ADVENTURE ON A WORLD
OF WONDERS
With
the colonial planet of Demeter in the hands of an outlaw, Charis Nordholm had
no choice but to leave. So she signed a contract which put her in the service of
the off-worlder, Jagan. Her assignment—to trade with the
mysterious Wyverns on Warlock.
At first, Charis was attracted by the dreams
of the shimmering Wyvern "witches," and she yearned to learn more of
their secrets. It was not until she met Shann Lantee, a government liaison
officer, that Charis finally began to understand the menace of Warlock. By
then, it was almost too late.
Andre
Norton is a superb storyteller whose "sweep of imagination and brilliance
of detail" have made the author "a primary talent among
science-fiction writers." (Virginia Kirkus) This fast-moving adventure is
further proof.
Andre Norton novels available from Ace Books include:
GALACTIC DERELICT (F-310)
THE BEAST MASTER (F-315)
STAR HUNTER (D-509)
DAYBREAK: 2250 A.D. (D-534)
THE LAST PLANET (D-542)
STORM OVER WARLOCK (F-109)
SEA SIEGE (F-147)
EYE OF THE MONSTER (F-147)
CATSEYE (F-167)
THE DEFIANT AGENTS (F-183)
STAR BORN (F-192)
THE STARS ARE OURSI (F-207)
WITCH WORLD (F-197)
HUON OF THE HORN (F-226)
STAR GATE (F-231)
THE TIME TRADERS (F-236)
LORD OF THUNDER (F-243)
WEB OF THE WITCH WORLD (F-263)
SHADOW HAWK (G-538)
SARGASSO OF SPACE (F-279)
JUDGMENT ON JANUS (F-308)
PLAGUE SHIP (F-291)
KEY OUT OF TIME (F-287)
(D-books
are 35^; F-books are 40^)
ANDRE NORTON
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the
Americas New York, N.Y. 10036
ordeal IN otherwhere
Copyright
©, 1964, by
Andre Norton
An
Ace Book, by arrangement with The World Publishing Co.
All
Rights Reserved
Printed in U.S.A.
I
Chabis
crouched behind the stump,
her thin hands pressed tight to the pain in her side. Her breath came in
tearing gasps which jerked her whole body, and her hearing was dimmed by the
pounding blood in her ears. It was still too early in the morning to
distinguish more than light and dark, shadow and open. Even the blood-red of
the spargo stump was gray-black in this predawn. But it was not too dark for
her to pick out the markers on the mountain trail.
Though
her will and mind were already straining ahead for that climb, her weak body
remained here on the edge of the settlement clearing, well within reach—within
reach. Charis fought back the panic which she still had wit enough
to realize was an enemy. She forced her
trembling body to remain in the shadow of the stump, to be governed by her mind
and not by the fear which was a fire eating her. Now she could not quite
remember when that fear had been born. It had ridden her for days, coming to
its full blaze yesterday.
Yesterday!
Chans strove to throw off the memory of yesterday, but that, too, she forced
herself to face now. Blind panic and running; she dared not give in to either
or she was lost. She knew the enemy and she had to fight, but since a trial of
physical strength was out of the question, this meant a test of wits.
As
she crouched there, striving to rest, she drew upon memory for any scraps of
information which might mean weapons. The trouble had begun far back; Charis
knew a certain dull wonder at why she had not realized before how far back it had begun. Of course, she and her father had expected to be
greeted by some suspicion—or at least some wariness when they had joined the
colonists just before takeoff on Vam.
Ander
Nordholm had been a government man. He and his daughter were classed as
outsiders and strangers by the colony group, much as were the other
representatives of law from off-world—the Ranger Franklyn, Port Officer Kaus
and his two guards, the medical officer and his wife. But every colony had to
have an education officer. In the past too many frontier-world settlements had
split away from the Confederation, following sometimes weird and dangerous
paths of development when fanatics took control, warped education, and cut off
communications with other worlds.
Yes, the Nordholms had expected a period of
adjustment, of even semi-ostracization since this was a Believer colony. But
her father had been winning them over—he had! Charis could not have deceived
herself about that. Why, she had been invited to one of the women's
"mend" parties. Or had it been a blind even then?
But this—this would never have happened if it
had not been for the white death! Charis's breath came now in a real sob. There
were so many shadows of fear on a newly opened planet. No safeguard could keep
them all from striking at the fragile life of a newly planted colony. And here
had been waiting a death no one could see, could meet with blaster or hunting
knife or even the medical knowledge her species had been able to amass during
centuries of space travel, experimentation, and information acquired across
the galaxy.
And
in its striking, the disease had favored the fanatical prejudices of the
colonists. For it struck first the resented government men. The ranger, the
port captain and his men, her father—Charis's fist was at her mouth, and she
bit hard upon her knuckles. Then it struck the medic—always the men. Later the colonists—oddly enough, those who had been most friendly
with the government party—and only the men and boys in those families.
The
ugly things the survivors had said—that the government was behind the plague.
They had yelled that when they burned the small hospital. Charis leaned her
forehead against the rough stump and tried not to remember that. She had been
with Aldith Lasser, the two of them trying to find some meaning in a world
which in two weeks had taken husband and father from them and turned their kind
into mad people. She would not think of Aldith now; she would not! nor of Visma Unskar screaming horrors when Aldith had saved
her baby for her—
Charis's
whole body was shaking with spasms she could not control. Demeter had been such
a fair world. In the early days after their landing, Charis had gone on two
expeditions with the ranger, taking the notes for his reports. That was what
they had held against her in the colony—her education, her equality with the
government men. So—Charts put her hands against the stump and pulled herself
up—so now she had three choices left.
She
could return; or she could remain here until the hunt found her—to take her as
a slave down to the foul nest they were fast making of the first human
settlement on Demeter; or somehow she could reach the mountains and hide out
like a wild thing until sooner or later some native peril would finish her.
That seemed much the cleaner way to end. Still steadying herself with one hand
on the stump, Charis stooped to pick up the small bundle of pitiful remnants
she had grubbed out of the ruins of the government domes.
A
hunting knife, blackened by fire, was her only weapon. And there were
formidable beasts in the mountains. Her tongue moved across dry lips, and there
was a dull ache in her middle. She had eaten last when? Last night? A portion
of bread, hard and with the mustiness of mold on it, was in the bag. There
would be berries in the heights. She could actually see them—yellow, burstingly
plump—hanging so heavy on willowy branches that they pulled the boughs
groundward. Charis swallowed again, pushed away from the stump, and stumbled
on.
Her
safety depended upon what the settlers would decide. She had no means of
concealing her back trail. In the morning it would be found. But whether their
temper would be to follow her, or if they would shruggingly write her off to be
finished by the wild, Charis could not guess. She was the one remaining symbol
of all Tolskegg preached against—the liberal off-world mind, the
"un-female," as he called it. The wild, with every beast Ranger
Franklyn had catalogued lined up ready to tear her, was far better than facing
again the collection of cabins where Tolskegg now spouted his particular brand
of poison, that poison, bred of closed minds, which
her father had taught her early to fear. And Visma and her ilk had lapped that
poison to grow fat and vigorous on it. Charis weaved on along the trail.
There
was no sign of a rising sun, she realized some time later. Instead, clouds were
thicker overhead. Charis watched them in dull resignation, awaiting a day of
chill, soaking rain. The thickets higher up might give her some protection from
the full force of a steady pour, but they would not keep out the cold. Some
cave or hole into which she could crawl before full exposure weakened her to
the point that she could go no farther-She tried to remember all the features
of this trail. Twice she had been along it—the first time when they had cut the
trace, the second time when she had taken the little ones to the spring to show
them the wonderful sheaths of red flowers and the small, jeweled, flying
lizards that lived among those loops of blossoming vines.
The
little ones . . . Charis's cracked lips shaped a grimace. Jonan had thrown the
stone which had made the black bruise on her arm. Yet, on that other day, Jonan
had stood drinking in the beauty of the flowers.
Little ones and not so little ones. Charis began to reckon how many boys had
survived the white death. All the little ones, she realized with some wonder,
were still alive—that is, all under twelve years. Of those in their teens, five
remained, all representing families who had had least
contact with the government group, been the most fanatical in their severance.
And of adult men . . . Charis forced herself to recall every distorted face in
the mob bent on destruction, every group she had spied upon while hiding out.
Twenty
adult men out of a hundred! The women would go into the fields, but they could
not carry on the heavy work of clearing. How long would it take Leader Tolskegg
to realize that, in deliberately leading the mob to destroy the offworld
equipment, he might also have sentenced all of the remaining colonists to slow
death?
Of
course, sooner or later, Central Control would investigate. But not for months
was any government ship scheduled to set down on Demeter. And by that time the
whole colony could be finished. The excuse of an epidemic would cover the
activities of any survivors. Tolskegg, if he were still alive then, could tell a plausible tale. Charis was sure that the
colony leader now believed he and his people were free from the government and
that no ship would come, that the Power of their particular belief had planned
this so for them.
Charis
pushed between branches. The rain began, plastering her hair to her head,
streaming in chill trickles down her face, soaking into the torn coat on her
shoulders. She stooped under its force, still shivering. If
she could only reach the spring. Above that was broken rock where she
might find a hole.
But it was harder and harder for her to pull
herself up the rising slope. Several times she went down to hands and knees,
crawling until she could use a bush or a boulder to pull upright once more. All the world was gray and wet, a sea to swallow one. Charis
shook her head with a jerk. It would be so easy to drift into the depths of
that sea, to let herself go.
This
was real—here and now. She could clutch the bushes, pull herself along. Above
was safety; at least, freedom of a sort still undefined by the settlers. And
here was the spring. The curtain of blossoms was gone, seed pods hung in their
place. No lizards, but something squat and hairy drank at the pool, a thing
with a long muzzle that looked at her from a double set of eyes, coldly,
without fear. Charis paused to stare back.
A
purple tongue flicked from the snout, lapped at the water in a farewell lick.
The creature reared on stumpy hind feet, standing about three feet tall; and
Charis recognized it, in this normal pose, as one of the tree-dwelling fruit
eaters that depended upon overdeveloped arms and shoulders for a method of
progress overhead. She had never seen one on the ground before, but she thought
it harmless.
It
turned with more speed than its clumsy build suggested and used the vines for a
ladder to take it up out of her sight. There was a shrill cry from where ft
vanished and the sound of more than one body moving away.
Chans
squatted by the pool side and drank from her cupped hands. The water was cold
enough to numb her palms, and she rubbed them back and forth across the front
of her jacket when she was finished, not in any hopes of drying them but to
restore circulation. Then Charis struck off to the left where the vegetation
gave way to bare rock.
How
long it was, that struggle to gain the broken country, Charis could not have
told. The effort stripped her of her few remaining rags of energy, and sheer,
stubborn will alone kept her crawling to the foot of an outcrop, where a second
pillar of stone leaned to touch the larger and so formed a small cup of
shelter. She drew her aching body into that and huddled, sobbing with weakness.
The
pain which had started under her ribs spread now through her whole body. She
drew her knees up to her chest and wrapped her arms about them, resting her
chin on one kneecap. For a long moment she was as still as her shaking body
would allow her to rest. And it was some time later that she realized chance
had provided her with a better hideout than her conscious mind had directed.
From
this niche and out of the full drive of the rain, Charis had a relatively
unobstructed view of the down-slope straight to the field on which their colony
ship had first set down. The scars of its deter-rockets were still visible
there even after all these months. Beyond, to her right, was the straggle of
colony cabins. The dim gray of the storm lessened the range of visibility, but
Charis thought she could see a trail or two of smoke rising there.
If Tolskegg was following the usual pattern,
he had already herded the majority of the adults into the fields in that race
for planting. With the equipment destroyed, it would be a struggle to get the
mutated seed in the ground in time for an early harvest. Charis did not move
her head. From here the fields were masked by the rounded slope; she could not
witness the backbreaking toil in progress there. But if the new ruler of the
colony was holding to schedule, she need not fear the trailers would be early
on her track—if they came at all.
Her
head was heavy on her knee; the need for sleep was almost as great as the ache
of hunger. She roused herself to open her bundle and take out the dry bread to
gnaw. The taste almost made her choke. If she had only had warning enough to
hide some of the trail rations the explorers had used! But by the time she had
cursed her father to the end, the main stores had largely been raided or
destroyed because of their "evil" sources.
As
she chewed the noisome mouthful, Charis watched downtrail. Nothing moved in the
portion of the settlement she could see. Whether or not she wanted to, whether
or not it was safe, she must rest. And this was the best hole she could find.
Perhaps the steady rain would wash away the traces she had left. It was a small
hope but all she had left to cling to.
Charis
thrust the rest of the bread back into her bundle. Then she strove to wriggle
deeper into her half-cave. Spray from the rain striking the rocks reached her
in spite of her efforts. But finally she lapsed into quiet, her forehead down
on her knees, her only movements the shivers she could not control.
Was it sleep or unconsciousness which held
her, and for how long? Charis rose out of a nightmare with a cry, but any sound
she made was swallowed up by a roar from outside.
She
blinked dazedly at what seemed to be a column of fire reaching from earth to
gray, weeping sky. Only for a moment did that last, and then the fire was at
ground level, boiling up the very substance of the soil. Charis scrambled
forward on hands and knees, shouting but still blanketed by that other sound.
There
was a spacer, a slim, scoured shape, pointing nose to sky, the heat of its
deter-rocket fire making a steam mist about it. But this was no vision—it was
real! A spacer had set down by the village!
Charis
tottered forward. Tears added to the rain, wet on her cheeks. There was a
ship—help—down there. And it had come too soon for Tolskegg to hide the
evidence of what had happened. The burned bubble domes, all the rest—they would
be seen; questions would be asked. And she would be there to answer them!
She
lost her footing on a patch of sleek clay, and before she could regain her
balance, Charis was skidding down, unable to stop her fall. The sick horror
lasted for an endless second or two. Then came a
sudden shock, bringing pain and blackness.
Rain
on her face roused Charis again. She lay with her feet higher than her head, a
mass of rubble about her. Panic hit her, the fear that she was trapped or that
broken bones would immobilize her, away from the wonderful safety and help of
the ship. She must get there—now!
In
spite of the pain, she wriggled and struggled out of the debris of the slide,
crawled away from it. Somehow she got to her feet. There was no way of telling
how long she had lain there and the thought of the ship waiting drove her on to
make an effort she could not have faced earlier.
No time to go back to the spring trail—if she
could reach it from this point. Better straight down, with the incline of the
slope to keep her going in the right direction. She had been almost directly
above and behind the landing point when she had sheltered among the rocks. She
must have slid in the right direction, so she only had to keep on going that
way.
Was it a Patrol ship, Charis wondered as she
stumbled on. She tried to remember its outline. It was
certainly not a colony transport—it was not rotund enough;
nor was it a regulation freighter. So it could only be a
patrol or a government scout landing off-schedule. And its crew would know how
to deal with the situation here. Tolskegg might already be under arrest.
Charis
forced herself to cut down her first headlong pace. She knew she must not risk
another fall, the chance of knocking herself out just when help was so near.
No, she wanted to walk in on her own two feet, to be able to tell her story and
tell it clearly. Take it slowly: the ship would not lift now.
She
could smell the stench of the rocket-burn, see the
steam as a murky fog through the trees and brush. Better circle here; it no
longer mattered if Tolskegg or his henchmen sighted her. They would be afraid
to make any move against her.
Charis wavered out of the brush into the open
and started for the village without fear. She would show up on the vista-plates
in the ship, and none of the colonists would risk a hostile move under that circumstance.
So—she
would stay right here. There was no sign of anyone's coming out of the
village. Of course not! They would be trying to work out some plausible story,
whining to Tolskegg. Charis faced around toward the ship and waved vigorously,
looking for the insignia which would mark it Patrol or Scout.
There
was none! It took a moment for that fact to make a conscious impression on her mind. Charis had been so sure that the
proper markings would be there that she had almost deceived herself into
believing that she sighted them. But the spacer bore no device at all. Her arm
dropped to her side suddenly as she saw the ship as it really was.
This
was not the clean-lined, well-kept spacer of any government service. The sides
were space-dust cut, the general proportions somewhere between scout and
freighter, with its condition decidedly less than carefully tended. It must be
a Free Trader of the second class, maybe even a tramp—one of those plying a
none-too-clean trade on the frontier worlds. And the chances were very poor
that the commander or crew of such would be lawfully engaged here or would care
at all about what happened to the representatives of government they were
already aligned against in practice. Charis could hope for no help from such as
these.
A
port opened and the landing ramp snaked out and down. Somehow Charis pulled
herself together, she turned to run. But out of the air spun a rope, jerking
tight about her arms and lower chest, pulling her back and off her feet to
roll, helplessly entangled, a prisoner. While behind she
heard the high-pitched, shrill laughter of Tolskegg's son, one of the five boys
who had survived the epidemic.
II
She
must keep her wits, she
must! Charis sat on the backless bench, her shoulders braced against the log
wall, and thought furiously. Tolskegg was there and Bagroof, Sidders, Mazz. She
surveyed what now must be the ruling court of the colony. And
then, the trader. Her attention kept going back to the man at the end of
the table who sat there, nursing a mug of quaffa, eyeing the assembly .with a
spark of amusement behind the drooping lids of his very bright and wary eyes.
Charis
had known some Free Traders. In fact, among that class of
explorer-adventurer-merchant her father had had some good friends, men who
carried with them a strong desire for knowledge, who had added immeasurably to
the information concerning unknown worlds. But those were the aristocrats, of
their calling. There were others who were scavengers, pirates on occasion,
raiders who took instead of bargained when the native traders of an alien race
were too weak to stand against superior off-world weapons.
"It
is simple, my friend." The trader's insolent tone to Tol-skegg must have
cut the colonist raw, yet he took it because he must. "You need labor.
Your fields are not going to plow, plant, and reap themselves. All right, in
freeze I have labor-good hands all of them. I had my pick; not
one can't pull his weight, I promise you. There was a flare on Gonwall's
sun, they had to evacuate to Sallam, and Sallam couldn't absorb the excess
population. So we were allowed to recruit in the refugee camp. My cargo's prime
males—sturdy, young, and all under indefinite contracts. The only trouble is, friend, what do you have to offer in return? Oh—" his
hand went up to silence the beginning rumble from Tolskegg. "I beg of you,
do not let us have again this talk of furs. Yes, I have seen them, enough to
pay for perhaps three of my cargo.
Your wood does not interest me in the least. I want small things, of less bulk,
a money cargo for a fast turnover elsewhere. Your furs for
three laborers—unless you have something else to offer."
So
that was it! Charis drew a deep breath and knew there was no use in appealing
to this captain. If he had shipped desperate men on indefinite labor contracts,
he was no better than a slaver, even though there was a small shadow of legality
to his business. And his present offer was sheer torment to Tolskegg.
"No
native treasures—gems or such?" the captain continued. "Sad
that your new world has so few resources to aid you now, friend."
Mazz
was pulling at his leader's grimed sleeve, hissing into Tolskegg's ear. The
frown on the other's face lightened a little.
"Give us a moment to do some reckoning,
captain. We may have something else."
The
trader nodded. "All the time you wish, friend. I thought that might move your memories."
Charis
tried to think what Mazz had in mind. There was nothing of immediate value to
trade, she was sure, save the bundle of pelts the ranger had gathered as
specimens. Those had been cured to send off-world as scientific material.
The
buzz of whispers among the colonists came to an end and Tolskegg faced about.
"You trade in labor. What if we offer you labor in return?"
For
the first time, the captain displayed a faint trace of surprise—deliberately,
Charis decided. He was too old a hand at any bargaining to show any emotion
unless for a purpose.
"Labor? But you are poor in labor. Do you wish to
strip yourselves of what few assets you possess?"
"You
deal in labor," Tolskegg growled. "And there is more than one kind of
labor. Is that not so? We need strong backs, men for our fields. But there are
other worlds where they may need women."
Charis
stiffened. For the first time she saw more than one reason for her having been
dumped here. She had thought it was merely to impress upon her the folly of
hoping for any rescue. But this—
"Women?" The captain's surprise grew more open.
"You would trade your women?"
Mazz
was grinning, a twisted and vicious grin centered on Charis. Mazz still smarted
from Ander Nordholm's interference when he had wanted to beat his wife and
daughter into the fields.
"Some women,"
Mazz said. "Her—"
Charis
had been aware that the trader had pointedly ignored her from his entrance
into the cabin. To interfere in the internal affairs of any colony was against
trading policy. To the captain, a girl with her arms tied behind her back, her
feet pinioned, was a matter involving the settlement and not his concern. But
now he accepted Mazz's statement as an excuse for giving her a measuring stare.
Then he laughed.
"And
of what possible value is this one? A child, a reed to break
if you set her to any useful labor."
"She
is older than she looks and has the learning of books," Tolskegg retorted.
"She was a teacher of useless knowledge, and speaks more than one tongue.
On some worlds such are useful or deemed so by the fools that live there."
"Who are you,
then?" The captain spoke to her directly.
Was
this a chance? Could she persuade him to take her, hoping to contact authority
off-world and so obtain her freedom?
"Charis Nordholm. My
father was education officer here."
"So?
Oh, daughter of a learned one, what has chanced in this placet^ He had slipped
from Basic into the sibilant Za-cathan tongue. She answered him readily in the
same language.
"First, winged one, a sickness, and then the blight of ignorance."
Tolskegg's
great fist struck the table with a drum thud. "Speak words we can
understand!"
The captain smiled.
"You have claimed for this child knowledge. I have the right to decide
whether that knowledge makes her worth my buying. In the water of the north
there are splinters of ice." Again he used one of the Five Tongues—that of
Danther.
"But
the winds of the south melt them swiftly." Charis replied to that code
address almost mechanically.
"I
say—speak what a man can understand. She has learning, this one. She is
useless to us here. But to you she is worth at least another laborer!"
"How
say you, Gentle Fern?" The trader addressed Charis. "Do you deem
yourself worth a man?"
For
the first time the girl allowed herself a thrust in return. "I am worth
several of some!"
The
captain laughed. "Well said. And if I take you, will you sign an
indefinite contract?"
For
a long moment Charis stared at him, her small spark of hope crushed before it
had time to warm her. As her eyes met his, she knew the truth—he was not really
an escape at all. This man would not take her from Demeter to someone in
authority. Any bargain would be made on his terms, and those terms would bind
her on almost every planet he would visit. With a labor cargo he would set down
only on those worlds where such a shipment would be welcome and legal. With an
indefinite contract to bind her, she could not appeal for freedom.
"That is
slavery," she said.
"Not
so." But his smile held almost as much malice as Mazz's grin. "To
every contract there comes an end in time. Of course, you need not sign, Gentle Fern. You may remain here—if that is
your wish."
"We
trade her!" Tolskegg had followed this exchange with growing exasperation.
"She is not one of us, nor our kind. We trade
her!"
The captain's smile grew broader. "It
would seem, Gentle
Fem, that you have little choice. I do not
think that this world will be very kind to you under the circumstances if you
remain."
Charis
knew he was right. Left to Tolskegg and the rest, their hatred of her the
hotter for losing out on what they thought was a bargain, she would be truly
lost. She drew a ragged breath; the choice was already made.
Til sign," she said
dully.
The
captain nodded. "I thought you would. You are in full possession of your
senses. You—" he pointed to Mazz, "loose the Gentle Fem!"
"Already
once she has run to the woods," Tolskegg objected. "Let her remain
bound if you wish to control her. She is a demon's daughter and full of
sin."
"I
do not think she will run. And since she is about to become marketable
property, I have a voice in this matter. Loose her now!"
Charis
sat rubbing her wrists after the cords were cut. The captain was right—her
strength and energy were gone; she could not make a break for freedom now.
Since the trader had tested her education to a small degree, it was possible that
learning was a marketable commodity for which he already
foresaw profit. And to be off-world, away from Deme-ter, would be a small
measure of freedom in itself.
"You
present a problem." The captain spoke to her again. There is no processing
station here, and we cannot ship you out in freeze—"
Charis
shivered. Most labor ships stacked their cargo in the freeze of suspended
animation, thus saving room, supplies, all the needs
of regular passengers. Space on board a trader ship was strictly limited.
"Since
we lift without much cargo," he continued, "you'll bunk in the strong
room. And now—what's the matter—are you sick?"
She had striven to rise, only to have the
room whirl about her with a sickening lurch of floor and ceiling.
"Hungry."
Charis clutched at the nearest hold, the arm the captain had put out
involuntarily when she swayed.
"Well, that can be
remedied easily enough."
Charis
remembered little of how she got to the spacer. She was most aware of a cup
pushed into her hands, warm to her cold palms, and the odor which rose from it.
Somehow she managed to get the container to her lips and drink. It was a thick
soup, savory, though she could not identify any of its contents. When she had
finished, she settled back on the bunk and looked about the room.
Each
Free Trader had a cabin with extra security devices intended to house
particularly rich, small cargo. The series of cupboards and drawers about her
were plainly marked with thumbprint locks which only the captain and his most
trusted officers could open. And the bunk on which she sat was for a port-side
guard when such were needed.
So
she, Charis Nordholm, was no longer a person but valuable cargo. But she was
tired, too tired to worry, to even think, about the future. She was tired—
The vibration of the walls, the bunk under her, were a part of
her body, too. She tried to move and could not; panic caught at her until she
saw that the webbing of the take-off belts laced her in. Thankful, Charis
touched the release button and sat up. They were off-planet, headed toward
what new port of call? She almost did not want to know.
Since
there was no recording of time in the treasure cabin, Charis could portion
hours, days, only by the clicking of the tray which brought her food through a
hatch at intervals-long intervals, for the food was mostly the low-bulk,
high-energy tablets of emergency rations. She saw no one and the door did not
open. She might have been imprisoned in an empty ship.
At first Charis welcomed the privacy, feeling
secure in it. She slept a lot, slowly regaining the strength which had been
drained from her during those last weeks on Demeter. Then she became bored and
restless. The drawers and cupboards attracted her, but those she could open
were empty. At the fifth meal-period there was a small packet beside her
rations, and Charis opened it eagerly to find a reader with a tape threaded
through it.
Surprisingly
enough, the tape proved to be one of the long epic poems of the sea world of
Kraken. She read it often enough to commit long passages to heart, but it
spurred her imagination to spin fantasies of her own which broke up the dull
apathy induced by her surroundings. And always she could speculate about the
future and what it might hold.
The captain—odd that she had never heard his name—had hers now, along
with her thumbprint, on his contract. She was signed and sealed to a future
someone else would direct. But always she could hope that chance would take her
where she could appeal for aid and freedom. And Charis was very sure now that a
future off-world would be better than any on Demeter.
She
was reciting aloud her favorite passage from the saga when a loud clang,
resounding from the walls of the cabin, sent her flat on the bunk, snapping the
webbing in place. The spacer was setting down. Was this the end of the trip for
her or just a way stop? She endured the pressure of planeting and lay waiting for the answer.
Though
the ship must be in port, no one came to free her, and as the moments passed
she grew impatient, pacing back and forth in the cabin, listening for any
sound. But, save that the vibration had ceased, they could as well have been in
space.
Charis
wanted to pound the door, scream her desire to be out of what was now not a
place of security but a cage. By stern effort she controlled that impulse.
Where were they now? What was happening? How long would this continue —this
being sealed away? Lacing her fingers tightly together, she went back to the
bunk, willed herself to sit there with an outward
semblance of patience. She might be able to communicate through the ration
hatch if this went on.
She
was still sitting when the door opened. The captain stood there with a bundle
under his arm which he tossed to the bunk beside her.
"Get
into this." He nodded curtly at the bundle. "Then cornel"
Charis pulled at the fastening of the bundle
to unroll a coverall uniform, the kind worn by spacemen off duty. It was clean
and close enough to her size to fit if she rolled up
sleeves and pants legs. Using the pocket-sized refresher of the cabin, she made
a sketchy toilet, glad to discard her soiled and torn Demeter clothing. But she
had to keep her scuffed and worn boots. Her hair was shoulder-length now, its
light brown strands fair against her tanned skin, curling up a little at the
ends. Charis drew it back to tie with a strip of cloth, forming a bobbing tail
at the back of her head. There was no need to consult any mirror; she was no
beauty by the standards of her race and never had been. Her mouth was too
wide, her cheekbones too clearly defined, and her eyes—a pale gray—too
colorless. She was of Terran stock, of middle height which made her taller than
some of the mutated males, and altogether undistinguished.
But
she was feminine enough to devote several seconds making sure the coverall
fitted as well as she could manage and that she made the best appearance
possible under the circumstances. Then, a little warily, she tried the door,
found it open, and stepped out onto the level landing.
The
captain was already on the ladder; only his head and shoulders were in sight.
He beckoned impatiently to her. She followed him down for three levels until
they came to the open hatch from which sprang the door ramp.
Outside
was a glare of sunlight which made Charis blink and raise her hands to shield
her eyes. The captain caught her elbow and steered her ahead into a harsh warmth, desert-like in its baking heat. And as her
eyes adjusted she saw that they had indeed set down in a wasteland.
Sand,
which was a uniform-red outside the glassy slag left by the rocket blast,
lapped out to the foot of a range of small hills, the outline of which
shimmered in heat waves. There was no sign of any building, no look of a port,
save for the countless slag scars which pecked and pitted the surface of the
desert sand, evidence of many landings and take-offs.
There
were ships—two, three, a fourth farther away. And all of them, Charis saw, were
of the same type as the one she had just left, second- and third-class traders.
This seemed to be a rendezvous for fringe merchants.
The
captain's hold on her arm left Charis no time to examine her surroundings more closely; he was
pulling rather than guiding her to the next ship, a twin to his own. And a man,
with an officer's winged cap but no uniform except nondescript coveralls, stood
waiting for them at the foot of the ramp.
He stared at Charis intently as she and the
captain approached. But the stare was impersonal, as if she were not a woman
or even a human being at all, but a new tool of which the stranger was not
quite sure.
"Here
she is." The captain brought Charis to a stop before the strange officer.
His stare held for a moment and then he
nodded and turned to go up the ramp. The other two followed. Once inside the
ship, Charis, sandwiched between the two men, climbed the core ladder up to the
level of the commander's cabin. There he signaled for her to sit at a
swing-down desk, pushed a reader before her.
What
followed was, Charis discovered, an examination into her ability to keep
accounts, her knowledge of X-tee contact procedures, and the like. In some
fields she was very ignorant, but in others she appeared to satisfy her
questioner.
"She'll do." The
stranger was very sparing of words.
Do
for what? The question was on the tip of Charis's tongue when the stranger saw
fit to enlighten her.
"I'm
Jagan, Free Trader, and I've a temporary permit for a world named Warlock. Heard
of it?"
Charis
shook her head. There were too many worlds; one could never keep up with their
listing.
"Probably
not—back of beyond," Jagan had already added. "Well, the natives
have a queer system. Their females rule, make all off-world contacts; and they
don't like to deal with males, even strangers like us. So we have to have a
woman to palaver with them. You know some X-tee stuff and you've enough
education to keep the books. We'll put you at the post, and then they'll trade.
I'm buying your contract, and that's that. Got it, girl?"
He
did not wait for her to answer, but waved her away from the desk. She backed
against the cabin wall and watched him thumbprint the document which
transferred her future into his keeping.
Warlock—another
world—unsettled by human beings except at a trading post. Charis considered
the situation. Such trading posts were visited at intervals by officials. She
might have a chance to plead her case before such an inspector.
Warlock—
She began to wonder about that planet and what might
await her there.
III
"It's
simple. You
discover what they want and
give it to them for as near your price as you can get." Jagan sat at the
wall desk, Charis on a second pull-seat by the wall. But the captain was not
looking at her; he was staring at the cabin wall as if the answer to some
dilemma was scratched there as deeply as a blaster ray could bum it. "They
have what we want. Look here—" He pulled out a strip of material as long
as Charis's forearm and as wide as her palm.
It
was fabric of some type, a pleasant green color with an odd shimmer to its
surface. And it slipped through her fingers with a caressing softness. Also,
she discovered, it could be creased and folded into an amazingly small compass,
yet would shake out completely unwrinkled.
"That's
waterproof," Jagan said. "They make it. Of what we
don't know."
"For their clothing?" Charis was entranced. This had the soft
beauty of the fabulously expensive Askra spider silk.
"No,
this fabric is used commonly to package things-bags and such. The Warlockians
don't wear clothing. They live in the sea as far as we know. And that's the
only thing we've been able to trade out of them so far. We can't get to
them—" He scowled, flipping record tapes about the top of his desk.
"This is our chance, the big one, the one every trader dreams of having
someday—a permit on a newly opened world. Make this spin right and it
means—" His voice trailed off, but Charis understood him.
Trading empires, fortunes, were made from
just such chances. To get at the first trade of a new world was a dream of good luck. But she was still puzzled as to how Jagan had
achieved the permit for Warlock. Surely one of the big Companies would have
made contact with Survey and bid in the rights to establish the first post.
Such plums were not for the fringe men. But it was hardly tactful under the
circumstances to ask Jagan how he had accomplished the nigh to impossible.
She
had been spending a certain period of each ship's day with Jagan, going over
the tapes he considered necessary for her briefing. And Chan's had, after her
first instruction hour, realized that to Jagan she was not a person at all, but
a key with which he might unlock the mysteriously shut door of Warlockian
trade. Oddly enough, while the captain supplied her with a wealth of
information about his goods, the need for certain prices and profits, the
mechanics of trading with aliens, he seemed to have very little to say about
the natives themselves, save that they were strongly matriarchal in their
beliefs, holding males in contempt. And they had been wary of the post after a
first curious interest in it.
Jagan
was singularly evasive over why the first contact had failed so thoroughly. And
Charis, treading warily, dared not ask too many questions. This was like
forsaking a well-wom road for a wilderness. She still had a little knowledge to
guide her, but she had to pick a new path, using all her intuition.
