sound rolled back like an echo through the crowd. You could hear it rising and
taking shape on every tongue, so that at first it was a soft, dangerous babble
of mingling syllables, then a coherent mutter, finally a roar.
"Jimmerton,
Jimmerton, Jimmerton!"
The
sound filled the square and echoed from the Temple walls. The crowd rocked with
it. Someone had given them a voice at last, an articulate word to speak that
would express all they needed to express in a single name. They put all they
had into it.
"Jimmerton,
Jimmerton!"
I saw Coriole nudge the bald man, who jumped
out briskly and ran up the steps a little way, then turned and waved his arms
at the swaying crowd. Everybody within hearing must have known exactly what
that shouted name meant, every connotation of it. But the bald man put it into
explicit words.
"Don't let it happen again, men!"
he cried in a shrill voice to the throng. "Remember Jimmerton! If the Hiërarch
gets this man too we'll never see him again!" His voice was thin and it
broke on the higher notes. It didn't carry, though I could see the cords stand
out on his neck as he tried. But he didn't need any mechanical amplifier to
project his words.
The front
ranks of the crowd caught them up and tossed them back and out until every
listener in the square must have heard what he said. With embellishments and
additions, if I knew that crowd — though perhaps it was done mainly by
Coriole's men, who had spread some of the wilder rumors about me.
"Don't let it happen again!" my
would-be benefactor shouted squeakily but valiantly. "Don't let them do
it! Remember Jimmerton! Remember — "
The
responding roar drowned him out. They were fright-eningly agreed on the single
subject of my future. The Hiërarch was not to have me.
It
didn't suit me at all. I was touched and impressed by this display of courage
in the very face of the Temple, though I had acquired enough sense in the past
few minutes to realize it was no personal tribute they were paying me. I was a
symbol, not a man. I was Function. I was Process. I was all the maturity and
adulthood they had been denied for nearly two thousand years.
They thought I was, that is.
But it was more of a burden than I could
carry for them. This rousing moment in the night was all very well, but what
could it lead to? How could I help them? I couldn't. If Coriole thought he was
rescuing me from my enemies he would have to think again.
I
lifted both arms dramatically at the top of the steps. The crowd milled with
excitement and silence fell across it section by section, the farthest growing
quiet last of all. The bald-headed man turned to look up at me, his mouth a
little open in anticipation. I cleared my throat. My voice usually carries well
enough in a theatre, but it sounded thin and flat in the tremendous roofless
space of the square.
"Let me go in," I shouted. "I
must talk to the Hiërarch. I must follow my own plans. Let me go — but
wait."
Coriole, who had been watching me too, with
the most painful attention, suddenly jumped to the lowest step and shouted as
loudly as he could, "Yes, let him go — and wait! He knows his duty. He
speaks for us all. But remember Jim-merton! Be sure he comes out again! Wait
until he comes! All of you! Remember Jimmerton — and wait!"
"Wait!" the crowd roared, with a volume that made the
steps tremble under us. "Wait!
Remember Jimmerton!"
I
raised my arms again. "Give me an hour," I said. "I'll come back
to you in an hour. Will you wait?"
The responding thunder of their voices had
the volume of a summer storm. They would wait. They remembered Jimmerton once
more, in a tremendous reverberant shout, and settled down into noisy milling
quiet to keep their promise.
CHAPTER XIII
THE
priests were scared. I went in through the gate with my escort, receiving awed
and angry stares from every eye, hearing the sibilance of the whispers that
ran before and after me all the way. Everyone was bewildered. Nobody seemed to
understand exactly what had happened.
There
must have been rumors about my unorthodox tampering with the top-secret video
band. I'd talked to too many people on my way to contact with the Hierarch to
keep that experience quiet. And then the utterly unexpected, apparently
spontaneous springing up of the crowd — it looked like military genius on my
part.
I
wondered what would happen to the crowd. I wondered even more poignantly what
would happen to me. I had a powerful weapon now, but I could so easily fumble
it. I didn't know how the Hierarch usually dealt with crowds. Judging by what
I'd seen and heard it should be easy for him to work a miracle and wipe out the
entire mob down there in the square. I wasn't sure why he hadn't.
We crossed the big hall swarming with gaping
priests, all of them looking at me but obviously stretching an ear apiece
toward the dull noises of the waiting crowd. We came to the shaft down which I
had so nearly dashed myself to pieces.
We stepped into empty air — the shaft
stretched down indefinitely to gloomy depths underground — and rose like
cherubs up the shaft. I may as well say now that I never did learn how that
levitation trick worked.
None of us spoke a word. We soared the full
height of the shaft and stepped neatly out in unison on a platform on the top
floor. There was a broad hall before us painted in gold with salamanders. At
the end of it was a purple curtain looped back over double doors. A little mob
of priests, their head-flaps agitated, hung around these doors, talking in
whispers and rolling their eyes unhappily as they saw us come.
The double doors swung open. We marched in
under the sweep of curtain. And just as we passed the agitated little group I
caught a glimpse of a calm dissipated-looking face among them regarding me with
a rather smug grin. It was Dio.
I would have said there wasn't a square inch
of my brain just then that wasn't packed with worried thoughts, but a small
pinwheel of fresh alarm went off in an unused corner and began shooting out
sparks.
How
much did he know about my interview with Coriole? Did his presence here mean
Falvi's arrest for attempted murder? Obviously Dio wasn't dead, after all. But
it occurred to me that I might be if he shot off his mouth at the wrong time
and place.
He
looked overwhelmingly complacent, like a man who has used great forethought,
picked the winning side and settled comfortably back to watch the losers put up
their vain but gallant fight.
I
didn't feel gallant. I was going to pick the winning side, too. Coriole had
been just a mite too clever, I thought, in maneuvering me into a spot where I
practically had to promise the crowd to fight for them. But he'd forgotten one
minor matter — maybe I wouldn't hang around here to see the crowd demonstrate.
I
had every intention of grabbing Lorna and making the plunge back through the
wall-between-worlds as fast as was humanly possible. After that — well, let the
two factions fight it out between them. It wasn't my battle.
Inside the double doors was a waiting room
lined with nervous priests. Never losing a beat we marched on through. The
nearer we got to the Hiërarch the higher the tension mounted in everyone
concerned.
The priests downstairs had been nervous
enough. Those in the hall had been practically biting their nails. These in the
anteroom almost twanged with tense nerves. I wasn't feeling any too relaxed
myself. The Hiërarch had frightened me even on a video screen.
My guards flung open an inner door and stood
back, deserting me. I went through alone.
The Hiërarch
sat at a big desk made out of solid gold. It was hideous. You couldn't have
crowded one more scrolled dragon or curly lion onto its carving if your life
depended on it. Queen Victoria would have loved that desk.
The Hiërarch
stood up. His eyes met mine. And suddenly all confidence I had been able to
retain so far vanished out of me between one breath and the next. I lost all
desire to make smart-aleck cracks about Malesco. I was nothing but a
second-string actor from a minor Broadway play, astray in the wrong world and
deserted by the phenomenal luck that had brought me this far. The Hiërarch was
no joking matter.
HE
wasn't very tall. But he was broad and solid and his purple and gold robes
didn't add a thing to the immense dignity and confidence of the man. He'd have
looked the same in sackcloth. His little expressionless eyes regarded me with
cold dispassion from under the fat lids.
There were three jittery priests in the room
with us. One of them jumped to pull the Hierarch's chair back as he rose. He
rolled forward with that bulldozer gait toward me. There was a chair in the
way. He didn't even glance at it. One of the priests almost dislocated an arm
snatching it out of the way in time and the Hiërarch surged on.
I think he would have trampled it under
rather than move around the obstacle. I was reminded again of Queen Victoria,
and the legend that she never looked back at her chair before she sat down. She
just sat, confident that someone would shove a chair under her in time. She had
been born a queen, you see.
The Hiërarch paused six feet away and
breathed through his nose, loudly. His voice was thick and rich. He wasted few
words on me. "Talk," he said.
I
looked him in the eye. I thought of Dio hovering outside the door, undoubtedly
waiting the right moment to do or say whatever would be best for Dio. I thought
of the crowd seething around the Temple wall, waiting for me, and a little
confidence flowed back into my mind. Not much. About a teaspoonful, perhaps. But it was more than welcome there.
"You," I said in my best hero's voice, "are going
to send me back to New York with Clia. Now."
We important people don't waste our words. I
snapped my jaw shut and glared at him with a great show of confidence.
The
Hierarch's little eyes never swerved from mine, but he made a soft snapping
noise with one handk A priest hurried up beside him and lifted a
familiar weapon chest-high, facing me. It was another of those glowing milk
bottles and as I looked a warning flash blazed out of it, obliterating
the whole room for a second.
I
didn't dare hesitate. Taking careful aim, I squinted my eyes nearly shut,
stepped forward a pace and with one deft smack knocked the bottle out of the
priest's hands. It bounced softly in the carpet, its glow dying.
"That's
enough of that," I told the Hierarch in a firm voice. "I'm no hired
thug. I came here unarmed. You needn't be afraid of me if you do as you're
told. But if I don't walk out of here unharmed within an hour — well, have you
looked out the window lately?"
The
Hierarch pulled in his topmost chin over a descending series of subsidiaries
and regarded me from under his brows. He had a thin mouth set between the flat
slabs of his cheeks and now the mouth curved up slightly in a grim smile.
"So that's what you meant," he said. "You said you'd explain
when you saw me."
