***************************************************
Author: Alan Dean
Foster
Title: The
Tar-Aiym Krang
Original
copyright year: 1983
Genre: Science
Fiction
Version: 1.1
Original
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e-text last updated : 12/14/00
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***************************************************
By
Alan Dean Foster : Published by Ballantine
Books:
The Icenggger Trilogy
ICERIGGER
MISSION TO MOULOKIN
THE DELUGE DRIVERS
The Adventures of Flinx of the Commonwealth
FOR LOVE OF MOTHER‑NOT
THE TAR‑AIYM KRANG
ORPHAN STAR
THE END OF THE MATTER
FLINX IN FLUX
MID‑FLINX
BLOODHYPE
THE HOWLING STONES
The Damned
Book One: A CALL TO ARMS
Book Two: THE FALSE MIRROR
Book Three: THE SPOILS OF WAR
THE BLACK HOLE CACHALOT
DARK STAR THE
METROGNOME and Other Stories
MIDWORLD NOR
CRYSTALTEARS
SENTENCED TO PRISM SPLINTER
OF THE MIND'S EYE
STAR TREK@ LOGS ONE‑TEN VOYAGE TO THE CITY OF THE DEAD
WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE . . . ... WHO NEEDS ENEMIES?
MAD AMOS PARALLELITIES*
'forthcoming
Books
published by The Ballantine Publishing Group are available at quantity
discounts on bulk purchases for premium, educational, fund‑raising, and
special sales use. For details, please call 1‑500‑733‑3000.
***************************************************
First
published in the USA in
1972
by Ballantine Books
©
1972 by Alan Dean Foster.
This edition published by'
arrangement with Ballantine Books,
a Division of Random House, Inc.
FIRST NEL PAPERBACK EDITION APRIL 1979
Conditions of sale: This book is sold subject to
the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re‑sold,
hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any
form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a
similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent
purchaser.
NEL
Books are published by
New
English Library from
Barnard's
Inn, Holborn,
London
ECIN 2JR.
Made
and printed in Great Britain by
William
Collins Sons & Co Ltd, Glasgow
45004270 7
***************************************************
To
Larry
Thor
And
John W. Campbell, Jr.
Mentors
***************************************************
The
Flinx was an ethical thief in that he stole only from the crooked. And' at
that, only when it was absolutely necessary. Well, perhaps not absolutely. But
be tried to. Due to his environment his morals were of necessity of a highly
adaptable nature. And when one is living alone and has not yet reached one's
seventeenth summer, certain allowances in such matters must be made.
It could be argued, if the Flinx were willing to
listen (a most unlikely happenstance), that the ultimate decision as to who
qualified as crooked and who did not was an awfully totalitarian one to have to
make. A philosopher would nod knowingly in agreement. Flinx could not afford
that luxury. His ethics were dictated by survival and not abstracts. It was to
his great credit that he had managed to remain on the accepted side of current
temporal morality as much as he had so far. Then again, chance was also due a
fair share of the credit.
As a rule, though, he came by his modest income
mostly honestly. This was made necessary as much by reason of common sense as
by choice. A too-successful thief always attracts unwanted attention.
Eventually a criminal law of diminishing returns takes over.
And anyway, the jails of Drallar were notoriously
inhospitable.
Good locations in the city for travelling jongleurs,
minstrels, and such to display their talents were limited. Some were far better
than others. That he at his comparatively slight age had managed to secure one
of the best was a tribute to luck and the tenacity of old Mother Mastiff. From
his infancy she had reserved the small raised platform next to her shop for
him, driving off other entrepreneurs with shout or shot, as the occasion and
vehemence of the interloper required. Mother Mastiff was not her real name, of
course, but that was what everyone called her. Flinx included. Real names were
of little use in Drallar's market-places. They served poorly for identification
and too well for the tax-gatherers. So in more appropriate ones were rapidly
bestowed upon each new inhabitant. Mother Mastiff, for example, bore a striking
resemblance to the Terran canine of the same name. It. was given in humour and,
accepted with poor grace, but accepted, nevertheless. Her caustic personality
only tended to compliment the physical similarity.
The man-child had been an orphan. Probably
involuntary, as most of his ilk were. Slill, who could tell? Had she not been
passing the slave coops at that time and glanced casually m a certain
direction, she would never have noticed it. For reasons she had never fully understood
she had bought it, raised it, and set it to learning a trade as soon as it was
old enough. Fortunately his theatrical proclivities had manifested themselves
at quite an early stage, along with his peculiar talents. So the problem of
choosing a trade solved itself. He proved to be a keen if somewhat solemn
observer, and so his own best apprentice. Fine and well, because the older
performers always became more nervous in his presence than they cared to admit.
Rather than admit it, they pronounced him unteachable, and left him to his own
devices.
She had also taught him as early as was practical
that in Drallar independence was ever so much more than an intangible thought.
It was a possession, even if it would not fit into one's pocket or pouch, and
to be valued as such. Still, when he had taken to her word and moved out to
live on his own, the sadness lingered with her as a new coat of paint. But she
never revealed it to him for fear of communicating weakness. Not in her words
nor in her face. Urged oil affectionately but firmly he was, much as the young
birds of the Poles. Also she knew that for her the Moment might come at any
time, and she wanted it to brush his life as lightly as possible.
Flinx felt the cottony pain of a sugar-coated probe
again in his mind; the knowledge that Mother Mastiff was his mother by dint of
sympathy and not birth. Coincidence was his father and luck his inheritance. Of
his true parents he knew nothing, nor had the auctioneer. His card had been
even more than usually blank, carrying not even the most elementary pedigree. A
mongrel. It showed in his long orange-red hair and olive complex ion. The
reason for his orphanhood would remain forever as obscure as their faces. Pic
let the life flood of the city enter his mind and submerge the unpleasant
thoughts.
A tourist with more insight than most had once
remarked that strolling through the great central marketplace of Drallar was
like standing in a low surf and letting the geometrically patient waves lap
unceasingly against one. Flinx had never seen the sea, so the reference
remained obscure. There were few seas on Moth anyway, and no oceans. Only the
uncounted, innumerable lakes of The- Blue-That-Blinded and shamed azure as a
pale intonation.
The planet had moved with unusual rapidity out of
its last ice age. The fast-dwindling ice sheets had left its surface pock
marked with s glittering lapis-lazuli embroidery or lakes, tarns, and great
ponds. An almost daily rainfall
maintained the water levels initially set by the retreating glaciers. Drallar
happened to be situated in an exceptionally dry valley, good drainage and the
lack of rainfall (more specifically, of mud) being one of the principal reasons
for the city's growth. Here merchants could come to trade their goods and craftsmen
to set up shop without fear of being washed out every third-month.
The evaporation-precipitation water cycle on Moth
also differed from that of many otherwise similar humanx-type planets. Deserts
were precluded by the lack of any real mountain ranges to block off
moisture-laden air. The corresponding lack of oceanic basins and the general
unevenness of the terrain never gave a major drainage system a chance to get
started. The rivers of Moth were as uncountable as the lakes, but for the most
part small in both length and volume. So the water of the planet was
distributed fairly evenly over its surface, with the exception of the two-great
ice caps al the poles and the hemispheric remnants of the great glacial
systems. Moth was the Terran Great Plains with conifers instead of corn.
The polyrhythmic chanting of barkers hawking the
goods of a thousand worlds formed a nervous and jarring counter-point to the
comparatively even susurrations and murmurings of the crowd. Flinx passed, a
haberdashery he knew and in passing exchanged a brief, secret smile with its
owner. That worthy, a husky blond middle-aged human, had just finished selling
a pair of durfarq-skin coasts to two outlandishly dad outworlders … for
three times what they were worth. Another saying trickled lazily through his
mind. ‘Those who come unprepared to Drallar to buy skin, inevitably get.'
It did not offend Flinx's well-considered set of
ethics. This was not stealing. Caveat emptor. Fur and fibres, wood and water,
were Moth. Can one steal seeds from a tomato? The seller was happy with his
sale, the purchasers were pleased with their purchase, and the difference would
go to support the city in the form of welfares and grafts anyway. Besides, any
outworlder who could afford to come to Moth could damn well afford to pay its
prices. The merchants of Drallar were not to any extent rapacious. Only
devious.
It was a fairly open planet, mostwise. The
government was a monarchy, a throw back to the planet's earlier days.
Historians found it quaint and studied it, tourists found it picturesque and
frozepixed it, and it was only nominally terrifying to its citizens. Moth had
been yanked abruptly and unprepared into the vortex of interstellar life and
had taken the difficult transition rather well. As won id-be planet-baggers
rapidly found out. But on a planet where the bulk of" the native
population was composed of nomadic tribes following equally nomadic fur-bearing
animals who exhibited unwonted bellicosity towards the losing of said fill's, a representative government would have proved
awkward in the extreme. And naturally the Church would not interfere. The
Counsellors did not even think of them-selves as constituting a government,
therefore they could not think of imposing one on others. Democracy on Moth would
have to wait until the nomads would let themselves be counted, indexed,
labelled, and cross-filed, and that seemed a long, long way off. It was well
known that the Bureau of the King's Census annually published figures more
complementary than accurate.
Wood products, furs, and tourism were the planet's
principal industries. Those and trade. Fur-bearing creatures of every
conceivable type (and a few inconceivable ones) abounded in the planet's
endless forests. Even the insects wore fur, to shed the omnipresent water. Most
known varieties of hard and soft woods thrived in the Barklands, including
& number of unique and unclassifiable types, such an a certain deciduous
fungus. When one referred to 'grain' on Moth. it had nothing to do with flour.
The giant lakes harboured fish that had to be caught from modified barges
equipped with cyborg-backed fishing lines. It was widely quoted that of all the
planets in the galaxy, only on Moth did an honest-to-goodness pisces have an
even chance of going home with the fisherman, instead of vice-versa. And
hunters were only beginning to tap I hat aspect of the planet's potentialities
... mostly because those who went into the great Forests unprepared kept an
unquieting silence.
Drallar was its capital and largest city. Thanks to
fortuitous galactic co-ordinates and the enlightened tax policies of a
sucession of kings it was now also an inter-stellar clearing-house for trade
goods and commercial transactions. All of the great financial houses had at
least branch headquarters here, reserving their showier offices for the more
'civilized' planets. The monarch and his civil service were no more than
nominally corrupt, and the king saw to it that the people were not swamped by
repressive rules and regulations. Not that this was done out of love for the
common man. It was simply good business. And if there were no business, there
would be no taxes. No taxes would mean no government. And DO government would
mean no king, a state of affairs which the current monarch, his Driest Majesty
King Dewe Nog Na XXIV, was at constant pains to avoid.
Then too, Drallar could be smelled.
In addition to the indigenous humans, the business
of Drallar was conducted by half a hundred intelligent races. To keep this
conglomeration of commerce pulsing smoothly, a fantastic diversity of organic
fuels was demanded. So the central marketplace Itself was encircled by a
seemingly infinite series of serving stands, auto-chefs, and restaurants that
formed in actuality one great, uninterrupted kitchen. The resulting comb;
nation of aromas generated by these establishments mingled to form an
atmosphere unduplicated anywhere else in the known galaxy. On more refined
trade stops such exotic miasmas were kept decently locked away. In Drallar t h
ere was no ozone to contaminate. One man's bread was another man's narcotic.
And one man's narcotic could conceivably make another being nauseous.
But by some chance of chemistry, or chemistry of
chance) the fumes blended so well in the naturally moist air that any potentially
harmful effects were cancelled out. Left only was an ever-swirling thick
perfume that tick led one's throat and left unexpecting mouths in a state of
perpetual salivation. One could get a deceptively full and satisfying meal
simply by sitting down in the centre of the markets and inhaling for an hour.
Few other places in the Arm had acquired what might be described as an
olfactory reputation. It was a truth that gourmets came from as far away as
Terra and Proycon merely to sit on the outskirts of the marketplace and hold
long and spirited competitions in which the participants would attempt to
identify only the wisps of flavour that were wafted outwards on the damp
breeze.
The reason for the circular arrangement was simple.
A businessman could fortify himself on the outskirts and then plunge mio the
whirl of commerce without having, to worry about being cut down in the midst of
an important trailsaction by a sudden gust of, say, pungent prego-smoke
from the bahnwood fires. Most of the day the vast circle served admirably well,
but during the prime meal hours it made the marketplace resemble more than ever
that perspicacious tourist's analogy of the ebb and flow of a sea.
Flinx paused at the stand of old Kiki, a vendor of
sweets, and bought a small thisk-cake. This was a concoction made from a
base of a tough local hybrid wheat. Inside, it was filled with fruit-pieces and
berries and small, meaty parma-niits, recently ripened. The finished
product was then dipped in a vat of warmish honey-gold and allowed to harden.
It was rough on the teeth, but, ob, what it did for this palate It had one
drawback: consistency. Biting into think was like chewing old spacesuit
insulation. But it had a high energy content, the parma-nuts were mildly
narcotic, and Flinx felt the need of some sort of mild stimulant before
performing.
Above the voices and the smells, above all, Drallar
could be viewed.
The edifices of the marketplace were fairly low, but
outside the food crescents one could see ancient walls, remnants of Old City. Scattered
behind and among were the buildings where the more important commerce took
place. The lifeblood of Moth was here, not in the spectacular stalls below.
Every day the economies of a dozen worlds were traded away in the dingy back
'rooms and offices of those old-new structures. There the gourmet restaurants
catered to the rich sportsmen returning from the lakes, and turned up their
noses and shut their windows against the plebeian effluvia assailing them from
the food stalls below. There the taxidermists plied their noisome arts,
stuffing downy Yax'm pelts and mounting the ebony nightmare heads of the horned
Demmichin Devilope.
Beyond rose the apartment houses where the middle
and lower classes lived, those of the poorer characterized by few windows and
cracking plaster, and those of the better-off by the wonderful multistoried
murals painted by the gypsy artists, and by the brilliant azurine tiles which
kept the houses warm in winter and cool in summer. Still further off rose the
isolated tower groupings of the rich inurbs, with their hanging gardens and
reinforced crystal terraces. These soared loftily above the noise and clamour
of the commonplace, sparkling as jewelled giraffes amid each morning fog.
Rising from the centre of the city to dominate was
the great palace of the rulers of Drallar. Generations of kings had added to it
each stamping a section here, awing there, with his own personality. Therein
dwelt King Dewe Nog Na and his court. Sometimes he would take a lift to the
topmost minaret, and there, seated comfortably on its slowly revolving
platform, leisurely survey the impossible anthill that constituted his domain.
But the most beautiful thing about Moth was not
Drallar, with its jewelled towers and chromatic citizenry) nor the innumerable lakes
and forests, nor the splendid and variegated things that dwelt therein. It was
the planet itself. It was that which had given to it a name and made it unique
in the Arm. That which had first attracted men to the system. Ringed planets
were rare enough.
Moth was a. winged planet.
The 'wings' of Moth doubtless at one time had been a
perfect broad ring of the Saturn type. But at some time in the far past it had
been broken in two places - possibly the result of a gravitational stress, or a
change in the magnetic poles. No one could be certain. The result was an
incomplete ring consisting of two great crescents of pulverized stone and gas
which encircled the planet with two great gaps separating them. The crescents
were narrower near the planet, but out in space they spread out to a natural
fan shape due to the decreasing gravity, this forming the famed 'wing' effect.
They were also a good deal thicker than the ancient Saturnian rings, and
contained a higher proportion of fluorescent gases, The result was two gigantic
triangular shapes of a lambent butter-yellow springing out from either side of
the planet.
Inevitably, perhaps, the single moon of Moth was
designated Flame. Some thought it a trite appelation, but none could deny its
aptness. It was about a third again smaller than Terra's Luna, and nearly twice
as far away, It had one peculiar characteristic. It didn't 'burn' as the name
would seem to suggest, although it was bright enough. In fact, some felt the
label 'moon' to be altogether inappropriate, as Flame didn't revolve around its
parent planet at all but instead preceded it around the sun in approximately
the same orbit. So the two names stuck. The carrot leading a bejewelled ass,
with eternity forever preventing satisfaction to the latter. Fortunately the
system's discoverers had resisted the impulse to name the two spheres after the
latter saying. As were so many of nature's freaks, the two were too uncommonly
gorgeous to be so ridiculed.
The wing on Drallar's side was visible to Flinx only
as a thin glowing line, but he had seen pictures of it taken from space. He had
never been in space himself, at least, only vicariously, but had visited many
of the ships that landed at the Port. There at the feet of the older crewmen he
listened intently while they spun tales of the great KK ships that plied the
dark and empty places of the firmament, Since those monster interstellar craft
never touched soil, of course. He had never seen one in person. Such a landing
would never be made except in a dire emergency, and then never on an inhabited
planet. A Doublekay carried the gravity well of a small sun on its nose, like a
bee carrying pollen. Even shrunk to the tiny size necessary to make a simple
landing, that field would protect the great bulk of the ship. It would also
gouge out a considerable chunk of the planetary crust and set of all sorts of
undesirable natural phenomena, like tsunamis and hurricanes and such. So the
smaller shuttle ships darted yoyo like between, traveller and ground, carrying
down people and their goods, while the giant transports themselves remained in
Polyphemian exile in the vastnesses of black and cold.
He had wanted to space, but had not yet found a
valid reason to, and could not leave Mother Mastiff without anyone. Despite
unceasing bellows asserting to her good health she was a hundred and something.
To leave her alone simply for a pleasure trip was not a thought that appeared
to him.
He tugged his cloak tighter around his shoulders,
half-burying Pip in the folds of thick fur. As human-inhabited worlds go. Moth
was not an exceptionally cold planet, but it was far from tropical. He could
not rein ember the time when lie had not been greeted upon awakening by a wet
and clammy fog. It was a dependable but dampish companion. Here furs were used
more to shed water than to protect from bitter chill. It was cold, yes, but not
freezing. At least, it snowed only in winter.
Pip hissed softly and Flinx absently began feeding
him the raisins he'd plucked from the thisk-cake. The reptile gulped them down
whole, eagerly. It would have smacked its lips, if it had any. As it was, the
long tongue shot out and caressed Flinx's cheek with the delicate touch of a
diamond cutter. The mini drag's iridescent scales seemed to shine even brighter
than usual. For some reason it was especially fond of raisins. Maybe it
relished their iron content.
He glanced down at the plus window of his personal
card meter. They weren't broke, but neither were they swimming in luxury. Oh,
yes, it was definitely time to go to work!
From a counter of her variegated display booth,
Mother Mastif was pleading amiably with a pair of small, jeweled thranx
touristas. Her technique was admirable and competent. It ought to be, he
reflected. She'd had plenty of time in which to perfect it. He was only mildly
surprised at the insectoid's presence. Where humans go, thranx also, and
vicey-versy, don't you know? So went the children's rhyme. But they did look s
bit uncomfortable. Thranx loved the rain and the damp, and in this respect Moth
was perfect, but they also preferred a good deal less cold and more humidity.
Paradoxically, the air could be wet and to them still too dry. Every time a new
hothouse planet turned up they got ecstatic, despite the fact that such places
invariably possessed the most objectionable and bellicose environments. Like
any human youngster, he'd seen countless pictures of thranx planets: Hivehom,
their counterpart of Terra, and also the famous thranx colonies in the blazon
and Congo baisins on Terra itself. Why should humans wear themselves out in an
unfriendly climate when the thranx could thrive there? They had put those
inhospitable regions to far better use than man ever could or would have - as
had humans the Mediterranean Plateau on Hivehom.
Indeed, the Amalgamation had worked out very well
all around.
From the cut of their necklaces these two were
probably from Evoria. Anyhow the female's tiara and ovipositor glaze were dead
giveaways. Probably a hunting couple, hero for some excitement. There wasn't
much to attract thranx to Moth, other than recreation, politics, and the light
metals trade. Moth was rich in light metals, but deficient in many of the
heavier ones. Little gold, lead, uranium, and the like, But silver and
magnesium and copper in abundance. According to rumour, the giant thranx
Elecseed complex had plans to turn Moth into a leading producer of electrical
and thinkmachine components, much as they had Arnropolous. But so Far it had
remained only rumour. Anyway, inducing skilled thranx workers to migrate to
Moth would necessitate the company's best psycho publicists working day and
night, plus megacredits in hardship pay. Even off-world human workers would
find the living conditions unpalatable at best. He didn't think it likely. And
without native atomics there' d be a big power problem. Hydro-electricity was a
limited servant due to the lack of white water. It formed an intriguing
problem. How to generate enough electricity to run the plant to produce
electrical products?
All this musing put not credit hi one's account nor
bread in one's mouth.
'Sir and madame, what think ye on my wares? No
better of this type to be found this side of Shorttree, and damn little there.'
She fumbled, seemingly aimless, about her samples. 'Now here's an item that
might appeal to ye. What of these matched copper drink-jugs, eh? One for he and
one for she,' She held up two tall, thin, burnished copper thranx drinking
implements. Their sides were elaborately engraved and their spouts worked into
intricate spirals.
'Notice the execution, the fine scroll work, sir,'
she urged, tracing the delicate patterns with a wrinkled forefinger. 'I defy ye
to find better, yea, anywheres!'
The male turned to his mate. 'What do yon say, my dear?'
They spoke symbospeech, that peculiar mixture of Terran basic and thranx
click-hiss which had become the dominant language of commerce throughout the
Humanx Commonwealth and much of the rest of the civilized galaxy besides.
The female extended a handfoot and grasped the
utensil firmly by one of its double bandies. Her small, valentine-shaped head
inclined slightly at an angle in an oddly human gesture of appraisal as she ran
both truehands over the deeply etched surface. She said nothing, but instead
looked directly into her mate's eyes.
Flinx remained where he was and nodded knowingly at
the innocent smile on Mother Mastiff's face. He'd seen that predatory grin
before. The taste other mind furnished him with further inform a lion as to
what would inevitably Follow. Despite a century of intimate familiarity and
association with the thranx there still remained some humans who were unable to
interpret even the commoner nuances of thranx gesture and gaze, Mother Mastiff
was an expert and knew them all. Her eyes were bright enough to read the
capital letters flashing there: SALE.
The husband commenced negotiations in an admirably
of hand manner, 'Well ... perhaps something might be engendered ... we already
have a number of such baubles ... exorbitant prices ... a reasonable level ...'
'Level! You speak of levels?' Mother Mastiff's gasp
of outrage was sufficiently violent to carry the odour of garlic all the way to
where Flinx stood. The thranx, remarkably, ignored it. 'Good sir, I survive at
but a subsistence level now". The government takes all my money, and I
have left but it pittance, a pittance, sir, for my three sons and two
daughters!'
Flinx shook his head in admiration of Mother
Mastiff's unmatched style. Thranx offspring always came in multiples of two, an
inbred survival trait. With most things terrene and human there had been little
or no conflict, but due to a quirk of psychology the thranx could not help but
regard human odd-numbered births as both pathetic and not a little obscene.
'Thirty credits,' she finally sighed.
'Blasphemous!' the husband cried, his antennae
quivering violently. 'They are worth perhaps ten, and at that I flatter the
craftsman unmercifully.'
'Ten!' moaned Mother Mastiff, feigning a. swoon.
'Ten the creature says, and boasts of it I Surely ... surely, sir, you do not
expect me to consider such an offer seriously'. 'Tis not even successful as a
jest.'
Fifteen, then, and I should report you to the local
magistrate Even common thieves have the decency to work incognito.'
'Twenty-five. Sir, you, a cultured and wealthy
being, surely you can do better than taunt and make sport of an old female. One
who has doubtless fertilized as many eggs as you ..." The female had the
grace to lower her head and blush. The thranx were quite open about sex ...
their's or anyone else's ... but still, Flinx thought, there were lines over
which it was improper to step.
Good manners it might not have been, but in this
case at least it appeared to be good business. The male harrumphed awkwardly, a
deep, vibrant hum. 'Twenty, then.'
'Twenty-three five., and a tenth credit less I will
not say!' intoned Mother Mastiff. She folded her arms in a recognizable gesture
of finality.
'Twenty-one,' countered the male.
Mother Mastiff shook her head obstinately, immovable
as a Treewall. She looked ready to wait out entropy.
'Twenty-three five, not a tenth credit less. My last
and final offer, good sir. This pair will find its own market. I must survive,
and I fear I may have allowed you to sway me too far already.'
The male wouid have argued further, on principle if
for nothing else, but at that point the female put a truehand on his b-thorax,
just below the ear, and stroked lightly. That ending the bargaining.
'Ahhh, Dark Centres! Twenty-five ... no, twenty-three
five, then! Thief! Assaulter of reason! It is well known that a human would
cheat its own female-parent to make a half- credit!'
'And it is well known also,' replied Mother Mastiff
smoothiy as she processed the sale, 'that the thranx are the most astute bargainers
in the galaxy. You have gotten yourself a steal, sir, and so 'tis you and not I
the thief"
As soon as the exchange of credit had been
finalized, Flinx left his resting place by the old wall and strolled over to
the combination booth and home. The thranx had departed happily, antennae
entwined. On their mating flight'? The male, at least, had Seemed too old for
that. His chiton had been shading ever so slightly into deep blue despite the
obvious use of cosmetics, while the female had been a much younger aquamarine.
The thranx too took mistresses. In the moist air, their delicate perfume
lingered-
'Well, Mother,' he began. He was not indicating
parentage - she had insisted on that years ago - but using the title bestowed
on her by the folk of the markets. Everyone called her mother. 'Business seems
good.' She apparently had not noticed his approach and was momentarily
flustered. 'What? What? Oh, 'tis you, cub! Pah!' She gestured in the direction
taken by the departed thranx. 'Thieves the bugs are, to steal from me so I But
have I a choice?' She did not wait for-an answer. I am an old woman and must
sell occasionally to support myself, even at such prices, for who in this city
would feed me?' 'More likely, Mother, it would be you who would feed the city,
I saw you purchase those same mugspirals from Olin the Coppersmith not six days
ago... for eleven credits.' 'Ay? Harrumph,' she coughed. 'You must be mistaken,
boy. Even you can make a mistake now and then, you know. Um, have you eaten yet
today?'
'A thisk-cake
only.' 'Is that the way I raised ye, to live on sweets?' In her gratefulness
for a change of subject she feigned anger. 'And I'll wager ye gave half of it
to that damned snake of yours, anyway!' Pip raised his dozing head at that and
let out a mild hiss. Mother Mastiff did not like the minidrag and never had.
Few people did. Some might profess friendship, and after coaxing a few could
even be persuaded to pet it. But none could forget that its kind's poison could
lay a man dead in sixty seconds, and the antidote was rare. Flinx was never
cheated in business or pleasure when the snake lay curled about his shoulder.
'Gentle, Mother. He understands what you say, you know. Nor so much what as
why, really.' 'Oh surely, surely! Now claim intelligence for the monster!
Bewitched it is, perhaps. I believe it that latter, at least, for I can't deny
I've seen the thing react oddly, yes. But it does no work, sleeps constantly,
and eats prodigiously. You'd be far better off without it, lad.' He scratched
the minidrag absently behind the flat, scaly head. 'Your suggestion is not
humourful, Mother. Besides, it does work in the act ...'
'Gimmick,' she snorted, but not loudly.
'And as to its sleeping and easing habits, it is an
alien tiling and has metabolic requirements we cannot question. Most
importantly, I like it and ... and it likes me.'
Mother Mastiff would have argued further except that
they had gone through uncounted variations of this very argument over the
years. No doubts dog or one of the local domesticated running-birds would have
made a more efficacious pet for a small boy, but when she'd taken in the
maltreated youngster Mother Mastiff'd had no credits for dogs or birds. Flinx
had stumbled on the minidrag himself in the alley behind their first shack,
rooting in a garbage heap for meats and sugars. Being ignorant of its identity
he'd approached it openly and unfearing. She'd found the two huddled together
in the boy's bed the following morning. She had hefted a broom and tried to
shoo it off, but instead of being frightened the thing had opened its mouth and
hissed threateningly at her. That initial attempt constituted her first and
last physical effort at separating the two.
The relationship was an unusual one and much
commented upon, the more so since Alaspin was many parsecs away and none could
recall having heard of a minidrag living unconfined off its native world
before. It was widely surmised that it had been the pet of some space trader
and had gotten loose at the shuttleport and escaped. Since the importation of
poisonous animals was a felony on most planets, Moth included, few were
surprised that the original owner had not made noisy efforts to reclaim his
property. In any case it had banned no one (Flinx knew otherewise, and better
than to boast the fact) and so none in the marketplace protested its presence
to the authorities, although all wished with a passion it would go elsewhere.
He moved to change the subject.
'How are you equipped for credit, Mother?'
'Fah! Poorly, as always. But,' and this with a sly,
small grin, I should be able to manage for a while off that last transaction.'
Id wager,' he chucked. He turned to survey the
chromaticalllly coloured crowd which flowed unceasingly around and in front of
the little shop, trying to gauge the proportion of wealthy tourists among the
everyday populace. The effort, as usual, made his head ache.
'A normal day's passings or not, Mother?'
'Oh, there's money out there now, all right! I can
smell it. But it declines to come into my shop. Better luck to you, perhaps
lad'
'Perhaps.' He walked out from under the awning and
mounted the raised dais to the left of the shop. Carefully he set about
rearranging the larger pots and pans which formed the bulk of Mother Mastiff's
cheaper inventory to give himself sufficient room to work.
His method of enticing an audience was simple and
timeworn. He took four small brana balls from a pocket and began to
juggle them. These were formed from the sap of a tree that grew only in Moth's
equatorial belt. Under the sun's diffused UV they pulsed with a faint yellow
light. They were per Feet for his needs, being solid and of a uniform
consistency. A small crowd began to gather. He added a fifth ball now, and
began to vary the routine by tossing them behind his back without breaking
rhythm. The word was passed outwards like invisible tentacles, occasionally
snatching fin of her person here, another there, from the fringes of the
shuffling mob. Soon be bad acquired his own substantial little island of
watchful beings. He whispered softy to the minidrag, almost buried in the soft
fur.
'Up, boy.'
Pip uncurled himself from Flinx's shoulder,
unfurling his leathery wings to their fullest extent. In spite of its rarity
the crowd recognized the lethal shape and drew back. The snake soared into the
air and performed a delicate, spiraling descent, to settle like a crown around
the boy's head. It then proceeded to catch each ball arid toss it high into the
air, changing the shape but not the rhythm of the act. The unbroken fluorescent
trail took on a more intricate weave. A mild pattering of applause greeted this
innovation. Jugglers were more than common in Drallar, but a young one who
worked so deftly with a poisonous reptile was not. A few coins landed on the
platform, occasionally bouncing metallically off the big pans. More applause
and more coins when the snake flipped all five balls, one after another, into a
small basket at the rear of the dais.
'Thank you, thank you, gentlebeings!’ said Flinx,
bowing theatrically, thinking, now for the real part of the act. 'And now, for
your information, mystification, and elucidation ... and a small fee' (mild
laughter), 'I will endeavour to answer any question, any question, that any one
in the audience, regardless of his race or planet of origin, would care to
tempt me with.'
There was the usual sceptical murmuring from the
assembly, and not a few sighs of boredom.
' All the change in my pocket,' blurted a merchant
in the first row, 'if you can tell me how much there is!' He grinned amid some
nervous giggling from within the crowd.
Fiinx ignored the sarcasm in the man's voice and
stood quietly, eyes tightly shut. Not that they had to be. He could 'work'
equally as well with them wide open. It was a piece of pure showmanship which the
crowds always seemed to expect. Why they expected him to look inward when he
had to look outwards remained ever-puzzling So him. He had
no real idea how his answers came to him. One minute
his mind was empty, fuzzy, and the next ... sometimes ... an answer would
appear. Although 'appear' wasn't quite right either. Many times he didn't even
understand the questions, especially in the case of alien questioners. Or the
answers. Fortunately that made no difference to the audience. He could not have
promised interpretations. There!
'Good sir, you have in your pocket four tenth
pieces, two hundredth pieces ... and a key admitting you & certain club
that...'
'Stop, stop!' The man was waving his gnarled hands
frantically and glancing awkwardly at those in the crowd nearest him. That will
do! I am convinced.' He dug into his pocket, came out with a handful of change,
thrust the troublesome key back out of sight of the curious who leaned close
for a look. He started to hand over the coins, then paused almost absently, a
look of perplexity on his face. It changed slowly to one of surprise.
'By Pali's tide-bore, the whelp is right! Forty-two
hundredths. He's right!' He hand ad over the corns and left, mumbling to
himself.
Flying coins punctuated the crowd's somewhat nervous
applause. Flinx judged their mood expertly. Belief had about pulled even with
derision. There were naturally those who suspected the merchant of being a
plant. They granted he was a very convincing one.
"Come, come, gentlebeings! What we have here is
larvae plav. Surely there are those among you with questions worth tempting my
simple skill'?'
A being at the hack of the crowd, a Quillp in full
postmating plumage, craned its thin ostrichlike neck forward and asked in a
high, squeaky voice, 'In what summer-month my hatchlings come a-bout will?'
'I am truly sorry, sir, but that is a question that
involves the future, and I am not a clairvoyant.' The creature sighed unhappily
and prepared to leave the gathering. At this sign of mortality on Flinx's part
a number of others seemed inclined to go with the tall Ornithorpe. Flinx said
hurriedly, 'But I hope fervent all five of your hatchlings successful are!'
The Quillp whirled in surprise and turned goggling eyes
on the small stage. 'How did you know that number my Circle had?' In its
excitement it spoke in its native tongue and had to be reminded by a neighbour
to shift to symbo-speech.
I make it a policy not to reveal professional
secrets.' Flilix yawned with calculated elaboration. 'Come, a real question,
gentle beings. I bore quickly. Miracles I cannot produce, though, and they
usually bore anyway.' Two humans, big, muscular fellows, were pushing their way
ungently to the stage. The one on Flinx's left wore glasses-not for their
antique therapeutic value, but because in some current fashion circles it was
considered something of a fad. He extended a credcard.
'Can you accept this, boy?'
Flinx bridled at the 'boy.' but extracted his card
meter. "Indeed I can, sir. Ask your question.'
The man opened his mouth, paused. 'How do I know
what to pay you?'
I can't set value on my answers, only on your
question. Whatever you deem it worth, sir. If I give no answer I will refund
your credits.' He gestured to where the minidrag rested alertly on his
shoulder. 'My pet here seems to have a feel for the emotional states of others
which is quite sensitive. Even more so than myself. A swindler, for example,
exudes something that he is especially sensitive to. I am rarely swindled.'
The man smiled without mirth. I wonder why'?' He
dialled a setting on the card, extended it again. 'Will a hundred credits do?'
Flinx was quick to stifle his reaction. A hundred
credits! That was more than he sometimes made in a month! For a moment he was
tempted to lower the figure, mindful of the laugh Mother Mastiff might have if
she Found out. Especially after his comments on her priceings this morning.
Then he reminded himself that, after all, the man had set the price and surely
would not cheat himself. He tried but could detect no trace; of humour about
the man. Nor his companion. Quite the contrary. And he hadn't heard the
question yet. What if he couldn't answer it?
'A ... a hundred credits would be most satisfactory,
sir.' The man nodded and stuck his card in the little black meter. The compact
machine hummed softly and the amount, one-oh-oh-zero-zero, clicked into place
on its tiny dial. There was a. brief pause and then it buzzed once, the red
light on its top glowing brightly. It noted that the amount of so-and-so, card
number such-and-such, was good for the amount dialled, and that credits
numbering one hundred (100) had been transferred to the account of one Philip
Lynx (his given name in the city records) in the Royal Depository of the sovereign
Republic of Moth. Flinx returned the box to its place in his pouch and looked
back to the two expectant men.
'Ask your question, sirs.'
'My co in pan ion and I are searching for a man ...a
friend... whom we know to be somewhere in this part of the city, hut whom we
have been unable as yet to contact.'
'What is there distinctive about him?' Flinx asked
from under closed eyes.
The other man spoke for the First time. His voice
revealed an impatience that his mind confirmed. It was brusque and low-pitched.
"He is not tall ... thin, has red hair like your-self, only darker and
tightly curled. Also his skin is not so dark us yours, it is mottled, and he
has wet eyes.'
That helped. Redheads were not plentiful in Drailar,
and ihe reference to 'wet eyes' indicated a man with a high Sexual potential.
The combination ought to be easy to locate. Flinx began to feel more confident,
Still, Drallar was large. And there was the shuttleport to consider too.
'Not enough. What else?'
The two looked at each other. Then the bigger one
spoke again. 'This man is dressed in navigator's clothes. He has with him ...
probably on his person ... a small map. A star map. It is hand "drawn and
very unprofessional looking. He usually keeps it in his blouse, which bulges
slightly in consequence.'
Flinx concentrated harder. So, a shift in the
internal abstract, an angle resolved ... He opened his eyes, looked up in
suprise. His gaze roved over the rear of the silent crowd and came to rest on
an individual at the back. A red headed man, not tall, with mottled skin, wet
eyes, and a slight bulge over his heart. Not surprisingly, Flinx sensed paper
therein. As soon as their eyes met the map's went wide. He broke and plunged
into the market mob. At the ensuing commotion the big man turned his head and
strained to see through the mass. He clasped a hand on his companion's shoulder
and pointed urgently. They started out in the direction of the disturbance,
forcing the other members of the assembly out of their way with far more
strength than tact.
Flinx almost called to them, but the action turned
to a shrug instead. If this form of an answer satisfied the two, he certainly
wasn't going to argue the matter. A hundred credits! Without even committing
himself. And the loose coin on the dais for Mother Mastiff. He waved an
impulsive band at the crowd.
'Thank you ever so for your attention, gentlebeings.
For today, at least, the show is over.'
The assemblage began to melt back into the flow of
traffic, accompanied by not a few groans of disappointment from would-be
questioners. With the unexpected dramatic build-up he had been given by the two
strangers he probably could have milked the remainder for a pile, but his gift
was capricious and possessed of a tendency to tire him quickly. Best to halt with
an unchallenged success. This windfall entitled him to a serious celebration,
and he was already impatient to get on with it.
'Pip, if we could take in what we took today on a
regular basis, the king would make me royal treasurer and you his official guardian.
The snake hissed non-committally, the jet-black eyes staring, up at him. Ink
boiled in those tiny poolings. Apparently government work didn't have much
appeal.
'And you are no doubt hungry again.' This produced a
more positive hiss, and Flinx chuckled, scratching the mini-drag under its
leather-soft snout. 'That's what I thought. However, I feel that something of a
more liquid nature is in order for myself. So we will make our way over to
Small Symm's, and I will guzzle spiced beer, and you may have all the pretzels
your venomous little carcass will hold!' the snake wagged its tail at this,
which involved its quivering all over, since it was mostly tail in the first
place.
As they made their way over the cobblestone back
street he began mentally to reproach himself for not playing the crowd longer.
He still felt that to overuse his talent would he to burn it out. But there
were times when one had to be businesslike as we11 as cautious, a point Mother
Mastiff had made to him many times. Still, he had slept late today and gotten
started later than was usual. It would probably have proved difficult to bold
the crowd much longer anyway. In Diallar darkness had a tendency to disperse
people rapidly, and it was even now quite black out. Besides, be had a hundred
credits in his pocket! Effectively, not actually, since it was in his account
at the depository. So why worry? Did the sun fight to gather new hydrogen?
He had almost reached the dimly lit bar when he
tasted the sounds. They came filtering out of the alleyway to his left a hole
dark as the gullet of a giant pseudo-sturgeon from one of the Great Northern
Lakes. It sounded very much like a fight. A questing probe brought back
overtones of fear/anger/terror/greed/bloodlust. Fighting in fun was accompanied
by much cursing and shouting. None were uttered in a battle to the death since
the participants were too busy and too intent of purpose to waste the breath.
only humans fought quite that silently, so he knew they were not a part of the
city's alien populace. There was that peculiar muteness of thought ...
Flinx did not mix in such conflicts. In a city like
Drallar where fat bellies and empty purses coexisted in abundance, one's own
business remained healthy so long as one minded it. He had taken one step
towards the peace of the bar when Pip uncoiled himself from his shoulder and
streaked into the alley.
Even at his comparatively young age, Flinx could
curse fluently in fourteen languages. He had time for only five before he was
hurtling into the blackness after his pet. It was only in precaution that he
drew the thin stiletto from its boot sheath without breaking stride.
Now he could perceive three forms in the dim light
from the cloud-masked stars and the city-glow. Two were large and stood
upright. The other was slight of build and lay with a recognizable stillness on
the ground. One of the others bent over the prostrate body. Before it could
carry out its unknown purpose, it jerked and roared loudly in the quiet.
'GODDAMN!'
The man began flailing wildly at a thin, leathery
shape which dived and swooped at his head, The other pulled the wicked shape of
a neuronic pistol from a shoulder cup and tried to sight on the rapidly moving
object. Flinx had no time to think. With vague thoughts of forcing the man to
the ground and knocking him out, be leaped on to the man's back. The thick
ropes of broad muscle he felt beneath the man's blouse rapidly squelched that
idea. The man lurched. In another second he'd be smashed against the wall of
the nearest building. The thin blade plunged once, instinctively. The big man
buckled horribly and crashed to the ground like a great tree. Flinx had already
left the dead hulk before it reached the pavement,
The other whirled, to meet this new menace as his
companion pitched forward on to his face. Cursing, he fired in Flinx's
direction. Rolling-like mad, the youth had made the cover of a broken metal
crate, Fortunately the man's night vision didn't seem as good as his own. Even
so, the near miss sent a painful tingle up his leg. An almost-hit with the ugly
weapon would cause a man literally to shake himself to death in a series of
uncontrollable muscular spasms, A direct hit to the heart or brain would kill
instantly. Supposedly such weapons were outlawed on Moth. Obviously the law
could be circumvented. The man rayed the area to his left. It was a mistake.
