******************************************************
Author: Alan Dean Foster
Title: The End of the Matter
Original copyright year: 1977
Genre: Science
Fiction
Version: 1.1
Date of e-text: 12/07/2000
Revised 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.
VL: 9 & up
IL: 7 & up
A Del Rey Book
Published by Ballantine Books
Copyright © 1977 by Alan Dean Foster
All
rights reserved under International and Pan‑American Copyright
Conventions. Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of
Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Ballantine Books
of Canada Limited, Toronto.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 77‑6128
ISBN 0.345‑29594‑3
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition: November 1977
Fourth Printing: May 1983
Cover art by Darrell Sweet
For Tim Kirk,
With thranx …
******************************************************
Take a God-sized bottle of hundred-proof night, spill
it across a couple of dozen light-years, and you have the phenomenon humanxkind
called the Velvet Dam. A dark nebula so dense that no near star was powerful
enough to excite it to glow, the Dam drew an impenetrable curtain across a vast
portion of the stage of space. No sun shone through it to the inhabited region
known as the Humanx Commonwealth. No broadcasts, transmissions, or birthday
greetings could be sent from beyond the vast ebony wall.
It lay far above the burgeoning ellipsoid of the
Commonwealth, and ran roughly parallel to the galactic equator. Yet since that
which is unseeable is ever the most attractive, humanx exploratory efforts had
already begun to probe persistently at its flanks.
One mission was the same as any other to the drone.
Whether it sought out new information behind the as- yet-unexplored Dam or
above the surface of Earth's own moon made no difference to its tireless mind.
Not that the drone was ignorant, however. The enormous distances traveled by
such long-range sensor vehicles rendered constant monitoring impossible. So in
addition to the plethora of precision recorders and scientific instrumentation
provided for sampling the far reaches of space, the independent robotic drones
were equipped with sophisticated electronic brains. Of necessity, they also
possessed a certain amount of decision making ability.
Its own incredibly complex collage of minute
circuitry was what changed the drone's preprogrammed course. In its limited
mechanical fashion, the drone had determined that the new subject was of
sufficient importance to dictate a shift in plans. So it broke from its
assigned path, fired its tiny KK drive, and relayed its decision to the drone
mother monitor station.
Though small, the tiny drive could push the unmanned
vehicle at a speed no humanx-occupied craft could attain. As it raced toward
the source of the extraordinary disturbance, it continued to relay its readings
back to the monitoring station. Before very long (drone time) it had approached
a spot where visual recording was possible. Without judging, without
evaluating, the drone worked hard to send a flood of information back to the
station banging just at the corner of the Velvet Dam.
What the drone recorded and relayed was consumption
on a cosmic scale. It hunted through its memory for records of similar
phenomena, but came up empty. This was shattering, since in its
ultraminiaturized files the drone retained some mention of every variety of
astronomical occurrence ever witnessed and noted by humanxkind.
The drone-mind worked furiously. Preliminary
surveillance was complete-should it depart now and return to its original task
or continue to study this momentous event? This was a critical decision. The
drone was aware of its own value, yet it seemed inarguable that any additional
bit of information it could obtain here would be more valuable to its makers
than everything else it might accomplish elsewhere. So the crucial circuits
were engaged, locked with religious fervor. The drone moved nearer, closer,
ever studying and transmitting new knowledge until, without so much as an
electronic whimper, it too was devoured.
The drone protested electronically its own
destruction, but its message was not heard or seen. That wasn't the drone's
fault. There was, at the moment of ingestion, simply nothing to see. But other
instruments were better equipped to tell of those last seconds, and they told
the drone station all that was necessary.
Several months passed.
In the station's center a circuit closed. Powerful
machinery was engaged. All the information gathered by a dozen far-ranging
drones was concentrated into a tight beam for deep-space transmission. With a
violent belch of energy, the station spat the knowledge to an occasionally
manned station on a far-distant humanx colony world. That station shunted the
transmission on to another world, and then on to another, and finally on to
Earth, one of the Commonwealth's two capitals. Commonwealth Science
Headquarters was located there, on the outskirts of a city on a high mountain plain
whose inhabitants had once practiced human sacrifice.
Patiently computers decoded, unraveled, and
otherwise made the transmission comprehensible. One small portion of that
information was marked for special notice. In due course it reached the eyes of
a competent but bored human being. As she examined the information, her eyes
grew wide and her boredom vanished. Then she alerted others-human and
thranx-and initial puzzlement became panic, then metamorphosed into stunned
resignation. The information was reprocessed, rechecked, reexamined. The
science staff of the station became reresigned to the situation.
A meeting quickly convened on the other side of the
world. The four people present-two
human, two thranx-were very important-important enough to have passed beyond
arrogance to humility.
One of the thranx was the 'current President of the
Commonwealth, the other head of all Commonwealth- sponsored scientific
research. One of the humans was the Last Resort of the United Church. The other
would not normally be considered as important as the other three beings
assembled in that room, but circumstances had temporarily made him so. He was
the technical supervisor in charge of processing drone information at the
Mexico City complex.
When the discussion finally had run out of new
things that needed saying, the aged President trieint "Drusindromid folded
truhands over his thorax and sighed through his spicules. His chiton shone
violet with many years, and his antennae drooped so low they hung before his
glowing compound eyes. He turned multicolored ornmatidia on the waiting human
technician. "The information is accurate. There are no mistakes. This you
are sure of?'