I
blinked stupidly at him. Then I got it. I'd promised to explain in person — and
in person I'd led a mob to his door. Oh, I'd been a smart operator, all right.
The world lost a military genius when I took up show business.
"Right,"
I said crisply. "Now let's not waste any more time. Suppose you send for
Clia and start things moving. I want the two of us back in New York by the time
that hour's up."
"And
your — followers?" the Hiërarch inquired. I hesitated briefly. I could
say I'd disperse them but would they disperse? They wanted me as a leader or at
least a figurehead, not as a vanishing image on a screen that showed me heading
back for Manhattan.
"I'll manage
them," I told the Hiërarch. "Send for Clia."
He
regarded me with his usual lack of expression for a painful thirty seconds.
Then he snapped his fat fingers again. The priest responsible for finger-snaps
hesitated uncertainly, not sure what the boss meant.
"Clia!"
the Hiërarch said venomously over his golden shoulder. The priest cringed and
scuttled for the nearest door.
I
let out a Jong breath unobtrusivly, hoping nobody would notice. It didn't seem
possible that I was going to win. I had only been certain that when you deal
with a human Juggernaut like this one you've got to bully louder and faster
than he does or you'll be trampled under. It appeared to be working, but I
didn't dare relax for a second and I had one insoluble problem still before
me.
Suppose everything went fine up to the very
point of my exit through the screen. The Hiërarch was no fool. He would not allow
himself to be left holding a bag containing a crowd that numbered some
thousands. How could he explain my absence when they began to tear down the
Temple wall to get at me? Did he simply mean to blast them out of existence
with a miracle? If so, why wait? Why not do it now and then dispose of me by
the same easy method?
If
he had really given in to me, then it had to mean he was afraid of the crowd.
Coriole had told me about the priesthood's very real fear of the people when
they were roused. Loma wouldn't have been allowed to survive if the voice of
the people hadn't demanded her, remembering Jimmerton. Now they demanded me and
I thought the Hiërarch didn't dare refuse them or attack them. He could wipe
out this mob, certainly, but Malesco was a big place and short of depopulating
the planet it would seem he couldn't control the people when they got their
temper up.
It also occurred to me as a sort of paradox,
that a miracle exercised now to disperse the crowd might have exactly the
opposite effect. The survivors, in their present mood of intellectual
curiosity, might become violently active to find out what made the miracle
work. I pictured something like a large cannon pouring out miraculous
death-rays, while in-defatigably curious men and women swarmed all over it
poking, prying, peering into the muzzle, turning any available wheels and
chattering excitedly about miracle-juice and the result of sparks.
It was at this point I experienced my first
real twinge about the people of Malesco. Up to now they had been people in the
abstract, a generalization that meant nothing. If Coriole told the truth, they
were a downtrodden populace who had allowed a series of tyrants to dominate
them for a long, long time.
I was facing the latest of the tyrants now,
and I began to realize what it would be like to live as one of the common herd
under a Hiërarch. Maybe they did need help, at that. But, I told myself firmly,
not from me. It wasn't my problem. I was no Malescan.
I had troubles enough of my own. It was true, of course, that I'd
inadvertently led them into something that might turn out dangerously for
everybody concerned. That depended on how the Hiërarch handled things.
CHAPTER XIV
I
HAD used a simple machine and produced a miracle on the street corner. But if
the Hiërarch tried to produce a miracle to disperse the crowd, I thought he
would find he had presented them with a mechanism instead. And they'd want to
examine the thing and see how it worked.
I didn't think he was a fool. It was hard to tell what he was.
At
this stage I began to be aware that there was a distant, disagreeable noise
coming rapidly closer, audible through one closed door and maybe two. By the
look of wincing anticipation on the Hierarch's face I knew he felt about the
way I did. You could always hear Lorna Maxwell a good deal further than you
could see her.
"What's the idea?" her remote voice
was demanding. "Stop shoving, will you? Stand aside, you — let an angel
pass. Who do you think you are, anyhow? Oh, stop shoving. I'm coming. I'm coming.
Just let me alone."
All
this was in mingled English and bad Malescan and was as much a part of Lorna as
her own skin. She didn't mean most of it. She could contrive to get shoved in
the politest company and the monologue of protest was simply her artless way of
being sure people were looking at her when she went by.
The
door behind me opened. The Hiërarch sighed audibly and Lorna Maxwell swept in,
heavily disguised as Clia, the transfigured Malescan.
While
she kept her mouth shut, she was a dazzling spectacle. She wore a sort of
cloth-of-silver robe, heavily encrusted with the images of lions, eagles and
salamanders in jewels which I had no reason to think weren't real. They had
improved her figure somewhat — it hadn't needed much. Seeing her clearly for
the first time now, I realized how tremendously they had improved her face.
She was unmistakably still Lorna but a glorified Lorna, not the commonplace
cheaply-pretty little creature I had last seen on Earth. Her face was almost
funny it was so beautiful. They'd made her into a collection of cliches.
Her eyes were luminously blue, slickly
soulful. Her nose was a delicate masterpiece of modeling. Her mouth — if I had
a copy of Bartlett's
Quotations handy
I could tell you all about her mouth . . . shut. Open, it still looked and
sounded just like Lorna's.
She paused at the door, looking at me
sharply. It took her a few seconds to identify me. It took a few more seconds
for her to get her ideas about me sorted out. What was in this for Lorna Maxwell?
You could see her doing simple sums inside
her head, very fast. Then she made up her mind. She flung both arms wide, the
silver sleeves flailing. She tipped her lovely head back, gave a panting breath
and cried out in a truly silvery lilt,
"Eddie! Eddie, darling!"
And with a rush of glittering robes and a
sweep of shining perfumed hair she was all over me.
There was a confused moment after that. Lorna
is heavier than she looks and she literally flung herself into my arms. It
would have been more romantic if we'd rehearsed it better.
I
tripped over the silver robe trying to get my balance and we almost sprawled at
the Hierarch's feet. Lorna had a tight grip around my neck and was sobbing in
my ear some lines from a play I dimly remembered, something about love and
reunion and bitter heartbreak.
When I got her at arms' length so I could see
her face I noticed she was keeping an eye on the Hiërarch as she went through
her act, just to make sure all this was being appreciated. Lorna is, of
course, one of those persons who never really enjoy an emotion that isn't fully
public.
"All right, Clia," the Hiërarch rumbled
patiently, after a moment. "I take it you know this man. He tells me he's
come to take you back to New York."
Lorna eyed me without turning her head. I realized she had her better
profile turned toward the Hiërarch and didn't want to spoil the pose, though
for all the good it did her she needn't have bothered. The Hiërarch at least
was not entrapped by the fatal charms his priesthood had bestowed on the
visitor from Paradise.
After
a certain amount of thought had passed rapidly through her mind Lorna gave a
sudden squeal and swung around to give me personally the benefit of a really
dazzling three-quarter view. It was wasted on me too, but I could see what an
effect she might have on those who didn't know her.
"Eddie,
you didn't!" she cried. "Really, did you come all
this way just to take me home? Oh, Eddie, I've missed you terribly. I — "
I gave her a shake.
"This
is Eddie Burton, remember?" I said. "I'm not a Hollywood scout. I'm
just good old Eddie. Do you really want to go back?" I spoke in English and
the Hiërarch scowled at us.
"I
certainly do," Lorna assured me, smiling a glistening smile that revealed
every tooth in her head. It was clear that they'd cured her of her phobia about
the machine, at any rate.
"Tired of being an
angel?" I inquired curiously.
"Bored to death. Oh,
it's been fun, but they never let me out of the Temple. I want to go back and
show myself off. Oh, Eddie, didn't they make me beautiful?"
"They
certainly did. You ought to get a Hollywood contract out of this, once you're
back. How does it feel to be beautiful?"
She
smiled at me with sudden unexpected humility, a sudden look of clumsiness and
uncertainty, like a girl dressed up in finery she knows isn't her own. Dimly Lorna
knew this face was too good for her, and she felt self-conscious about it.
Unexpectedly,
I was sorry for her, seeing the old Lorna under this lovely facade, uncertain,
noisy, burning with ambition, terrified of failure and starving for success.
Well, this time she ought to get it.
"We're
on our way back right now," I told her rather grandly, and in Malescan for
the Hierarch's benefit. I hoped it was the truth. It worried me that I seemed
to be getting away so easily with my bluff, but I didn't dare relax for an
instant.
It
was ominous in a way that no questions had been asked about how I got through
into Malesco, what I'd been doing in that room at the Baths, how it happened
that I spoke Malescan intelligibly if not perfectly, above all how I'd managed
to call up that crowd — and why.
The Hiërarch
stood there, looking at me, with Lorna striking attitudes in my arms. He
puffed out his slablike cheeks a couple of times, sighed and said, "You
think so, do you?"
There
was the soft sound of finger-snapping and right then I stopped worrying about
one thing: getting away with my bluff so easily.
I stopped worrying because there was a sudden
downward blur past my eyes and a tight, silky noose closed violently around my
chest and arms. I felt the slam against my spine of a fist tightening the knot
at my back.
At
the same moment something equally tight around my ankles almost threw me off my
balance. My worry about getting away with anything ceased abruptly. I wasn't
getting away with a thing — not any more.
Lorna's great luminous blue eyes grew very
wide. I could see the whites all round them for a moment as she stared over my
shoulder. I turned my head and found myself looking upward into a face about a
foot above my own. An enormous priest was holding the rope around my arms.