Unhampered, Pip had the time he needed. The mini drag spat once.
It was not a gesture of defiance, but of death. The
flying snakes or 'miniature dragons' of Alaspin are akin to a few other
carnivorous creatures. Among these is the Hema-chacus, or spitting
cobra, of Terra. The latter has Forward-facing fangs and instead of injecting
its venom via a bite, can spit it to a surprising distance with remarkable
accuracy. The Alaspinian minidrags, however, have no fangs. Only small cutting
teeth for biting. Little work has actually been done on them on their seldom
visited planet, but they apparently, eject their poison through a narrowing
tube of cartilaginous material running along the roof of the mouth. Muscles
running the length of the jaw and along the neck force the venom even further
than the Terran types, and with greater accuracy. Fortunately the minidrag has
a relatively mild disposition and attacks only when threatened. Pip's actions
were therefore unusual but not incomprehensible.
The man gave vent to a shockingly shrill,
soul-tearing scream and sank to his knees, clawing at his eyes. The venom was
corrosive as well as killing. It was not fatal unless it got into the bloodstream,
and so by rubbing at his eyes the man effectively killed himself. In thirty
seconds he had become incapable of even that.
In another thirty he was incapable of doing anything
at all, Pip returned to his familiar resting place. As he settled his coils around
Flinx's shoulder, the boy could feel the unnatural tension in the reptile's
muscles, There was a brief urge to bawl the minidrag out good and proper, but
his narrow escape and the fact that the snake had once again saved his life put
it off. Time pressed. Still shaking slightly from muscular reaction of his own,
he crept from his hiding place to the results of an undesired action.
The only sounds in the alley were the ruffling
whispers made by the always moist air flowing over the silk-cool stones and the
steady plop, plop, plop of blood flowing from the wound in the back of the man
the stiletto had finished. There remained the third body. In spite of
everything, he bad been too late to help the small man. His neck had been
broken cleanly. Unmoving, the sightless eyes reflected the silent stars.
There was just sufficient light for him to make out
the man's brilliant red hair.
A crumpled piece of plastic lay clutched in a
spasmodically Frozen hand. Flinx pried it from his grasp, bending open the
lifeless but still stubborn fingers. Above him lights began to come on as the
cautious inhabitants of the alleyway decided it was safe to trust their
precious selves to the quiet uncertainty of the night. Prudence had been seized
and now curiosity had taken over. It was time for him to leave. Now that the
locals had bestirred themselves and the action had been resolved the local
constabulary would be arriving. Although they would take their time, they would
get here none the less. It would not do to be found standing over three
lifeless bodies, all of them blatantly out world. Especially when one of them
had registered a hundred credits to his account only this afternoon.
He didn't like stealing from the dead, but anything
that small that could cause the death of three men in one night was too
important to leave to the discretion of the police. Without more than a casual
glance at it, he shoved the rumpled sheet into his pouch.
The police arrived shortly after lie had exited the
mouth of the alley. A sudden increase in the babble of thoughts and voices told
him that the bodies had been discovered. For locals action was time-defined and
pedantic. When the police discovered that the three corpses were outworlders, a
search pattern would be put into effect with small delay. Murder was not
conducive to increased tourism. He hurried a mite faster towards the bar.
Small Symm's establishment was notable not so much
for its food and drink, hut rather for the reputation it enjoyed as being one
of the few places in Drallar where a being could go at night, get comfortably
drunk, and still be assured of retaining the same amount of body fluid that he
held commenced the evening with. Small Symm himself was well aware of the
business this favourable standing attracted to his place and so laboured
mightily to maintain it. He did not know it, but if his business had been a
country on Terra several odd centimes ago, it would have been called
Switzerland.
As Small Symm stood well over two metres tall and
weighed in the neighbourhood of a hundred and fifty kilos, few felt inclined to
dispute his neutrality. Those who had yearnings to contented them selves with
imbibing elsewhere and commenting on the inordinate size of the barkeeps ears.
There were no drinking laws on Moth. Only sober
ones, as the saying went. As far as the judges were concerned one could proceed
directly from the mother's breast to a bottle of Old Yeast-Bubble's best mash
brew liquor. The end result of this oft-commented upon degenerate policy was a
thriving local industry and a surprisingly small number of alcoholics.
However, there had been a few who had commented at
times on Flinx's comparative youth and thereby questioned his right to imbibe
fermented spirits. One particular person, a travelling sin spinner from
Puritan, had been especially obnoxious in this respect. Small Symm had lumbered
over and politely advised the fellow to mind his own business.
Holding fast to the tenets of his faith (and being a
bit tipsy himself), the man had told Symm in no uncertain terms what he could
do with his suggestions. The next thing he knew, his right arm had been neatly
broken in two places. As gently as possible. The outworlder bad gone straight
to the police and the police had objected ... after all, an outworlder,
respected ... but not too vigorously. Especially after Symm had picked up their
paddycraft and jammed it immovably into a sewer opening. After that Flinx and
Symm both found themselves little troubled by minions of either God or Cop.
The giant was pleased to see him. Not the least of
the things they had in common was the tact both were technically orphans.
'A dry hearth, young master! And how does the world
find you tonight!'
Flinx took the seat at the end of the bar. It finds
me well enough, enormous one. Well enough so that I will have a bottle of your
very finest Burrberry beer, and a cauldron of pretzels for my friend.'
He rubbed the snake under the jaw and Pip's eyes
slitted in appreciation. There were times when he would swear he could hear the
thing purr. But since no one else could, he never made it a point of
discussion.
Symm's eyebrows went Lip slightly. Burrberry was
expensive, and potent. He is far more concerned about the youth's ability to
handle the former, however. The red ale was imported all the way from Crnkk, a
thranx planet, and packed quite a kick for even a full-grown human. But he
fetched it, and the pretzels for the minidrag.
When he returned, the snake did not wait for an
invitation, but dived immediately into the bowl and began wa11owning around in the
salty twists, its tongue darting and flicking with machinelike rapidity at the
big halite crystals. Like many things in Draliar, even the pretzels disdained
subtlety. Flinx reflected again that for an undeniably carnivorous animal, his
pet was notoriously fond of grain products. The mini drag's culinary
adaptability had been one reason why it had been able to thrive so well in the
city. There had been times when meat had been scarce, and vermin as well, and
he and Mother Mastiff had watched in wonderment as the reptile happily downed
large portions of salted bread or pime, the cheap cornlike growths that
infested many of Moth's softwoods.
Flinx hefted the delicately formed bottle and poured
the cherry-red brew, watching it foam pinkly over the lip of the mug. Brewing
was one of the thranx's most polished abilities. It was too late for the few
perpetual drunkards and too early for most night crawlers. Small Symm satisfied
himself that his other customers were taken care of and hunkered himself over
the bar, leaning on crossed arms like hirsute trees. He watched silently as the
boy downed a long draught of the effervescent liquid, then began from the
remainder with short, caressing sips. Now and then a satisfied! hiss would come
from the region to their right, among the pretzels.
The barkeep's eyebrows jumped again when Flinx
elected to pay for the nourishments in coin. 'Business has been so good, then?'
'It has, it has. Believe it or not old friend, I
made a hundred credits today. Honestly, too" The recent memory of three
bodies in an alley came back to him. 'Although now I am not so glad I did,
maybe.'
'That is & strange thing to say.' The giant
poured himself a tiny yttrium cognac. 'I am happy for you, but somewhat
disappointed also, for it will mean that you will not need the job I've lined
up for you.'
'Oh? Don't be in such a hurry, massive one. And
don't try to psych me, either. I am solvent at the moment, true, but money has
a tendency to slip unnoticed from my fingers. I give too much away also. And I
have the old woman to think of, although by now she might own the city
fountains, despite her protestations of poverty.'
'Ah, Mother Mastiff, of course. Well, possibly you
would be interested, then. I can at least promise you some intriguing company.'
He gestured behind Flinx. 'The third booth. Two most extraordinary personates.'
Flinx turned to look at the small, cloth-covered
booths winch lined the back of the establishment. Business and pleasure,
sometimes mixed, were often conducted in those shrouded enclaves. He peered
harder in the fuzzy light. Most people could not have discerned anything at
even that short distance, but Flinx did not look with his eyes alone, Yes,
there were indeed two figures in the indicated booth. And yes, from what he
could see of them they did form an odd pair.
One was a very tail human. His face was not sallow,
but composed mostly of acute angles, Like knife blades protruding out from
under the skin. His hair seemed to be greying at the temples and back, a
natural turning of colour, and one streak of pure white ran all the way from
front to back. The eyes were sharply slanted, almost mongoloid, and as black as
most of his hair. They were made to appear mildly incongruous by the bushy
eyebrows which met over the bridge of the nose. The mouth was small and
thin-lipped, and the body, while not skinny, had the slenderness of careful
diet more than vigorous exercise. He was heavily tanned on the visible portions
of his body, the tan that Flinx had come to recognize as belonging to men who
had been long in space and exposed to greater amounts of naked ultraviolet than
most.
If the man was unusual, his companion was twice so
Although Flinx had not seen so very many thranx for they did not congregate in
Drallar, he had seen enough to know til at the one lounging across from the man
was by far the oldest he'd ever come across. Its chiton had Faded from a normal
healthy pale blue to a deep purple that was almost black. The antennae drooped
to the sides and were scaly at the base. Even at this distance he could
perceive how the shell below the wing cases (both sets were present: un' mated,
then) was exfoliating. Only the glowing, jewel-like compound eyes glittered
with a gold that signified youth and vigour. A pity that he could not perceive
even deeper.
The cloth effectively cut off their conversation at
this distance, but now and then the insect would make a gesture with a truehand
and the human would nod solemnly in response. Flinx found the iiquor hampering
him. Almost angrily, he turned back to his friend.
'You were right, Symm. An odd coupling to find
here.'
'They've been in every night for four nights running
now, and they drink steadily, although it seems to have about as much effect on
them as water. But to the point. As is plain to a Mottl-bird, they arc
strangers here. Yesterday they first began inquiring after a guide, saying that
they wish to see more of the city. I was at a loss to help them until I thought
of you. But now, since you are grown as rich as the king ...'
'No, no. Wait.' Flinx was feeling expansive. Perhaps
it was the beer. 'They should be good for a few stories, if nothing else. Yes.
I'll assume the conveyance.'
Symm grinned and ruffled the boy's hair roughly.
'Good I thought a glimpse of them might persuade you, as your interest in
things off-world is notorious. Why it should be, though, the Tree knows! Wait
here, I'll go tell them.'
He went out from behind the bar and over to the
booth. Through the faintly puce haze induced by the beer he could see the giant
part the curtain and murmur to the two beings within.
'Well,' he muttered to himself. 'One thing's
helping, any-ways. At least they're not common tourists. Perhaps I'll be spared
the agony of watching them chortle over buying ship-loads of junk at three
times the honest price.' He made a sound that was a long hiss ending in a
popped bubble. A scaly, smug head popped up from the bowl of demolished pixels,
which had shrunken considerably in volume. The minidrag slid out on to the
table and up the proffered arm, curling into its familiar position on Flinx's
shoulder. It burped once, sheepishly.
Symm returned with the two off-worlders in tow.
'This youth is called Flinx, sirs, and offers to be your guide. A finer or more
knowledgeable one cannot be found in the city. Do not be misled by his
comparative youth, for he has already acquired more information than is good
for him.'
Here at close range Flinx was able to study his two
charges better. He did so, intently. The tail human was a fair sixth metre
shorter than the huge Symm, but the thranx was truly a giant of its kind. With
its upper body raised as it was now, its eyes were almost on a level with
Flinx's own. The entire insect was a full two metres long. One and a half was
normal for a male of the species. That their eyes were busy in their own
scrutiny of him he did not mind. As a performer he was more than used to that.
But he found himself looking away from those great golden orbs. Meeting them
was too much like staring into an ocean of shattered prisms. He wondered what
it was like to view life that way, through a thousand tiny eyes instead of
merely two large ones.
When the man spoke, it was with a surprisingly
melodious voice. 'How do you do, youngster. Our good dispenser of spirits here
informs us that you are practically Indispensabie to one who wishes to see:
something of your city.'
He extended a hand and Flinx shook it, surprised at
the calluses there. As the enacts of the mildly hallucinogenic brew wore off,
he became increasingly, aware of the uniqueness of the two beings he was going
to be associating with each exuded an aura of something he'd not encountered
before, even in his wanderings among the denizens of the shuitle-port.
'My name is Tse-Mallory .. Bran. And this, my companion is the Eint Truzenzuzex.'
The insect bowed from the 'waist' at the
introduction, a swooping, flowing motion not unlike that of a lake-skimmer
diying for a surface swimming fish, Another surprise: it spoke Terranglo, instead
of symbospeech. Hero was a learned and very polite bug indeed! Few thranx had
the ability to master more than a few elementary phrases of Terrangio. Its
inherent logical inconsistencies tended to give them headaches. The insect's
pronunciation, however, was as good as his own. The rasping quality of it was
made unavoidable by the different arrangement of vocal cords.
'High metamorphosis to you, youth. We've been in
need of a guide to this confusing city of yours for several days, actually.
We're very glad you've agreed to help us out of our difficulty.'
'I'll do what I can, gentlesirs. 'This flattery was
embarrassing.
'We would prefer to start at dawn tomorrow,' said
Tse-Mallory. 'We're here on business, you see, and a more intimate acquaintance
with the city is a prerequisite which we have put off" too long already.
We were expecting a guide to meet us, actually, but since he has apparently
changed his mind, you will have the commission.'
'We are staying at a small inn a short distance down
this same street..' added Truzenzuzex. It's sign is three fishes and...'
'... a
starship. I know the place, sir I'll meet you at first-fog - seven hours
- tomorrow, in the lobby.' The two shook hands with him once again and made as
if to take their leave. Flinx coughed delicately but insistency. 'Uh, a small
detail, sirs.'
Tse-Mallory paused. 'Yes?'
'There is the matter of payment.'
The thranx made the series of rapid clicking sounds
with its mandibles which passed for laughter among its kind. The insects had a highly
developed, sometimes mischievous sense of humour.
'So! Our guide is a plutocrat as well! No doubt as a
larvae you were a hopeless sugar-hoarder. How about this, then? At the
conclusion of our tour tomorrow - I daresay one day will be sufficient for our
purposes - we will treat you to a meal at the finest constabulary in the food
crescent.'
Well! Let's see now, twelve courses at Portio's
would come to ... well! His mouth was watering already.
That'll be great ... sufficient, I mean, sirs.'
Indeed, it would!
Flinx
was of course not a guide by profession, but he knew ten times as much about
the real Drallar as the bored government hirelings who conducted the official
tours of the city's high spots for bemused off-worlders. He'd performed this
function for other guests of Small Symm more than once in the past.
These, however, had proved themselves rather outré touristas.
He showed them the great central marketplace, where goods from half-way across
the Arm could be found. They did not buy. He took them to the great gate of Old
Drallar, a monumental arch carved from water-pure silicon dioxide by native
craftsmen, and so old it was not recorded in the palace chronicles. They did
not comment. He took them also to the red towers where the fantastic flora of
Moth grew lush in greenhouses under the tender ministrations of de dieted royal
botanists. Then to' the tiny, out-of-the-way places, where could be bought the
unusual, the rare, and the outlawed. Jewelled dishware, artwork, weaponry,
utensils, gems, rare earths and rare clothings, tickets to anywhere. Scientific
instruments, scientists, females or other sexes of any species. Drugs:
medicinal, hallucinogenic, deadly, preservative. Thoughts and palm-readings.
Only rarely did either of them say this or that small flung about their
surroundings. One might almost have thought them bored.
Once it was at an antique cartographer's, and then
in a language incomprehensible to the multilinguistic Flinx.
Yes, for two who had seemed so needful of a guide,
they had thus far shown remarkably little interest in their surroundings. They
seemed far more interested in Flinx and Pip than in the city he was showing
them. As late afternoon. rolled around he was startled to realize how much they
had learned about him through the most innocent and indirect questioning. Once,
when Truzenzuzex had leaned forward to observe the minidrag more closely, it
had drawn hack wanly and curled its head out of sight behind Flinx's neck. That
itself was an oddity. The snake's normal reaction was usually either passivity
or belligerence. This was the first time Flinx could recall it's displaying
uncertainty. Apparently Truzenzuzex made little of the incident) but he never
tried to approach the reptile closely again.
‘You are an outstanding guide and a cheerful
companion,'the thranx said, 'and I for one count my self fortunate to have you
with us.' They had moved along until they were now quite a distance from the
city's centre. Truzenzuzex gestured ahead to where the tower homes of the very
wealthy stretched away in landscaped splendour. 'Now we would wish to see the
manicured grounds and hanging gardens of Drallar's inurbs, of which we have
both heard so much.'
I'm afraid I cannot manage that, sir. The grounds of
Braav murb are closed to such as I, and there are ground-keepers - with guns -
who are posted by the walls to keep the common folk from infesting the greens.'
'But you do know the ways within?' prodded
Tse-Mallory.
'Well,' Flinx began hesitantly. After all, what did
he really know of those two? 'At night I have sometimes found it necessary to
... but it is not night now, and we would surely be seen going over the walls.'
'Then we shall go through the gate. Take us,' he
said firmly, shutting off Flinx's incipient protests, 'and we will worry about
getting past the guards.'
Flinx shrugged, irritated by the man's stubbornness.
Let them learn their own way, then. But he mentally added an expensive dessert
to the evening's meal. He led them to the first gateway and stood in the
background while the large, overbearing man who lounged in the little building
there came over towards them, grumbling noticeably.
It was now that the most extraordinary event of the
day took place. Before the obviously antagonistic fellow could so much as utter
a word, Truzenzuzex put a truehand into a pouch and-thrust under the man's eyes
a card taken from somewhere inside- The man's eyes widened and he all but
saluted, the belligerence melting from his attitude like wax. Flinx had never,
never seen an inurb guard, a man widely noted for his cultivated rudeness and
suspicious mannerisms, react so helplessly to anyone, not even the residents of
the inurbs themselves. He grew even more curious as to the nature of his
friends. But they remained basically unreadable. Damn that beer! It
seemed to him that he had heard the name Tse-Maltory somewhere before, but he
couldn't be certain. And he would have given much for a glimpse of the card
Truzenzuzex had so negligently flashed before the guard.
The way was now quite unopposed. He would at least
have the opportunity of seeing some familiar things for the first time in the
light of day. At leisure, too, without having to glance continually over his
shoulder.
They strolled silently amid the emerald parklike
grounds and tinkling waterfalls, occasionally passing some richly dressed
inhabitant or sweating underling, sometimes startling a deer or phylope among
the bushes.
I understand,' said Tse-Mallory, breaking the
silence, 'that each tower belongs to one family, and is named thusly.'
'That's true enough.' replied Flinx.
'And arc you familiar with them?'
'Most, not all. Since you are curious, I'll name the
ones I do know as we pass them.'
'Do that.' It seemed silly, but they were paying, so
who was he to argue the practicality? A fine wine joined the dinner menu ...
'.. and this,' he said as they drew abreast of a
tail black-glazed tower, 'is the House of Malaika. A misnomer, sir. As I
understand, it means "angel" in a dead Terran language.'
'No Terran language is "dead,"' said Tse-Mallory
cryptically, Then. 'He who is named Maxim?'
'Why, yes. I know because I've performed here for
parties, several times past. This next, the yellow ... '
But they weren't listening, he saw. Both had halted
by the black tower and were staring upwards to where the rose-tinted crystal
proto-porches encircled the upper stories and over hung the lush greenery of
the hanging vines and air-shrubs.
‘It is fortuitous,’ he heard Truzenzuzex remark, 'that
you know each other. It might or might not facilitate certain matters. Come. we
shall pay a call on your Mister Malaika.'
Flinx was completely taken aback. Was this why they
had hired him in the first place? To come this far to an impossibility? Next to
the king and his ministers, the trader families of Drallar, nomads who had
taken their talents off planet, were the wealthiest and most powerful
individuals on the planet. And some might possibly be wealthier, for the extent
of the great fortunes was not a subject into which even the monarch could
inquire with impunity.
It is a slight acquaintance only, sirs! What makes
you believe he will do anything but kick us out? What makes you believe he'll
even see us?'
'What makes you think we can enter an oh-so-restricted
inurb?' replied Truzenzuzex confidently. 'He will see us.'
The two began to head up the paved walkway towards
the great arch of the tower entrance and Flinx, exasperated and puzzled, had
little choice but to follow.
The double doorway of simple carved crystal led to a
domes hallway that was lined with statuary and paintings and mindgrams which
even Flinx's untrained eye could recognize as being of great value. There, at
the far end, was a single elevator.
They halted before the platinum-in laid wood. A
woman's voice greeted them mechanically from a grid set off to one side.
'Good afternoon, gentlebeings, and welcome to the
House of Malaika. Please to state your business.'
Now they would finish this foolishness! The message
was all very nicely put, the surroundings pleasant. Out of the corner of an eye
he could see a screen, delicately painted, ruffling in the slight breeze of the
chamber's ventilators. Beyond which no doubt the muzzle of a laser-cannon or
other inhospitable device was already trained on them. It was comfortably cool
in the hall, but. he felt himself none the less beginning to sweat.
'Ex-chancellor second sociologist Bran Tse-Mallory
and first pililosoph the Ent Truzenzuzex present their compliments to Maxim of
the House of Malaika and would have converse with him if he is at home and so
disposed.'
Flinx's mind parted abruptly from thoughts of making
a run for the entrance. No wonder they'd gotten past the gate guard so easily!
A churchman and a pure scientist. Highranked at that, although Tse-Mallory had
said 'ex'. Chancellor second -that was planetary level, at least. He was less
sure of Truzenzuzex's importance, but he knew that the thranx held their
philosophs, or theoreticians, in an esteem matched only by that of the honorary
Hive-Mothers and the Chancellor Firsts of the Church themselves. His mind was
deluged with questions, all tinged by uncertainty as much as curiosity. What
were two such eminences doing slumming in a place like Small Symm's? Why had
they picked him for a guide - a youth, a nothing - when they could have had a
royal escort by a king's minister? That answer- he could read clearly.
Incognito; the one word said much and implied more. At the moment, what
dealings did two such sophisticated minds have with a solid, earthy merchant
like Maxim Malaika?
While he had been dazedly forming questions without
answer, a mind somewhere had been coming to a decision. The grid spoke again.
'Maxim of the House of Malaika extends greetings,
albeit astonished, and wilt have converse immediately with the two honoursirs.
He wishes the both of you ...' there was a pause while a hidden eye somewhere
scanned, '... the three of you to come up. He is' now in the southwest
porchroom and would greet you there soonest.'
The grid voice clicked off and immediately the rich
grained doors slid back. Man and thranx, stepped unbidden into the dark-pile
interior. Flinx debated a second whether to follow them or run like hell, but
Tse-Mallory decided for him.
'Don't stand there gawking, youth. Didn't you hear
it say he wished to see the three of us?' Flinx could nowhere detect
malignance. He stepped in. The elevator held them all more than comfortably.
He'd
been in this house before, but if there was one
thing he was certain of it was that he was not now being summoned to provide
entertainment. And this was not the servants' entrance he'd used before. The
soft fsssh of air as the doors closed sounded explosively loud m his
ears.
They were met at the end of their ride by a tall
skeleton of a man dressed in the black and crimson of the Malaika family
colours. He said nothing as he conducted them to a room Flinx had not seen
before.
The far end of the room looked open to the sky.
Actually if was one of the great crystal proto-porches which made this section
of Drallar resemble so well a bejewelled forest. He quivered momentarily as he
stepped out on to what appeared to be slick nothingness. The two scientists
seemed unaffected. He had been on one of these before, when performing, but it
had been opaque. This one was perfectly transparent, with just a hint of rose
colouring, all the way to the ground. He looked up and the vertigo passed.
The furnishings were all in red and black, with here
and there an occasional bright colour in some imported article or work of art.
Incense hung cloyingly in the air. In the distance the sun of Moth had begun to
set, diffused by the perpetual thin fog. It got dark early on Moth.
On one of the numerous big fluffy couches sat two
figures. One he immediately recognized: Malaika. The other was smaller, blonde,
and quite differently formed. The majority of her covering was formed by her
waist-length hair.
The voice that rumbled out of the thick-muscled neck
was like a dormant volcano stirring to life. ‘Je? Our visitors are here.
You run along, Sissiph, dear, and make yourself more pretty, ndiyo?'
He gave her a crushing peck on the cheek and sent
her from the room with a resounding swat on the most prominent portion of her
anatomy. He's got a new one, thought Flinx. This one was blonde and a bit more
ripely curved" than the last. Apparently the trader's tastes were
expanding along with his belly. In truth, though, it showed only slightly as
yet.
'Well! Well,' boomed Malaika. His teeth flashed
whitley in the ebony face, sparkling amidst wisps of curly beard. He was up to
them and shaking hands in two steps. 'Bran Tse-Mallory and the Eint
Tnizenzuzux. Usitawi. Thee Truzenzuzex?’
The insect performed another of its slow, graceful
bows. ‘I plead guilty of necessity to the accusation.' Flinx took the time to
admire the insect's abilities. Due to the nature of their physiology the thranx
were usually extremely stiff in their movements. To see one bow as did
Truzenzuzex was exceptional.
When the Humanx Commonwealth was in the process of
being formed, humans had marvelled at the scintillating blue and blue-green
iridescence of the thranx body colouring and swooned at the natural perfume
they exuded. They had wondered miserably what the thranx would see in their own
dun-coloured, stinky soft selves. What the thranx had seen was a flexibility
coupled with firmness which no thranx could ever hope to match. Soon travelling
dance companies from humanoid planets had become among the most popular forms
of live entertainment on the thranx colonies and bomeworlds.
But from the thorax up, at least, Truzenzuzex gave
the impression of being made of rubber.
Malaika finished shaking hands with both and then
gave Flinx another little surprise. The' merchant extended his head and touched
nose to antenna with the insect. It was the nearest a human could come to the
traditional-thranx greeting of interwining antennae. But then, he reminded
himself, a man who did business with as many races as had Malaika would know
every gesture as a matter of course... and commerce.
'Sit down, sit down" he roared in what be
undoubtedly thought to be gentle tone of voice. 'What do you think of my little
mwenzangu there, eh? Companion,' he added, seeing the puzzlement on
their faces. He jerked his head in the direction taken by the departed girl.
Tse-Mallory said nothing, the twinkle in his eyes
being sufficient. Truzenzuzex went
further, If I read current human values aright, I should venture to say that
such a propagation of marmoreal flesh to the width of the pelvic region would
be viewed as more than usually aesthetic.'
Malaika roared. 'Stars, you are a scientist,
sir! Powers of observation, indeed! What can I give you both to drink?'
'Ginger ale for me, if you have a good year.'
'Fagh! I do, but 'pon my word, sir, you've mellowed
if you're the same Tse-Mallory I've heard tell of, And you, sir?'
'Would you by any chance have some apricot brandy?'
'Oh ho! A gourmet, as well as a man of science! I
believe we can accommodate you, good philosoph. But it will necessitate a-trip
to the cellars. I don't often receive such a discerning guest.' The shadow
which had conducted them from the elevator still stood wraithlike at the back
of the room. Maiaika waved to it. 'See to it, Wolf.' The sentinel bowed
imperceptibly and shuffled from the room, taking something in the atmosphere
with him. More sensitive to it than the others, Flinx was relieved when the
man's presence had gone.
Now, for the first time, that hearty voice lost some
of its bantering tone. ‘Je? What brings you two here, to Drallar? And so
very quietly, too.' He glanced keenly from one imperturbable' face to the
other, stroking that rich Assyrian beard slowly. 'Much as' my ego would be
flattered, I cannot believe that such a stealthy entrance to our fair city has
been effected purely for the pleasure of making my company.' He leaned forward
expectantly in a manner that suggested he could smell money at least as well as
Mother Mastiff.
Malaika was not as tall as Tse-Mallory, but he was
at least twice as broad and had the build of an over-age wrestler. Shockingly
white teeth gleamed in the dusky face which bore the stamp of the kings of
ancient Monomotapa and Zimbabwe. Massive, hairy arms protruded from the sleeves
of the one-piece semisilk dressing-gown he wore casually belted at the waist.
Legs to match, as solid looking as a Mothian ironwood tree, thrust out from the
pleated folds at the knees. The short, knobbly toes on the splayed Feet bore a
close resemblance to the woody parasites that often infested such growths. At
least, they did on one foot. The other, Flinx knew, ended at the knee. Fuelled
by credits, the prosthetic surgeons had laboured their best to make the left
match its natural counterpart on the right. The match was not quite perfect.
The real one, Flinx had learned from a talkative
young woman at one of Malaika's parties, had been lost in the man's youth. He
had been on a fur-gathering expedition to the planet of a minor sun in Draco
when his party had been attacked by an ice-lizard. Being rather stupidly caught
away from their weapons, they had watched helplessly as the carnivore
instinctively sought out the weakest member of their party, the youthful female
accountant. Malaika alone bad intervened. Lacking a suitable weapon, he had
choked the beast to death by the simple expedient of jamming his left leg down
its throat. It was the sort of extreme stunt that one wouldn't expect of the
pragmatic merchant. Unfortunately, by the time they could get him to sufficient
hospital facilities the limb had been torn and frozen beyond repair.
'We neither intended nor expected to deceive you,
friend Malaika. We happen in fact to be on the trail of something we have good
reason to think you would find of value, yes. To us, however, it means much
more than a paltry few hundred million credits.'
Flinx swallowed.
'But,' Tse-Mallory continued, 'our personal
resources are limited, and so we are forced, however reluctantly, to seek an
outside source of aid. One with an open credit slip and a closed mouth.'
'And so you've wound your way to me. Well, well,
well! It seems I'm to be flattered after all. I wouldn't be truthful if I said
I were not. None the less, you must of course prove that what you wish me to
provide credit for is going to be profitable to me ... in hard credit, not
philosophical intangibles ... your pardon, friends. Tell me more about this
thing which is worth much more than a mere few millions of credit.'
'We assumed that would be your reaction. Any other,
to tell the truth, would have made us suspicious. It is one of the reasons why
we feel we can deal openly with your type of person.'
'How comforting to know that you regard me as so
obviously predictable,' Malaika said dryly. 'Do go on.'
'We could have gone to a government organization.
The best are all too often corrupt, despite Church pronouncements. We could
have gone to a large philanthropic organization. They are too prone to shock.
In the end we decided it would be best to go where the promise of much credit
would insure the exclusivity of our enterprise.'
'And supposing that I do agree to put up fedha
for this venture, what guarantee have you that I will not kill you outright if
it proves successful and return with the object of search and two cancelled
cheques?'
'Very simple. First, odd as it may sound, we know
you to be both reliable and reasonably honest in your business dealings. This
has proved among the best of your wares in the past and should again, despite
the bloodthirsty image your publicists enjoy presenting to the gullible public,
Second, we don't know what we're looking for, but we will know it when we find
it. And there is an excellent possibility that we will find nothing at all. Or
worse, something will be found which will still remain worthless to us because
of its incomprehensibility.'
'Good! Any other thoughts and I would have
become suspicious! I become more and more curious. Elucidate for the benefit of
my poor, ignorant trader's mind. Why me, por favor?’
Truzenzuzex ignored the pun and made the thranx
equivalent of a shrug. 'Someone was necessary. As already mentioned, your
reputation in a business noted for its back-stabbing made my ship-brother
select you.' Another revelation,
thought Flinx. "And Moth itself is close to our objective . . . in a
relative sense only, so it would do you little good and much expense to try to
find it on your own. Also, another vessel departing Moth would mean nothing,
with its constant flux of star travel. Our course would not be suspect from
here, whereas elsewhere it might engender unwanted cogitation. Traders,
however, often fly peculiar tangents to throw off competitors.'
At this point the drinks arrived. Conversation was
suspended by mutual consent as the debaters sipped at their refreshments. Flinx
sampled Tse-Mallory's mug of ginger ale and found it delicious, if mild.
Malaika drained at least half the contents of a huge tankard in one gulp. He
rubbed his foamy lips with the sleeve of an immaculate gown, staining it irreparably.
Knowing the fabric's worth in the marketplace, Flinx couldn't help but wince.
‘I again apologize for my denseness, sirs, but I
would have whatever it is the competition is to be thrown off of spelled out to
me.' He turned to face Tse-Mallory directly. 'And although you are apparently
no longer associated with the Church in an official capacity, sociologist, I
confess I am curious to know why you did not approach them seeking aid.'
'My dealings with the United Church, Malaika, have
not been over close for a number of years now. My parting was amicable enough,
but there was a certain amount of unavoidable bitterness in certain quarters
over my leaving that ... matters would be complicated, shall we say, should I
reveal our knowledge to them at this time. Such would be necessary to secure
their aid.’
'Um. Well, that's blunt enough. I won't prod a sore.
Maybe we should get on to...' He paused and looked to his right. Tse-Mallory
and Truzenzezux followed his gaze with their own.
Flinx shifted his position on the floor
uncomfortably. He had managed to hear as much as he had by remaining utterly
inconspicuous while in plain sight, an art he had learned from a certain
patient and very sneaky old man. Aided by his own odd abilities, it had served
him importantly more than once. These three, however, were far more observant
than the folk one encountered in the marketplace. He could see clearly that he
would have to leave. Why not voluntarily ?
‘Uh, sirs, I could do with some ... if you, honoured
host, would point me in the direction of a pantry, I will endeavour to make
myself instantly and painlessly nonpresent.'
Malaika chuckled deafeningly. 'Astuteness is
laudable, youth. So instead of sending you home ... I could wonder where that
might be ... you go back to the hall, to your right, second door. You should
find in there enough nourishment to keep even you busy for a few minutes!'
Flinx
uncurled from his lotus position on the floor and departed in the indicated
direction. He felt their eyes and minds on him until he was out of view, at
which point the pressure relaxed. Malaika's conviviality did not fool him. He
might already have' heard more than would prove healthy. He was intensely
interested in the answers to a good many questions that Malaika was now undoubtedly
putting to his guests, and entertained thoughts of locating a good listening
place at a thin section of wall. However, the death's head bad reappeared and
stationed himself by the entrance to the porch-room. The blue eyes had passed
over him once, as though he were not worthy of a second glance. Flinx bridled,
then sighed. He would have to make do with what he could pick up without visual
contact. Might as well enjoy the other opportunity while he bad it. He walked
on.
The pantry was all of fantastic. He almost forgot
the unusual progression of incidents that had brought him here while he gorged
himself and the minidrag on the store of luxuries. He had gotten as far as
debating between Terran champagne and pine mint from Barabas when a
short-series of extremely odd thoughts drifted across his open mind. He turned
and noticed that the door to the room on his right was slightly open. The
teasing sub-vocalizations came from beyond there. He did not for a moment doubt
that that door should be securely locked. Cautiously, with a quick glance at
the kitchen entrance, he made his way over to the door and slid it back another
inch.
The room next to the kitchen was narrow but long. It
probably ran the whole length of this radius of the tower. Its function, at
least, was unmistakable. It was a bar. With an eye towards locating' an even
more palatable drink and his curiosity piqued he prepared to enter, only to
catch himself quickly.
The room was already occupied.
A figure was hunched over by the opposite wall, its head
pressed tightly against it. He could make out the outlines of a ventilating
grid or something similar on the other side of the head. The face was turned
away from him-and so bidden. The metal and wood he could see there was thin and
light. The voices from the next room sounded clearly to him even from where he
stood in the kitchen.
He eased the door back as slowly and easily as
possible. Apparently totally engrossed in the conversation taking place on the
other side of the wall, the figure did not notice his quiet approach. The grid
itself could now be seen to be much larger than would be required for
ventilating purposes. It looked loose and was probably hinged. Garbage could be
passed through it from the other room, and thence shifted to nearby disposal
units. He had a hunk of spiced Bice cheese in one hand and a pheasant leg
between his teeth. His free hand started down for the stiletto hidden in his
boot, then paused. The thoughts of the figure did not have the coldness nor the
death-clear logic of the professional spy or assassin. Quite the contrary. Deaf
killers were also rare, and this one had still refused cognizance of his
presence.
He made a rapid decision and brought back a foot,
delivering a solid blow to the upthrust portion of the unbalanced figure below.
It uttered a single screech and shot through the grille into the room beyond.
In a split second he had regretfully discarded both pheasant and cheese and
rolled through after it, coming up on his feet on the other side. The startled
faces of Malaika, Tse-Mallory, and Truzenzuzex were already gazing in
astonishment at the scene. The figure stood opposite him) rubbing the injured
portion. It cursed him steadily and fluently. He noticed absently as he dodged
the fingers which drove for his larynx that the figure was very much that of a
woman. It matched the thoughts he had picked up. Reluctantly he assumed a
defensive pose, legs apart, knees slightly bent, arms out and forward. Pip
fluttered nervously on his shoulder, the pleated wings unfurling preparatory to
the minidrag's taking flight.
The woman made another motion as if to attack again,
but was frozen by the bellow which came from Malaika's - direction.
'ATHA!' She turned to face him.
The big merchant strode over to stand between them.
His eyes went from one to the other, finally settling hard on Funx.
'Well, kijana? I suggest something profound,
and quickly!'
Flinx tried to keep his voice as even as possible,
despite the adrenalin pumping through his system.
‘I was in the pantry and happened to notice the door
to the room next to it was open' (never mind why he had noticed it). 'Looking
in, I saw a figure ... that figure ... hunched over next to a grille. The room
most certainly ought to have been locked. I assumed that this was not part of
your normal method of conducting private business talks and so I decided to
force the issue -and the person – into the open, where the air is clearer. I'm
sorry if I've broken a fetish or taboo of yours.'
'What!' Then he caught the humour of it and grinned..
‘Think I'm a weirdie, eh, kijana?
‘It was a thought, sir.'
'Adabu! No, you did right, Flinx.' He turned
a furious gaze on the girl. She shrank back slightly under that withering
visage but the obstinate glare left her face. Somehow she found the wherewithal
to look righteous.
'Goddamn you, girl, double-damn and collapsed
drives, I've told you about this, before!' He shook his head in exasperation.
'Again, kwa ajili ya adabu, for the sake of manners, I forgive it. Get
out to the port and check out the shuttle.'
It was checked again only last week and nothing was
wrong with ...
'Agggh!' He raised a hand the size of a ham. 'I..
strongly ' ... suggest ... that you ...!'She skittered by the descending hand
and sped for the exit. The look she sent Flinx on the way out was brief, but
hot enough to melt duralloy. Malaika caught his breath and seemed to calm
himself somewhat.
'How much of what she heard did you hear?'
Flinx lied. In the situation he considered it more
than ethical. 'Enough.'
'So, so!' The merchant considered. 'Well, perhaps it
will work out for the better. You'll probably turn out to be the sharpest one
aboard, lad, but I'd stay clear of Atha for awhile. I'm afraid your method of
making first greetings will never replace shaking hands'.' He shook with
laughter at his own witticism. He put out an arm as if to embrace Fiinx's
shoulders, drew it back hastily at a warning gesture from Pip.
'She works for you?' It was a rhetorical question.
But Flinx was curious to know what position the girl held that could inspire
such trust on Malaika's part that he could treat her as he had without fear of
reprisal.
'Atha? Oh yes.' He looked in the direction taken by
the girl. 'You wouldn't think a mwanamke that ferocious would have the
patience to make starship copilot at her age, would you? She's been with me in
that capacity for six years now.'
Flinx resumed his former position on the floor. In
reply to Tse-Mallory's inquiring gaze. Malaika said, I've decided that our
young friend will accompany us on the journey. I know what I'm doing,
gentlesirs. If the trip is long and tedious he will provide relief for us, and
he's sharp as a whip besides. He also has some peculiar abilities which might
prove useful to us) despite their capriciousness. It is a subject to which I
have meant to give more attention in the past, but have never found the time.'
Flinx glanced up interestedly, but could detect nothing beyond the merchant's
veneer of surface geniality. In any case, he is too poor and not rich enough to
pose a threat to us. And I believe him to be disgustingly honest. Although he
has had ample opportunity to steal from my house he has never done so . . . as
far as I know.'
'His honesty was never in question,' said
Truzenzuzex. I've no objection to the lad's presence.’
'Nor I,' added Tse-Mallory.
‘Then, sociologist, if you would continue with your
narrative?'
'Actually, there is not much that is new to tell.
Would that there were. As you might know my companion and I gave up our
respective careers and regular pursuits some twelve odd years ago to research
jointly the history and civilization of the Tar-Aiym.'
'Some talk of your work has filtered down to my
level, yes. Do continue. Naturally I am interested in anything that has to do
with the Tar-Aiym ... or their works.'
'So much we - naturally - supposed.'