"They
have something else." Jagan came out of the thoughtful silence into which
he had retreated. "It's a tool, a power. They travel by it." He rubbed
one hand across his square chin and looked at Charis oddly as if daring her to
take his words lightly. "They can vanish!"
"Vanish?"
She tried to be encouraging. Every bit of information she could gain she must
have.
"I
saw it." His voice sank to a mumble. "She was right there—" one
finger stabbed at the corner of the cabin, "and tiien—" He shook his
head. "Just—just gone! They work it some way. Get
us the secret of how they do that and we won't need anything else."
Charis
knew that Jagan believed in the truth of what he had seen. And aliens had secrets. She was beginning to look forward to Warlock more than for just
a chance of being free of this spacer.
But when they did planet, she was not so
certain once again. The sky of mid-aftemoon was amber, pure gold in places. The
ship had set down among rough cliffs of red and black which shelved or broke
abruptly to the green sea. Except for that sea and the sky, Warlock appeared a
somber world of dark earth, a world which, to Charis, repelled rather than
invited the coming of her species.
On
Demeter the foliage had been a light, bright green, with hints of yellow along
stem or leaf edge. Here it held a purple overcast, as if it were eternally
night-shadowed even in the full sun of day.
Charis had welcomed and fiercely longed for
the fresh air of the open, untainted by spacer use. But after her first tasting
of that pleasure, she was more aware of a chill, a certain
repulsion. Yet the breeze from the sea was no more than fresh; the few odors it
bore, while perhaps strange, were not offensive in any way.
There
was no settlement, no indication except for slag scars, that
any spacer had finned in here before. She followed Jagan down the ramp, away
from the rocket steam, to the edge of a cliff drop, for they had landed on a
plateau well above sea level. Below was an inlet running like a sharp sword
thrust of sea into the land. And at its innermost tip
bubbled the dome of the post, a gray dome of quickly hardened plasta-skin—the
usual temporary structure on a frontier planet.
"There
she is." Jagan nodded. But it seemed to Charis that he was in no hurry to
approach his gate to fortune. She stood there, the breeze tugging at her hair
and the coveralls they had given her. Demeter had been a frontier world, alien,
but until after the white death had struck it had seemed open, willing to
welcome her kind. Was that because it had had no native race? Or because its
very combination of natural features, of sights, sounds, smells,
had been more attuned to Terran stock? Charis had only begun to assess what
made that difference, trying to explore the emotions this first meeting with
Warlock aroused in her, when Jagan moved.
He
lifted a hand to summon her on and led the way down a switchback trail cut into
the native rock by blaster fire. Behind she could hear the voices of his crew
as they formed a line of men to descend.
The
foliage had been thinned about the post, leaving a wide space of bare, blue
soil and gray sand ringing the bubble, an elementary defense precaution.
Charis caught the scent of perfume, looked into a bush where small
lavender-pink balls bobbed and swung with the wind's touch. That was the first
light and delicate thing she had seen in this rugged landscape.
Now
that she was on a level with the post, she saw that the dome was larger than it
looked from above. Its surface was unbroken by any windows; visa-screens within
would be set to pick up what registered on sensitive patches of the walls. But
at the seaward end there was the outline of a door. Jagan fronted that and
Charis, alert to any change in the trader's attitude, was sure he was puzzled.
But his pause was only momentary. He strode forward and slapped his palm
against the door as if in irritation.
The portal split open and they were inside
the large fore-room. Charis looked about her. There was a long table, really
only a flat surface mounted on easily assembled pipelegs. A set of shelves, put
together in a like manner and now occupied by a mass of trade goods, followed
the curve of the dome wall along, flanking the door, and added to the portion
cutting this first chamber off from the rest.
There
was a second door midway of that inner wall; the man who stood there must be
Gellir, Jagan's cargomaster and now post keeper. He had the deep tan of a space
man, but his narrow face, with its sharp jet of chin and nose, bore signs of
fatigue. There were lines bracketing his lips, dark smudges under his eyes. He
was a man who was under a strain, Charis thought. And he carried a stunner, not
hols-tered at his belt as all the crew wore them when planetside, but free in
his hand, as if he expected not his captain but some danger he was not sure he
could meet.
"You
made it." His greeting was a flat statement of fact. Then he sighted
Charis and his expression tightened into one that she thought, with surprise,
was a mingling of fear and repulsion. "Why—" He stopped, perhaps at
some signal from Jagan the girl had not seen.
"Through
here," the captain spoke to her quickly. She was almost pushed past Gellir
into a passage so narrow that the shoulders of her escort brushed the plasta
walls. He took her to the end of that way where the dome began to curve down
overhead and then opened another door. "In here," he ordered curtly.
Charis
went in, but as she turned, the door was already shut. Somehow she knew that if
she tried to separate it by palm pressure, it would be locked.
With
growing apprehension Charis looked about the room. There was a folding cot
against the slope of the wall—she would have to move carefully to fit in under
that curve. A stall fresher occupied a considerable space in the room where the
roof was higher. For the rest, there was a snap-down table and a pull-out seat
to fit beneath it and, at the foot of the cot, a box she guessed was to hold
personal possessions.
More like a cell than living quarters in its
design to eonserve space. But, she thought, probably equal to any within the
post. She wondered how big a staff Jagan thought necessary to keep here.
Gellir had been in charge while the captain was off-world, and he could have
been alone, a situation which would cause him to be jumpy under the
circumstances. Normally a spacer of the Free Trader class would carry— Charis
reckoned what she did know about such ships—normally a captain, cargomaster,
assistant pilot-navigator, engineer and his assistant, a jet man, a medico, a
cook—perhaps an assistant cargomaster. But that was a fully staffed ship, not a
fringe tramp. She thought there had been four men on board beside Jagan.
Think
things out, assemble your information before you act.
Ander Nordholm had been a systematic thinker and his training still held in the
odd turn her life had taken. Charis pulled out the seat and folded her hands on
the table surface as she sat down to follow her father's way of facing a problem.
If
she only knew more about Jagan! That he was desperately intent upon this
project she could understand. Success meant a great deal for a fringe tramp;
the establishment of a post on a newly opened planet was a huge step up. But
—how had one on the ragged edge of respectability gotten the franchise for such
a post in the beginning? Or—Charis considered a new thought—or had Jagan broken
in here without a license? Suppose, just suppose, he had seen the chance to
land well away from any government base, start trading. Then, when he was
located by a Patrol from whatever headquarters did exist on Warlock, he could
present an established fact. With the trade going, he could pay his fine and be
left alone, because the situation could be so delicate locally that the legal
representatives would not want the natives to have any hint of dissension
between two off-world groups.
Then a time lapse in establishing proper
contact with the aliens would goad Jagan into action. He would have to take
any short cut, make any move he could devise, to get started. So, he needed
her—
But
that meeting on the desert of the unknown world where she had been traded from
the labor ship to Jagan— What was that place and why
had Jagan been there? Just to pick her up—or some other woman? An illegal
meeting place where traders in contraband exchanged cargoes—of that she was
sure. Smugglers operated all over space. A regular stop for the labor ship and
Jagan was there, waiting on the chance of their carrying a woman for sale?
Which meant she had been taken by an illegal trader. Charis smiled slowly; she could be lucky
because this trade had gone through. Somewhere on Warlock there was a government
base where all Contacts between off-worlders and natives were supervised. If
she could reach that base and protest an illegal contract, she might be free
even with Jagan holding her signature and thumbprint against herl
For
the time being she would go along with Jagan's trading plans. Only—if the
captain were working against time-Suddenly Charis felt as cold as she had when
crouched on the Demeter mountainside. She was only a tool for Jagan; let that
tool fail and . . .
She
took an iron grip on herself, fought the cold inside her which was a gathering
storm to send her beating at the door of what might be a trap. Her hands were
palm-down on the table, their flesh wet. Charis strove to master the sickness
in her middle and then she heard movements. Not in this cell— no—but beyond its
wall.
A pounding—now heavy, now hardly more than a tapping—at irregular
intervals. She
was straining to hear more when the sound of metallic space-boot plates
clicking against the flooring made her tense. Coming here?
She slipped sidewise on the seat to face the
door. But that did not open. Instead, she heard another sound from beyond the
wall—a thin mewling, animal-like, yet more frightening than any beast's cry. A
human voice—low; Charis could not make out any words, just a man's tone close
to the level of a whisper.
Now the sound of footsteps just without her
own door.
Charis sat very still, willing herself into what she
hoped was the outer semblance of calm. Not Jagan entered as the door split
open, but one of the crew she did not recognize. In one hand he carried a
sack-bag such as the crew used for personal belongings, which he tossed in the
general direction of her cot. In the other, he balanced a sealed, hot ration
tray which he slid on to the table before her. The room was so small he need
hardly step inside the door to rid himself of both burdens.
Charis
was ready to speak, but the expression on his face was forbidding and his
movements were those of a man in a hurry. He was back and gone, the door sealed
behind him before she could ask a question.
A
finger-tip pressure released the lid of the tray and Charis savored the
fragrance of stew, hot quaffa. She made a quick business of eating, and her
plate was cleared before she heard more sounds. Not the thumping this time but
a low cry which was not quite a moan.
As
suddenly as that plaint began, it stopped and there was silence. A prisoner? A member of the crew ill?
Charis's imagination could supply several answers, but imagination was not to
be relied upon.
As
the silence continued, Charis rose to investigate the bag on the cot. Jagan or
someone had made a selection of trade goods, for the articles which spilled out
were items intended to catch the eye of an alien or primitive. Charis found a
comb with the back set in a fanciful pattern of bits of crystal;
a
mirror adorned to match; a box containing highly scented soap powder, the too
strong perfume of which made her sniff in fastidious disgust. There were
several lengths of cloth in bright colors; a small hand-sew kit; three pairs of
ornamented sandals in different sizes for a fitting choice; a robe, which was
too short and too wide, of a violent blue with a flashy pattern of oblak birds
painted on it.
Apparently
the captain wished her to present a more feminine appearance than she now made
wearing the coveralls. Which was logical considering her duties here—that she
register as a woman with the natives..
Suddenly
Charis yielded to the desire to be just that again —a woman. The colonists of
Demeter had been a puritanical sect with strong feelings cancerning the
wrongness of frivolous feminine clothing. Suiting themselves outwardly as well
as they could to the people they must live among, all members of the
government party not generally in uniform had adapted to the clumsy, drab
clothing the sect believed fitting. Such colors as now spilled across the cot
had been denied Charis for almost two years. While they were not the ones she
would have chosen for herself, she reached out to stroke their brightness with
an odd lightening of spirit.
There
were no patterns by which to cut, but she thought she had skill enough to put
together a straight robe and skirt, a very modified
version of the colony clothing. The yellow went with the green in not too
glaring a combination. And one pair of sandals did fit.
Charis
set out the toilet articles on the table, piled the material and the robe on
the chair. Of course, they must have brought her the least attractive and
cheapest of their supplies. But still—she remembered the strip of native
material Jagan had shown her. The color of that was far better than any of
these garish fabrics. Someone who used that regularly would not be attracted by
what she had here. Perhaps that was one of the points which had defeated Jagan
so far; his wares were not fitted to the taste of his customers. But surely the
captain was no amateur; he would know that for himself.
No—definitely
she would not combine the yellow with the green after all. One color alone and,
if there was not enough material, Jagan would have to give her the run of his
shelves to make a better selection. If she was going to represent her race
before alien females, she must appear at her best.
Charis
measured the length of green against her body. Another modification of the cut
she had planned might do it.
"Pretty—pretty—"
She
swung around. That sibilant whisper was so startling that Charis was badly
shaken. The figure in the slit of the opened door whipped through and drew the
portal tight shut behind her as she stood, facing Charis, her back to the door,
her lips stretched in a frightening caricature of a smile.
IV
The newcomer was of a height with Charis so they could
match eye to eye as they stood there, Charis gripping the fabric length tightly
with both hands, the other woman continuing to laugh in a way which was worse
than any scream. She must have been plump once, for her skin was loose in
pouches and wrinkles on her face and in flabby flaps on her arms. Her black
hair hung in lank, greasy strings about her wrinkled neck to her hunched
shoulders.
"Pretty."
She reached out crooked fingers and Charis instinctively retreated, but not
until those crooked nails caught in the material and jerked at it viciously.
The stranger's own garments were a bundle of
stuffs—a gaudy robe much like the one Charis had been given, pulled on
crookedly over a tunic of another and clashing shade. And she wore the heavy,
metal-plated boots of a space man.
"Who
are you?" Charis demanded. Oddly enough, something in her tone appeared
to awaken a dim flash of reason in the other.
"Sheeha," she replied as simply as
a child. "Pretty." Her attention returned again to the fabric.
"Want—" She snatched, ripping the length from Charis's grasp.
"Not to the snakes— not give to the snakes!" Her lips drew flat
across her teeth in an ugly way and she retreated until her shoulders were once
more set against the door panel, the material now wreathed and twisted in her
own claw hands.
"The snakes won't get this pretty!" she announced. "Even
if they dream. No—not even if they dream ..." <
Charis
was afraid to move. Sheeha had crossed the border well into a country for which
there was no map of any sane devising.
"They
have dreamed," Sheeha's croak of a voice was crooning, "so many times
they have dreamed—calling Sheeha. But she did not go, not to the snakes,
no!" Her locks of hair bobbed as she shook her head vigorously.
"Never did she go. Don't you go—never—not to the snakes."
She
was busy thrusting the material she had balled into a wad into a bag in her
robe. Now she looked beyond Charis at the blue robe on the cot, reaching out
for that, also.
"Pretty—not for the
snakes—no!"
Charis
snatched the garment up and pushed it into that clawing hand.
"For
Sheeha—not the snakes," she agreed, trying to keep her fear from showing.
Again
the woman nodded. But this time as she took the robe, she caught at Charis with
her other hand, linking fingers tight about the girl's wrist. Charis was afraid
to struggle. But the touch of the other's dry, burning skin against her own
made her flesh shrink, and a shudder ran through her.
"Cornel"
Sheeha ordered. "Snakes will get nothing. We shall make sure."
She jerked Charis toward her as she swung
around. The door-slit opened and Sheeha pulled the unresisting girl out into
the corridor. Dared she call for help? Charis wondered. But the grasp on her
wrist, the strength the other displayed, was a warning against centering
Sheeha's attention on her.
As
far as Charis could see, the trading post was deserted save for the two of
them. The doors along the hall were shut, but that to the store was open and
the light there beckoned them on. It must be early evening. Was Sheeha going
out into the night? Charis, remembering the broken country about the perimeter
of the post, had hopes of escape there if she could break the hold the other
had on her.
But
it appeared that Sheeha was bound no farther than the outer room where the
shelves were crowded with the trade wares. As her eyes settled on that wealth
of miscellaneous goods, she did drop her hold on Charis.
"Not to the
snakes!"
She
had moved down the corridor at a rapid shuffle, as if the weight of the space
boots had been a handicap. But now she fairly sprang at the nearest shelf on
which stood rows of small glass bottles, sweeping her arms along to send them
smashing to the floor. A cloud of overpowering and mingled scents arose. Not
content with clearing them from the shelves, Sheeha was now stamping on the
shards which survived the first crash, her cry of "Not to the
snakes!" becoming a chant.
"Sheeha!"
She
had finished with the bottles and was now grabbing at rolls of materials,
tearing at the stuff with her claws. But her first assault had brought a
response from the owner of the post. Chans was brushed aside with a force which
sent her back against the long table as Jagan burst in from the corridor and
hurled himself at the frantic woman, his arms clamping hers tight to her body
though she threshed and fought in his grasp, her teeth snapping as her head
turned back and forth trying for a wolfish-fang grip on her captor. She was
screaming, high, harsh, and totally without mind.
Two
more men came on the run, one from outside, the other—whom Charis recognized as
the one who had brought her the food—from the corridor. But it took all three
of them to control Sheeha.
She
cried as they looped a length of the unrolled fabric about her, imprisoning her
arms against her body, making her into a package.
"The dreams—not the dreams—not the snakes!" The words broke from her as a plea.
Charis
was surprised to see the emotion on Jagan's face. His hands rested gently on
Sheeha's shoulders as he turned her around to face, not the interior corridor
of the post but the outer door.
"She
goes to the ship," he said. "Maybe there . . ." He did not
complete that sentence but, steering the woman before him, he went out into
the night.
The
overwhelming odors of the spilt perfumes were thick enough to make Charis
sneeze. Trails of trade fabrics cascaded down from the second shelf Sheeha had
striven to clean off. Mechanically Charis went over to loop the material up
from the mess on the floor, circling about the glass shards which were still
visible in the powder Sheeha's boots had ground.
"You—"
She glanced up as the man by the table spoke. "You'd better go back
now."
Charis obeyed, glad to be out of the wreckage. She was shivering as she sat down upon her
cot once again, trying to understand what had happened. Jagan said he needed a woman to contact the natives. But before Chariss coming there had
already been a woman here—Sheeha. And that Sheeha was to the captain something
more than a tool Charis was sure, having watched his handling of her frenzy.
The snakes—the dreams? What had moved Sheeha to her wild talk and acts? Charis's own first
impression of Warlock, that it was not a world to welcome her kind—was that the
truth and not just a semiconscious, emotional reaction to certain landscape
coloring? What was happening here?
She
could go out, demand an explanation. But Charis discovered that her will this
time was not strong enough to make her cross that threshold again. And when she
did try the door and found she could not open it, she sighed in relief. In this
small cell she felt safe; she could see every inch of it and know she was
alone.
The
light from the glow-track running along the ceiling of the bubble was growing
dimmer. Charis deduced they were slacking power for the night. She curled up on
the cot. Odd. Why was she so sleepy all at once? There
was a nicker of alarm at her realization at that oddness. Then
. . .
Light
again, all around her. Charis was aware of that light even though her eyes were
closed. Light and warmth. Then came
the desire to know from whence they reached her. She opened her eyes and looked
up into a serene, golden sky. Golden sky? She
had seen a golden sky—where? when? A part of her
pushed away memory. It was good to lie here under the gold of the sky. She had
not rested so, uncaring, for a long, long time.
A tickle at her toes, a lapping about her ankles, up around her calves. Charis stirred, used her elbows to prop
herself up. She lay in warm, gray sand in which there were
small, glittering points of red, blue, yellow, green. Her body was bare, but
she felt no need for any clothing; the warmth was covering of a sort. And she lay
on the very verge of a green sea with its foremost wavelets lapping gently at
her feet and legs. A green sea ... As
with the golden sky, that triggered memory, memory which something within her
feared and fought.
She was languorous, relaxed, happy—if this freedom could be called happiness. This was
right! Life should always be a clear gold sky, a green sea, jeweled sand,
warmth, no memories—just here and now!
Save
for the kiss and go of the waves there was no movement. Then Charis wanted
more than this flaccid content and sat up. She turned her head to find that she
was in a pocket of rock with a steep red cliff behind and about her and,
seemingly, no path out. Yet that did not disturb her in the least. With her
fingers she idly shifted the sand, blinking at the winks of color. The water
was washing higher, up to her knees now, but she had no wish to withdraw from
its warm caress.
Then—all the languor, the content, vanished.
She was not afraid, but aware. Aware of what? one part of her awakening mind demanded. Of
what? Of—of an intelligence, another awareness.
She scrambled up from the sand which had hollowed about her body and stood,
this time giving the rock walls about her a closer examination. But there was
nothing there, nothing save herself stood alive in
this pocket cup of rock and sand.
Charis
looked to the sea. Surely there—right there—was a troubling of the water.
Something was emerging, coming to her. And she . . .
Charis
gasped, gasped as if the air could not readily fill too empty lungs. She was on
her back, and it was no longer gold day but dim pale night about her. To her
right was the curve of the bubble wall. She could barely make it out, but her
outflung hand proved it solid and real. But—that sand had also been real as it
had shifted between her fingers. The soft lap of the sea
water, the sun and air on her skin? They, too, had been real.
A dream—more vivid and substantial than any
she had ever known before? But dreams were broken bits of things, like the
shards Sheeha had left on the floor of the trade room. And this had not been
broken, contained nothing which did not fit. That awareness
at the end, that belief that there was something rising from the sea to meet
her?
Was
it that which had broken the dream, pattern, brought her awake and into that
frightening sense, for a fraction of a second, that she was drowning—not in the
sea which had welcomed and caressed her but in something which now lay between
the realization of that sea and this room?
Charis
wriggled off the cot and padded to the seat by the table. She was excited,
experiencing the sensation which she had known when she anticipated some
pleasure yet to come. Would a second try at sleep return her to the sea, the
sand, the place in space and time where something—or someone—awaited her?
But
the sensation of well-being which she had brought with her from the dream, if
dream that had been, was seeping away. In its place flowed the same vague
discomfort and repugnance which had claimed her from her first leaving the
spacer. Charis found herself listening, as it seemed, not only with her ears
but with every part of her.
No
sound at all. Without knowing exactly why, she went to the door. There was
still light from the roof, dimmed to twilight but enough to see her way around.
Charis set her hands on either side of the slit and applied pressure. And the
portal opened, allowing her to look down the corridor.
This
time she faced no string of closed doors; they all gaped open. Again she
listened, trying to still her own breathing. What did she expect to hear? A murmur of voices, the sound of some sleeper's heavy intake and
expulsion of air? But there was nothing at all.
Earlier her room had seemed a haven of
safety, the only security she could hope to find. Now she was not so sure, just
as she could not put name to the intangible atmosphere which made her translate
her growing uneasiness into action she could not have assayed before.
Charis
started down the hall. Her bare feet made no sound on the floor which was too
chill as> she paused at the first door. That was open wide enough to show
her another cot-empty, just as the room was empty. The second
room, more sleeping quarters without a sleeper. A third room with the
same deserted bareness. But the fourth room was different. Even by this dim
light she could make out one promising feature, a com visa-screen against the
far wall. There was a table here, two chairs, a pile of record tapes. Ugly, distorted-She
was startled into immobility. It was almost as if she had seen this room and
its furnishings through eyes which measured and disdained it and all it stood
for. But that odd dis-orientation had been only a flash, the visa-screen drew
her. It was undoubtedly set there to be a link between a planeting ship and the
post. But, too, it might just furnish her with a key to freedom. Somewhere on
Warlock there was a government base. And this com could pick up that station,
would pick it up if she had the patience and time to make a sweep-beam search.
Patience she could produce; time was another matter. Where were the traders?
All back to the spacer for some reason? But why?
Where
earlier she had crept, now Charis sped, making the round of the post: the
sleeping rooms—all empty; the cook unit with its smell of recently heated
rations and quaffa still lingering but otherwise closed tight; the larger outer
room, where the smashed glass had been brushed into a pile and then left, where
one strip of tangled and creased material still fluttered from a hastily
wrapped roll; back to the com room. She was alone in the post. Why and for how
long she could not tell, but for the moment she was alone.
Now
it was a matter of time, luck, and distance. She could operate the sweep, set
its probe going to pick up any other com-beam within a good portion of planet
surface. If this was the middle of a Warlockian night, there might be no one on
duty at the government base com. Still she could set a message to be picked up
on its duty tape, a message which would bring the authorities here and give her
a chance to tell her story.
Pity
she could not increase the glow of lights, but she had not found the control
switch. So Charis had to lean very close to the keyboard of the unit to pick
out the proper combination to start the sweep.
For
a moment or two Charis was bewildered by a strange and unorthodox arrangement
of buttons. Then she understood. Just as the ship Jagan captained was
certainly not new or first class, this was a com of an older type than any she
had seen before. And a small worry dampened her first elation. What would be the range of sweep on such an antiquated installation? If the
government base was too far away, she might have little hope of a successful
contact.
Charis
pressed the button combination slowly, intent upon making no error in setting
up a sweep. But the crackles of sound which the activated
beam fed back into the room was only the natural atmospheric response of
an empty world. Charis had heard that on Demeter the times she had practiced
the same drill.
Only
the beep-beep spark traveling from one side of a small scan-plate to the other
assured her that the sweep was active. Now she had nothing to do but wait,
either to catch another wave or face the return of the traders.
Having
set the com to work, Charis returned to her other problem. Why had she been
left alone in the station at night? From the deeply cleft valley of the inlet
she could not see the landing site of the plateau where the spacer had
planeted. Jagan had taken Sheeha to the ship, but he had left at least two men
here. Had they believed her safely locked in her room so they could leave for
some other necessary duty? All she knew of the general routine of the post she
had learned from the captain, and that had been identical to the cramming of
what he had wanted her to know of his business.
The
faint beeping of the sweep was a soothing monotone, too soothing. Charis's head
jerked as she shook herself fully awake. One third of the circle had registered
no pick-up, and at least a fourth of the circumference must be largely sea,
from which direction she could expect no positive response.
That
came just when Charis was almost convinced there was no hope for her, it came—weak, so weak that the distance must be great.
But she had a direct beam on it and so could increase receptive volume.
Somewhere to the northeast, another off-world com was beaming.
Charis's
fingers flew, centering her sweep, adding to its intensity. The visa-plate
before her clouded, began to clear again. She was
picking up an answer! Charis reacted more quickly than she had thought possible
as some instinct sent her dodging to one side, away from the direct line of the
plate and so out of sight—or at least out of focus—for a return cast.
The
figure which emerged from the clearing mist was no government man, though he was a man or at least humanoid in appearance. He wore the same dingy
coveralls as the traders used; belted at his thick waist was not the legal stunner
but a highly illegal blaster. Charis's hand shot out and thumbed the lever
which broke connection just as the expression of open surprise on his face
turned to one of searching inquiry.
Breathing
fast, the girl crept back to her place before the screen. Another
post—somewhere to the north. But the blaster?
Such a weapon was strictly forbidden to anyone except a member of the Patrol or
Defense forces. She hesitated. Dare she put the sweep to work again? Try it
south? She had not recognized the man pictured on the plate as one of the
ship's crew, but still he could be one of Jagan's men. And so the captain's
actions here could be more outside the law than she had guessed.
Standing
well to one side of the screen, Charis triggered the sweep again. Moments later
she had a pick-up to the south. However, what flashed on the screen this time
was no armed space man but a very familiar standby pattern—the insignia of
Survey surmounted by a small Embassy seal, signifying an alien contact mission
manned by Survey personnel. There was no operator on duty; the standby pattern
clarified that. But they would have a pick-up tape ready to record. She could
send a message and know that it would be read within hours. Charis began to
click out the proper code words.
V
A soft swish of sound, a light touch on her body.
Charis
looked about her with an acceptance which was in itself part of the strangeness
of this experience. She had been huddled in the seat before the com, beating
out on its keys her call for attention. Then—she was here, back somehow in the
dream.
But,
she knew a second or so later after the dawn of that realization, this was not
quite the same dream after all. She wore the coverall she had pulled on before
she began her night's prowling of the deserted post. Her bare feet sent small
messages of pain along nerves and she glanced down at them. They were bruised
and there was a scrape along one instep which oozed drops of blood. Instead of
that feeling of oneness and satisfaction she had had before, now she was tired
and confused.
There, as it had before, rolled the sea under
the light of morning. And about her were rocky cliffs, while her sore feet sank
into loose and powdery sand. She was on the shore-there was no doubting that,
but this could not be a dream.
Charis
turned, expecting to see the post on its narrow tongue of water, but behind her
was a cliff wall. She could sight a line of depressions in the sand, ending at
the point where she now stood, marking her trail, and those led back out of
sight. Where she was and how she had come here she did not know.
Her
heart picked up the beat of fear, her breath came faster in shallow gasps. She
could not remember. No forcing of thought could bring back memory.
Back?
Maybe she could trace her way back along her trail. But even as she turned to
try that, Charis found she could not. There was a barrier somehow, a sensation
almost as keen as physical pain, which kept her from retracing. Literally she
could not take the first step back. Shaking, Charis faced around and tried
again to move. And the energy she expended nearly sent her sprawling on her
face. If she could not return, there was nothing to prevent her going forward.
She
tried to equate the points of the compass. Had she strayed north or south from
the post? She thought south. South—the government base lay to the south. If she
kept on, she had a chance of reaching that.
How
small that chance might be Charis dared not consider. Without supplies, without
even shoes, how long could she keep going? Some wild thoughts troubled her. Had
she brought this upon herself because she had striven to contact the base by
com? She cupped her hands over her eyes and stood, trying to understand, trying
to trace the compulsion which must have led her to this place. Had her conscious
mind blanked out? Her need for escape, for reaching the government base, had
that then taken over? It made sense of a sort, but it had also led her into
trouble.
Charis
limped down to the sea and sat on a rock to inspect her feet. They were
bruised, and there was another cut on the tip of a toe. She lowered them into
the water and bit her lip against the sting of the liquid in her wounds.
This
might be a world without life, Charis thought. The golden-amber sky held
floating clouds, but no birds or winged things cut across its serenity. The
sand and rocks about her were bare of any hint of growing things, and there was
no break on the smooth surface of the beach save the hollows of her own
footprints.
Charis
pulled open the seal front of her coverall and took off her undershirt. It was
a struggle to tear that, but at the cost of a broken nail she at last had a
series of strips which she bound about her feet. They would be some protection
since she could not remain where she was forever.
Some
hundred feet or so to the south, the cliff pointed out to meet the sea with no
strip of easily traveled beach at its foot. She would have to climb there. But
Charis sat where she was for a while, marking the hand- and-footholds to use,
when she had to.
She
was hungry—as hungry as she had been back on the mountain on Demeter, and there
was not even a hunk of bread for her this time. Hungry and
thirsty—although the water washed before her mockingly. To go on into a
bare wilderness was sheer folly, yet there was that invisible barrier on the
back trail. Now, even to turn her head and retrace by eye the hollow sand
prints required growing effort.
Grimly
she rose on her bandaged foot and limped to the cliff. She could not stay
there, growing weaker with hunger. There could be hope that beyond the cliff
there was more than just sand and rock.
The
climb taxed her strength, scraped her palms and fingers almost as badly as her
feet. She pulled out on the pitted surface of the crest and lay with her hands
tight against her breast, sobbing a little. Then she raised her head to look
about.
She
had reached the lip of another foliage-choked, narrow valley such as the one
which held the trading post. But here were no buildings, nothing but trees and
brush. However, not too far away a thread of water splashed down to make a
stream flowing seaward. Charts licked dry lips and started for that. Within
seconds she crouched on blue earth, her hands tingling in the chill of the
spring water as she drank from cupped palms, not caring whether her immunization
shots, intended for any lurking danger on Demeter, would hold on Warlock.
If
the sea beach had been empty of life, the same was not true of this valley. Her
thirst assuaged, Charts squatted back on her heels and noticed a gauzy-winged
flying thing skim across the water. It rose again, a
white threadlike creature writhing in the hold of its two pincer-equipped
forelegs, and was gone with its victim between a bush and the cliff wall.
Then,
from over her head, burst a clap of sound as if someone had brought two pieces
of bone sharply together. Another flyer, a great deal more substantial and a
hundred times larger than the insect hunter, shot out of a hole in the cliff
and darted back and forth over her. The thing had leathery skin-wings, its body
naked of any feathers or fur, the hide wrinkled and seamed. The head was very
large in proportion and split halfway down its length most of the time as an
enormous fang-set mouth uttered "clak-clak" noises.
A
second flyer joined the first, then a third, and the racket of their cries was
deafening. They swooped lower and lower and Charis's first curiosity turned to
real alarm. One alone would have been no threat, but a flock of the things,
plainly set upon her as a target for their dives, could mean real trouble. She
looked about for cover and plunged in under the matted branches of the
stunted-tree grove.
Apparently
her passage was not hidden from the clakers even though they could not reach
her, for she could hear their cries following her as she moved toward the sea.
Something leaped up from just before her and squealed as it ran for the deeper
shadows.
Now
she hesitated, unsure of what else might lie in this wood—waiting. The smell of
growing things—some pleasant, some disagreeable to her off-world senses—was
strong here. Her foot came down on a soft object which burst before she could
shift her weight and she saw a mashed fruit. More of these hung from the
branches of the tree under which she stood and lay on the ground where the
squealing creature had been feeding.
Charis
plucked one and held it to her nose, sniffing an unfamiliar odor which she
could not decide was pleasant or the reverse. It was food, but whether she
could eat it was another question. Still holding the fruit, Charis pushed on
seaward.
The
clamor of the clakers had not stilled but kept pace with her progress, yet the
open water tugged at her with a queer
promise of safety. She came to the last screen of brush from which the
vegetation straggled on to vanish in a choke
of gray sand.
There
was a smudge on the horizon which was more, Charis believed, than a low-flying
cloud bank. An island?
She
was so intent upon that that she did not, at first, note the new activity of
the clakers.
They
were no longer circling about her but had changed course, flying out to sea
where they wheeled and wove aerial patterns over the waves. And there was a
disturbance in those same waves, marking action below their surface. Something
was coming inshore, heading directly toward her.
Charis
unconsciously squeezed the fruit until its squashed pulp oozed between her
fingers. Judging by the traces, the swimmer—who or what that
might be—was large.
But
she did not expect nightmare to splash out of the surf and face her across so
narrow a strip of beach. Armor plate in the form of scales, greened by clinging
seaweed laced over the brown serrations, a head which was also armed with
hornlike extensions projecting above each wide eye, a snout to gape in a
fang-filled mouth . . .
The
creature clawed its way up out of the wash of the waves. Its legs ended in
web-jointed talons. Then it whipped up a tail, forked into two spike-tipped
equal lengths, spattering water over and ahead. The clakers set up a din and
scattered, soaring up, but they did not abandon the field to the sea monster.
But the creature paid them no attention in return.
At
first Charis was afraid it had seen her, and when it did not advance she was
temporarily relieved. A few more waddling steps brought it out of the water,
and then it flattened its body on the sand with a plainly audible grunt.