Slightly behind him stood another giant with
a rope-end in his hands. The other end trailed downward to my ankles. A slight
pull would throw me flat. I didn't see the least point in putting up a
struggle. Either of these Goliaths could have pulled my head off with a flick
of the wrist.
I couldn't do a thing except keep my face
immobile and try not to irritate these giants into going any farther. I could
only maintain dignity by being strong and silent. So I dropped my arms straight
from the elbow, where the rope held them to my sides. I motioned the gaping Lorna
away and regarded the Hiërarch with a calm, heroic gaze.
He was permitting himself a slight smug
twitch of the lips as he looked at me. "Search him," he said briefly.
A swarm of priests descended on me from some
region I could not see because my back was toward the door. I felt hands
slapping cautiously all over me, searching for the unfamiliar pockets of my
exotic tweeds. They were thorough.
On the hideous golden desk beside the Hiërarch
a little heap of my belongings grew like magic. Every item was regarded with
deep suspicion and handled with extreme care, particularly the cigarette
lighter with which I had kindled that Promethian fire on the street corner.
Finally
I stood there with all my pockets hanging wrong-side-out and no further
possessions on my person anywhere. I saw the Hiërarch regarding Lorna with
quiet satisfaction. Suddenly, I realized why he'd waited until she came before
he cracked down on me. He wanted her to observe his power. Nobody was going to
bluff the Hiërarch, not even a visitant from Paradise, and he wanted the other
visitant to know it.
"Now,"
the Hiërarch said comfortably, "we can talk." He moved with ponderous
deliberation around the desk and sat down, stirring the pile of small change
from my pocket with a forefinger. He looked at me with his impassive
all-knowing stare.
"You
have come here," he said to me coldly, "without invitation. You cause a great deal of trouble out of motives I'm not really interested
in. I know as much about you as I need to know. Things in Malesco were going
along very smoothly until you came, and I intend you to leave them just as
smooth before you go."
I
looked at him hopefully. So I was to go, was I? Where? I didn't ask.
"I
know the method of your coming," he went on complacently. "Falvi
will be properly disciplined for tampering with the Earth-Gates and for failing
to report your arrival. It was Falvi,
wasn't it?"
I maintained my look of
impassive heroic calm.
"All right," the Hiërarch said.
"You were seen to emerge from a room you could not have entered except by
the Earth-Gates a moment after Falvi had left it. You were assisted down a
shaft which was obviously unfamiliar to you.
"You
followed Falvi to the Baths. There you spent some while in conference with a
notorious rabble-rouser. When detected tampering with a Holy Screen you were
able to impress certain of my people with your threats and I allowed you a
certain latitude just to see what your plans were."
He
interlaced his thick fingers and looked at them with modest pride. "The
wisdom of my policy," he went on in a fat voice, "is now clear."
I doubted that. He was probably saying it to
impress his audience, but there was still a crowd outside waiting for me and he
couldn't argue it away. I believed I'd really succeeded in the major part of my
bluff. He'd let me get away with so much because he was really baffled.
I knew more than I ought to know and he
couldn't be sure where my knowledge stopped. Certainly it had been a mistake to
let the crowd move on the Temple. He'd have dispersed them long ago if he
dared. I was arguing myself into fresh confidence. I thought I'd better speak
before it could wane again.
"The wisdom of your policy," I said
with heavy irony, "will tell you to send Lorna and me back to New York
before that hour the crowd gave you is over. They won't want to see any ropes
on me either. An hour isn't very long for everything that's got to be done, is
it? Time's getting short."
He
frowned plumply at me. He hated to make any concessions. It occurred to me
then that he was suffering from a form of hubris, something I dimly remembered defined in
Plato's Laws.
The sin against proportion
had been committed here and the Hierarchs of Malesco wielded powers too big for
their souls.
So they suffered congenitally, I suspected,
from hubris, which is misbehavior through pride. This man
before me would, of course, have been somewhat more than human if he hadn't
developed a certain amount of that sin, since he ruled a world. The office he
occupied was two thousand years old and creaking with an overload of
accumulated grandeur.
Undoubtedly
he was making the other classic mistake of confusing himself with his office.
He arrogated to himself personally all the glory that belonged to the office of
Hiërarch. He was, in a word, vainglorious. Orgulous is the expressive medieval
word for it.
He scowled at me blackly. It went hard with
him to have to back down even by implication. But there was that crowd outside
which he hadn't dealt with yet. I could almost see him remembering it. So he
snapped his fingers again reluctantly.
I felt the pressure of my ropes slacken. They
fell in two loose loops to my feet and I stepped out of them without even
looking down.
"You'll
do as you're told," he said, just to make clear he wasn't conceding
anything. "It isn't that easy. You're right to rely on your mob — but
don't rely too much. I can always disperse them if they push me too far. I'd
prefer not to, but it's within my power to do so. I'll refrain only so long as
it's more convenient to refrain. Do you understand that?"
"I see what you mean," I said.
"Very
well. You and Clia will return to Paradise. A public ceremony is being
organized now for that purpose. You may go on one condition." He exhaled
loudly through his nose.
"On
one condition," he repeated. "That is that you address the crowd
before you go. A short speech is being prepared for you. The people must be
instructed to disperse quietly. They must be told they have sinned in allowing
the fatal treason of curiosity to overcome them. The great Alchemist is
displeased with them all.
"That must be made clear. A few moral
truths about obeying the priesthood and doubling their contributions to the
Temple as a sign of true repentance will be incorporated in your speech. After
that I believe they'll go quietly."
I
looked at him thoughtfully. Maybe they would. I couldn't be sure, but I rather
felt they would. It was clever of the Hiërarch. Certainly it put Coriole right
back in his place. He had tried to crowd me into a position of public savior
which I wasn't at all ready to assume. This was the only way I could think of
that would get me out of it.
But
it made me feel very uncomfortable. Nobody could say I'd encouraged all those
people to stick their necks out by following me to the Temple. I'd done
everything I could to get rid of them. True, now that they were here they were
very useful, but I hadn't asked them to follow me.
I
didn't owe them anything. I'd been deftly maneuvered into this spot and, if I
could be maneuvered out again, that was a matter between Coriole and the Hiërarch.
I was a tool and it suited me fine.
Then
I remembered Uncle Jim and my discomfort deepened. When you came right down to
it this is what Uncle Jim had done, too. Pitched into Malesco unintentionally,
he had accumulated a band of followers, taken on hostages to fortune — at least
I'd managed to avoid that — and eventually deserted when things became more
rugged than he could take. Now the pattern was repeating itself.
"You
have no choice, of course," the Hiërarch put in neatly at this point.
"Your refusal would simply mean the deaths of the people. I'd rather not
wipe out your misguided followers, but if I must I can. Remember, this is my
world, not yours. I rule Malesco."
He pulled in his chins and gave me an
orgulous look. I shrugged. He was perfectly right. It was his world. I didn't want Malesco. All I wanted was to get back to New
York with Lorna. And this was the easiest way to do it.
"It's the people's problem," I
assured myself. "They haven't any right to expect some magic delieverer
from another world to turn up and solve everything for them. If I lay an easy
solution in their laps they won't value it. You've got to work out your own
problems before you get any good from them. That's one of the first lessons in
life."
"If you have any notions," the Hiërarch
said at this point, "that you can burst into inspired speech at the last
moment, please forget them."
I blinked at him. That hadn't occurred to me.
He was overestimating my concern for the people of Malesco.
"Remember
I control all the mechanistic resources of this world," he reminded me.
"The people can't possibly overthrow me. It's no kindness to encourage
them to try. Surely you can see that."
I
did, all right. I glanced at Lorna, who had been unexpectedly silent. She
wasn't following the conversation at all. From the moment she saw a pack of
cigarettes emerge from my pocket it was clear that one devouring desire had
taken control of her. But she seemed to be too afraid of the Hiërarch to say
anything. There was no help to be gained from her. She didn't even know what we
were saying.
I sighed uncomfortably. "All
right," I said. "Let's get started. I'll make your speech for
you." And I began stuffing my empty pockets back into place to give myself
something to do.
CHAPTER XV
I
STOOD on the stage of the biggest theatre I'd ever played in and got ready for
the largest audience. The average legitimate theatre in New York is a tiny
place and it holds comparatively few people at a time.
But
this vast, long chamber with the painted walls would more than contain the
crowd I had left in the square before the Temple. I shuffled my feet on the
golden stage and wished the ordeal were over.
Lorna was beside me, making
nervous adjustments of her robes. The Hiërarch sat on a hideous gold throne,
even more encrusted with ornament than his desk upstairs. There were priests
and priests and more priests everywhere I looked, but the people hadn't come in
yet. The doors were closed.
This
was the dais below the great circular screen that opened upon Earth. It was
just a window now. Through it I could see over the rooftops the great watery
dome of the Baths with the fountains of fire playing over it, and Lorna's
pictured face painted in colored lights on the side of the building.
It
was the same view I'd had from far above when I first emerged into Malesco. I
never understood clearly how they switched the opening between the worlds from
upstairs to the ground floor for ceremonies — but that was the way it was.
Upstairs
it was privately operated and constantly attended by people like Falvi. Down
here it worked only on great occasions — like this one. Of course no great
mystery was involved. We use remote control and coaxial cables and such
gimmicks ourselves, and in the face of such a miracle as the Earth-Gates merely
technical angles were trivial enough.