'Pardon, sir,' interrupted Flinx, I know of the
Tar-Aiym, of course, but only by rumour and book. Could you maybe tell me more,
please?' He looked properly apologetic.
Since Malaika offered no objection, perhaps himself
not considering such information redundant. Tse-Mallory agreed.
'All right then, lad.' He took another long swig of
his drink. 'As near as we have been able to determine, some 500,000
Terran-standard years ago this area of the galaxy was, as it is now, occupied
by a large number of diverse and highly intelligent races. The Tar-Aiym were by
far the strongest of these. Most of their time and effort was apparently
absorbed in warring with their less powerful neighbours, as much for the
pleasure of it,, it seems, as for the wealth it brought them, At one time the
Tar-Aiym empire covered this section of space to a depth of four quadrants and
a width of at least two, Maybe more.
'Any reason we could put forth to explain the total
disappearance of the Tar-Aiym and most of their subject races would be mostly
conjecture. But working pains-takingly with bits and pieces of myth and rumour,
and a very few solidly documented facts, researchers have put together one explanation
that seems to offer more than most.
'At the height of their power the Tar-Aiym came
across a more primitive race far in towards the galactic centre. This race was
not quite the intellectual equal of the Tar-Aiym, and they'd had star travel
for only a short time. But they were tremendously tenacious and multiplied at
an extra-ordinary rate. They resisted, successfully, every effort to be forced
into the Tar-Aiym hegemony. In fact, under the impetus provided by Tar-Aiym
pressures, they began to make giant strides forward and to spread rapidly to
other systems.
'Apparently the Tar-Aiym leadership did a most
uncharacteristic thing. It panicked. They directed their war scientists to
develop new and even more radical types of weaponry to combat this supposed new
menace from the centre. True to form, their great laboratories soon came up
with several offerings. The one that was finally implemented was a form of
mutated bacterium. It multiplied at a phenomenal rate, living off itself if no
other host was available. To any creature with a nervous system more complex
than that of the higher invertebrates it was completely and irrevocably lethal.
The story from there,' continued Truzenzuzex, 'is a
simple and straightforward one. The plague worked as the leadership had hoped,
to the extent of utterly wiping out the Tar-Aiym enemies. It also set about
totally eliminating the Tar-Aiym themselves and most of the intelligent and
semiintelligent life in that huge sector of space we know today as the Blight.
You know it, Flinx?'
'Sure. It's a-big section between here and the
centre, Hundreds of worlds on which nothing intelligent Lives. They'll be
filled again someday.'
‘No doubt. For now, though, they are filled only
with the lower animals and the wreckage of past civilizations. Fortunately the
surviving space-traversing worlds were informed of the nature of the plague by
the last remnants of the dying Tar-Aiym. A strict quarantine must have been put
into effect, because for centuries it appears that nothing was permitted in or
out of the Blight. Otherwise it is probable that none of us would be sitting
here now. It is only in recent times that the systems of the Blight have been
rediscovered and somewhat hesitantly explored.'
‘The taboo' lingers even if the reason behind it has
gone,' said Malaika quietly.
'Yes. Well, some of the quarantined races on the
fringe of the epidemic died out rather slowly. By means of interspace relay or
some similar device they managed to pass out some threads of fact describing
the Armaggedon. Innocent and guilty alike died as the plague burned itself out.
Thank Hive that all traces of the germ have long since departed the cycle of
things."
'Amen,' murmured Malaika surprisingly. Then, louder,
'But please, gentlesirs, to the point. And the point is - credit.’
Tse-Mallory took over again. 'Malaika, have you ever
heard of the Krang?'
‘Nini? No, I ... no, wait a minute.' The
trader's thick brows furrowed in thought. 'Yes. Yes, I believe I have. It forms
part of the mythology of the, uh, the Branner folk, doesn't it?'
Tse-Mallory nodded approval, 'That's right. The
Branner, as you may or may not recall, occupy three star systems on the
periphery of the Blight, facing Moth. According to a folk-legend of theirs
passed down from the cataclysm, even though the Tar-Aiym were hard pressed to
find a solution to the threat from the centre, they had not yet given up all
forms of nonmilitary development and experimentation. As we now know for a
fact, the Tar-Aiym were inordinately fond of music.'
'Marches, no doubt,' murmured Truzenzuzex.
'Perhaps. Anyway, one of the last great works of
artistic merit that their culture was supposed to have produced was a great
musical instrument called the Krang. It was theoretically completed in the
waning days of the Empire, just as the plague was beginning to make itself
known on Empire planets as well as those of the enemy.'
'Ili?' said Malaika. 'So?'
'On the side of the Blight almost one hundred and
fifty parsecs from Banner lies the home world of a primitive race; ofhominids,
little visited by the rest of the galaxy. They are far off the main trade
routes and have little to offer in the way of value, either in produce or
culture. They are pleasant pastoral, and nonaggressive. Seemingly they once
possessed star travel, but sank back into a preatomic civilization and are only
just now beginning to show signs of a scientific renaissance. Interestingly
enough, they also have a legend concerning something called the Krang. Only in
their version it is not an artistic device, but a weapon of war. One which the
Tar-Aiym scientists were developing parallel with the plague, before the latter
was put into widespread use. According to the legend it was intended to be
primarily a defensive and not an offensive weapon. If so, it would be the first
time in the literature' that the Tar-Aiym had been reduced to building a device
for defensive purposes. This runs contrary to all we know of Tar-Aiym
psychology and shows how severely they believed themselves pressed by their new
enemy.'
'Fascinating dichotomy,' said Malaika. 'And you have
some indication as to where this weapon or lute or whatever might be? If
either, it would be very valuable in Commonwealth markets.'
'True, though we are only interested in its
scientific and cultural properties.'
'Of course, of course! While my accountants are
estimating its net worth, you can draw theoretical rationalizations from its
guts to your heart's content ... provided that you remember how to put its
pieces back together again. Now just where is this enigmatic little treasure
trove, eh?' He leaned forward eagerly.
'Well, we know exactly, almost,' said Tse-Mallory.
'Exactly? Almost? My weak mind again, gentlesirs.
Forgive me, but I profess lack of comprehension.'
Truzenzuzex made a very human-sounding sigh. Air
made a soft whoosh! as it was forced out the breathing spicules of his
b-thorax.
'The planet on which the Krang is supposedly located
was discovered accidentally nearly a t-year ago by a prospector working
independently in the Blight. He was hunting for heavy metals, and he found
them, 'Only they weren't arranged in the ground the way he'd expected.'
'This fellow, be must have had sponsors,' said
Malaika. 'Why didn't he take this information to them?'
‘The man owed a very great debt to my ship-brother. Heknew
of his interest in Tar-Aiym relics. Supplying Bran with this information was
his way of paying off the debt. It was of a personal nature and going into it
here can serve no purpose. It would have been a more than equitable
reimbursement.'
'Would have been?' Malaika's humour was degenerating
visibly into irritation. 'Come, come, gentlesirs, all this subtle evasion makes
my mind sleepy and shortens my patience.'
'No evasion intended, merchant. The man was to have
met us in our rooms in the market section of the city, bringing with him a star
map listing complete co-ordinates for the planet. As we had previously agreed
on you as a likely sponsor, the three of us were then to proceed on to this
house. When he did not arrive as scheduled we decided after some deliberation
to seek you out anyway, in the hope that with your resources you might discover
some hint as to his whereabouts. In any case, it would have been difficult to
maintain our independence much longer. Despite our best efforts, we do not look
like tourists. Enterprising persons had already begun asking awkward
questions.'
‘I will - ' began Malaika, but Flinx interrupted.
'Did your friend by any chance have red hair?'
Tse-Mallory jerked around violently. For a second Flinx
had a glimpse into something terrifying and bloody, which until now the
sociologist had kept well buried beneath a placid exterior. It faded as rapidly
as it had appeared, but a hint of it persisted in the crisp, military tones of
the sociologist's voice.
'How did you know that?'
Flinx pulled the crumpled piece of plastic from his
pocket and handed it to an astounded Truzenzuzex. Tse-Mallory recovered himself
and glanced at the unfolded sheet. Flinx continued unperturbed.
'I have a hunch that's your star map. I was on my
way to Small Symm's establishment when my attention was caught by a commotion
in an alleyway. Ordinarily I would have ignored it. That is the way one lives
in Drallar, if one wishes to livelong. But for reasons unknown and thrice cursed
my pet,' he gestured at Pip, 'got curious, and took it into his head to
investigate. The occupants of the alley took exception to his presence. An
unfunny fight was in progress, and in the situation which developed the only
argument I had was my knife.
'Your friend had been attacked by two men.
Professionals by their looks and actions. They weren't very good ones. I killed
one, and Pip finished the other. Your friend was already dead. I'm sorry.' He
did not mention his earlier encounter with the three.
Tse-Mallory was looking from the map to Flinx.
'Well, it was said before that it was a fortuitous circumstance that brought
you to our notice. Now it appears to have been doubly so.'
He was interrupted by an intent Malaika, who
snatched up the map and moved over to where a flexilamp was poised. Positioning
the powerful beam he began to study the lines and symbols on the plastic with
great deliberation. Dust motes danced drunken spirals in the subdued light.
'A most unusual and versatile pet,' commented Truzenzuzex
idly. I've heard of them. The mortality rate from their venom is notoriously
high, giving them a reputation all out of proportion to their numbers and
disposition. Fortunately, as I understand it, they do not seem to attack
without due provocation.'
‘That's right, sir,' said Flinx, scratching the
object under discussion on the side of its narrow head. 'A ship's physician at
the shuttleport once told me he'd met a scientist who'd actually been to
Alaspin. The minidrag is native to there, you know. In his spare time, the man
had done some limited research on them.
'He said they seemed standoffish, which struck me as
kind of a funny way to describe a poisonous reptile. But harmless unless, as
you said, provoked. Pip was already pretty tame when I found him. At least,
I've never had any trouble with him. The people in my area have learned to
tolerate him, mostly because they haven't any choice.'
'Understandable attitude,' murmured the philosoph.
'This doctor's friend was with an expedition to
Alaspin to study the ruins of the ancient civilization there. He hypotha ...
hypothesized that the minidrag's ancestors might have been raised as pets by
whoever had produced that culture. Selective breeding could account for some of
their peculiar characteristics. Like, they have no natural enemies on the
planet. Fortunately their birthrate is very low. And they are omnivorous as
well as carnivorous. I found out early what that meant, when Pip started eating
bread when he couldn't find meat. Oh yes, he also said they were suspected of
being empathetic telepaths. You know, telepathetic on the emotional but not the
mental level. That's why I'm never cheated in the marketplace or at business or
gambling. Pip's sensitive to such things.'
'A fascinating creature, I say again,' Truzenzuzex
continued. 'A subject I would like to pursue further. However as I am not an
exoherpetologist. I don't think it would be worthwhile just now. Too many other
things on my mind,' The confession did not entirely ring true, as Flinx could
read it. Mot entirely.
Malaika was craning his neck over the map, tracing
out lines in the plastic with his fingers and nodding occasionally to himself.
'Ndiyo, ndiyo ... yes.' He looked up finally.
'The planet in question circles a GO, sol-type star.
Four-fifths of the way towards GalCentre, straight through the Blight. Quite a
trip, gentlesirs. He doesn't supply much information on the planet itself, no,
not by an ndege-depositing, but it might be enough. Terratype, slightly
smaller, marginally thinner atmosphere, higher proportion of certain gases ...
helium, for example. Also eighty-one point two per cent water, so we should
have little trouble finding the thing.'
'Unless it happens to be submerged,' said
Truzenzuzex.
'So. I prefer not to consider possibilities
upsetting to the liver. Besides, if that were the case I don't think your
prospector friend would have found it. We'll have the same kind of heavy-metal
detection instruments with us anyway, but I'd wager on its being above the
water-line. If I recall, the information we do have on the Tar-Aiym suggests
they were anything but aquatic in build.'
'That's true,' admitted the philosoph.
'We'll travel most of the way through unspaced
areas, but then, one section of nothing is very much like any other, kweli?
I foresee no problems. Which probably means a mavuno of them. At least
we will be comfortable. The Gloryhole will not be crowded with all of
us.'
Flinx smiled but was careful to bide it from the
merchant. The origin of the name of Malaga's private cargo-racer was a
well-known joke among those in the know-Most thought it an ancient Terran word
meaning a rich mineral strike ...
'Unless, of course, this gun or giant harp or
whatever is going to crowd us. How big did you say it was?'
‘I didn't,' said Tse-Mallory. 'We've no better idea
than you. Only that it's .. large.'
'Hmph! Well, if it's too big to go up on the
shuttle, we'll just have to send back for a regular transport. I'd rather sit
on it once we've found it, but there are no relay stations in that area. If
it's been there untouched for a few millennia it will wait a few days.' He
rolled up the map. 'So then, sirs. If there are no objections, I see no reason
why we cannot leave kesho, tomorrow.'
There were none.
'Ema! A toast, then. To success and profit, not
necessarily in that order! Naxdrovia!’ He raised his tankard.
'Church and Commonwealth,' murmured man and thramt
together, softly. They sipped down the remainder of their drinks.
Malaika burped once, glanced out through the crystal
wall where the sun of Moth was sinking rapidly behind the fog-squalls.
It is late. Tomorrow then, at the port. The dock
stewards will direct you to my pit. The shuttle will take us all in one trip
and I need little time to set my affairs in order.'
Tse-Mallory rose and stretched. If I may ask, who
are "us all"?'
'Those four of us here now, Wolf and Atha to run the
ship, and, of course, Sissiph.'
'Who?' asked Tse-Mallory.
'The Lynx, the Lynx,' whispered Truzenzuzex,
grinning and nudging his ship-brother in the ribs. 'Have your eyes aged as much
as your brain? The girl!' They were strolling to the hallway now.
'Ah yes.' They paused by the shadowlike Wolf, who
held the door open for them. The man grinned in what was obviously supposed to
be a friendly gesture, it did not come off that way. 'Yes, a very, ah,
interesting and amusing personage.'
'Ndiyo,' said Malaika amiably. 'She does have
quite a pair, doesn't she?'
As the others bid the spectral doorman goodeve, a
hand came down on Flinx's shoulder. The merchant whispered. 'Not you, kijana.
I've a question for you yet. Stay a moment.'
He shook hands with Tse-Maltory and touched
olfactory organs with Truzenzuzex, waving them towards the elevator.
'Good rest to you, sirs, and tomorrow at first fog!'
Wolf closed the door, cutting off Flinx's view of
the scientists, and Malaika immediately bent to face him intently.
'Now. lad, that our ethical friends have left, a
point of, urn, business. The two hired corpses you Left rotting so properly in
that alley. Did they have any special insignia or marks on them or their
clothing? Think, youth!'
Flinx tried to recall. It was awfully dark ... I'm
not sure...'
'And when did that ever bother you? "Don't
hedge with me, kijana. This is too important. Think ... or whatever it
is you do,'
'All right. Yes. When I was trying to pry that map
away from the dead man. I did notice the feet of the man Pip had killed. He'd
fallen close by. The metal of his boots bad a definite design etched on them.
It looked to be some kind of bird ... an abstract representation, I think.'
'With teeth ?' prompted Malaika.
'Yes ...no... I don't know for sure. The questions
you ask, merchant! It could have been. And for some reason, during the fight I
got this picture of a woman, an old-young woman.'
Malaika straightened and patted the boy on the back.
His expression was jovial but his thoughts were grim - grim. Ordinarily Flinx
would have resented the patronizing gesture, but this time, coming from the
merchant, it seemed only complimentary.
'Thank the Mti of Miti for your powers of
observation, lad. And for a good memory.' Flinx saw another word: uchawi,
witchcraft, bill did not press the point. The big man changed the subject
abruptly, 'I'll see you kesho, on ship, then?'
‘I would not miss it. Sir, may I ask the why of your
question?'
'You may not. The ship tomorrow, then. Good rest,'
He ushered a puzzled Flinx to the elevator.
The merchant stood pondering silently awhile, curses
bubbling like froth from the cauldron of his mouth. They constituted the only
sounds in the now 'deserted room. He turned and walked over to an apparently
blank section of wall. Striking a hidden switch he sent the deep-grained
panelling sliding lip into the ceiling to reveal a complex desk. The slim bulk
of an interstellar transceiver dominated the other apparatus. Buttons were
pushed, dials turned, meters adjusted. The screen lit up suddenly in a glorious
fireball of chromatic static. Satisfied, he grunted and hefted a small mike.
'Channel six, please. Priority. I wish to speak
straight-line direct person, to Madame Rashalleila Nuaman, on Nineveh, in the
Sirius system.' A small voice floated out of a tiny speaker set to one side of
the rainbow flux rippling on the screen, 'Gall is being placed) sir. One
moment, please.'
Despite the incredible distances involved,
the-slight delay was occasioned by the need to boost the call through half a
hundred relay stations. Time of transit, due to the less-than-space concepts in
use, was almost instantaneous.
The screen began to clear, and in a short while he
was facing one of the ten wealthiest humanoid females in the universe.
She was lounging on some sort of couch. To one side
he could easily make out the muscled, naked leg of whoever was holding the
portable transceiver hookup for her. In the background he could see lush
greenery, growing to fantastic size and shapes without the restraints of heavy
gravity. Beyond that, he knew, was the dome which shut out the airless void
that was the normal atmosphere of Nineveh. Nature battled surgery as the woman
pulled her face into a toothsome, slinky smile. This time, surgery won. It was
intended to be sexy, but to one who knew, it only came out vicious.
'Why Maxy, darling! What a delightful surprise! It's
always so delicious to hear from you. That lovely body of yours is well, I
trust, and business equally?'
'I'm only well when business is good. At the
moment it is passible, Rasha, just passable. However I have hopes it will take
a sudden jump for the better very shortly. You see, I've just had a most
interesting chat with two gentlemen . . . three, if you count the redhead.'
Nuaman tried to project an aura of disinterest, but
surgery couldn't hide the way the tendons tautened in her neck. 'How
interesting, I'm sure, I do hope it proves profitable for you. But your tone
seems to imply that you believe I am somehow involved."
‘It did? I don't recall saying anything that might
lead you to that conclusion... darling. Oh, it isn't the redhead you're thinking
of. Your bully-boys did get to that one ... as per instructions, no doubt.'
'Why Maxy, whatever are you thinking of? Why should
any of my assistants be on Moth? My dealings on the planet are small, as you
well know. You're the one who keeps blocking all my attempts to expand my
interests there. Anyhow, I don't know many redheads altogether ... certainly
can't recall any I'd want killed. Messed up a little, perhaps, but not killed.
No, darling, you're mistaken. What an odd conversation! There's nothing on that
'pitifully damp ball of dirt of yours, redheaded or otherwise, that I'd risk a
murder for,'
'Ummm. Not even this, hasa?’ He held up the
map. Folded, so that the interior would not show.
It didn't matter. She recognized it, all right! She
sat bolt upright and leaned forward so that her face, witchlike, seemed to fill
the whole screen.
'Where did you get that? That belongs to me!'
'Oh now, Rasha, bibi, I do doubt that. And do
sit back a little. Closeups are not your forte, you know.' He made a pretence
of examining it. "No name. I'm afraid. And besides, I got it from a live
redhead. A boy, really. He happened along just as your "assistants"
happened to be performing acts of doubtful legality against the original owner.
Either the youth is an extraordinary chap ... which I am inclined to believe
... or else the two assistants you assigned to this job were very low-grade
morons ... which, come to think of it, I am also inclined to believe. They were
yours, I see. It had your typically brazen touch about it. I merely wanted
to make certain. I've done that. Thank you, Rasha dear. Sikuzuri, now.'
He cut her off in midcurse and went off to find
Sissiph.
All in all, it had been rather a good day.
On
Nineveh, Rashalleila Nuaman, matriarch and head of one of the largest private
concerns in the Commonwealth and one of the tea richest humanoid females in the
known firmament, was howling mad. She booted the nearly nude male servant who
held the portable transceiver in an indelicate place. The unfortunate machine
fell into a pool of mutated goldfish. Startled, they scrambled for cover amidst
pastel lily pads. A number of very rare and expensive opaline glasses were
shattered on the stone pathway.
Her anger momentarily assuaged, she sat back down on the
lounge and spent five minutes rearranging her hair. It was olive this week. At
that point she felt sufficiently in control of herself to get up and walk to
the main house.
How had that utter bastard Malaika found out about the
map? And how had it found its way into his hands? Or possibly...
possibly it had been the other way around? The two gentlemen he had so snidely
referred to were undoubtedly that Tse-Mallory person and his pet bug. But who
was this new 'redhead'? Who had so rapidly and shockingly managed to wreck what
had until a few minutes ago been a comparatively smooth, routine operation? And
all this now, with Nikosos only two days out of Moth! It was
insufferable! She took a clawed swipe in passing at a stand of priceless
Yyrbittium trumpet-blooms, shredding the carmine leaves. The delicate
tube-shaped petals, sifted brokenly to the floor. Someone was definitely, yes
definitely, going to be flayed!
She stomped into the lounge-room that doubled as her
office and collapsed disconsolately in the white fur mouldy chair. Her bead
dropped on to her right hand while the left made nervous clicking sounds on the
pure corrundum table. The brilliant quicksilver flickering was the only
movement in the wave-proofed room. It was insufferable! He would not get
away with it. It would be on his head, yes, on his, if a single killing
operation devolved into a multiple one. It might even extend itself to his own
exquisite carcass, and wouldn't that be sad. He would make a lovely
corpse. Don't just sit there, you slobbering bitch. Get cracking She leaned
over the desk and jabbed a button. A thin, weary face formed on the screen in
front of her. 'Dryden, contact Nikosos and tell him that he is not to land at
Drallar. He is instead to monitor all starships that are in parking orbit
around the planet and stand off. Any which depart in the direction of the
Blight he is to follow as closely as possible while at all times staying out of
immediate detector range. If he complains, tell him I realize it's a difficult
proposition and he's simply to do his best,' I can always fire him later, she
thought grimly. If he presses you for an explanation, tell turn plans have been
changed due to unforeseen and unpreventable circumstances. He is to follow that
ship! I guarantee there will be one, and probably shortly. It will be headed
for the planet be was originally to have proceeded to by map. For now he'll
have to do without his own set of co-ordinates. Is that alI clear?'
'Yes, Madame.'
She had cut him off before he reached the second
‘m'. Well, she'd done what she could, but it seemed so goddamn little'
Her feeling of comparative impotence magnified her rage and the corresponding
desire to take out her frustration on someone else. Let's see. Who was handy? And
deserving? Um. The idiot who had bungled with those two assassins? A fine
choice! Her niece? That bubble-head. And to think, to think that one day she
might have to take over the firm. When she couldn't even oversee a simple
extraction. She pressed another button.
'Have Teteen auz Rudenuaman report to my office at,
oh, five hours tomorrow morning.'
'Yes, Madame,' the grid replied.
Now if there were only someone else. A budding
career to squelch, perhaps. But in good faith there was no one else she could
rake over the coals. Not that that should prove a consideration if she felt
especially bitchy, but a loyal staff could be assured only through an equal
mixture of fear and reward. No point in overdoing the former. No, face to it,
what she really needed was relaxing. Hopefully that fop van Cleef would be in
decent shape tonight. A smile suddenly Sickled across her face. The unlucky
button got jabbed again.
Cancel that last. Have my niece report at five hours
tomorrow ... but to my sleeping quarters, not the office.'
Noted,' said the grid compactly.
Rashalleila leaned back and stretched luxuriously.
Definitely she felt 'better. She knew her niece was hopelessly in love with her
current gigolo. Why, she couldn't for the life of her see, but it was a fact.
It would be interesting to see if the girl could keep a straight face tomorrow
as she was bawled
out in front of him. While he stirred groggily in her aunt's bed. It would
fortify her character, it would. She giggled at the thought and even in the
empty room it was not
a pleasant sound.
Bran
Tse-Mallory and Truzenzuzex were making their way casually back to their rooms
via the routes of the market-place. It was twice as noisy and confusing at
night as it was during the day. The flashing lights of motorized handcarts and
fluorescent vendors added much to the atmosphere of controlled anarchy. Still,
they did not need the Flinx. No matter how tortuous or confused the route, a
thranx could always retrace it once travelled.
'Well, brother,' said Truzenzuzex, dodging a mobile
seller of novelties, 'what do you think of our friend the merchant?'
I would feel much better if our friend the unusual
youth were twenty years older and in his place. A partial telepath, for sure. I
could sense it. But such wishes are useless. Chaos, Up the universe!' he
muttered.
‘Up the universe!' replied Truzenzuzex. Both smiled
at the private joke, which had a deeper meaning than the surface humour
implied. 'The man seems as trustworthy a member of his type as we are likely to
find, and he has the ship we need. I cannot be positive yet, of course, but
under the circumstances I think we have done quite well. And the boy's presence
on the vessel should serve as a moderating factor. He seems to trust the
trader, too.' 'Agreed. The lad's presence will inject an uncertainty element,
if nothing else.'
'A certain uncertainty factor. How apropos of this
venture so far "The insect shook its head in deliberate aping of the human
gesture. 'This has caused three deaths so far. I would hope there will be no more.'
'So would I, brother, so would I. The two of us have
seen too much death already.' Truzenzuzex did not reply, as he was
concentrating on a difficult forking of their path.
Tse-Mallory followed mechanically. The noise and
lights had a tendency to hypnotize, he allowed his mind to drift…
The
picture they were seeing in the viewscreen of the stingship was identical to
the one being flashed to every member of the task force. It showed a tall, thin
Ornithorphe with primarily black and yellow plumage. The being was possessed of
a large amount of natural dignity, which it was at present being hard-pressed
to retain. It is not easy to be dignified when one is begging.
Ensign Bran Tse-Mallory, aged twenty-six years,
Fourth Battle Group, Sixth Corps of the Enforcement Arm of the United Church,
watched the military governor of the blue planet below them crumble mentally as
he pleaded with their own commander for aid. Anger and embarrassment mingled in
his own throat, which was unaccountably dry, as he followed the conversation.
'Major Gonzalez,' the Ornithorphe intoned, 'I will
ask you for a final time, and then T must go and do what I can to aid my
people, even if it is only to die with them. Will you use the forces at your
command to intercede and prevent a massacre?'
The voice of Task Force Commander Major Julio
Gonzalez filtered through the small grid used for interfleet Frequencies. It
was cool and controlled. Bran wanted to smash the grid and the sickly smug face
that sat behind it.
'And I am forced to remind you once again, Governor
Bolo, that much as I sympathize with your plight there is nothing I can do. It
is, after all, only by pure coincidence that my force is here at all. We are on
a peaceful patrol and stopped by your planet only to pay the customary courtesy
call. Had we been a week earlier or later we would not even be witness to this
unfortunate situation.'
'But you are here and you are witness, Jaor,’ began
the governor for the seventeenth time, 'and ...'
'Please, sir, I've listened quite too Song as it is.
The Church and the Commonwealth have been at peace with the AAnn Empire for
years now ...'
'Some peace!' muttered an indiscreet voice elsewhere
on the network. If Gonzalez heard it, he gave no sign.
'... and I refuse to jeopardize that peace by
interceding In an affair that is none of my business. To intervene on either
side would be tantamount to an act of war. Also, I should be acting directly
contrary to my orders and to the purpose of this patrol. I must refuse to do
so, sir. I hope you can understand my position.'
'Your position" the governor gasped. His voice
was breaking noticeably under the strain of the last few days and he had to
fight to keep his thoughts framed in symbospeech.
'What of those AAnn-ghijipps out there? An
open attack on a helpless colony. "Act of war" you say! Isn't that a
direct violation of y our precious Convention? The one that "your"
patrol is supposed to be upholding?'
If your claim is just, I am sure the Convention
arbiters will decide in your favour.'
'Whose favour!' roared the Governor. 'Surely
you know what the AAnn do to subject planets! Especially those who have the
impertinence to resist. If there are none of us left alive to accept the
favourable decision of the arbiting board, what use your damned Convention!
Will our memories receive pensions?'
‘I am sorry, governor. I wish I could help you, but
...'
'Send just one of your ships, a token showing,' he
cried.
'They might hesitate .. '
‘I said I was sorry, governor. I am distraught.
Good-bye, sir.' Gonzalez had broken the connection.
From above and behind him. Bran heard the voice of
his young ship-brother. The insect's deep blue-green chiton was rendered even
more resplendent by the silver battle harness that enclosed its cylindrical
body.
'That,' said Truzenzuzex in cool, even tones, 'was
just possibly the most nauseating bit of rhetorical doggerel it has ever been
my misfortune to overhear.'
Bran agreed. He was finding it more and more
difficult to restrain himself. Even without the heightened-instinct-perception
drugs, the killing urge was beginning to steal warmly over turn. It had the
powerful push of righteous indignation behind it.
Isn't it possible that maybe the locals ...?' '...
haven't got a chance,' finished Truzenzuzex. 'They're outnumbered and
outgunned, and not a regular armed force among them in the first place. As the
AAnn doubtlessly surmised well in advance. I doubt 'f their ships even have
doublekay drives. Theirs is only a colony and they wouldn't have need of many.'
‘Typical AAnn
macoeuvre. Damn those anthropomorphic
bastards! Always sniping and chipping at edges. I wish they'd come right out and
say they're going to contest us for this part of the galaxy. Let 'cm stand up
and fight like men!'
'No can do, brother, because they obviously aren't.
And I refer not to their physiologies alone. According to the Aann standards
set down by their philosophy of "perpetual warfare as the natural state of
things," any advantage you can get over your opponent is by definition of
success ethical. They're not immoral, just amoral. Sneak attacks are like sugar
- pardon, -like bread- to them.'
‘If the major agreed to step in I'm sure headquarters
would give retroactive approval to the action,' Bran said. 'They'd offer
obeisance in public, sure, but privately I'll bet Marshal N'Gara would
approve.'
'He might. Might not. As soldiers grow older and more
powerful their personalities tend more and more to the mercurial. I can't see
dear sweet Gonzalez risking a chance to help a bunch of aliens, especially
non-Commonwealh. He's far too fond of his scotch and imported Terran cigars,
Besides, to undertake such an action would require at least a modicum of
imagination, a commodity in which our commander is sadly deficient. Look. It's
starting already.
Bran glanced up above the communications equipment to
the huge battle screen. Out in the void a number of ships represented only by
ghostly dots were manoeuvring across thousands of kilometres for position in a
battle which would prove notable only for its brevity. Somehow the locals had
mustered six spaceworthy ships. He'd bet a year's credit not one of them was a
regular warship. Police launches, most likely. Opposite, the well-drilled,
superbly disciplined Aann force was to lining one of its characteristic
tetrahedrons. Fifteen or so attack ships, a couple of destroyers, and two
bloated pips that in a normal battle situation he would have interpreted as
dreadnoughts. The finer instruments on the big board told the true story: same
mass, small gravity wells. Troop carriers, nursing dozens of small, heavily
screened troop shuttles.
He'd observed AAnn occupation forces in action before.
No doubt by now the members of the first assault wave were resting comfortably
in their respective holds, humming softly to themselves and waiting for the
'battle' to begin, masking sure their armour was highly polished, their
nerve-prods fully charged ...
He slammed a fist down on the duralloy board,
scraping the skin on the soft underside of his wrist. There were ten stingers
and a cruiser in the humanx force ... more than a match for the AAnn, even
without the dubious 'help' of the locals. But he knew even before the pathetic
debate of a few moments ago that Major Gonzalez would never stir from his
wood-panelled cabin on the Altair to intervene in any conflict where humanx
interests weren't directly threatened. He paused at a. sudden thought. Of course,
if a confrontation could be forced to the point that such a threat occurred ...
still no certain guarantee ... definite court-martial ... dismissal from the
Corps ... 300,000 sentient beings ... processing camps... He suddenly wasn't so
sure that he wanted to make captain after all. Still, he'd need the concurrance
of...
'Bran, our drive appears to lie malfunctioning.'
'Wha? I don't...'
'Yes, there is no question about it. We appear to be
drifting unavoidably into the area of incipient combat. At top speed, no less.
A most unusual awkwardness, wouldn't you agree?'
'Oh. Oh, yes.' A pseudo-smile sharp as a scimitar
cut his face. "I can see that we're helpless to prevent it. God damn
unfortunate situation. Naturally we'll
have to make emergency preparations to defend ourselves. I don't think the AAnn
computers will be overly discerning about ships which float into their target
area.'
'Correct. I was just about to commence my own
injections.'
'Myself also.' He snuggled back into the reaction
seat, felt the field that enabled them to manoeuvre at high speed and still
live take hold gently. 'Best hurry about it.'
He followed accepted procedure and did his best to
ignore the barely perceptible pressures of the needles as they slipped
efficiently into the veins on his legs. The special drugs that heightened his
perceptions and released the artificial inhibitions his mind raised to
constrain the killer instinct immediately began to take effect, A beautiful
rose-tinted glow of freedom slipped over his thoughts. This was proper. This
was right'. This was what he'd been created for. Above and behind him he knew
that Truzenzuzex was undergoing a similar treatment, with different drugs. They
would stimulate his natural ability to make split-second decisions and logical
evaluations without regard to such distractions as Hive rulings and elaborate
moral considerations.
Shortly after the Amalgamation, when human and thranx
scientists were discovering one surprising thing after another about each
other, thranx psychologists unearthed what some humans had long suspected. The
mind of Homo sapiens was in a perpetual state of uneasy balance between total
emotionalism and computer like control. When the vestiges of the latter, both
natural and artificial, were removed, man reverted to a kind of control led
animalism. He became the universe's most astute and efficient killing machine.
If tile reverse was induced he turned into a vegetable. No use had been found
for that state, but for theformer ...
It was kept fairly quiet. After a number of gruesome
but honest demonstrations put on by the thranx and their human aides, mankind
acknowledged the truth of the discovery, with not a small sigh of relief. But
they didn't like to be reminded of it. Of course a certain segment of humanity had
known it all along and wasn't affected by the news. Others began to read the
works of ancients like Donation Francois de Sade with a different eye. For
their part human psychologists brought into clearer light the marvelous thranx
ability to make rapid and correct decisions with an utter lack of emotional
distraction and a high level of practicality. Only, the thranx didn't think it
so marvellous. Their Hive rulings and complicated systems of ethics had long
kept that very same ability tied down in the same ways humanity had its killer
desires.
The end result of all the research and
experimentation was this: in combination with a ballistics computer to select
and gauge targets, a thranx-buman-machine triumvirate was an unbeatable
combination m space warfare. Thranx acted as a check on human and human as a
goad to thranx. It was efficient and ruthless. Human notions of a 'gentleman's'
war disappeared forever. Only the AAnn had ever dared to challenge the system
more than once, and they were tough enough and smart enough to do it
sporadically and only when they felt the odds to be highly in their favour.
It was fortunate that thranx and human proved even
more compatible than the designers of the system had dared hope - because the
nature of the drug-machine tie-up resulted in a merging of the two minds on a
conscious level, it was as if the two loves of a brain were to fight out a
decision between themselves, with the compromise then being paused on to the
spinal cord and the rest of the body for actual implementation, Some stingship
pilots likened it more closely to two twins in the womb. It was that intimate a
relationship. Only in that way would the resultant fighting machine operate at
100 per cent effectiveness. A man's partner was his ship-brother. Few stinger operators stayed married long,
except those who were able to find highly understanding wives.
The tingling mist flowed over his eyes, dimming and
yet enhancing his vision. The tiniest things became obvious to his perception.
Specks of dust in the cabin atmosphere became clear as boulders. His eyes
fastened on the white diamonds on the battle screen with all the concentration
of a starving cobra. All stinger pilots admitted to a slight but comforting
sense of euphoria when under battle drugs. Bran was experiencing it now. For
public relations purposes the enforcement posters insisted it was a beneficial
byproduct of the HIP drugs. The pilots knew it for what it was; the natural
excitement that overtakes most completely uninhibited humans as they anticipate
the thrill of the kill. His feelings whirled within, but his thoughts stayed
focused.
'Up the universe, oh squishy bug!' he yelled
drunkenly. Off from never-never land Truzenzuzex's voice floated down to him.
‘Up the universe, oh smelly primate!’ The ship
plunged towards one corner of the Aann tetrahedron.
The enemy force stood it as long as possible. Then
three ships broke out to intercept their reckless charge. The rest of the
formation continued to form, undaunted. Undoubtedly no one in a position of
command had yet noticed that this suicidal charge did not come from the region
of the pitiful planetary defence force circling below. And having all heard the
interfleet broadcast they knew it
couldn't possibly be a Commonwealth vessel. Bran centred their one medium SCCAM
on the nearest of the three attackers, the pointer. Dimly, through the now
solid perfumed fog, he could make out the outraged voice of Major Gonzalez on
intership frequency. It impinged irritatingly on his wholely occupied
conscious. Obviously Command hadn't bought their coded message of engine
trouble.
'You there, what do you think you're doing! Get back
in formation! Ship number ... ship number twenty-five return to Formation!
Acknowledge, iih ... by heaven! Braunsch-weiger, whose ship is that? Someone
get me some information, there!
It was decidedly too noisy in the pod. He shut off
the grid and they drove on in comparative silence. He conjured up a picture of
the AAnn admiral. Comfortably seated in his cabin on one of the troop carriers,
chewing lightly on a narco-stick ... one eye cocked on the Commonwealth Force
floating nearby. Undoubtedly he'd also been monitoring the conversation between
the planetary governor and Major Gonzalez, Had a good laugh, no doubt.
Expecting a nice, routine massacre. His thoughts must now be fuzzing a bit,
especially if he'd noticed the single stinger blasting crazily towards the
centre of his formation. Bran hoped he'd split an ear-sac listening to his
trackers.
His hand drifted down to the firing studs. The calm
voice of Truzenzuzex insinuated itself maddeningly in his mind. No, it was
already in his mind.
'Hold. Not yet,' Pause. 'Probability.'
He tried angrily to force the thought out and away.
It wouldn't go. It was too much like trying to cut away part of one's own ego.
His hand stayed off the firing stud as the cream-coloured dot grew maddeningly
large in the screen.
Again the calm, infuriating voice. 'Changing course
ten degrees minus y, plus x two degrees achieve optimum intercept tangent.'
Bran knew they were going to die, but in his detached
haze of consciousness it seemed an item of only peripheral importance. The
problem at hand and the sole reason for existence was to kill as many of them
as possible. That their own selves would also be destroyed was & certainty,
given the numbers arrayed against them, but they might at least blunt the
effect of the AAnn invasion. A tiny portion of him offered thanks for
Truzenzuzex's quiet presence. He'd once seen films of a force of stingships in
action with only human operators. It had resembled very much a tridee pix he'd
seen on Ten-a showing sharks in a feeding frenzy.
The moment notified him of itself. 'Firing one!'
There were no conflicting suggestion from the insectoid half of his mind. He felt
the gentle lurch of his body field as the ship immediately executed an
intricate, alloy-tearing manoeuvre that would confuse any return fire and at
the same time allow them to take the remaining two enemy vessels between them.
Without the field he would have been jelled.
The disappearance of a gravity well from the screen
told him that the SCCAM projectile had taken the AAnn ship, piercing its
defences. A violent explosion flared silently in space. A SCCAM was incapable
of a 'near-miss.’ The SCCAM system itself was a modification of the dobblekay
drive that powered the ships of most space-going races. When human and thranx
met it was found that the human version was more powerful and efficient than
the thranx posigravity drive. It also possessed a higher power-conservation
ratio, which made it more reasonable to operate. Working with their human
counterparts after the Amalgamation, thranx scientists soon developed a number
of improvements in the already remarkable system. This modified propulsive
drive was immediately installed in all humanx ships, and other races to order
the components which would enable them to make their own modifications. A
wholely thranx innovation, however, had been the adaption of the gravity drive
as a weapon of irresistible power. The SCCAM projectiles were in actuality
therm-o-nuclear devices mounted on small ship drives, with the exception that
all their parts other than those requiring melting points over 2400 degrees
were made of alloyed osmium. Using the launching vessel's own gravity well as
the initial propelling force, the projectile would be dispatched towards a
target. At a predetermined sate distance from the ship, the shell's own drive
would kick in. Instantly the drive would go into deliberate overload.
Impossible to dodge, the overloaded field would be attracted to the nearest
large gravity well in this case, the drive system of an enemy ship. Coupled
with the uncontrolled energy of a fusion reaction, the two intersecting drive
fields would irrevocably eliminate any trace of the target. And it would be
useless for an enemy vessel to try to escape by turning off its own field, for
while it might survive impact with the small projectile field, the ship had not
yet been constructed that could take the force of a fusion explosion
Unscreened. And as the defensive screens were powered by the posigravity drives
...
He felt the ship lurch again, not as violently this
time. Another target swung into effective range. He fired again. Truzenzuzex
had offered a level-four objection and Bran had countered with a level-two
objective veto. The computer agreed with Bran and released the shell. Both
halves of the ship-mind had been partially correct. The result was another hit
... but just barely.
The AAnn formation seemed to waver. Then the left
half of the tetrahedron collapsed as the ships on that side sought to counter
this alarming attack on their flank. More likely than not the AAnn commander
had ordered the dissolution. Penned up in a slow, clumsy troop carrier he was
by now likely becoming alarmed for his own precious skin. Heartened by this
unstrategic move on the part of their opponents the native defensive force was
diving on the broken formation from the front, magnifying the confusion if not
the destruction and trying to avert the attention of the Aann warships from
their unexpected ally. Bran had just gotten off a third shot -amiss- when a
violent concussion rocked the stinger. Even in his projective field he was
jerked violently forward. The lights flickered, dimmed, and went off, to be
replaced a moment later by the eerie blue of the emergency system. He checked
his instruments and made a matter-of-course report upwards.