The
head swung back and forth and then settled, snout resting outstretched on the
scaled forelegs. It had all the~ appearance of desiring a nap in the warmth of
the sun. Charis hesitated. Since the clakers had directed their attention to
the fork-tail they might have forgotten her. It was the time to withdraw.
Her inner desire was to run, to crash back
into the brush and so win from the valley, which had taken on the semblance of
a trap. But wisdom said she was to creep rather than race. Still facing the
beast on the shingle, Charis retreated. For some precious seconds she thought
her hope was succeeding. Then . . .
The
screech overhead was loud, summoning. A claker spied her. And its fellows
screamed in to join it. Then Charis heard that other sound, a whistling,
pitched high to hurt her ears. She did not need to hear those big feet pounding
on the shingle or the crackle of broken brush to know that the fork-tail thing
was aroused and coming.
Her
only chance now was the narrow upper end of the valley where the cliff wall
might give her handholds to rise. Bushes raked and tore at her clothing and
skin as she thrust through any thin spot she could sight. Past the spring and
its draining brook she staggered to a glade where lavender grass grew thickly,
twisted about her feet, whipping blood from her with sharp leaf edges.
Always
above, the clakers screamed, whirled, dived to get at her, never quite touching
her head but coming so close that she ducked and turned until she realized that
she was losing ground in her efforts to evade their harassing. She threw herself
into the cover on the other side of that open space, using her arm as a shield
to protect her face as she beat her way in by the weight of her body.
Then
she was at her goal, the rock wall which rimmed the valley. But would the
clakers let her climb? Charis flattened herself against the stone to look up at
the flock of leather-wings from under the protection of her crooked arm. She
glanced back where shaking foliage marked the sea beast moving in.
They were all coming down at herl Charis screamed, beat out with both arms. Cries . .
.
She flailed out defensively, wildly, before
she saw what was happening. The flight of the clakers had brought them to a
line which crossed the more leisurely advance of the fork-tail. And so they had
run into trouble. For, as storm lightning might strike, the forked tail swept
up and lashed at the flyers, hurling bodies on and out to smash against the
cliff wall.
Twice
that tail struck, catching the avid first wave of attackers, and then some of
the second wave who were too intent upon their target or too slow to change
course. Perhaps five screeched their way up into the air to circle and clak,
but not to venture down again.
Charis
spun around and feeling for hand- and footholds, began to climb. The fork-tail
was now between her and the remaining clakers. Until she had reached a higher
point, she might not have to fear a second attack. She centered all her energy
upon reaching a ledge where some vines dropped ragged loops not far from her
groping fingers.
She
pushed up and into the tangle of vine growth which squashed under her squirming
body, rolling over as fast as she could to look back at the enemy. The clakers
were in a frenzy, rising as if wishing to skim down at
her, while below, Charis cringed back.
The
fork-tail was at the foot of the cliff, its webbed talons clawing at the rock.
Twice it managed to gain a small hold and was able to pull up a little, only to
crash back again. Either the holds were not deep enough to sustain its weight
or some clumsiness hindered its climb. For it moved awkwardly, as if on land its bulk were a liability.
But
its determination to follow her was plain in those continued efforts to find
talon-holds on the stone. Charis sidled along the vine-grown ledge with care
lest one of those loops of tough vegetation trip her. She stopped once to tear
loose a small length of the stuff, using it to lash out at a claker which had
gathered resolution enough to dive at her head. The whip of vine did not touch
the flyer, but it did send it soaring away in haste.
She could use that defense as long as she
traveled the ledge, but when she turned to climb once more, she could not so
arm herself. And she ■vyas approaching a point
where the shelf was too narrow to afford foot room.
The
fork-tail still raised on hind feet below, clawing at the cliff wall with
single-minded tenacity. A slip on her part would topple her into its reach. And
she dared not climb with the clakers darting at her head and shoulders. Now she
could keep them off with the lashing vine, but they were growing bolder, their
attacks coming closer together, so that her arm was already tired of wielding
the improvised whip.
Charis
leaned against the cliff wall. So far it looked as if the reptilian attacker
could not reach her. But the clakers' harassment continued unbated, and she was
tired, so tired that she was beginning to fear that even if they did withdraw,
she would not have the strength left to finish the pull up to the top of the
cliff.
She rubbed her hand across her eyes and tried
to think, though the continuing din of the attackers made her feel stupid, as
if her brain was befuddled and cocooned in the noise. It was the cessation of
that clamor which brought her to full consciousness again.
Overhead
the ugly creatures had ceased to wheel. Instead they turned almost as one and
winged across the valley, to snap into the holes in the rock from which they
had earlier emerged. Bewildered, the girl could only stare after them. Then,
that sound from below— Steadying her body with one
hand on the rock wall, Charis looked down.
The
fork-tail had turned and, on four feet once again, was making a ponderous way
back through the smashed and crushed growth, heading seaward without a backward
glance to the ledge where she stood. It was almost as if the clakers and the
sea beast had been ordered away from her . . .
What
made her put that interpretation on their movements? Charis absently rubbed
the rest of the sticky fruit pulp from her hand on a fibrous vine leaf.
Silence—nothing stirring. The whole valley as she could now see it, save for
the waving foliage where the fork-tail retreated, could have been empty of
life. She must make the most of this oddly granted breathing spell.
Doggedly
she set about reaching the top of the rise, expecting any moment to have the
clakers burst at her. But the silence held. She stood up on the crest, looked
beyond for cover.
This
was a plateau much like the one Jagan had used as a landing space. Only this
showed no rocket scarring. South, it stretched on as might the surface of a
wall well above the sea, open to air and sun with no cover. But Charis doubted
if she could descend again. So she turned south, limping on her tender feet,
always listening for the clak-clak of the enemy.
A splotch of color, vivid against the dull, black-veined, deep red of
the rocks. Odd
that she had not seen that earlier when she first surveyed this height. It was
so brightly visible now that it drew her as might a promise of food.
Food
. . . Her hand came up over her eyes and fell again as she strove to make sure
that this was not a hallucination but that it did exist outside of her craving
hunger.
But
if part of a hallucination, would not the so-pictured foods have been
familiar—viands she had known on Demeter or other worlds where she had lived?
This was no pile of emergency rations, no setting out of known breads, fruits,
meats. On the strip of green were several round balls of a deeper green, a
shining white basin filled with a yellow lumpy substance, a pile of flat rounds
which were a light blue. A tablecloth spread with a meal! It had to be a hallucination! It could not have been there earlier or she would
have seen it at once.
Charis
shuffled to the cloth and looked at the objects on it. She put out a scratched
and grimy hand and touched fingers to the side of the bowl to find it warm. The
odor which rose from it was strange—neither pleasant nor
unpleasant—just strange. She hunkered down, fighting the wild demand of
her body to be fed while she considered the strangeness of this food out of
nowhere. Dream? But she could touch it.
She
took up one of the blue rounds, found it had the consistency
of a kind of tough pancake. Rolling it into a scoop, Charis ladled up a
mouthful of the yellow—was it stew? Dream or not, she could chew it, taste it,
swallow it down. After that first experimental mouthful, she ate, greedily,
without caring in the least about dream or reality.
VI
Charis
found the tastes were as
difficult to identify as the odors—sweet, sour, bitter. But on the whole, the
food was pleasant. She devoured it avidly and then ate with more control. It
was not until she had emptied the bowl by the aid of her improvised pancake
spoon that she began to wonder once more about the source of that feast.
Hallucination? Surely not that. The bowl about which she
cupped a hand was very real to the touch, just as the food had been real in her
mouth and now was warm and filling in her stomach. She turned the basin about,
studying it. The color was a pure, almost radiant white; and, while the shape
was utilitarian and without any ornamentation, it was highly pleasing to the
eye and suggested, Chans thought, a sophistication of art which marked a high
degree of civilization.
And
she did not need to give the cloth a closer inspection to know that it matched
the strip Jagan had shown her. So this must have all come from the natives of
Warlock. But why left here—on this barren rock as if awaiting her arrival?
On
her knees, the bowl still in her hands, Charis slowly surveyed the plateau. By
the sun's position she guessed that the hour was well past midday, but there
were no shadows here, no hiding space. She was totally alone in the midst of
nowhere, with no sign of how this largesse had arrived or why.
Why?
That puzzled her almost more than how. She could only believe that it had been
left here for her. But that meant that "they" knew she was coming,
could gauge the moment of her arrival so well that the yellow stew had been hot
when she first tasted it. There was no mark that any aircraft had landed.
Charis moistened her lips.
"Please—"
her own voice sounded thin and reedy and, she had to admit, a little frightened
as she listened to it "—please, where are you?" She raised that plea
to a call. There was no answer.
"Where
are you?" Again she made herself call, louder, more beseechingly.
The
echoing silence made her shrink a little. It was as if she were exposed here to
the view of unseen presences—a specimen of her kind under examination. And she
wanted away from here—now.
Carefully
she placed the now empty bowl on the rock. There were several of the fruit and
two pancakes left. Charis rolled these up in the cloth. She got to her feet,
and for some reason, she could not quite understand, she faced seaward.
"Thank you." Again she dared raise
her voice. "Thank you." Perhaps this had not been meant for her, but
she believed that it had.
With the bundle of food in her hand, Charis
went on across the plateau. At its southern tip she looked back. The shining
white of the bowl was easy to see. It sat just where she had left it, exposed
on the rock. Yet she had half expected to find it gone, had kept her back
turned and her eyes straight ahead for that very reason.
To
the south, the terrain was like a flight of steps, devised for and by giants,
despending in a series of ledges. Some of these bedded growths of purple and
lavender vegetation, but all of it spindly short bushes and the tough
knife-bladed grass. Charis made her way carefully from one drop to the next,
watching for another eruption of clakers or other signs of hostile life.
She had to favor her sore feet and that
journey took a long time, though she had no way of measuring the passing of
planet hours save by the sun's movements. It was necessary that she look
forward for shelter against the night. The sense of well-being which had warmed
her along with the food was fading as she considered what the coming of
Warlockian darkness might mean if she did not discover an adequate hiding
place.
At last she determined to stay where she was
on the ledge she had just reached. The stubby growth could not mask any large
intruder, and she had a wide view against any sudden attack. Though how she
might defend herself without weapons, Charis did not know. Carefully she unwrapped the remains of the food and put it aside on some
leaves she pulled from a sprawling plant. She began to twist the alien fabric
into a cord, finding that its soft length did crush well in the process, so
that she ended with a rope of sorts.
With
a withered branch she was able to pry a stone about as big as her fist from the
earth, and she worked hurriedly to knot it into one end of her improvised rope.
Against any real weapon this would be a laughable defense, but it gave her some
small protection against native beasts. Charis felt safer when she had it under
her hand and ready for use.
The
sunlight had already faded from the lower land where she now was. With the
going of that brighter light, splotches of a diffused gleam were beginning to
show here and there. Bushes and shrubs glowed with phosphorescence as the twilight
grew deeper, and from some of them, as the heat of the day chilled away, a fragrance was carried by a rising sea breeze.
Charis settled her back against the wall of
the drop down which she had come, facing the open. Her weapon lay under her
right hand, but she knew that sooner or later she would sleep, that she could
not keep long at bay the fatigue whicl* weighted not only her drooping eyelids
but her whole body. And when she slept . . . Things happened while one slept on
Warlockl Would she awake once more to find herself in a new and strange part of the wilderness? To be on the safe side, she put
the food in its leaf-wrapping into the front of her coverall and tied the loose
end of the scarf weapon about her wrist. When she went this time, she would
take what small supplies she had with her.
Tired
as she was, Charis tried to fight that perhaps betraying sleep. There was no
use speculating about what force was in power here. To keep going she must
concentrate on the mechanics of living. Something had turned the clakers and
the sea beast from attack. Could she ascribe that to the will of the same
presence which had left the food? If so, what was "their" game?
Study of an alien under certain conditions? Was she being used as an experimental
animal? It was one answer and a logical one to what had happened to her so far.
But at least "they" had kept her from real harm—her left hand folded
over the lump of food inside her coverall; as yet any active move on
"their" part had been to her advantage.
So sleepy . . . Why fight this leaden cloud?
But—where would she wake again?
On
the ledge, chilled and stiff, and in a dark which was not a true dark because
of those splotches of light-diffusing plants and shrubs. Charis blinked. Had
she dreamed again? If so, she could not remember doing so this time. But there
was some reason why she must move here and now, get down from the ledge, then
get over there.
She
got up stiffly, looping the scarf about her wrist. Was it night or early
morning? Time did not matter, but the urgency to move did. Down—and
over there. She did not try to fight that pressure but went.
The light plants were signposts for her, and
she saw that either their light or scent had attracted small flying things that
flickered with sparkles of their own as they winged in and out of those patches
of eerie radiance. The sombemess of Warlock in the day became a weird
ethereality by night.
Darkness
which was true shadow beyond—that was her goal. As had happened on the beach
when she had struggled to turn north to try and retrace her path to the post,
so now she could not fight against the influence which aimed her at that dark
blot, which exerted more and more pressure on her will, bringing with it a
heightening of that sense of urgency which had been hers at her abrupt
awakening.
Unwillingly
she came out of the half-light of the vegetation into darkness—a cave or cleft
in the rock. Drifts of leaves were under her feet, the sense of enclosing walls
about her. Charis's outflung hands brushed rock on either side. She could still
see, however, above her the wink of a star in the velvet black of the night
sky. This must be a passage then and not a true cave. But again why? Why?
A second light moved across the slit of sky,
a light with a purpose, direction. The flying light of some
aircraft? The traders searching for her? That
other she had seen on the com screen? But she thought this had come from the
south. A government man alerted to her message? There was no chance of being
seen in the darkness and this slit. She had been moved here to hide—from danger
or from aid?
And
she was being held here. No effort of her struggling will could move her
another-step or allow her to retreat. It was like being fixed in some stiff and
unyielding ground, her feet roots instead of means of locomotion. A day earlier
she would have panicked, but she had changed. Now her curiosity was fully
aroused and she was willing, for a space, to be governed so. She had always
been curious. "Why?" had been her demanding bid for attention when
she was so small she remembered having to be carried for most of the exploration
journeys Ander Nordholm had made a part of her growing. "Why were those
colors here and not there?" "Why did this animal build a home
underground and that one in a tree?" Why?—why?—why?
He
had been very wise, her father, using always her thirst for knowledge to
suggest paths which had led her to make her own discoveries, each a new triumph
and wonder. In fact, he had made her world of learning too perfect and absorbing,
so that she was impatient with those who did not find such seeking the main
occupation of life. On Demeter she had felt trapped, her "whys" there
battered against an unyielding wall of prejudice and things which were and must
always be. When she had fought to awaken the desire to reach out for the new
among her pupils, she had clashed with a definite will-not-to-know and
fear-of-Ieaming which had first rendered her incredulous and then hotly angry
and, lastly, stubbornly intent upon battle.
While
her father had been alive, he had soothed her, turned her frustrated energy to
other pursuits in which she had freedom of action and study. She had been
encouraged to explore with the ranger, to record the discoveries of the
government party, received as an equal among them. But with the settlers, she
had come to an uneasy truce which had burst into open war at her father's
death, her repulsion for their closed minds fanned into hatred by what had
happened when Tolskegg took over and turned back the clock of knowledge a
thousand years.
Now
Charis, free from the frustrations of Demeter, had been presented with a new
collection of whys which seemed to have restrictions she could not understand,
to be sure, but which she could chew on, fasten her mind to, use as a curtain
between past and present.
"I'll
find out!" Charis did not realize she had spoken aloud until some trick of
the dark cleft in which she stood made a hollow echo of those words. But they
were no boast, a promise rather, a promise she had made herself before and
always kept.
The
star twinkling above was alone in the sky. Charis listened for the sound of a
copter engine beat and thought that she caught such a throb, very faint and far
in the distance.
"So." Again she spoke aloud, as if who or what she addressed stood within
touching distance. "You didn't want them to see me. Why? Danger for me or escape for me? What do you want of
me?" There was no reason to expect any reply.
Suddenly
the pressure of imprisonment was gone. Charis could move again. She edged back
to settle down in the mouth of the cleft, facing the valley with its weird
light. A breeze shush-shushed through the foliage, sometimes
setting light plants to a shimmer of dance. There was a cliirruping, a
hum of night creatures, lulling in its monotone. If something larger than the
things flying about the light vegetation was present, it made no sound. Once
again, since the urgency had left her, Charis was drowsy, unable to fight the
sleep which crept up her as a wave
might sweep over her body on the shore.
When
Charis opened her eyes once again, sunlight fingered down to pattern the earth
within reach of her hand. She rose from the dried leaf-drift which had been her
bed, pulled by the sound of running water: another cliff-side spring to aid her
toilet and give her drink. Her two attempts to make leaf containers to carry
some of the liquid with her were failures and she had to give up that hope.
Prudence
dictated a conservation of supplies. She allowed herself only one of the
pancakes, now dry and tough, and two of the fruit she had brought from the
feast on the plateau. Because such abundance had appeared once, there was no
reason to expect it again.
The
way was still south but Charis's aching muscles argued against more climbing
unless she was forced to it. She returned to the cleft and found that it was
indeed a passage to more level territory. The heights continued on the western
side, forming a wall between the sea and a stretch of level fertile country.
There was a wood to the east with the tallest trees Charis had yet seen on
Warlock, their dark foliage a blackened
blot which was forbidding. On the edge of that forest was a section of brush,
shrub, and smaller growth which thinned in turn to grass—not the tough,
sharp-bladed species she had suffered from in the valley of the fork-tail, but
a mosslike carpet, broken here and there by clumps of smaller stands bearing
flowers, all remarkably pale in contrast to the dark hue of leaf and stem. It
was as if they were the ghosts of the more brightly colored blossoms she had
known on other worlds.
The
mossy sward was tempting, but to cross it would take her into the open in full
sight of any hunters. On the other hand, she herself would have unrestricted
sight. While in the forest or brush belt, her vision would be limited. Swinging
her stone-and-scarf weapon, Charis walked into the open. If she kept by the
cliff, it would guide her south.
It
was warmer here than it had been by the sea. And the footing proved as soft as
she had hoped. Keeping to the moss, she walked on a velvety surface which
spared her bruised feet, did not tear the tattered rags of covering she had
fashioned for them. Away from the dark of the wood, this stretch of Warlockian
earth was the most welcoming she had found.
A
flash of wings overhead made her start until she saw that this was not a claker
but a truly feathered bird, with plumage as pale as the flowers and a naked
head of brilliant coral red. It did not notice Charis but skimmed on, disappearing
over the cliff toward the sea.
Charis did not force the pace. Now and again
she paused to examine a flower or insect. She might be coming to the end of a
journey a little before her appointed time and could now spare attention for
the things about her. During one rest she watched, fascinated, as a scaled
creature no larger than her middle finger, walking erect on a pair of sturdy
hind legs, dug with taloned front "hands" in a patch of earth with
the concentration of one employed in a regular business. Its efforts unearthed
two round gray globes which it brushed to one side impatiently after it had
systematically flattened both. Between those spheres had been packed a curled,
many-legged body of what Charis believed was a large insect. The lizard-thing
straightened his find out and inspected it with care. Having apparently decided
in favor of its usability, it proceeded to dine with obvious relish, then stalked on among the grass clumps, now and again stooping
to search the earth with a piercing eye, apparently in search of another such
find.
Midday
passed while Charis was still in the open. She wondered if food would again
appear in her path, and consciously watched for the gleam of a second white
bowl and the fruit piled on a green cloth. However, none such was to be seen.
But she did come upon a tree growing much to itself, bearing the same blue
fruit which had been left for her, and she helped herself liberally.
She
had just started on when a sound shattered the almost drowsy content of the
countryside. It was a cry—frantic, breathless, carrying with it such an appeal
for aid against overwhelming danger that Charis was startled into dropping her
load of fruit and running toward the sound, her stone weapon ready. Was it
really that small cry which awakened such a response in her or some emotion
which she shared in some abnormal way? She only knew that there was danger and
she must give aid.
Something
small, black, coming in great leaps, broke from the brush wall beyond the rim
of the forest. It did not head for Charis but ran for the cliff, and a wave of
fear hit the girl as it flashed past. Then the compulsion which had willed
against her turning north, which had held her in the cleft last night, struck Charis.
But this time it brought the need to run, to keep on running, from some peril.
She whirled and followed the bounds of the small black thing, and like it,
headed for the sea cliff.
The
black creature ran mute now. Charis thought that perhaps those first cries had
been of surprise at sudden danger. She believed she could hear something
behind—a snarling or a muffled howl.
Her
fellow fugitive had reached the cliff face, was making frantic leaps, pawing at
a too-smooth surface, unable to climb. It whimpered a little as its most
agonizing efforts kept it earthbound. Then, as Charis came up, it turned,
crouched, and looked at her.
She
had a hurried impression of great eyes, of softness, and the shock of the fear
and pleading it broadcast. Hardly aware of her act but conscious she had to do
something, she snatched up the warm, furred body which half-leaped to meet her
grasp and plastered itself to her, clinging with four clawed feet to the stuff
of her coverall, its shivering a vibration against her.
There
was a way up that she, with her superior size, could climb. She took it, trying
not to scrape her living burden against the rock as she went. Then she was in
a fissure, breathless with her effort, and a warm tongue tip made a soft, wet
touch against her throat. Charis wriggled back farther into hiding, the rescued
creature cradled in her arms. She could see nothing coming out of the wood as
yet.
A
faint mewing from her companion alerted her as a brown shadow padded out on the
lavender-green of the moss —an animal she was sure. But from this distance and
height, Charis could not make it out clearly as it slunk on, using bushes for
cover So far it had not headed in their direction But the animal was not alone
Charis gasped For the figure now coming from between two trees was not only
hu-manoid—it wore the green-brown uniform of Survey She was about to call out,
to hail that stranger, when the freezing she had known in the cleft caught and
held her as soundless, as motionless, as if she had been plunged into the
freeze of a labor ship. Helpless, she had to watch the man walk back and forth
as if searching for some trail, and at last disappear back into the wood with
his four-footed companion.
They
had never approached the cliff, yet the freeze which held Charis did not break
until long moments after they had gone.
VH
"Meerkreee?" A soft sound with a
definite note of inquiry. For the first time Charis looked closely at
her fellow fugitive, meeting as searching a gaze turned up at her.
The
fur which covered its whole body was in tight, tiny curls, satin-soft against
her hands. It had four limbs ending in clawed paws, but the claws were
retractable and no longer caught in her clothing. There was a short tail like a
fringed flap, now rucked neatly down against the haunches. The head was round,
sloping to a blunt muzzle. Only the ears seemed out of proportion to the rest.
They were large and wide, set sideways instead of opening forward toward the
front of the skull, and their pointed tips had small tassle-tufts of gray fur
of the same light color that ringed the large and strikingly blue eyes and ran
in narrow lines down the inner sides of the legs and on the belly.
Those
eyes— Fascinated, Charis found it difficult to look away from the eyes. She was
not trained in beastempathy, but she could not deny there was an aura of
intelligence about this small and appealing creature which made her want to
claim a measure of kinship. Yet, for all its charm, it was not to be only
cuddled and caressed; Charis was as certain of that as if it had addressed her
clearly in Basic. It was more than animal, even if she was not sure how.
"Meerrreee!" No inquiry now but impatience. It squirmed a little in her hold. Once
more a pale yellow tongue made a lightning dab against her skin. Charis
released her grip, fearing for an instant that it would leave her. But it
jumped from her lap to the rough floor of the crevice and stood looking at the
forest from which its enemy had emerged.
Enemy? The
Survey manl Charis had almost forgotten him. What had restrained her from
hailing him? Perhaps his very being here had been the answer to her call from
the post. But why had she not been allowed to meet him? For allowed was the proper term. A prohibition she could not explain had been laid upon
her. And Charis knew, without trying such an experiment,
that if she attempted to go to the wood she would not be able to push
past an invisible wall someone or something had used to cut her off.
"Meeerreee?" Again a question from the furred one. It
paused, one front paw slightly raised, looking back at
her from the entrance to the crevice.
Suddenly
Charis wanted to get out of this moss-carpeted land. The frustration of her
flight from the very help she wished was sour in her. Up over the cliff wall,
back to the sea— The longing to be again beside the
waves was a pulling pain.
"Back to the sea." She said that aloud as if the furred one
could understand. She came out of the crevice and glanced up for a way to
climb.
"Meeree
Charis
had expected the animal to vanish into the moss meadow. Instead, it was
demanding her attention in its own way before it moved sure-footedly along,
angling up the surface of the cliff. Charis followed, warmed by the
realization that the animal appeared to have joined forces with her, if only
temporarily. Perhaps its fear of the enemy in the forest was so overpowering it
wanted the promised protection of her company.
While
she was not as agile as the animal, Charis was not far behind when they reached
the crest of the cliff. From here one could look down on the expanse of the sea
and a line of silver beach. There was a feeling of peace. Peace? For an instant
Charis recaptured the feeling she had known in that first dream—contentment and
peace. The animal trotted ahead, south along the cliff top.
From this point the drop to the sand was too sheer to descend, so Charis again
followed the other's lead.
They came down to the silver strand by a path
her companion found. But when Charis would have gone on
south, the Warlockian creature brushed about her ankles, uttering now and then
an imperative cry, plainly wanting her to remain. At last she dropped
down to sit facing the sea, and then, looking about her, she was startled. This
was the cove of her first dream exactly.
"Meerree?" That tongue-tip touch, a sense of reassurance, a small warm body
pressed against hers, a feeling of contentment—that all was well . . . coming
from her companion or out of some depth within herself? Charis did not know.
They
came out of the sea, though the girl had not seen them swimming in. But these
were not a threat like the fork-tail. Charis drew a deep breath of wonder and
delight or welcome as the contentment flowered within her. They came on,
walking through the wash of the waves, then stood to
look at her.
Two of them, glittering in the sun, sparkling with light. They were shorter than she, but they walked
and stood with a delicate grace which Charis knew she could never equal, as if
each movement, conscious or unconscious, were a part of a very ancient and
beautiful dance. Bands of jewel colors made designs about each throat in gemmed
collars, ran down in spirals over chest, waist, thigh, braceleting the slender
legs and arms. Large eyes with verticle slits of green pupils were fixed on her.
She did not find the saurian shape of their heads in the least
repulsive—different, yes, but not ugly, truly beautiful in their own fashion.
Above their domed, jewelmarked foreheads stood a sharp V point of spiky growth, a delicate green perhaps two shades lighter than the sea from which they
had come. This extended down in two bands, one for each shoulder, wider as if
aping wings.
They
wore no clothing, save a belt each from which hung various small
implements, and a pair of pouches. Yet their patterned, scaled
skin gave the impression of rich robes.
"Meeerrrreeeel"
The furred body against hers stirred. Charis could not doubt that was a cry of
pleasure. But she did not need that welcome from the animal. She had no fear of
these sea ones—.the Wyvems surely, the masters—or rather the mistresses—of
Warlock.
They
advanced and Charis arose, picking up the furred one, waiting.
"You
are—" she began in Basic, but a four-digit hand came out, touched her
forehead between the eyes. And in that touch was not the feel of cold reptilian
flesh but of warmth like her own,
No
words. Rather it was a flow of thought, of feeling, which Charis's
off-world mind turned into speech: "Welcome, Sister—One."
The
claim of kinship did not disturb Charis. Their bodies were unlike, yes—but that
flow of mind to mind—it was good. It was what she wanted now and forever.
"Welcome."
She found it hard to think, not to speak. "I have come—"
"You
have come It is good. The journey has been weary, but now it will be less
so."
The
Wyvern's other hand moved up into the line of Charis's vision. Cupped against
the scaled palm was a disk of ivory-white. And once seeing it, she found she
could not look away. A momentary flash of uneasiness at that sudden control and
then ...
There
was no beach, no whispering sea waves. She was in a room with smooth walls that
were faintly opalescent as if they were coated with sea-shell lining. A window
broke one of those surfaces, giving her a view of open sea and sky. And there
was a thick mat spread under that, a covering of fluffy feathers folded neatly
upon it. "For the weary—rest."
Chans
was alone except for the furred one she still held. Yet that suggestion or
order was as emphatic as if she had heard the words spoken. She stumbled to the
mat and lay down, drew the fluffy cover over her bruised and aching body, and
then plunged into another time—world—existence . . .
There
was no arbitrary measurement of time where she went, nor was memory ever sharp
set enough to give her more than bits and pieces of what she experienced,
learned, saw in that other place. Afterward, things she had garnered sank past
full consciousness in her mind and rose in time of need when she was unaware
that she held such secrets. Schooling, training, testing—all
three in one.
When
she awoke again in her windowed room, she was Charis Nordholm still, but also
she was someone else, one who had tasted a kind of knowledge her species had
never known. She could touch the fringe of that power, hold a little of it; yet
the full mystery of it slipped through her fingers much as if she had tried to
hold tightly the waters of the sea.
Sometimes
she sensed disappointment in her teachers, a kind of exasperation, as if they
found her singularly obtuse just when they hovered on the edge of a crucial
revelation, and then her own denseness was a matter of anger and shame for her.
She had such limitations. But yet she fought and labored against them.
Which
was the dream—existence in that other world or this waking? She knew the room
at times and the Citadel in the island kingdom of the Wyverns, of which it was
a part, and other rooms in other places she knew were not the Citadel. She
knew sea depths: Had she gone there in body or in her dream? She danced and ran
along the sands of shores with companions who sported and played joyously with
the same bursting sense of happy release that she knew. That, she believed, was
real.
She
learned to communicate with the furred one, if on a limited plane. Tsstu was her name and she was one of a rare species from
the forest lands, not truly animal, not wholly "human," but a link
between such as Charis's own kind had sought for years.
Tsstu
and the Wyvems and their half-dream existence in which she was caught up,
absorbed, in which memory faded into another and far less real dream. But there
was to be an awakening as sudden and as racking as that of a warrior startled
from slumber by the onslaught of the enemy.
It
came during one of the periods Charis believed real, when she was in the
Citadel on an island apart from the land mass where the post stood. She had
been teasing her companion Gytha to share dreams with her, a process of communication
which swept one wholly adrift in wonder. But the young Wyvern seemed
absent-minded and Charis guessed a portion
of her attention was elsewhere in rapport with her kind, whom Charis could only
reach if they willed it so.
"There
is trouble?" She thought her question, her hand going instinctively to the
pouch at her belt in which rested her guide, the carved disk they had given
her. She could use it, though haltingly, to control dangerous life such as the
fork-tails or to travel. Of course, she could not draw upon the full Power;
maybe she never would. Even the Wise One, Gysmay, who was a Reader of Rods,
could not say yes or no on that though, in a way Charis did not understand, the
elder Wyvern could read the future in part.
"Not so, Sharer of my
Dreams." But
even as the answer came, Gytha -vanished with a wfll-to-Otherwhere. The impression
she left—Charis frowned—that faint trail of impression was of trouble, and trouble
connected with herself.
She
brought out her guide, felt it warm comfortingly on her palm. Practice with
it—that was important. Each time she bent the Power to her will she was that
much more proficient. The day was fair; she would like to be free in it. What
harm in her using the disk ashore? And Tsstu had been restless. For both of
them to return to the moss meadow might be enjoyable. Memory moved—the Survey
man there. Somehow she had forgotten about him, just as the post and the
traders had receded so far into the dreamy past that they were far less real
than a shared dream.
Cupping
the disk, she thought of Tsstu and then heard the answering
"Meerreee" from the corridor. Charis pictured the moss meadow,
questioned, and was answered with an eager assent. She caught up the small body
as it bounded toward her and held it against her as she breathed upon the disk
and made a new mind-picture—the meadow as she remembered it most vividly by
that solitary fruit tree.
Then
Tsstu wriggled out of Charis's hold, pranced on her hind legs, waving her front
paws in the air ecstatically, until the girl laughed. She had not felt as
young and free as this for as long as she could remember. To be Ander
Nordholm's assistant had once absorbed all her interest and energy, and then
there had been nothing but dark shadows until she had seen the Wyvems coming to
her through the sea. But now, no Wyvems—nothing but Charis and Tsstu, removed
from the need for care, in a wide and welcoming stretch of countryside.
Charis
threw out her arms, put up her head, so that the warmth of the sun was directly
on her face. Her hair, which always intrigued the Wyvems so, she had caught
back with a tie the same green as the clinging tunic she now wore.
This time her feet were shielded from hurt
with sandals of shell seemingly impervious to wear, yet as light as if she were
barefoot. She felt as if she might emulate Tsstu and dance on the moss. She had
taken a few tentative steps when she heard it, a sound which sent her backing swiftly
into the cover of the tree branches—the hum of an airborne motor.
A
copter was coming from the southeast. In general appearance it was like any
other atmosphere flyer imported from off-world. Only this one had service
insignia, the Winged Planet of Survey surmounted by a gold key. It was slanting
away, out to sea in the general direction of the Citadel.
In
all the time she had been with the natives, they had had no contact that she
had known of with any off-worlders save herself. Nor
had the Wyvems ever mentioned such. Foi* the first time Charis speculated about
that. Why had she herself never asked any questions about the government base,
made any attempt to get the Wyverns to take or send her there? She had seemed
to forget her own species while she was with the Warlockians. And that was so
unnatural that she was uneasy when she yealized it now.
"Meeerrreee?" A paw patted her ankle. Tsstu had caught Charis's thought or at least
her uneasiness. But the animal's concern was only partly comforting.
The
Wyverns had not wanted Charis to return to her own kind. It had been their
interference on her first awakening that had kept her from retracing her trail
to the post, had made her take cover from the flyer in the night, avoid the
Survey man. She had had only kindness—yes—and an emotion which her species
could term love, and care and teaching from them. But why had they brought her
here, tried to cut her off from her own blood? What use did they have for her?