I'd
spent the last half hour or so cramming, studying my part with the aid of two
priests who acted as prompters. It wasn't a difficult role to learn. In fact,
I'd had time to ask a few tentative questions about the Earth-Gates, for I had
a pardonable curiosity as to the nature of the springboard that was going to
hurl me into a pretty frightening abyss.
To
my surprise the priests had answered my questions — not as clearly as I could
have wished but I managed to piece out some interesting details. I began to
understand why it was that Malesco had discovered the Earth-Gates whereas our
own scientists have merely theorized about such matters.
The
reason was simply that alchemy accepts the idea of transmutation in a
semi-mystical way which is nevertheless founded on solid physical science.
Belief precedes practical application in spite of Newton and the apple.
Before
Newton men knew enough to get out from under, but the theory of gravitation
enabled men to go on from there and create rather than merely to use what was
already at hand. However, not until certain alloys, methods and isotopes were
discovered was Malesco able to build the Earth-Gates.
We use energy to move ourselves from place to
place. With kinetic energy we travel far and fast. But there is another method
— potential energy. We use that when we build a bridge. The bridge must be
constructed in a special way so it won't fall down. It must be made of special
material strong enough to endure the stresses and strains. The Romans used
stone. They couldn't have bridged San Francisco Bay. We use metal alloys so we
can do that.
Now sometimes kinetic and potential energy
are joined in one bridge — a drawbridge.
The
Malescan apparatus to bridge the gap between two worlds was similar. Cathode
and anode may be solid metal; but what jumps between is pure energy, electronic
in nature. So the Earth-Gates were part kinetic and part potential.
When you get into the theory of probability you
start working with its breakdown within the atom. So far our own science has
been puzzled by this, rather as the experts of Galileo's time were baffled when
two balls, one of wood and one of iron, were dropped from the top of a tower
and behaved irrationally in the light of the known science of that period.
Anyhow, Malescan alchemic scientists had also
noticed a breakdown of probabilities within their atoms. Remember, they knew all about Earth, and the space-time cleavage
back in Roman days. They thought this might be the key. Somewhere within the
atom was the missing link. Somewhere, solidly in Malesco — somewhere, solidly
on Earth, were cathode and anode.
The
trick was to find a form of energy that would bridge the widening gap.
Well,
they did it. It took a long time, but they did it. They discovered atomic
energy eventually and then managed to find the right type of energy to bridge
the gap. Oddly enough, that wasn't the hardest part.
The
really tricky work — my priests explained — came, first in building up enough
sufficient potential to cross the gulf, secondly in controlling and guiding
that enormous power. (Remember the atomic bomb? We invented it all right but as for controlling it — )
Moreover
the powers involved were so enormous that sometimes the Earth-Gates got
slightly out of control. The spark would jump the gap of its own volition and
the two worlds would meet briefly — for a second or two — with only a few
square feet of space involved. The gaps always closed again.
Still, this is what must have happened when I
entered
Malesco.
There must have been a brief bridging of the gap, so that when I called Lorna's
name Falvi heard a voice from the air and, sensibly connecting that phenomenon
with the Earth-Gates, let his fatal curiosity get the better of him. Perhaps
that explains Joan of Arc's voices too.
Legend
had it that such phenomena had happened even before the Earth-Gates were built.
Perhaps the two worlds were closer together then, so the gulf could be bridged
more easily. A visitant from an unknown place had appeared once in Malesco —
his name was something very much like Peter Rugg.
And
there was the tale of the Malescan who had disappeared without trace from the
middle of an open field. (Would it surprise you to know that I finally worked
it out that his name, spoken phonetically, resembled Kaspar Hauser?)
I
wish now I had asked more questions. I wish the priests had been clearer. For the
Earth-Gates were among the great miracles of science, and I couldn't
concentrate on them at all because I had stage fright.
I
stood waiting, facing the far end of the enormous room, wondering where the
exit door was, running over my opening lines, wishing again and again that the
next half hour.were over, that Lorna and I were back home again. Then the air
suddenly shuddered with the hollow hooting of trumpets and the whole far end of
the room shimmered before me.
I
thought it was my eyes blurring. Then I saw that the entire end wall had grown
translucent with a pouring flood of pale light. A vast A began to burn upon the
surface of the wall, and I realized that it was no wall but a great curtain.
It
shivered and began to rise. The trumpets tooted their hollow notes again and a
second curtain rose, lead-gray, to reveal a third and then a fourth beyond,
successively thinner and more golden. Now I could see a dim outline of the
square in which I had left my faithful followers.
But the curtains distorted things. It looked
as if the whole square, which had been half empty when I left, was full now of restless
motion. I had thought the crowd would, if anything, thin out a little while it
waited. I had even braced myself to find it entirely dispersed by the time I
got to relying really heavily on the people. But Coriole had been smarter than
I expected.
The
last curtain rolled upward, pure golden yellow, and from the dais where I stood
I could see that the entire square was one solid, seething mass of heads and
faces turned toward me. And that wasn't all.
As far as the eye could reach down the
streets leading into the square there were more heads, more faces, more
restless pushing and surging. It looked as if all of Malesco ■ had
gathered here to send me off with appropriate ceremony. You couldn't see the
pavement anywhere the crowd was packed so tight.
When the curtain rose the foremost ranks
rolled forward in one solid mass and the noise of it surged into the Temple and
reverberated from the walls. The people weren't shouting. They didn't make any
particular noises when they saw me.
I'd rather expected some sort of
demonstration, but I didn't get it. The volume of their voices rose a little,
but each individual man and woman was talking in low, controlled tones and
there was no shouting. It seemed to me that this crowd meant business.
It
scared me. Could I handle it? Could the Hiërarch? I didn't know what weapons he
had, but it looked to me that nothing short of an atom blast could wipe out
this entire mob at one blow. He could, at worst, destroy the foremost of the
crowd.
It seemed to me those endless ranks of people
disappearing down the streets far away could and would surge forward and find
out and destroy the sources of the destruction before the last man was anywhere
near extinction. I didn't look around at the Hiërarch, but I felt a little cool
breath of . . . dismay? . . . move over the dais as the priesthood prepared to
greet its audience.
In
less time than I'd have believed, the hall was packed tight and solid with men
and women shoulder to shoulder, staring up at the dais and at me. And with them
came a curious atmosphere of tension and expectation, so that the enclosing
walls seemed to pack the feeling down tight under the high roof and we all felt
it pressing around us.
Down there in the front ranks I saw one familiar
face — Coriole's.
He was only about twenty feet away from me
and he was watching me like a cat, his pale blue eyes never swerving from mine.
It made me uncomfortable. I looked away — and found I was staring at another
familiar face, this time in the wings and even closer than Coriole. This time
it was Dio.
He still looked sleepy. He still had the air
of a man who's had a hard night and not enough rest. But there was a lot more
in his expression now. Sullenness, I thought, for one thing. I had a series of
quick consecutive thoughts about Dio.
There just hadn't been time until now to
wonder where the Hiërarch got his detailed information about my activities
since my arrival here, but it was obvious when I thought back. Dio, of course —
he had probably been hanging around Falvi's door hoping for a break and had got
one.
Maybe he'd suspected Falvi's connection with
the underground for some while and finally had caught him at it with me. That
would explain his air of avid anticipation when he carried me down the shaft
and set me adrift in the city, hoping I'd lead him to something worth while.
That
was Dio's policy, of course. Coriole had confirmed it if I'd needed
confirmation. Dio was on Dio's side and nobody else's. And now he was sullen.
Why? Well, he'd given the Hiërarch some valuable information, certainly. But
what reward had he got? Not enough, to judge by his expression.
He
hadn't even been inside the Hierarch's door when I went to pay my formal call.
He'd been hanging around in the hall, hoping for crumbs. It wasn't enough for
Dio — not nearly enough. I wondered about promotion in the priesthood. Maybe
it went by seniority. Dio was young. He wouldn't be content to wait another
fifty years for recognition. He'd want it now.
Since his scheme to inform the Hiërarch on
Coriole had failed he'd certainly be watching for something even bigger. I
didn't like having him so close to me. I meant to play right along with the Hiërarch,
of course — I hadn't any choice now — but if I should see any loopholes I didn't
want Dio watching me with that expectant stare, waiting to jump the moment my
back was turned.
There
was a low rumbling along the walls. I looked up.. So did everybody else. And
this time a single deep breath of protest seemed to sweep the whole hall, from
side to packed side. For above us, between the painted animals on the walls,
were regularly spaced Golden A's. There was an ominous glow dawning behind
them.
I recognized it with a shudder. It was the
same glow I had last seen in the bottle-shaped weapons of the priests. My eyes
ached in quick retrospect as I thought of the blinding sunburst of heat and
brilliance those weapons could emit.
But those had been of milk-bottle size. These
were six feet across. The golden A's were simply ornamental scrollwork across
the mouths of so many cannon embedded in the wall. The Hierarch was taking no
chances with this dangerous crowd. One simultaneous glare from those glowing
mouths above us would crisp every human in the hall to cinders.
I
hoped — not at all like a hero — that the priests had some way to shut off the
dais from those blasts if and when the time came to unleash them.
Still there was no demonstration from the
crowd. They weren't intimidated. They weren't even angry on the surface. But
they were waiting. The thousands of lifted faces I could see had a grim set
look, and I could feel in the air that indefinable tension of determination and
hard, controlled patience. Every eye was on me.
My
speech was short. I'd learned it easily enough. The notes were on a little
glass and gold table before me. I went over the opening lines in a quick mental
gabble, waiting for my cue.