'Tru, this time the drive is off for real. We're
going to go into loose drift only ... be paused. A typically ironic reply was
not forthcoming.
Tru? How are things at your end?' The speaker gave
back only a muted hiss. He jiggled the knob several times. It seemed operative.
'Tru? Say something, you slug! Old snail, termite, boozer ... god damn it, say
something!'
With the cessation of the ship's capacity for battle
the HIP antidotes had automatically been shot into his system. Thank Limbo the
automedics were still intact I He felt the killing urge flow out of him,
heavily, to be replaced by the dull aftertaste and temporary lethargy that
inevitably followed battle action.
Cursing and crying all at once he began fighting with
his harness. He turned off the body field, not caring if the ship suddenly
decided to leap into ward rive and spatter him all over the bulkhead. Redfaced,
he started scrambling over broken tubing and sparkling short-circuits up to
where Truzenzuzex lay in his own battle couch. His own muscles refused to
respond and he damned his arms which persisted in slipping off grips like damn
hemp. He hadn't realized, in the comfort of HIPnosis, how badly the little
vessel had been damaged. Torn sheeting and wavering filaments floated
everywhere, indicating a loss of shipboard gravity. But the pod had remained
intact and he could breathe without his hoses.
The thranx's position was longer and lower than his
own, since the insect's working posture was lying prone and facing forward.
Therefore the first portion of his fellow ensign's body that Bran encountered
was the valentine-shaped head with its brilliant, multifaceted compound eyes,
The familiar glow in them had dimmed but not disappeared. Furiously he began to
massage the b-thorax above the neck joint in an operation designed to stimulate
the thranx's open circulatory system. He kept at it despite the cloying wetness
that insisted on floating into his eyes. Throwing his head back at least made
the blood from the gash on his forehead drift temporarily backwards.
‘Tru! C'mon, mate! Move, curse you! Throw up, do
something, dammit!' The irony of trying to rouse his companion so that he could
then be conscious when the Aann disruption beams scattered their component
parts over the cosmos did not interrupt his movements.
Truzenzuzex began to stir feebly, the hissing from
the breathing spicules below Bran's ministering hands pulsing raggedly and
unevenly.
'Mmmfff! Ooooo! My friend, I hereby inform all and
sundry that a blow on the cranium is decidedly not conducive to literate
cognitation! A little lower and to the right, please, is where it itches. Alas,
I fear I am in for a touch of the headache.'
He raised a tmehand slowly to his head and Bran could
see where a loose bar of something bad struck hard after the body-field had
lapsed. There was an ugly dark streak in the insect's azure exoskeleton. The
thranx organism was exceptionally tough, but very vulnerable to deep cuts and
punctures because of their open circulatory system. When their armour remained
intact they were well-nigh invulnerable. Much more so than their human
counterparts. The same blow probably would have crushed Bran's skull like
eggshell. The great eyes turned to face him.
'Ship-brother, I notice mild precipitation at the
corners of your oculars, differing in composition from the fluid which even yet
is leaking from your bead. I know the meaning of such a production and assure
you it is not necessary. Other than injury to my immaculate and irresistible
beauty, I am quite all right ... I think.
‘Incidentally, it occurs to me that we both have been
alive entirely too long, As I appear to be at least momentarily incapacitated I
would appreciate it if you would cease your face-raining, get back to your
position, and find out just what the hell is going on.'
Bran wiped the tears from the corners of his eyes.
What Tru said was perfectly correct. He had been so absorbed in reviving the
insect be bad failed to notice that by ail reasonable standards of warfare they
should both have been dead several minutes now. The AAnn might be unimaginative
fighters, but they were efficient. He scrambled back to his seat and flipped
emergency power to the battle screen. What he saw there stunned his mind if not
his voice.
'Oooo-wowwww! Pibbixxx! Go get 'em Sixth, baybee!'
'Will you cease making incomprehensible mouth-noises
and tell me what's taking place? My eyes are not fully focused yet, but I can
see that you are bouncing around in your seat in a manner that is m no way
related to ship actions.'
Bran was too far gone to hear. The scene on the
screen was correspondingly weak, but fully visible none the less. It resembled a
ping-pong game being played in zero gravity by two high-speed computers. The
AAnn force was in full retreat, or rather, the remainder of it was. The bright
darts of Commonwealth stingships were weaving in and out of the retreating
pattern with characteristic unpredictability. Occasionally a brief, terse flare
would denote the spot where another ship had departed the plane of material
existence. And a voice drifted somehow over the roaring, screaming babble on
the communicator, a voice that could belong to no one but Major Gonzalez. Over
and over and over it repeated the same essential fact in differing words.
'What happened what happened what happened what...?'
Bran at this time suffered his second injury of the
action. He sprained a lattisimus, laughing.
It was all made very clear later, at the
court-martial. The other members of the Task Force had seen one of their
members break position and dive on the AAnn formation.' Their pilot-pairings
had stood the resultant engagement as long as possible. Then they began to peel
out and follow. Only the cruiser Altair bad taken no part in the battle. Her
crew bad a hard time living it down, even though it wasn't their fault.
Not so much as a tree on the planet had been
scorched.
The presiding officer at the trial was an elderly
thranx general officer from the Hiveworld itself. His ramrod stiffness combined
with fading exoskelelon and an acid voice to make him a formidable figure
indeed. As for the majority of the Task Force, its members were exonerated of
wrongdoing. It was ruled that they had acted within Commonwealth dictates in
acting 'under a justifiable circumstance where an act of violence against
Commonwealth or Church property or persons shall be met with a SI force
necessary to negate the effects of such violence. This provision was ruled to
have taken effect when the AAnn ships had engaged stingship number twenty-five
in combat. That ship number twenty-five had provoked the encounter was a point
that the court would 'take under careful study ... at length.'
Ensigns Bran Tse-Mallory and Truzenzu of the Zex were
ordered stripped of all rank and dismissed from the service. As a preliminary,
however, they were to be awarded the Church Order of Merit, one star cluster.
This was done. Unofficially, each was also presented with a scroll on which
those citizens of the colony-planet known as Goodhunting had inscribed their
names and thanks ... all two hundred and mnety-five thousand of them.
Major Julio Gonzalez was promoted to commander and
transferred immediately to a quiet desk post in an obscure system populated by
semi-inteiligent amphibians.
After first being formally inducted into his
ship-brother's clan, the Zex, Bran had entered the Church and had become deeply
absorbed in the Chancellory of Alien Sociology, winning degrees and honours
there. Truzenzuzex remained on his home planet of Willow-Wane and resumed his
preservice studies in psychology and theoretical history. The title of Eint was
granted shortly after. Their interests converged independently until both were
immersed in the study of the ancient Tar-Aiym civilization-empire. Ten years
had passed before they had remet, and they had been together ever since, an
arrangement which neither had had cause to regret.
'Buy a winter suit, sir? The season is fast nearing,
and the astrologers forecast cold and sleet. The finest Pyrrm pelts,
good sir"
'Pas? No. No thank you, vendor.' The turnout
to their little inn loomed just ahead, by the seller of prayer-bells.
Bran felt an uncommonly strong need of sleep.
Flinx
returned to his apartment to set himself in order for the trip. On the way back
from the inurb he had stopped at a shop he knew well and purchased a small
ship-bag. It was of a type he'd often seen carried by crewmen at the port and
would do equally as well for him. It was light, had a built-in sensor lock on
the seal, and was well-nigh indestructible, They haggled formally over the
price, finally settling on the sum of nine-six point twenty credits. He could
probably have cut the price another credit, but was too occupied by thought of
the trip, so much so that the vendor inquired as to his health.
At the apartment he wasn't too surprised to find that
all his possessions of value or usefulness fit easily into the one bag. He felt
only a slight twinge of regret. He looked around for something else to take,
but the bed wouldn't fit, nor would the portikitchen, and he doubted there'd be
a shortage of either on the ship anyway. Memories were stored comfortably
elsewhere. He shouldered the bag and left the empty room.
The concierge looked at him warily as he prepared to
leave her the keys. She was generally a good woman, but inordinately
suspicious, in reply to her persistent questioning he said only that he was
departing on a journey of some length and had no idea when he would return. No,
he wasn't 'running from the law'. He could see that the woman was suffering
from a malady known as tridee addiction, and her imagination had been drugged
in proportion. Would she hold the room for his return? She would ... for four
months' rent, in advance if you please. He paid it rather than stand and argue.
It took a large slice out of the hundred credits he'd made so recently, but he
found that he was in a hurry to spend the money as quickly as possible.
He strolled out into the night. His mind considered
sleep but his body, tense with the speed at which events had been moving around
him, vehemently disagreed'. Sleep was impossible. And it was pleasant out. He
moved out into the lights and noise, submerging himself in. the familiar frenzy
of the marketplace. He savoured the night-smells of the food crescent, the
raucous hooting of the barkers and sellers and vendors, greeting those he knew
and smiling wistfully at an occasional delicate face peeping out from the
pastel lit windows of the less reputable saloons.
Sometimes he would spot an especially familiar face.
Then he would saunter over and the two would chat amiably for a while, swapping
the stones and gossip of which Flinx always had a. plentiful supply. Then the
rich trader or poor beggar would rub his red hair for luck and they'd part -
this time, at least, for longer than the night.
If a jungle could be organized and taxed, it would be
called Drallar.
He had walked nearly a mile when he noticed-the slight
lightening of the western sky that signified the approach of first-fog (there
being no true dawn on Moth). The time had run faster than expected. He should
be at the port shortly, but there remained one last thing to do.
He turned sharply to his right and hurried down
several alleys and backways he knew well. Nearer the centre of the marketplace,
which was quieter at night than the outskirts, he came on a sturdy if small
frame building, it advertised on its walls metal products of all kinds for
sale. There was a combination lock, a relic, on the inside of the door, but he
knew how to circumvent that. He was careful to close it quietly behind him.
It was dark in the little building but light seeped
in around the open edges of the roof, admitting air but not thieves. He stole
softly to a back room, not needing even the dim light. An old woman lay there,
snoring softly on a simple but luxuriously blanketed bed. Her breathing was
shallow but steady, and there was what might have been a knowing smile on the ancient
face. That was nonsense, of course. He stood staring silently at the wrinkled
parchment visage for several long moments. Then he bent. Gently shifting the
well-combed white hair to one side he planted a single kiss on the bony cheek.
The woman stirred but did not awaken. He backed out of the room as quietly as
he had entered, remembering to lock the main door behind him.
Then be turned and set off at a brisk jog in the
direction of the shuttleport, Pip dozing stonelike on one shoulder.
The
great port lay a considerable distance from the city, so that its noise, fumes,
and bustling commerce would not interfere with the business of the people or
the sleep of the king. It was too far to walk. He hailed a Meepah-beast
rickshaw and the driver sent the fleet-footed creature racing for the port. The
Meepahs were fast and could dodge jams of more modem traffic. It was a
sporting way to travel, and the moist wind whistling past his face wiped away
the slight vestiges of sleepiness which had begun to overtake him. As the
animals were pure sprinters and good for only one long run an hour they were
also expensive. They flew past slower vehicles and great hoverloaders bringing
tons of goods to and from the port. As they had for centuries and doubtless would
for centuries to come, the poor of Moth walked along the sides of the highway.
There were none of the public moving walkways on Moth that could be found in
profusion in the capitals of more civilized planets. Besides being expensive,
the nomad populace tended to cut them up for the metal.
When he reached an area away from the bustling
commercial pits that he thought would be close to the private docks, he paid
off the driver, debarked, and hurried off into the great tubular buildings. He
knew more than a little of the layout of the great port from his numerous trips
here as a child. Where his interest in the place had sprung from he couldn't
guess. Certainly not from Mother Mastiff! But ever since an early age he'd been
fascinated by the port for the link it provided with other worlds and races.
When he had been able to steal away from that watchful parental eye he'd come
here, often walking the entire distance on short, unsteady legs. He'd sit for
hours at the feet of grizzled old crewmen who chuckled at his interest and spun
their even older tales of the void and the pinpricks of life and consciousness
scattered through it for his eager mind and the fawning attention he gave
freely. There were times when he'd stay till after dark. Then he'd sneak ever so
carefully home, always into the waiting, scolding arms of Mother Mastiff. But
at the port he was all but mesmerized. His favourites bad been the stories of
the interstellar freighters, those huge, balloonlike vessels that plied the
distances between the inhabited worlds, transporting strange cargoes and
stranger passengers. Why sonny, they'd tell him, if’n it weren't fer the
freighters, the hull damn uneeverse 'ud collapse, 'an Chaos himself 'ud return
t’rule!
Now maybe he'd have a chance to see one of those
fabulous vessels in person.
A muted growl went audible behind him and he turned
to see the bulky shape of a cargo shuttle leap spaceward, trailing its familiar
of tail cream and crimson. The sound-absorbing material in its pit was further
abetted by the layered glass of the building itself in muffling the scream of
the rockets and ramjets. It was a sight he'd seen many times before, but a
little piece of him still seemed to go spaceward with each flight. He hurried
on searching for a dock steward.
Approximately every fifteen minutes a shuttle landed
or took off from Drallar port. And it was by no means the only one on the
planet. Some of the private ports managed by the lumbering companies were
almost as big. The shuttles took out woods, wood products, furs, light metals,
food-stuffs; brought in machinery, luxury goods, traders, and touristas.
There! Checking bales of plastic panels was the white and black checkered
uniform of a steward. He hurried over.
The man took in Flinx's clothing, age, and ship-bag
and balanced these factors against the obviously dangerous reptile coiled
alertly now about the boy's shoulder. He debated whether or not to answer the
brief question Flinx put to him. Another, senior steward pulled up on a scoot,
slowed and stooped.
'Trouble, Prin?’
The steward looked gratefully to his superior.
"This ... person ... wishes direction to the House of Malaika's private
docks.'
‘Um.' The older man considered Flinx, who waited
patiently. He'd expected something of this sort, but read only good intentions
on the elder's part. 'Tell him, then. 'Twill do no harm to let him have a
gander at the ships, and mayhap he has real reason for being there. I've seen
queerer board Malaika's craft.' The man revved his scoot and darted off down
the vaulting hallway.
Pit five, second transverse tube on your left,' the
man said reluctantly. 'And mind you go nowhere else!'
But Flinx had already started off in the indicated
direction.
It wasn't hard to find, but the telescoping rampway seemed
endless. It was a relief to see the tail figure of the merchant waiting for
him.
'Glad to see you show, kijana!’ he bellowed,
slapping Flinx on the back. Fortunately, he managed to avoid most of the blow.
Pip stirred slightly, startled. 'You're the last to arrive. Everyone else is
already aboard and safely fucked away. Give your pack to the steward and strap
in, We're just ready to cut.'
Malaika disappeared forward and Flinx gave his bag to
the officious-looking young fellow who wore the House of Malaika arms (crossed
starship and credit slip) on his cap and jacket. The man ducked into a low door
to the rear, leaving Flinx alone in the small lock. Rather than stand by
Himself until the man returned to check him off, he moved forward to the
passenger cabin and found himself an empty seat.
Since this was a private and not a commercial
shuttle, it was smaller than most. There were only ten seats in the low, slim
compartment. The craft was obviously not designed for extended journeys. The
decoration verged on the baroque. He peered down the narrow aisle.
The first two seats were occupied by Malaika and his
Lynx, Sissiph. She was clad in a bulky Jumpsuit for a change, but it served
only to emphasize the beauty of her face. In the second row Bran Tse-Mallory and
Truzenzuzex were leaning into the aisle, arguing animatedly but amiably on some
subject which remained incomprehensible to Flinx on every level of perception.
Then came their two starship pilots, Atha Moon and the shadow man, Wolf. Both
were staring intently, but at different things. Atha was gazing out the port,
observing what she could of their normal preparations for lift. The man's eyes
were focused unwaveringly on an invisible point six inches in front of his
nose. His face was, as usual, utterly devoid of expression. He remained
unreadable.
Atha's attention seemed to vary awkwardly between the
outside of their tiny vessel and the front of the cabin. She was continually
darting her head into the aisle or poking it above the back of the seat in
front of her. Especially whenever an unusually loud giggle or chuckle came from
that vicinity. Probably she thought herself inconspicuous. Perhaps she hadn't
noticed him come aboard behind her. In any event she seemed unconcerned about
Wolf's presence.
Even from here he could see the way the muscles in
her neck and cheeks tightened, the way her blood pressure changed and her
breathing increased, in response to the byplay from up front. It was mild, but
still ... He shook his head. They hadn't even reached their ship yet and
already an explosive situation was building. He could not tell how long it had
been forming, but he did know one thing. He personally had no wish to be around
when it finally came to a head.
He wondered if Malaika had the slightest inkling that
his personal pilot of six years was hopelessly in love with him, There were
several empty seats, so he chose the one behind Atha. Not that he preferred it
so much to any other, but he preferred to stay as far away as possible from the
enigmatic Wolf. He couldn't read the man, so ha was still unsure of him. As he
had on numerous other occasions, he wished his peculiar talents wouldn't be so
capricious in their operation. But when he directed his attention to Wolf there
was only an oddly diffuse blank. It was like trying to fathom a heavy mist. Dew
did not hold the symbols well.
A brief admonition came over the cabin speaker and
Flinx felt the ship tilt under him. It was being raised hydraulically. Shortly
it had settled steady, at its lift-off angle of seventy degrees.
Another problem brought itself to his notice as he
was strapping himself in. Pip was still coiled comfortably about his left
shoulder. This definitely was not going to work! How were they going to handle
the minidrag? He motioned the steward over. The man struggled up the aisle by
means of handles set into the sides of the chairs. He eyed the snake wanly and
became a bit more polite.
‘Well, sir, it seems to be capable of keeping a
pretty firm grip with that tail. It can't stay like it is, though, because on
Jiff it'd be crushed between your shoulder and the chair.' The way he said it
made it plain that he wouldn't mind observing that eventuality. He went back
down the aisle.
Flinx looked around and finally managed to urge the
snake on to the thick arm of the seat opposite his. Since Pip was an arboreal
creature, Flinx was much more concerned about how it would react to the
pressure of lift-off than to 'the condition of weightlesness. Not to mention
how he'd manage himself.
He needn't have worried. The luxurious little craft
lifted so smoothly that pressure was practically nonexistent, even when the
rockets took over from the ramjets. It was no worse than a heavy blanket on his
chest, pressing him gently back into the padded seat. The muted hum of the
rockets barely penetrated the well-shielded cabin. Overall, be felt only a mild
sense of disorientation. By contrast, Pip appeared positively ecstatic. Then he
remembered that Pip had been brought to Moth by spaceship and bad therefore
undergone this same experience at least twice before. His apprehensions had
been groundless. But they bad served to take his mind off the flight. Another
glance at the minidrag showed the narrow head weaving from side to side while
the single-tipped tongue darted rapidly to and fro, touching every tiling
within reach. The pleated wings were unfurled and flapping in sheer pleasure.
After the rockets cut off and the little ship drifted
weightlessly, Flinx felt acclimated enough to reach over and pick up the snake.
He replaced it on its familiar spot on his shoulder. The confident pressure on
his arm and back was, as ever, reassuring. Besides, the dam thing was having
entirely too much fun. And the one thing they definitely did not need at the
outset of their expedition was the venomous reptile flapping crazily in free
fall about the confined space of the cabin.
They passed several vessels in parking orbit around
the planet, including one of the great fuelling stations for the shuttles. Some
of the giant craft were in the process of loading or unloading, and men in
suits floated about them sparkling like diamond dust. The boy's eyes drank in
every-thing and hungered for more. Once, when the shuttle turned ninety degrees
on its side and moved to line up for conjunction with their starship, the
planet itself rolled majestically into view beneath them.
From this angle the famous ring-wings were clearly
visible. The radiant butter-gold layers of rock and gas combined with the lakes
which glistened sapphirelike through breaks in the cloud cover to make the
planet more than ever resemble the Terran insect for which it had been named.
He got only the slightest glimpse of their ship, the Gloryhole.
That was enough. Sandwiched in among bloated freighters and pudgy transports
she looked like a thoroughbred in a barnyard. She still had the inevitable
shape of a doliblekay drive ship, a balloon stuck on to the end of a plumber's
helper, but the lines were different from most. The balloon at one end was the
passenger and cargo space, and the plunger at the other the generating fan for
the posigravity field. Instead of being wide and shallow, like a plate, the Gloryhole's
generating fan was narrower and deep, chalicelike. The passenger-cargo area was
still balloon-shaped, but it was a streamlined, tapered balloon. Simply on
looks alone one could tell that the Gioryhole was faster than any
regular freighter or liner aspace. It was one of the most beautiful things he'd
ever seen.
He felt a slight jolt through his harness as the
shuttle clicked into the transfer lock of the big ship. Following the steward's
instructions he released himself from the restraining straps and drifted after
the others into the umbilicitube, pulling himself hand over hand along the
portable pullway.
The luxury of the Gloryhole in comparison to the freighters he'd bad
described to him made itself quickly apparent. The starship's airlock was
furlined.
The steward and Malaika exchanged brief orders and
the uniformed young man drifted out of the tube, pulling in the line behind him.
After a bit the door whirred shut, and they were effectively separated from the
shuttle.
‘Je? If you'll all follow me - use the
handholds - we'll adjourn to the salon.' Malaika started off through the lock
exit. 'Atha, you and Wolf get up to Control and start up the drive. Let's have some decent gravity around here.
A bwbui I'm not, to spin my own web! The two of you now where your cabins are.'
Atha and the skull-face moved off through a side passage. Malaika swivelled to
face them. 'The rest of you I'll show to your rooms myself.'
The salon was a fairyland of glass, wood, and
plastics. Bubbles of crystal containing brilliantly coloured forms of aquatic
life were suspended throughout the big room by a thin but unbreakable network
of plastic webbing. Real trees grew through the green-fur floor, each
representing a different species native to Moth. Metal sculptures layered with
gem dust hung cloud like from the ceiling, which was a tridee soloid depicting
an open sky complete to clouds and sun. It began to darken, effectively
simulating the sunset taking place on the planet's side below. It was an odd
simile to come to mind, but for some reason Flinx could best liken the
sensation to walking through an especially fine beer.
The ship shuddered once, twice, ever so
imperceptibly, and he could feel the weight beginning to return to his body. He
started io float towards a side door and then began flailing frantically so
that he would land on his feet and not his head. A glance showed that none of
the other passengers were experiencing similar difficulties. Sissiph was being
steadied by Malaika, and Tse-Mallory and Truzenzuzex hadn't even bothered to
pause in their argument. Angrily he got his errant legs under him. No one
commented on his obvious difficulty, for which he was grateful. Full gravity
returned after a very short interval.
Malaika walked- over to what looked like a cactus but
actually a bar. "We'll remain at point nine five gravity for the duration
of the trip. Possibly most of you aren't used to keeping up muscle tone in
space' (Flinx took a quick sensing of the two scientists' compositions and
doubted the accuracy of Malaika's remark) 'and so I'd hesitate to set it lower
than that. The slight difference should be just enough to be exhilarating and it
approximates what we'll encounter on our objective planetfall.'
'This will serve as a. regular gathering place. Meals
will be served here by the autochef, unless you prefer to eat in your cabin.
Njoo, i will show you your own ...'
Flinx spent three days just examining his 'own'. It
was packed with fantastic devices that sprang at you out of floor, ceiling, and
walls. You had to watch your step. Press the wrong switch and you were liable
to be doused with warm water ... irrespective of your attire of the moment.
That bad been a disheartening experience, especially as he had been trying for
a haircut. Fortunately no one but Pip had been around to witness it.
He had been concerned to see how his pet would take
to the confinements of shipboard life. Everyone else, excepting possibly
Sissiph, had adjusted to the reptile's presence. So that didn't give him cause
for worry. As it happened, there were no others. The minidrag would go swooping
in and out among the pylons and plastic tapestries of the salon as if he owned
them, frightening the devil out of the inhabitants of the glass bubbles.
Occasionally it would bang batlike from a particularly inviting artificial
branch or real one. When it was discovered that the food selector in their
cabin could deliver fresh bits of raw Wiodor meat, the snake's content
ment was assured.
They had been moving out of Moth's system at a slow
but continually building speed for several days now. Malaika was in an
expansive mood, and so when Flinx requested permission to stand by in Control
during change over, the merchant acceded gracefully. Once they made the initial
jump past light speed at changeover their rate of acceleration would go up
tremendously.
Apparently no one else shared his curiosity. Malaika
remained secluded in his cabin with his Lynx. Tse-Mallory and Truzenzuzex spent
most of their time in the salon, playing personality chess and conversing in
languages and on subjects Flinx could grasp only an occasional bit of. Once
more he reflected on their complete ease and familiarity with starship travel.
Malaika had half-promised to come up to Control for
changeover to explain the workings to Flinx. But when the time came, Sissiph
was pouting over some incomprehensible slighting and the merchant was compelled
to remain in the cabin with her. In his place he instructed Atha to answer any
questions Flinx might have regarding the workings of the ship or drive. She had
acknowledged the order with obvious distaste.
Flinx had come to the conclusion that he was going to
have to be the one to break the silence that their unceremonious first meeting
had produced. Otherwise they might not exchange a word the entire trip, and
even a large spaceship is too small an area in which to retain animosities.
He entered Control and strolled up behind her seat.
Wolf was off on the opposite side of the room. She said nothing, but he knew
she had noticed his entrance.
He read directness and decided to counter with same.
'Look, I didn't mean to kick you back there in the
tower, that time.' She swivelled to eye him questioningly. That is, I didn't
mean to kick you, t meant to kick ... oh. hell I' The explanation hadn't seemed
this complicated when he'd rehearsed it in his mind. Of course, then, be hadn't
had to contend with the rich red-brown in those eyes. I thought you were a spy
... or assassin, or something. You certainly didn't look as though you belonged
where you were, so I took the least bloody route I could think of at the time
of forcing you into the open. It worked, you turned out to be not what I
expected, and I apologize. There! Truce?'
She hesitated, and then her face softened into an
abashed grin. She put out a hand. 'Truce" He kissed it instead of shaking
it, and she turned, pleased, back to her instruments. 'You know, you were
right, actually, I had no business at all being where I was. Nor doing what I
was doing. Do I look that much like an assassin from the back?'
'The contrary, the contrary.' Then, abruptly) 'You're
quite attracted to your boss, aren't you?'
Her face jerked up, surprised. One would have thought
he'd just revealed one of the great secrets of the universe. He had to work to
keep from grinning. Tree, was she that naive?
'Why ... why, what a thing to say! What a perfectly absurd
thought! Maxim Maiaika is my employer, and a good one. Nothing more. What makes
...? Oh, do you have any questions about the ship? If not, I am bus ...'
Hastily, he said, 'Why is it that while this ship is
infinitely more complicated than the shuttle, both require the same crew of
two?' He knew the answer, but wanted to keep her talking.
'That's the reason, right there.' She indicated the
panoply of ranked lights and instruments around them. 'Because it is so
complex, it requires a lot more automation just to operate. Actually, the Gloryhole
pretty well runs herself most of the time. Except for providing instructions
and handling decisions, we're here just in case of the unforeseen situation.
Interstellar navigation, for example, is much too complex for human or thranx
minds to manage on any really practical level. Starships have to be run by
machines or they'd be impossible altogether.'
‘I see. By minor situations and unforseen things, do
you mean like at changeover?'
'Oh, there's no real danger from change over. The
companies like to make a big thing of it to give their passengers a slight
thrill. Sure, once in a while you'll hear about something happening. A meteor
will make a millions-to-one infringement on the gravity well of a ship at the
moment of shift and the ship will turn inside out, or some-thing equally weird.
Those are real exceptions. The tridee and faxcax blow those incidents alt out
of proportion for their ratings value. Usually it's no more trouble than
stepping from land on to a floating boat.'
'Glad to hear it. I don't think I'd enjoy being
turned inside out. That was the old Curryon, wasn't it'?'
'Why, yes. It was twenty-four thirty-three, old
calendar. Actually, we have to worry only about keeping the center of the field
positioned constant with respect to the fan and generator. The computers take
care of most of that. Once it falls too far ahead or drops too close, you have
to stop the ship, then start up all over again. That takes a lot of time, for
deceleration and acceleration, and it's expensive as well as tricky. If the
field should start to oscillate, the ship could be shaken to pieces. But as i
said, the computers handle all that worry for us. Barring those unforeseen
circumstances, of course.'
'I've never been on a doublekay drive ship before.
I'm no physicist, but could you maybe give me a quickee explanation of how the
thing works? One that even my simple mind could understand'?'
She sighed. 'Okay. What the Caplis generator does ...
that's what we hold in the "fan" up ahead ... is in effect produce a
powerful but concentrated gravitational field at the nose of the ship. As soon
as the field exceeds the natural one of the ship, the ship moves towards it,
naturally attracted by a "body" of greater "mass" than
itself. Being part of the ship, the doublekay drive unit naturally goes along
with it. But the unit, having moved forward, is set to keep the field at a
constant distance from the hull of the craft. Therefore the field is moved
forward also. The ship will try to catch up to it again, and so on, ad
infinitum. The field is in effect pulling the ship instead of pushing it, as
the shuttle rockets do, Doublekay vessels actually move in a series of
continuous jerks, so rapid and close together that they seem to be one smooth,
unbroken pull. The increase or decrease in the size of the field determines the
speed of the ship.
'Being a wave and not a particle form of energy,
gravity isn't affected in the same way that mass is on approaching the speed of
light. The doublekay field creates a coneshaped zone of stress behind it, in
which mass acts differently than it does under normal circumstances. That's why
when we exceed the speed of light I don't see through you or something. Once
we've made that initial breakthrough, or “change over,” our rate of travel goes
lip enormously. It's something like riding the back of a very tame SCCAM shell.
'Our initial power comes from a small hydrogen
"spark-plug" ... I wonder
sometimes where that word came from ... up near the generator housing in the
tube section of the ship. Once started up, the field can be
"channelled" to a certain extent. That's where we get our gravity for
the ship and power to run the lights and a lit o bar and things.
"in the event of a drive failure there are
provisions for converting the fan loan old ion-type drive, powered by the
hydrogen plug. It would take twelve years at its best speed to get from Moth to
Power Line, the nearest inhabited planet. Farther out where the stars are more
scattered it's even worse. But twelve years or so is better than never.
Stranded ships have been saved that way ... those that managed to overcome
problems like lack of food and insanity. But the rate of failure for doublekay
drives in miniscule. Only rarely can a mere human manage to screw one up.'
Thanks,' said Flinx. 'That helps ... sort of.' He
glanced over at Wolf and saw that the man was totally immersed in his work. He
lowered his voice. ‘Incidentaily, I think maybe you've got the wrong idea of
what a Lynx is.'
'A prostitute,' she replied automatically.
'Uh-uh. The Lynx are a group of very beautiful and
ambitious women who don't regard life mating as the end-all of civilization.
They prefer to move from one fascinating man to another.'
'So I've been told. And seen. That's still a matter
of opinion.' She sniffed calculatingly.
He started for the exit. 'So I don't think you need
worry about Sissiph or any of the others settling down with your merchant,
permanent-like.'
'Listen!' she shouted, 'For the last time, I ...!'
She dropped her voice as Wolf looked over curiously. 'I am not in love with
Maxim Mataika!'
'Sure, sure,' said Flinx from the doorway. ‘I can see
that.'
It was only a short while later, while watching a
viewtape in his cabin, that he realized he'd missed changeover.
Teleen
auz Rudenuaman was resting easily in her rooms on the great estate complex of
her aunt. She was scantily clad. That is, she wore at least as little as the
huge male form which stood admiring the play of its muscles in the wall-length
mirror across from the bed-desk.
'Rory,' she said to the ceiling, 'you do love me,
don't you?'
'Um-hmm,' said the figure, bending on one knee and
flexing a forearm.
'And you'd do anything for me, wouldn't you?'
'Um-hmm.'
'Then why,' she said, sitting up abruptly and
shouting, 'the hell didn't you do anything when the old witch started in on me
this morning'?'
The figure sighed and turned regretfully from the
mirror to face her. Its body was hard, but the face was curiously soft, almost
childlike. Beautiful and soft. The expression it wore was amiable and best
described as intensely vacuous.
‘I could have said something. Teleen, dear,
but what would it have accomplished? Besides making her even more suspicious of
us. She had it in for you anyway, and nothing I could have said would likely
have turned her off. Besides, she was right, you know. You did foul up
that ...'
‘I’m not interested. I had enough of that from her
this morning. Surely she can't reasonably expect me to be responsible for the
ineptitude of men her people hired m the first place?'
Rory Mallap van Cleef sighed again and began pulling
on a gold dressing-gown. ‘I suppose not, dear. But then when has she ever been
reasonable a out anything? I really don't understand the intricacies of such
dealings. She was awfully bitchy, wasn't she?’
Teleen slid out of the bed and moved to sit next to
him. She put her arms possessively around the massive shoulders, resting her
head against one bulging dorsal.
'Look, Rory, I've told you before. The only way we're
ever going to have any happiness is to eliminate the old bag once and for all.'
Rory grinned. He was not without a sense of humour,
even if it did tend more than a bit to the primitive.
'Now is that any way to talk about your beloved
aunt?'
'No, it's the only way to talk about her! And at that
I'm flattering her. Every time we discuss her elimination my charitable
instincts get the better of me. But to be specific...
'Please, darling. I'm not in the mood now.'
'Rory,' she said, sitting back, 'are you in love with
me... or with her?'
'Don't be obscene, dear! You have no idea, no idea,
what a task it is constantly to have to feign interest in that sack of surgical
miracles. Especially,' and be drew her on to his lap and kissed her, 'after
you.'
'Mmmmm, That's the way I like to hear you talk!' He
had her purring again. 'You'll go along with me, then?'
'As I've said before, if you come up with a
reasonably sensible plan. Love or not. I'm not going to take a chance on
spending the rest of my life on some prison moon because some scheme is only
half worked out. I'm no genius, but I'm smart enough to know it. So you manage
the brains for both of us. I'll supply any needed muscle. Of which,' he added,
flexing a tricep lovingly, I have more than sufficient.'
She slipped out of his grasp and stamped angrily on
the deep fur floor, is did interesting things to the rest of her body. 'Stop
admiring yourself for a minute and try to be serious. Murder is not a funny
business!'
'It is when it involves your aunt,'
'Oh, you're impossible! All right; look, you know how
food she is of bathing in that pool, the little one with all those lovely fish
and snails and things?' Her eyes were slitted. 'How she never misses a daily
swim?'
'Yes, T know the place. So?'
'Would it be a simple matter to wire the tiling, do
you think?' He shook his head, doubtfully. 'Her people would notice that sort
of thing. You know how careful she is.'
'Not if we disguised it as one of those censored
frogs, or something r She glowed. 'Yes, a frog. I'm sure such a device could be
made. Waterproof, small, but still capable of delivering a lethal charge, yes.
And you could, urn, put the guard "to sleep" for the minute necessary
to slip the thing into the water.'
'That does sound good, darling. Yes, Teleen, I do
think so too!' He lifted her off the floor and kissed her gently. 'One thing,
though. Why haven't you thought of something like this before?'
Her mouth twisted in a feral smile that, had she
known it, was almost a carbon copy of her aunt's. 'Oh, I have, I have, sort of.
But until this morning, I really hadn't been sufficiently inspired I Today I
was finally convinced she is quite mad. It will be only a kindness to gift her
with a long sleep.'
Rashalleila Nuaman switched off the spy-screen and
smiled kittenishly to herself. Her niece's generosity and concern was ... well,
appalling. So she had finally dug up enough courage to actually plan the thing!
About time, yes. But to trust that 'side of beet" van Cleef with such
knowledge! Tsk. Poor judgement, poor. How anyone could actually fall in love
with an automaton, an utter nonentity, like that! Oh sure, he was great between
the sheets. But beyond that he was a nothing, a void, a null factor.
Well-meaning and' affectionate, to be sure. Like a large puppy-dog. Ah, well.
Let them enjoy their private games. It would be good practice for Teleen. Buoy
her self-confidence, and all that. Eventually, though, the poor thing would
have to be jolted back to her senses. She giggled at the small witticism. Such
folderol was fine, but not on company time. Which reminds. Must have the ground
keeper get rid of all those nice froggies. Temporarily, at least. No use
wasting. Dinner tomorrow, perhaps.
She had turned off the spy-screen a-few moments too
early. Downstairs, her niece's stimulated mind had come up with another
thought.
'We also ought to keep the old bitch off balance,
Rory. While we're trying to hammer this thing out. She's not a complete idiot,
you know,'
'I suppose that's a good idea,' said van Cleef,
flexing his quadriceps. 'You'll think of something,' Her face was alight. 'I
have. Oh, have I!' She turned away and walked over to the china desk. A hidden
switch revealed a comm-screen she knew wasn't being tapped by any of her dear
auntie's automatic spy monitors. It was the one machine on the estate whose
circuitry she'd checked over herself. She tapped out a rapid, high-speed series
of numbers that sped her call over a very special and very secret relay system
to a little-contacted section of space.
Eventually the screen cleared and a face began to
take shape.
'Well, good light to you, Amuven DE, and may your
house always be filled with dust.'
The face of the AAnn businessman crinkled in a toothy
smile. 'As always, as always. So good to hear from you again, Mistress Rude!'
Flinx
had been staring silently out through the main viewport of the salon for some
time, well aware that there was someone behind him. But to have turned
immediately would have engendered unnecessary awkwardness. Now lie turned to
see the two scientists and became aware that be needn't have been concerned.
Neither was paying the slightest attention to him. They bad drawn over lounges
and were staring out at the magnificent chaos of the drive distorted heavens.
Taking no notice of their scrutiny, the prismatic panoply flowed on unchanged.
'Don't mind us, Fhinx. We're here for the same thing.
To enjoy the view,' The philosoph returned his attention to the great port and
the doppler-distorted suns which glowed far more sharply than they ever could
in their natural state.
But Flinx's concentration and mood had been broken.
He continued facing the two scientists.
'Sirs, doesn't it strike you as odd that in a time
when so many folk have so much trouble getting along with one another, you two,
of two utterly different races, manage to get along so well?'
'Your questions, T fear, will never carry the burden
of subtlety, lad.' Tse-Mallory turned to the thranx. 'At times in the past my
friend and I existed in a rather close – one could say intimate - association.
Or work necessitated it. And we are not so very different as you might think.'
‘I remember your calling each other ship-brother
several times.'
'Yes? I suppose we did. We've never gotten used to
the idea that other people might find it unusual. It's so very natural to us.
‘You were a gunnery team?'
‘No,' said Truzenzuzex. 'We flew a stingship. Small,
fast, a single medium SCCAM projector.’
'As to our relationship irrespective of ship life,
Flinx, I'm not sure Tru and I could give you an objective answer. Our personalities
just seem to compliment one another. Always have. The attraction between human
and thranx is something, that psychologists of both races have sweated over for
years, without ever coming up with a. satisfactory explanation. There are even
some pairs and groupings that become physically ill if one is separated long
from its alien counter-part. And it seems to work on both sides. A kind of
mental symbiosis. Subjectively, we just feel supremely comfortable with each
other.
'You know the events leading up to the Amalgamation,
the Pitar-humanx war, and such'?'
'Only bits and pieces. I'm afraid. Regular schooling
is something that eluded me early.'
'Umm. Or vice versa, I suspect. Tru?'
'You tell the lad. I'm certain he'd find the human
version of the story more palatable.'
'All right.'
'Human and thranx have known each other for a
comparatively short period of time. Hard to believe today, but true. A little
over two t-centuries ago, scoutships of both races first encountered each
other's civilizations. By that time, mankind had been in space for several
previous t-centuries. In that time, while engaged in exploration and
colonization, he had encountered many other alien life-forms. Intelligent and
otherwise. This was also true of the thranx who had been in space even longer
than humanity.
‘There was an indefinable attraction between the two
races from the very outset. The favourable reactions on both sides far
outweighed the expected prejudice and aversions.'
'Such existed on the thranx planets as well,' put in
Truzenzuzex.
‘I thought I was going to tell this?'
'Apologies, oh omnipotent one!'
Tse-Mallory grinned, and continued. 'The thranx were
as alien as any race man had yet encountered. A hundred-per cent insectoid, hard-shelled,
open circulatory system, compound eyes, rigid, inflexible joints ... and eight
limbs. And they were egg-layers. As a news commentator of the time put it,
"they were completely and delightfully weird." '
If I recall aright, your people laid a few eggs at
that time too,' piped the pililosoph. Tse-Mallory shut him up with an
exasperated glance.
'From past experiences one would have expected the
human reaction to the discovery of a race of giant sentient insects to be
hostile or at least mildly paranoid. That had proved the pattern in too many
previous contacts. And man had been lighting small and much more primitive
cousins of the thranx for thousands of years on the home planet. In fact, if
you can believe it, the term "bug" originally had a derogatory
connotation.