Use—a cold word, and yet one her mind fastened
upon now only too readily. Jagan had brought her here to use as a contact with
these same wielders of strange powers. Then she had been skillfully detached
from the post, led to the meeting by the sea. And
understanding that, Charis broke free of the enchantment which had bound her to
the Otherwhere of the Wyvems.
The
copter was out of sight. Had it been summoned for her? Charis was sure not. But
she could have been there when it arrived. She called Tsstu, caught her up, and
concentrated upon the disk to return.
Nothing
happened. She was not back in the Citadel room but still under the tree in the
meadow. Again Charis set her mind to the task of visualizing the place she
wanted to be and it was there, as a vivid picture in her mind, but only in her mind.
Tsstu
whimpered, butted her head under Charis's chin; the girl's fear had spread to
her companion. For the third time, Charis tried the disk. But it was as if
whatever power had once been conducted through that was turned off at the
source. Turned off and by the Wyvems. Charis was as
certain of that as if she had been told^so, but there was one way to test the
truth of her guess.
She
raised the disk for the fourth time, this time painting a mind-picture of the
plateau top where the mysterious feast had been spread. Sea wind in her hair,
rock about— She was just where she had aimed to go. So—she could use the disk here, but she could not return to the native stronghold.
They
must have known that she had left the Citadel. They did not want her to return
while the visitor was there—or ever?
One of those half messages from Tsstu which
came not as words or pictures but obliquely: something wrong near here . . .
Charis looked from the sea to the slit of
valley where she had seen the fork-tail, secure in her knowledge that neither
the sea beast nor the clakers could attack a disk carrier. From here she could
see nothing amiss below. Two clakers, screeched and
made for her and then abruptly sheered away and fled for their nesting holes.
Charis used the disk to reach the scrap of beach below the cliff. She had
forgotten to bring Tsstu but she could see the black blot against the red of
the rock where the little creature was making a speedy descent.
Tsstu
reached the bottom of the cliff and vanished into the cloak of vegetation.
Charis moved inland, the mental call bringing her to the spring.
A broken bush, torn turf. Then, on a stone, a dark sticky smear about which flying things buzzed
or crawled sluggishly. In the edge of the pool, something gleamed in a spot of
sun.
Charis
picked up the stunner—not just any off-world weapon but one she knew well. When
Jagan had had her in his cabin on the spacer to give her those instructions in
what he intended to be her duties, she had seen such a side arm many times. The
inlay of cross-within-a-circle set into the butt with small black vors stones
had been a personal mark. It was out of the bounds of possibility that two
weapons so marked could be here on Warlock.
She
tried to fire it, but the trigger snapped on emptiness; its charge was
exhausted. The trampled brush, the torn-up sod, and that smear— Charis forced
herself to draw her finger through the congealed mess. Blood! She was sure it
was blood. There had been a fight here and, judging by the lost stunner, the
fight must have gone against the weapon's owner or his weapon would not be left
so. Had he faced a fork-tail? But there was no path of wreckage such as that
beast had left on its pursuit of her, traces of which still remained to be
seen. Only there had been a fight.
Tsstu
made a sound deep in her throat, an "rrrrurrgh" of anger and warning.
Moved purely by impulse, Charis caught up Tsstu and used the disk.
VIII
The
smell caught at Charis's
throat, made her cough, even before she knew the source. This was the post
clearing—just as she had aimed for—the bubble of the building rising from bare
earth. Or the remains of it, for there were splotched holes in its fabric from
which the plasta-cover peeled in scorched and stinking strips. Tsstu spat,
growled, communication with Charis firm on the need for immediate withr
drawal.
But there was a prone figure by the ragged
hole which had once been a door Charis started for that— "Hoyyyyyy!"
She
whirled, her disk ready. There was someone on the trail which led down the
cliff face He moved faster, waving to her She could
escape at any moment she chose and that knowledge led her to stand her ground
Tsstu spat again, caught a clawed grip of Charis's tunic
From
the brush rim of the clearing came a brown animal, trotting purposefully. It
walked with its back slightly arched, showing off the bands of lighter color
along each side, the fur thick and long. More of the light fur was visible above
its eyes. Its ears were small, its face broad, the
tail bushy.
Just
out of the bushes it stopped to eye Charis composedly. Tsstu made no more
audible protests, but the trembling of her body, her fear of mind, was
transmitted to Charis. For the second time the girl readied her disk.
The man who had waved disappeared from the
trail; he must have jumped down the last few feet. Now a whistle sounded from
the foliage. The brown animal squatted down where it was. Charis watched warily
as the newcomer burst into the clearing in a rush.
He wore the green-brown of Survey, with the
addition of high boots of a dull copper, supple material. On his tunic collar
was the glint of metal—the insignia of his corps again modified with a key as
it had been on the copter. He was young, though nowadays with the mixture of
races and the number of mutants, planet years were
hard to guess. Not as tall as the usual Terran breed though, and slender. His
skin was an even brown which might be its natural shade or the result of much
weathering, and the hair, rather closely cropped to his round skull was almost
as tightly curled, and just as black, as Tsstu's fur.
His
impetuous break into the open halted and he stood staring at Charis in open
disbelief. The brown animal rose and went to him, rubbing against his legs.
"Who are you?" he
demanded in Basic
"Charis
Nordholm," she replied mechanically. Then she added, "That beast of
yours—he frightens Tsstu—"
"Taggi? You need not fear him." The brown animal reared against the man's
thigh and he fondled its head, scratched behind the small ears. "But—a curl-cat!" He was gazing now with almost as
great surprise at Tsstu. "Where did you get it? And how did you make
friends with it?"
"Meeerrreeee." Some of Tsstu's fear had lessened. She wriggled about in Charis's arms
as if settling herself in a more comfortable position, watching both man and
animal with wary interest.
"She
came to me," Charis fitted the past to the present, "when you were
hunting her with that animal!"
"But I never—" he
began and then stopped "—oh, back in the woods that day Taggi went off on
a new scent! But why —who are you?"
His tone had a new snap; this was official business now. "And what are you
doing here? Why did you hide when I searched here earlier?" "Who are you?" she countered.
"Cadet
Shann Lantee, Survey Corps, Embassy-Liaison," he replied almost in one
breath. "You sent that message, the one entered on our pick-up tape,
didn't you? You were here with the traders, though where you were just a little
while ago-"
"I
wasn't here. I have just come."
He
moved toward her, the animal Taggi remaining where it was. Now his eyes were
intent, with a new kind of measurement.
"You've
been with them!"
And
Charis had no doubt as to whom that "them" referred. "Yes."
She was not prepared to add to that, but he seemed to need no other answer.
"And
you've just come here. Why?"
"What has happened here? That man
there—" She turned -toward the body once more but the Survey officer in
one swift stride was blocking her view of it.
"Don't
look! What's happenedP-Well, I'd like to know that myself. There's been a raid.
But who or why—Taggi and I have been trying to learn what could have happened
here. How long have you been with them?"
Charis
shook her head. "I don't know." It was the truth, but would this
Lantee believe it?
He
nodded. "Like that, eh? Some of their dreaming . . ."
It
was her turn for surprise. What did this officer know of the Wyverns and their
Otherwhere? He was smiling slowly, an expression which modified his usual set
of mouth, made him even more youthful.
"I,
too, have drearrted," he said softly.
"But I thought—I"
She had a small prick of
emotion which was not amazement but, oddly, resentment.
His smile remained, warm and somehow eager. "That they do not admit males can
dream? Yes, that is what they told us, too, once upon a time."
"Us?"
"Ragnar Thorvald and I. We dreamed to order—and came out under our
own command, so they had to give us equal status. Did they do the same to you?
Make you visit the Caverns of the Veil?"
Charis
shook her head. "I dreamed, yes, but I don't know about your cavem. They
taught me how to use this." On impulse she held up the disk.
Lantee's
smile vanished. "A guide! They gave you a guide.
So that's how you got here!"
"You don't have
one?"
"No, they never
offered us those. And you don't ask—"
Charis
nodded. She knew what he meant. With the Wy-vems, you waited for their giving;
you did not ask. But apparently Lantee and this Thorvald had better contact
with the natives than the traders had been able to establish.
The traders—the raid here. She did not realize that she was speaking aloud her thoughts as she
said:
"That man with the
blaster!"
"What man?" Again that official voice from Lantee.
Charis
told him of that strange last night in the post when she had awakened to find
herself in a deserted building, of her use of the com and the answer the sweep
had picked up in the north. Lantee shot questions at her, but the answers she
had were so limited she could tell him little more than the fact that the
stranger in the visa-plate had worn an illegal weapon.
"Jagan
had a limited permit," Lantee said when she had done. "He was here on
sufferance and against our recommendation, and he had only a specified time in
which to prove his trade claim. We heard he had brought in a woman as liaison,
but that was when he first set up the post. .
"Sheeha!" Charis broke in. Rapidly she added that part of the story to the rest.
"Apparently she couldn't take the
dreams," Lantee observed. "They reached for her, just as they did
for you. But she wasn't receptive in the right way, so it reacted on her, broke
her. Then Jagan made another trip and got you. But this other crowd—the one you
picked up that night—that spells trouble. It looks as if they hit here—"
Charis
glanced at the body. "Is that Jagan? One of his
men?"
"It's a crewman, yes. Why did you come
here? You taped a call for help to escape that night."
She
showed him the stunner, told him of where and how she had found it. Lantee was
far from smiling now.
"The
com in the post was smashed along with everything else inside that wasn't
blast-burned. But—there was something else. Have you ever seen a mate to
this before, or was it part of Jagan's stock—a keepsake?"
Lantee
moved back to the body he had warned her not to approach and picked an obj'ect
from the ground beside it. When he came back, he held an unusual weapon, now
horribly stained for a third of its length. It had the general appearance of
a spear or dart, but the sawlike proj'ections extended farther down its shaft
than was natural in a spearhead.
Charis's
fingers were a tight fist about her disk as Lantee held it closer to her. The
bone-white substance was very like that used in the guide.
"I
never saw it before." She told the truth, but in her a fear was growing.
"But you have an idea?" He was too
acutel
"Suppose,
just suppose," Lantee continued, on longer holding her eye to eye as if
demanding her thoughts, but regarding the strange spear with a brooding
expression, "that this is native to Warlock!"
"They
don't need such
weapons," Charis flashed. "They can control any living thing through
these." She waved her balled fist.
"Because they dream." Lantee noted. "But what of those of
their race who do not dream?"
"The—the males?" For the first time Charis wondered about that. Now she remembered that,
in all the time she had spent with the Wyvems, she had not seen any male of
their species. That they existed she knew, but there appeared to be a wall of
reticence surrounding any mention of them.
"But—" she could not believe in Lantee's suggestion that is
the sign of blaster fire." With her chin she pointed to the post.
"Yes.
Blaster fire, systematic wrecking of every installation —and then this—used to
kill an off-worlder It's as complicated as a dream,
isn't it? But this is real, too real by far1" He dropped the
stained spear to lie between them "We have to have answers and have them
quick." He looked up at her. "Can you call them? Thorvald went out to
the Citadel for a conference before he knew about this "
"I tried to go back
before—they'd walled me out."
"We
have to know what happened here. A body with this in it.
Up there—" Lantee waved toward the plateau, "—an empty ship just
sitting. And out of here, as far as Taggi can trace, not a single trail. Either
they lifted in by aircraft or—"
"The
sea!"
Charis finished for him.
"And
the sea is their
domain; there is not much
happens out there that they are not aware of."
"You
mean—they planned this?" Charis demanded coldly.
To her mind violence of this kind was not the Wyvern way.
The
natives had their own powers and those did not consist of blaster fire and
serrate-toothed spears.
"No,"
Lantee agreed with her promptly. "This has the stamp of a Jack job, except for that." He toed the spear. "And if a Jack crew planeted here, the sooner we combine forces against them, the
better!"
To
that Charis could
agree. If Jagan's poor
outfit had been fringe trading, it had still been on the side of the law. A
Jack crew was a thoroughly criminal gang, pirates swooping on out-world trading
posts to glut, kill, and be off again before help could be summoned. And on such
an open world as Warlock, they might well consider lingering for awhile.
"You have a Patrol
squad on world?" she asked.
"No. We're in a queer situation here.
The Wyvems won't allow any large off-world settlement. They only accepted
Thorvald and me because we did, by chance, pass their dream test when we were
survivors of a Throg raid. But they wouldn't agree—or haven't yet—to any Patrol
station. We have a scout that visits from time to time and that's the limit.
"This
post of Jagan's was an experiment, pushed on us by some of the off-world VEEPS
who wanted to see how a nongovernment penetration would be accepted. And the
big Companies didn't want the gamble. That's how a Free Trader got it. There
are just Thorvald, Taggi, his mate Togi and their cubs, and me, plus a com-tech
generally resident at headquarters."
As
if the mention of his name summoned him, the brown animal lumbered forward. He
sniffed the spear and growled. Tsstu spat, her claws pricking through to
Charis's skin.
"What is he?" she
asked.
"Wolverine,
a Terran-mutated team animal," Lantee answered a little absently.
"Could you try to raise them again? I have a hunch that time is getting
rather tight."
Gytha—among the Wyvems Charis had been the
closest to that young witch who had shared some of her instruction —maybe she
could break through by beaming the power directly at Gytha and not at the
Citadel as a whole. She did not answer Lantee's question in words but breathed
upon the disk, and closed her eyes the better to visualize Gytha.
At
her first meeting with the Wyverns, they had had a physical uniformity which made it difficult for an off-worlder to see
them as individuals. But Charis had learned that their jeweled skin-partems
varied, that this adornment had meaning. The younger members of their species,
when they came to adulthood and the use of the Power,
could take certain simplifications of designs worn by the elders of their
family lines and then gradually add the symbols of their own achievements,
spelled out in no code Charis could yet understand, although by it she could
now recognize one from another.
So
it was easy to visualize Gytha, to beam her desire for her friend. She expected
mind contact but, at an exclamation from Lantee, she opened her eyes to see
Gytha herself, the gold and crimson circles about her snout agleam in the sun,
the spine ridges along her back moving a little as if she had actually used
them to fly here.
"He-Who-Dreams-True." The mental greeting reached out to Lantee.
"She-Who-Shares-Dreams." Charis was startled when the Survey man
answered in the same way. So he did have communication with the Wyverns in
spite of the fact he possessed no disk.
"You have called!" That was aimed
at Charis with a sharpness which suggested her act had been an error of
judgment. "There is trouble here—"
Gytha's
head turned; she surveyed the wreckage of the post, glanced once at the body.
"It does not concern
us."
"Nor
this either?" Lantee made no move to pick up the spear again, but with
boot toe he nudged it a little closer to the Wyvem.
She
looked down, and a barrier between her and Charis snapped into place, as a door
might slam. But Charis had been long enough among Gytha's kind to read the
flash of agitation in the sudden quiver of the Wyvern's forehead crest. Her
indifference of moments before was gone.
"Gytha!" Charis tried to break through the barrier of silence. But it was as if
the Wyvem was not only deaf but that Charis and Lantee had ceased to exist.
Only the bloodstained spear had reality and meaning.
The
Wyvem made no gesture of warning. But they were there—.two more of her kind.
And one—Charis took a quick step back—one of the new arrivals had a head crest
which was close to black in shade; the whole surface of her scaled skin was
covered with such a multiplicity of gemmed design that she flashed Gysmay—one
of the Readers of Rodsl
With
her came the impact, first of irritation; then, as the Wyvem looked at Lantee,
a cold anger, cold enough to strike as a weapon
Though
the Survey officer swayed, his face greenish under the brown, he stood up to
her Under that momentary burst of anger, Charis caught
the suggestion of surprise in the Wyvem
The
second Warlockian who had accompanied Gysmay at Gytha's summons made no move.
But from her, too, flowed emotion—if one could name it that—a feeling of
warning and restraint. Her head crest was also black, but there was no flashing
display of patterned skin bright in the sun. At first glance Charis thought she
wore no designs at all, even the "encouragement" ones of her
ancestors. Then the girl noted that there was a series of markings, deceptively simple, so close in hue to the natural
silver of her skin as to make a brocade
effect detectable only after concentrated study.
For
Lantee or Charis this newcomer had no attention at all; she was staring
unwmkmgly at the spear. That rose from the spot where Lantee had dropped it,
moving up horizontally on a level with the Wyvern's eyes, coming to her. Then
it stopped, balanced in the air for a long moment.
It
whirled end for end and dashed groundward. There was a sharp snapping as it
shattered into bits. It might have been broken against rock instead of bare
earth. Then the splinters whirled about and rose in turn. Charis watched unbelievingly
as those needle-small remnants of the spear spun madly about. They fell,
stilled, but now they formed what was surely a pattern.
The
girl reeled. Tsstu, in her arms, screeched. The wolverine squalled. Charis
watched Lantee collapse limply under a mental blow of rage, so
raw and hot as to be a fire within one's tormented brain. There was a red cloud
about her. but Charis was most aware of the pain in
her head
That
pain accompanied her into the dark nibbled at her will, weakened her struggle
to pull away from it. Was it pain or something behind the pain, compelling her,
making her no longer Charis Nordholm but a tool to be used, a key to turn for
another, stronger personality?
The pain pushed at her. She crawled through a
red haze —on and on. Where? for what purpose? There
was only the whip of pain and the need to obey that other
will which wielded such a lash. Red, red, all about
her. But the red was fading slowly as a fire falls into ash. Red to
gray, gray which remained about her, a gray she could see . . .
Charis
lay on her back. There was an arch of wall close to her right hand; it sloped
inward over her head. She had seen that wall before. Half-light
so dim—bare walls—a drop table —a seat by it. The trading post—she was
back in the trading post!
IX
It
was oddly still. Chan's
sat up on the cot, pulled her coverall into place. Coverall?
Something buried deep inside her questioned, and a seed of doubt plagued her.
Yes, the post was very still. She went to the door, set her hands on either
side of the sealed slit. Was she locked in? But when she applied pressure, the
portal opened and she was able to look out into the corridor.
The
doors along it gaped open as she slipped into freedom.
Listening brought no trace of sound, no murmur of voices or the heavy breathing
of a sleeper. She went on down the hall, the floor chill to her bare feet.
But
this—all of this, whispered that rebellious voice deep within her, she had done
before. Yet on the surface, this was the here and now. The rooms were empty;
she paused at each to make sure of that. Then the fourth room: a com screen
against its wall, chairs and piles of record tapes. The corn-she could use its sweep, try to pick up the government base. But first she
must make sure she was safely alone.
A hunied search of the post, room by room. Time—it was a matter of time. Then she was
back in the com room, leaning over the key board, picking out the proper
combination to trigger a sweep ray.
A wait, and then a signal to the northeast. The visa-plate clouded and then cleared.
Chans dodged from her position before it. A man was standing out of the mist, a
man wearing a dingy uniform of a trader. Charis studied him, but he was unknown
to her. Only the illegal blaster holstered at his belt made him different from
any other fringe crewman. Charis's hand swept out to break contact.
She
activated the sweep once again, tried south, and picked a signal—the insignia
of Survey with a seal of Embassy. Slowly then she began to click out a message
for the tape.
She
was on a hillside. It was cold, dark, and she was running, running until her
breath made a sharp stab beneath her ribs. The hunt would be up soon. Or would
Tolskegg be willing to let her go, to die alone in the heights of exhaustion,
starvation, or at the claws of some beast? He had Demeter and the settlement
below now within his hold.
Demeter!
The part of her which had been denying that this was the here and now
struggled. Charis shook with more than cold. She was climbing to the
heights above the settle^ ment, yet the belief that this was all false grew
stronger and stronger.
A dream. And
there were those who used dreams and the stuff of dreams as a
potter spun clay on his wheel. If she was caught in a dream, then she
must wake—wake soon. Not a dream. Yes—a dream. She felt her own exhaustion, the
pinch of hunger which was pain, the rough ground over which she stumbled, the
bushes she grasped to steady her.
Not
real—a dream! The bushes thinned until they were unsubstantial ghosts of
themselves. Through their wavering outlines she saw a wall—yes, wall, solid
wall. She was not on Demeter—she was—she was . . .
Warlock!
As if the recognition of that name were a key, the now shadowy slope of Demeter
vanished, driven away like smoke by a rising wind. She lay on a pad of mats. To
her right was a window giving on the dark of night with a frosting of stars in
the sky. This was Warlock and the Citadel of the Wyvems.
She
did not move but lay quietly trying to separate dream from reality. The post—it
had been raided. That Survey officer Shann Lantee— She
could see him as plainly now as if he stood before her, the blood-spattered
alien spear held between them.
The spear. It
had splintered under the action of the Wy-vem. The broken bits had moved in
that weird dance until they had fallen in a pattern which had awakened such
rage in the Warlockians. And that rage . . .
Charis
sat bolt upright on the mats. Lantee crumbling under the Power of the Wyvems,
herself returned to relive portions of the past—for what purpose she could not
divine. Why had that rage been turned on Lantee? In a way, it had been her
fault for summoning Cytha She had been too impulsive.
Her
hands went to the pouch at her belt. It was empty of the disk. That had been in
her hand when the Power had taken her on the shore Had
she dropped it or had they taken it from her?
That
could mean that the Wyvems no longer considered her in the guise of friend or
ally. What had the broken spear meant to them? Without the
disk Charis was a prisoner here in this room. At least there was no reason why
she could not attempt at once to find out what bonds had been set upon her
freedom. Would she discover herself as unable to move as she had been on her
flight along the shore when it had suited the Wyvems to control her?
"Tsstu?" Charis held that call to hardly above a whisper She
did not know how much of an ally the small curl-cat could be against the
Wyvems, but she had come to depend upon her for companionship more heavily than
she had guessed.
A
drowsy sound came from the shadow directly below the window near which her head
had rested. Tsstu lay there, curled in a ball, her eyes closed, her ears folded
back tight against her head. Charis stooped and drew her fingers lightly across
that head.
"Tsstu,"
she whispered coaxingly. Was the curl-cat—she had adopted Lantee's name for
Tsstu's species since it fitted so well—deep in her own land of dreaming, too
deep to be aroused now?
The ears twitched and slits of eyes showed
between lids. Then Tsstu yawned widely, her yellow tongue curled up and out.
She lifted her head to eye Charis.
To
communicate more than just vague impressions without the aid of the disk—could
she do that? Charis made a sudden swoop to gather up the curl-cat, holding
Tsstu aloft so that those narrow felinehke eyes looked straight into hers. Was
Tsstu so closely linked to the Wyvems that she would serve them rather than
Charis now?
Away, the girl thought, out
of here,
"Rrrruuuu." That was agreement.
Tsstu
wriggled vigorously in her grasp, wanting her freedom. Charis obeyed her wish.
The curl-cat approached the doorway on pad-feet, elongating and flattening her
body so that she had the appearance of a hunter on stalk. She stared into the corridor, her head raised a little, her ears spread to their
widest. Charis guessed that every sense the curl-cat had was analyzing,
scouting, for them. Tsstu glanced back at the girl, summoned—
This
way led to the assembly rooms, to other private chambers such as hers,
prepared for dreamers. Whether or not the corridor would eventually take them
outside Charis did not know; she could only hope and rely upon Tsstu.
Even
without the disk she strove to pick up any mind touch, any intimation that the
Wyverns were about. Twice
Chans
was sure she had brushed beamed thoughts, not enough to read, just enough to be
certain that they did exist. Otherwise, as in the trading post, she might be
walking through a deserted dwelling.
Tsstu seemed confident of her path, trotting
noiselessly along, choosing without hesitation whenever the corridor branched
or was crossed by another passage. Charis was already out of the small portion
of the maze that she knew. And she was conscious of the fact that the curl-cat
had guided her into a section where the light from the walls was dimmer, the
walls themselves rougher, narrower. She gained a feeling of age. Then the light
was gone from the whole wall surface, lingering only in some places Charis had
to study closely before she saw the purpose of those remaining patches. They
made out a design not unlike the whorls and circling on the disks Here on the walls were some of the same symbols of power
which the Wyvems had harnessed to their bidding
But these patterns were not finished nor as
crisp and cleanly cut as those on the disks Larger, cruder, could they still
open doorways for the initiated?
Tsstu
continued with confidence. The even temperature of the other corridors failed.
Charis put fingers to the nearest spiral and jerked them away as her flesh
shrank from the heat there. She coughed, her throat dry.
Where or what was this place?
In
spite of an inner warning, she could not help but follow some of the designs
with her eyes, looking ahead to pick them up, keeping them in sight until they
were behind her. They blanketed her general field of vision until all she could
see were the designs, and she halted with a cry of
fear.
"Tsstu!"
Soft fur against her ankles, a reassurance in her mind. The curl-cat must not be affected by the
same illusions as now imprisoned the girl. But to walk through this blackness
where only the whorls, circles, lines had any existence for her was more than
Charis could bring herself to do. Fear—overwhelming, panic-raising fear—
"Meeeerreee!"
Charis could feel Tsstu, she could hear her,
but she could not see the curl-cat. She could see nothing but the patterns.
"Back!"
her word was a hoarse whisper. Only now Charis was not sure where back was. To
take a step could plunge her into unknown chaos.
There
was one design out of that mass of patterns—somehow she was able to fasten on
that. Larger, sprawled out in crude length where she was used to it in a
compact, clearly defined circle—this was her own disk pattern. She was certain
of that.
"Tsstu!" She caught up the curl-cat by touch. Only those lines of dull silver
glowed in the darkness. Concentrate on this design as she had on the disk and
so—escape?
Charis
hesitated. Escape to where? Return to the raided post? To the
moss meadow? She must have a strong visual picture of her goal or the
transport would not occur. Post? Meadow?
Neither was where she wanted to go now. It was not just escape she wanted, it
was knowledge of what was happening and why. But one could not gain that so . .
.
Then—she
was there. Lines of Wyvems, all seated cross-legged on mats, all intent upon
two in the center. Lines of Wyvems, circles of them, for the
chamber was a bowl-shaped place made up of climbing ledges, circling a
space.
In
that space Gysmay and her shadow-patterned companion stood alone. They faced
each other, those two, and between them on the dark of the floor were
splinters, needle-like pieces of all colors of the rainbow. The two were intent
upon those splinters as were all others in that chamber.
Charis's hair stirred with electricity, her skin
prickled.
There was such power here, loosed, flowing,
that she reacted to it physically. None of those about her had noted her coming;
they stared at the splinters, concentrating their power.
The
splinters rose upon their points, whirled, danced, spun
into the air to form a small cloud which first encircled Gys-may. Three times about her body, beginning at waist height, then at her
throat, lastly about her head. Then they spun away to the open between
the two Wyvems, came apart in a tinkling rain to form a design on the floor.
And from those that watched there came to Charis a ripple of emotion, some
decision or demand or bargaining point, she was not sure which, had been
stated.
Again
the needles rose in their point-dance, leaped into the air to form a cloud
which now wreathed the shadowed Wy-vern. And Charis thought that they spun more
slowly this time and that the cloud did not glint with bright colors but was
more subdued. It broke and tinkled down to deliver the answer, counterargument,
disagreement—three in one.
And
again there was to be sensed a wave of approbation from some of the watchers,
but a weaker one The company was divided upon some issue and their discussion
conducted so Charis watched, supposing that Cysmay was about to answer, for the
needles were rising again
But
this time their dance was less prolonged and the cloud they formed swayed
neither to one of the Wyverns nor to the other. It was a tight saucer-shape
rising higher and higher, straight up until it was level with the fourth and top
tier of the ledges.
The
company watched in shocked surprise This they had not
expected. Gysmay and her companions held their disks. But if they strove to
call the needles, those were now out of their control. The cloud swayed back
and forth as if it clung to some unseen pendulum. And each swing brought it
closer to where Charis stood.
Suddenly it broke from that measured swing to
dart at her. She cried out as it whirled about her head, swiftly, almost
menacingly. The two nearest Wyvems were on their feet, while all below focused
on the girl.
Twice,
three times, the cloud wreathed her and then it was gone, out over the open,
descending. But Charis could not move; the restraint of the power held her
prisoner. The cloud broke, rained its substance down to the floor, but she
could see no design, only a meaningless jumble.
At
the same time she moved, not of her own volition, but under the will of those
about her, descending from tier to tier until she stood in the open,
equidistant from the two witches.
"What
is read is read. To each dreamer, a dream as is the will of
Those Who Have Dreamed Before. It would seem, Dreamer of Other World
Dreams, that you, also, have a word in this matter—"
"In
what matter?" Ohans asked aloud.
"In
the matter of life and death, of your blood and our blood, of past and future " was the evasive answer
Where
she found the words and the courage to say them in an even voice, Charis did
not know as she replied: "If that is the answer, I have been
granted—" she nodded at the fallen needles "—then you needs must
read it for me, O, One of All Wisdom."
It was the shadow-laced Wyvern who answered:
"But this is beyond our reading, though it has meaning since the Power moved its fashioning. We can only believe that
its time is not yet. But time itself is an enemy in this matter. When one
weaves a dream there must be no breaking of the thread of warp and woof. In our
dreams, you and yours are unwelcome—"
"Those of my blood
have died on the shore," Charis retorted. "Yet I cannot believe that
it was by your hands and will-"
"No—by their own. For they began an ill dream and twisted the pattern.
They have done a thing which is beyond straightening now." Gysmay was all
anger, though that emotion was controlled and perhaps the more deadly because
of that control. "They have given those who cannot dream another kind of
power to break the long-laid design. Thus they must be huntedl They would overturn all reason and custom, and to that the
end is slaying—and the slaying has already begun. We want no more of you. It
shall be so." She clapped her hands and the needles jumped, collecting
into a heap.
"Perhaps—" the shadowed Wyvern
spoke.
"Perhaps?"
echoed Chans. "Speak plainly to me now, Holder of Old Wisdom. I have seen
a dead man of my race lying by a broken dwelling, and with him was a weapon which
was not his. Yet among you I have seen no arms save the disks of Power. What
evil walks this world? It is not of my making nor of
the man Lantee's." She did not know why she added that, save that Lantee
had had friendly contact with the witches.
"You
are of one breed with the makers of this trouble!" Gysmay's thought was
like a sharp hiss.
"The
spear," Chans persisted, "this is of your kind, not mine! And a man
died of it."
"Those
who dream not—they hunt, they kill with such. And now they have broken the
ancient law and run to do evil in the service of strangers. Those strangers
have given them a protection against the Power so that they may not be brought
back into order again. Perhaps this was not of your doing, for among us you
have dreamed true and know the Power in its proper use. And the man Lantee,
together with the one other who was with him from the earlier time, he, too,
has dreamed—though that was out of all custom. But now come
those who do not dream, to uphold the evil of not-dreaming. And our world will
fall apart unless we hasten to the mending."
"But still," the shadowed Wyvern's
quieter message came, "there is the pattern we cannot read and which we
may not push away unheeded, for it was born of what we evoked here to answer us
in our need. Therefore, there is a use for you, though we know not yet what it
may be, nor do you. This you must learn for yourself and bring to aid the
greater design—"
There
was no mistaking the warning lying in that. Charis could only guess at the
meaning behind the circumlocution of speech. An off-world party—probably the
Jacks who had raided the post—had freed some of the males from the control of
the Wyvern matriarchs. And these were now fighting for or with the strangers.
In return, the Wyverns seemed about to organize some counterblow against all
off-worlders.
"This
great design—is it being readied against those of my blood?" Charis asked.
"It
must be carefully woven, then aimed and dreamed." Again
only half an answer. "But it will break your pattern as you have
broken ours."
"And I have a part in this?"
"You
have received an answer which we could not read. Discover its meaning and maybe
it will be for us also."
"She
breaks our pattern here," Gysmay interrupted. "Send her into the
Place Without Dreams that she may not continue to
disrupt what we do here!"
"Not
sol She was answered; she has a right to leam the meaning of that answer. Send
her forth from this place, yes —that we shall do. But into the Darkness Which
Is Naught? No—that is against her rights. Time grows short, Dreamer.
Dream
true if you would save the breaking of your pattern Now—get
you hence!"
The tiered chamber, the watching Wyverns,
vanished. Night was dark about Charis, but she could hear the murmur of sea
waves not too far away. She breathed fresh air and above her were stars. Was
she back on shore?
No.
As her eyes adjusted to the very dim light, she was able to see that she stood
on a high point of rock; around her on all sides was the wash of waves She must
be marooned on a rocky spear in what might be the middle of the ocean.
Afraid
to take a step in any direction, Charis dropped down to her knees, hardly
believing this could be true. Tsstu stirred, made a small questioning sound,
and Charis's breath caught in a half-sob of incredulous protest.
X
"The
dream is yours. Dream
true."
Rock,
an islet of bare rock, high above the sea with no path down its steep walls
against which waves thundered. Overhead the cries of birds disturbed from
their nesting holes by her coming. In the half-light of early morning Charis
surveyed her perch. The first bewilderment of her arrival was gone, but her
uneasiness now had a base of fear
There
was a series of sharp, shallow ledges leading down from the point of rock where
she crouched to a wider open space sheltered on one side by a ridge. Some
vegetation, pallid and sickly looking, straggled in that pocket of earth. She
rose to look out over the sea, having no idea where she was now in relation to
the Citadel or the main continent.
Some distance away there was another blot
which must mark a second rock island, but it was too far to make out clearly.
The finality which had been in her dismissal from the Wyvem assemblage clung.
They had sent her here, and she could only believe that they would do nothing
to get her back. Her escape must be of her own devising.
"Meeerrreee?" Tsstu squatted on the rock, her whole stance expressing her dislike of
these surroundings.
"Where
do we go?" Chan's asked. "You know as much as I."
The
curl-cat looked at her through eyes slitted against the force of the rising
wind. Charis shivered. There was a promise of rain in the feel of that breeze,
she thought. To be caught on this barren rock in a storm ...
Only
that half-pocket below offered any shelter at all; best get into it now. Tsstu
was prudendy already on the way, though with caution as she clawed along the
ledges.