People
of Malesco . . . gabble-gabble . . . great Alchemist in Paradise is impatient
with your sinful curiosity . . . gabble-gabble . . . sent me to warn you . . .
gabble-gabble . . . as punishment for your wilful misconduct . . .
gabble-gabble . . . returning to Paradise and taking Clia back with me out of
the contaminating . . . gabble-gabble . . .
There
it was, the deep hooting of those great curled horns. A breathless hush fell
upon the crowd. I knew I'd never have such an audience again. They were with me
to a man. They loved me in Malesco. Well, it ought to be over in ten minutes.
"It's
not your battle, Eddie," I assured myself, waiting for the horns to stop
echoing. "You're just an actor. You've played villains before. This is a
quick walk-on and then curtain. In ten minutes you'll be home in New York and
these people can fight it out among themselves."
The echoes stopped. I took a deep breath and
started talking. My voice was a little shaky at first, but I got it under
control after the first words. The public address system here was working fine.
They could hear me, I saw, even in the back rows.
I
got past "Great Alchemist in Paradise" and swung into it, putting
paternal reproof into the lines, trying to sink myself in the character I was
playing so I wouldn't have to think. 1 hadn't written this play. It wasn't my battle
... it wasn't my battle ... it wasn't —
It wasn't going over.
There
was no doubt about that. The muttering from the back of the house began to rise
before I'd got more than two lines into my speech. I spread my arms and put
more volume into my voice, ad-libbing a little to make time for the mutter to
subside.
It
worked — for a moment — and I went on with increasingly cold feet. I didn't
like it. I didn't like it at all. I didn't like my lines or the part I was
playing, and it seemed to me the Hiërarch had made a terrible mistake in his
handling of the crowd.
It's
simple psychology. You can't take something away from people when they prize it
very highly and not give them anything in return. These men and women had come
here charged with a tremendous potential for action and it wasn't going to work
if we just said, "Run along home now like good children."
I had misjudged the Hiërarch.
He knew what he was doing.
The
second time the muttering from below rose to a roar that threatened to drown
out my speech. I felt a stirring at my elbow. I stepped back a pace, drawing
out a syllable long enough to give me time to glance back.
CHAPTER XVI
IT
WAS Lorna. She came forward with a graceful, gliding step she certainly hadn't
known in New York. She spread her arms and the silver sleeves caught the light
and glowed like fire. She spoke in a cooing, emotional croon that filled the
hall without effort.
"You
are angry," she cooed at them, in the purest Males-can. "You have
reason to be angry. Someone has cheated you of your rights!" Silvery
indignation sounded in her voice now. I was baffled for an instant at the
command she had over the language and her lines. Lorna wasn't up to ad-libbing.
Then
I realized the Hierarch had been preparing for this all along. I hadn't been
the only one who spent the last half hour studying my lines. Lorna had been
coached too, for just this occasion.
The crowd was dead silent, waiting, puzzled.
I was puzzled, too. But in the instant before Lorna went on I saw
understanding light up one face below me in the crowd. Coriole's eyes met mine
in a sudden blaze of anger and hatred. He knew what was coming. And then, of
course, I did too.
It
had been the Hierarch's plan from the start. But he hadn't told me. He must
have known how far he could push me along the way he meant me to go. I'd agreed
to make this fairly harmless little speech. But he suspected I wouldn't do what
Lorna was now doing for me.
"A
man who deserves your righteous anger!" Lorna cried throatily. "He
and his men have worked like serpents underground to make trouble between you
and your loving priesthood. He is jealous of your destiny. You will go on
through virtuous lives to reincarnation in Paradise.
"But
he will never reach New York and now he tries to trick you too out of your
birthright: Paradise! People of Malesco, I give you that man, to punish as you
choose!" The silver-draped arm swung dramatically and pointed straight
down before her.
"Coriole!" she
shrilled. "Coriole!"
Instantly from picked spots in the crowd a
well-disciplined claque took up the shout. The Hiërarch hadn't forgotten a
thing. His stooges were planted all through the room and they had strong
voices.
"Coriole!"
they yelled with well-assumed rage. "Coriole tricked us! Grab him! Grab
Coriole! Don't let him get away!"
The
crowd boiled furiously, wild with indecision. Above them the golden A's glowed more and more ominously as the power
stepped up behind them, waiting to be released.
"Get Coriole!" some feeble voices
began to cry tentatively, as suggestibles in the crowd swung toward the people
who made the most noise. "Get him — get Coriole!"
The thing hung in a perfect balance for one
of those timeless moments. It needed a push one way or the other and for that
instant nobody semed capable of pushing. Time was on the side of the Hiërarch.
When
you have an organized group acting under strict orders it's simply a matter of
time until they swing the crowd their way by pure volume of noise. And Coriole
for some reason was caught flatfooted.
Either
he'd relied too heavily on me or the unexpected size of the crowd had given him
false confidence. But it was partly the size of the crowd that trapped him now.
He was hemmed in so tightly he couldn't run even if he wanted to. I saw his
mouth open and shut and the veins in his neck swell as he shouted something — perhaps the names of his friends — but the noise was too loud and nobody could
hear him.
There's always a large percentage of mindless
fools in any mob, ready to yell whatever the next guy is yelling. The
Hier-arch's boys were making headway. Probably a good many of these people had
never heard of Coriole, but that didn't stop them from yapping for his blood.
I stood there on the dais and dithered like
my cousin in the crowd. "It isn't your fight, it isn't your fight," I
kept telling myself futilely. "This is the people against their government
and there isn't a thing you can do about it. Don't meddle. Keep your mouth shut
and you'll come out on top. Keep your mouth shut!"
Here on the dais a separate crisis seemed in
progress. The roaring mob was below us, the jammed square was in front of us — the shouting and yelling sweeping
infectiously back out of the Temple and along the packed streets. But it might
have been happening on the other side of the world so far as it outwardly
seemed to affect the priests.
The Hiërarch
sat motionless on his
gold-crusted throne. Lorna, having spoken her piece, had sidled up to me
and was whispering urgently, "Did you keep any cigarettes, Eddie?"
I didn't answer her. I was watching the
priests. They weren't as good at hiding their emotions as the Hiërarch
was. A lot of ambivalence
seemed to be in progress in the massed priesthood in the wings. The men wound
up in the curled horns each had a deep breath drawn, ready to blast away at a
word from the Hiërarch.
They never took their eyes from his face. I
knew there were hidden priests at the controls of the sunburst weapons glowing
ready in the walls, and they must be watching the boss too, each with a finger
poised above the switch of whatever activated those heat-rays.
It
seemed to me the priests were alarmed somewhat out of proportion to reason. I
saw they were winning. All they had to do was wait. Already the roar of
"Get Coriole!" could be heard clearly from several sides and it was
gaining with every second.
Then
I caught Dio's eye and for an instant everything else went blank and silent
around me, so urgent was the look on his face. But I didn't know what the look
meant. He seemed to be hanging eagerly on my next motion, my next word. He
seemed to attach tremendous importance to what I did next.
There was the same avid anticipation on his
face which I'd seen in our first meeting when he waited joyfully for me to give
myself away. Was that what he expected now? Was he afraid I'd try to swerve the
anger of the mob from Coriole to the priests? Did he think I could do it? If he
did, maybe he was right. Maybe, if I could just think of the right word,
Coriole might still have a chance.
But
did I want to meddle that much? I'd gone through a lot to get right where I was
now, on the threshold of return to New York. In a few moments Coriole would be
submerged by the angry mob, all its energy diverted against the man who'd
roused it. And the ceremony would go on as planned.
Dio was
reaching into his robe. I saw him fumble for something, never taking his eyes
from my face. Then he had it. He pulled it out, keeping his hands closed over
something small.
He
was smiling rather wolfishly now, the bright avid in-tentness stronger than
ever on his face. He reminded me irresistibly of those weapons glowing in the
walls. There was the same leashed blaze, the same menace held barely in check.
Still
nailing me with that brilliant unswerving stare, he drew his arm back a little
and snapped something shiny through the air straight at me.
It seemed to me it hung there between us for
years and years. My mind ran in little circles, yelping hysterically. "Is
it a bomb?" my mind demanded. "Shall I catch it? Shall I dodge it?
What is it? What's eating him? What shall I do?"
But my body acted with calm independence of
the frantic mind. Automatically both of my hands reached out and the object
smacked neatly into them.
It was a small, flat square. The feel of it
made a picture take shape in my mind before I even looked. Another of those
white wafers with gold writing on it. A message from Dio?
I
opened my hands slightly and looked down. It wasn't a wafer. There was no
writing on it. Dio
had tossed me my cigarette
lighter.
You wouldn't believe what a short time all
this really took. Coriole was still looking around wildly for his men. The mob
was still milling indecisively. The leather-lunged stooges in the congregation
were still bellowing incendiary phrases at the tops of their voices. But the
tide was already on the turn.
The
priests, I thought, had won. Not tangibly yet but definitely. This was one of
those important moments in Ma-lescan history when a touch would swing the
balance one way or the other and the touch had been applied. It was swinging
ponderously toward the Hierarch's side.
And the moment was perhaps as great a point
of division as that- earlier moment in Roman history when the two worlds had
split apart in probability. Everything hung in the balance.
I
held the cigarette lighter stupidly in my hands, blinking at it. What did Dio
mean? Was he on the side of the priests or the side of the rebels?