'But by now mankind bad learned it was going to have
to live in peace and harmony with beings whose appearance might be personally
repulsive. It didn't help things to know that many of those same beings
considered man at least as repulsive-looking as he considered them.' He glanced
expectantly at Truzenzuzex, but that worthy was at least temporarily subdued.
'So the actual reaction between human and thranx was doubly unexpected. The two
races took to each other like a pair of long-separated twins. The thranx traits
of calmness, cool decision-making ability, politeness, and wry humour were
admired tremendously by humans who'd sought such qualities in themselves. By
the same token there was a recklessness combined with brains, an impossible
self-confidence, and a sensitivity to surroundings that thranx found appealing
in man.
'Once it had been voted on by both races and approved
by considerable margins despite the expected opposition from moneyed
chauvinists. Amalgamation proved to be even less trouble than the optimists had
anticipated. Thranx click-speech, with its attendant whistling, actually had a
reasonable phonetic counterpart among the thousands of Terran languages and
diaiects.'
‘African sub-divisions,' mused Tnizenzuzex, Xhosa.'
‘Yes. For their part thranx could, with difficulty,
manage the major human language system ol' Terrangio. The eventual outgrowth of
much work by phoneticists, semanticists and linguists on both sides was a
language that hopefully combined the better aspects of both. The clicks and
whistles and some of the rough rasps of Hive-speech major were kept in, intact,
along with most of the smoother sounds and vowels of Terrangio. The result was
probably the closest thing to a universal language, barring telepathy, we’ll
ever have' symbospeech. Fortunately for business purposes, most other races
with vocal apparatus can also manhandle at least enough of it to get by with.
Even the AAnn, who turned out to be better at it than most.
'The mutual admiration society was off and winging.
Pretty soon it had extended itself to other aspects of the new human
life-system. Our politicians, judges, and law-makers couldn't help but admire
the beauty and simplicity with which thranx law and government had been put
together. It was practically an art-form, built up as it had been from the old
Hive structure itself. Not that it was that different from the oldest human
municipalities and nation-states. Just much more sensible. Thranx lawyers and
magistrates soon cleared away a lot of the backlog that had been clogging human
courts. Besides their superlative natural sense of jurisprudence, they could
not possibly be accused by anyone of partiality.
Terran-derived sports, on the other hand, completely
revolutionized the thranx's biggest problem - that of leisure. They simply
hadn't realized that there were so many organized ways of having fun. When they
discovered chess and judo, it was all over with flip-the-rock and that ilk.'
'Third-degree black belt,' noted Truzenzuzex proudly.
'Although I'm getting a bit creaky for such activity.'
'So I've noticed, I could go on and on, lad. Human
planets were deluged with exquisite examples of thranx workmanship. Machinery,
handicrafts, personal gadgetry, delicate electrical products, and so on. Even the body colouring of each was pleasing
to the other, although thranx odour had a decided advantage over the human.'
'No argument there,' puffed the philosoph. That
earned him another sharp glance.
'When the thranx got hold of Terran literature,
paintings, sculpture, and such seemingly unrelated things as ice-cream and
children's toys ... in short, the two races just seemed to merge amazingly
well, And the greatest of humans achievements, the modified doublekay drive,
you must know about.
'But by far the greatest impetus towards amalgamation
along with the Pitar-liumanx war was the formation of the United Church.
Powerful) relatively new groups existed among both races with similar beliefs.
When they learned of one another's existence, an alien organization with
practically identical theologies and desires, they soon had formed a combine
which rapidly overwhelmed all but the most die-hard members of the older
established churches. Not the least of its strengths was that it insisted on
being called a nonreligious organization. For the first time, people could get
top-level spiritual guidance without having to profess a belief in God. Back
when, it was a real revolution.'
'As near as we can tell,' put in Truzenzuzex, 'it is
still unique in being the only multiracial spiritual institution in the galaxy.
And other races have members.'
‘I'm afraid I don't belong,' said Flinx.
'Doesn't bother me. The Church really couldn't care
less. They don't proselytize, you know. They're much too busy with the
important things. Sure, they'd be glad to have you or anyone else as a new
member, but you have to go to them. The mountain will have to go to Mohammed,
because Mohammed is busy enough in his neighbourhood!'
'What?' said Flinx.
'Forget it. Archaic reference. Even our materialistic
captain is a member."
‘I guessed that. Does he believe in God. too?'
'Difficult to tell,' Said Tse-Mallory thouglitfully.
That's only inidental anyway. I'm more concerned about whether or not God
believes in him, because I've a hunch we're going to need any outside help we
can get before this trip is over.'
'How about the Pitar-humanx war?' Flinx prompted.
'Oh that. Tomorrow, hmm? I could use a drink right
now. Haven't done that much lecturing since ... a long time.'
True to his word he picked up the narrative the
following morning, over tea and sweetcakes. Besides, one gets bored quickly in
space. His audience had grown, however, since everyone was now in the salon
except Wolf. It was his turn on duty watch.
‘I too am familiar with the details,' put in Malaika,
an arm curled possessively around Sissiph's waist. 'But I think I'd enjoy
hearing you tell it, juu ya. I know my versions are wrongs' He laughed
uproariously.
'So,' said Tse-Mallory, unconsciously aping their
host. 'Some five t -decades after the initial Terran-thranx contact, relations
between the two civilizations were growing at a geometric pace. Both sides,
however, were still wary of each other. Contact between the two religious
groups was still in a formative stage, and amalgamation was a dream in the
minds of a few outstanding visionaries of both races. These were still greatly
outnumbered by the "patriots" on both sides.'
'Then came the first Terran contact with the Pitar.
That race occupied two densely populated planets in the Orion sector. They were
a totally unexpected factor, an alien race human to point nine six three
places. Really a remarkable and as yet unequalled coincidence of form.
Externally they were for all practical purposes identical with humankind. In
looks, as a race, they came pretty close to the Terran ideal. The males were
tail, muscular, handsome, and exceptionally structured. The women were one
hundred per cent feminine and at least as attractive as the men. Humanity went
through a brief, hysterical phase in which anything even remotely Pitarian was
the subject of slavish imitation. The Pitar themselves seemed cordial enough,
if a bit nervous and self-centred. Limitless professions of mutual aid and
un-dying friendship were exchanged between the two races.
'The Pi tar were highly scientific, and in a few
phases of research came surprisingly close to matching Terra. Weaponry, for
example. The reasons for this obvious dichotomy in their seemingly peace loving
civilization became apparent later. Too much later. It also appeared to have a
disproportionate influence in their social setup.
'Human-Pitar friendship was progressing at a rate
comparable to bliman-thranx. Several years after first contact, a tramp
freighter happened to put in at a large but out-of-the-way human old colony.
Treetrunk, or Argus V, as it's better known now. Apparently the entire colony,
some six hundred thousand souls, had been utterly and ruthlessly wiped out by
an unknown lifeform. Not a man, woman,
or child had been left alive on the entire planet. Corpses of women seemed to
be especially lacking. The reason for this was discovered later also. Well,
expressions of sympathy poured in from the other intelligent races, including
the Pitar. They were at least as outraged as any of the others. Most races then
sent out scouts to try to locate this new and virulent alien race before they
themselves could become the victims of a similar atrocity.
'Two months later a man was found orbiting one of the
devastated planet's two moons in an antique, jury-rigged lifeboat. A cruiser of
the Unop-Patha - you know that race? - was on courtesy patrol at the
time and happened to drift within range of the boat's feeble transmitter. They
had never encountered an insane human before and were pretty much at a loss as
to what to do with him until they could finally turn him over to the nearest
human authorities. That happened to be the big research group which was sifting
Treetrunk for clues. A month of intensive treatment succeeded m restoring the
fellow to partial coherency.
It took them some time to make sense of his story.
His mind had been badly unhinged by months of helpless drifting in space, fears
of meeting an enemy ship - and, after a while, of not meeting one - and by what
he had seen on the planet itself. It was fortunate that he didn't have the
courage to commit suicide. The ugly story he told has been documented many
times over and I find it personally distasteful, so I will skip over the gory
parts.
'The enemy had struck without warning, raining death
on the unprepared, populace. Being without a regular military force - or need
of one - the planet was quite helpless. The police skiffs tried and, as might
have been expected, proved useless. All appeals for mercy, negotiations, or
surrender were met with the same response as ferocious resistance. When all
opposition had been crushed and all interstellar communications completely
destroyed, or blanketed out, the invaders came down in ships of vaguely
familiar design to inspect what remained of the battered colony.
'Our single survivor had been as surprised as anyone
when the sneak tridee screens had focused on the locks of the landing shuttles
and armed Pitarian troops had come pouring out. They were remorseless in their
destruction of the surviving human population, treating it as if they were the
lowest, filthiest organisms in the universe. They helped themselves to a few
valuables and such, but for the most part they seemed to enjoy killing for the
love of it. Like weasels on Terra. At this point the man's mind started to
shrink away again. The psychiatrists who attended him felt that if he'd
remained sane he never would have been able to cope with the other stresses
that his escape put on his mind. Like not eating for four days, and such. The
Pitar were thorough. They carried life detectors to search out survivors no
matter how well they were hidden.
'Our informant had lived in a small town near the
planet's equator. He had once been a ship's engineer and had bought a small,
obsolete lifeboat which he enjoyed tinkering with in his spare time. Again, it
took a madman to suppose that that wreck could ever make it to the nearest
moon. Before the enemy troops had reached his area he had managed to provision
the tiny ship and perform a successful liftoff. Obviously the orbiting warships
were no longer expecting a vessel from the planet's surface. All spaceports had
been destroyed, and all the commercial doublekay drive ships in parking orbit
had been vapourized while trying to escape or taken over by Pi tan an prize
crews. No one thought of an attempt to escape simply to space. The moons are
uninhabitable' and there are no other planets in the system capable of
supporting human life. Or possibly they weren't geared to the detection of a
propulsive system as tiny and outmoded as his. Anyway, he made it safely
through their outward-turned screens and into a closed orbit around the first
moon. He never really expected to be picked up. All his addled mind could think
of was getting away from the abomination below. It was pure chance that he was
rescued.
‘That was the gist of Ins story. Among the nauseating
details the probes pumped out of him was what the Pitar did with the bodies of
all those missing women. That was so disgusting the authorities tried to keep
it from the general public, but as usually happens in such cases, the word got
out. The resultant uproar was violent and widespread. War was never even
formally declared because most of the members of the Terran Congress held
reserve commissions and rushed to get aboard their ships.
'The gigantic armada that was assembled buried itself
into the Pitarian system. Much to everyone's surprise, the Pitarians held their
own from their planetary and satellite bases. In space their ships were no
match for the human fleet, in addition to being heavily outnumbered, but the
possibility of such an eventuality had been considered by the Pitarians and
their scientists had put up an offensive-defensive net-work which the starship
weaponry was unable to batter through. It settled down to a war of attrition
which the Pitarians hoped to win by making it too expensive to bear. As a
result they were effectively blockaded from the rest of the universe, or, as
the more polite were wont to put it, were placed in a state of "enforced
quarantine".
‘It appeared as though the situation might stay that
way indefinitely. That is, until the t bran x stepped in. Like most of the rest
of the intelligent races the thranx had heard the details of the Argus V
massacre. Unlike most of them however, they were determined to do something
more effective than blockading. As far as the thranx were concerned the final
straw was the use to which the Pitar bad put human females. The female is
considered even more an object of veneration and helplessness on thranx worlds
than on the most gallant of humaiioid ones. This is a legacy from their early
ancestors, when there was one egg-laying queen to protect and nurture. When
this hereditary attitude was translated into manners, it was one reason why
Terran and other humanoid females who had had contact with the thranx were
among the first vociferous boosters of the idea of almalgamation.
'So the thranx added their fleets to the human. At
first this had no effect other than to intensify an already near-perfect
blockade. Then the human-thranx teams made their first big breakthroughs on the
doublekay drive systems, the SCCAM weapons complex, and more. A device had
finally been found which could successfully penetrate the Pitarian battle
network. It was used. There was at this time some desire among humanx
scientists to make an attempt to preserve at least a portion of Pitarian
civilization intact, for study. They Sloped to find an explanation for their
extreme racial paranoia. Sentiment being what it was on the human planets, however,
this proved impossible. There is also some reason to believe that the Pitarians
themselves would not have permitted this. Their affliction was that strong.
Any-way, they fought to the last city.
‘The three planets remain, blasted and empty. One human,
two Pitarian. They are not often visited, except by the curious and the morbid.
The scientific teams that worked on the ruins of the
Pitarian civilization came to the conclusion that the race was totally unable
to accept or understand terms like mercy, compassion, openness, and equality,
and similar abstract concepts. They believed themselves to be the only race
worthy of existence in the universe. Once they had managed to steal all the
knowledge they would stoop to borrow from the barbaric humans, they set out to
destroy them. The other intelligent races of the galaxy would have been next on
their programme of extermination, including the thranx. Compaired to them our
erstwhile modern competitors, the AAnn, are positively pacific.
'Fortunately, in most respects the Pitarins were
no-where near as sharp as the AAnn. Their weapons development far exceeded
their racial maturity, and their conceit their cleverness. I've often wondered
whether the Pitar-humanx war was a single boost to amalgamation or a multiple
one. There was mutual hatred of the Pitarians, the gratitude mankind felt for
the thranx aid, and the fear that somewhere out among the stars there might
exist another bunch of psychopathic fillers like the Pitar.'
It was very quiet in the elegant room when
Tse-Mallory bad finished.
'Well,' said Atha finally, breaking the thought-heavy
silence, ‘it's my turn up front, I'd better go an relieve Wolf.' She uncurled
herself from the lounge and departed forward.
'Ndiye, ndiye,? The merchant, leaned over and leered at
Sissiph. 'Come, my pakadoge, little pussy. We are only half-way through that delightful
book of yours, and I can't wait to see how it turns out. Even if it is mostly
pictures. You'll excuse us, gentlesirs?'
Giggling, the girl led him out of the salon.
Tse-Mallory began setting up the levels for the
personallty-chess board, while Truzenzuzex began shuffling the cards and lining
up the blue and red and black pieces.
Flinx looked up at the sociologist. 'Sir, you didn't
participate in the Pitar-humanx war, did you?'
'Pure Flux, youth, no! I’ll admit to being aged, and
rarely even to old, but archaic - never! I did have a grandfather who
participated, though. As I suppose alt of our ancestors of that time did, one
way or another. Didn't yours?'
Flinx rose and idly brushed off his pants. The fur
from the carpet had a tendency to cling. 'Excuse me, please, sirs. I recall
that I haven't fed Pip his evening meal, and I wouldn't want him to get
irritated and start nibbling on my arm.'
He turned and headed for the passageway. Tse-Mallory
looked after him curiously, then shrugged and tinned back to the game. It was
his move.
Thus
far there had been no trouble. The first sign of it came three ship-days safer.
Malaika was in Control, checking out co-ordinates
with Wolf. In his cabin Truzenzuzex was rigid in a meditation trance. He
utilized that technique whenever be wished to consider a problem involving
extreme concentration. And sometimes just to relax. In that state he required
less body energy. In the salon, Tse-Mallory was trying to explain the workings
of a semantic puzzle to Flinx. Atha was nearby, attempting somewhat' boredly to
beat herself at the ancient and timeworn game Of Monopoly. She moved the
obscure little idols and symbols in ways that Flinx had always found dully
repetitive. Everything continued normally until Sissiph, bored and ejected from
Control by the busy Malaika, stomped crankily into the room, a trail of
translucent pseudolace flowing behind her.
'This is a dull place! Dull, dull, dull!
Like-like living in a coffin!' She fumed quietly for a few minutes. As no one
deigned to notice her, she moved to a more central location. 'What a
collection! Two pilots, two brain cases, and a kid with a poisonous worm for a
pet!'
Pip's head lifted abruptly and the minidrag made an
unfriendly motion in the girl's direction. Flinx stroked the back of its head
until it had relayed sufficiently for some of She tightness to leave the long
muscles. His own response was mild as he considered the
self-uacertainty/anger/coo-fusion in the girl's mind.
‘It is a reptile, and bears no relation to ...'
'Reptile! Worm! What difference does it make?'
She pouted. 'And Maxy won't even let me watch while he plays with all
those darling co-ordinates and standards and things! He says I
"distract" him. Can you imagine? Distract him?'
‘I can't imagine why it should either my dear,'
murmured Atha without looting up from her game. Ordinarily Sissiph probably
would haven't made anything of it. Back in Drallar she'd had more than ample
opportunity to inure herself to Atha's sarcasm. But the combination of the long
flight and her frustrations of the moment combined to make her turn. Her voice
was tight.
‘Is that supposed to be some kind of crack?'
Still Atha did not look up from her game. No doubt
she expected Sissiph to brush off the remark as she usually did and go
flouncing from the room in a dignified huff. She returned with a slang phrase
‘Tis truth, forsooth.’
'And your mouth,' rejoined Sissiph, parodying the
words terribly, 'is a bit too "looth"!’ She gave the game table a
quick shove with a knee. Being portable and not bolted to the fabric of the
ship, it toppled easily. Small metal objects and plastic cards sailed in all
directions.
Atha closed her eyes tightly, not moving, and then
slowly opened them again. She turned easily to stare at the Lynx, her eyes even
with the other girl's knees.
‘I think, honey, that if we're going to pursue this
conversation, we'd do it better on a more equal level.'
Her forearm shot out and caught the surprised Sissiph
behind the knees. She let out a startled squeak and sat down hard.
From there on, their bodies seemed to merge so
closely that Flinx was hard put to tell them apart. Their thoughts were
indecipherable. Scientific combat went out the port, so to speak. Tse-Mallory
left his puzzle and made a laudible, if foolhardy, attempt to stop it. All he
received for his efforts was a long scratch on one cheek. At that moment
Malaika, summoned hastily by Flinx with a gentle probe, appeared in the fore
doorway. He took in the whole scene at a half-glance,
'What in the name of the obscenity sewn hells is
going on here?'
Even his familiar bellow had no effect on the two
combatants, who were by now too deeply engrossed in their work to notice mere
mortal entreaties. The merchant moved forward and made an attempt to separate
the two. Several,in fact. It was like dipping one's bands into a whirlwind.
Frustrated, he backed off.
The longer one lived m the lower levels of Drallar,
the greater one's acquired knowledge of elementary human psychology. Flinx said
loudly bat evenly, putting as much disgust into his voice as be could muster,
'My, if you two only knew how funny you look!' He also risked a brief mental
projection of the two combatants, suitably embellished.
There was immediate peace in the room. The cloud of
hair, teeth, nails, and shredded clothing ground to an abrupt halt, resolving
itself into two distinct bodies. Both stared blankly at Flinx, then uncertainly
at each other.
‘Thanks, kijana. I'd thought you might help
out here and there, but apparently there's no end' to your talents.' Maiaika
reached down and grasped each girl by the remaining material at the scruff of
her neck, Sifting them much as one would a pair of obstinate kittens. The two
glared silently at one another and seemed more than willing to start in all
over again. Perceiving this, he shook them so hard that their teeth rattled and
their tippers fell-off.
'We're on a billion-credit hunt in rarely spaced
territory after something which any other company in the galaxy would gladly
slit my throat for an inkling of, and you two mwanamkewivu, cretins,
idiots, can't live in peace for a month!' He shook them again, although not as
furiously. Neither of them looked in the mood for fighting now. If this happens
again, and I'll warn you only once, I will cheerfully chuck the both of you,
biting and scratching if that's the way you want it, out the nearest airlock! Is
that understood?'
The two women stared silently at the floor.
'An
ndiyo au la! Tell me now!' The voice reverberated around the saion.
Finally Sissiph murmured, almost in audibly. 'Yes,
Maxy.' He turned to glare murderously at Atha.
'Yes, sir,' she said meekly.
Malaika would have continued, but Wolf chose that moment
to peer into the room.
'Captain, I think you'd better come take a look at
this. There is an object or objects on the screens which I would say is a ship,
or ships, i'd like your opinion,'
'Nini?’ Malaga roared, whirling. 'What!' He
let go of the two women. Both stood quietly, trying to create order out of the
chaos of their clothing. Occasionally one would glance up at the other, but for
now, at least, both were thoroughly abashed.
‘It appears to be closing on us, sir. I do wish you'd
come take a look... now.' Malaika turned to face the erstwhile fighters. ‘Atha,
you get fixed up and up front... upesi! Sissiph, you go back to our
cabin and stay there.' Both nodded soberly and departed in different
directions.
'Sociologist, you go and get your friend out of that
semi-sleep, or whatever he calls it. I want you at full consciousness in case
anything untoward happens. I have a hunch both of you have had at least a
modicum of experience with deep- space ship manoeuvres?'
‘Tse-Mallory had started off towards Truzenzuzex's
cabin. Now he paused to smile back at the big trader. 'Something of the sort,'
lie said quietly.
‘Fine. Oh, kijana?’ Flinx looted up. "You
keep a close eye on that pet of yours. Things might get a little bouncy around here.
I don't know how excitable that little devil is, but I wouldn't want him
underfoot and nervous around busy people.'
'Yes sir. Have you any idea what it is?'
'Yes and no. And I'm afraid it's liable to be the
former. And that's bad.' He paused, thoughtful. 'You can come up front, if you
like, so long as you watch that snake. Tell our learned passengers they can
too, if they so desire. There's enough room. I just don't want Sissiph around.
The darling pakadogo has a tendency to get hysterical when things aren't
where she can put a finger... and other delightful things... on them. But I
think perhaps the others would like to be around when we find out what is what.
And they might have hunches to contribute. I value hunches highly. By the way,
I don't suppose you can answer that question for me?'
Flinx concentrated, hard. It was a long way off, but
there was nothing else around for light-years, so it came in strong, strong.
"If was malignant/strange/picture of dry air, sun, blood/taste of
salt/relief/all wrapped in cold, clear thoughts like snow-melt fitted in only
one type...
He looked up, blinked. The merchant was watching him
intently, with not a little hint of concern. He became aware then of the beads
of sweat on his brow. He said one word, because it was sufficient.
'AAnn.'
The merchant nodded thoughtfully and turned for the
door.
The
dot that indicated the presence of an operating posi-gravity drive field was
dear now and far off to their 'right' - about ninety degrees or so to the present
x-plane. It was moving on a definite convergence course. They still could not
be sure what it was, other than that at least one mind occupied a similar area
of space.
An ancient aphorism someone had once recited to Flinx
came back to him. As he recalled it, there had been two men involved, one old
and one young. The younger had said, "No news is good news,' and the
other, a Terran holy man, had wisely replied, 'That's not necessarily true, my
young friend. A fisherman doesn't think he's lucky if he doesn't get a bite.'
He wasn't positive that the story was an appropriate analogy for the moment,
because be found himself disagreeing with the holy man.
‘Two of them. Captain,' said Wolf. 'See...’
It was true. Even Flinx could see that as the large
dot came closer it was separating into two distinct points. At the same time he
sensed a multiplicity of similar minds to the one he'd first noticed although
much weaker.
'Two ships,' said Malaika. 'Then my one guess is in
error after all. Before shadows. Now, everything in the dark. Usiku.
Still, it might be...'
'What was your guess, Maxim?' asked
Truzenzuzex.
‘I thought perhaps a competitor of mine - a certain competitor - had gotten
drift of your discovery to a greater extent than I originally thought. Or that
certain information had leaked. If the latter case, then I should suspect that
some- one on this ship is a spy.’ There were some fast, uneasy glances around
the cabin. 'That is still a possibility, but I am now less inclined to suspect
it. I don't know of any combine in the Arm, neither the one I had in mind nor
even General Industries,
that could afford or would be inclined to put out two ships on what has a very
good chance of being a profit-less venture on merely spurious, secondhand
information. Not even an AAnn Nest-Corporation.'
‘In which case,' said Tse-Mallory, 'who are our two
visitors?' I don't know, sociologist, hata kidogo. Not at all. But we
will no doubt find out shortly. They should be in reception distance
momentarily, if they aren't already. If there were a relay station in this area
we might have found out sooner... assuming of course that they wished us to
know of their presence, and knew closely enough where we were. I think that I
doubt that...'
Atha was efficiently manipulating dials and switches.
I've got everything wide open, sir, and if they're beaming us, we'll pick it
up, all right!'
They did.
The face that appeared on the screen was not
shocking, thanks to Flinx's advance warning, but the garb it wore was because
it was so totally unexpected.
'Good morning to you, Gloryhole,' said the
sallow-faced AAnn officer-noble who looked out at them. 'Or whatever day-period
you are experiencing at the moment. The illustrious and renowned Maxim Malaika
captaining, I assume?'
'The puzzled and curious Maxim Malaika is here, if
that's what you mean.' He moved into the centre of the transceiver's pickup.
'You're one up on me.'
'Apologies,' said the figure. I am named Riidi WW,
Baron Second of Tyrton Six, Officer in the Emperor Maahn the Fourth's Circumspatial
Defence Forces. My ship is named Arr, and we are accompanied, in travel
by her sister-ship, the Unn.'
Malaika spoke in the direction of the omnipickup
mike. 'All that. Your mother must have been long-winded. You boys are a bit off
your usual tracks, aren't you'?'
The Baron's face reflected mild surprise. As Flinx
suspected, it was mock. 'Why, captain! The Blight is unclaimed space and open
to all. There are many fine, colonizable, unclaimed planets here, free to any
spacegoing race. While it is true that in the past His Majesty's government has
been more involved in outward expansion, an occasional search for planets of
exceptionai promise does sometimes penetrate this far.'
‘A very concise and seemingly plausible explanation,'
whispered Truzcnzuzex to Malaika from out of range of the audiovisual pickups.
‘Yes,' the merchant whispered back. "I don't
believe a word of it either. Wolf, change course forty-five degrees t-plus.'
'Done, Captain.'
'Well, Baron, it's always nice to hear from someone away
out in the middle of nowhere, and I am sure that two of his Majesty's
destroyers will be more than a match for any planet of "exceptional
promise" you may happen to find. I wish you luck in your prospecting.'
'Your offers of good fortune are accepted in the
spirit in which they are given, Captain Malaika in return I should like to
extend the hospitality of my ship and crew. Most especially of our galley. I am
fortunate enough to have on board a chef who works wonders with the cuisine of
thirty-two different systems. The fellow is a. wizard, and would be proud to
have the opportunity to display his talents before such discerning gourmets as
yourselves.'
Wolf's low whisper cut across the cabin. 'They've
changed course to match our new one, sir. And accelerated, too.'
'Keep on course. And pick it up enough to match their
increase. But do it subtly, mwanamume, subtly!' He turned back to the
screen.
'Truly a gracious offer, Baron, and ordinarily T
would consider it an honour and a delight to accept. However, I am afraid that
circumstances warrant we decline this particular invitation. You see, we had
fish for supper last evening, and I am certain it was not per pared half so
well as your chef could manage, because we have all been suffering from severe,
pains of the lower intestinal tract today. If we may, I'll put off your kind
offer till a later date.'
Away from the mike he whispered, 'The rest of you get
back to yow cabins and strap down. I'll try to keep you up on what happens
through your intership viewers. But if we have to bump around a bit, I don't
want you all bouncing off the woodwork and messing up my carpets!'
Flinx, Tse-Mallory, and Truzenzuze made a scramble
for the exitway, being careful to stay out of range of the tri-dee video
pickup. But apparently Truzenzuzex couldn't resist a dig at a persistent and
long-time enemy. The thranx had had dealings with the AAnn long before mankind.
He stuck his head into range of the pickups and
yelled, 'Know, 0 sand-eater, that I have sampled AAnn cuisine before, and that
my gizzard has found it to be gritty to the palate. Those who dine upon rocks
rapidly assume the disposition and mental capacity of the same"
The AAnn bristled, the scales along its neck-ridge
rising. 'Listen, dirt-dweller, I'll inform you that ...!' He caught it in
mid-curse and recomposed himself with an effort. Feigning a sigh where he no
doubt would have preferred a threat, he said, 1 retain the courtesies while it
is evident they have departed your ship. Captain. Have it your way. You cannot outrun
us, you know. Now that we are within easy range, my detector operators will be
most careful not to lose you. It will be only a. matter of time before we come
within filial distance of you. At that moment T would hope that you would have
reconsidered my really exceptionally polite and generous invitation, and will
lower your field. Otherwise,' he said grimly, lam very much afraid we shall be
forced to open you up like a can of zith-paste.
The screen abruptly went blank.
In his cabin, Flinx lay down on his bed and began to
strap into the emergency harness that was affixed permanently to its sides. He
had Pip next to his left hand, curled around a bar On the side of the bed. He admonished it
to bo quiet. The snake, sensing that important things were happening, did as k
was told with a minimum of fuss and bother.
When he had finished and settled himself into the
closest thing to a comfortable position he could manage in the awkward harness,
he turned on the little screen which hung suspended from the roof of the cabin.
It cleared instantly to reveal Malaika, Atha, and Wolf busy in Control. Un-willingly, he began to recall more
familiar sights and smells. It embarrassed him, but at that moment he wished
fervently he were back home in Drallar, juggling before an appreciative crowd
and masking small boys laugh by telling them the names of their secret loves.
What he could interpret of the mind/thoughts of the AAnn commander was not
pleasant. The feeling passed abruptly as though a cool rag had been drawn across
his mind and be settled himself grimly to wait.
In the huge, exotically furnished cabin which formed
her quarters, Sissiph lay alone on the big bed, curled in her harness. Her
knees nearly touched her chest. She felt very alone. The order to don harness bad
been delivered in a tough, no-nonsense tone that Maxy had never used with her
before, and she was frightened. The luxurious accoutrements, the intricately
carved furniture and sensuous cantilevered lighting, the king's ransom in
clothing scattered about the room, all suddenly seemed as frivolous and flighty
as the toys of a child. She had known, she had simply known, when she had
chosen to try to replace that other little witch - what had been her name? - as
Malaga's steady Lynx, that something terrible like this was going to happen.
She had known it!
Merchants were so damned unpredictable!
She did not throw the switch which would lower the
screen and put her in communication with Control and the rest of the ship. Let
him survive without her for a while! Instead she buried herself as deeply as
she could in the purr-silk pillows and promised herself that if she survived
this awful, horrible journey into no place, she was going to find some nice
hundred-and-fifty-year-old man ... on the verge of death. A senile, wealthy
one, with whom she could look forward to a nice, quiet, comfortable, short,
married life... and a long, wealthy widowhood.
Bran Tse-Mailory was lying in his bed quietly
reviewing the hundred and five maxims of the state of Indifferent Contentment,
It was originally invented by a brilliant graduate student to help nervous
students relax for examinations. It would do duty in other situations. The
current one, for example. But no matter how hard he tried, he couldn't get past
twenty-one. It kept repeating it self over and over in his mind every time he
tried to concentrate on twenty-two.
'Mankind must without a doubt be the most conceited
race in the universe, for who else believes that .God has nothing better to do
than sit around all day and help him out of tight spots?'
It was an unworthy thought for one who supposedly had
mellowed so over the years, but how, oh, how lie wished for the comforting grip
of a gun - any kind of gun -under his fingers. They tightened and relaxed
reflexively, making deep furrows in the softness of the blankets.
The Eint Truzenzuzex was lying quietly on his
modified lounge, legs fully extended, foothands and truehands crossed on his
chest in the proper Oo position. He tried to keep one half of his mind
focused on the ship viewer, while the other half droned through the ritual.
‘I, Tru, of the family Zen, clan zu, the Hive Zex, do
hereforth pray that I shall not bring disgrace on my-our ancestors. I, Tru, of
the family Zen, clan zu, the Hive Zex, do hereforth pray that in the coming
Time of Trouble I may reflect credit on my first-mother, clan mother, and Hive
mother. I, Tru, of the family Zen, clan ...'
Atha Moon and the man called Woif thought otherwise.
They were much too busy for anything else. And Maxim Malaika, the man who was
responsible for them all, did likewise. Also, he was too scared to have time
for trivialities like worry. Wolf broke into his nonthoughts.
They've closed to within five mils, sir. At this rate
they'll be within particle-beam range in five, ten minutes.'
'Choovy! And other urnmentionables! Damn!' Atha looked back at him
worriedly. "Couldn't we try to dodge them, Maxim? I mean, Captain'?'
'La,
hasha, Atha. Mo way. Those are AAnn destroyers out there. They're built to chase
down and slice up ships much faster than we are. The Gloryhole is a rich
man's whim, not a navy ship. But it is something of a speedster, Sharti. Of
necessity. With any kind of distance between us at initial contact we might
have slipped out of detector range and lost them, but they were on top of us
before we even knew who they were. Anyway, there are two of them. One, labda,
we might still slip, but never two. Not at this range.'
Atha thought. 'Couldn't we just, well, surrender and
take our chances'? I mean, everything considered, that Baron didn't seem all
that awful. Just impatient. And we aren't at war or anything with his people.'
'Ndoto. A dream. The AAnn don't operate that
way, Atha.' His
lips were firmed, 'tight. 'At best they are... intolerant... with folk who
co-operate with them. With those who don't... lf you're curious about details,
ask Wolf. He was
in an AAnn prison camp for five years, during the last real humanx-AAnn
conflict. There may be others who survived that long in one of those hell-pits
and lived to tell of it. If so, I haven't met him,'
'The captain is right, Miss Moon. I would much rather
throw myself into space to blow up like a deep-sea fish than be captured by
those again.' He nodded at the screen, where the white dots continued their
inexorable approach. 'Among their other affectations, they are very adept at
the more refined forms of torture. Very. It is something of an art form with
them, you see. Most of my scars don't show. They're up here, you see.' He
tapped the side of his head. If you wish some detailed descriptions ...'
Atha shuddered. 'Never mind.’
'This Riidi fellow seems fairly decent... for an
AAnn, but to take the chance... If I could spare Wolf from plotting, or myself
from the computer... landunono' No, wait" He leaned over the mike pickup.
'Ninyi nyote! Tse-MaHory, sociologist. And you, bug! Have either of you
ever handled a spatial weapon before ? Even In simulation T In his cabin
Tse-Mallory nearly broke a finger struggling with his harness. And Truzenzuzex
broke off his ritual in a place and manner that would have earned him the
condemnation of every member of his clan, had they known of it.
'You mean you've got a gun on this tub?'
shouted Tse-Mallory. 'What kind? Where? Speak up, mercantilist! Implosion
weapons, particle guns, missile tubes, explosive projectiles, rocks... Tru and
T will handle it!'
'Je? I hope so. Listen to me. Behind your
cabins, naani, storage compartment. There's a walkway, it opens into the
cargo balloon. Then a pullway. Go to the end of the main pull way, you can't
get lost. You'll find branches there. Be carefull, there's no gravity in that
part of the ship. Take the one that goes ninety degrees north of your
horizontal. At the top you'll find a medium charge interstice laser, mounted on a universal
belt encircling the ship, I'm powering it now.' He paused momentarily while his
hands did things below the range of the camera's pickup.
‘It is a single-person mounting. Sorry, philosoph.
But you could help him with the computer. If he doesn't have to watch the imageouts
and battlescreen at the same time...'
The two men of peace were already on their way.
Malaika uttered a silent prayer in the hopes that the
two scientists wouldn't cut up the ship and turned back to his tables.
'How are we doing, Wolf?'
'They're still closing, sir. Not as rapidly now that
we've picked up our own speed, but still closing. Yon want to go on maximum?'
'No. No, not yet. That's strictly out last gasp, if
we need it. Let them continue to think the Glory’s just another
freighter for a while. First I want to see what our braincases can do with the
popgun.'
The braincases in question were making their way
along the pullway at breakneck speed. Fortunately, there was no drifting cargo
to impede their progress. The great metal-fabric enclosure was almost
completely empty. A few cases drifted lazily in their spiderweb enclosures,
giving the pale green cavern and its ghostly atmosphere a tinge of perspective.
The feeling was enhanced by the lighting, or lack of it. Since this area of the
ship, although by far the largest, was rarely visited except upon arriving or
departing a cargo stop, the lighting was kept to a minimum. Even so it would
have been lost in the cargo compartments of one of the great 'Soaring Sun'
class freighters.
They had no trouble locating the correct branchway at
the end nexus of the main one. It was the only strand headed remotely in the
required direction. Tse-Mallory launched himself upward and began to float up
to the rope. He reached out and began to pull himself rapidly upward, hand over
hand. Truzenzuzex, he knew, would be right behind him. With its four hands the
insect could go faster than he, but there was no reason for him to pass Bran
since ho couldn't operate the human-contoured gun nearly as well.
They reached the gun housing, a sphere of thick metal
like a blister in the skin of the ship. It had its own emergency power and air
supply. Far off to both sides he could see where the mounting's powered belt
encircled the skin of the vessel. Moving along that belt the gun could cover an
approaching threat from any angle. He had only a second to wonder what it was
doing on a private yacht before he was inside the shell and buckling himself
into the gun seat, Truzenzuzex secured the hatch behind them, moving to the
computer imageouts to Bran's left, A more modern weapon would have had both
combined in a single helmet-set that would fit down over the gunner's bead. The
insect began to cannabalize braces, locks, and belts from the emergency
compartments, until he had built himself a reasonably solid harness opposite
the 'puter.
Bran wrapped his light hand around the pressure
trigger with all the fondness of a proud father caressing his new-born. His
left went into the battlesureen sensory pickup. He let go of the trigger for a
moment, reluctantly, to tighten the nerve sensors around his spread left hand.
He flexed it once to make sure the pickups didn't pinch and then returned the
right to the trigger grip. Next began a careful examination of the screen and
dial scopes. It was definitely an early model, but then laser weapons hadn't
changed much in their basic design for several centuries, and probably wouldn't
in several more. The base design was too cheap and efficient. He had no doubt
that he could operate this one effectively on the first try. Come to that, he'd
damn well have to! Their pursuers weren't likely to give them a practice shot.
Under impulses from his left hand the battlescreen
Ht. He was gratified to see that his combat reflexes, at least, were still
operative. On the screens were two dots the size of his thumbnail. For a moment
he almost panicked, thinking he was back on the old Twenty-Five. If an opposing
ship had m amazed to approach this close in a war situation they'd have been
vapourized by now. But then, this wasn't a war situation. At least not yet. He
put that unpleasant line of thought out of his mind. Something for the
diplomats to sharpen their tongues on. Obviously neither of the approaching
ships had expectations of meeting even token resistance. It was simply a game
of catch-up. They came on openly and without caution. Possibly, hopefully, they
also had their screens down or at least underpowered.
From his left Truzenzuzex began rattling off a.
stream of figures and co-ordinates. One of the destroyers was slightly nearer
than the other. The sloppy formation was the inevitable result of
overconfidence on the enemy's part. Bran began lining up a centre shot. His
finger hesitated over the trigger, and he spoke into the intership mike.
'Look, Malaika. These people are here after
something, and since we've only got one something worth risking an interstellar
incident over, they're going to want us in One piece. I don't expect them to
start any reckless shooting. They're coming in as if all they expect to have to
do is net us like a clipped Geech bird. I've played with the AAnn
before. They're not overimaginative, but they think damn fast. That means one
good shot and one only, and then we'd better run like hell. How close can you
let them get while still giving us an outside chance to break their detection?
Assuming they'll be sufficiently confused to let us.’
Maiaika. calculated rapidly in his head. 'Um ... um
... mara kwa mara ... that Rildi fellow will have to decide whether to
blow us to atoms or make another try ... the latter, I don't doubt ...has to
take us alive, or not at all... I can give you another two mils distance. La,
one and a half, now.'
'Good enough,' said Tse-Mallory, concentrating on the
screen, ft would have to be, he thought. 'We'll know it back here when the
'puter hits it.' Malaika didn't reply. That will bring us down almost to ... to
three,' said Tnizenzuzex.
I supposed. Let me know when we reach three point
one.'
Time enough?'
Tse-Mallory grinned. '0le bug-wug, me friend, my
reflexes have slowed down through the years, but dead yet they ain't! It'll be
enough. Up the universe!'
‘Up the universe!' came the even reply.
In Control, Malaika turned to Wolf, his face
thoughtful.
'You heard?'
The shadow-man nodded.
'All right then. Start slowing down. Yes, slowing
down! If he says he's going to get only one shot, he's probably going to get
only one shot, and I want him to have as good a line as possible. So let's make
it look nearly as we can as though we're giving up the chase.'
Obediently. Wolf began cutting their speed. Slowly,
but the AAnn compouters would notice it.
‘Three point seven ... three point six...
Truzenzuzex's voice recited the figures with machine-like precision and
clarity.
Bran's body was steady, but he was trembling ever so
slightly inside He was older.
‘Tru, uh, did you spot any HTP drugs in that
emergency locker?'
'Heightened TP? Three point five ... you know that
stuff's almost as carefully watched as the SCCAM circuitry. Oh, there's some of
the bastard stuff back there, the kind that's available on any black market.
All that will do, my friend, to borrow a saying, is "screw up you bod' ...
three point four ...not to mention your reflexes... screw it down, more likely.
Relax.'
‘I know, I know!' His eyes never left the screen.
'But, vertebrae. I wish I had some now!'
'Obscenity is better ... three point three ...
pretend you're back at the University working over old man Novy's thesis. That
ought to generate enough anger for you to take those ships apart with your bare
hands...'
Bran smiled, and the tenseness left him. Back at the
University old professor Movy had been one of their pet animosities.
'... three point two ...'