Rain
sure enough, great drops slapping down. But rain meant water to drink. Charis
welcomed those runnels which spattered into the pockets of rock. With the gift
of rain water, this storm could be a blessing for them both.
The
birds which had cried overhead were now gone. Tsstu, prowling their scrap of
ground, went to work at a matted tangle against the ridge wall She looked up with a trickle of white coursing over her
chin, which she swept away with a swift swipe of tongue
"—ree—"
She pushed her head back into the tangle and then backed out, coming to Charis
carrying something in her mouth with delicate care. When the girl put out her
hand, Tsstu dropped into it a ball which could only be an egg.
Hunger
fought with distaste and won. Charis broke a small hole in the top of that
sphere and sucked its contents, trying not to notice the taste. Eggs and rain
water— How long would they last? How long would the
two of them last perched up here, especially if the wind grew strong enough to
lick them off?
"The dream is yours. Dream true."
Could this be only one of those very real dreams which the Wyverns were able to evoke? Charis could not remember that in any
of those visions she had felt .the need to eat
or drink. Dream or real? Charis had no evidence either
way.
But there had to be some
way of escapel
The ridge at her back kept a measure of the
rain from them, but the water gathering on the higher level drained down into
this slight basin, pooling up about the roots of the few small plants. The
earth about them grew slick.
If
she only had the disk! But she had not had that back in that passage where the
patterns had glowed on the walls. Yet her concentration upon those designs had
taken her into the Wyvem assembly.
Suppose
she had the same means of leaving here—where would she go? Not back to the
Citadel; that was enemy territory now. To the raided post?
No, unless she was only seeking a hiding place. But that was not what she
wanted.
Wyvern
witches against off-worlders. If the natives moved only against the Jacks and
their own renegade males, that was none of her battle. But they were seeing all off-worlders as enemies now. If this rock exile was merely a device to
keep her out of batde, it was a well-planned one. But she was of one stock; the
Wyverns, no matter how much they had been in accord, were alien. And when it
came to drawing battle lines, she was on the other side, whether her original
sympathies lay there or not.
No,
Charis did not care what happened to the scum which had turned Jack here; the
quicker they were dealt with the better. But they should be disciplined by
their own kind.
Lantee
and this Ragnar Thorvald who represented off-world law on Warlock and who now
were apparently lumped with those to be finished off, Wyvern-fashion—they must
have a say. If they could be warned, then there might still be time to summon
the Patrol to handle the Jacks and prove to the Wyvems that all off-worlders
were not alike.
A warning. But
even with the disk Charis could not reach the government base. You had to have
a previous memory of any point, be able to picture it in your mind, in order to
use the Power to reach it. And Lantee—what had happened to him at the post? Was
he even still alive after that mind blast from the Wyverns?
Could—just possibly—could you use a person as a journey goal? Not to summon him to you as she had so disastrously
done with Gytha at the post, but to go to him? It was action she had never
tried. But it was a thought.
Only first—the means. With a disk, one focused on the pattern until one's eyes were set, and
ones concentration reached the necessary pitch to use one's will as a
springboard into Otherwhere, or through it into another place.
Back
in the passage, she had involuntarily used the glowing design on the wall to
proj'ect her into the Wyvem council, though then she had not controlled her
place of arrival.
What
was important then was not the disk itself but the design it bore. Suppose she
could reproduce that pattern here, concentrate upon it. Escape? It might be her
one chance. Manifestly she had no means of leaving here otherwise. So why not
try the illogical?
Then—go
where? The post? The moss meadow?
Any point on which she could fix an entrance would bring her no closer to the
base of the Survey men. But if she could j'oin Lantee —Him she could visualize
strongly enough to use. The only other possibility was Jagan and she could not
obtain any aid from the trader, even if he were still alive.
To
j'oin Lantee who, by his own account, had some experience with Wyvern dreaming
and Power—might that not make him more receptive as a focal point? There was so
much she had to guess about this, but it was the best chance she could see now.
If she could set up the liberating pattern at all.
What were her means? The rock was too rough
to serve as a surface on which to scratch lines. The slick clay at the edge of
the growing pool caught Charis's attention. It was a relatively flat stretch
and one could make an impression on it with a sharp stone or a branch from one
of the bushes. But she had to do it right.
Charis
closed her eyes and tried to build within her mind the all-important memory.
There was a wavy line which curled back upon its length—so. Then
the break which came —thus. Something else—something
missing. Her agitation grew as she strove to fit in the part she could
not remember. Maybe if she drew it out she would
But
the expanse of the clay was now too well covered by the pool water And the wind was rising. With Tsstu curled close against
her. Charis hugged the protecting ridge rock. There was nothing to do until the
storm died.
Within
a very short time Charis began to fear that they would not survive the fury of
the wind, the choking drive of the rain. Only the fact that the ridge wall was
there and they were tight against it gave them anchorage. The downpour
continued to raise the pool until the water lapped Charis's cold feet and legs,
but then it reached new runnels to feed it to the sea below.
Tsstu
was a source of warmth in her arms and the curl-cat's vague communication was a
reassurance, too. A confidence flowed from the animal to the girl, not
steadily, but when she needed it most. Charis wondered just how much of what
had happened to them Tsstu understood. Their band of mind-touch was so narrow
the girl could not judge the intelligence of the Warlockian animal by the forms
of comparison she knew. Tsstu might be far more than she seemed or be assessed
as less because of the lack of full communication
There
came a time when the wind no longer lashed at their refuge or poked in
finger-gusts to try to loosen their hold. The sky lightened and the rain, from
a blustering wall of driven water, slackened into a drizzle. Still Charis was
not sure of the design. But she watched the shore of the pool avidly, wondering
whether she could bare the clay by cupping out water with her hands.
The
sky was streaked with gold when she edged forward and .twisted a length of
water-soaked frond from one of the bushes. To strip away leaves and give
herself a writing point was no problem Impatience possessed her now—she must try this slender hope
She
cupped out some of the pool water by hand, clearing a stretch of smooth blue
clay. Nowl Charis found her fingers shaking a little; she set her will and
muscle power to control that trembling as she put the point of her writing tool
in the sticky surface
Thus—the wavy line which was the base of the design to her thinking. Yes! Now for the sharp counterstroke to
bisect it at just the proper angle There-correct. But the missing
part...
Charis
shut her eyes tightly Wave, line— What was the other? Useless. She could not remember
Bleakly
she looked down at the almost complete partem But
"almost" would not serve; it had to be perfect Tsstu sat beside her,
staring with feline intensity at the marks in the clay. Suddenly she shot out a
paw, planted it flat before Charis could interfere. At the girl's cry, the
curl-cat's ears folded and she growled softly, but she withdrew her forefoot,
leaving the impress of three pads set boldly in the mud.
Three indentations? no—two! Charis
laughed. Tsstu's memory was the better. She rubbed the mud clear, began to
draw again—this time far
more swiftly—with self-confidence. Wavy
line, cut, two ovals—not quite where Tsstu had placed them, but here and here.
"Meeerrrreee!"
"Yesl" Charis echoed that cry of
triumph. "Will it work, little one? Will it work?
And where do we go?"
But
she knew she had already made up her mind as to that. Not a place but a man was her goal—at least at first try. If she could not join Lantee, they
would try for the moss meadow and the chance of working their way south to the
base from there. But that meant a waste of time they might not have to spend.
No—for what might be the safety of all their kind on this world, Lantee was her
first goal.
First
she began to build her mental picture of the Survey officer, fitting in every
small detail that memory supplied, and she found there were more of those to
summon than she had believed. His hair, black, crisply curling like Tsstus; his
brown face sober and masked until he smiled but then softening about his mouth
and eyes; his spare, wiry body in the green-brown uniform of his corps; his
tall boots of copper; rubbing against those, his companion Taggi. Erase the wolverine,
a second living thing might confuse the Power.
Charis
found that she could not divide the two in her mind-picture. Man and animal,
they clung together despite her efforts to forget Taggi and see only Lantee.
Once more she built up the picture of Shann Lantee as she had seen him at the
post before she had summoned Gytha. Just so he had stood, looked, been. Nowl
Tsstu
had come back into her arms, her claws caught in Charis's already slitted
tunic. Charis regarded the curl-cat with a smile.
"We
had better finish this flitting about soon or you will have me reduced to rags.
Shall we try it?"
"—reee—" Agreement by mind-touch,
eager anticipation. Tsstu appeared to have no doubts that they would go somewhere.
Charis stared down at the pattern.
Cold—no light at all—a terrible emptiness. Life was not. She wanted to scream under a
torture which was not of body but of mind. Lantee—where was Lantee? Dead? Was this death into which she had
followed him?
Cold again—but another kind of cold. Light—light which carried the promise of
life she knew and understood. Charis fought down the churning sickness which
had come from that terror of the place where life did not exist.
A rank smell, a growling answered by Tsstu's "rrruuugh" of
warning.
Charis saw the rocky waste about them and— the brown Taggi. The wolverine
lumbered back and forth, pausing now and then to snarl. And Charis caught the
feeling of fear and bewilderment which moved him Always his pacing brought him
back to the figure which squatted in a small fissure, huddling there, facing
outward
"Lanteel"
Charis's cry of recognition was almost a paean of thanksgiving. Her gamble had
paid off; they had reached the Survey man.
But
if he heard her, saw her, he made no response. Only Taggi turned and came to
her at an awkward run, his round head up, his harsh cry sounding not in
warning-off anger but as a petition for aid. Lantee must be hurt. Charis ran.
"Lantee?"
she called again as she went to her knees before the crevice into which he had
crawled. Then she saw his face clearly.
At
their first meeting his expression had been guarded, remote, but it had
been—alive. This man breathed; she could see the rise and fall of his chest His
skin—she reached out her hand, rested finger tips briefly on his wrist, then
raised them to his cheek—his skin was neither burning with fever nor unduly
chill. Only what had made him truly a man and not a living husk was gone,
sucked or driven out of him, By that bolt of the
Wyvern's wrath?
Charis
sat back on her heels and looked about. This was not the clearing before the
post, so he had not remained where she had seen him fall. She could hear the
sea. They were somewhere in the wilds along the coast. How and why he had come
here did not matter now.
"Lantee—Shann—"
She made a coaxing sound of his name as one might to attract the attention of a
child. There was no flicker of response in his dead eyes, on the husk of a face.
The
wolverine pushed against her, his rank odor strong. Taggi's head moved, his
jaws opened and closed on her hand, not in anger but as a bid for attention.
Seeing that he had that, Taggi released his hold, swung around facing inland,
his growl a plain warning of danger in that direction.
Tsstu's
ears, which had flattened at first sight of the Ter-ran animal, spread again
She clawed at Charis. Something was coming; her own warning was piercingly
sharp—they must
go
Charis
reached again for Lantee's wrist, her fingers closed firmly as she pulled him
forward. Whether she could get him moving she did not know
"Come—come,
we must go." Perhaps her words had no meaning, but he was responding to her tug. crawling out of the
crevice, rising to his feet as she stood up and drew him with her. He would
keep moving as long as she kept hold of his arm, Charis discovered, but if she
broke contact, he stopped.
So
propelling him, the girl turned south, Tsstu prowling ahead, Taggi forming a
rear guard. Who or what could be behind them she did not know; her worst
suspicions said Jack. Lantee wore no weapon, not even a stunner. And thrown
stones were no protection against blasters. To find a refuge in which to hole
up was perhaps their only hope if they were trailed.
Luckily,
the terrain before them was not too rough. She could not have hauled Lantee,
even docile as he was, up or down climbs. Not too far ahead were signs of
broken country, an uneven line of outcrops sharp against the sky. And
somewhere among those they might find a temporary sanctuary. Taggi had
disappeared. Twice Charis had turned to watch for the wolverine, not daring to
call. She remembered the whistle she had heard back in the moss meadow when she
had first sighted the Survey officer and his four-footed companion. That
summons she could not duplicate.
Now
she hurried on. Under her urging, Lantee lengthened his stride, but there was
no sign that he was responding to anything but her pull on his arm. He might
have been a robot. Any warning she had would mean nothing to him in his
present condition, and whether that had been caused only by temporary shock
from the encounter with the blast of Wyvern power or something more lasting,
she could not tell.
It
would not be long until sunset, Charis knew. To reach the broken land before
the failing of the light was her purpose. And she made it. Tsstu scouted out
what they needed, a ledge forming a good overhang which was half cave. Charis
pushed Lantee ahead of her into that growing pool of shadow and pulled him
down. He sat there, staring unseeingly out into the twilight.
Emergency
rations? His uniform belt had a series of pockets in its broad length and
Charis set about searching them. A message or record tape in the first, then a
packet of small tools for which she could not imagine any use apart from
complicated installation repairs, three credit tokens, a case for identity and
permit cards containing four she did not pause to read, another packet of
simple first-aid materials—perhaps more to the purpose now than the rest. She
worked from right to left, emptying each pocket and then restoring its contents,
while Lantee paid no heed to her search. Now—this was what she had hoped for.
She had seen just such tubes carried by the ranger on Demeter. Sustain tablets.
Not only would they allay hunger, but they added a booster which restored and
nourished nervous energy.
Four of them. Two Charis dropped back into the tube which she placed in her own belt
pouch. One she mouthed and chewed with vigor. There was no taste at all, but
she got it down. The other she held uncertainly. How could she get it into
Lantee? She doubted if he would eat in his present condition. She would have to
see if a certain amount of absorption would come by the only way left. She
gathered two pebbles from the ground and brushed them back and forth on her
ragged 'tunic to clean them from dust as well as she could, next, that identity
card case, also dusted for surface dirt. With the rubbing of the tablet
between the two pebbles, Charis obtained a powder, caught on the slick surface
of the case.
Then,
forcing his mouth open, the girl was able to brush that powder into Lantee's
mouth. It was the best she could do. And just maybe the reviving powers of the
highly concentrated Sustain might cut down the effects of the shock— or
whatever affected him now.
XI
While
she still had light,
Charis set about making their half-cave into more of a fortress, pushing and
carrying loose stones to build up a low wall across its front. If they kept
well down behind that, the green of her tunic and the green-brown of Lan tee's uniform would not be too noticeable. She bit at a
ragged nail as she crawled back under cover.
The pocket of shadow had deepened and Charis
put out a questioning hand to guide her. She touched Lantee's shoulder and
moved, to huddle down, close beside him. Tsstu flitted in,
"meeerreeed" once, and then left on a hunt of her own. Of Taggi,
there had been no sign since they had come into the broken land. Perhaps the
wolverine, too, had gone in quest of food.
Charis
let her head fall forward to rest on her knees. In this cramped space it was
necessary to ball one's body into the smallest possible compass. She was not
really tired; the Sustain tablet was working. But she needed to think. The
Wyvems had warned her that time was against her. She had won free from the sea-rock
to which they had exiled her, but perhaps she had made the wrong choice of
escape. In his present condition, Lantee was no ally but a responsibility. With
the coming of light she could redraw the pattern, get as far south as the moss
meadow. How much farther beyond that lay the government base she had no idea.
But if she kept on following the shore she would eventually reach it.
But—Lantee? She could not take him with her, she was sure of that. And to leave him
here in his condition—Charis shied from that solution every time the brutal
necessity for action presented it. He was no friend; they had no acquaintance
past that one meeting by the post. He had no claim on her at all and the need
for action was urgent.
There
were times when one human life was expendable for the whole. But, well as she
knew the bitter logic of that reasoning, Charis found a barrier in her against
her following it as high and firm as the barriers which the Wyvems had used to
control her. Well, she could do nothing during the hours of dark. Maybe before
morning Lantee would come out of it, out of this state of nonbeing. It was
childish to cling to such hope but she did. Now she tried to will herself to
sleep, a sleep past the entry of any dream, "-ah-ahhhhhhh-"
The
plaint was that of pain. Charis strove to deafen herself against it.
"-ah-ahhhhhhhl"
The
girl's head came up. There was a stirring beside her. She could not see Lantee
save as a dim bulk in the gloom, but her hand went out to feel the convulsive
shudders which tore him. And always came that small
thread of a moan which must mark some unendurable agony.
"Lantee!" She shook his arm and he fell over against her, his head now resting on
her knee, so that the shivering which rocked him became partly hers. His
moaning had stopped, but his breath came and went in great sucking gasps, as if
he could not get oxygen enough to satisfy the needs of his trembling body
"Shann—what
is it?" Charis longed for light enough to see his face. When she had
nursed those struck down by the white plague on Demeter, she had known this
same sick fear, this same courage sapping frustration. What could she do, what could anyone do? She drew him toward her so that
his head rested in her lap, tried to hold him still. But just as he had been
apathetic and robot-like before, so now he was restless. His head turned back
and forth as that horrible gasping racked him
"Rrrruuuu." Out of nowhere Tsstu came, a shadow. The curl-cat was on Lantee's
chest, crouched low, clinging with claws when Charis tried to push her away.
Then a growl and Taggi burst around the stones Charis had set up, came to nuzzle against Lantee's twisted body as if, with
Tsstu, he strove to hold the sufferer still. Need—it was a cloud about the four
of them—the blind call for help which Lantee did not have to put into words for
Charis to feel, the concern of the animals, her own helplessness. This was a
crisis point, she realized that. The Survey man was fighting a battle, and if
he lost—?
"What can I do?" she cried aloud.
This was not an affair of the body—she had delved deeply enough into the Wyvern
Power to know that—but of mind, of—of identity.
Will—that
was the springboard of Wyvem power. They willed what they wished, and it was! She was willing now-willing Lantee to . . .
Dark and cold and that which was nothing once
again, this was the space into which her desire to help was drawing her, a
space which was utterly alien to her kind. Dark—cold. But now— Two small fights, flickering, then growing stronger,
though the dark and cold fought to extinguish them; two lights which drew
closer to her and grew and grew. She did not reach out her hands to take
up those fights, but they came as if she had called. And then Charis was aware
that there was a third light, and she furnished the energy on which it fed.
Three
lights joined to speed through that dark in search. No thought, no speech among
them; just the compulsion to answer a calling need. For the dark and cold were
all-encompassing, a sea of black having no shore, no islands.
Island?
Faint, so faint, a glimmer showed on the sea. They spun
together, those three lights, and struck down to the small spark gleaming in
that encroaching and swallowing dark. Now there was a fourth light like an ash-encrusted coal in a near-dead fire. Together
the three aimed at that fire, but there was no touching it: They had not the
power to strike through, and the fire was near extinction.
Then
the light which was fed by Charis's energy and will soared, drawing also that
which was the animals. She reached out, not with a physical arm or hand but with an extension of her inner force, and
touched one of her companion lights.
It
snapped toward her. She was rent, to writhe in pain as emotions which were
alien warred against that which was Charis alone—wild, raw emotions which
boiled and frothed, which dashed her in and about. But she fought back, strove
to master and won to an uneasy stability. And then she reached out again and
drew to her the second spark.
Once
again she was in tumult, and even greater was the fight she had to wage for
supremacy. But the urgency which had drawn all three, the need to go to the
dying fire, laid upon them now the need for acting as one. And when Charis
called upon that need, they obeyed.
Down
to that glimmer which was now far spent sped a bolt of flaming force raised to
the highest possible pitch. That broke through, pierced to the heart of the
fire.
Turmoil for a space. Then it was as if Charis raced wildly
down a corridor into which emptied many doors. From be-
hind each of these came people and things she did not know,
who grasped at her, tried to shout messages in her ears, im-
press upon her their importance, until Charis was deafened,
driven close to the edge of sanity. To that corridor she could
see no end. ,
The
voices screamed, but through them came other sounds —a growling, a
squalling—equal to the voices, demanding attention in their turn. Charis could
not run much farther . . .
Silence,
abrupt, complete—and in its way terrifying, too. Then—light. And she had a body
again. Aware first of that, Charis ran a hand down that body in wonder and
thankfulness. She looked about her. Under her sandaled feet was sand, silver
sand. But this was not the shore of the sea. In fact, vision in any direction
was not clear, for there was a mist which moved in spirals and billows, a mist
of green, the same green as the tunic she wore.
The mist curled, writhed, held a darker core.
She saw movement in that core, as if an arm had drawn aside a curtain.
"Lanteel"
He
stood there, facing her. But it was no longer the shell of a man she saw. There
was life and awareness back in his body and mind. He held out his hand to her.
"Dream . . . V
Was it all a dream? She had known such clarity of
vision before in the dream Otherwhere of the Wyverris.
"I don't know,"
she answered his half-question.
"You
came—you!" There was a kind of wondering recognition in his voice which she
understood. They had been together in that place where their kind was not. The
four fires, joined together, had now broken the bonds which had held him in a
place their species should never know.
"Yes."
Lantee nodded even though Charis had put none of that into words. "You and Taggi and Tsstu. Together you came, and
together we broke out."
"But this?" Charis gazed about at the green mist. "Where is this?"
"The Cavern of the Veil—of illusions. But this I believe is a dream. Still they
strive to keep us that much in bonds."
"For dreams there are answers."
Charis went down on her knees and smoothed the sand. With one finger tip she
traced her design. It was not clear in the powdery stuff, but there was enough,
she hoped, to serve her purpose. Then she looked at Lantee.
"Come."
Charis held out her hand. "Think of a half-cave —" swiftly she
described the place they had been in at night "—and keep hold. We must try
to return."
She
felt his grip tense and harden, his stronger fingers cramping hers until her
flesh numbed. And then she centered all of her mind on the picture of the ledge
cave and the pattern. . . .
Charis was stiff and cold, her arm ached, her hand was numb. Behind her was a rock wall, over her head an extension of it, and from before her a breath of
sun heat There was a sigh and she glanced down.
Lantee
lay there, curled up awkwardly, his head in her lap, his hand clutching hers in
that numbing grip. His face was drawn and haggard, as if he had aged planet
years since she had seen him last But the slack blankness which had been so
terrifying was gone He stirred and opened his eyes, first bewildered, but then
knowing, recognizing her.
He raised his head
"Dream I"
"Maybe. But we are back—here." Charis freed her hand from his hold and
spread her cramped fingers With her other hand she
patted the nearest stone in her improvised wall to assure herself of its reality.
Lantee
sat up and rubbed his hand across his eyes. But Charis remembered
"Tsstu! Taggi!"
There
was no sign of either animal. A small nagging fear began to nibble at her mind.
They—they were those other lights. And she had lost them; they had not been in the
place of green mist Were they lost forever?
Lantee stirred "They were with
you—there?" It was not a question but a statement. He crawled out from
under the ledge, whistled a clear rising note or two. Then he stooped and held
out his hand again to draw her up beside him.
"Tsstu!" aloud she called the
curl-cat.
Faint—very
faint—an answer] Tsstu had not been abandoned in that
place. But where was she?
"Taggi is alive!" Lantee's smile
was real. "And he answered me. It was different, that answer, from what
it has ever been before, more as if we spoke."
"To
have been there—might not that bring a change in us
all?"
For a moment he was silent and then he
nodded. "You mean because we were all one for a space? Yes, perhaps that
cannot be ever put aside."
She
had a spinning vision of that race down the endless corridor with its opening
doors and the shouting figures emerging from them. Had those represented
Lantee's memories, Lantee's thoughts? Not again did she want to face that!
"No,"
he agreed without need of speech from her, "not again. But there was then
the need—"
"More than one kind of need." Charis shied away from any more mention of
that mingling. "There's more trouble than Wyvern dreaming for us to
consider now." She told him of what she had learned.
Lantee's
mouth thinned into a straight line, his jaw thrust forward a little.
"Thorvald was with them or at least at the Citadel when we found that
spear. They may have put him away as they did me. Now they can move against all
off-worlders without interference. We have a com-tech at the base, and a Patrol
scout may have set down since I left—one was almost due. If that ship had not
come in, Thorvald would have recalled me when he left. Two, maybe three, men
were there and none of them armored against Wyvern control. We've been very
cautious about trying to expand the base because we. did
want to maintain good relations. These Jacks have blown the whole plan! You say
they have some Wyvem warriors helping them? I wonder how they worked that. From
all we've been able to learn, and that's very little, the witches have a firm
control over their males. That has always been one of the problems; makes it
almost impossible for them to conceive of co-operation with us."
"The Jacks must have something to
nullify the Power," Charis commented.
"That's all we need," he said
bitterly. "But if they can nullify the Power, then how can the witches go
up against them?"
"The Wyvems seem very sure of
themselves." Charis had her own first doubts. With the assembly arrayed
against her back at the Citadel, she had accepted their warning; her respect
for their Power had not been shaken until this moment. But Lantee was right. If
the invaders were able to nullify the Power to the extent of releasing the
males who had always been under domination, then could the witches hope to
battle the strangers themselves?
"No," Lantee continued,
"they're very sure of themselves because they've never before come up
against anything which threatened their hold on their people and their way of
life. Perhaps they can't even conceive of the Power's being
broken. We had hoped to make them understand eventually that there were other kinds of power, but we have not had time. To them this is a
threat, right enough, but not the supreme
threat I believe it is."
"Their Power has been broken," Charis said quietly. "With a
nullifier, yes. How soon do you suppose the truth of that will get
through to them?"
"But
we did not need this machine or whatever the Jacks have. We broke it—the four of usl"
Lantee
stared at her. Then he threw back his head and laughed, not loudly but with the
ring of real amusement.
"You
are right. And what will our witches say to this, I wonder? Or do they already
know? Yes, you freed me from whatever prison they consigned me to. And it was a prison!" His smile vanished, the drawn lines in his face
sharpened. "So—their Power can be
broken or circumvented in more ways than one. But I do not think that even that
information will deter them from making the first move. And they must be
stopped." He hesitated and then added in a rush of words, "I am not
arguing that they should take the interference of the Jacks and not fight back.
By their way of thinking their way of life is threatened. But if these witches
go ahead as they plan and try to wipe us all off Warlock, supposing they are able to fight the Jack weapon or weapons, then they will have written
the end to their own story themselves.
"For if this band of Jacks has come up with a nullifier to
defeat-the Power, others can, too. It will just be a matter of time until the Wyverns are under off-world
control. And that mustn't happenl"
"You say that?"
Charis asked curiously. Tom?"
"Does
that surprise you? Yes, they have worked on me and this was not the first time.
But I, too, have shared their dreaming. And because I did and Thorvald did, we
were that much closer to bridging the gap between us. We must be changed in
part when we are touched by the Power. But though they may have to bend to
weather a new wind— which will be very hard for them—they must not be swept
away. Now—" he looked about him as if he could summon a copter out of the
air "—we have to be on the move."
"I don't think they will allow us to
return to the Citadel," Charis demurred.
"No,
if they are working up to some stroke against off-worlders, they will have all
the screens up about their prime base. Our own headquarters is the only place.
From there we can signal for help. And if time is good to us, we can handle the
Jacks before they do. But where we are now and how far from the base—"
Lantee shook his head.
T)o you have your disk?" he added a moment
later.
"No.
But I don't need it." Just how true that was, Charis could not be sure.
She had won off the rock island and out of the place of green mist without it,
however. "But I've never seen your base."
"If
I described it, as you did this rock hole for me, would that serve?"
"I don't know. The cavern was a dream, I
think."
"And
our bodies remained here as anchors to draw us back? That could well be. But
there's no harm in trying."
The
hour must have been close to midday; the sun was burning hot on the baked
section of rock. And, as Lantee had pointed out, they were lost as far as
landmarks were concerned. His suggestion was as good as any. Charis looked
about for a patch of earth and a stone or stick to scratch with. But there was
neither.
"I must have something
which will make a mark."
"A mark?" Lantee echoed as he, too, surveyed their general surroundings. Then he
gave an exclamation and snapped open a belt pocket to bring out the small aid
kit. From its contents he selected a slender pencil which Charis recognized as
sterile paint, made to cleanse and heal small wounds. It was of a greasy
consistency. She tried it on the rock. The mark was faint but she could see it
"Now,"
Lantee sat on his heels beside her, "well aim for a place I know about a half mile from the base."
"Why
not the base itself?"
"Because
there may be a reception waiting there that we wouldn't care to meet. I want to
do some scouting before I walk into what might be real trouble
"
He
was right, of course Either the Wyverns might already have made their move—for
how could Charis guess how much time had actually passed since she had been
wafted from the assembly to the island—or the Jacks, learning the undermanned
status of the only legal hold on Warlock, had taken it over to save themselves
from off-world interference.
"Right here—there's a lake shaped
so." Lantee had taken the sterile stick from her and was drawing. "Then trees, a line of them standing this way. The rest
is meadow land. We should be at this end of the lake."
It
was hard to translate those marks into a real picture and Charis began to shake
her head. Suddenly her companion leaned forward and laid his palms flat against
her forehead just above her eyes.
XH
What
Charis saw was indistinct and fuzzy, not as
clean-cut as a picture she recalled from her own memory, but perhaps enough for
concentration. Only, with that fogged picture came other things; that corridor
with the doors was beginning to take form behind the wood and lake Charis struck Lantee's hand away and stared at him,
breathing hard, trying to read an answering awareness in his eyes.
"Well
have to remember the dangers of that." Lantee spoke first.
"Not
again! Never again!" Charis heard her voice grow shrill.
But
already he was nodding in reply. "No, not again But did you see enough of
the other?"
"I
hope so." She took the stick from him and chose a flat rock surface on
which to sketch the Power design. It was when she was putting in the ovals
Tsstu had remembered for her that Charis paused.
"Tsstu! I cannot leave her behind. And Taggi—"
She
closed her eyes and sent out that silent call: "Tsstu, cornel Come
now!"
Touch! There came an overlapping of thought
waves as fuzzy as the picture Lantee had beamed to her. And—refusal! Decided refusal—an abrupt breaking of contact. Why?
"There
is no use," she heard Lantee say as she opened her eyes again.
"You reached Taggi." It was not a
question.
"I
reached him in a different way than I ever have before. He would not listen. He
was occupied—"
"Occupied?"
Charis wondered at his word choice. "Hunting?"
"I
don't think so. He was exploring, trying something new which interested him so
greatly he would not come."
"But
they are here, back with us, not in Otherwhere?" Her
relief was threatened by that recurring fear.
"I
don't know where they are. But Taggi has no fear; he is only curious, very
curious. And Tsstu?"
"She
broke contact. But—yes—I think she had no fear either."
"We shall have to
leave now!" Lantee continued.
If
they could, Charis amended silently. She took his hand once more. "Think
of your lake," she ordered and concentrated on the faint pattern on the
rock.
Cool breeze—the murmur of it through leaves.
The direct baking of the sun had been modified by a weaving of branches, and
just before her was the shimmer of lake surface.
"We made it!" The tight grasp on
her hand was gone. Lantee surveyed the site with a wary measuring,
his nostrils slightly dilated as if, like Taggi, he could pick up and classify
some alien scent.
There was a path along the lake shore,
defined well enough to be clearly visible. Otherwise the place was as deserted
as if no off-worlder had ever been there before.
"This
way!"
Lantee motioned her south, away from the thread of path. His voice was close to
a whisper, as if he suspected they were scouting enemy-held territory.
"There's
a hill in this direction and from it we can get a good look at the base."
"But why—?" Charis began and was favored with an impatient frown from her
companion.
"If
there's any move being made, either by the Jacks or the witches, the first
strike will be at the base. With Thor-vald and me out of the way, the witches
may be able to put Hantin, or any other off-worlder, right under control. And
the Jacks could overrun the whole place easily, make a surprise attack and
write off the base just as they wrote off the trading post."
She
followed him with no more questions. On Demeter Charis had gone exploring with
the ranger; she thought she knew a measure of woodcraft. But Lantee was as much
at home in this business as Taggi could be. He slipped soundlessly from one
piece of cover to another. However, she noted with some surprise, he did not
display any outward signs of impatience when her clumsiness slowed them. And
she was even a little resentful of what she came to believe was his
forbearance.
Hot
and very thirsty, Charis wriggled up a slope Lantee had led them to. She had a
swelling bite delivered by the rightful inhabitant of an earthen run she had
inadvertently crushed, and her throat ached with desert dryness before they lay
side by side behind a screen of brush at the top of that rise.
A
cluster of four bubble domes lay below and, farther away, a landing field.
There was a light copter standing to one side of that, and on the
rocket-blasted middle section stood a small spacer—a Patrol scout, Charis
believed.
It
was very peaceful there below. No one moved about the buildings, but pale
flowers native to Warlock grew in the open space. And some brighter spots in
those beds suggested that perhaps some off-world plants had been imported as an
experiment.
"It looks all right—" she began.
"It
looks all wrong!" His whisper carried something of the hiss of Wyvern
anger.
There
were no blast holes in the fabric of the domes as
there had been at the raided post, nothing in sight which suggested trouble.
But Lantee's concern was plain to read, and she returned to a second and more
searching survey of the scene.
It
must be midafternoon and there was a quality of drowsy peace down there. The
inhabitants could all be dozing out the hours at their ease. Charis made up her
mind not to ask for enlightenment but wait for her companion to volunteer the cause
for his suspicion.
He
began to talk softly, perhaps more as a listing of his own causes for suspicion
aloud rather than as a sharing of information with Charis.
"Com mast down. Hantin's not out in the garden working on that new crossing bed of his.
And Togi—Togi and the cubs—"
"Togi?" Charis dared to ask.
"Taggi's mate. She has two cubs and they spend every afternoon that's sunny down among
those rocks. They're very fond of earth-wasp grubs and there's
several colonies of them to be found there. Togi's been teaching the cubs how
to dig them out."
But
how could he be sure that just because a wolverine and her cubs were not at a
certain place there was trouble below? Then Charis added that to the two other
facts he had noted—the com mast down and that he had not seen one of the base
personnel outside. But both of those were such little things—
"Put those three things
together"—Lantee was either able to read her thoughts in part or was
following her own line of reasoning with surprising accuracy—"and you have
a wrong answer. On a base you come to follow habit. We have the com mast up
always. That's orders and you don't change regulations unless there's an
emergency. Hantin is experimenting with the crossing of some of the native
plants with off-world varieties. He's hybrid-mad and he spends all his free
time in the garden. And Togi is earth-wasp minded; only caging would keep her
away from those rocks. And since we've yet to find any cage she can't break out
of—" He looked glum.