"Neither,"
I told myself rapidly. "Dio's on Dio's side and nobody else's. He's for
the winners."
But he'd given me the means to swing the
course of history away from his own men. What did it mean? Obviously, only one
thing.
Dio thought the rebels were the likelier
winners. He wanted in on the stronger side. And that meant the priests were a
lot weaker than they looked. Somehow, somewhere, they were covering up with a
colossal bluff. Dio knew. And he expected me to — to what?
My mind was still telling me, "Don't
meddle! It isn't your battle!" but again my body calmly went its own way.
Without the slightest mental processes to guide me I kicked over the gold and
glass table beside me on the dais and swung both arms up over my head at full
length.
The pages of my speech fluttered unnoticed
from the table to the floor. But the noise of the overturned table was a
quicker and higher sound than the bellowing of the mob. It caught eyes in the
front ranks.
I flicked the lighter with one thumb, praying
fervently that it wouldn't choose this moment to balk.
There was a strange breathless pause in the
shouting down below. Then I heard the sigh that swept like a soft breeze
through the room and I knew the flame had caught.
Miraculously,
little by little, but marvelously fast, the uproar died away. Out in the square
the crowd was still yelling, but there was a hush in the painted room. I could
hear silence sweeping backward through the streets as the noise had swept a
minute or two before.
I
stood there like Liberty holding the torch of freedom aloft, and I didn't feel
as silly as I might have. I was Liberty
in that moment and/ it was the torch of freedom — if things went right.
I
held the dramatic pose until I was sure every eye had focused on that one small
flame, that one-candle-power torch that contained more power than all the
Hierarch's weapons. I knew that while I held it the priests wouldn't dare touch
me. But what was I going to do next? 1 couldn't stand forever in this
melodramatic attitude.
It
was my hour. I couldn't
do the wrong thing. I
snapped the lighter shut, swung my lifted arm back, and hurled the glittering
square of metal out over the heads of the crowd.
It
turned twice in the air, catching light on its shining sides, and then dropped
gently out of sight among the craning heads. There was silence for a moment.
Then the crowd seethed around the spot where it had fallen and a shrill voice
cried, "I got it. I got it!"
Everybody
looked. Even the Hierarch leaned forward on his throne. We all saw the meager
little half-bald man in the mob who had caught the torch I threw.
He
looked like a middle-aged clerk. He wore a shabby tunic and his hair needed
cutting, what there was of it. But he held the lighter up in his cupped palms
like a holy relic and his insignificant little face was transfigured with
rapture.
That
was the point at which the Hierarch lost his head. He was a clever man but he
didn't know everything.
And one of the things he
didn't know was how to deal with a problem like this, with people getting so
riotously out of hand so fast, with everything depending on his decisions from
minute to minute, and no past experience to guide him.
This
had never happened before. All he had to go by was a time when something a
little like it had happened — Jim-merton's coming. The priesthood had triumphed
over Jim-merton by fast direct high-pressure methods. The Hierarch tried that
now. It would never do to let that dangerous cigarette lighter float about the
city, passing from hand to hand and igniting rebellion in all who saw it.
"Bring me the sacred relic," he
shouted, making majestic gestures. "That is a relic from Paradise — too
holy for human hands! Bring it to me!"
I caught a venomous glance from his small
enigmatic eyes, but he had no time to waste on me just now. He was rising with
great pomp, surging forward across the platform. His outspread arms brushed
Lorna and me aside.
"Bring me the relic!" he shouted, making his voice so rich and deep
that even above the clamor of the crowd people heard it and heads turned.
Especially
his claque planted among the audience heard it. When the command made itself
understood I could instantly spot the undercover agents
down below. Little eddies of the throng seethed around each as they began to
surge toward the spot where the man with the lighter stood.
But they weren't the only ones who heard the
orders. All within earshot caught the words, and the deep spontaneous growl of
anger that rose in the wake of the command must have told the Hiërarch
instantly he'd made a
mistake. He'd started something he couldn't finish without bringing up some
heavy artillery — very heavy. Maybe nothing he had was strong enough to silence that angry
growling as it grew and spread and strengthened.
The mob was like a single organism now. A
word dropped into it spread in eddying rings out and out until it was lost
among the vanishing throngs in the streets. An idea, a promise of success or a
threat of defeat, seemed to spread in the same way. A few words spoken from the
dais ran like magic through the listening crowds and eddied out there among the
packed avenues almost quicker than the eye could follow the spreading tumult it
made.
One
or two of the Hierarch's strong-arm squad had reached the little man with the
lighter by now. The others were floundering closer but against increasing
opposition. The people around each of them were resisting. Knots of angry men
and women came into being all about every one of the forward-surging stooges.
The
mob was turning into a single organism and the organism encysted these germs of
disease in its midst, isolated them, built up the anger and the strength
necessary to control them exactly as a living body surrounds and overwhelms
dangerous intruders within itself.
Something
that was new and powerful had been born in Malesco — this crowd — this single close-knit unit of all the
thousands functioning as one. It was stronger than the Hiërarch,
stronger than the
priesthood.
It
was a new being. And I had created it. It was my responsibility now. So it was my fight after all.
Dio was watching me with fierce expectancy.
Coriole, wedged tightly in the mob twenty feet away, was watching too, his pale
eyes unswervingly on mine. I felt a third in-tentness and glanced sidewise to
find the Hierarch regarding me with that inscrutable fat stare of his. These
three knew. The next move was probably mine, and they realized it. These three
— no, it was four.
For
Lorna's newly limpid eyes suddenly intercepted mine. She edged toward me across
the platform and I felt her cold fingers clasp my hand. With unerring instinct
Lorna Maxwell had spotted the man temporarily in a key position. Whatever
there was in it for her she meant to get. She moved toward me with all the
mindless assurance of a plant turning toward the sun.
I had no idea what to do
next.
CHAPTER XVII
ABOUT thirty seconds had elapsed since I
threw the lighter, and already a major battle was starting in the crowd around
the little man who had caught it.
"Little
Man," I thought bitterly. Not a single cliche was being spared me. Even
that nauseating phrase to denote the masses had come into actual being right
under my nose. The representative Little Man himself was squealing and struggling
feebly for the priceless boon of a cigarette lighter, and I couldn't do a thing
to help him. I couldn't . . .
The sudden tremendous blare of the curled
horns stunned me into blankness. Some hidden amplifier must have been turned
on, for the whole hall shook with that deep-toned, vibrant blast. The Hierarch
had moved while I stood there hesitating.
Down in the crowd all motion ceased for a few
seconds as every brain in the mob vibrated painfully to that fearful noise. One
vast collective headache must have throbbed through the whole organism which
was the Malescan crowd.
The
Hierarch's voice amplified to godlike volume, though I could see no mechanism
to carry it, rolled majestically down the hall as the horn blast faded. He
wasted no words. He didn't even command them to stop fighting, since obviously
they had already stopped for the moment, stunned by the noise of the horns. He
went right to the heart of his problem, which was me.
"Paradise,"
he roared sonorously, "awaits its children. Silence! Let the Earth-Gates
open!"
For
a second I think nobody quite knew what he meant. We were all too involved in
our immediate problems. But then I saw a change come over the faces just below,
looking up at us. Their gaze shifted to something behind me. I was aware of a
slowly dawning new light on the dais and I saw my own shadow take dim shape and
stretch out at my feet across the golden floor.
I turned. The great circular window that
normally looked out over the city had clouded with shining opalescence. You
couldn't see Malesco through it any more. But a shape was growing there. A vast
luminous A, the symbol of divided worlds bridged by a crossbar between Paradise
and Malesco, gleamed through the clouds.
Very
rapidly the A faded, and Paradise itself replaced Malesco beyond the window.
New York at night, its streets streaming with lights, appeared to lie some
hundreds of feet down just beyond the great circle in the wall.
"Paradise
awaits!" the Hierarch's rich bellow announced, still amplified to
superhuman volume. "The two who came to us must now return to the glorious
rewards of New York. Clia! Burton! The Earth-Gates open!"
Behind me in the hall a wave of silence was
moving outward through the crowd, though in the distance I could still hear
shouting. Now a new wave began just below me, almost at my heels. I knew it
would move as the shouting and the silence had moved, out and out until it
reached the limits of the streets. But the new sound was very quiet. It was a
sigh, a murmur. There was nothing they could do. They waited.
Was
I going to leave them to the mercies of the priesthood as Jimmerton had done? I
wished I knew.
The vision of New York rocked before me like
a ship and seemed to shoot upward with sickening speed as if all of us who
watched were dropping toward the street. And as we dropped the clarity of the
view clouded. I could see why.
If this were a real opening between the
worlds, not a dressed-up version, it would never do to let the Malescans see
too clearly what the real streets were like. Through a golden cloud I saw the
blur of passing traffic, their lights making rainbows in the mist. We were
looking at street-level straight into the City of Paradise.
"Come,"
the Hiërarch said. "Paradise awaits. The Gates are open. Clia, Burton — farewell!"
All
we had to do was step through. It was what I'd been struggling for during all
this endless eternity in Malesco. Lorna's hand was still clasping mine. I'd got
what I came for. What was in it for me if I hesitated any longer? Nothing.
"Go
on," the Hiërarch said urgently, in his normal voice, not using
the amplifier that would let the people hear. "Step through. You're all
right now. Just get out of here and don't make any more trouble."