He could see the bastard's ugly face now. He wondered
what had finally happened to the old boy after ... His finger tightened on the
trigger.
'... three poi ...'
Already the pressure-stud was being depressed.
In the nothingness of nowhere a lancet of emerald
green brighter than a sun leaped from the Gioryhole across a second of
infinity. A milli-instant later it impinged on the drive fan of the nearest
AAnn warship, which happened to be the Unn. There was a soundless flash
of impossible scintillating gold flame, like the waves of tortured hydrogen that march across the skin of
stars. It was followed by an explosion of vapourized solids and an expanding,
rapidly diffusing cloud of ionized gas.
The battle screen showed one white dot and one tiny
nebula.
In the gun housing, Bran was frantically trying to
reline the laser for a shot at the second ship, but he never got a real chance.
At the instant of silent destruction, Malaika had
permitted himself one violent cry of ‘Oseee-yees!’
Then, 'Wolf, Atha, get us moving, watti!' Atha
slammed over & connection and the Gloryhole leaped forward at her
maximum acceleration.
On the still existing AAnn ship, the Arr,
panic reigned only in those areas of the vessel where Baron Riidi WW's control
was peripheral. Around him the crew only reflected fatal resignation. The one
pleasant thought m all their minds was what they would do to the people on
their quarry once the commander and the techs had extracted whatever it was
they wanted from them. None glanced at the Baron's face for fear of meeting his
eyes.
The Baron's polished claws scraped idly at the scales
on his left arm. There was a voi pickup set by the right one.
'Enginemaster,' he said calmly into the grid, 'full
power, please. Everything you can spare from the screens.' He did not bother to
inquire if they were now up.
He turned back to the huge battlescreen which
dominated the bridge. On it a white dot had shrunk rapidly but had not
succeeded in disappearing completely. Now, it could not. Without taking Ills
eyes from the screen he addressed the crew over the comm-system.
'No one is to blame for the loss of the Unn. Not
expecting interspace weaponry on a private craft of that type, only debris
screens were up. That error has since been rectified. The enemy is faster than
originally estimated. It apparently hoped to pass out of detector range in the
confusion engendered by the loss of our sister-ship. This had not occurred. It
will not occur. We are through playing polite. Bend your tails to it., gentlemen, we have a
ship to catch! And when we have done I can promise you at least some interesting
entertainment!’ Inspired,
the crew of the Arr dipped to their tasks with a will.
Bran cursed once, briefly, as the surviving A. Ann
ship shrank out of range.
Truzenzuzex was busily disengaging himself from his
make shift harness. 'Relax, brother. You did as well as we'd hoped. Better.
They had their screens down, all right, or they wouldn't have gone up like
that. We must have hit their generator dead on. Metamorphosis, what a show!'
Tse-Mallory took the advice and relaxed as well as he
could. 'Yes. Yes, you're perfectly correct. Tru. A second time we wouldn't have
been so lucky. If we'd had a second time.’
'Quite so. I suggest now a return to our cabins. This
toy will be of no further use. If we had a real gun, now ... oh, well. After
you, Bran.'
Truzenzuzex had reopened the hatch and they dived
down the pullway. Heading back through the murky green hollows they missed
Mataika's congratulations as they poured over the now untended mike in the
gunshell.
'Ships and novas, ships and novas! By the tail of the
Black Horse nebula! They did it! Those effete, simple, peace-loving nduguzuri
did it! Taking out a warship with one shot from that antique!' He shook his
head. 'We may not get out of this but, by mitume, the prophets, those
lizards'll know they've been in a fight!'
Wolf brought the merchant back to reality. Not that
his mind had ever really left it, but his spirit bad - momentarily. It had been
refeshing, anyway.
'They're beginning to pick up on us again, sir.
Slower than before. Much slower. But we're running on everything we have and
they're still making up distance on us.'
Atha nodded concurrence. 'The screen may not show it
yet, but it's here in the readouts. At this rate we've got maybe three - no,
four hours before they're within paralysis-beam range.'
'Je! That's it, then. Pepongapi? How
many evil spirits?'
He sat down in his seat. Once they got that close
they'd make mummies out of everyone on board and then unwrap their minds at their
leisure. The methods might vary, but they would undoubtedly be unique in their
unpleasantness. That could not be permitted to happen. As soon as the AAnn got
that close he'd see to it that everyone had a sufficiently lethal dose of
something from med supply to insure that questioning would remain an
impossibility. Or possibly a laser would be better. Burned down to ashes, the
AAnn technicians, good as they might be, couldn't reconstruct. Yes, that was a
better choice. After he finished with everyone else he'd have to make certain
not to miss the brain. He'd have only the one shot. Better start looking for a
mirror, Maxim!
If there were only some way they could pick up enough
speed to swing out of detector range! Even if only for a few microseconds, it might
be enough. Space was vast. Given that one precious interval the Gloryhole
should easily shake her pursuers. Unconsciously, he put his hand over Atha's.
'There's got to be a way to pick up another half
multiple!'
He didn't notice the way her hand trembled when his
covered it, not the way she looked down at it. He removed it abruptly without
being aware of the effect he'd had on his co-pilot. It joined the other in
digging at their owner's hair.
Flinx was also considering the problem, in his own
way. He knew little about stellar navigation, and less about doublekay units
... but Malaika had forgotten more than he might ever know. He couldn't match
the mere h ant's knowledge, but he could remember for him. The links in the
trader's mind branched a million ways. Patiently, he tracked down now this, now
that one, bringing long-forgotten studies and applications to the surface where
Malaika's own system would pick them up, look them over, and discard them. In a
way it was tike using the retrieval system at the Royal Library, lie kept at it
with a steadiness he hadn't known he possessed, until ...
'But aktti! Commonsense ...!' He paused, and
his eyes opened so wide that for a moment Atha was actually alarmed. 'Atha!'
Sbe couldn't prevent herself from jumping a little at the shout. He had it.
Somehow the idea had risen from its hiding place deep in his mind, where it had
lam untouched for years.
'Look, when the Blight was first reached, survey
ships went through it - some of it - with an eye towards mapping the place,
right? The idea was eventually dropped as impractical - meaning expensive - but
all the information that had originally been collected was retained. That'd be only proper. Check
with memory and find out if there are any neutron stars in our vicinity.'
'What?'
'An excellent idea, Captain,' said Wolf. 'I think ...
yes, there is a possibility - outside and difficult, mind - that we may be able
to draw them in after us. Far more enjoyable than a simple suicide.'
It would be that, Wolf, except for one thing. I am
not thinking of even a complicated suicide. Mwolizurl, talk to that
machine of yours and find out what it says!'
She punched the required information uncertainly but
competently. It took the all-inclusive machine only a moment to imageout a long
list of answers.
'Why yes, there is one, Captain. At our present rate
of travel, some seventy-two ship-minutes from our current attitude.
Co-ordinates are listed, and in this case are recorded as accurate, nine point
... nine point seven places.'
'Start punching them in.' He swivelled and bent to
the audio mike. 'Attention, everybody. Now that you two minions of peace and
tranquillity have effectively pacified half our pursuit, I've been stimulated
enough to come up with an equally insane idea. What I'm ... what we're going to
try is theoretically possible. I don't know if it's been done before or not.
There wouldn't be any records of an unsuccessful attempt. I fee] we must take
the risk. Any alternative to certain death is a preferable one. Capture is
otherwise a certainty.'
Truzenzuzex leaned over in harness and spoke into his
mike. 'May I inquire into what you ... we will attempt to do'?'
'Yes,' said Wolf. 'T admit to curiosity myself,
Captain.'
'Je!
We are heading for a nueutron star in this sector for which we have
definite co-ordinates. At our present rate of speed we should be impinging on
its gravity well at the necessary tangent some seventy ... sixty-nine minutes
from now. At ha, Wolf, the computer, and myself are going to work like hell the
next few minutes to line up that course. If we can hit that field at a certain
point at our speed ... I am hoping the tremendous pull of the star will throw
us out at a speed sufficient to escape the range of the AAnn detector fields.
They can hardly be expecting it, and even if they do figure it out, I don't
think our friend the Baron would consider doing likewise a worthwhile effort. I
almost hope he does. He'd have everything to lose. At the moment, we have very
little. Only we humans are crazy enough to try such a stunt anyway, kweli?'
'Yes. Second the motion. Agreed,' said Truzenzuzex. I
I were in a position to veto this idiotic - which I assure you I would do.
However, as I am not... let's get on with it, Captain.'
'Damned with faint praise, eh, philosoph? There are
other possibilities, watu. Either we shall miss our impact point and go
wide, in which case the entire attempt might as well not have been made and we
will be captured and poked into, or we will dive too deeply and be trapped by
the star's well, pulled in, and broken up into very small pieces. As Captain I
am empowered to make this decision by right ... but this is not quite a normal
cruise, so I put it to a vote. Objections?'
The only thing that came over the comm was a slight
sniffle, undoubtedly attributable to Sissiph (she had given in to curiosity and
Hipped on her unit). It could not be construed as an objection.
'Je! We will try it, then. I suggest strongly
you spend some time checking out Your harnesses and spreading yourselves as
comfortably as possible. Provided that we strike the star's field at the
precise tangent I am almost positive that the Gloryhole can stand the forces involved. If it cannot
it will not matter, because our bodies will go long before the ship does. Haidhuru.
It doesn't matter. Physiologically I have no idea what to expect. So prepare
your bodies and your spirits as well as possible, because in sixty ...' he
paused to glance
at the chronometer, 'six minutes, it will be all one way or all the other.'
He cut the mike and began furiously feeding
instructions and requests into a computer auxiliary.
If they had one consolation, thought Flinx, it was
that there would be no borrifyingly stow buildup of gravity within the ship.
They would either fail or succeed at such a supremely high speed that it would
be over in an instant... as Malaika bad said, all one way or all the other. He
did not care to imagine, what would happen if they missed their contact point
and dived too close to the star. Dwell in the well. Not funny. He saw himself
and Pip mashed flat, like paper, and that proved unamusing also.
The chronometer, oblivious of mere human concerns,
continued to wind down. Sixty minutes left ... forty ... twenty to ... ten
tofivetothreetotwo ...
And then, unbelievably, there were only sixty seconds
left till judgement. Before he had time to muse on this amazing fact, there was
a. slight jar. A silent screaming from the furthest abyss of time flowed like
jelly over the ship. He hung on the lip of a canyon of nothingness, while it
tried desperately to ingest him. He refused to be ingested, REFUSED! A pin
among other pins in a bowl of milk, while somewhere a million fingernails dug
exquisitely scratching on a thousand hysterically howling blackboards-
sscRRRREEEEEEEE...'
On
board the destroyer Arr the chief navigational officer blinked at his
detector screen, then turned to stare up at where the Baron sat in his command chair.
'Sir, the humanx vessel had disappeared from my
screens. Also, we are rapidly approaching a neutron star of considerable
gravitonic potential. Orders'?'
Baron Riidi WW was noted for his persistence. The
idea of a trapped quarry escaping him was most unappeaiing. Neither, however,
was he a fool. His eyes closed tiredly.
'Change course thirty degrees, right to our present
plane. Cut to cruising speed, normal.' He looked up then, eyes open, at the
battle screen. Somewhere out there was a white dot. Out there also, an
invisible bottomless pit of uaimaginable energy masked an impossible retreat.
Or a quick suicide. An inkling of the-human's intentions percolated through his
cells. He did not feel the least inclined to try to duplicate the event.
Whether the idiot was alive or dead, he would not know for many months ... and
that was the most infuriating thing of all.
He flexed his long lingers, staring at the brightly
polished claws whose length was suitably trimmed to that for a high member of
the aristocracy. Colloid-gems shone lavalike on two of them. He locked them
over his chest and pushed out-ward. Those among the crew who were more familiar
with the actions of the nobility recognized the gesture. It indicated
Conception of Impractical Power. Under the Circumstances it constituted a
salute to their departed foe.
'Set a return course for Pregglin Base and signal our
industrialist friend the following missive. No, I don't wish an interstar
hookup. Just send it. "Intercepted anticipated vessel and made positive
audiovisual identification. Repeat, positive. Chased to points..."give
our current co-ordinates, shipmaster ... "where contact with same was
irretrievably lost due to," 'he smiled slightly,' "an unexpected turn
of speed on the part of the pursued vessel. In hostile action with same, the
destroyer Unn was lost with all hands.” Add this note, communicator, and
scramble it to my personal code. "Sir. Your request has proven expensive
in the extreme. Contrary to your indications we did not encounter, as you led
me to believe, a terrified shipload of frightened moneylenders. As a result of
your bungling. I now find myself in the uncomfortable position of having to
account for my off-base time to my good friend Lord Kaath, C. How good a
friend, he is will now be put to a considerable test. As will your ability to
place judicious bribes, I hope, for both our sakes, that the latter will be
sufficient. Explaining the loss of the Unn will be rather more
difficult. Should the true circumstances surrounding this idiocy leak out it
would be more than enough to condemn us both to death by nth degree torture at
the hands of the Masters. Kindly do keep this in mind."
'Sign it, "yours affectionately, Riidi WW, Baron
etc., etc." And get me a drink.'
It
was autumn, Mother Mastiff bad closed up the shop, packed a lunch, and taken
them both off to the Royal Parks. It was a cloudless day, which was why.
Literally cloudless. On Moth this wasn't merely a pleasant exception, it was an
event. He could remember staring endlessly at the funny-coloured sky. It was
blue, so different from the normal light grey. It hurt his eyes. The thoughts
of the animals, the birds, were odd and confused. And the hawkers sat
listlessly in their respective booths, cursing softly at the sun. It had stolen
all their customers. It was a softer sky, and softness of any kind was rare in
Drallar. So everyone bad taken the day off, including the king.
The Royal Parks were a great, sprawling place. They
had originally been created by the builder's of the first botanical gardens to
use up the space left over from those great constructs. By some monstrous
bureaucratic error it had been opened to the general public and had remained so
ever since. The great f1ashing boles of the famous iron wood trees shot
straight and proud to impossible heights over his boyish head. They seemed much
more permanent than the city itself.
The ironwoods were moulting. Every other week the
royal gardeners would come and gather up all the fallen leaves and branches.
Iron wood was rare, even on Moth, and the scraps where far too valuable to be
swept away. The guards in their lemon-green uniforms sauntered easily about the
park grounds, there more to protect the trees than the people.
Children were playing on the marvellous gyms and
tangles that an earlier king had setup. As long as the people had abrogated the
park, he felt that they might as well enjoy it to the fullest. The kings of
Drallar bad been greedy, yes, but not exceptionally so.
He had been too shy to join the giggling, darting
shapes on the funchines. And they had all been frightened of Pip, silly things!
There had been one little girl though ... all curls and blue eyes and flushes.
She had shuffled over hesitantly, trying hard to appear disinterested but not
succeeding. Her thoughts were nice. For a change, she was fascinated by the
minidrag rather than repelled by it.
They had been on the verge of making introductions in
the simple but very correct manner that adults Jose so quickly, when a. great
leaf had drifted down unseen and struck him fair between the eyes. Ironwood
leaves are heavy, but not enough to produce injury, even to a small boy. Only
embarrassment. She had started giggling uncontrollably. Furious, he had stalked
off, ears burning with the heat of her laughter, his mind frozen with her
picture of hum. He had thought momentarily of siccing Pip on her. That was one
of the impulses he had learned to control very early, when the snake's
abilities had been glass-gruesomely demonstrated on a persistent tormentor, a
stray mongrel dog.
Even as he strode farther and farther away, the
sounds of her laughter followed, ghostlike. As be walked he took vicious and
ineffectual swings at the rust-coloured leaves floating down uncaringly about
him. And sometimes he didn't even touch them when they dropped brokenly to the
ground.
Then
the sky wasn't blue anymore. Nor light grey. It was pastel green.
He stopped flailing his arms and looked around,
moving only his eyes. Pip stopped beating his pleated wings against his
matter's face and flew off to cur] comfortably against the nearest bed-bar,
satisfied with the reaction it had produced. The mi n id rag's tough
constitution had apparently suffered few ill effects, Flinx didn't know yet
whether to curse it or kiss it.
He tried to sit up but fell back, exhausted by the
brief effort. Oddly enough, his bones didn't bother him at all. But his
muscles! The tendons and ligaments too, all of the connective web that held the
framework together. Felt like they'd been tied end to end, stretched out,
rolled together into a ball, and pounded into one of Mother Mastiff's less
palatable meatloafs.
It was a trial, but he finally managed to sit up. The
events of ... how long had he been out? ... came back to him as he rubbed
circulation back into benumbed legs. As soon as he felt reasonably humanoid
again, he leaned over and spoke into his shipmike. In case the others were in
less positive shape than he, he enunciated slowly and clearly so as to besure
to be understood.
'Captain? Captain? Control? Is anyone up there?' He
could sense all the other minds but not their condition, as his own was too
addled to focus yet.
'Rahisi, kijana! Take it easy. Glad to hear
you' re back too.' The trader's voice was a familiar healthy boom but Flinx
could read the strain on his mind. In another minute his picture flashed on to
the small viewscreen. The blocky face had added another line or two, the beard
a. few white hairs, but otherwise the craggy visage was unchanged. And although
his body and mind looked wearied by the stresses they had undergone, the face reflected
old enthusiasms.
'Wolf and I have been up, although not about, by moyo
Uzito, what an experience! It seems that our friend the hard-headed
philosoph, who wears his bones inside out, stood it better than the rest of us.
He's been up here rubbing us poor softies back into consciousness.'
The voice of the insect came over the speaker from
some-where off-camera, but Fiinx could place the thranx from the strength of
its thoughts, which were indeed better organized than those of its companions.
‘If the rest of your body was as hard as your head.
Captain, you, at least, would not need my aid.'
‘Je! Well, kijana, Tse-Mallory's been
up the longest of us poor humans, and I believe Der Bugg is just now bringing
Atha 'round... yes, bless her flinty moyo. We were going to send him in
to see you next, Flinx, but I see that's not necessary.'
'Did we...?' but Malaika seemed not to hear and Flinx
was too tired to probe.
'Mwanamume and mtoto, what a buggy
ride! Sorry, bwana Truzenzuzex. No offence intended. It's an old Terran saying, meaning
"to go like blazes," roughly. I know only that it's appropriate to
our present situation. Perhaps it's designed to invoke a friendly Mungu, je?
Metamorphosis! Fxlinx me lad, me kijana, me mtoto, we went past
that star so fast after hitting that field that our transversion
'puter couldn't handle it! The mechanism wasn't built
to programme that kind of speed, and I'd hate to tell you where the cut-off max
is! If there were only some way this sort of thing could be done on a commercial
basis ... owk!'
He winced and gingerly touched a hand lo the back of
his neck.
'However, I must admit at the present time there
appear to be certain drawbacks to the system. Uchawi!. I would have
given much to have' seen the face of our friend the Baron when we shot off his
screens, je! Unannounced, as it were. I wonder if he ... but unwrap
yourself from that webbing, kijana, and get thee forward. I've a bit of
a surprise for you, and it looks even better from up front.' Flinx could feel the
tone beginning to return to his muscles He undid the rest of the harness and
slid slowly off the bed. There was an awkward moment as he had to grab the wall
for support, balancing himself on shaky legs. But things began to normalize
themselves quickly now. He walked around the room & few times,
experimentally, and then turned and headed for Control, Pip curled comfortably
about his left shoulder.
Malaika swivelled slightly in his seat as Flinx
appeared on the bridge.
‘Well'? What's the surprise?' He noted that
Truzenzuzex had disappeared, but could feel the insect's presence in another
part of the ship.
Apparently Malaika noted his searching gaze. Or
possibly he was becoming sensitive. He'd have to be careful around the big
trader.
'He's gone to try to help Sissiph. She figured to be
the last to return, rudisha.'
That was undoubtedly true. Atha and Wolf he could
clearly see busy at their instruments.
'Kijana, that big kick in the... boost we got
shoved us far ahead of my anticipated schedule ... on our prearranged path! I
planned it that way when we were setting up the interception co-ordinates. No
use wasting a brush with death if it can be utilized to profit also ... but I
honestly didn't link the Glory's field could hold us that steady. How-
ever, it did, and here we are.’
'Which is where?' asked Flinx.
Maiaika was smug. 'Not more than ninety minutes ship-mafasi
from our intended destination!' He turned back to his desk, muttering. 'Now if
there's only some way to make it commercially feas...'
Flinx put together what he knew of bow far they'd
come when they were intercepted by the AAnn warship and how far they'd still
had to go at that time. The result he came up with was an acceleration he had
no wish to dwell on. That's great, of course, sir. Still, it would also be nice
if...'
'Um? If what?'
If when we get where we're going we find something
worth getting there for.’
'Your semantics are scrambled, kijana, but I
approve the sentiment. Mbali kodogo, a little way off, perhaps, but I do
indeed approve.'
The
planet itself was a beauty. It would have been ideal for colonization if it
hadn't been for the unfortunate dearth of land area. But even the fact that
ninety per cent of the land was concentrated in one large continent might not
make such exploitations prohibitive. Oceans could be farmed and aimed, too, as
on colony worlds like Dis and Repler. And those of Booster, as they had named
it, were green enough to suggest that they fairly seethed with the necessary
base-matrix to support humanx-style sea-culture. Fortunately the chlotophyll
reaction had proved the norm on most humanx-type planets found to date.
By contrast the single continent appeared to be oddly
dry. Especially discouraging to Truzenzuzex, as the thranx would have preferred
a wet, tropical climate. He confirmed this opinion by voicing it every chance
he got.
As far as they were able to determine from orbit,
every-thing was exactly as it had been described on the star-map. Atmospheric
composition, with its unusual proportion of free helium and other rare gases,
UV radicount (est, surf./ sq.mi./ki), mean and extreme, temperatures, and so
forth. There was only one fact their observer had failed to note.
As near as their probes could estimate, at no place
on the surface of Booster did the wind ever blow less than seventy kilometres
sn hour. At certain points over the oceans, especially n e art he: equator, it
was remarkably consistent. But it did not appear to drop below that
approximated minimum. There was currently one gigantic storm system visible in
the southeastern portion of the planet. The meteorology 'puter guessed the
winds near its centre to be moving in excess of 780 kilometres per hour.
Impossible!' said Malaika, when he saw the initial
image-out. 'Mchawi mchanganyiko!'
'Quite.' said Truzenzuzex. 'Definitely. Go fly a
kite.' The sceintist indulged in the whistling laughter of the thranx.
Malaika was confused, by the laughter as well as the
referent. 'Translation, please?'
'It means,' put in Tse-Mailory over the insect's laughter,
that it is more than possible.' He was gazing in complete absorption at the
sphere turning below. The unusual silver-gold tinge to the atmosphere had
aroused interest in his mind. 'And there might be places, on the single
continent, for example, where canyons and such would channel even higher
velocities.'
The merchant took a deep breath, whooshed it out, and
fingered the small wooden image that hung omnipresent about his neck. 'Namna gemi mahaili? What kind of place? No wonder there's nothing more than
one little continent and a few visiwabovu. Such winds would cut down
high places like chaff!' He shook his head. 'Why the Tar-Aiym would pick a
place like this to develop their whatever-it-is I'll not guess.'
There is much we don't know of the Tar-Aiym and their
motives,' said Tse-Maliory. Tar more than we do know. From their point of view
it might have been perfect. Maybe they felt that its very unattractiveness
would discourage inspection by their enemies. And we have no final evidence as
to what they considered a hospitable climate. We don't even know for certain
what they looked like, rember. Oh, we've got a vague idea of the basics. The
head goes here, the major manipulative limbs there, and so on. But for all we
really know they might even have been semiporous. A nice
the-hundred-kilo-an-hour hurricane might have been as a refreshing bath to
them. In which case I'd expect the Kiang to be some sort of resort facility.'
'Please!' said Malaika. 'No obscenities. If that were
true, why haven't we found such winds on any of the other planets we know the
Tar-Aiym inhabited?'
Tse-Mallory shrugged, bored with the turn of the
conversation. 'Perhaps the weather has changed since then. Perhaps they changed
it. Perhaps I am wrong. Perhaps I am crazy. In fact, there are times when my
suspicions of the latter approach certitude.'
I've noticed,' said Truzenzuzex, unable to resist.
'Agh! If I knew all the answers,' said the
sociologist. I'd be God. In which circumstance I'd most certainly be outside
this ship right now and not cooped up with the rest of you mental cases!' He
returned his gaze to the screen, but Flinx could taste the humour in his mind.
'Captain?' broke in Wolf's quiet tone. 'Preliminary
read-out from geosurv probes indicates that the con
tinent has a basaltic base, but is composed on the
surface primarily of sedimentary rocks, heavily calcinaceous, and with a high
proportion of limestones.'
'Um-hum. Figures. That would also tend to explain how
the wind could knock down any mountains so quickly. In another million years,
barring any rising of the ocean bed, there probably won't be a plot of land
sticking above the waters of this planet. Fortunately I do not have to worry
about that, too.' He turned from the screen. 'Atha, go and ready the shuttle.
And get set to take us down. It doesn't appear that we're going to need
airsuits, thank Mungu, but make damn sure the crawler is in good running
condition. And see if you can't turn up something for us to use as eye
protection against this infernal wind. So that we won't have to use the suit
helmets. Je?'
She started to leave, but he halted her at the door,
his face thoughtful. 'And make sure we have plenty of rope. I've been on
planets where the rain would eat right through a suit to your skin, if the
fauna didn't get to you first, if the flora didn't beat the fauna out. But this
makes the first one I've ever been on where my primary concern will be being
blown away.'
'Yes, Captain.' She left then, passing the arriving
Sissiph on the way out. The two had recovered enough to glare at each outer
meaningfully for a moment but, aware that Malaika's eyes were on them, said
nothing.
I don't think we'll have much trouble locating this
thing of yours, gentlesirs - providing it does indeed exist. There don't appear
to be any canyons or other rugged areas where it could be hidden, and since
your friend found it without seeming difficulty, I see no reason why we, with
more sophiscated instrumentation, should not do likewise- Yes, we should get to
it quickly, quickly. Afyaenu, gentlesirs. Your health!'
He clapped those huge hands together and the report
they made in the enclosed space was deafening.
'He looks like a small child in expectation of
receiving a new toy,' Tse-Mallory whispered to Truzenzuzex.
'Yes. Let us hope that it is indeed of an aesthetic
rather than a lethal nature.'
The shuttle had its own balloonlike hangar in the
bottom of the great cargo section. Sissiph, professing ignorance of manoeuvring
the pullways, had to be helped down. But the way she snuggled into an obliging
Malaika suggested motives other than incompetence. The powerful little ship was
a complete space-going vessel, albeit a far more streamlined and less spacious
one than the Gloryhole. It was powered by rockets of advanced design
and, for atmospheric suborbital flight, by ramjets. Being intended for simple
ground-to-space, space-to-ground filghts, it had limited cruising range.
Fortunately they had only a limited area of probability to search. Conducted
from tha Gioryhole it would have been more leisurely, but Malaika wasn't
going to restrain himself any longer than was necessary, despite the attendant
inconveniences. He wanted down.
The fact that they wouldn't need the flexible but
still awkward airsuits would be a. great help. Atha had fitted them all with
goggles whose original purpose was to protect, the wearer from heavy UV. While
dark, they would serve equally well to keep dust and airborne particles out of
everyone's eyes. For Truzenzuzex she had managed a pair from empty polmer
containers.
Off in a corner, Sissiph was arguing petulantly with
Malaika. Now that the fun of her escorted trip down the pull way was over ...
'But I don't want to go, Maxy. Really I don't.'
'But you will, my mwanakondoowivu, you will. Njoo,
come, we all stay together. I don't think our playful Aann friends will find
us. I don't see how they could, but I still fear the possibility. In the event
of that obscene happening, I want everyone in one and the someplace. And I
don't know what we're going to run into downstairs, either. We're going into
the ruins of a civilization dead half a million years, more advanced than us,
and utterly ruthless. Maybe they have left some uncouth hellos for late
drop-ins'? So every hand will be along in case it's needed. Even your delicious
little ones.' He smacked the collection of digits in question with a juicy
kiss.
She pulled the hand away and stamped a foot (her
favourite nonvocal method of protest, but ineffectlual in the zero-gravity).
'But Maxy ...!'
‘Starehe! Don't "Maxy" me. A
definite no, pet.'He put a hand on her shoulder and spun her gently but firmly
about, giving her a shove in the direction of the shuttle's personnel port.
'Besides, if I were to leave you on board all by yourself
you'd likely as not erase the navigation tapes trying to order dinner from the
autochef. No, you come with us, ndegedogo, little bird. Also, your hair will look so pretty
streaming away in the gentle breezes.'
Her caustic voice came faintly as they entered the
lock. 'Breeze! I heard you talking about the hurric...!'
Or, thought Flinx as he struggled with the gun and
belt that Atha had given him, it is possible that our Captain hasn't Forgotten
how neatly the AAnn seemed to find us. Maybe he thinks dear, sweet, helpless
Sissiph is not entirely to be trusted. He went quiet, sought within the mind in
question for a hint, a relationship that might bear out the merchant's possible
suspicion. If anything was there, it was too deeply buried or well-hidden for
him to seek out. And there were other things that seeped in aground the edges
of his probe that embarrassed him, even a sixteen-year-old from Drallar. He
withdrew awkwardly. Let Malaika. Keep the load on his mind.
He was far more interested in admiring the gun. The
handle was all filigree and inlay, a good deal fancier than the practical
destroyers he'd seen in the barred and shadowed gun shops of Drallar.
Unquestionably, it was equally as deadly. He knew what this model could do and
how to handle it. In those same shops he had fired this and similar
weapons with empty charge chambers while the owners
had looked on tolerantly and exchanged patronizing comments with the regular
customers.
It was beautiful. Compact and efficient, the laser
pistol could cook a man at five hundred metres or a steak at one. It could weld
most metals, or burn its way through any form of conventional plastic; barrier.
All in all, it was a useful and versatile tool as much as a weapon. While he
hoped he wouldn't need it down on the surface and Still had Pip with him, the
streamlined weight felt ever so comfortable bugging his hip.
At Malaika's insistence they had all also been issued
a full survival belt. Even Sissiph, who had complained that the negligible
weight distorted her Figure. This prompted an un flattering comment from Atha
which Fortunately went un-heard by the Lynx, or they might have had an other
minor cataclysm in the tiny vessel's lock.
The belt was equipped and designed for use on planets
which varied no more than ten per cent from the humnax norm. Besides hefting
the mandatory gun, the belt contained concentrated rations and energy pills)
sugar salt solution, their portable communicator units, a tent for two which
was waterproof, conserved body heat, and folded to a
package smaller than one's fist, charges for both
comm and gun, tools for finding direction, making nails, of planting corn,
among other things. There was also a wonderfully compact minimiciofilm reader,
with some fifty books on its spool. Among the selections were two staples: the Universal
Verbal Communications Dictionary (in seven volumes, abridged), and
the Bible of the United Church, The Holy Book of Universal Truths, and other
Humorous Anecdotes.
IF he had had his entire apartment and all its accoutrements
from Drallar, he would have been less well off than he was with that single
fabulous device encircling his waist.
The tremendous winds and jet streams that flowed
unceasingly around the planet should have made their descent difficult. Under Atha's
skilful handling, however, it was almost as gentle as it might
have been in the Gloryhole. The only rough moments came as they passed
through the silvery-gold impregnated sections of the atmosphere. The natural
layers of airborne metallic particles (there were two) seemed unusually dense
to the two scientists, but as long as they remained on rockets, not dangerously
so.
Unlike the luxury craft which had lifted them from
Moth's surface, this shuttle was equipped more For carrying cargo than folk,
and so wasn't provided with as many ports. Despite the small ness of the
scattered plexalloy sections, however. Flinx still had some view of the land
below. The one continent rambled from the north pole down to a point just below
the equator. It was mostly red-yellow at this height, with here and there large
splotches of dull green. Small rivers, faint and insignificant in comparison
with the coppery blues of the planetary ocean, meandered lazily down among the
low hills. Naturally there were no river canyons. Any such would have
disappeared millennia, ago under the punishing onslaught of the untiring winds.
He had been momentarily worried about Pip, who had
adamantly refused to be fitted with a tiny pair of make-shift goggles. Close
inspection revealed that the reptile was equipped with transparent nictitating
membranes, which slid down to protect the eye. He'd never noticed them before,
probably because he'd simply not looked. He berated hi in-self mentally for not
realizing that an arboreal animal would naturally come built with some such
type of natural protection against wind-carried objects. But then, neither of
the two scientists had, either. Actually, Pip was more of a glider than a
flyer. If he could master the winds down there he'd no doubt be more at home on
Booster's surface than any of them.
A small intercabin comm conveyed the voice of Malaika
back to them from Control. The tiny piloting cabin barely had space enough for
the two pilots, and the big trader crowded it unmercifully. But he had insisted
on remaining 'on top of things.' It was literally put.
They had been cruising on jets for only a short while
when his excited cry broke the cabin's silence. 'Maisha, there it is!
Check out the ports to your right.' There was a concerted rush to that side of
the ship. Even Sissiph, her natural curiosity piqued, joined the movement.
They were still high, but as they banked the ruins of
what had been a good-sized city, even by Tar-Aiym standards, came into view.
They had built well, as always, but on this planet very little could remain in
its original state for long. Still, from here it seems as well preserved as any
of the Tar-Aiym cities Flinx had seen on tape. As they dropped lower the alien
city pattern of concentric crescents, radiating out from a fixed point, became
as clear as ripples from the shore of a pond.
But even at this height the thing that inmediately
caught everyone's attention and caused Truzeazuzex to utter a soft curse of
undefinable origin was not the city itself, but the building which stood on the
bluff above the metropolis's nexus. A single faceless edifice in the shape of a
rectangular pyramid, cut on squarely at the top. Both it and the circular base
it rose from were a uniform dull yellow-white in colour. The very top of the
structure appeared to be covered with some kind of glassy material. Unlike the
rest of the city it looked to be in a state of perfect preservation. It was
also by far the tallest single structure he had ever seen.
'Baba Giza!’ came Malaika's hushed voice over
the speaker. He apparently became aware that his speaker pick-up was on. Take
your seats, everybody, and fasten your straps. We are going to land by the base
of that bluff. Rafiki Tse-Malloiy, rafiki Truzenzuzex, we will
explore the entire city beam by beam if you wish, but I will bet my majicho
that your Krang is in a certain building at the top of a certain hill"
Nothing like understatement to heighten anticipation,
thought Fhiix.
They landed, finally, on the broad stretch of open
sandy ground to the left of both city and bluff. Atha had wisely' elected to
use replaceable landing skids instead of the wheeled gear, being uncertain as
to the composition of the land they were going to set down on. There had been
no clear, paved stretch of territory nearby. They had had a quick glimpse of
the ruins of a monstrous spaceport off to the rear of the city's last crescent.
Malaika had vetoed landing there, wishing to land as close as possible to the
ziggurat itself. He felt that the less distance they had to travel on the ground
and the closer they could remain to the ship itself, the safer he would feel
about roaming around the ruined city. The great spaceport had also no doubt
served as a military base, and if any unpleasant automatic devices still
remained to greet unauthorized visitors, they also would probably be
concentrated there. So their landing was a bit rougher than it might have been.
But they were down now, in one piece, and had received another benefit none had
thought of. It would have been obvious had anyone reflected on it.
The wind came in a constant wall from behind the
building and the bluff below which they had landed. While by no means
perpendicular, the bluff proved steep enough to cut out a good portion of the
perpetual gale. It would mean easier working conditions around the shuttle
itself, in addition to eliminating the possible problem of having to tie the
ship down. The ship's branch meteorology 'puter registered the outside windage
at their resting point at a comfortable forty-five kilometres an hour.
Positively sylvan.
'Atha, Wolf, give me a hand getting the crawler out.
The rest of you check over your equipment and make sure you've got an extra
pair of goggles apiece." He turned to Tse-Mailory. Je! They built
their city behind the biggest wind-break they could find. Sort of gives the lie
to your "caressing wind bath" theory, kweli?'
"Do not abuse my guesses, Captain, or I'll make
no more.' His eyes and mind were obviously focused elsewhere,
'Wolf?'
'Here, Captain.' The skeleton came out of the fore
cabin, looking even more outre than usual in his silver belt and goggles. The
expression on his face was odd, because any expression on his face was an
oddity.
'Captain, there's an active thermal power source
some-where under this city.'
"Not nuclear?' asked Malaika. A gravitonic power
plant was of course impossible on any body-with a reasonable field of its own.
Still, there were known aspects to Tar-Aiym science that humanx researchers
couldn't even begin to explain.
'No, sir. It's definitely thermal. Big, too,
according to the sensors., although it was a very fast check-through.'
Malaika's eyebrows did flip-flops. 'Interesting. Does
that suggest any "guesses" to you, gentlesirs?'
Tse-Mallory and Truzenzuzex pulled themselves away
from their rapt contemplation of the monolith above and considered the
question.
'Yes, several,' began the philosoph. 'Among which is
the confirmation of a fact we were fairly certain of anyway, that this is a
young planet in a fairly young GO system. Tapping the core-power of a planet is
difficult enough on the youngest which this is not. But anyone can tap. The
problem is to keep it under sufficient control to be able to channel it
with-out causing planetwide earthquakes or volcanoes under major Hive-centres.
We're still not so very adept at that ourselves. And only in the most limited
sense.’
'And,' continued Tse-Mallory, 'it suggests they
needed a hell of a lot of power for something, doesn't it? Now this is a fairly
good-sized Tar-Aiym town, but it also seems to be the only one on the planet.'
He looked at Malaika for confirmation and the trader nodded, slowly. 'So for
the mind of me I can't see what they had to go to all that trouble for, when
their qua sin u clear plants would have provided more than enough power for
this one city. Especially with all the water that's available.'
'Captain,' said Truzenzuzex impatiently. 'We will be
bappy to hypothesize for you at length - later. But now I wish you would see
about removing our surface transportation from the hold.' His head swiveled to
a port and the great golden eyes stared outward. I have little doubt that your
unasked questions and, hopefully, most of ours will be answered when we get
inside that Tuarweh on top of this bluff '
'If we get into it.' added Tse-Mallory. ‘it is
lust possible that the owners locked up when they moved, and left no Key
behind.'
The
crawler was a low, squat vehicle, running on twin duralloy treads. It also had
a universal spherical 'wheel' at its centre of gravity to facilitate turning.
Atha had made a few preliminary safety calculations and had conic up with the
fact that it would remain relatively stable in winds up to two hundred and
fifty kilometres per, at which point things would start to get sticky. Flinx,
for one, had no desire to put her calculations to a practical test. Nor did
Malaika apparently. He insisted on filling every empty space on the machine
with objects of weight. If the winds got that bad, all the paraphernalia they
could stuff into it wouldn't help. But it at least provided them with something
of a psychological lift.
Not the least of these 'objects of weight' was a
heavy laser rifle, tripod-mounted.
'Just in case,' the merchant, had said, 'opening the
door proves more difficult, than it might.'
'For a peaceful trader travelling on his private
racer you appear to have stocked quite an arsenal,' Truzenzuzex murmured.
‘Philosoph, I could give you a long, involved
argument replete with attractive semantic convolutions, bull will put it, so,
and leave it. I am in a very competitive business.'
He cocked a challenging eye at the thranx,
'As you say.' Truzenzuzex bowed slightly.
They boarded the crawler, which had been manoeuvred
close to the cargo port to minimize the initial force of the wind. The big land
cruiser held all of them comfortably. It had been designed to transport heavy
cargo, and even with Malaika's 'objects of weight' scattered about there was
plenty of room in which to move around. If bored, one might take the ladder up
to the driver's compartment, with its two beds and polyplexalloy dome. There
was room up there for four, but Malaika, Wolf, and the two scientists occupied
it immediately and were disinclined to give it up. So Flinx had to be content
with the tiny ports in the main compartment for his view of the outside. He was
alone in the quiet spaces with the two women, who sat at extreme opposite end
of the cabin from each other and exchanged deathly thoughts back and Forth. A
less congenial atmosphere would have been difficult to imagine. Try as he
would, they were beginning to give him a headache. He would far rather have
been upstairs.
They were making their way up the slope of the bluff
now, zigzagging whenever the incline grew too steep for even the crawler's
powerful spiked treads to negotiate. Their progress was slow but steady, the
machine after all having been designed to get from point A to point B in one
piece, and not to race the clock. It did its job effectively.
As might have been predicted, the ground was crumbly
and soft. Still, it was more lock than sand. The treads dug in deeply and the
engine groaned, it slowed their advance somewhat, but assured them of excellent
traction in the teeth of the wind. Still, Flinx would not like to have faced a
real blow in the slow device.
They finally topped the last rise. Looking back into
the distance Tse-Mallory could make out the crumbled spires and towers of the
city, obscured by eternal dust and mad. It was more difficult to see up here.
Gravel, dirt, and bits of wood from the hearty ground-bugging plants began to -
splatter against the front of the dome. For the first time the howl of the wind
became audible through the thick shielding, sounding like fabric tearing in an
empty room.
Wolf glanced al their anemometer. 'A hundred fifteen
point five-two kilos an hour ... sir.'
‘Je! I'd hoped for better, but it could be
worse. Much worse. No one is going to be taking long walks. Upepokuu! In
a gale we can manage. A hurricane would be awkward.'