"So—what do we do
now?"
"We
wait until dark. If the base is deserted and the com not wrecked—both of which
are slim chances—there may be an opportunity to get a call off planet. But
there's no use in trying to get down there now. Any approach would have to be
made across the open."
He
was right in that. The usual clearing about buildings ordered by custom in a
frontier world was not as open here as it had been about Jagan's post. But
there was no brush or trees or other cover growth left within a good distance
of any of the four domes or the landing field. To approach those meant
advancing in the open.
Lantee
rolled over on his back and lay staring up into the bush they were using as a
screen with an intentness which suggested that he hoped to read the answer for
their problem somewhere within the maze of its drooping branches.
"Togi—"
Charis broke the silence "—is she like Taggi? Could you call her?"
What aid the wolverine might be Charis did not know, but to try and reach her
was action of some sort, and just now she found inaction more frustrating than
she could bear.
Exasperation sharpened Lantee's reply.
"What do you think I'm trying to do? But since she has had cubs she is
less receptive to orders. We have let her go her own way while they are small.
Whether she will ever obey spoken commands again, I am not sure."
He
closed his eyes, a frown line sharp between bis well-marked
brows. Charis propped her chin on her hand. As far as she could determine, the
base continued to drowse in the sun. Was it really deserted? Through Wyvern
Power sending its inhabitants into that strange darkness? Or left so by a Jack
raid?
Unlike
the rugged setting Jagan had chosen for his post, this more open country was lighter,
gave no feeling of som-bemess darkening into possible menace. Or was she becoming
so accustomed to the general Warlockian scenery that it no longer looked the
same to her as it had when Jagan had brought her out of the spacer? How long
ago? weeks? months? Charis
had never been able to reckon how much time she had spent with the Wyvems.
Yes,
here Warlock was fair under the amber sky, the golden sun. The amethystine hues
of the foliage were sheer splendor. Purple and gold—the ancient colors of
royalty in the days when Terra had hailed kings and queens, emperors and
empresses. And now Terr an blood had spread from star to star, mutated,
adapted; even allegiances had changed from world to world as the tides of
migration had continued generation after generation. Ander Nordholm had been
born on Scandia, but she herself had never seen that planet. Her mother had
been from Bran, and she herself could claim Minos for her native soil. Three widely separated and different worlds. And she could
not remember Minos at all. Lantee— where had Shann Lantee been born?
Charis
turned her head to study him, trying to select some race or planet to fit his
name and his general physical appearance. But to her eyes he was not
distinctive enough a type to recognize. Survey drew from almost
every settled planet of the Confederation. He could even be a native Ter-ran.
That he was Survey meant that he had certain basic traits of character, certain
very useful skills. And that he was also wearing the gold key of an embassy above
his cadet bar meant even more^that he had extra-special attributes into the
bargain.
"It's no use." He raised his hand
to shade his now open eyes. "If she is still down there, I can't touch
her—not mentally anyway."
"What did you think she might do to help
us now?" Charis asked, curious.
"Maybe nothing." But that seemed an evasive answer to the girl.
"Are you a Beast
Master?" she asked.
"No,
Survey doesn't use animals that way—as fighters or sabotage teams. Taggi and Togi
are both fighters when they have to be, but they act more as scouts. In lots of
ways their senses are more acute than ours; they can learn more in a shorter
time about a new stretch of country than any human. But Taggi and Togi were
sent here originally as an experiment. We learned after the Throg attack just
how much they could help—"
"Listen!"
Charis's hand clamped onto his shoulder. She straightened out, flat to the
ground, her head to one side. No, she had not been mistaken. The sound was growing louder.
"Atmosphere flyer!" Lantee's identification confirmed her own
guess. "Back!" He rolled farther under the
drooping branches of the bush and tugged at Charis as she wormed in after him.
The
flyer was approaching from the north, not coming in over their present perch.
As the plane set down on the landing strip, Charis saw that it was larger than
the copter already
there—probably a six-passenger ship motored for
transcontinental service, not
for the
shorter flights of the copters.
"That's none
of ours!"
Lantee whispered.
It came to a halt and
two men
dropped from it to stride
purposefully toward the domes.
They went so confidently that the watchers knew they
must expect welcome or at
least believe that no difficulty awaited them. They were
too far
from the spy post
for their
features to be distinguished, but while they wore uniforms
of a
similar cut to those at
the post,
Chans had never seen
these before. The black and
silver of Patrol, the green-brown of Survey, the gray
and red
of the
medical service, the blue
of AcJmirtistration,
the plain
green of the rangers, the maroon
of Education—she
could identify those at a glance.
But these
were a light yellow.
"Who?" she
wondered. When
she heard
a small
grunt from Lantee, she added, "Do
you know?"
"Something—somewhere—" Then
he shook
his head.
"I've seen something like
that color, but I can't
remember now."
"Would Jacks wear uniforms? The one
I saw
with the blaster—he was dressed
just like any other Free
Trader."
"No." Lantee's
frown grew deeper. "It means
something— if I could only remember!"
"No government service? Perhaps
some planetary organization
operating off-world," Charts
suggested.
"I don't
know how that could be.
Look!"
A third man had come out
of one
of the
domes. Like the two from the
flyer he wore yellow, but
sunlight struck glinting sparks from
his collar
and belt;
that could only mark insignia
of some
type. A uniformed invasion of
a government
base— A
wild idea suddenly struck Charts.
"Shann—could—could a war have
broken out?"
For a moment he did not
answer her and, when he
did, it was almost as if
he were
trying to deny that idea
to himself
as much as to
her.
"The only war we've waged in centuries
has been against the Throgs—and those aren't Throgs down there! I was here just
five days ago, and the messages we were receiving from off-world were all only
routine. We had no warning of any trouble."
"Five
days ago?" she
challenged him. "How can we be sure of how much time passed while the
Wyvems controlled us? It may have been weeks or longer since you were
here."
"I
know—I know. But I don't think war is the answer. I just don't believe it. But a Company action— If they thought they could get
away with a grab— If the gain was big enough—"
Charis considered that. Yes, the
Companies—they were regulated, curbed, investigated, as well as the
Confederation and the Patrol could manage. But they had their own police, their
extra-legal methods when they dared flaunt control. Only what would bring any
one of the Companies to send a private army to Warlock? What treasure could be scooped up here before a
routine Patrol visit would reveal such lawless activity?
"What
could they find here to make it worth their while?" she asked. "Rare metals? What?"
"One
thing—" Lantee continued to watch the men below. The two from the flyer
were discussing something with the man from the dome. One of them broke away
and headed back for the aircraft. "One thing might just be worth it if
they could seize it."
"What?"
Charis's guesses roved wildly. Surely Jagan would have known and mentioned any
outstanding native product during his instruction on trading.
"The
Power itself I Think what that secret would mean to
men who could use it on other worlds!"
He
was right. The Power was a treasure great enough to tempt even one of the
Companies into piracy of a kind. If they mastered its use they could defy even
the Patrol. And Lantee's idea fitted very neatly into place, especially now
that she remembered Jagan's mention of the same quest.
"The nullifier." She thought aloud. "That's their answer to the use of the Power
against them.
But how did they develop
something of the sort without knowing more about the Power? Maybe they believe
they can use it to control the Wy-vems and make them yield their secrets."
"The
nullifier, whatever it is, can be an adaptation of something already well
known. As to the rest—yes—they could believe they have the witches
finished."
"But
the Jacks?
Why?"
Lantee
scowled. "Not the first time a Company has shoved some of its hard-fisted
boys into plain clothes and tried a Jack cover-screen for a quick steal. If
they're caught, then they're just Jacks and nothing else. If they succeed, the
Company comes in behind their screen and they all fade out as soon as the grab
is over If they believe now that they've either wiped out all opposition or
have it under wraps, then they're in the open with another force to consolidate
their position and protect any experts and techs they send in for a real study
of the Power. It all fits. Don't you see how it fits?"
"But—if
this is a Company at work—" Charis's voice trailed off as the full force
of what might be arrayed against them struck home.
"You're
beginning to see? Jacks on their own are one thing; a Company pulling a grab is
something else." Lantee's tone was bleak. "They will have resources
to draw on to back their every move. Right now I wouldn't wager star against
comet that they're not iri complete control here."
"Maybe,"
Charts chose to use his gambling symbols, "they may believe that they have
every comet on the board blocked, but there are a few wild stars left."
There was a faint
suggestion of a smile about his lips.
"Two wild stars, perhaps?"
"Four.
Do not underestimate Tsstu and Taggi." And she meant that, strange as it
sounded.
"Four—you, me, a wolverine, and a curl-cat—against the might of a
Company. You
fancy high odds, don't you, Gentle Fern?"
"I
fancy any odds we can get while the game is still in play. The counters have
not been swept from the board yet."
"No,
nor the game called. And we might just run those odds to a more even balance. I
do not think that our friends below have yet met the witches of Warlock. Even
we do not know their full resources."
"I hope they have some
good ones left," was her comment.
Only
a short time ago the Wyvems had come out in the open as enemies. Now Charis
wished with all her heart for their success. In the lines of battle, if what
she and Lantee had come to believe was true, they would be on the side of the
witches.
"What can we do?"
She was again afire for action.
"We
wait and still we wait. When it is dark, I want to see a little more of what is
going on down there. Make sure, if we can, just what we are up against."
He was entirely right, but waiting now was so
very hard.
XIII
They
lay side by side again, watching the base. The flyer had taken off, leaving behind
one of its passengers; with the officer, he had returned to the domes. Again
the site was seemingly deserted.
"That
is a Patrol scout ship down there," Charis said. "Would any Company
dare move outwardly against the patrol?"
"With
a good cover story they could risk it," Lantee replied. "A scout
isn't on a tight report schedule, remember. They could say that they found this
base deserted and blame any trouble on the Wyverns if it became necessary to
provide an explanation. What I'd like to know is—if this is a Company grab—how
they came to leam of the Power. Jagan ever say anything about it?"
"Yes,
he mentioned it once. But he spoke mostly about things such as this
cloth." Charis plucked at the stuff of her tunic which was standing the
hard usage better than Lantee's uniform. "He was gambling to make a high
stake, but I thought trade material was mostly fishing on his part."
"He
got in here over Thorvald's protest," Lantee commented "We couldn't
see how he rated a permit in the first place, he was
so close to the fringe."
"Could
he have been used as a Company cover? Maybe without his even knowing it''"
Lantee
nodded. "Could well be. Send him in as an opening wedge and have his
reports to add to their general knowledge since our files are closed—if any
files are ever closed when the grab is big enoughl" he ended cynically.
"Somebody passed over a bag of credits in this deal. I'd swear blood-oath
on that"
"Just what can you do down there?" Charis asked.
"If
the com isn't out and if I can reach it, just one signal set on repeat will
bring in such help as'll make these blaster merchants think someone's put a
couple of earth-wasps under their tunic collars!"
"Several
ifs in that."
Lantee
smiled his humorless, lip-stretching smile. "Life is full of ifs. Gentle Fern. I've carried a pack of them for years."
"Where are you from, Shann?"
"Tyr."
The answer was short, bitten off as if meant to be final.
"Tyr,"
Charis repeated. The name meant nothing to her, but who could ever catalogue
the thousands of worlds where Terran blood had rooted, flowered, branched, and
broken free to roam inward.
"Mining world. Right—right about there!" He had lifted
his head and now he pointed northward into the sky which was displaying the
more brilliant shades of sunset.
"I
was born on Minos. But that doesn't mean much since my father was an Education
officer. I've lived on—five—six —Demeter was the seventh world."
"Education officer?" Lantee echoed. "Then how did you get
with Jagan? You beamed in a tape asking for aid. What was that all about
anyway?"
She
cut the story of Demeter and the labor contract to its bare bones as she told
it.
"I
don't know whether Jagan could have held you to that contract here on Warlock.
On some worlds it'd be legal, but anyway you could have fought him with
Thorvald's backing," he observed when she was done.
"Doesn't matter much now. You know—I didn't like Warlock at first.
It—it was almost frightening. But now, even with all this, I want to stay
here." Charis was surprised at her own words. She had said them
impulsively but she knew they were true.
"By
ordinary standards, this will never be a settlement world under the code."
"I
know—intelligent native life over the fifth degree—so we stay out. How many
Wyvems are there anyway?"
He
shrugged. "Who knows? They must have more than one settlement among the
off-shore islands, but we do not go except to their prime base and then only on
permission. You perhaps know more about them than we do."
"This
dreaming," Charts mused. "Who can be sure of anything with them? But
can the Power really be used by males? They are so certain that it can't. And
if they're right about that, what can the Company do?"
"Follow
Jagan's lead and bring in women," he retorted. "But we're not sure
that they are right. Maybe their males
can't 'dream true,' as they express it, but I dreamed, and Thorvald did, when
they put us through their test at first contact. Whether I could use a disk or
pattern as you have I don't know. Their whole setup is so one-sided that
contact with another way of life could push it entirely off base. Maybe if they
were willing to try—"
"Listen!"
Charis caught at his sleeve. Speculation about the future was interesting, but
action was needed now. "What if you can use a pattern? You know the whole
base; you could get down there and out again if you had to. It would be the
perfect way to scout!"
Lantee
stared at her. "If it did work—!" She
watched him catch some of her enthusiasm. "If it just would work!"
He
studied the base. The shadows cast by the domes were far more pronounced,
though the sky was still bright over their heads. "I could try for my own
quarters. But how would I get out again? There's no disk—"
"We'll
have to make one or its equivalent. Let's see." Charis wriggled about
under their brush cover. The initial pattern to get in by—she could draw that
on the ground as she had before. But the other one—to bring Lantee out
again—he'd have to carry that with him. How?
"Could
you use this?" The Survey man pulled free a wide, dark leaf. Its purple surface
was smooth save for a center rib and it was as big as her two hands.
"Try this to mark with." He had out
his case of small tools and handed her a sharply pointed rod.
Carefully
Charis traced the design which had unlocked so many strange places since she
had first used it. Luckily the marks showed up well. When she had done, she
handed the leaf to Lantee.
"It
works so. First, you picture in your mind as clearly as you can the place you
want to go. Then you concentrate on following this design with your eyes, from
right to left—"
He
glanced from the leaf to the base. "They can't be everywhere," he
muttered.
Charis
bit back a warning. Lantee knew the terrain better than she. Perhaps he, too,
was chafing at inactivity. And, if the leaf pattern worked, he could be in and
out of any danger before those who discovered him could move. It would be, or
should be, sufficiently disconcerting to have a man materialize out of thin
air before one, to give the materializer some seconds of advantage in any
surprise confrontation.
Lantee's
expression changed. He had made up his mind. "Now!"
Charis
could not bring herself to agree in this final moment. As he had said earlier,
there were so many ifs. But neither had she the right
to persuade him not to make the try.
He slid
down the slope behind them, putting the hill between him and the base before
getting to his feet, the leaf in his hands. His jaw set, his whole face became
a mask of concentration. Nothing happened. When he looked up at her, bis
expression was bleak and pinched.
"The witches are
right. It won't work for me!"
"Perhaps—" Charis
had another thought.
"They must be right!
It didn't work."
"Maybe for another reason. That's my pattern, the one they gave me in the beginning."
"You mean the patterns
are individual—separate codes?"
"It's
reasonable to believe that. You know how they wear those decorative skin
patterns, made up partially of their ancestors' private designs, in order to
increase their own Power. But each of them has her disk with her own design on
it. It could be that only that works really."
"Then I do it the hard way," he
replied. "Go in after dark."
"Or
I could go, if you'd give me a reference point as you did when we came
here."
"No!" There was no arguing against
that; she read an adamant refusal in his whole stance.
"Together—as we came here?"
He
balanced the leaf in his hand. Charts knew that he longed to be as decisive
with another "no," but there were advantages in her second suggestion
which he had to recognize. She pushed that indecision quickly; not that she
had any desire to penetrate into the enemy's camp, but neither did she want to
remain here alone and perhaps witness Lan-tee's capture. To her mind, with the
Power the two of them would have a better chance working together than the Survey
man had as a lone scout.
"We
can get in—and out—in a hurry. You've already agreed that's true."
"I don't like
it."
She
laughed. "What can one like about this? It is somer thing we
have agreed must be done. Or shall we just take to the countryside and wait out
whatever they are planning to do?" Such prodding was not fair of her, but
her impatience was rising to a point where it threatened her control.
"All right!" He was angry. "The room is like this." Down on one knee, he
sketched out a plan, explaining curtly. Then, before she could move, those same
brown fingers were against her forehead, giving her once more that fuzzy
picture. Charis jerked away from that contact.
"I told you—not that! Not again!"
The girl had no desire to recall any of the earlier dizzy, frightening time
when they joined minds after a fashion, when the strange thoughts strove to
storm her own mental passages.
Lantee
flushed and drew his hand back. Her uneasiness and faint disgust were at once
overlaid by a feeling of guilt. After all, he was doing the best he could to
insure the success of their action.
"I have the picture now as clearly as I
had this place, and we came here safely," she said hurriedly. "Let's
go!" For a moment his hand resisted her grasp as she caught it, then his
hold tightened on hers.
First the room—then the pattern. It was becoming a familiar exercise, one
she had full confidence in. But now—nothing happened.
It
was as if she had thrown herself against some immovable and impenetrable wall!
The barrier the Wyvems had reared to control her movements earlier? It was not
that. She would have known it for what it was. This was diffèrent—a new sensation altogether.
She
opened her eyes. "Did you feel it?" Lantee might not be able to work
the transference on his own; but, linked, they had
done it successfully once, so perhaps some part of the present failure had
reached him.
"Yes.
You know what it means? They do have a nullifier to protect them!"
"And
it works!" Charis shivered, her hand creasing the leaf into a pulp.
"We
were already sure that it did," he reminded her. "Now —I shall go by
myself."
She
did not want to admit that he was right, but she had to. Lantee knew every inch
of the base; she was a stranger there. The invaders might have other safeguards
besides the nullifier.
"You don't even have a
stunner . ..
"If I can get in down there, that little
matter can be corrected. More than a stunner is needed now. This you can do—work your way around to the landing strip. If I succeed, we'll make
use of the copter. You can fly one?"
"Of course! But where will we go?"
"To the Wyverns. They'll have to be made to understand what they are up against here. I
ought to find evidence of one kind or another as to whether this is a Company
grab. The witches may be able to blanket you out of their own mode of travel,
but I'll swear they have no way of preventing the copter from reaching their
prime base. Let us just get to them and they can pick the truth out of our
minds whether they want to or not."
It
sounded simple and as if it might work, Charis had to admit. But there was that
tall hedge of ifs in between.
"All
right.
When do we move?"
Lantee
crawled up to their former vantage point and she trailed him. After he surveyed
the landscape he spoke, but he did not answer her question.
"You
circle around in that direotion, giving me a hundred-count start. We haven't
spotted any guards about the strip, but that doesn't mean that they haven't
plugged it with sniffers, and those might even be paired with anti-persona
bombs into the bargain."
Was
he deliberately trying to make her regret any part in this?
"We
could certainly use the wolverines now. No sniffer could baffle them," he
continued.
"We
could use a detachment of the Patrol, too," Charis retorted tartly.
Lantee
did not rise to that. "I'll come in from that direction." He pointed
south. "Let's hope our wild stars have the value we hope they do on this
board. Luck!"
Before she could more than blink he had gone,
vanished into the brush as if one of the disks had whirled him into Otherwhere.
Charis strove to fight down her excitement and began a slow count. For some
seconds she heard a subdued rustling which she was sure marked his retreat—then
nothing.
No
movement about the domes. Lantee was right; they could have used the wolverines and Tsstu to advantage now. Animal senses, so much
keener than human, could have scouted for them both. She thought of an
anti-persona bomb twinned to a sniffer detector, and her own part in the action
had less and less appeal. The copter was far too tempting a
bait; those below must have
some watch on it! Unless they believed that they had effectively disposed of
all resistance.
"—ninety-five—ninety-six—"
Charis counted, hoping she was not speeding up. It was always far easier to be
on the move than to lie and wait.
"—ninety-nine—one-hundred!" She crept down slope to the east on the
first lap of her own journey. The light held enough so that she kept to cover, pausing within each shadowed shelter to study the
next few feet or yards of advance. And, to keep in concealment, she pulled her
circle arc into a segment of oval. When she knew that she must head in again •
to meet the landing strip, Charis's mouth was dry in contrast to her damp
palms, while her heart thudded in a heavy beat.
She
found a tree limb, old and brittle—dry but long enough for her purpose. A
sniffer activated to catch a prowler would be set about so high—knee-high for a
walking manor less. Would they expect someone to crawl in? All right, then, to
be on the safe side—calf-high Charis set about stripping small branches for
handfuls of leaves. Several tough ground-vines gave her cords to lash the mass
of vegetation to the stick.
As a
device for triggering a trap, it was very crude, but it lessened the odds
against her somewhat. Now her wriggling advance was even slower as she worked
the bundle before her, testing each foot of the way.
The pole was hard to hold in her sweating
hands, her shoulders ached with the effort necessary to keep it at what she
believed to be the right height. And her goal could have been half the
continent away since she appeared to draw no closer to it in spite of her
continued struggles.
But so far—no sniffer. And there had to be an end sometime. Charis
paused for a breather. No sound came from the domes, no
indication there were any guards, either human or machine. Were the invaders
under the impression they had nothing to fear, no reason to post sentries?
Must
not let growing confidence make her careless, Charis told herself. She did not
have one hand on the copter door yet. And—whyl—that might be itl The machine itself could be rigged as a trap. And if that
were so, could she discover and disarm it?
One thing at a time—just
one thing at a time . . .
She
had raised her bundle probe, was on the creep again when the twilight breeze
brought her a faint scent. Wolverine! When aroused in fear or anger, Charis
knew, the animals emitted a rank odor. Was this a mark of the passing of Togi
and her cubs?
Could
Charis contact the female wolverine who had no knowledge of her as friendly?
Lantee had said that afternoon that Togi was less amenable to human contact or
control since she had become a mother; the wolverines were noted hunters,
accustomed to living off the land. Was Togi now hunting?
Charis
sniffed, hoping for some clue as to direction. But the scent was faint, perhaps
only a lingering reminder of some earlier passage of an angry wolverine
clinging to grass or bush. And there stood the beacon of the Patrol scout not
too far to her left. She was close to the fringe of the landing strip. Charis
thrust her bundle detector before her and crept on.
A screech—a snarling—a thrashing in the brush
to her left. A
second cry cut into a horrible bubbling noise.
Charis
bit her tongue, painfully muffling a cry of her own. Wide-eyed she watched that
wildly waving bush. Another cry—this time not unlike a thin,
pulsating whistle. Then suddenly there were figures out in the open,
running toward the commotion. As they neared, Charis could see them better.
Not
the off-worlders she and Lantee had watched from the hill. Wyvems?
No.
For the second time, Charis choked back a
cry. For these running figures carried spears, the same type of spear she and
Lantee had found at the post. And they were taller than the Wyvems Charis knew,
their spiky head and shoulder growths smaller so that they resembled ragged and
ugly spines rather than small wings: the Wyvem males Charis had never seen in
all her days among the witches!
They
cried out shrilly in a way which rasped Charis's nerves and hurt her ears. Two
of them hurled spears into die now quiet bush.
A
shout from behind, from the domes; this surely had issued from a human throat.
No words Charis could distinguish but it brought confusion to the Wyvems. The
two at the rear stopped, looked over their shoulders; then, at a second shout,
they turned and ran swiftly in the direction of that call. The foremost
attackers had reached the bushes, spears thrust ahead. One of them cried out.
Again no words, but Charis judged the tone to be one of disappointment and
rage.
They
milled around out of her sight and then came back into the open, two of them
carrying a limp body between them. One of their own kind
killed by some means. Togi's doing?
But
Charis had little time to wonder about that for there was more shouting from
the domes, and all but the two Wy-verns carrying the body began to run in that
direction.
Lantee—had they found
Lantee?
xrv
The
wyvern males had left the
landing strip. Charis could follow their path through the brush to the open and
the waiting copter. Lantee's plan of heading out to sea in the copter, aiming
at the witch Citadel, was practical. Lantee?
Charis
rubbed her hands together and tried to think clearly. Something had happened back
there at the domes; it was only logical to associate the clamor with Lantee's
attempt to scout the enemy. He could now be a prisoner—or worse.
But
if she took the copter now when the attention of any sentries was fixed
elsewhere, she had her best chance of escape, though she might well be
deserting a man who had aroused the invaders but managed to evade them. To goto
get to the Citadel and warn the witches of the possible danger, leaving Lantee,
his fate unknown? Or to stay in hopes of his coming?
There
was no real choice; there never had been, Charis knew
that deep within her. But now, at the final test, she felt as bruised and
beaten as if those spear carriers had taken her in an unequal struggle. Somehow
she got to her feet and ran for the copter.
As
she wrenched open the cockpit door, Charis paused for any trap to explode in
her face. Then she scrambled in behind the controls. So far, all right. Now—where?
The Citadel was to the west,
that was her only clue. Only, the sea was wide and she had never made
the journey by air, as Lantee had. Maybe her guide could be a negative one, and
she tracked her goal by the barrier against the Power or rather her use of it. Such a thin chance—but still a chance.
Charis
set the control on full, braced herself for the force of a lift-leap, and
pushed the proper button. She was slammed back in the cushioned pilot's chair.
Copters were not designed for such violent maneuvering. But a lift-leap would
take her off the strip with speed enough to startle any guard she had not seen.
She
gulped and fought the effects of the spurt upon her body, forcing her fingers
to modify the climb. The domes were now small silvery circles just visible in
the growing dark. She set a course northward, and put the flyer temporarily on
auto-pilot while she tried to think out just how she could track that barrier
with any accuracy.
How
did you track nothingness? Just try to pierce here and there until you found
the wall between you and your goal? Her vague direction was that island home of
the Wyverns which stood northwest of the government base, southwest from
Jagan's post, and she had not even a com sweep to give her a more definite
position.
Below,
just visible in the night, was the shore, an irregular division between land
and sea. The pattern—she must have
the pattern. Charis looked about her a little wildly. There was no leaf to
scratch, no earth or rock to draw upon. That wall storage pocket at her left
hand? Charis plunged fingers into it and spilled out what it contained.
A
packet of Sustain tablets—swiftly she scooped that into her own belt pouch and
another first-aid kit, bigger and better fitted than the small one Lantee had
carried. Joyfully Charis scrabbled in it for the sterile pencil. It was not
here, but there was a large tube of the same substance. Last of all, a flat
sheet of plasta-board such as could be used for sketch maps, its surface
slightly roughened as if it had been marked and erased many times.
This
would serve if she could find something with which to mark. Again Charis pawed
into the pocket, and her fingers, scraping the bottom of the holder, closed
about a thin cylinder. She brought out a fire tube. No use—or was it?
Frantically
she twisted its dial to the smallest ray, and pressed the tip tight to the
plasta-board. It was such a chance —the whole thing might go up in a burst of
flame. But a map sheet should have been proofed against heat as well as
moisture. Only this one had been used in the past, perhaps too often. She drew
swiftly, fearful of any mistake. The brown heat-lines bit deeply into the
surface and spread a little, but not enough to spoil the design.
Charis
clicked off the heat unit and studied what she now held. Blurred,
yes, but to her distinctive enough in its familiarity. She had a good
substitute for the disk which she had lost.
Now—to put it to use. She closed her eyes. The room in the Citadel—concentrate!—the barrier! But in which direction? All she knew was that the barrier
still existed. Her one idea of a direction-finder seemed a failure. No one gave
up at a first try, though.
Room—design—barrier. Charis opened her eyes. Her head was turned slightly to the left. Was
that a clue? Could she test it? She snapped the copter off auto-pilot and
altered course inland away from the shore. When she had ceased to see the sea
with only the dark mass of land now under her, she brought the flyer about and
cruised back.
Room—design—
Her head to the left again, but not so much. She had
to take that as her lead, slender as it was. Altering the degree of course to
that imagined point, she sent the copter on out to sea.
Design—try—
She was looking straight ahead when she met what she
could not penetrate. Oh, let this be right.
Let it be right.
Charis had no idea how far offshore the
Wyvem-held islands were. Any copter had a good ranging allowance, but her goal
might still lie hours ahead. She clicked up the speed to full and sat with her
hands on the map sheet, waiting.
The stars were low on the horizon. No! Not
stars—they were far too low. Lights! Lights at nearly sea level—the Citadel!
On impulse Charis tried the Power and it was as if she had thrown her body at
full force against an unyielding slab of tri-steel. She gasped at what was
translated into physical pain upon that encounter.
But
the copter had met with no barrier. It continued on, unerringly bound for the
lights ahead.
Charis
had no idea what she would do when she reached the Citadel. Only she had her
warning, and with the Power the Wyverns would know that she spoke the truth.
Even with that warning—what could the witches do in their turn, except avoid
outright and quick disaster by delaying whatever attack they had already organized.
The
lights picked out the windows in the massive block of the Citadel, some of them
almost on a level with the copter. Charis resumed control and circled the
buildings in search of a level site on which to land. She had rounded the
highest of the blocks when she sighted ground lights marking an open space,
almost as if they had prepared for her coming.
As
the flyer touched the pavement, she saw a second copter at one side. So—the
other Survey man, Thorvald, had not left. An ally for her?
Or was he now a prisoner, tucked away in such a pocket of nonbeing as Lantee
had been? Lan-tee— Charis tried to push out of her mind any thought of Lantee.
She held the plasta-board. In this well-like space between walls there were no breaks, no doors, and
the windows were at least a story above her. The lights which had directed her
landing burned in portable standards. So the Wyvems had expected her. Yet no one waited here; she might be standing in a trap.
Charis nodded. This was all a part of what
the shadow-patterned Wyvem had promised. She must do it all by her own efforts;
the answer had to be hers.
The
shadow Wyvem had said it, so to her it must be proven. Charis held the
plasta-board in her two hands where she could see its design in the flickering
half-light of the lamps. Spike-wing crest, pallid skin with only the faint tracings
of faded designs—Charis pulled the Wyvem out of memory and built with care the
picture to center upon, until she was sure no detail she could recall was
missing. Then—
"So
you can dream to a purpose after all." No
amazement, only recognition as a greeting.
The
room was dusky. Although two lamps stood on either side of a table, their
radiance made only a small pool, and Charis sensed larger space stretching far
beyond where she stood. That other—the Wyvem—sat in a chair with a high back,
its white substance glowing with runnels of color, which in themselves appeared to crawl with life.
She leaned back at her ease, the alien witch,
her hands resting on the arms of her chair as she surveyed Charis
ap-praisingly. Now the off-worlder found words to answer.
"I have dreamed to this much purpose, Wise One, that
I stand here now."
"Agreed. And to what future purpose do you stand here, Dreamer?"
"That a warning may be
delivered."
The vertical pupils in those large yellow
eyes narrowed, the snouted head raised a fraction of an inch, and the sense of
affront reached Charis clearly.
"You
have that which will arm you against us, Dreamer? Then you have made a gain since last we were thus, face to face. What great new power
have you discovered to be able to say T warn you' to us?"
"You
mistake my words, Wise One. I do not warn you against myself, but against
others."
"And
again you take upon yourself more than you have the right to do, Dreamer. Have
you then read your answer from Those Gone Before?"
Charis
shook her head. "Not so. But still you mistake me, Reader of Patterns. In
what is to come, we dream one dream, not dream against dream."
Those eyes searched into her, seemed to pick
at her mind.
"It
is true that you have done more than we believed you could, Dreamer. Yet you
are not one with us in any power save that which we have granted you. Why do
you presume to say that we are now to dream the same dream?"
"Because
if we do not, then may all dreams be broken."
"And
that you truly believe." Not a question but a statement. However, Charis
made a quick answer. -
"That I truly
believe."
"Then
you have learned more than how to break a restraint dream since last we have
stood together. What have you learned?"
"That
those from off-world are more powerful than we thought, that they have with
them that which renders all dreams as nothing and protects them, that their desire here may be to gather to them the Power that they may use it for
their own purposes in other places."
Again that faint pick, pick to uncover the truth behind her words. Then, "But of these facts you are not
wholly sure."
"Not wholly,"
Charis agreed. "Every pattern is made of lines. So, when you have long
known a design and see only a portion of it, you can still envision the
whole."
"And this is a pattern
you have known before?"
"It is one I have heard of, one Lantee
has heard of."
Had
she made a mistake in mentioning the Survey man's name? That chill which
reached from mind to mind suggested that she had.
"What
has any man-thing to do with this?" A hissing question
hot with rising ire.
Charis's anger woke in turn. "This much, Wise One. He may be dead now, striving to
carry war to the enemy— your
enemyl"
"How
can that be when he is—" The thought chain between them broke in
mid-sentence. Lids dropped above the yellow eyes. The feeling of withdrawal was
so sharp that Charis almost expected the Wyvem to vanish from her chair. Yet
her body was still there although her mind was elsewhere.
The
minutes were endless, then Charis knew the Wyvem had
returned. Fingers had clenched about the chair arms, the yellow eyes were open,
fixed upon the girl, though there was no touch of mind.
Charis
took a chance. "You did not find him, Wise One, where you had sent
him?"
No answer, but Charis was
sure the Wyvem understood.
"He
is not there," the girl continued, "nor has he been for some time. As
I told you in truth, he has been about your business
elsewhere. And perhaps to his hurt."
"He
did not free himself." The frantic grip of the Wyvem's hands relaxed.
Charis thought that the witch was annoyed because she had betrayed her
agitation so much. "He could not. He is a man-thing—"
"But
also a dreamer after his own fashion," Charis struck in. "And though
you strove to remove him from this struggle, yet he returned—riot to war
against you but against those who threaten all dreaming."