Still
I hesitated. His little eyes between their rims of fat were almost closed as he
looked at me. He had never seemed more of a juggernaut than now. I had a
curious feeling that this wasn't all, that there was something further on his
mind as he waited so impatiently for my next step. But that could all be
imagination.
"Go on," he whispered again.
"Get out! Or do you want some help?"
I heard the soft snapping of his fingers and
a couple of burly priests put their hands together in hieratically pious
gestures and came forward on each side of us. I could see perfectly well that
we were going to be shoved through the Gates in a minute or two if we didn't go
of our own accord.
The
crowd was completely silent now. It didn't seem possible that so many people
could stand so still, hardly breathing, waiting to be abandoned to the just
punishment of the priesthood. Jimmerton had deserted them too, long ago.
Now
I was going, and the Hiërarch could hardly wait to get me out of Malesco,
so he could arrest Coriole and that ridiculous Little Man and put my cigarette
lighter with the other relics of Paradise. Then it would be treason again for
anyone to think about how the little wheel went around and the sparks flew out.
And,
I thought suddenly, maybe someday another man from New York would stumble
through the Earth-Gates.
Maybe
somebody not yet born. What story would he hear from the descendants of these
people, about how a man named Jimmerton and a man named Burton had led them
into revolt and left them when the going got tough?
Don't make any mistakes about Eddie Burton.
That's sentimental talk. My own skin is the most important thing in the world
to me. But if I could save Lorna and myself and still have some little
dividend of glory left over, that wouldn't be too bad, either.
"Farewell!"
the Hiërarch suddenely thundered with full volume turned on. "Farewell!"
I
heard his fingers snap again and the two bulky priests ceased making hieratic
gestures long enough to take each of us by an arm and move us at a sort of
stately trot toward the Gates.
At
that moment, almost too late, I knew what I could do to collect on that
dividend of glory.
"Wait!" I said. "Just a second — I forgot something."
The
priests paused slightly to see what the Hiërarch would say to this. He looked at me very
sharply and I saw no relenting on his face. He knew when he was well off. He
wasn't going to give me a chance to get him into any more trouble.
And
besides, there was something curious about his face and his eyes — a sort of gleam as if this weren't quite all,
as if he waited for something yet to come. Coriole's arrest? Dio's punishment?
Exterminating the crowd? All of those and maybe something more. I hadn't time
to think about it.
"Lorna," I said rapidly and softly in English. "Have you got your amplifier
turned on? I want you to say something to the crowd. Quick!"
She
said in a sort of musical whine, "Oh, Eddie, I don't want to! Let's go! I —
"
There
was no time to waste persuading her. I got a good grip on her hand and bent her
little finger painfully outward. I'd rather have twisted her arm, but that
would have showed too clearly.
"Does
that hurt?" I demanded in a rapid mutter. "I'll dislocate it if you
don't repeat what I say after me at full volume. Understand?"
AU I got in reply was a squeal of pain and anger. I paid no attention. She was trying to squirm free,
but the priest on her far side had a firm hold on her and didn't understand why
she was struggling so suddenly. Between us we had her where she couldn't get
away.
"Say People of Malesco," I commanded, giving her the Malescan for it.
"Go on, before I pull your finger off. People of Malesco!"
"People of Malesco!" she cried
furiously, and the volume of the sound roaring from her throat so near me was
almost deafening. I wondered where the amplifier was — in a tooth somewhere? "People of Malesco!"
The
priests jumped slightly at the roar. The screen before us vibrated a little and
the sound woke echoes in the vault of the roof over the dais. Lorna's back was
to the crowd but they must have heard her speak clear out in the streets.
The Hiërarch
gave us both a look of pure
venom. But he had to give in. He made a gesture and the grip on my arm
slackened. Still holding Lorna's hand in my compelling clutch, I swung her
around to face the crowd.
"I have one last message for you," I dictated.
Lorna swore at me in a
whisper and then rolled the Males-can words out in the rich, sonorously sweet
voice they'd given her along with the lovely face.
"Your Hiërarch
is a great man," I said, releasing her finger slightly. She
put such emotion in the transcript when she repeated it that a very convincing
half-sob broke up the words a little. It was a sound of rage and pain, but it
gave the speech a touching quality. ■ "He has done so much for Malesco," I dictated.
"Let me go!" Lorna
whispered. "He has done so much for Malesco —
"
"That Pwadise has decreed him a
reward."
"Eddie,
I'll kill you! Let go. Let go! That Paradise has decreed him a reward —
"
"Listen while I tell you," I whispered. "Listen well, for this is the greatest
reward a living man ever knew. Do you hear me, people of Malesco?"
Between
the snarls of rage she got the words out. I made her pause then and in the
interval the people gave us one unified roar of answer. They were with us. They
knew something was up, and I thought they were ready to back almost anything I
said. What did they have to lose now?
"I
was a mortal among you," I dictated, ignoring her snarls. "I lived a good life and went straight to New York when I died. But
your Hiërarch has lived a life so good that the Great Alchemist sent me here to claim
him for Paradise — now!"
Halfway through that speech Lorna
stopped struggling.
Evidently she had picked up enough Malescan to realize what she was saying. She
rolled her eyes at me. "I hope you know what you're doing," she
whispered in the pause that followed this speech.
"Shut up," I said. "Wait a
sceond. Let them yell. See how they like it?" I was looking straight down
at Coriole as I spoke and I saw the sudden blaze of excitement on his face as
he realized what I was attempting.
"Your
Hiërarch returns
to Paradise with me — now!" Lorna
parroted after me. And
then, in a whisper, "Oh, Eddie, do you think he'll go? You must be crazy.
What'11 we do with him in New York?"
"Shut up," I said again. "Go
on — make a gesture toward him. Invite him to Paradise. Go on or I'll break
your arm!"
With
incomparable grace she held out her hand toward the Hiërarch,
her silver sleeve flowing
and flashing with jewels. There was a good deal of ham in her acting, but the
audience wasn't critical.
The Hiërarch stood there stunned at the foot of his golden
throne. The entire priesthood stood stunned around him. Nobody had expected
this. For an instant stillness and silence held everybody on the dais
motionless.
"Say, Come, Paradise awaits us," I hissed.
"Come, Paradise awaits us," Lorna
cooed and the volume of her
coo filled the entire hall and echoed through the city outside.
The Hierarch's eyes met mine. He shook his
fat shoulders a little and said in a low growl several phrases of Malescan that
Uncle Jim had never taught me. But he came. He had no choice. He couldn't
repudiate Lorna before everybody. Slowly he lumbered toward us, juggernaut to the last.
The overturned table was in
the way, and he rolled forward, ignoring it, knowing somebody would snatch it
out of his path. Somebody did. He didn't glance down. You could see the furious
thoughts racing through his mind behind his frozen face, but it was quite clear
that he didn't know what to do next.
I
did. It seemed perfectly simple to me. I was giving Coriole the chance he'd
begged for. Coriole had friends among the priesthood and those friends were
organized. I thought that if the Hiërarch were suddenly snatched away Coriole would
have a good chance of seizing control and putting one of his boys on that
hideous golden throne. It was all I could do for him. I thought it was pretty
good myself.
CHAPTER XVIII
WE
made a little tableau before the glowing Earth-Gates. Lorna
and I, with our priest
escort on each side, ready to seize us again at a word from the Hiërarch
— and the Hiërarch
in all his pomp and power,
entirely helpless to have himself. It was a fine moment. I felt very proud of
my own cleverness.
The Hiërarch
shook himself again,
growled deep in his throat, and spoke at about half volume, so that the crowd
heard him clearly but not deafeningly.
"I
am not worthy of this honor." It must have gone hard with him to say such
a thing, but it was the best he could think of just now.
"Paradise
thinks you more than worthy," I dictated firmly and Lorna rolled it out over the crowd.
He
ground his teeth. I really heard them grind. He let his little eyes shoot angry
but hopeful glances around the dais. Nobody moved. Evidently nobody could think
any faster than he could. Then I saw a sudden faint hope dawn on his face.
"Come,
then," he said clearly, "We will go together." And he bowed us
forward toward the Gates. I didn't get it for an instant. Then I saw he meant
us to go first. He was being very, very polite and urging us ahead of him
through the screen. Then, no doubt, he wouldn't follow.
"Oh no!" I said. "Lorna,
tell them this. Paradise decress your Hiërarch
the honor of stepping first
through the Earth-Gates."
She giggled a little and
told them.
And
at that a sudden, unexpected tension settled down over the dais..A murmur ran
through the priesthood. They stared in new consternation at the Hiërarch.
He himself froze to new rigidity. Something
had happened and I didn't know what it was. But he did. All the priests did. I
sought Dio's eye but he only nodded. It was okay. I waited.
It
was shocking to see how the color drained slowly out of the Hierarch's ruddy
face as he looked at the Earth-Gates. I couldn't understand it. Naturally he
didn't want to leave Malesco, but this reaction was all out of proportion to
what he was called upon to do.
I thought, "He can just face around
toward the crowd and refuse to go, can't he?" and I tried to brace myself
to combat that, racking my brain for something to say when he did. I was sure
it was what he'd do. I think he was sure too — for a moment or two. I saw him waver just a
little as if he were nerving himself to turn.
Then
the crowd seemed to sense the same thing. It was still a single organism and
the tremor of refusal that had started close up under the platform when the
nearest people saw the Hiërarch waver spread rapidly backward through the
hall.
They
didn't want him to stay. They weren't going to let him stay.