As they moved further in from the edge of the bluff
the air began to clear sufficiently for them to catch sight of their objective.
Not that they could have missed it. There wasn't anything else to see, except
an occasional clump of what looked like dried seaweed. They rolled on, the wind
dying as they moved further into the lee of the building. Three pairs of eyes
leaned back ... and back, and back, until it seemed certain it would be simpler
to lie down and stare upward. Only Wolf, eyes focused on the instrument board
of the massive crawler, failed to succumb to the lure of the monolith.
It towered above them, disappearing skyward in swirls
of dust and low clouds, unbroken by ledge or window.
"How huyukubwa?’ Malaika finally managed
to whisper.
'How big do I make it? I couldn't say too well,'
answered Tse-Mallory. 'Tru? You've got the best depth vision among us.'
The philosoph was quiet for a long moment. In human
terms?' He lowered his eyes to look at them. If he could have blinked he would,
but thranx eyeshields reacted only in the presence of water or strong sunlight,
so he could not. His improvised goggles gave his face an unbalanced look.
'Well over a kilo at the base... each way. It looked
a perfect square from the air, you know. Perhaps ...' he took another brief
glance upward, 'three kilometres high.'
The slight jolting and bumping they had been
experiencing abruptly disappeared. They were now travel ling on the smooth
yellowy-white circle on which the structure was centred.
Malaika peered down at the substance they were
traversing, then back at the building. The heavy crawler left no tracks on the
solid surface.
'What do you suppose this stuff is, anyway?'
Tse-Mallory had joined him in looking down at the
even ground, 'I don't know. When I saw it from the air my natural inclination
was to 'think, stone. Just before we grounded I thought it looked rather
"wet," like certain heavy plastics. Mow that we're down on it I'm not
sure of anything. Ceramics. maybe'?'
‘Metal-reinfced, surely,' added Truzenzuzex. 'But as
for the surface, at least a polymer ceramic would be a good guess, certainly.
It's completely different from anything I've ever seen before, even on other
Tar-Aiym planets. Or for that matter, from anything I could see of the city as
we came in.'
'Um. Well. since they built their city in the lee of
this bluff, as a windbreak, I don't doubt, I'd expect any mlango to be
on this side of the structure. Je?’
As it turned
out shortly enough, there was, and it was.
Unlike the rest of the mysterious building the
material used in the construction of the door was readily identifiable. It was
metal. It towered a good thirty metres above the cab of the crawler and
stretched at least half that distance in either direction. The metal itself was
unfamiliar, dull-grey in colour, and possessed of an odd glassy lustre. Much
like the familiar fogs of home for Flinx. The whole thing was recessed several
metres into the body of the building.
'Well, there's your door. Captain.' said Tse-Mallory.
‘How do we get in? I confess to a singular lack of inspiration, myseif.'
Malaika was shaking his head in awe and frustration
as he examined the entrance. Nowhere could be seen the sign of a single joint,
weld, or seam.
'Drive right up to it, Wolf. The wind is practically dead
here. We'll have to get out and look for a door uzz or something. If we don't
find anything that's recognizably a handle or a keyhole, we'll have to unlimber
the rifle and try a less
polite entrance.' He eyed the massive square
dubiously. 'Although I hope that alternative doesn't become necessary. I know
the stubborness of Tar-Aiym metals.'
As it turned out, the problem was solved for them.
Somewhere in the bowels of the colossal structure,
long dormant but undead machinery sensed the approach of an artificial
mechanism containing biological entities. It stirred sleepily, prodding resting
memory circuits to wakefulness. The design and composition of the approaching
vehicle was unfamiliar, but neither was it recognizably hostile. The entities
within were likewise unfimiliar, albeit more obviously primitive. And there was
an A-class mind among them. Likewise unfamiliar, not hostile, and it had been
such a long time! The building debated with itself for the eternity of a
second.
'Hold it, Wolf!' The merchant had noticed a movement
in front of the crawler.
With a smoothness and silence born of eternal
lubrication, the great door separated. Slowly, with the ponderousness of
tremendous weight, the two halves slid apart just far enough for the crawler to
enter comfortably. Then they stopped.
'Utamu. We are expected, perhaps?'
'Automatic machinery,' mumbled Truzenzuzex,
entranced.
'My thoughts also, philosoph. Take us in, Wolf.'
The quiet man obediently gunned the engine and the
powerful landcraft began to rumble forward. Malaika eyed the sides of the
narrow opening warily. The metal was not a reasonably thin sheet. It was not
even a moderate one.
'A good nineteen, twenty, metres through,' said
Tse-Mallory matter-of-factly. 'I wonder what it was designed to keep out.'
"Not us, apparently,' added Truzenzuzex. 'You
could have played your toy on that for days. Captain, and burned it out before
you scratched the entrance. Id like to try a SCCAM on it, just to see which
would come out the winner. I've never heard of any artificial structure
resisting a SCCAM projectile, but then I've never seen a twenty-metre-thick
Hive-block of solid Aiymetal before, either. The question will undoubtedly
remain forever academic.'
They had rolled perhaps a few metres beyond the door
when it began to slide heavily shut behind them. The silence of it was eerie.
Wolf glanced questioningly at Malaika, hand on throttle. The merchant, however,
was at least outwardly unconcerned.
‘It openeed to let us in, Wolf. I think it will do so
to let us out.' The doors closed, "’In case, any kwa nini worry? It
doesn't matter now.'
They got another surprise. Unless they were hollow,
which hardly seemed likely with that door, the walls
of the pseudoceramic material were a good hundred and fifty metres thick. Far
more than was needed merely to support the weight of the building, great as it
was. It bespoke much more an attempt at impregnability. Such had been found
before in the ruins of Tar-Aiym fortresses, but never approaching this in
scale.
Flinx did not know what he expected of the interior.
He'd been scanning consistently ever since the great doors had opened, but had
not been able to detect anything thinking inside. And he'd lamented his purely
sideways view from the crawler. He didn't see how the inside could possibly
surprise him any more than that unmatched exterior.
He was wrong.
Whatever it was he had anticipated in his wildest
thoughts, it was nothing like the reality. Malaika's voice drifted down to him
from above. It was oddly muted.
'Katika here, everyone. Atha. open the lock.
There's air in here and it's breathable, and light, and no wind, and I don't
know whether to believe it myself or not, even through my majicho tells
me ... but the sooner you see it ...'
They didn't need further urging. Even Sissiph was
excited. Atha scrambled to the small personnel lock and they watched while she
cracked the triple seal. cutting the flow of liquid at the three prescribed
points. The heavy door swung itself outward. The automatic ramp extended itself
to touch ground, buzzed once when it had made firm contact, and turned itseif
off.
Flinx was first out, followed closely by Atha and the
two scientists, Malaika and Sissiph and lastly, Wolf. All stood quite silent
under the panorama spread before them.
The ulterior of the building, at least, was hollow.
That was the only way to describe it. Somewhere above Flinx knew those massive
wails joined a ceiling, but strain his eyes as be might lie couldn't make it
out. The building was so huge that despite excellent circulation, clouds had
formed inside. The lour gigantic slabs pressed heavy on his mind, if not his
body. But claustrophobia was impossible in an open space this large. Compared
to the perpetual swirl of air and dust outside the utter calm within was cathedral-like.
Perhaps, indeed, that was what it was although he knew the idea to be more the
feeling imparted by his first view than the likely truth.
The light, being intended for nonhunanx eyes, was
wholely artificial and tinged slightly with blue-green. It was also dimmer than
they would have preferred. The philosoph's naturally blue chiton looked good in
it, but it made the rest of them appear' vaguely fishlike. The dimness did not
obstruct their vision as much as it made things seem as though they were being
viewed through not-quite-clear glass. The temperature was mild and a bit on the
warm side.
The crawler had been halted because it could proceed
no farther. Row upon row of what were indisputably seats or lounges of some
sort stretched out from where they stood. The place was a colossal
amphitheatre. The ranks extended onward, unbroken, to the far side of the
structure. There they ended at the base of... something.
He took a glance and risked a brief probe of the
others. Malaika was glancing appraisingly about the limits of the auditorium.
Wolf, his permanent nonexpression back on his face, was sampling the air with
an instrument on his belt. Sissiph clung tightly to Malaika, staring
apprehensively about the disquieting silence. Atha wore much the same look of
cautious observation as the big trader.
The two scientists were in a state as close to
Nirvana as it was possible for scientists to be. Their thoughts were moving so fast Flinx was hard-pressed even to
sample them. They had eyes only for the far end of the great room. For them a
search bad been vindicated, even if they didn't know what it was they bad
found. Tse-Mallory' chose that moment to step forward, with Truzenzuzex close
behind, The rest of them began to file down the central aisle after the scientists,
towards the thing at the far side.
It was not an exhausting walk, but Flinx was grateful
for the opportunity to rest at the end of it. He sat on the edge of the raised
platform. He could have taken one of the seat-lounges below, but they were nowhere
near contoured [or the human physiology and doubtless were as uacomfortable as
they looked.
Large steps led up to the dais he sat on. At its far
end a flawless Dome of glass or plastic enclosed a single, unadorned couch. A
large oval doorway opened in the dome facing the auditorium, it was a good
metre higher than their tallest member and far wider than even Malaika's
copious frame would require. The bench itself was tilled slightly to face the
amphitheatre. A smaller dome, shaped like a brandy glass, fitted partway over
its raised end. Thick cables and conduits led from it and the bottom of the
couch to the machine.
The 'machine' itself towered a hundred metres above
them and ran the length of the auditorium, melting into the curved corners. While
the exterior of the structure was remorselessly acute, the interior was
considerably rounded off. Much of the machine was closed off but Flinx could
see dials and switches catching the light from behind half-open plates. Those
he could make out had obviously not been designed with haumanx manipulating
members in mind.
From above the dull metal plating of the machine an
uncountable profusion of chromatically coloured tubes ran towards the distant
roof. Azure roof. Azure, peach, shocking pink, ivory, Tyrolean purple,
chartreuse, orange, mutebony, smoke, white-gold, verdanure... every imaginable
shading and tone, and not a few unimaginable ones. Some were the size of a
child's toy, small enough to fit over his little finger. Others looked big
enough to swallow the shuttle with ease. In the corners they merged into the
fabric of the structure. He turned a slow circle and saw where bulges in the
walls, extending even above the entrance way, indicated the presence of in ore
of the colossal pipes. He reminded him-self that he had no way of being certain
they were even hollow, but somehow the impression of pipes persisted. Sometimes
his talents operated independent of his thoughts.
‘Well,' said Malaika. He said it again. 'Well. well!'
He seemed uncertain of himself, a rare state. Flinx
smiled at the merchant's thoughts. The big man wasn't sure whether to be
pleased or not. He definitely had something, all right. But he didn't know what
it was, let alone bow to market it. He stood while everyone else sat.
I suggest we obtain whatever supplies we'll need for
our investigations.' Truzenzuzex and Tse-Mallory were examining everything in
minute detail and hardly heard him. 'This has passed over my head, and so from
my hands. I trust you gentlebeings can find out what this thing does'?' He
waved a broad hand to encompass what they could see of the machine.
I do not know,' said Truzenzuzex. 'Offclaw, I would
say that our acquaintances the Branner had the right idea. When they spoke of
this thing as a musical instrument. It certainly looks like one, and the
arrangements in here,' he indicated the amphitheatre, 'would tend to support
that assumption. For my wings, though, I can't see as yet how it operates.'
'Looks like the ultimate product of a mad
organbuilder's worst nightmares,' added Tse-Maliory. 'I wouldn't say for sure
unless we figure out how to operate the thing.'
'Will you?' asked Malaika.
'Well, it seems to be still partially powered, at
least. Wolf recorded she power source, and something operated the doors, turned
on the lights ... and keeps the air fresh, I hope. It wasn't designed according
to conceptions we'd find familiar, but that thing,' and he gestured at the dome
with its enclosed bench, looks an
awful lot like an operator's station. True, it might also be a resting place
for their honoured dead. We won't know till we dig a lot deeper. I suggest that
we move everything we'll need from the shuttle in here. It'll be a lot simpler
than running out in this gale every time we need a spanner or a sandwich.'
'Mapatano! I agree. Wolf, you and I will start
transferring things from the shuttle. It will go quickly enough, once we unload
some of that junk I piled into the crawler. It appears we are going to be here
for a bit, hata kidogobaya!"
It
was an odd feeling to be constantly within the building. Not confining, for the
door worked perfectly even for one person - provided he earned with him at
least one item of recognizable metallic artificial construction. It was a
peculiarly satisfying sensation to approach the great bulks, comm unit or gun
extended m front of one, and have a million tons of impregnable metal slide
gently aside to reveal a personalized passageway a metre wide and thirty metres
high.
It was better outside at night, but not much. In
spite of the goggles the dust eventually worked its insistent way into eyes.
And it was chilly.
Tse-Mallory and Truzenzuzex had been pouring over the
Immense apparatus, prying behind those panels in the slate-grey wall which
would open, ignoring those which would not. There was no point in forcing entry
and risking break-age to the intricate device. Not when they could spend years
on the unresisting portions. And they didn't have years. So they continued to
dig into the exposed guts on the Krang without disturbing a single wire from
its proper place, treading with the utmost care lest they nudge some vital
circuit from its proper alignment. While the scientists and Malaika laboured
over the enigma of the machine, Atha and Flinx would sometimes take the crawler
into the vast city. Wolf remained behind to help Malaika, and Sissiph to be
near him. So Flinx had the crawler's observation dome practically to himself.
He found it hard to believe that structures which
even in ruin and under a centuries-old coat of dust could remain beantiful had
been raised to house the most warlike race the galaxy had known. The thought
cast an unshakable pail over the quiet ruins. Little in the way of decoration
was visible on the sand blasted exteriors of the structures, but that didn't
necessarily mean much. Anything not integral to the actual support of the
edifice would long since have been worn away. And they were cruising far above
what had once been a main boulevard. The street itself was somewhere far below,
buried under a millennia of shifting sand and soil. They recognized it as such
only because of the absence of buildings. Probably this city had been covered
and un-covered at least a hundred times, each new cycle grinding away some
portion of its original aspect. They had soon discovered that a mild
electrostatic field came up regularly every evening and cleared the days'
accumulation of dust and debris from the base of the Krang for the width of the
yellow-white circle. But no such care was visible in the city. In the evenings,
as the sun set, the sands turned blood-red and the hulks of h oil owed
buildings sparkled like topaz and ruby in a setting of carnelian. The constant,
unceasing wind spoiled the illusion of beauty, and its rise-and-fail moan
seemed an echoing curse of all the vanished races ever subjugated by the
Tar-Aiym.
And they didn't even know what they had looked like.
A
week later they were all gathered in informal conference on the dais. A small,
portable cook stove, powered by an aeternacell, had been set up nearby, giving
the place an incongruously domesticated look. Next, thought Flinx, they would
be hanging out laundry. It had been found more convenient for the scientists to
sleep and eat by their work, instead of making the daily hike to the crawler.
They could have brought the cruiser right up to the base of the dais, but for
all they knew the seals themselves might play some crucial part in the
operation of the Krang. Besides, reducing parts of the place to rubble hardly
seemed the proper way to go about resurrecting its secrets. It was just as we
11th at they hadn't, because the sleepy machine would have noted the gesture as
hostile and taken immediate and appropriate action.
The odours of frying bacon and eggs, and juquil for
Truzenzuzex, added to the homey atmosphere. At the moment, Atha and Sissiph
were managing the cooking for the scientists. This was proved a necessity after
all the men had demonstrated a monumental ineptitude with the device, which did
ninety per cent of the work itself. Knowing full well he could operate it
better than any of them, Flinx had pleaded ignorance when offered the chance to
try it. He had no desire to be tied down with the, job of cook, not when he
could spend his time watching the two scientists dissect the amazing innards of
the machine.
'This thing grows more incredible by the day.'
Tse-Mallory was talking now. 'You know, we found walk way at each corner of the
building, where the machine disappears into the walls.'
I'd wondered where you two had disappeared to,' said
Malaika.
'They extend I don't know bow far beneath us. To the
centre of the planet for all I can tell, although I'd think that the heat would
make that a prohibitive development even for the Tar-Aiym. Nor do we have any
idea how far it extends on the horizontal level, either. To the ocean? Under
it? We didn't have an easy time of it down there, you know. There are steps and
ladders and ramps, and none designed for human or thranx hands. But between the
two of us, we managed. There must be mechanical lifts somewhere, but we
couldn't find them.'
‘We first went down three days ago ... apologies For
worrying you. I suppose we should have mentioned where we were going, but we
didn't really know ourselves, and certainly didn't expect to be gone as long as
we were. The excitement of the moment overcame our time-sense.
'We went more or less straight down, pausing only
twice, for three hours and sleep-time. These pipes, or whatever,' he indicated
the rainbow giants ranked above them, 'are continuous below this flooring, and
descend to levels we didn't reach. Not even at the furthest, point of our
journey. Most of the machinery was completely unfamiliar to us. And I daresay
we two are as familiar with Tar-Aiym design as anyone in the Arm. But the majority
of this stuff was way past us.'
'Near the surface the machinery is practically solid.
Further down it thins out to a sufficient degree to become recognizable as to
its individual components. All of it looked brand-new. In many places the metal
was warm, confirming what we've suspected all along. Power is being fed into it
continually. And there must be a billion kilometres of wire down there.
'Still, we have no idea what it does. Captain. I am
sorrier than you could ever be, but you can console yourself in the knowledge
that whatever it is, it is far and away the biggest and best of its kind.'
This last from a tired looking Truzcnzuzex. The
phliosoph had been working at an incredible pace the past week, and his age was
beginning to show. On the ship he had kept it well masked with his energy and
youthful spirits.
'Couldn't you discover anything about its function?'
pleaded Malaga.
T se-Mallory sighed. He had been doing a lot of that,
lately. 'Not really. We both incline to the musical instrument theory, still.
There are many arguments against it that bother us, though.' He looked at
Truzenzuzex, who nodded confirmation.
‘Je?’ Malaika
prompted.
'For one thing, we can't quite bring ourselves to
believe that in a time of such stress a. race as war-oriented as the Tar-Aiym
would devote so much effort and material to anything of a nonlethal nature. The
metal for that door, for example, must have been required for the construction
of warships. Yet it was brought and used here. On the other hand, we know they
were artistically inclined in a gruesome sort of way. Their tastes did run
strongly to the martial. Possibly they felt the need of a project to stimulate
patriotic fervour, and this was their way of doing it. It would also have
possible psychological benefits we can't begin to imagine. If that seems
unlikely, consider the lack of evidence we have to go on. I’m not ready to
believe any of my explanations myself.'
'And another thing. Did you happen to notice the
unusual silvery-gold tinge to the atmosphere as we were coming down?'
'No ... yes!' said Malaika. I've seen it before on
other planets, so I didn't think it too out of the ordinary. These ... then.'
were mbili layers, if I remember aright ... seemed thicker than most.
And better defined. But I don't view that as a cause for surprise. I've seen
quadruple layers, too. And the unusual thickness of these layers, too. And the
unusual thickness of these could easily be accounted for by the scouring
effects of these wachawi upepo, sorcerer's winds,'
True,' Tse-Mallory continued. 'Wind glitter, I
believe they call it. As you say, there could be natural explanations for the
odd thickness of the layers. The reason I bring them up at all is because on
one of the levels we reached we found what appeared to be at least a portion of
a. great meteorological monitoring station. Among other things, several of the
instruments appeared to be occupied solely with keeping information on those
two levels in the atmosphere. We only had time for a fast look at it, as our
prime concern was making speed downward. But the only reason we noticed is at
all was because the metal was quite warm there, gave off a lot of heat, and
seemed to be running at full power. That's something we observed in only a very few other
places. We now think that those layers, have something to do with the actual
function of the Krang. What, I can't imagine.'
To be more specific,' said Truzenzuzex, 'this thing,'
and he pointed at the transparent dome and the lounge within, 'takes on more
and more the aspect of a centre control for the operation of the entire apparatus. I know it seems
difficult to imagine this monstrosity being operated by a single being lying on
that slab, but evidence seems to support it. I am sceptical, myself. There is
not a switch, dial, or similar device anywhere near the thing. And yet its
location alone, and isolation, seem to support its importance.
'Close examination of that helmet, or headdress, or
what- ever it is, shows that it's line with what might be some form of sensory
pickups. If the machine is indeed still capable of more than partial
activation, then theoretically mere proximity to those pickups ought to do it.
Actual physical
contact with the operator wouldn't seem to be
necessary. So the fact that the size and shape of our heads in no way
corresponds to that of the Tai-Aiym ... in all probability ... shouldn't hinder
us.'
'You're thinking of trying it, then,' said Malaika.
'We must.'
'But suppose it's geared to respond only to the
electromagnetic patterns generated by a Tar-Aiym mind'?'
'We have no indication that "electromagnetic
patterns" are even the type of whatever is necessary to activate the
machine,' retorted Tse-Mallory. 'But if that does prove to be the case, then
unless you can produce a live and cooperative Tar-Alym, I am very much afraid
that we might as well pack and go home.' He shrugged. 'Tru and I feel we've
more or less reached a dead end as far as mere circuit-tracing goes. We could
continue to poke around in this pile of complexity for a thousand years -
fascinating as that might be - and not come any closer to mating it work.'
'Trying it ... couldn't that be awfully dangerous?'
asked Atha.
‘It could very well be lethal, my dear. We decided
that long ago. For instance, there might be a feedback which could ... for that
very reason, and for several others, I shall try it first. If we have still
failed to activate it and no obviously harmful results are forthcoming, I see
no reason why everyone here should not have an opportunity to try the same.'
'Not we" said Sissiph loudly.
'Now wait a minute!’ began Malaika, ignoring her.
'Sorry, Captain.' Truzenzuzex, now. 'Starhe!
Don’t bother, as you would say. Bran is correct. Our training may not exactly
qualify us as operators of this thing, but our familiarity with the works of
the Tar-Aiyrn and what little we know of their psychologies might help us cope
with any unforeseen problems that could develop. Such designs might arise which
would overwhelm a complete novice. Sorry, but there is too much involved to
permit you to make the initial attempt, at least. We are not on board ship. You
are momentarily overruled, Captain.'
'Je!’ rumbled Malaga.
Tse-Mallory stepped to the entrance of the dome.
'Let's he on with it, then.'
'You mean, sasaa kuume?' asked Malaika.
Tse-Mallory paused. ‘I don't see why not.' He
hesitated again at the entrance, looked back. I don't expect much to happen,
let alone anything dangerous. And it if does I wouldn't expect this to he much
protection, but for my own psychological comfort, everyone off the dais,
please. It certainly ought to be safe enough in the seats, or lounges, or
whatever they are. Obviously the Tar-Aiym used them when this thing was in
operation, so they should be safe for us as well. Theoretically speaking.'
'Sociologist, theoretical injury I don't mind.'
Malaika smiled in what was intended to be a reassuring manner and joined the
others in moving off the raised area into the rows of 'seats' below.
Truzenzuzex was the only other one to remain on the
platform. Ostensibly he was there to observe, but both he and Tse-Mallory knew
that if anything went wrong the insect's aid would not likely be of much use.
He took the proverbial and ritual deep breath and entered the dome.
The ceramic-plastic slab was now familiar from days
of prolonged and minute inspections. He climbed up on to the smooth, cold
surface and turned, facing out and slightly up. From inside the dome the roof
of the monolith seemed almost visible. Possibly the transparent material had an
actual slight magnifying effect. It did not seem significant.
The slab was much longer than was necessary to hold
his lanky frame. It wasn't heated, though. He found himself squirming
uncomfortably on the hard, chilly surface and wishing it were abed. This was
too much like the moulds in a cryogenic suspension lab. Do it quick, his mind
told his body I Digging into the unyielding surface with his heels, he shoved
hi in self upward. In one motion his head was fully within the helmet.
Flinx didn't know' what to expect. Explosions,
earthquake, a collapsing building, perhaps. In any case the results were
disappointing, if safe.
The helmet took on a pale red tinge, shifting to
yellow, and thence to a light green. Also, a slight humming sound become
audible. Apparently it came from within the slab itself. That was all, No
fireworks, not even a few simple flashes of Lightning.
Tsp-Mallory's face within the dome was twisted, but
it was obviously in concentration and not pain. Oddly, his mind was unreachable
to Flinx. If nothing e]se the dome blanketed the thoughts of whoever lay
within.
Twenty minutes later he was out of the dome, shaking
his head while the others crowded around.
'Je?’ asked Malaika.
The sociologist looked irritable. ‘Je? Well,
we proved one thing. If this machine is still capable of functioning as it was
intended, that helmet is certainly the initiating point.'
‘I can't believe that this entire insanity was built
just tomake pretty coloured lights in a plastic headdress!'
‘No, of course not.' Tse-Maliory looked wistfully
back at the slab and the once-again transparent helmet. It seems as though I
was able to activate it. But only a very little. Apparently there's a necessary
something missing from my mind. Or maybe it merely takes a kind of training we
know nothing about. I don't know. I tried everything I could with my mind.
Self-hypnosis. Yoga. The Banda exercises. Total objective
concentration. An open subconscious. You saw the results. Or rather, the lack
of them.'
'Could you feel anything, anything at all?' asked
Flinx.
'Umm. Yes, it was peculiar. Not painful or
threatening. Just peculiar. Like something was trying to get inside my head. A
tickling of the outside of the brain, barely noticeable. And when I tried to
concentrate on it, it went away and hid. I must say I'm disappointed.'
'Je" You think perhaps you've got a
monopoly on it?' The merchant looked upset, as well he had a right to be. 'What
now?'
'Now I suggest the rest of the humans give it a try.
I believe that I've amply demonstrated its harmlessness, if nothing else.
Keeping it attuned to one type of mind might have a beneficial cumulative
effect.'
One at a time the rest of them took a turn under the
innocuous helmet. Excepting of course Sissiph, who refused even to go near it.
Malaika managed to generate a strong yellow glow in the transparent material.
Flinx did as well (or as poorly, no one could say) as Tse-Mallory, only his
colouring also possessed an uneven pulsing. As if to counter Tse-Mallory's
claim, he emerged from the domed chamber with a definite headache. Atha and
Wolf could each manage a light red, almost rose colour. They had better luck
when Truzenzuzex? at last made his attempt.
The second that ageing, iridescent head entered the
zone of effectiveness, the soft colours immediately ran from pink up to a deep
blue. Tse-MaHory had to remark on it to get everyone's attention. Repeated
failure had led to discouraging boredom. But no one was bored now. Even outside
the dome the humming from the base of the slab was clearly audible. On one of
the open panels of the great grey bulk of the machine, lights were beginning to
glow faintly. The helmet bad by now turned a deep lavender.
'Look at the dome’ Flinx pointed.
For several inches of its height the dome was glowing
a solid and unwavering crimson. Every now and then the cottony light would
creep upward a few millimetres, only to sink back and disappear into the floor.
An hour later Truzenzuzex staggered out of the dome.
Tse-Mallory had to support the philosoph around the b-thorax, as the old
insect's legs proved too shaky to manage on their own. The philosoph was
visibly tired. Together they lurched down to the first row of alien benches.
Truzenzuzex's visage did not Wrinkle as did a primate's, but the usual healthy
glow of his eyes was more subdued than before.
'You certanily labelled it correctly, brother,' he
finally gasped, 'when you said there was something trying to get inside your
head! I felt like a youth again, trying to break out of my chrysalis. Whew! I
could tell it did no good, though.'
'Not true,' said Flinx. Mahilka nodded confirmation.
'You had the dome itself glowing red - around the base, anyway.'
'I did?' The whistling thranx laughter followed. I
suppose that is an accomplishment of sorts. I could not detect it from the
inside. I was concentrating rather deeply, and my optics weren't the nerves I
was working with. Does that mean perhaps we are on a proper track?' He turned
to face Malaika. The tone was gradually returning to his muscles. 'Captain, I
retract my earlier statement. Give me another three or four weeks at this and I
believe I'll be able to tell you, one way or another, whether this thing can
ever be operated by man or thranx. Or whether your investment has proved itself
a loss.'
Malaika looked resigned rather than frustrated. His
own unsuccessful strivings with the Krang had produced a little patience, if no
other results.
'Bado Juzi. "Yet the day before
yesterday." An old saying in my family, gentlemen. You've done already
much more that I had a right to hope. Take your time, gentlesirs, take your
time.'
Far below in the secret places of the planet the
consciousness of the Krang stirred sluggishly, it considered more fully the
impulses which had awakened the Prime Nexus with feeble, childish probings and pressures.
Even in its semisomnolent state it was easonably certain (+prob., 90.97,
—prob., 8.03, random factoring, 1.00) that there was an A-class mind present
above. One tully capable of arousing the Krang to the state of Naisma,
or total effectiveness. Apparently it had chosen not to reveal itself yet. The
machine considered and allowed the sections of itself which controlled
intelligence to lapse back to dormancy, ready.
When the mind was ready, the Krang would be.
After all, it had been built that way.
As
it developed, Truzenzuzex did not get his month. Nor his three weeks. They had
been pouring over the accessible portions of the machine's innards for only
three days when Malaika's comm signalled an extra-atmosphere incoming call. As a
matter of safety his portable comm was hooked to the big transmitter in the
crawler. Flinx was present when the signal came in, helping the two scientists
with the more physical aspects of their work. Sissiph, Atha, and Wolf were back
in the crawler, rearranging their supplies in its cavernous hold.
In order to facilitate their work, two cots (one
modified) had been placed nest to the scientists' portastove. The others still
found U more comfortable to sleep within the familiar confines of the crawler,
despite the attendant daily walk it engendered.
Both scientists paused in their work the moment they
spotted the strange expression which had come over Malaika's face. Flinx picked
it up from the sudden confusion of the merchant's thought. He had been watching
them labour over strange markings and unfamiliar alien switching devices all
morning. Nine tenths of what they were trying to do mechanically eluded him. He
had been able to help them with the more delicate portions of their operations,
having, as they put it, a certain ‘feel' for where things were located. And as
always, their conversation on both the vocal and mental level had been
fascinating.
Captain...' began Tse-Maliory.
We're being called,' the merchant replied.
'Extra-atmospheric.'
His thoughts reflected suspicion as much as
disbelief. He flipped over the broadcast switch of the tiny comm unit.
Wolf, are you monitoring this?'
Yes, Captain,' came the unmodulated reply from the
distant crawler.
All right. Send an acknowledgement and put it over.
Someone knows where we are. Not much use denying it.' He turned to the others.
°We might be being monitored now, although I doubt it's possible through these
walls. But then, I also doubt we're receiving a call from another star-ship,
and that is the case, Haidhuru. Nothing matters. Leave your comms off
and listen on mine, if you wish. No point in broadcasting how many units we
have in operation. If they don't know already.'
It was the first time Flinx had seen the merchant so
down-cast. Obviously the strain was taking a bigger toll of his resources than
he cared to show. At any rate, all he said into the comm was, 'Yes?'
The voice that responded was naturally high. But if
the tone was slightly effeminate, the words were not.
Captain Maxim Malaika, House-Head and Plutocrat? I
bring you greetings, sir, from Madame Rashaleila Nuaman and Nuaman
Enterprises.' Malaika's lips twisted in a sub-vocal oath which made Flinx
blush. 'Congratulations!'
That superciliousness was sufficient to stimulate the
merchant's tongue,
'Damned decent of you. And who are ninyi nyote?’
'Pardon? Oh, I. I am of little consequence.
But for purposes of facilitating further conversation ... which, I assure you, will
be forthcoming ... you may know me as Able Nikosos.'
'Je, Mister
Nikosos. I agree
wholeheartedly that your personage is doubtless of little consequence. I am
curious as to bow you got here. This planet seems to be acquiring a universal
notoriety.'
'How so? Umm. As to your question, Captain, why,' and
the voice reflected mock astonishment, 'we followed you. Most of the way from
Moth. At a discreet distance, of course. Speaking of which, you certainly
changed your course a good deal at the beginning of your journey. Yes you did.
But after the first week we had no trouble plotting your approximate course.
You know, this is the fourth system in this sector with planets that we've
visited. We knew more or less where the one we wanted was, but not its exact
co-ordinates. It made it hard on us, yes hard, when we lost you completely.
Those co-ordinates were on a bit of material which ... but never mind that.
That's long in the past now, isn't it?'
'You didn't by any chance get some help from a
certain AAnn baron?'
'An AAnn baron?' The squeaky voice reflected
surprise. MaSaika glanced at Flinx.
'He's telling the truth, sir. And they're definitely
in a set orbit.'
The two scientists looked in surprise at Flinx.
Neither said anything, but he could sense a mild resentment of his secrecy in
their thoughts. He wanted desperately to tell them how necessary it was to
maintain that secrecy. Even today, psi-sensitives were not universally popular,
a fact he had found out early and painfully as a child. Now was not the time,
though. The voice on the comm continued.
'What would we have to do with the AAnn? Nasty
people, those, nasty! No indeed, sir. We found you all by ourselves, in spite
of the difficulties your disappearance occasioned us. But we did find you,
didn't we? So no harm done. Besides, no use trying to share the blame, and I
refuse to share the credit. Not that it should matter to you in the long run.
Or even the short one.' A brief giggle broke the commentary. 'My ship is parked
a couple of field lengths from your Gloryhole. We beamed it first. When
we did not receive a reply and when the lock refused us entrance - how clever
of you, Captain! - we assumed you had already made your drop to the surface. A
glance at your shuttle bay confirmed it.'
'Thelathini nguruwe! Thirty pigs. Which is the
ultimate number which can be fitted into a standard captain's cabin, in case
you didn't know.' The voice seemed immune to insult as well as to modesty. Tut, tut, Captain. You'll offend my modest nature.'
'Small chance of that.'
'Anyway, the emanations from your components would
have revealed your location to us even if you had declined to acknowledge our
call. As I am sure you were well aw are.'
'Captain,' said Flinx, 1 thought you said . . .'
'Forgot about the relay to the shuttle's comm. That's
what they'd pick up. They could hardly miss us anyway.' He was already setting
up a last-ditch defence in his mind.
‘Where are you now, friend Nikosos, other than in
orbit?'
'A good guess, Captain. Why, we're drifting over this
moisture-poor continent. Rather close to you, I've no doubt. We should be down
in a short while, at which time I hope to greet you personally.' The voice paused, then resumed again.
'Whatever you are hiding in must really be something. We're having no end of
trouble picking up your signal.'
'You've travelled along way for a lot of nothing,
Nikosos. We've been working on this "whatever," as you so accurately
say, for weeks now. We haven't been able to figure out what it does, much less
how it does it.'
'Certainly, Captain, certainly!' The voice carried a
humouring tone now. 'Personaly whenever the cold of space affects me too
deeply, I like to fly through the nearest M Supergiant to warm my chilly bones.
As I said, we'll be seeing you shortly.'
‘He doesn't believe you,' said Flinx,
Malaika nodded. 'And then?'
'Well, that does pose a problem. eh? I certainly
can't wave you on your happy way home, because then all my hard work would have
been for naught, wouldn't it? But then, assassination realty isn't my line,
either Perhaps some-thing can be worked ...' Malaika cut the comm. He turned to
the others.
‘Je, you heard. Where new planets are
concerned, possession is nine tenths of the ancient law. I doubt Rasha will
leave me be to call in a Church Evaluation Force.' He switched the comm to
inter personnel frequency.
'Wolf. you heard everything?'
'Yes, Captain.' The shadow-man's reply was even.
Flinx wondered if the pilot were capable of an excitement he never showed. I
fear that your pet took it rather hard, though. She's fainted. Miss Moon is
caring for her now.'
‘Je! She will be quiet for a while then,
anyway. We're going to join you shortly. We'd best all remain pamoja. He
flipped off the comm again.
'What do you propose?' asked Tse-Mallory.
'Not much I can, sociologist. Even if this Nikosos
person should be mjinga enough to come without a portable defensive
screen, it would be awkward to attempt to fight our way out. Although we are
not.' and here he looked directly at Flinx, 'without surprises of our own.
However, I am certain the men he leaves on his ship - only one this time, for a
change - will be monitoring everything that happens. We'd be at their mercy in
the shuttle. If this Nikosos doesn't bring a screen, and if we could surprise
him and get off a crippling few shots before they had time to warn their
starship, and if we could slip to the Gloryhole under their detectors,
and if we could get inside and get the generator powered before they noticed -
why, we might have a good chance of sneaking off or fighting them.'
Too many "ifs",' said Truzenzuzex
unnecessarily.
'Kabisa, quite. Still, we have other weapons.
Rest assured I'll try them. Bribery, for one, has often proven more effective
in war than nucleonics.' But I fear that Rasha wouldn't send a creature that
vulnerable on such an important mission. Not one who'd be tempted by total
bribery, anyway. Partial, now ... There is only one other thing I can think of
to do. There's only one miango to this building. Set up the rifle and
blast the first being to enter it. As long as he has no certain idea of how we
are equipped for supplies and guns he might be impatient enough to dicker with
us. Unfortunately we don't have much, even with what we could move in here from
the shuttle, Mibu, ail he has to do is burn the shuttle and take a
leisurely safari back to Nineveh with co-ordinates for the Registry!'
'Why doesn't he do that anyway?' asked Flinx.
'Not his assignment, kijana, or he wouldn't
even have bothered to call us. Simply disabled the Glory and been on his
way. Obviously he needs to find out everything he can about the Krang.' He
gestured at the two scientists. 'Rasha knows about you two. I told her myself, chura
that I am. She could hire experts of her own, but she knows your reputation.
Rasha never neglects her homework. So I'm not worried for your lives. Only your
reputations. I believe I can also manage something For myself. Too many people
would ask awkward questions if I were to disappear suddenly ... even on a trip
of exploration in an unspaced area. And he can't make that much fedha!
Oh, he still couldn't afford to let any of us go free. Most likely he's been
ordered to keep us comfy someplace until Rasha's investment here is tied up
sixways in four dimensions. That veiled hint at "assassination" was probably his
way of opening bids.'
'A suggestion. Captain,' said Truzenzuzex.
'Ndiyo?’
'Assuming all you've said to be true, why not simply
accede quietly and give him what he wants?'
'What" Even Flinx was startled.
I assure you that the Krang will remain useless to
both him and his employer. I was pessimistic when I said I would require three
weeks to evaluate the machine's potential usefulness. We could learn much about
the Tar-Aiym from it, of that I've no doubt. I think that I can also say with a
great deal of certitude right now that it will otherwise never be more than an
outstanding curiosity for archaeologists and touristas.'
'Lakini, but... you got it working! Part of
it, anyhow.'
'What I did was no more than polishing the drive
coils of a Caplis generator. I succeeded in warming it up, perhaps, and
appearing functional, but I doubt that I could ever, ever bring it to even
partial operation. And we still have no more idea of what it's supposed to do
than we did before. No being could go further, I think ... no matter who your
Madame Nuaman engages.'
Lf you're positive- ' began Malaika.
Truzenzuzex looked questioningly at Tse-Mallory and
both turned back to the merchant. 'Nothing is positive, Captain, but I will not
bandy Church maxims with you. Without hesitation, I concur with my brother's
evaluation.'
'Mbwa ulimwengu! Very well, then. We will
forgo destruction in favour of more subtle manoeuvres.' He activated the comm
for a wide broadcast channel. Now that he was on familiar ground once more, his
voice had the old ring back. 'Nikosos!' There was a hiss, sput, pause, and then
the mousey voice had returned. 'No need to shout, Captain. You have thoughts?'
'Look, agent. I will give you the opportunity to gain
what you wish and perhaps save a few lives in the process, I have a fully
operational six millimetre luser rifle here, and plenty of charges, but I don't
see anything worth fighting over. I wish you luck in making it perform if you
can, which I doubt. The whole city is yours. I wish only to leave this mukia
as rapidly as possible. You may have our notes, if you wish. Everything we've
found out about, the Krang itself ... which amounts to very little. But I've a
boy and two women here, and I want them out of this.'
'How touching' I did not expect such admirable
altruism from you. Captain. Yes, despite my orders I think a financial
agreement satisfactory to all concerned can be arranged. Blood tends to upset
my liver, anyway. Although I'm sure you'll understand when I say that you and
your companions must remain as my guests for a short while, A minimal amount of
time, really, but very necessary.'
'Naturally, I understand the necessity and will be
glad to sign...'
'Oh no, Captain, that won't be required. I trust your
word. Your reputation precedes you. Personally I find honesty in our profession
somewhat nauseating, but in this case it is to my advantage. No, much as you'd
like to have such an agreement in words, I'd rather not have such a missive in
existence. Such things have a habit of disappearing and turning up later in the
most destressing places. Shortly, now.
'Our flight has been interesting so far. Captain, but
I fear I should find this planet boring. If you would be so kind as to leave
your transmitter on standby, we will follow its pulse In.' This entire
distasteful business can be speeded to completion. I am certain you have even
less desire than I to prolong it.' He clicked off.
'Captain,' came Wolf's voice over the comm, 'this
makes me ill. Is there no other way ...?'
‘No other way, Wolf. I would rather fight too, but
... Leave open the transcomm for them to follow down, as he requested. At least
our work here appears to have been fruitless, or I wouldn't consider such an alternative.
We can wish them much of the same. Whatever they find in the city they are
welcome to. It's been something of a wild mbizu chase after all.'