"What dream have you that you can do this thing?"
"Not
my dream alone," Charis retorted. "But his dream also, and other
dreams together, as a key to unlock this prison."
"I must believe that this is so. Yet
such an act is beyond all reason."
"All reason known to you and your
sharers of dreams. Look, you." Charis moved to the table, stretched out hand and arm
into the full path of the light. "Am I like unto you in the sight of all?
Do I wear any dream patterns set upon my skin? Yet I dream. However, need my
dreams be any more like unto yours than my body covering resembles that you
wear? Perhaps even the Power when I bend it to my will is not the same."
"Words-"
"Words with proving action behind them. You sent me hence and bade me dream myself
out of your net if I could, and so I did. Then with Shann Lantee I dreamed a
way free from a deeper prison. Did you believe I could do these things?"
"Believe?
No," the Wyvern replied. "But there is always a chance of difference,
a variable within the Power. And the Talking Rods had an answer for you when we
called upon Those Who Once Were. Very well, these are truths accepted. Now say
again what you believe to be a truth that had no full proving."
Charis
retold her discoveries at the base, Lantee's deductions.
"A machine which nullifies the Power." The Wyvern led her back to that. "Such
you believe can exist?"
"Yes.
Also—what if such a thing be brought to use against
you even in this very stronghold? With your dreams broken, how may you fight
against slaying weapons in the hands of those who come?"
"We
knew—" the Wyvern was musing "—that we could not send dreams to
trouble these strangers. Or bring back—" she spoke in anger "—to
their proper places those who have broken the law. But that all this is being
done so that they may take the Power from us—that we had not thought
upon."
Charis
knew a small spark of relief. That last admission had changed her own status. It was as if she were now admitted in a
small way into the Wyvern ranks.
"However,
they must be ignorant to believe that man-things can use the Power."
"Lantee
does," Charis reminded her. "And what of the other you have known as
a friend here—Thorvald?"
Hesitation, then an unwilling answer. "He, too, in a small
way. An ability, you believe, that these others
may share because they are not blood, bone, and skin with us?"
"Is that so hard to
understand?"
"And
what have you to suggest, Dreamer? You speak of battles and warfare. Our only
weapons have been our dreams, and now you say they will avail nothing. So—what
is your answer?" Hostility again.
And
Charis had little with which to meet that. "What these invaders do here is
against the law of our kind as much as it is a threat against your people.
There are those who will speedily come to our aid."
"From where? Winging down from other stars? And how will you call them? How long
will it take them to arrive?"
"I
do not know. But you have the man Thorvald, and he would have answers to these
questions."
"It
would seem, Dreamer, that you believe I, Gidaya, can
give all orders here, do as I wish. But that is not so. We sit in council. And
there are those among us who would not listen to any truth if you spoke it. We
have been divided upon this matter from the first, and to talk against
attacking now will require much persuasion. Should you stand openly with me,
that persuasion would fail."
"I
understand. But also, as you have said to me, Wise One, there is such a thing
as a threat by time. Let me speak to Thorvald if you have him here, and learn
from him what may be done to gain help from off-world." Had she gone too
far with that plea?
Gidaya
did not answer at once. "Thorvald is in safe keeping—" she paused
and then added "—though I wonder now about the safety of any keeping. Very
well, you may go to him. It may be that I shall say to those who will object
that you are joining him in custody."
"If you wish." Charis suspected that Gidaya would offer that as a sop to the anti-off-world
party. But she greatly doubted that the Wyvern believed any longer Charis
herself could be controlled by the Power.
"Go!"
At
least Thorvald had not been consigned to that place of nothingness which had
been Lantee's prison. Charis stood in a very
ordinary sleeping room of the Citadel, its only difference from the one she
had called her own being that it had no window. On the pile of sleep-mats lay a
man, breathing heavily. His head turned and he muttered, but she could not make
out his words.
"Thorvald! Ragnar Thorvald!"
The bronze-yellow head did not lift from the
mats nor his eyes open. Charis crossed to kneel beside him. "Thorvald!"
He
was muttering again. And his hand balled into a fist and shot out to thud home painfully on her forearm. Dreaming! Naturally? Or in some fantasy induced by the Wyvems? But she
must wake him now.
' "Thorvald!" Charis called louder and took
hold of his shoulder, shaking him vigorously.
He
struck out again, sending her rolling back against the wall, then
sat up, his eyes open at last, looking about wildly. But as he sighted her he
tensed.
"You're
real—I think!" His emphatic assertion slid into a less confident
conclusion.
"I'm
Charis Nordholm." She crouched against the wall, rubbing her arm.
"And I'm real all right. This is no dream."
No,
no dream but the worst of trouble. And did Thorvald have any of the answers
after all? She only hoped that he did.
XV
He
was very tall, this
officer of Survey, towering over Charis where she sat cross-legged on his mat
"bed as he strode impatiently back and forth across the chamber, now and
then shooting a question at her or making her retell some part of the story
again.
"It
does look very much like a Company grab." He gave judgment at last. "Which means they must be very sure of themselves, that they think
they have all angles covered." Now he might be talking to himself
rather than to her. "A deal—somehow they've made a deal!"
Charis
guessed at the meaning of that. "You think they've arranged for closed
eyes somewhere?"
Thorvald
glanced at her sharply, almost in dislike, Charis decided. But he nodded
curtly. "Not in our service!" he rapped out.
"But
they wouldn't be able to square the Patrol, would they? Not if you were able to
get a message through."
He smiled grimly. "Hardly.
But the only off-world com is at the base, and from your account they hold that
now."
"There's
the Patrol ship finned down on the field. That should have its
own com," she pointed out.
Thorvald
rubbed one hand along the angle of his jaw, his eyes now fixed unseeingly on
the blank wall of the chamber.
"Yes, that Patrol
ship—"
"They didn't have any
guard on the copter."
"They
weren't expecting trouble then. They probably thought they had all the base
staff accounted for. That wouldn't be true now."
She
could see the reason in that argument. Yes, when they had taken Lantee, as she
was now sure they had, and she had flown the copter out, they had been put on the
alert. If the Patrol ship had not been guarded before, Charis did not doubt now
that it was under strict surveillance.
"What can we do?"
"We'll have to count
on it that they do have Lantee."
Or,
Charis made herself add silently to Thorvald's statement,
he is dead.
"And
they know that he had at least one other with him, since the copter was taken.
They may scan him, and he's not been, brain-locked."
Charis
found her hands shaking. There was a cold sickness in her middle, seeping into
the rest of her body. Thorvald was only being objective, but she found she
could not be the same on this point, not when the man he was discussing was
more than a name—a living person who, in a way Charis could hardly describe,
had been closer to her than any other being she had known. She was unaware that
the Survey officer had paused until he dropped down beside her, his hands
covering both of hers.
"We must face the
truth," he said quiedy.
Chans nodded, her spine stiffened, and her
head came up. "I know. But I went off—off and left him—"
"Which was the only thing you could have done. He knew that.
Also, there is this. Those male Wyverns—they were attacked by something in the
bush—you think it was Togi?"
"I
smelled wolverine just before. And one of the Wyverns was killed, or badly
injured."
"Which may lead them to believe that there were more than two of you
out there. And that could force caution on them. The animals work with
trainers—that is universally known. And it's also general knowledge that they
are fanatically loyal to their trainers. Lantee has been in charge of the
wolverines for two planet years. Those at the base may keep him on ice in order
to have control over the animals."
Did
he really believe that? Charis wondered. Or was it a very thin attempt to placate her feeling of guilt?
"This
nullifier," Thorvald was on his feet again, back to that restless pacing.
"As long as they have that they might as well be in a land fortress! And
how long will they wait before moving out with it? If they had a trace-beam on
that copter, they know—"
"Just where to attack!" Charis finished for him, realizing for the
first time what might be the folly of her own move.
"You
had no choice." Thorvald caught her up on that quickly. "A warning
was important. And with the Wyvern barrier up you had no other way of reaching
them."
"No,
but I have a way of getting back there." Charis had been thinking. It was
a crazy, wild plan, but it might work. She had his full attention.
Sheeha!
Charis had gone back to her first night on Warlock, to the trader woman who
had been shocked into mental unbalance by contact with the witches.
"These
invaders know that Jagan brought me here," Charis began. "Also that I
wandered out of the post while under
Wyvern
control; they can check all that. They might even have the tape recording I
made to your base when I appealed for help. But it may be that they do not
know that / took the copter. Or, if they do—well, how much do they know of the
Power? They know the Wyvems used it to dominate and control their males. So,
perhaps they will think I was under Wyvem control while taking the copter.
"Now,
suppose I let them think I have escaped and that I have headed back to the base
because I think there is safety there. I can act as Sheeha did."
"And
if they put you under a scanner?" Thorvald demanded harshly, "or if
they have already learned from Lantee what you can do with the Power?"
"If
they have, they won't want me under a scanner, not right away. They'll want demonstrations,"
Charts countered. "They can't know too much about it, can they? What have
you reported? Those reports must have brought them here."
"Reports? What have we had to say in those except generalities? We had our
instructions to go slow with the witches. After they helped us wipe out a Throg
base here—it was entirely their efforts that broke that—they were in no hurry
to fraternize. The willingness to communicate had to come from their side,
contact was on a delicate basis. I don't understand about this nullifier. No
off-world Company could have learned enough from our reports to build it
because we didn't know enough ourselves. Unless this machine is a modification
of something they already had and they brought it with them, simply as an
experiment which did pay off—too welll"
"Then,"
said Charis, bringing him back to her own suggestion, "they could not
know about the Power and how it works?"
"I
don't see how they could. They may have subverted some of the male Wyverns. But
those have never been able to dream or use the Power. Company scouts could have
some idea of what it does, but they'd only be guessing at how it works."
"So as an off-worlder who has had some
experience with it, I could make statements they would have no way of
testing?"
"Unless they use a
scanner," he reminded her.
"But when you're dealing with a mental
problem, you don't destroy its roots," Charis countered. "I tell you,
if I went to them as a fugitive who had escaped the Wyverns and was willing to
co-operate, anyone with any intelligence would not put me under force. He would
want me to give freely."
Thorvald studied her. "There's more than
one kind of force," he said slowly. "And if they suspected that you
were playing a double game, they wouldn't hesitate to use all and every means
to crack you for what they wanted. A Company on a grab is moving against time,
and their agents here would be ruthless."
"All right. Then what's your
answer? It seems that I
have the best chance of getting into the base on my own terms. Do you or the
witches have any at all? If you're taken trying to get in—the way Shann
was—then you're expendable too."
"Yes."
"Well, I represent something they
want—an off-worlder who has had experience with the use of the Power. There is
a good chance to get close to the nullifier under those circumstances. And if
I could put that out of action, then the witches could do the rest. As it is
now, the Wyverns suspect us too, just because we are off-world."
"And
how can you convince the Wyverns that you will work against our own
species?"
"They
read my mind under the Power. There's no hiding the truth from them. Short of
leading in an armed force, which we don't have, you aren't going to take back
your base. And someone has to make a move before the invaders do."
"You
don't know how rough a grab force can be—" Thor-vald began.
Charis stood up. "I have been hunted by
men before. You can tell me very little about cruelty used as a weapon. But as
long as I present a chance of profit to those in command, I shall be guarded.
And I think that now I am your only key."
The
girl closed her eyes for a second. This was fear, this sick chill. Yes, she
knew what it meant to face hostility; before, she had to run from it. Now she
must walk defenseless straight into the worst her imagination could picture for
her. But there was a chance. She had known that from the argument
she had had with Gidaya. Perhaps the continued use of the Power did implant in
one a confidence. Only, once at the base, she would not have the Power to pull
on; the nulli-fier would see to that. She would have only her wits and luck to
back her. Or—could she have more? The wolverines, Togi and her cubs, lurked
about the base, apparently free of control and able to prey upon the alien
guards. Charis had had no contact with Togi, but with Taggi, who had been so
strangely one with her, in that search for Lantee, and with Tsstu, it might be
different. Where were the animals now?
"You
have something more in mind?" A change in her expression must have
brought that question from him.
"Tsstu
and Taggi—" she began and then explained more fully.
"But
I don't understand. You say that they weren't with you in the Cavern of the
Veil or afterward."
"No,
but they answered when we called. I don't think they were captive in any dream
place. Perhaps they had to be free to go their own way for a space after that.
It—it was a frightening experience." Charis had a flash thought of the
corridor, the opening doors in which Lantee's thoughts had attacked her, and
again she shivered. "They may have run from what they remembered."
"Then—will they return?"
"I think they will have to," Charis
said simply. "We wove a bond then and still it holds us; Maybe we can never loose it. But if I could find them, they
would be allies those at the base would not suspect."
"Suppose
the nullifier dampened contact between you?" Thorvald persisted.
"If
I reached them before I went in, they would know what they could do in
aid."
"You
seem to have all the answers!" He did not appear to relish that admission.
"So you're to walk alone into a trap and spring it—just like that!"
"Maybe I can't. But I
believe there's no other solution."
"Again you read the
pattern right, Sharer of Dreams!"
They
looked around, startled. Gidaya stood there and with her, Gysmay.
Thorvald
opened his mouth, then closed it again. There was a
set to his jaw that suggested that, while he knew silence was proper, he
resented it.
"You
are persuaded it must be thus?" Charis asked of the Wyverns.
Gysmay
made a movement of the shoulders approximating a human shrug.
"I,
who am a Holder of the Upper Disk, will go with the desires of my Sharers of
Dreams in this matter. You believe, one who is not quite a stranger,
that this is what must be done. And you are willing to take that doing
into your own hands. So let it be. Though we cannot
give you any aid, since the evil which has been brought to trouble our world
holds about its heart a wall we cannot pierce."
"No,
you cannot aid me once I am within that place. But there is that you can do for
me before I enter—"
"Such
being?"
Gidaya asked.
"That
Tsstu and Taggi be found and summoned from where they have gone."
"Tsstu at least has power of a sort, but
whether that may be harnessed to your purpose—" the older Wyvem hesitated.
"However, no power, no aid, is to be despised when one walks into a
fork-tail's den without a disk between one's fingers. Yes, we shall search out
the small one and also the other who serves these men. Perchance we can do
more, using like tools—"
Gysmay
nodded eagerly. "That is a good thought, Reader of the Rods! One can build
on it. Perchance we can provide some action for these invaders to think upon so
that then-minds will be in two ways occupied and not fastened alone upon you
and what you would do among them. We cannot walk through their rooms, but we
shall see." She did not elaborate.
Turning
to Charis, Thorvald cut in: "I'm going with you— in the copter."
"You
can'tl" Charis protested. "I won't take the flyer back. I must wander
in as if I have been lost—"
"I
didn't say land at the base. But I must be back near the base, near enough to
be able to move in when we can." He said that defiantly, glaring at the
Wyvems as if he would compel them to his will.
When we can, Charis thought, more likely—if
we can.
"It
is well," Gidaya answered, though there was a small movement from Gysmay
as if she were protesting. "Take your machine and fly—to this place—"
Into
Charis's mind came instantly a clear picture of a flat rock expanse squared off
to make a natural landing strip.
"About
a mile from the basel" Thorvald burst out; he must also have had that mind
picture and recognized it. "We shall come in from the south—at
night—without landing lights. I can set us down there without trouble."
"And
Tsstu—Taggi?" demanded Chans of the Wyverns.
"They
shall join you there for whatever purpose you think they may serve. Now you may
go."
Charis
was back in the landing well where the two copters were waiting, but this time
Thorvald was with her. As the girl started for the machine which had brought
her to the Citadel, the Survey officer caught at her arm.
"Mine—not that one." He drew her with him toward the other
copter. "If it's sighted after we land, they'll believe I returned and am
hiding out. They won't connect it with you."
Charis
agreed to the sense of that and watched him settle behind the controls as she
took her place on the second seat. They lifted with a leap which signaled his
impatience more than his words had done. Then, under the night sky, they drove
on, the ocean below them.
"They
may have a search beam on," he said as his fingers played a dot-dash over
course buttons. "We'll take the long way around to make sure we have the
best cover we can. North—then west—then up from the south—"
It was a long way around. Charis watched with eyes over which the lids were
growing very heavy. The smooth sheen of the night-darkened sea underneath them
spread on and on in spite of their speed. To be flying away from their goal
instead of toward it was hard to be reconciled to now.
"Settle
back," Thorvald's voice was low and even; he now had his own impatience
under iron control. "Sleep if you can."
Sleep?
How could anyone sleep with such a task before her.
Sleep—that . . . was . . . impossible . . .
Dark—thick, negative dark. Negative? What did that mean? Dark, and then, deep in
the heart of that blackness, a small fire struggling to beat back the dark.
A fire threatened, a fire she must reach and feed.
Bring it back to bright blaze againl But when Charts
strove to speed to the fire, she could move only with agonizing slowness, so
that the weight which dragged at her limbs was a pain in itself. And the fire
flickered, reblazed, and then flickered. Charts knew that when it died wholly
it might not be relit. But she needed more than herself to feed that fire, and
she sent out a frantic, soundless call for aid. There was no answer. "Wake
up!"
Charis's
body swayed in a rough grip, her head jerked back and forth on her shoulders.
She looked up, blinking and half-dazed, into eyes which blazed with some of die intensity of the fire of the dark.
"You
were dreaming!" It was an accusation. "They have a hold on you. They
never meant—"
"Nol"
Enough understanding had returned to make her shake off Thorvald's hands.
"Not one of their
dreams."
"But you were dreaming!"
"Yes."
She huddled in the copter seat as the machine flew on under auto-pilot.
"Shann—"
"What about him?"
Thorvald caught her up quickly.
"He's
still alive." Charts had brought that one small crumb of assurance out of
the black with her. "But—"
"But
what?"
"He's
just holding on." That, too, had come to her although it was not so
reassuring. What had strained Lantee to the depths she had witnessed? Physical
hurt? A scanner attack? He was alive and he was still
fighting. That she knew with certainty and now she said so.
"No real contact? He
told you nothing?"
"Nothing. But I almost reached him. If I could try again—"
"No!"
Thorvald shouted at her. "If he is under a scanner, you don't know how
much they could pick up because of such a contact. You—youTl have to put him
out of your mind."
Charis only looked at him.
"You'll have to," he repeated
doggedly. "If they pick you up in any way, you haven't a chance of going
in as you've planned. Can't you see? You are the only chance Lantee has now.
But you'll have to reach him in person in order to help; not this way!"
Thorvald was right. Charis had enough sense
left to acknowledge that Tightness, though
that did not make it any easier when she thought of the small fire flickering close to extinction in a deep and all-abiding darkness.
"Hurry!" She moistened her dry lips with her tongue.
He was resetting their
course. "Yes."
The
copter spiraled away to the right, heading toward the shore they could not see
and the task she had set herself.
XVI
The
stars were no longer sharp
points above as the copter set down under Thorvald's practiced control. An hour close to dawn— Dawn of what day? Time had either
stretched slowly or fled swiftly since Charis had walked out onto the soil of
Warlock. She could no longer be sure that it followed any ordered marking of
minutes or hours. She stood now on the rock, shivering a little in the chill
predawn wind.
"Meeerrrreee!" At the cry of welcome, Charis went down on her knees, holding out her
arms to the shadow which sped toward her. The warmth of that small body
pressing tight to hers, the loving dabs of tongue-tip against her throat, her
chin, brought a measure of comforting confidence. Tsstu was again in the circle
of Charis's arms, avid for contact, excited in her welcome.
Then
the rasp of harsher, coarser fur against the girl's legs signaled Taggi's
arrival. A small grunting growl was his vocal hail as she put one hand to his
upthrust head, scratching behind his small ears.
"Taggi?" Thorvald walked from the copter.
The
wolverine slipped from under Charis's hand, went to the Survey officer. He
sniffed inquiringly at the other's field boots, and then reared up against the
man, his forepaws scraping Thorvald's thigh as he gave voice to a sound between
a whine and a growl. There was no mistaking the questioning note, nor the demand for enlightenment which came to Charis
mentally. Taggi wanted the one he knew better than Thorvald.
Charis
sat where she was, cradling the nuzzling Tsstu close to her, but reaching out
mentally to capture Taggi's thought stream, to try and tap that boiling and, to
her, alien flow of brain energy. She touched and savored again, forcing herself
not to shrink from the raw savagery, the strange stream. Taggi dropped on all
fours. He was swaying from foot to foot, his blunt head swinging about so that
he could eye her.
Thoughts—impressions
like small sparks—whirled through ■the air above a stirred fire. Charis
built up a picture of Shann Lantee within those sparks—Shann as she had seen
him last on the hillside above the base.
Taggi
came to her. His teeth closed upon the hand she held out in greeting, not with
force enough to even pinch the skin but with the same caress of this kind that
she had seen him give to Shann. And, too, inquiry—stronger and much more
demanding.
Charis
thought of the base as she had viewed it from the hill, knew that Taggi
caught that. He dropped his hold upon her, turned halfway around to face in a
new direction, and with his head up began sniffing the wind audibly.
Charis
approached with some trepidation the real message she must pass along to the
wolverine. Tsstu was much more in tune with her. How was she to project into
that hunter's brain the sense of danger and an understanding of from whence
danger came? By pictures of Shann as a prisoner?
First
she thought of Lantee as he stood free by the pool. Then she added imagined
bonds, cords about his wrists and ankles, to restrain his freedom. There was a
loud snarl of rage from Taggi. She had succeeded so far. But caution! The
wolverine must not race recklessly in under that prodding.
"—reeeeuuu—"
Tsstu gave a cry Charis knew meant warning. The wolverine looked back at them.
Inquiry
flashed not at her but at the curl-cat. The animals had their own band of
communication. Perhaps that was her best answer.
Charis
changed the direction of her warning, no longer striving to hold contact with
the wild, rich stream of Taggi's thought, but to meet Tsstu's. Strike back
against the enemy, yes; free Shann, yes. But for now,
caution.
The
rumbling growl from Taggi grew fainter. He was still shuffling impatiently from
foot to foot, his eagerness to be gone plain to read, but Tsstu had impressed
him with the need for caution and the old craftiness of his breed was now in
command. Wolverines have great curiosity, but they also have a strong instinct
for self-preservation; they do not walk easily into what might be a trap, no
matter how attractive the bait. And Taggi knew that he faced a trap.
Again
Charis centered on Tsstu, thinking out as simply as she could her own plan for
entering the base. Suddenly she looked to Thorvald.
"The nullifier—could it stop communication of mind with mind?"
He gave her the truth. "It could well be
so."
The
animals must remain outside. Tsstu—the curl-cat was small—she could act as
liaison between the wolverine and the base.
"Meeerrreee!" Agreement in that and another swift
tongue-tip touch on Charis's cheek.
The
girl rose to her feet. "There's no sense in delaying any longer. Time to go." Putting down the curl-cat, she pulled the
tie from her hair, shaking the loosened strands about her neck and shoulders.
By the time she reached the base, her hair would be sufficiendy wild-looking,
filled with bits of leaf and twig. She could not tear the Wyvem material off
her clothing, but earth stains would adhere to it and the crawling she had
already done provided dirty blotches. There were raw and healing scratches on
her arms and legs. She would well present the appearance of someone who had
been lost in a wilderness for a time. Moreover, the nourishment given by the
Sustain tablets had worn off so that she did not have to feign hunger or
thirst; she felt them both.
"Take
care—" Thorvald's hand went out, almost as if he would hold her back on
the very edge of action.
The
contrast between that simple warning and what might lie ahead of her suddenly
seemed to Charis so funny that a small,, strangled
sound of choked laughter was her first answer. Then she added, "Remember
those words yourself. If you're spotted by some air scout—"
"They
might spot the copter, they won't sight me. Ill be
ready to move in to you when I can."
That
"when I can" rang in Charis's ears as she walked away. Better make
that "if I can." Now that she was committed to the venture, every
possible fear—the product of a vivid imagination—swirled about her. She
concentrated instead on her memory picture of Sheeha. She had to be Sheeha now
as far as the invaders at the base were concemed—Sheeha, a woman brought in by the traders to contact the Wyverns, one who had
broken at that meeting with the alien power. She had to be Sheeha.
Taggi
played guide and advance scout, leading her down from the heights where the
copter had landed. Here on the lowlands the predawn was still dark and Charis
found the going more difficult. Her hair caught in branches; she tore free,
adding more scratches to those she already bore. But that was all to the good.
For a while she carried Tsstu, but as they drew near the base, both animals
took to cover and Charis kept touch by mind instead of sight or hearing.
Sun
made silver droplets of the bubble shelters as Charis lurched into the open
ground around the base. There was no need for her to fake her fatigue, for now
she moved in a half-fog of exhaustion, her mouth dry, her
ribs heaving with every gasping breath she drew. She must indeed look what she
claimed to be—a fugitive, half-crazed, struggling out of the wilderness of a
hostile world to seek the shelter and company of her own kind.
There
was an unsealed door in the second of the bubbles. Charis headed for that. Movement there—a man in yellow coming into the open, staring at
her. Charis forced a cry which was really a dry croak and slumped
forward.
Calls—voices. She did not try to sort them
out just yet but concentrated on lying limply where she had fallen, making no
answer when she was rolled over, raised, and carried
into the dome.
"What's a woman doing
here?" That was one voice.
"She's
been bush-runnin'. Lookit how she's all scratched up and dirty. And that ain't no service uniform. She ain't from here. You tell the
captain what just blew in?"
"She dead?" asked a third voice.
"Naw— just out on her feet. But where'n Dis did she spring from? Ain't no settlement on this planet—"
"In
here, captain. She just came runnin' outta the brush.
Then she sees Forg, gives a ldnda yip, and falls on
her face!"
The click-click of magnetic space-boot plates. A fourth man was coming in to where she lay.
"Off-worlder,
all right"—the new voice—"What's that rig she's wearing? That's no
uniform, she couldn't be from here."
"From the post maybe,
captain?"
"From the post? Wait a minute. That's right. They did bring in a woman to try to
contact the snake-hags. But no, we found her when we took over their
ship."
"No,
there was two women, captain. First one blew up on
'em—went clean out of orbit in her head. So they got 'em another one. And she
wasn't there when we took over. What about the tape you found here—the one
askin' help from the base? She could be the one who sent it. Got outta the post
and started runnin'—"
There
was a twitch at her tunic as if one of those gathered about her was fingering
the material.
"This
is the stuff those snake-hags use. She's been with them."
"Prisoner, eh,
captain?"
"Maybe—or something else. You, Nonnan, get the medic over here. Hell bring her around and then we'll have some answers. The rest of you, clear out. She might talk better if she
doesn't come to with all of you looking her over."
Charis
stirred. She did not care for the idea of a Company-squad medic. Such an expert
might use the tongue-loosening drugs she had no guard against. It would be well
to regain consciousness before his arrival. She opened her eyes.
She
did not have to counterfeit her shriek. That came naturally as she faced—not
the Company officer she had expected—but a creature seemingly out of a
nightmare. Leaning toward her was one of the male Wyvems, his snout mouth
slightly open to display the fang-teeth with which he was only too generously
armed, his slit-pupiled eyes measuring her with no friendly intent.
Charis
screamed a second time and jerked her legs up under as she sat bolt upright,
squirming as far from the Wyvem as she could manage to move on the cot where
they had laid her. The creature's taloned paw swept out and down, wicked claws
scraping the foam mattress only inches away from her body.
A
very human fist connected at the side of that reptilian head, sending the
Wyvern off balance, crashing back against the wall, and a human in uniform took
his place. Charis screamed again and cowered away from the Wyvern who had
righted himself and was now showing a lipless snarl of rage.
"Keep
it off! Snake!" she cried, remembering Sheeha's name for the Wyverns.
"Don't let it get me!"
The
officer caught the native by his scaled shoulder and headed him out the door
with a rough shove. Charis found herself crying, a reaction she did not attempt
to control as she shrank against the wall of the room, drawing herself into as
small a space as possible.
"Don't
let it get me!" she begged as she tried to appraise
the man who now faced her.
He
was very much of a type, a Company officer in the mercenary forces. Charis had
seen his like before in space-port cities, and she thought she dared not depend
upon his being less shrewd than any space officer. His very employment on a
grab action would make him suspicious of her. But he was fairly young and his
attack on the Wyvern made her think that he might be a little prejudiced in her
favor.
"Who are you?" The demand was
rapped out in a tone meant to force a quick and truthful answer. And up to a
point she could supply the truth.
"Charis—Charis Nordholm. You—you are the Resident?" He would
believe that she was ignorant of his uniform, that she thought him a government
man.
"You
might say so. I'm in charge at this base. So your name is Charis Nordholm? And
how did you come here to Warlock, Charis Nordholm?"
Not too much coherence in her answer, Charis
decided. She tried hard to remember Sheeha. "That was a snake," she
accused. "You have them here." She eyed him with what she hoped would
register the proper amount of suspicion and fear.
"I tell you the native won't harm
you—not if you're what you seem," he added the last with some emphasis.
"What
I seem—" she said. "What I seem—I am Charis Nordholm." She held
her voice to a colorless recitation of facts as if she repeated some hard-leamed
lesson. "They—they brought me here to—to meet the snakes! I didn't want to
come—they made me!" Her voice lengthened into a wail.
"Who brought you?"
"Captain
Jagan, the trader. I was at the trading post—" "So—you were at the trading post. Then what happened?" Again
she. could give him part truth. Charis shook
her head. "I don't know! The snakes—they gave me to the snakes —snakes all
around—they got inside my head—in my head." She set her hands above her
ears, rocked back and forth. "In my head—they made me go with them—"
The
captain was on to that in a flash. "Where?"
His demand was purposely sharp to penetrate the haze that he supposed held
her.
"To—to their place—in the sea—their
place—" "If you were with them, how did you get away?" Another man had come into the room and
started toward her. Ibe captain caught him back as he waited alertly for her
answer. "How did you get away from them?" he repeated again with an
emphasis designed to rivet her attention.
"I
don't know—I was there—then I was all alone—all alone in a
woods. I ran—it was dark—very dark—"
The
captain spoke to the newcomer, "Can you get her to make better
sense?"
"How do I know?" the other
retorted. "She needs food-water."
The medic poured from a container and held
out the cup. She had to steady it in both shaking hands to get it to her mouth.
She let coolness roll over her dry tongue. Then she detected a taste. Some drug? She might already have lost the game because she
had no defense against drugs and she had finished the draft. As a cover she
kept the cup to her lips as long as possible.
"More—" she
pushed the cup at the medic.
"Not now, later."
"So—"
the captain was eager to get her back to her story "—you just found yourself
in a woods and then? How did you get here?"
"I
walked," Charts replied simply, keeping her eyes on the cup the medic was
now holding as if that mattered far more than the officer's questions. She had
never tried to play such a role before and now she hoped that the picture she
presented was a reasonably convincing one. "Please—more—" she
appealed to the medic.
He
filled the cup about a third and gave it to her. She gulped it down. Drug or
not this was her proper action. Her thirst allayed, her
hunger was worse.
"I'm hungry," she told them.
"Please, I'm hungry—"
"I'll get her something," the medic
volunteered and left.
"You
walked," the captain persisted. "How did you know which way to
walk—to come here?"
"Which way?" Chans returned
to her trick of repetition. "I did
not know the way—but it was easier—not so many bushes—so I went that way where it was open. Then I saw
the building and I ran—"
The medic
returned, to put into her hand a soft plasta-skin tube. Chans, sucking at its cone end, tasted the rich, satisfying paste it
contained. She recognized it as the revive ration of a
well-equipped base.
"What do
you think?" the captain asked the medic. "Could she just head in the right direction that
way? Sounds
thin to me.
The medic was thoughtful. "We don't
know how this Power
works. They could have directed her, without her being aware of it."
"Then she's meant to be their key in!" The look the captain directed at Charis was
now coldly hostile.
"No, any directive such as that would fail once
she got within the Alpha-rim. If they
gave her some such hypo-order, it won't workSnow. You've seen how the warriors are freed from control here. If the hags did have some purpose and pointed her at us, it's
finished."
"You're
sure of that?"
"You've seen it happen with the males. The control does not operate within the rim." "So—what do we do with her?"
"Maybe we can leam something. She has been with them —that is obvious."
"Might be more your department than mine," the
captain observed. "You
can take her on with the
other one. He still
out?"
"I told you, Lazgah, he's not unconscious in the ordinary
sense." The medic was clearly irritated. "I don't know what he is except still alive. So far he hasn't responded to any restorative. Such a complete withdrawal—I've
never seen its like before."
"Well, at least she isn't like him. And
maybe you can leam from her. Try to, and the sooner the better."
"Come." The medic spoke softly. He
held out his hand to Charis.
She eyed him over the tube from which she was
now sucking the last remnants of paste. "Where?"
"To
a good place, a place where you may rest, where there is more food—water—"
"Out there?" She used the tube to point to the door behind him.
"Yes."
"No. There are snakes
therel"
"One
of the warriors was here when she came to," the captain explained. "Sent her farther off the beam."
"No,
no one will hurt you," the medic assured her. "I won't let
them."
Charis
allowed herself to be persuaded. That scrap of conversation about the "he"
who was being treated— It must be Lanteel
XVII
Fouh
hooms made up a small but
very well-equipped medical unit for the base. The worst feature, as far as
Charis was concerned, was the single door to the outside, a door by which a
blaster-armed guard already sat. To be free one must pass him.
Now the medic shepherded her on, his hand
under her arm half-steering, half-supporting her, and she made her survey of
•the quarters in a series of seemingly aimless stares. They came into the third
room and that touch on her arm brought her to a halt. She swayed, put out a
hand against the wall to steady herself, hoping that
her start could be attributed to her dazed condition.
Lantee
lay on his back on a narrow cot. His eyes were wide open, but his face had that
same blankness it had worn when she had found him among the rocks. He had
returned to the husk of a living being, his true identity missing.