"Farewell!"
some raucous voice bellowed just below the dais. "Farewell!" Other voices took it up. In a backward wave
it rolled through the hall until the ceiling rocked with the efforts of the
people to speed their parting leader.
He
shook his thick shoulders under the golden robe. There was something bull-like
about the way he swung his head around and ran a desperate glance along the
ranks of the watching priests.
"Fix
it!" he
said inexplicably through his teeth, hardly moving his lips. "One of you
fix it! Flammand, help me! Hyperion, do something! Hyerion, I'll have you
burned!"
Nobody moved.
There was dense silence on the dais while,
the roars of determined farewell gained volume in the hall below. No one on the
platform would meet the Hierarch's eye. "Flammand!" he commanded in a
frighteningly fierce whisper. "Flammand!"
There was an almost imperceptible motion in
the priestly throng near Dio. Someone
took an indecisive step forward — probably Flammand. Dio, his teeth showing, in a grin, stepped forward at the same instant and
shouldered the volunteer. The fellow could have got past him, but he didn't
try. After a second of agonizing hesitation he fell back and was lost in the ranks.
"Hyperion!"
The Hierarch's whisper was
almost a scream now. And the silence on the platform had taken on a
quality of relentlessness that seemed inflexibly cruel even though I had as yet no idea what it was about.
There
was a small seething among the priests to the left. If Hyperion were trying to
respond, there seemed plenty to prevent him. Hyperion, like Flammand, subsided.
And the priesthood, like the people, in that moment firmly and finally rejected
their Hierarch.
He stood there, swaying, his head down,
shooting glances of rage and helpless hatred at the ranks of the priesthood
which had been his to command until a moment ago, which by some mysterious
alchemy of their own had simultaneously decided to defy him.
It was very curious, that moment. Before it
the Hierarch had ruled a world. After it, all in one instant, something inexplicable
had happened and he was helpless.
He
rolled his small, agonized eyes from face to face. He lowered his head between
the heavy golden shoulders and it seemed to me he was about to lumber forward
with his bulldozer gait to crush down opposition and force obedience again.
But the opposition was too intangible for crushing. He couldn't crush a world.
There was only one thing left which he could
trample under, if he hoped to save his face —
Looking back now, I can see that he had no
real choice. It wasn't only that the world he had ruled without question all
his life suddenly presented an unbroken front of flat rebellion to him.
There's just the barest possibility that if he'd attacked the rebellion openly
he might have breached it and lived. I don't think he could have succeeded, but
he might have.
There
was much more to his surrender than that. Because to overcome the opposition
he'd have had to expose his own trickery, He'd have had to stand self-confessed
before the people and the priests as a murderer, a liar and a blasphemer
against Alchemy. And that he couldn't do. Hubris can be a force for good as well as for evil in such a case as his. Unwittingly,
I'd given him a choice between death and glory, or life and disgrace, and once
he realized what the choice was he never faltered.
For what he did then I had to concede him
respect. He straightened, throwing his fat shoulders back so that the golden
robes swung magnificently. There was a definite note of baiting in the
farewells that roared from the crowd below now. But as he lifted his head they
slackened a little to see what he would do.
He made them all a stiff, proud bow.
The
little byplay on the platform had been lost upon the throng, who could neither
hear nor see it. But something in the attitude of the Hierarch and the priests
seemed to convey to them at least that something was about to happen which they
didn't expect.
The
baiting note faded from their yells, but the volume of the noise did not
slacken. They meant him to go. There was a dogged quality in their voices that
would not cease while he stood here in their world. He would not again hear any
sound in Malesco except the roaring of the people urging him toward Paradise.
There
was nothing left for him to do but accept the honor and the glory that v/as
being thrust upon him. He turned with a regal sweep of his robes and with
sudden firmness strode unhesitatingly tov/ard the Earth-Gates. He knew what he
was doing. He knew better than any of us just then. But he never faltered.
He
moved like a juggernaut to the last. He'd always crushed opposition. Now, when
it was his own life that stood in the way of the prestige he'd built up and
lived by for so long, his hubris sustained
him and he crushed that, too. He rolled forward with grim pride, refusing to
depart from Malesco in anything less than the full dignity of his office. In
his own way he was magnificent.
With
majestic stride he stepped up on the brink of the Earth-Gates. The blurred
sounds of New York traffic and the blurred motions of the lights flickered in
his very face as he stood there. He did not hesitate or look back. He raised
one arm in a gesture of farewell to the watchers and stepped forward over the
threshold.
The
last sound he heard must have been the roar of his people driving him out of
Malesco and into Paradise.
The
people couldn't see what we saw, on the dais. He'd planned it that way
naturally. He hadn't wanted anybody but the priests to see the trap he'd set
for Lorna and me.
He'd had no intention of letting living
people return to New York and open the way for more angels from Paradise. He'd
had trouble enough as it was. So the Earth-Gates were set to insure that no
living person could pass between the worlds.
There
was a flare of bright gold when he touched the surface of the screen. The flare
was blinding. From below, in the hall, all anybody could see was the upper area
of the flash. But from where I stood I saw the figure in the gleaming robes
pause for an instant between two worlds, in that singing void I remembered so
well myself. He was balanced on the crossbar of the Alchemic A, in effect, the
bridge narrow under his feet.
Then fire sprang out all
around him.
I
saw the golden robes catch and go up in colored flames. I saw his hair catch
and burn like a crown. But when the fire took hold on the man himself its
brilliance increased suddenly a hundredfold, and the Hierarch vanished in a
furnace glare which no one who watched could endure to gaze at.
I
shut my eyes. Inside the lids for a moment or two the outlines of the burning
man were etched clearly, an afterimage incised by the brilliance of the flame
that destroyed him. He stood in full outline upon my inner lids for longer than
the man himself stood in his own body. I think he was consumed and destroyed
before his image faded against my closed eyes.
And that's how it happened that Lorna Maxwell
and I stepped through onto the corner of Fifth
Avenue and Forty-Second Street at three in the morning, dressed in fantastic
garments. The lumbering buses and the stone lions were a lot less real to us
than the world we'd just left.
When you think about it you have to realize
that a lot of clichés
are self-fulfilling by
definition. Given a particular setup plus a particular stimulus, the chances
are strong that a particular result will follow, trite because it's more or
less inevitable. It wasn't yet dawn in Malesco when we fulfilled our own cliché and rounded out the ceremony by departing
with full grandeur through the Earth-Gates, back to Paradise.
Of course I could have made a speech before I
left. I could have said, "There's no point in
making a ceremony of this because your whole religion is based on a fraud. New
York's no more a Paradise than Malesco. The theory of reincarnation is
stultifying and alchemy as a religion isn't going to get you anywhere no matter
how hard you try."
They
would probably have mobbed me if I'd said it. You can't change the thinking
patterns of a world overnight by administering a few home truths. It will be a
long slow subtle process if it takes place at all. That's Coriole's problem, to
be tackled sometime in the future. His immediate problem that night was to get
rid of Lorna and-me quickly.
I had played Prometheus and my part was over.
Lorna had been too much the tool of the Hierarch to be welcome in Malesco. The
sooner we were shunted back to Paradise and the Earth-Gates firmly closed
behind us, the better.
So
we left Malesco. And the gates were closed. I doubt if they will open again in
our lifetime. The things that are going on behind it now are probably very
interesting and exciting — for Malescans — but they're no business of ours.
Coriole knows what he wants and traffic with Earth isn't on the list.
We
left the rose-red city in the throes of its own revolution and came home to
Paradise.
EPILOGUE
She calls herself Malesca now. You can see
why. And she's beautiful, all right. Probably her press agent's telling the
truth when he says she's the most beautiful girl
in
the world — if you like that kind of beauty. It's saccharine. I know I
couldn't live with it myself.
Still, the Malescan priesthood knew what it
was doing. They were clever psychologists. They worked out all the features
that would appeal most strongly to Malescans — who are extremely human.
Pygmalion
fell in love with Galatea, didn't he? Even though he knew she was nothing but a
chunk of stone. But the beauty that shaped the stone was irresistible.
Lorna
says she loves me. That began a long time ago, before the episode in Malesco.
She says she hadn't changed. But she has, of course. Malesco changed her quite
a lot.
She had nothing I wanted before the change
and the essential Lorna, the woman behind all that beauty, is exactly the
same. I know it. I wish I could forget it. The forces that drive a man or a
nation or a world are inarguable. I can't fight them, myself. I wish I could.
Because
blast all cliches — I love her. In my own way. After a fashion. I couldn't live
with her. You know what she's like. And that's why I'd never have gone to the
place that night if I'd known she was singing there.
But
I sat clinking ice in my glass, listening to Malesca sing. They gave her a
beautiful voice. I kept repeating axioms to myself to drown out the sweetness
of the song that was hypnotizing everyone else in the room. "Beauty is
only skin deep," I thought. "Handsome is as handsome does. A bird in the hand — "
Applause in a sudden storm interrupted me. I
looked up to see Malesca bowing, making every motion a symphony of grace. Her
luminous blue eyes were searching the dimness for me, bewildered and determined
as they always were whenever she looked at me.
She wasn't going to accept refusal. She was
going to come to me again as soon as the applause stopped. She was going to sit
down beside me and plead again in that lovely throaty voice, soft as velvet and
sweet as honey.
I
finished my drink in one quick gulp, jumped up and started toward the exit.
Behind me the applause died and I heard Malesca's voice calling, "Eddie, Eddie!"
When I reached the door I was almost running.