'But he as much as threatened murder ...I'
'Wolf, please, I know. Jua is hard. Still,
we've little choice. I don't trust him, either. But he could simply leave now
and return for our emaciated corpses later. No, I'm betting he'd rather pick up
the extra, credit my offer holds. Why shouldn't he?' He shrugged, despite the
fact that Wolf couldn't see it.
'Wolf, if the odds weren't so nyani-sided ...
" He sighed. 'House rules.'
'I understand, Captain.'
Malaik'a switched off and sat down heavily on one of
the alien benches, looking suddenly very old and tired.
'Of course, if you gentlesirs had discovered how to make
this mashineuzi work, I wouldn't even consider ...'
'We understand, too, Captain,' said Tse-Mallory. 'A
bad choice is no choice. We never worried for ourselves. He must at least
display us to Nuaman to convince her of our uselessness. And one abrupt disappearaace,
too, would cause discussion in certain quarters.'
'Nuaman. Damn that bitch" He looked
upward. 'This day I forget forever that creature is human and mwanamke!’
He noted Flinx's glance. 'She ceased to be a bibi, a lady, kijana,
long before you were born.'
Kilometres
above, a very satisfied Able Nikosos leaned back in his lounge in the plush
shuttle cabin and relayed orders to his pilots. He rubbed his hands together.
Things had gone nicely, nicely. Almost as nicely as it" he had received
that map as scheduled, back on Moth. The presence of Malaika already down on
the planet made things a mite more complicated, but not overmuch. It appeared
that it would make things is ore profitable. Besides collecting a fat bonus
from the old witch for successfully carrying out a mission more difficult than
originally' assigned, there would be the ill after of the wealthy Malaika's
ransom ... payable in advance. As preplanned, the two braincases would be
shipped off to Nuaman. As soon as a decent amount of the ransom had been paid -
wasn't Malaika's word good now? - the boy could be shunted out the nearest
lock. As for the two women, well, the ancestral homestead was in need of a few
new toys. The price of healthy young women bad gone up insufierably in the past
few years. Insufferably! All the fault of those damned priggish Churchmen.
'Violence is unsanitary,' indeed! At the rate he used them up his hobby was
becoming prohibitively expensive. Shameful? The addition of two new, free faces
(and bodies, oh yes!) would therefore be a financial as well as an aesthetic
bonus. He did not doubt but that they would both prove young and attractive.
Otherwise what business would they have with the roguish Malaika?
If they weren't his type, quite, he could still use
them. Less artistically, perhaps, but they might still remain serviceable. And
he was not known as a connoisseur for nothing.
The shuttle's delta wings began to unfold as it dipped towards atmosphere.
Malaika, Tse-Mallory, Truzenzuzex, and Flinx were
making their way slowly back to the crawler. No one spoke. Flinx had already
determined not to let his gun be taken from him without argument. He could
prove equally adept at treachery! He'd read the confusion and little piggish thoughts
Nikosos had been having, difficult as it had been with their owner moving so
rapidly above the planet's surface. He trusted him now about as far as he could
throw the Gloryhole. That the two scientists and Malaika would get off
safely was a possibility, but from the agent's thoughts the chance that he and
the women would do likewise seemed small in the light of what he had read. In
'the final analysis he would not count - no, not expect the merchant to put Ins
life on the line for him, or for the women, or even for the scientists.
Survival is an argument that morals do not even belong in the same class with.
So he'd best plan on taking some action on his own. It was an unflattering but
logical evaluation of their present situation. That scared him almost as much
as the reality of it did. He shivered slightly, despite the warmth.
Something had, been bothering him for the last few
minutes, in addition to the expected quota of fearful anticipation. He shrugged
his shoulders despite the lack of an itch there. That was it! Not an itch, but
the tack of a' persistent and familiar one. The minidrag was elsewhere. In the
absorption of the past moments and his concentration on the agent's mind, he'd
not noticed that the reptile was missing. He turned abruptly.
'Pip? Where's Pip?'
‘Just to be certain,' murmured Malaika, not hearing
Flinx's low enquiry. He flipped his comm. 'Wolf, I
don't like to play without at least a few cards. Break out the rifle and set it
up facing the entranceway.'
'Yes, Captain,’ came the enthusiastic reply.
‘If this fellow has us so neatly tied up and
packaged,’ said Tse-Mallory, 'why bother with the gun? I thought you'd given up
once and for all the idea of our fighting our way out of this?'
Flinx searched the air around them. The snake was still
not visible. He felt naked without the familiar reptilian presence.
'So I have, more or less. We know that he has us
packaged, and he knows that be has us packaged, but he doesn't know that we
know he has us packaged.'
'Simplify that, please.'
'Ndiyo. Sure. Put it this way. A man
negotiates with considerably less arrogance than he might when he knows he's
sitting under the gun of a man who fears for his life. We've little enough in
the way of levers so that we've got to use the slightest we can find.'
Despite Flinx's varieties of calls, whistles, and
entreaties the minidrag had not shown itself. It was unusual, but not
unprecedented. Sometimes the snake had a mind of its own. Truzenzuzex couldn't
duplicate the stuttering calls Flinx was using, but the insect was helping with
the visual portion of the search. It served to take his mind at least
temporarily off their unfortunate circumstances.
'Where would he be likely to hide, lad?' asked the
scientist.
'Oh, I'm not sure, sir. Different places.’ He was becoming
honestly concerned now and listened with only one ear to the philosoph's
questions. He could not sense the minidrag's presence and that alone worried
him. 'He doesn't do this sort of thing often. I suppose the depression in the
atmosphere got to him. He's sensitive to that, you know. He does prefer cool,
closed-in places. Like ...'
He broke off in shock. In the distance he could see
the minidrag. Even as he watched, it fluttered about the transparent dome. Its
natural curiosity got the better of it then, because despite a warning thought
from Flinx it poked its head under the attractive shape of the helmet. What
happened next surprised both watchers. The minidrag did an awkward turn in the
air and seemed to fall in on itself, collapsing into a tight curl at the very
highest point of the helmet. It lay still, unmoving, within the structure,
which now pulsed an uncertain yellow.
All thoughts of their immediate difficulties were
instantly discarded in a paroxysm of fear for his life-long companion. Heedless
of Truzenzuzex's cautions he plunged forward at a run for the place they'd just
left. Malaika turned and uttered an oath, charging after the boy. His bandy
legs were no match for those of the youth but moved at a respectable speed none
the less.
As he neared the dome Flinx noted a slight but
definite tremor underfoot. He paid it no heed.
Truzenzuzex did. He glanced at Tse-Mallory.
'Yes, brother. I felt it too.' His voice was
reflective. Another tremor, stronger this time.
'What occurs?’ said a puzzled Truzenzuzex. ‘I thought
we'd established that this part of the planet, at least, was plutonically
secure.' He stared uneasily at the vaulting walls, gauging their-strength and
stability.
The gentle sharing started again, only this time it
was somewhat less than gentle. And it didn't stop. It grew progressively louder
and more forceful, and although no one noticed it, it did so as Flinx drew
closer to the dome.
The steady vibration was felt, no, sensed, more than
heard. It bespoke power somewhere deep below.
'What is going on?' whispered Tse-Mallory.
‘Elitat! I'm not sure, replied the philosoph
in equaly subdued tones, 'but I think perhaps our puzzle is setting about
answering itself.'
Fiinx had mounted the dais and was moving towards the
dome. Pip had still not moved. He barely noticed the tremors which were shaking
the structure. As he neared his motionless pet the odd buzzing which had begun
in his head began to get worse. He shook his head impatiently to clear it hut
with no effect. There was an odd feeling of euphoria alternating with the pain.
Don't fight it, something seemed to whisper. He heard
waves on a beach, breaking softly. The minidrag's eyes were shut tightly. It
appeared to be jerking to the strains of some silent song. His first thought
was of convulsions, but the reptile's movements, although irregular, seemed too
even for that. He started to reach under the great helmet for his troubled pet.
The buzzing increased and he reeled backwards under a startling attack of
dizziness.
DONT ... FIGHT ... YOU!
Pip's in ... trouble. Trouble.
He shook his head again and this time it seemed to
give him a little relief. Blurred, his thoughts were blurred. He focused watery
eyes on the snake and plunged drunkenly under the helmet.
E*P*I*P*A*N*Y.
Inside his skull an ancient dam, weakened by chance
and evolution, collapsed. The surge of stuff behind it was awesome.
The normally transparent structure of the dome
exploded in a mass of scintillating, brilliantine auroras. From crown to base,
all the colours of the visible spectrum ... and probably those of the invisible
also. Purples, greens, golds dominated the reds, blues, and other primes. A
corruseating maelstrom of angry, almost metallic iridescence wove - intricate and indecipherable patterns within
the material of the dome itself. Faerie grids of phosphorescence, fox fire, and
ball-lightning etched spiderwebs of light in the air within the building.
On the bench within the dome within the building that
was the K rang, Fiinx lay stilled in seeming unconsciousness next to his now
quiescent pet. The helmet above them pulsed a deep and fiery violet.
'Captain...' Wolf's voice fluttered distorted by
waterfalls of static over the crackling comm unit, but Malaika didn't notice.
He had pulled up short in astonishment as soon as the dome had begun its eye
blinding display.
The gigantic pipes of the machine pulsed with anvil
like ringings, circlets of lambent electricity crawling up their sides like
parasitic haloes. They crackled viciously, much as ripping plastic foil.
'... interspace call ...!' Wolf didn't have a chance
to pick up Malaika's acknowledgement, for the voice of Nikosos overrode the
pilot's on the channel.
'What are you trying down there, merchant? No tricks,
I warn you! I will have my men destroy your ship! I wish only a transmitter
signal. A whole section of the continent to your east is... glowing, yes,
glowing, under the surface, it seems. The place looks like it's on fire. I
don't know what you're up to, man, but if you so much as ..."
The voice disappeared in a Niagara of interference.
At that moment the world became filled with H's, U's, N's, and for some reason,
especially G's,
Malaika took one step forward and dropped to the
floor as if he'd been axed. At least, later, he thought he'd Fallen. For all he
could actually remember, he might have floated. The air in the amphitheatre
suddenly seemed to exert its presence, forcing him back and down. He was
drowning in it. Msaada! Funny,
they'd never noticed how dense it was. Dense.' His head was imprisoned in a
giant vice ... no, not a vice. A thousand million jackboots drummed alien
marches on the sides of his head while a conspiracy of laughing electrons tried
to pull his scalp. He smelled burnt-orange.
As he rolled on the floor trying to keep his head together
while it insisted on flying apart, he caught a glimpse of Tse-Mallory. The
sociologist was a similar shape. His face was a terrifying sight as he battled
the force that was pushing them all towards gentle madness. Deprived of full
rational control, the tall body twisted and flopped on the pale white floor
like a suffocating samakl. Truzenzuzex, on the other hand, was sprawled
motionless on his back. His eye membranes were closed for the first time the
merchant could recall. Nowhere could he see what might have stimulated the
reflex. The philosoph's legs were extended straight out and stiff, but the
hands and foot hands waved feebly in the electrostatically charged air.
Down below, the trillion kilometres of circuitry (and
other things) that was the dormant mind of the Krang stirred, awoke. A-class
mind, yes. But blocked'. Naturally blocked! And what's more,
unaware of itself! It was unheard of! An A-class mind could be reduced, yes,
but only artificially. Blocked? Never! And naturally! The situation was
... unnatural. It conflicted with the Law.
The Krang found itself con fronted with a Unique
Circumstance. It would be forced to the ultimate mechanical decison. Taxing the
initiative. But it could not operate itself itself. The mind above was
essential/needed/required. It probed
gently. Once the blocks were removed ... cooperation ...
ADJUST YOUR CELLS, ORGANISM ... SO I
Gently, gently.
Above, the body of Flinx jerked once.
I can't do that!
YOU MUST. IT IS ... NECESSARY.
It hurts!
IGNORANCE HURTS. TRY.
Flinx's inert body squirmed again. His head throbbed
unmercifully, seeming to grow to impossible proportions.
I ... can't!
The Krang considered. Stronger pulsation could remove
the blockage forcefully ... and possibly destroy the mind forever. Consider alternatives.
If blocked, how was the mind able to stimulate initial activation in the first
place?
It required the fraction of a nanosecond to locate
the answer. There was a catalyst mind nearby. That Explained. In referents the
K-rang was familiar with. Working swiftly through the moderating channels of
the C-mind, the great machine made the necessary adjustments/tunings in the
A-class brain. Gratefully, it sensed the barriers go down/dissolve. It was
easy, tills time. They had been weak and perforated to begin with. ETTA
energies started to flow in the waiting floways. Further intervention was no
longer required.
E*N*T*R*O*P*Y*R*E*A*L*I*Z*A*T*I*O*N.
In an instant of falling glass shards Flinx perceived
the entire universe. It appeared as a very small, opaque ball of crystal. The
instant passed, but he saw things clearly for the first time. Yes, much more
clearly. He sensed filings only half-noticed, suspected, before. And things not
noticed at all. He saw the marvellous structure that was the Krang. He perceived
the marvellous structure that was himself. Certain energies were required fully
to awaken the instrument. Only a tiny part of it pulsed with awareness now.
Here, and here, yes.
The Krang awoke. To full awalefulness for the first
time in half a million years. Hymn-march. Gilorianus! The threnody that flowed
from the now attuned activator-mind was an unfamiliar one and crude in
technique. But the Krang realized that in five hundred millennia tastes might
have changed. The important thing was that the Screen had gone up automatically
the instant the tune had supplied the necessary keying impulses.
The Krang's sensors instantly scanned the sky for
light-years in all directions. Since the activator had done nothing on an
instructional level except to broadcast sensations of danger, the machine
instituted a general optimum scan pattern and hoped it would prove sufficient.
It recognized the activator now as a novice. He would have to he guided.
Somewhere a minor circuit dutifully noted that a
single ship of alien construct had been pulverized at the moment of Screen
activation, caught as it went up. A close call! Again the Krang regretted it
could operate at only partial consciousness until the moment of full
stimulation. Fortunately, the vessel had not penetrated. No harm done. The
activator was informed and concurred. Another ship - no, two - lurked just
outside the Screen. Although it remained stationary and made no hostile
gestures, the activating mind directed the Krang to focus on the area of space
occupied by the larger of the two vessels. Obediently, the machine complied.
Its field of effective Close-range focus was a
minimum thousand-kilometre sphere. It would have no trouble impacting the
single indicated craft while missing the other. Those incredible sensors could
line up the necessary cone of projection within a metre of any desired point.
That was far more than necessary. It drew the necessary information as to
specifics from a now co-operating A-mind. If the Krang had had feet, it would
have been tapping them.
Above, the rhythmic pulsations that were making a
pulp of Tse-Mallory's thoughts let up momentariiy. They were instantly
transformed into an utterly indescribable cross between a modulated screech and
a bellow. The supersonic shriek of a bat amplified a million times and made
audible, backed with electric trumpets and kettledrums. Even so, it did not
press as intolerably on to his skull as had the other. The sociologist was able
to roll on to his back and lie still, panting and gasping irregularly for the
hostile air which seemed intent on evading his lungs.
Painfully, he turned his head. He fought to keep the
skreeling moan from penetrating too deep, knowing that if he eased up and
allowed it to gain deep purchase, the knife-edge of the sonics would begin
slicing up the nerves and neurons therein. He was able to stave it off.
Apparently Malaika was stronger in his resistance
than any of them. Somehow he staggered to his feet and began to lurch and sway
in the direction oft he platform. He bad made half the distance when the
building moved.
At the moment of the first thrum. Wolf had gunned the
crawler's engines and made a dash for the door. Fortunately the big cruiser had
been pointing in that direction. When the First full note struck him he had tumbled
from the control seat, clasping his ears. But the crawler, set on its course,
continued on dumbly. As they bad before, the great doors parted. The moment
they closed behind the crawler, the torture stopped.
Wolf pulled himself slowly into the chair and managed
to halt the machine's headlong plunge before it sent them hurling over the
bluff, "He didn't know what had happened - too quick! But he did know that
the captain and the others were still inside. He made a quick check of the
cargo area. Both women were sprawled among the supplies, mercifully unconscious
- whether from the effects of the 'thing' or their precipitous exit he couldn't
tell.
What to do. Sprawled helplessly on the floor
of the crawler, beating at the metal in agony, he would be little help to the
captain or anyone. For the moment, returning inside was out of the question. A
try at the comm units produced only an ocean of static. Maybe he could find
something in the shuttle that would screen his mind enough to permit him to
reenter that hell. He wasn't given finis to ponder the problem.
The building, every million-ton of it, was shifting
its position. It leaned backward and for a horrible moment he feared it was
going to topple on to the miniscule crawler. It did not. It hung poised in the
swirling sky for a second and then turned slightly to the south. It began to
hum, deeply. The vibrations could be felt through the floor of the cab – or in
one's teeth. Miles up m the dust-laden air be could see the upper hundred
metres or so of the structure begin to glow a rich ebony. He'd never seen
anything glow black before and was fascinated by the phenomenon. It continued
for some thirty seconds. The circular base on which the building rested also
seemed to brighten slightly. The air for some distance around took on a
momentary rose colour. Then it stopped.
The Krang recorded the dispatch of the second vessel
as matter-of-factly as it had the first.
The entire process, from initial activation to now,
had taken a. little under two minutes.
Impatiently the Krang waited for further orders from
the activation Nexus. The directive to destroy the other alien spacecraft did
not come. In fact, the mind then and there removed it self from control of the
Nexus.
The machine debated with itself. It had been a long,
long time since it bad existed at full consciousness. It had discovered again
that it rather enjoyed the sensation.
But its imprinted instructions were clear and left no
room for logical evasions. In the absence of an activating mind it was to
return to a state of powered-down dormancy. This meant deactivation of all but
the most elementary maintenance functions. The Krang sighed. The purposes of
its builders had often seemed at variance with their desires and it had not now
been shown reason to change that opinion. But it knew what a Frankenstein was,
if it utilized a different reference. The great vanes in the depths of the
limestone caverns which channeled the planet's unceasing gales began to shift
down. The generators which drew power in countless ergs from the molten core of
the planet throttled back, and the bubbling iron-nickel centre calmed.
Slowly but efficiently, the Krang went about the
necessary task of turning itself off.
Flinx
rolled over and picked himself up. His head still throbbed but the actual pain
bad almost disappeared. He'd been drunk only once in his life. The memories of
the monstrous hangover he'd suffered as a consequence came back to him now,
incongruously. He stared around. After their close swing around the neutron,
star it had been his muscles which had been beaten and mauled. Controlled by
the piano-string tautness of his outraged nervous system, it was now the marrow
of his bones which vibrated in remembered sympathy with the ton-tones of the abruptly
silent Krang. He looked inward, unconsciously rearranging certain cellular
structures, fluids. The pain drifted away, leaving only a lot of light.
Aided by his friend, Truzenzuzex was slowly getting
to his feet. Flinx didn't care to imagine what the insect, with its
"unprotected exoskeleton, had gone through. Malaika had been thwarted in
his attempt to reach the dais by the un-expected angling of the building. He
was sitting on the edge of a bench now, rubbing a knee and carefully checking the
ligaments and tendons to make certain that nothing critical had been damaged.
Otherwise he seemed unharmed, for a multiplicity of oaths in a. remarkable
number of languages flowed in unceasing profusion from his thick lips.
Assured that his humanx companions were all right,
Flinx turned his attention to his pet. The small, leathery body was curled
tightly under the activation hood. It gave sign of neither motion nor life.
Careful not to get his head under that quiet object, he lifted the solid little
form from its resting place. Still it did not stir. With his newly stimulated
mind he probed gently within the small body. He had been pushed, indeed shoved
into a new and unfamiliar universe and was still a little uncertain (honest
now, frightened) of his abilities. He probed deeper. The minidrag had served as
a conduit for forces beyond its own capacity to handle. Like an overloaded
capacitor, certain rearrangements and adjustments were in order.
Flinx set about making them.
The others had gathered together and were standing
off to one side, watching silently and having the courtesy not to offer
sympathy. With an unoccupied portion of his mind lie searched theirs, briefly.
All three were still stunned by the events of the past few minutes. Almost as
much as he, lie reflected wryly. He could feel the empathy radiating outward
from them and it made him feel better.
A last readjustment, a stubborn artery ... no, there!
One thin eyelid flickered, raised. An oil-black eye peered out and around. It
swivelled up to where it encountered Flinx's own, was joined by its twin. In
slow, jerky motions the minidrag began to uncurl. Flinx stuck out his tongue.
Pip's darted out to make contact with it in an old gesture of familiarity and
affection. He could feel the tension begin to slip from the muscular coils, the
life-pulse to strengthen.
He had dropped the habit of crying at about the time
he-had discovered it did nothing more than clean his pupils. Still, there was a
suspicious moisture at the corners of his eyes. He turned away so that the
others might not be offended by it. If he had remained facing the other way or
had bothered to probe he might have noticed that Truzenzuzex's expression was
something more than merely sympathetic.
The
shuttle had not been h armed and they made the ascent into the upper atmosphere
with more ease and certainty than they bad managed the trip down. Atha and Wolf
were at the controls. The others were in the rear cabin, their minds intent on
the present instead of the future for the first time is some while.
'Well, sir,' said Truzenzuzex to Malaika, 'we
apologize. It seems as though your investment has proven singularly
unprofitable. I confess that it was not really a concern of ours from the
beginning. But after the expense and danger you have been through I do wish you
could have realized something in the way of a more substantial increment from
it.'
'Oh now, you are unnecessarily pessimistic, my
hard-shelled rafiki.' The merchant puffed vigorously on an incredibly
foul-smelling pipe. 'I have a city that is no doubt filled to overflowing with
priceless Tar-Aiym artifacts and inventions ... If I can ever dig them out of
that infernal sand! A fine, inhabitable planet. With a thriving native aqueous
ecological system, probably compatible to the humanx norm. I think that thus
planet might even bring back the sailing ship, ndiyo!'
'The reference eludes me,' said the philosoph.
I'll show you trioids when we get back. One of the
more poetic bits of man's technological past. No, no, from the fedha
standpoint I am not ready to count this journey a bust! And there is always the
Krang to play with, Je? Even if our young friend insists it was a freak
accident that he had nothing to do with.' He looked questioningly at Flinx, who
studiously ignored them all. 'But for you two, I am afraid, it been a real
disappointment. You must be even more frustrated now than when we landed, Je?’
It all depends on how you choose to view it,' said
Tse-Mallory. 'When we started on the trail, of this thing we really had no idea
what we expected to find, other than something big. When we found that, we
didn't know what we'd found. And now that we've left it ... well, when you get
ready to come back and dig out those artifacts,' he glanced at his
ship-brother, 'Tru and I will be more than happy to help you with the sorting,
if not the excavating. And we still, as you say, have the Krang itself to
"play" with. It will at least form the basis for many a lengthy and
infuriating scientific paper.' He smiled and shook his head. 'The psychological
and sociological implications alone ... eh, Tru?'
'Unquestionably, brother.' The thranx tried hard to
convey a human attitude of profound reflection, failed, and substituted one of
nostalgic unconcern instead. The result did not quite come off.
It seems as though the legends of both the Branner
and our primitive hominids had some validity to them. Who would have suspected
it? The Krang is both a weapon and a musical instrument.’
They had left the atmosphere now and Atha was
setting an orbit that would bring them up on the Gloryhole from below
and behind. The blackness poured in on one side while the sun, filtered down
automatically by the photosensitive ports, lit them from the other. Despite the
equalizing effects of the cabin lights, it tended to throw facial features into
unnaturally sharp relief.
It tells us a lot about the Tar-Aiym ... not to
mention going a long way towards explaining their interest in two such
seemingly divergent fields as war and art. I can't say that I care for their
tastes in music, though. Myself, I prefer Debussy and Koretski. No doubt to
their ears ... or what-ever they used ... such sounds were pleasing and
exciting, nay, patriotic.'
'Subtle sounds of death resound, and lyres smote as children
drowned,' Tse-Mallory recited.
'Porzakalit, twenty-third sonnet,' said Truzenzuzex.
It would take a poet.'
"I may be overly dense,' said Malaikii, 'but I
still don's understand how the kelelekuu worked!’
'You are not alone in that respect, Captain, but
rather the member of a large minority. II' you wish, though, I could
hypothesize.'
'Go ahead and hypothesize, then!'
'Apparently,' continued the thranx, discreetly
waving away the noxious effluvia produced by the carbonized weed in the
merchant's pipe, ‘the machine generates some form of vibration ...I confess
myself hesitant to label it "sound waves". Probably something
partaking of those characteristics as well as those of wave forms we could not
identity - although their effects were noted! You recall that on our initial
passage through the atmosphere. I remarked on the unusual density of the double
layer of windglitter?' Malaika nodded. ' Probably those layers are kept
artificially reinforced The wave forms - let's call them "k-waves" for
want of a better, or more accurate, term - were generated by the Krang, These
waves passed through the lower layer of the metallic wind glitter but not the
higher, denser one. Accordingly, they were then "bounced" along
between the two layers,
as they were by now sufficiently weakened to be incapable of breaking back
through the lower one. All around the planet, I'd wager. Perhaps more than
once, constantly being rejuvenated by the generators of the Krang.'
"0h now I know they're probably not sound
waves,' said Malaika, 'but planet-wide circulation in the atmosphere? From a
single generating source - maintenance of a certain minimal strength - the
power requirements ... You really think if possible'?'
'My dear Malaika, I regard anything as-possible
unless clearly demonstrated otherwise ... the more so when this machine is
involved.'
'Even simple sound waves,' put in Tse-Mallory. 'Back
on Terra itself, old calendar eighteen eighty-eight, there was a volcanic
explosion in the major ocean. An island called Krakatoa blew up rather
violently. The shock waves travelled several times around the globe. The sound
of the explosions - simple sound waves, remember - was heard half-way around
the globe. Given the Tar-Aiym's abilities and the fact that these were much
more than mere sound waves, I should consider the production of such forms an
elegant possibility. Besides, I should think you'd need little convincing after
that highly spectacular demonstration we had.'
'A conclusion after the fact,' said Truzenzuzex
dryly. ‘Very astute of you, brother. However, as I am only slightly more
knowledgeable in this regard than you ...'
'Disputed!'
'... I let the matter drop. The Tar-Aiym were fully
capable, as you say, of amplifying on nature - pardon the pun.'
I would suppose that explains what became of our
Nikosos, then,' murmured Malaika, 'Once his shuttle entered the region of
effective vibrations ...'
'Destructive oscillation?' added Tse-Mallory.
'Shaken to pieces? Possibly,' said Truzenzlizex.'Or
maybe they cause a breakdown or weakening of the atomic structure. Even in what
was probably the safest plaice on the planet the vibrations - "music"
if you must- near to shook my skeleton off' Not an impossible device.
Fantastic, yes, but not impossible. Myself, I am much more interested in the
method used to eliminate their starship,'
'Ndiyo,' said Malaika. 'How about that? It was
nowhere near the atmosphere and so could not have been trapped in the wind
glitter layers.'
In addition to maintaining an impenetrable defensive
screen around the planet, the Krang would be no more than a stalemate device if
it did not have offensive capabilities as well,' continued the thranx. 'A
device wholely defensive in nature would be contrary to everything we know of
Tar-Aiym psychology. And you are all aware of how the quality of vibrations
changed ever so significantly towards the end of our ordeal. Now then, Flinx,
you say sensed the destruction of the other starship, yet there was no sign of
an explosion? No flare, nothing?'
A safe question, and one he could hardly deny.
'That's right, sir. It just ... vanished.'
'Uni. A possibility suspected that will probably
never be confirmed, but ... remember that our ship was a very short distance
away, yet apparently has not been afected. I suspect, gentlesirs, that the
Krang is a gravitonic generator - but of power undreamed of even by the ancient
Gods.' He farced Malaika squarely. 'Captain, what would happen if a gravity
field approximately one cetimetre in diameter with a field equal in strength to
the surface of a neutron star impinged on a real mess?'
Malaga's swarthy face reflected puzzlement,
revelation, and astonishment in amazingly brief succession. His voice reflected
all three.
'Manisa!’ That would trigger a Schwarzchild
Discontinuity! But that's ...!'
Impossible?' Truzenzlizex smiled. 'Pardon, Captain,
but how else might you explain if? The power necessary to generate such a field
would need a planet-sized ship ... much simpler to use a pianet, eh? And
remember there was no evidence of an explosion. Of course not. Not even light
could escape a field of such strength! And gravity follows an inverse square
law, so naturaily our ship was not effectively endangered. A more perfectly
selective weapon would be hard to imagine. A mere kilometre away and you would
not even notice such a field. But touch it and poof! Instant
non-existence! I
hope that one might have the sense not to tamper with such a device overmuch,
Captain.' The thranx's voice was steel-solemn. 'We do not know anywhere near enough
about the operation of such a field. Suppose we did not discover the way to
"uncreate" such a field? The Krang obviously can do that-how, I
cannot begin to imagine. But if such a field were to be released, uncontrolled,
it would simply wander around the universe gobbling up ... every-thing.'
It was too quiet in the cabin, now. 'But I think
there's little chance of that,' he continued more spiritedly, 'unless our young
friend can activate the mechanism once again. Not to mention,' he added,
'directing it as successfully.'
Flinx had read the veiled accusation coming for some
time now. He knew it would have to be countered. They must not think him
capable of operating such a threatening weapon. Especially, he reminded
himself, when he wasn't sure if he could!
I told you sir, I don't know what happened. The
machine controlled me, not vice versa!'
'Still,' the thraax said significantly.
It would have been easy to rearrange the insect's
mind so that he would simply take Flinx's explanation of the occurrence at face
value. Too easy. The Krang had not affected his sense of ethics. Besides, the
idea of deliberately tampering with another's deepest centres of thought was
mildly repulsive, as well as a bit frightening. Especially when the mind in
question was recognizably wiser than his own. Power, he reminded himself, is
not knowledge. He would need a tot of the latter in the future,
'Look ...' He was thinking rapidly, it was easy, now.
‘As far as "directing" the device goes, you said yourself that the
machine was composed of infinitely sophisticated circuitry. Once started up, it
would be fully capable of handling the situation to its own satisfaction. I was
merely like the hydrogen "plug" that starts the KK drive.'
'Um. And how do you account for its taking the actions
it did?'
'Maybe Nikosos' ship made a movement that the machine
interpreted as hostile, and it responded accordingly. Perhaps it was just keyed
and ready when I entered it. I'm certainly not that much different from anyone
else here.'
(Lie!) 'Probably my gift or talent or whatever you
want to call it had something to do with it. Remember, it didn't do anything
the first time I entered it.'
‘I have a hunch your own fears at the moment had a
lot to do with it too. Yes, that's plausible.'
‘Right,' Flinx continued, grateful for the opening.
'I was scared when I entered it this time ... really scared.' (Truth) 'My
emotional strain had to be picked up by the machine. It's an artistic device,
too! Probably any of us could have stimulated it under those conditions.'
(Possible, not probable.) In any case, it's finished now and i've no desire,
not the tiniest, to try it again!' (Mixed truth.)
'Enough lad! You are too aggressive for my poor,
senile mind.' (Baloney!) ‘I am satisfied, for the nonce.' (Flinx read
otherwise, but it did not matter.) 'You have convinced me in fair and equal
oral combat. Try me at personality chess and I'll beat the freckles off you!
Yet ...' He glanced at the minidrag, then back to Flinx. 'You say you feel
unchanged? No after effects?'
Minx shook his head with a confidence that would have
made Mother Mastiff proud. 'No. I really don't know what happened. My mind was
...' He broke off as the outside light was abruptly extinguished. The shuttle
had slipped into her mooring dock in the cargo hold of the Gloryhole.
'And that is that,' said Malaika, unnecessarily. To
every-one's great satisfaction, his pipe bad gone out. "I'd love to
discuss this all further with you gentlebeings, but at some future nafasi,
ndiyo? If I do not get something of a recognizably liquid consistency down
my throat very soon, you'll be able to scatter me in orbit with the wind
glitter, for I shall dry up to dust!'
He moved down the narrow aisle between them and
opened the small personnel lock. The pale green light of the cargo balloon
sifted inward. A pullway drifted conveniently nearby. Sissiph in hand he began
hauling the two of them up its swaying length. Atha went next, followed by the
two scientists. Flinx plucked Pip from where the minidrag lay coiled
comfortably about a chair arm and placed him on his shoulder. He hurried out of
the ship. Even now the figure of Wolf was still one he wished to avoid. He
followed the others up the pullway.
On reaching the gravitized section of the ship,
everyone went his separate way. Atha and Woif to Control, Malaika and Sissiph
to their cabin. The merchant had not yet had a drop of in toxic ant, but he had
escaped a ransom and gained a planet. Even if he never realized a cent off his
investment, that alone was enough to make him slightly drunk. The two
scientists prepared to resume their endless game of personality chess as though
they had never been interrupted.
'That was not a legal psychosis.' said Tse-Mallory,
his voice drifting back to Flinx. 'And you are well aware of it!'
'Why, Bran, how can you say that? Surely when I
instigated a Jump of four places in that secondary childhood fear piece ...'
Their voices faded as he turned the corner leaving to his cabin.
Flinx glanced down at this shoulder. The minidrag,
the effects of its ordeal now apparently catching up with it, was fast asleep.
He paused after a moment's hesitation for twice that in thought. Then he
shrugged, grinned. Whistling a famous and delightfully ribald tune, he
sauntered off in expectation of the biggest pseudo steak the ship's autochef
could produce. He had much to think about.
And much to do it with.
Rashalleila
Nuaman lay back in her huge bed and idly examined the bedraggled, seminude
figure of her niece. The girl had obviously used more force than good sense in
protesting madame's request' for her presence.
'Teleen,’ she said, sighing, ‘I am awfully
disappointed in you, you know. Stupidity I can sometimes understand, but
sloppiness is inexcusable. I knew about your amusing plan for doing away with
me, of course.'
The girl started at this and her eyes darted around
the room in search of an escape route. Even assuming she could evade the grasp
of the two giants who stood impassively to either side of her, there was
nowhere on the airless moon to escape to.
'Oh, don't let it bother you, child. It didn't me.
Actually I thought it rather an admirable attempt. Showed some spunk, for a
change. But that you should undertake to interfere with business ...
that, my dear,' and her voice dropped dangerously, 'was ill-chosen on your
part. I would perhaps have more sympathy for you had you succeeded. And with
the AAnn, too. Dear, dear! I suppose you are aware they are the closest thing
to a hereditary enemy mankind has?'
Teleen's tone was bitterly sarcastic. 'Don't foist
patriotic mush on me, you sanctimonious crank! You'd sell babies to the Devil
if you thought he was more than a superstition ... and enough profit.'
'You are being absurd, girl. Also impertinent. I
certainly would not. At least, certainly not for spite, as you did. Being
branded an enemy of the Commonwealth and excommunicated by the Church would
require promise of a considerably greater potential return than such pettiness
as you aspired to. And on top of everything else, your adolescent ineptitude
will force me to tolerate an unbearable amount of ridicule from a very old and
dear friend. Who incidentally, I am informed, has long since sewn up the
registry of a certain planet by interspace relay, beyond argument of any kind. I
will now be forced to fall back on legal means to obtain what was rightfully
mine in the first place. As you may know, such procedures are notoriously
unfair.
'However, we are not here to discuss that. What we
are here to determine, dear niece, is what T am to do with you. I fear that
your attitude has taken rather a dangerous turn. I do not fear it, but my men
are capable of error too. Accordingly, I am forced to send you on vacation,
until such time as you have been persuaded to channel your considerable energies
into more porductive pursuits. You shall be given ample time to repent and
readjust your rebellious attitudes, There is a very excellent and renowned
mental institution in the Qatar system. It is operated by a. group of
exceptional therapists who have aided me often in the past. While their methods
have often been questioned, most notably by the Church, their successes cannot
be denied. The director is a personal friend of long standing.'
'Rory,' said Teleen imploringly.
‘I am sure they will be more than happy to
accommodate you as a guest for awhile. Unfortunately, they specialize in
childhood neuroses and sexual maniacs of the most extreme kind. Now, which
section do you suppose you would find more comfortilble for your stay?'
'Rory!' The girl's voice was frightened and shrill,
now.
Rory Mallap van Cleef stood quietly by the foot of
the bed in silk loincloth and beads.
'Oh, you needn't badger your accomplice and
confidant, my dear. Darling Rory knows what side of the bed his butter is on.'
She smiled sweetly.
His voice was even and mild. Almost neutral, in fact,
I am sorry, love.' He flexed a bicep. I still love you, of course, but I don't
see why we should both be made to suffer for this unfortunate setback. I'll wait
for you.' Then, after a thoughtful pause. I do hope this doesn't complicate our
relationship.'
Teleen's answer was unprintable.
'Teh! Such language. And after all those expensive
schools, too. Yes, I am certain you will be placed in the section most suitable
to your attitude, child. I see no reason why you shouldn't take the opportunity
to add to your education at the same time as we are about improving your
disposition.'
She waved a hand negligently and the girl was dragged
spitting and squealing from the room.
'Remember now, dear. I am depending on you to show
your hosts the true Nuaman spirit! Come back to us in one piece, won't you?'
She shook her head mournfully after the closing doors had cut off the sound of
the girl's fading shrieks. ‘The, I'm not sure that girl will ever be ready to
take over the company reins. Everything devolved upon me, and I am old. But not
that old.' She extended a hand 'Rory ... come here...'
They were half-way home and proceeding smoothly for
Moth. Flinx looked up from his game of crystal solitaire, now grown childishly
slimplistic. The sense of thoughts in violent conflict had grown too strong to
be ignored. As it was a normal sleep shift he was the only one in the lounge,
and the commotion surprised him.
A rather dishevelled-looking Atha stepped into the
room. She obviously hadn't expected to encounter anyone and was noticeably
upset by Flinx's presence.
'Well,' she began awkwardly, simultaneously trying to
adjust her clothing, 'we've, uh, almost finished our journey, Flinx. I imagine
you're looking forward to getting home ... and to that credit slip Malaika's
prepared for you!’
'Yes, to both. You're on your way to relieve Wolf at
Control, I assume?'
'Hmmm? Oh yes, naturally!' He had to hide his
amusement at the way she had pounced on the excuse. 'Yes, I've just come from
making some alterations, uh, in the arrangement of the ship's supplies. They
were becoming unwieldy. I had to... work on the problem at some length to get
things right.'
'And did you?'
Her smile was broad. 'Oh, yes, Everything should now
be m its proper place.' She disappeared forward.
A short while later a much more dishevelled Sissiph,
clothes and self in nearly equal disarray staggered into the lounge. The
expression on her face was murderous, interrupted only when she grimaced at a
particularly painful bruise. She spared him one unfocused glance before weaving
off in the direction of the big cabin she shared with Malaika.
Apparently then, everyone had profited from the
expedition, with the exception of an attractive and furious minority of one. He
sighed and returned to his game, its attraction dimmed. There were many things
to do, and he wasn't sure how to go about doing them. Lf he couldn't have any
fun ... Malaika, lie knew, was preparing great things for him. He could not see
himself in the role the merchant had envisioned for him. Dressing up for gala
conferences, withering competitors with his astonishing insight. Perhaps a
compromise might be arranged. But that might mean leaving the markets, and his
friends there. Mother Mastiff would probably have no trouble adapting to such a
life. He grinned. Could High Society survive her? More seriously, how would he
adapt? With everyone these days convinced of his own righteousness and secure
in the knowledge that 'his was the proper way of doing things.'
He'd also seen what un-nice people could do to the
nice, enough to want to modify the situation. Out there were minds which would resist such efforts. And
who was he, to arbitrate the lives of others? Did he want to play God? He
didn't think so. Besides he was only ... well, he was almost seventeen, wasn't
he? He had talent, and one innocent man and two probably guilty ones had died
because he hadn't used it properly. "Now he had Power, and who knew how
many had died in space because of it? Power. Fagh! He wasn't one tenth the Man
Tse-Mallory was! He'd need. Men like that to help him or he'd likely make some
horrendous mistakes. Now they might prove deadly. Could be handle what he was
now? Did he want to?
Still, the whole universe was out there and it seemed
a shame not to take a look at it.
Now that he could see,
*******************************************************
Note: Map of the Commonwealth and its Chronology Published in 05: Flinx in Flux
*******************************************************
Born in New York City in 1946,
Alan Dean Foster was raised in Los Angeles, California. After receiving a bachelor’s
degree in political science and a Master of Fine Arts in motion pictures from
UCLA in 1968-69, he worked for two years as a public relations copywriter in a
small Studio City, California, firm.
His writing career began in 1968 when August Derleth bought a long letter of Foster’s and published it as a short story in his biannual Arkham Collector Magazine. Sales of short fiction to other magazines followed. His first try at a novel. The Tar-Aiym Krang, was published by Ballantine Books in 1972.
Foster has toured extensively
through Asia and the isles of the Pacific. Besides traveling, he enjoys
classical and rock music, old films, basketball, body surfing, and karate. He
has taught screenwriting, literature, and film history at UCLA and Los Angeles
City College.
Currently, he resides in Arizona
with his wife JoAnn (who is reputed to have the only extant recipe for
Barbarian Cream Pie).