"Do you know this
man?"
"Know
this man?" Charis repeated. "Who is he? Know him —why should I—"
Her confusion was the best act she could achieve. She knew the medic was
studying her closely.
"Come
on." He took her arm again, led her into the next chamber. Two more cots. He pushed her down on the nearest one.
"Stay here."
He
went out, sealing the door behind him. Charis ran her hands through the wild
tangle of her hair. They could be watching her even now via some visa system,
so take no chances. Anyway, she was in the base, and so far their suspicions
of her were only normal. But just in case there was a spy system, she lay back
on the cot and closed her eyes.
Outwardly
she was composed for slumber; inwardly her thoughts were busy. Lantee—what had happened to Shann? The first time he had been shocked into such a state
by a blast of the Wyvem Power. But that was not in effect here, and those few
words Charis had heard exchanged between the captain and the medic suggested
that their prisoner's present withdrawal had not come as a result of anything
they had done. They were baffled by it.
"Withdrawal" the medic had phrased
it—a way of escape.
Chans
almost sat up, startled by what she thought was the answer. Lantee had chosen
this as a way of escape! He had purposely retreated thus before they could use
a scanner or a truth drug, fleeing back into the same blackness, really retreating
into what might prove death. And the motive for such a choice must have been a
very strong one.
The
Power would not work inside this Alpha-rim, whatever that was. Charis's hand moved against her tunic, feeling the slight bulk of
the plasta-board which was her key to the place where Lantee had fled, a key
which she could not turn. She had found Lantee, or rather the shell which had
encased him. She had yet to find the nullifier or work out a plan against it.
Her self-confidence was failing fast.
This
was always the worst, this striving to cultivate patience with every nerve in
her hammering for action. She must first establish her character as a
bewildered fugitive. So she forced herself to lie quietly although she longed to
be across that small room, trying the door to see if it was lock-sealed.
It
had been early morning when she had come here; now the invaders, both
off-worlders and Wyvern males, would be astir. Not a good time to go exploring.
Exploring! Charis summoned concentration, sent out a creeping thought—not
backed by the Power, but on her own—striving to reach Tsstu. If this avenue of
communication was also blocked by their Alpha-rim—
A
mind touch lapped against her probe as delicately as if the curl-cat was here in
the room to give her a tongue-caress. Charis knew a throb of excitement, that
road was not closed! She had contact, faulty and wavering as it was, with the
animals outside the base.
The
Tsstu link was no longer a touch but a firm uniting, and then came the feral
urge she associated with Taggi— and another! Lantee?
No. This was not the passageway link, but a heightening of the Taggi strain—his
mate, the female wolverinel A piece of luck Charis had
not counted on.
Tsstu
was trying to send a message, drawing upon the united
power of the wolverines to give it added impetus. A warning?
No, not quite that; rather a suggestion that any action be delayed. Charis
caught a very fuzzy picture of a Wyvern witch mixed in that. The female Wyverns
must be taking a hand as they had promised. Then just as Charis tried to learn
more, the curl-cat broke contact.
The
girl began to think about Lantee. It had taken the Power to reach him
before—the Power plus her own will and that of the two animals. But there in
the copter she alone had found him, and without consciously drawing on the
Power. Now, if he remained too long in that black world, would he ever come
forth again? A small fire could die to ashes, never to be rekindled.
Charis
willed herself to think of a black which was the entire absence of any light,
the swallowing dark from which her species had fled since first they had
learned the secret of fire as a weapon against that which prowled in the
shadows. Cold crept up her body, the dark gathered in— A spark far in the heart
of that dark . . .
A wrenching at her, dragging her back. Charis moaned at the pain of that wrenching.
She opened her eyes to look up into the slitted ones set in a reptilian face
where a cruel satisfaction gleamed.
"Snake!" She screamed.
The
Wyvern male grinned, obviously highly amused by her shock and terror. He caught
at her tunic, his claws in the fabric drawing her to the edge of the cot. But'
as he raised a paw for another grip, his scaled palm spread wide and then
contracted quickly as if it had touched fire. A thin cry had burst from the
alien; he jumped away from her.
"What's going on here?" a human
voice demanded. Hands appeared on the Wyvem's shoulders as a figure loomed behind the native, dragging him back.
Charis watched the medic pull the Wyvem out
of her room. Then she stumbled after—to see the guard come into Lantee's room
and aid the medic in forcing the struggling native on, the warrior all the
while uttering sharp, shrill cries. She paused at the foot of Lantee's cot as
they disappeared toward the outer door.
Shann!
She did not cry that aloud, and even as she made a plea of it in her mind, she knew that there would be no answer. But
still she longed now for his support.
His
eyes were wide open, but behind them was nothingness. She did not have to
touch his limp hand to know that it could not grip hers.
The
cries of the Wyvem did not grow fainter. Instead they were augmented outside by
a growing chorus. There must be more of the natives gathering. Were the Company
men in dispute with their allies?
Charis
hesitated. She longed to go to the outer door to see what was going on, but
that action would not fit her present role. She should be cowering, frightened
to death, in some corner. She listened—the clamor was dying— Better
get back to her own room. She scuttled back.
"You—"
Captain Lazgah stood in the doorway, his shoulders blocking the medic, and the
tone of his voice was a warning.
Charis
sat up on her cot, her hands were in her hair as if she had been pulling at it.
"The snake—" she took the initiative swiftly "—the snake tried
to get mel"
"For good reason." Lazgah's quick stride brought him to the cot
side. His fingers were steel-tight and punishing about her right wrist as he
pulled her about to face him squarely. "You've been using those hags'
tricks. Snake—you're a snake yourself I Those bulls out there have good reason to hate
such tricks—they'd like to get their claws into you. Cathgar says you've been
working with the Power."
"That's impossible!" the medic cut
in. "You've had the complete reading from sensatator since she's been
here. There's no indication that anything registered. Gathgar knows that she's
been with the females and he built up all this on ■that fact alone."
"What
do we know about this Power anyway?" Lazgah asked. "Sure, there's
only been negative register since she's been here. But she might have some way
of blanketing reception on that. A scanner could give us the truth."
"You
put a scanner on her now and you'll get nothing but a complete burn-out. She'll
be another like that fellow in there. What good will that do?"
"Turn
the bulls loose on her and we could learn something."
"What
can you learn from the dead? They're worked up now to a killing rage. Don't
hurry and maybe—"
"Don't
hurry!" The captain made a noise not far removed from one of Taggi's
snarls. "We don't have much time left. This one knows where those hags
have their base. I say—get her under questioning and find that out. Then we
move and move fast. We have our orders to cut all comers on this deal."
"Destroy what you want and what good
will it do? Sure, you can probably blast your way in
and bum out the opposition, but you know what we've learned so far. The Power
doesn't work unless you have had the training. It may not operate for males at
all. You have a woman here who's already been sensitized to it. Why not use
her just as Jagan intended—to pick up the information you need? You won't get
that by force—either against her or maybe against the Wyvern females."
Lazgah relaxed his grip on Charis. But he
still stood over the girl, staring at her as if he could reach inside her skull
by his will and bring her under control.
"I
don't like it," he stated, but he did not protest further. "All
right—but you keep an eye on her."
The
captain tramped out. But the medic did not follow. It was his turn to favor
Charis with a measuring survey.
"I
wish I knew whether you are playing a game," he said, surprising Charis
with his frankness. "Those hags can't possibly control you past the Rim.
But—" He shook his head, more at his own thoughts than at her, and did not
finish his sentence. Going out abruptly, he closed the seal again.
Charis
continued to sit on the cot. The Wyvern male Gath-gar had accused her of
working with the Power, but she had not. At least not with
the aid of the patterns, Wyvem-fashion. Could it be,
Charis's hand went to the plasta-board under her tunic, that she did not need
such an aid any more? Was what she had been doing here—her contact with Tsstu,
the reach-for Lantee—an easier method of using the same force?
But
if that were true, there was a way of using the Power which could not be
affected by the nullifier. Charis blinked. That surmise opened up a whole new
field of speculations. She could reach Tsstu, and Tsstu could link in turn with
the wolverines. Suppose that Tsstu, the wolverines, Charis and Lantee could
form a chain to break open the Alpha-rim of the enemy?
Lantee—
Somehow her thoughts always returned to Lantee, as if the pattern which was
not a pattern needed the element for which he stood—just like the time she
could not remember the right design until Tsstu supplied the indentations in
her drawing. Charis could not have explained why she was certain of this, but
she was.
She
lay back on the cot and closed her eyes. Lantee must be summoned out of hiding,
be one with them again. Charis released a questing thought, spun it out and
away from her as a fisherman might cast a line or as a com beam might search
for another installation to activate. A Wyvern witch working under the Power
would have been accurate in such a hunt. She herself, using the pattern, could
have centered on Tsstu and been reasonably certain of a quick contact, but this
blind seeking was a fumbling process.
Touch! Charis tensed. Tsstu! Now she must
hold that contact, signal along it her need for energy reserves for the job to
be done. But Tsstu was unwilling. It was as if she was in Charis's hand and
wriggling for her freedom. But Charis kept the line taut,
sent her determined demand along it. There— Taggi came in. The girl braced
herself against the impact of the
far more savage mind of the wolverine. Through Tsstu to Taggi went her call for
strength and a mutual pointing of their
combined wills. Lantee—Charis made that call into form— Lantee. Now a fourth
will joined—Togi, the female linked with her mate. The
thrusting leap of that striking back to Charis was like a blow.
The
girl held that linkage intact for a long moment, as a climber might examine
knotted ropes to be sure of his support before facing a dangerous mountainside.
Now! The wills were a spear which Charis not only aimed for the throwing but
followed in flight.
Into
the black of the nothing-place, surely the strangest of those Otherwheres into
which the Power of the Wyverns led, she was the point of a fiery arrow shooting
on and on, seeking the spark of light there. Now it was before her, very low,
an ember close to extinction. But the arrow which was Charis, Tsstu, Taggi, and
Togi struck into its heart.
Around
them whirled a wild dance of figures. From all the doorways they had come into
the corridor to crowd about her. She could not flee from them lest the lifeline
break. This was worse than the first time she had walked this forbidden way,
for the thoughts and memories of Shann Lantee now gathered more substance in
their shadows. Charis knew a terror which balanced her on the thin edge of
sanity.
However,
the chain held true and pulled her back until she lay again on the cot, aware
of its support under her. The contacts broke, the wolverines were gone; Tsstu,
gone.
"I am here."
Charis
opened her eyes, but no one in a green-brown uniform stood beside her. She
turned her head to face the wall which was still between them.
"I am—back."
Again
that assurance, clear-cut as audible words but, in her mind, coming with the
same ease as the Wyvern witches communicated.
"Why—"
Her lips shaped that soundlessly to match the inquiry in her mind.
"It was that or face
the scanner," he answered swiftly.
"And
now?"
"Who knows? Did they
take you, too?"
"No." Charis
outlined what had happened.
"Thorvald here?" Lantee's thoughts dropped away and she did not try to follow deeper.
Then he was back to communication level. "The installation we're after is
in the main dome. They have it guarded by Wyvern males who are sensitive to any
telepathic waves. And they will fight to the death to keep it in action and
themselves free."
"Can we reach
it?" Charis asked.
"Little chance. At least, I've seen none so far," was his disappointing answer.
"You
mean it's impossible for us to do anything?" Charis protested.
"No,
but we have to know more. They've stopped trying to rouse me. Perhaps that will
give me a chance to make some move."
"The Wyvern male told them I am using
the Power. But I haven't tried it with the pattern and it
didn't register on some machine of theirs, so they didn't quite believe him.''
"You did this—without a pattern?"
"With Tsstu and the wolverines, yes. Does it mean we don't really need a pattern?
That the Wyvems don't need them? But why wouldn't it show up on their
machine?"
"May
hit another wave length," Lantee returned. "But if the Wyvern males
pick it up, they may be more sensitive on other bands than their mistresses credit. I wonder if they could have some Power of
their own but don't know how to use it. If they picked you up before—"
"Then this last call
for you—they could—"
"Be
really alerted now? Yes. Which shaves our time to act.
I don't even know how many there are here at the base."
"The witches have
promised their help."
"How can they? Any
sending of theirs will fail at the Rim."
"Shann,
the Wyvems control their males with the Power. And the male I saw here believes
that I can use it here. Suppose we all link again. Could we control them inside the Rim?"
There
was a moment of pause in the flow of thought and then he answered,
"How
do we know what will work and what won't until we put it to the test? But I
want to be ready to get out of here on my own two feet. And from here I can see
a guard with a blaster at the outer door. We might be able to link against the
Wyvern males, but I wouldn't swear we could link to take out an off-worlder who
has never been sensitized to mental control."
"What do we do?"
"Link with the others. See if you can reach Thorvald so—" he ordered.
This
time the first link was not Charis, but Lantee and his will strengthened hers
in her search for the curl-cat. Tsstu replied with a kind of fretfulness, but
she picked up the wolverines.
A line cast out, spinning . . . then the
catch of response.
"Wait!"
That caution came back link by link. "The witches are moving. Wait for
their signal." Break off as the animals dropped
contact.
"What can they
do?" Charis demanded of Lantee.
"Your
guess is as good as mine." He was tense. "The medic's just come
in."
Silence. How
well could he play his role, Charis wondered a little fearfully. But
if the medic had given up hope of reviving the Survey man, he might not
examine him too closely now. She lay listening for any sound which might come
through the walls.
The
door of her room opened and the medic came in with a tray on which there was
food, real food, not rations. He put it down on a
drop-table and turned around to look at her. Charis tried to look like one
awakening from a nap. The man's expression was set and the motion with which he
indicated the food was abrupt.
"You'd better eat.
You'll need it!"
She
sat up, pushing back her hair, striving to present bewilderment.
"If
you're smart," he continued, "you'll tell the captain all about it
now. He's an expert on grab raids. If you don't know what that means, you'll
soon discover the hard way."
Charis
was afraid to ask what this warning did mean. To cling to her cloak of being a
dazed fugitive was her only defense.
"You
can't hide it—not any longer. Not with a complete burn-out of the sensatator
this time."
Charis
tensed. The linkage—twice the linkage—had at last registered on whatever
safeguard the invaders had mounted.
"So/ you do understand
that?" The medic nodded. "I thought you would. Now, you had better
talk and fasti The captain might just turn you over to
the bulls."
"The snakes!" Charis found words at last. "You mean give me to the snakes?"
She did not have to counterfeit her repulsion.
"That
gets to you, does it? It should; they hate the Power. And they'll willingly
destroy anyone who uses it if they can. So—make your deal with the captain.
He's willing to offer a good one."
"Simkm!"
There
was such urgency in that hail that the medic whirled to the door. There was a
growing murmur of sound—some of it sharp, the rest shouting. The medic ran,
leaving the door open. Charis was up and into Lantee's room instandy.
The
hissing blatt-blatt of a blaster in action came now. And she had heard that
claking before when the birds had hunted her along the Warlockian cliff.
Then,
like a swifter beat of her heart, a pulse
along all the veins and arteries of her body—
"Now!"
The
signal was not spoken but to it all of Charis responded. She saw Lantee slide
from the cot in one supple, co-ordinated movement—as ready as she.
xvm
Lantee
waved Charis back and took
the lead as they approached the outer door. The Company guard still stood
there, his back blocking their passage, intent upon what was
happening
outside, his blaster drawn and moving as if he were trying to align its sights
on some very elusive mark.
The
Survey man crossed the anteroom with the caution of a stalking feline as the
din outside covered any sound within. But some instinct must have warned the
guard. He turned his head, sighted Lantee and, giving a cry, tried to bring his
blaster up and around.
Too
latel Just what Lantee did Charis was not sure. The blow he struck was
certainly not any conventional one. As the guard crumpled, the blaster fell to
the floor and skidded. Charis pounced and closed fingers about the ugly weapon.
She tossed it, as she straightened, to Lantee and he caught it easily.
They
looked out into a scene of wild confusion, though their view of it was limited
to a small segment of the base. Men in yellow uniforms crouched under cover and
laced the air with blaster rays, apparendy trying to strike back at some menace
in the sky. Two of the Wyvern males lay either dead or unconscious by the door
of a dome to the right, across from the one in which Shann and Charis had been
prisoners. And there were burned and blasted clakers littering the ground in
all directions.
"There—"
Lantee gestured to the dome by which the Wyvern bodies sprawled. "It's in
there."
But
to try to reach that would set them up as targets for the marksmen now
concentrating on the clakers. The din of the attack cries was lessening; fewer
bodies struck the ground. Charis saw Lantee's lips thin, his face assume a grim
cast, and she knew he was tensing for action.
"Runl I'll cover
you."
She
measured the distance by eye. Not far, but at this moment that open space
stretched as an endless plain. And the Wyvern males?
Those in sight were motionless, but more could be inside that open door.
Chans gave a leap which carried her well into
the open. She heard a shout and then the crackle of a blaster beam which was
close enough to scorch her upper arm. She cried out, but somehow she kept to
her feet and stumbled on into the door, tripping there over the body of a
Wyvern. She sprawled forward into the interior, thereby saving her life as one
of the murderous, saw-toothed spears flew past her. She rolled, coming up
against the wall where she pushed up to look at her assailants.
Wyvern
males—three of them, two still holding spears, one of whom raised his weapon
with sadistic slowness. The Wyvern was enjoying her fear as well as the fact
that he was now in, command of the situation.
"Rrrrrrrruuggghhh."
The
Wyvern, his spear almost ready to throw, snapped around to face the door. A
snarling ball of fury burst through it to launch at the natives. They howled,
thrusting wildly at the wolverine. But the animal, using the advantage of its
surprise attack to break past them, disappeared into the next room.
"Charis! You all right?"
Shann
dodged in. The fabric of his tunic smoldered at rib level and he beat at it
with his left hand.
"Surprisingly bad
shots for Company men," he commented.
"Maybe
they've orders not to kill." Charts tried to match his composure. But
though she was on her feet now, she kept her back to the wall, facing the
Wyvems, amazed that they had not launched a spear as yet. The eruption of the
wolverine into their midst had shaken them oddly.
Shann
gestured the three aliens back with his ready blaster.
"Move!"
he ordered curtly. And the wariness in their yellow eyes told the two
off-worlders that the natives were well aware of the potency of that weapon.
They retreated from the small outer room into
the main room of the structure. There had been a good-sized com unit in here,
but one glance told Charis that it could not serve them, for the installation
had been deliberately rayed with blaster fire until it was half-melted in more
than one place.
But
that was not all that was in the room. On a base improvised from packing boxes
was an intricate machine giving off an aura of rippling light. And, standing
about that, almost as if they were cold and were warming their chilled bodies,
were six male Wyverns. Now spears were leveled—until they sighted the blaster
Shann held.
"Killl"
The word was scorching hate in Charis's mind as it flashed from the warriors.
"And be killed!"
Shann returned in the same mental speech.
The
snouted, spike-combed heads bobbed. Their surprise, their unease close to the
border of fear, played about them much as did the light that rippled from the
machine they guarded.
Lantee could do just that—wipe out the
Wyverns and the machine they were striving to shield with
their bodies. In Charis's thought, the natives were ready to die in that fashion. But was that the only answer?
"There
might be a better one." Shann's thought came in reply to hers.
"Kill!"
Not from the Wyvems now, but clear and as a feral demand. Taggi emerged from
under the wreckage of the com.
"Here!"
The small black shadow which had just flitted in sprang at Charis. The girl
stooped and gathered up Tsstu. From her arms the curl-cat regarded the Wyvems
with an unwinking stare.
"We die—you die!"
Clear-cut
that warning. But the Wyvern who had made it did not raise his spear. Instead
he placed his four-digited hands on the installation. •
"He means it." This time Lantee
used audible speech. "There must be some sort of panic button in that that
will blow up the whole thing if necessary. Move awayl" He changed to
mental order and gestured with the blaster.
Not
one of the natives stirred, and their determination not to yield to that
command beat back at the off-worlders in a counterblast. How long could such a
standoff continue? Charis wondered. Sooner or later the Company men would be in
on this.
She
put down Tsstu and went back to the anteroom, to discover that while she could
close the outer door, there was no way to secure that portal. The palm lock
which had once fastened it was now only a blackened hole in the fabric.
"Kill the witch onel With you,
we shall bargain."
The
thought was clear speech in her head as she reentered the wrecked com room.
"You
are as we. Kill the witch and be free!" The males appealed to Lantee.
Tsstu
hissed, her ears flattened against her round skull as
she backed to a stand before Charis. Taggi growled from where he accompanied
Shann, his small eyes alight with battle anger.
The
spokesman for the natives glanced at both animals. Charis caught the quiver of
uncertainty in his mind. Shann the Wyvem could understand; Charis he hated
since he classed her with his own females who had always held the Power. But
this link with animals was new and so to be feared.
"Kill
the witch and those who are hers." He made his decision, lumping the unfamiliar with Charis. "Be free again as
now we are."
"Are
you?" From somewhere Charis found the words. "Away from this room or
from this base where this off-world machine cannot reach—are you then
free?"
Stark,
hot hate glowing at her from yellow eyes, a snarl lifting scaled skin away from
fangs.
"Are
you?" Shann took up, and Chans readily gave way to his leadership. To the
Wyvern males, she was a symbol of all they hated most. But Lantee was male and
so to them not wholly an enemy.
"Not
yet." The truth was hard to admit. "But when the witch ones die, then
we shall be!"
"But
there may not be a need for such killing or dying."
"What are you thinking
of?" Charis asked vocally.
Lantee
did not look at her. He was studying the Wyvern leader with intensity, as if he
would hold the native in check by his will alone.
"A
thought," he said aloud, "just a thought which might resolve the
whole problem. Otherwise, this is going to end with a real blood bath. Now that
they know what this machine can do for them, do you think the males will ever
be anything again but potential murderers of their own kind? And we can destroy
this machine—and them, but that will be a failure."
"No
killing?" The Wyvem's thoughts cut in. "But if we do not kill them
while they may not dream us defenseless, then they will in time break us and
once more use the Power against us."
"Upon
me they used the Power and I was in the outer dark where nothing is."
The
astonishment of the Wyvems was a wave spreading out to engulf the off-worlders.
"And
how came you again from that place?" That the Wyvern recognized the site
of Lantee's exile was plain.
"She
sought me, and these sought me, and they brought me forth."
"Why?" came flatly.
"Because they were my
friends; they wished me well."
"Between
witch and male there can be no friendship! She is mistress—he obeys her
commands in all things—or he is naught!"
"I
was naught, yet here I am now." Shann sought Charts. "Link!
Prove it to them-link!"
She tossed the mental cord to Tsstu, to
Taggi, and then reached for Shann. They were as one and as one, Shann thrust at the Wyvern's consciousness. Charis saw
the spokesman for the natives sway as if buffeted by a storm wind. Then the
off-worlders broke apart and were four again.
"Thus it is,"
Shann said.
"But
you are not as we are. With you, male and female may be different. True?"
"True.
But also know this: as one, we four have broken the bonds of the Power. But can
you live always with a machine and those who have brought you the machine? Can
they be trusted? Have you looked into their minds?"
"They
use us for their purposes. But that we accept for our freedom."
"Turn off the machine,"
Shann said abruptly.
"If we do, the witches
will come."
"Not unless we will
it."
Charis
was startled. Was Lantee running his claims too high? But she had begun to
understand what he was fighting for. As long as the cleft between male and
female existed in the Wyvem species, there would be an opening for just such
trouble as the Company men had started here. Shann was going to attempt to
close that gap. Centuries of tradition, generations of specialized breeding,
stood against his wilL And all the terrors and fears
of inbred prejudice would be fighting against him, but he was going to try it.
He
had not even asked for her backing or consent, and she discovered that she did
not resent that. It was as if the linkage had erased all desire to counter a
decision she realized as right. "Link!"
A crackling explosion, the stench of burning plasta-fab. The Company soldiers had turned blasters on
the dome! What did Lantee propose to do about that? Charis had only time for
one fleeting thought before her mind fell into place beside the others.
Again
it was Lantee who aimed that shaft of thought, sent it out past the melting
wall of the dome, straight at the enemy minds, open and ill-prepared for such
attack. Men dropped where they stood. A still-spitting blaster rolled along the
ground, spraying its deadly ray in a wave pattern along a wall.
Shann
had had the courage to try that first gamble and he had won. Could he do the
same again in the greater gamble he proposed?
The Wyvem
spokesman made a slight motion with his hand. Those who walled the machine with
their bodies stood away.
"That is not the Power
as we know it."
"But
it was born of that Power," Shann caught him up. "Just as other ways
of life may issue from those now known to you."
"But you are not
sure."
"I
am not sure. But I know that killing leaves only the dead, and the dead may not
be summoned back by any Power ever known to living creatures. You will die and
others shall die if you take the vengeance you wish. Then who will profit by
your dying—except perhaps off-worlders for whom you do not fight in
truth?"
"But you fight for
us?"
"Can I hide the truth
when we touch minds?"
That curious quiet came
down as a curtain between the off-worlders and the Wyverns as the natives
conferred among themselves. At last the spokesman returned to contact.
"We
know you speak the truth as you see it. No one before has broken the bonds of
the Power. That you have done so means that perhaps you can defend us now. We
brought our spears for killing. But it is true that the dead remain dead, and
if we make the killing we wish, we as a people shall die. So we shall try your
path."
"Link!" Again the command from Lantee. He made a motion
with his hand and the Wyvem pressed a lever on the installation.
This time they had not fashioned a spear of
the mind-force but a barrier wall, and only just in time. As a wave of
determined attack struck against it, Charis swayed and felt the firm brace of
Shann's arm as he stood, his feet a little apart, his
chin up—as he might have faced a physical fight, fist against fist.
Three
times that wave battered at them, striving, Charis knew, to reach the Wyvem
males. And each time the linkage held without yielding. Then they were there in
person—Gys-may, her brilliant body-patterns seeming to flame in her terrible
anger, Gidaya—and two others Charis did not know.
"What do you?"
The question seared.
"What we must."
Shann Lantee made answer.
"Let
us have those who are ours!" Gysmay demanded in full cry.
"They are not yours
but their own!"
"They
are nothing! They do not dream, they have no Power. They are nothing save what
we will them to be."
"They
are part of a whole. Without them, you die; without you, they die. Can you
still say they are nothing?"
"What
say you?" The question Gidaya asked was aimed at Charis, not Shann.
"That he speaks the
truth."
"After the manner of
your people, not ours!"
"Did
I not have an answer from Those Who Have Gone Before which you could not read,
Wise One? Perhaps this is the reading of that answer. Four have become one at
will, and each time we so will it, that one made of four is stronger. Could you
break the barrier we raised here while we were one, even though you must have
sent against us the full Power? You are an old people, Wise One, and with much
learning. Can it not be that some time, far and long ago, you took a turning
into a road which limited your Power in truth? Peoples are strong and grow when
they search for new roads. When they say, 'There is no road but this one which
we know well, and always must we travel in it,' then
they weaken themselves and dim their future.
"Four
have made one and yet each one of that four is unlike another. You are all of
a land in your Power. Have you never thought that it takes different threads to
weave a real pattern—that you use different shapes to make the design of
Power?"
"This
is folly! Give us what is ours lest we blast you." Gys-may's head-comb
quivered, the very outlines of her body seemed to shimmer with her rage.
"Wait!"
Gidaya interrupted. "It is true that this dreamer has had an answer from
the Rods, delivered by the will of Those Who Have Dreamed Before. And it was an
answer we could not read, but yet it was sent to her and was a true one. Can
any of you deny that?"
There was no answer to her
demand.
"Also,
there have been said here things which have a core of good thought behind
them."
Gysmay
stirred, none of her anger abating. But she did not render her protest openly.
"Why
do you stand against us now, Dreamer?" Gidaya continued. "You, to
whom we have opened many gates, to whom we gave the use of the Power—why should
you choose to turn that same gift against us who have never chosen to do you
ill?"
"Because
here I have seen one true thing: that there is a weakness in your Power,
that you have been blind to that which makes evil against you. As long
as you are a race divided against itself, with a wall of contempt and hatred keeping you apart, then there is a way of bringing disaster upon your race. It is because you opened doors
and made straight a road for me that I will to do the same for you now. This
evil came from my people. But we are not all thus. We, too, have our divisions
and barriers, our outlaws and criminals.
"But
do not, I pray you, Wise Ones," Charis hastened
on, "keep open this rift in your own nation so that outside ill can enter.
You have seen that there are two answers to the Power on which you lean. One
comes through a machine which can be turned on and off at the will of
outsiders. Another is a growth from the very seeds you have sown, and so it is
possible for you to nourish it also.
"Without
this man I have only the Power you gave to my summoning. With him and the
animals, I am so much the greater that I no longer need this." From her
tunic Charis took the map sheet, holding it out so that the Wyvems could see
the pattern drawn upon it. She crumpled the sheet and tossed it to the floor.
"This must be thought upon in'
council." Gidaya had watched that repudiation of the pattern with narrowed
eyes.
"So be it," Charis affirmed, and
they were gone.
"Will
it work?" Charis sat in the commander's quarters of the base. A
visa-screen on the wall showed a row of Wyvem warriors squatting on their
heels, guards for the still dazed Company men who had been herded into the
visitors' dome in temporary imprisonment, awaiting the arrival of the Patrol
forces.
Lantee lounged in an Eazi-rest, far down on
his spine, while across his outstretched legs sprawled two wolverine cubs now
snorting a little from the depths of slumber.
"Talk
out, won't you?" Thorvald snapped in exasperation as he looked up from the
emergency com. "I pick up only a kind of buzzing in the brain when you do
that and it's giving me a headache!"
Shann
grinned. "A point to remember, sir. Do I think
our argument will convince them? I'm not venturing any guesses. But the witches
are smart. And we proved them flat failures, tackling them on their own ground.
That rocked them harder than they've ever been, I imagine. Warlock's been
theirs to control; with their Power and their dreams, they have thought
themselves invincible. Now they know they are not. And they have two answers:
to stand still and go under, or to try this new road
you've talked about. I'll wager we may have a tentative peace offer first,
then some questions."
"They
have their pride," Charis said softly. "Don't strip that from
them."
"Why
should we wish to?" Thorvald asked. "Remember, we, too, have dreamed.
But this is just why you will handle the negotiations."
She
was surprised at the tone of his voice, but he was continuing. "Jagan was
right in his approach, a woman must be a liaison. The
witches have to admit that Lantee and, to a lesser degree, myself have some
small claim on their respect, but they will be happier to have you take the
fore now."
"But I'm not-"
"Empowered
to act on a diplomatic level? You are. This mission has wide emergency powers,
and you are to represent us. You're drafted, all of you—Tsstu and Taggi
included—to conduct a treaty with the witches."
"And it
will be a real treaty
this time!" Charis did not know
how Shann
could be so sure of
that, but she accepted his confidence.
"Link!"
Automatically now
she yielded
to that
unspoken order. It was a new
pattern, flowing, weaving, and she
allowed herself to be swept along,
sensing there were treasures to
be found
so: the subtle skill
and neat
mind that was Tsstu, the
controlled savagery and curiosity that
was Taggi
and sometimes
Togi.
Then there was that other—closer in some ways, different
in others, and fast
becoming an undissolvable part of
her— which was strength, companionship. Hand rising
to clasp
hand, falling away, but
always there to reach and
hold again when needed.
This had she brought with
her from
the Otherwhere
of the
Wyverns and this she would
need ever hereafter to be complete.
Here's
a quick checklist of recent releases of ACE
SCIENCE-FICTION BOOKS
F-titles
40V M-titles 450
F-303 THE BLOODY SUN by Marion Zimmer Bradley
F-304 THE RADIO BEASTS by Ralph Milne
Farley F-305 ALMURIC by Robert E.
Howard F-306 EARTH'S LAST CITADEL
by C.
L. Moore & H. Kuttner F-307 WARRIOR
OF LLARN by Gardner F. Fox M-l 03 THE
GOLDEN PEOPLE by Fred Saberhagen
and
EXILE FROM XANADU by Lan Wright M-l05
MESSAGE FROM THE EOCENE
by Margaret St. Clair
and THREE WORLDS OF FUTURITY
by
Margaret St. Clair F-309 CLANS OF THE
ALPHANE MOON by Philip K. Dick F-311
SWORDSMEN IN THE SKY
Ed.
by Donald A. Wollheim F-312 THE RADIO
PLANET by Ralph Milne Farley F-313 A
BRAND NEW WORLD by Ray Cummings F-314
THE UNIVERSE AGAINST HER by James H. Schmitz M-l07 THE COILS OF TIME by A. Bertram Chandler
and INTO THE ALTERNATE UNIVERSE
by A.
Bertram Chandler F-317 THE ESCAPE ORBIT
by James White F-318 THE SPOT OF LIFE
by Austin Hall F-319 CRASHING SUNS by
Edmond Hamilton M-l 09 THE SHIP THAT
SAILED THE TIME STREAM
by G. C. Edmondson
and STRANGER THAN YOU THINK
by G. C. Edmondson
If
you are missing any of these, they can be obtained directly from the publisher
by sending the indicated sum, plus 5(2 handling
fee, to Ace Books, Inc. (Dept. M M), 1120
Avenue of the Americas, New York, N. Y. 10036
"Fans
of Andre Norton are familiar with the planet Warlock and its shimmering,
powerful witches, the matriarchal Wyverns, who rule by dreams. ORDEAL IN OTHERWHERE
goes back to this familiar science-fiction setting, this time with young Charis
Nordholm, who has been sold as a slave to a trader wishing to buy cloth from
these strange creatures.
"Charis
soon finds herself not only in contact with the Wyverns, but also mixed up in a
mysterious internecine warfare she does not understand...
"Norton's
books have earned a special place for being highly imaginative and beautifully
written."
-ANNISTON STAR