Both the human technician and the thranx science
chief nodded, the human adding: "We are running an- other drone to the
area, sir. It will move on a projected intercept path. Since by the time the
drone reaches the region the sun which was being absorbed will have been
completely destroyed, we will have to depend on nonvisual instrumentation to
detect the wanderer. But I don't really think all this is necessary, sir. The
first drone's report is unchallengeable."
"I know the speed of which those drones are
capable," the President murmured. "Yet this object is so massive that
it surely will have sucked an entire star into itself by the time the new drone
arrives?"
"Yes, Honored One," the thranx science
chief admitted dolefully. "The radiation that first led our drone to it
was from the last of the sun's plasma being drawn off from the surface. That
portion of space was full of a ginhought amount of particulate
radiation, especially gamma rays. It-'” The science chief respectfully halted,
seeing that the President was absorbed with less technical worries.
The old thranx shook his head slowly, a gesture the
insectoids had picked up near the beginning of the Amalgamation, the joining of
human- and thranxkind several hundred years ago. "This course," he
said, gesturing with a foothand toward the three-dimensional star projection
floating above the center of the table, "how long?"
Brushing back white-brown hair, the human technician
replied mechanically, "Unless for some unimaginable reason it alters its
path, sir, the massive collapsar will emerge from the Velvet Dam in seventy-two
point one standard Commonwealth years. Fifteen point six years thereafter, it
will impact tangent to the projected critical distance from the sun around
which the twin Commonwealth worlds of Carmague-Collangatta orbit. We
estimate"- he paused to swallow-" that the sun of the twin worlds will
have completely vanished down the hole within a week."
"So fast," the President whispered,
"so fast."
"Twenty-seven point three years later,"
the technician continued remorselessly, "the same catastrophe will befall
the star around which the world Twosky Bright circles." He paused a
moment, then went on. "No other Commonwealth suns or worlds lie within
crisis range of the collapsar’s projected path through our galaxy. It will
continue on through the galactic axis. Several thousand years from now, it will
leave the Milky Way, traveling in the general direction of RNGC 185."
"How can the collapsar move so fast?" the
President asked.
The technician glanced at his superior; it was the
science chief who replied. "We still do not fully understand all the mechanics
of collapsars, Honored One. Such radical distortions of the stellar matrix
retain many secrets. It is enough to know that it is moving at the
indicated speed, on the predicted path."
The President nodded and touched a switch, throwing
a vast semicircular map onto the ceiling. He studied the map, ignoring the view
of sweltering jungle and marshland visible through the window below the ceiling
screen. "What of the three worlds, then?"
Rising, the Last Resort moved to stand next to the
science counselor. A tail human, be towered over the President-but only
physically. One of the three endangered worlds was inhabited almost solely by
thranx, yet they were as much a part of his flock, as devout and inspiring, as
was his own family. His robes, in the aquamarine of the Church, were simple and
comfortable. Only a single gold insignia on sleeve and collar indicated that he
was the ranking member of the Commonwealth's major spiritual organization.
"Caimague and Collangatta are the fourth and
twelfth most populous worlds in the Commonwealth, sir," he declared.
"Twosky Bright is the twenty-third, but ranks fifteenth in real economic
production. Together, the three endangered planets have a population of over
three and a half billion. From both a humanxistic and an economic standpoint,
their destruction would be a stunning blow."
Great compound eyes stared expectantly up at him.
The President hoped wisdom was shining from each of them, instead of the
anxiety and helplessness he felt. "What can be done for them?"
The supreme spiritual leader of the Commonwealth
turned eyes downward but found no inspiration in the tiled floor. "The
Church's logisticians tell me ... very little, sir. Even given the nearly
ninety years left to us, actual evacuation is not practical. It would take the
resources of the entire navy plus every Church peace- forcer to shift even a
fraction of the populations safely and successfully to other worlds. As soon as
such a movement was initiated, the reason behind it would be impossible to keep
secret. There would be panic of the worst sort. Naturally, we cannot consider
such action. And with the Commonwealth so weakened, there are those who would
take advantage of our absent defense."
"I know," murmured President Drusindromid.
"What is the maximum number that can be saved with- out weakening our
forces to the point of inviting scavengers?"
"The figures are not exact ..." the Last
Resort began apologetically.
Abruptly, the President's voice cut instead of
soothed: "I dislike inaccuracy where humanx lives are concerned,
Anthony,"
"Yes, sir. If we are lucky, I am told, we may
hope to rescue as many as five percent."
There was silence m the tower chamber. Then the
President mumbled to himself in High Thranx. Aware that no one had heard, he
raised his voice. "Set the necessary events in motion. If it were but one
percent, I would still consider the effort worthwhile."
"The problem of panic remains, sir," the
Last Resort pointed out.
"We will think of a suitable excuse," the
President assured him. "But this must be done. Five percent is nearly two
hundred million. Saving two hundred mil- lion lives is worth the risk of panic.
And we may be lucky and save even more."
"Science does not allow much leeway for
luck," the Commonwealth -science chief muttered, but only to himself. The
President was eyeing them each in turn.
"If there is nothing else, gentlesirs?"
Silence in the room. "We have much to do, then, and I have another meeting
in half an hour. This one is at an end."
At that signal, the Last Resort, the science chief,
and the technician started from the chamber. The President saw them out, using
foothands in addition to all four trulegs to support himself. As always,
everything rested finally on those aged antennae, the technician thought as he
was about to bid the President goodbye. But a truhand reached out and stopped
him.
"A moment, young man." The technician was
nearly seventy. The President was,
however, a good deal older. "There is, of course, no way of stopping,
turning, or destroying a collapsar?"
Remembering to whom he was talking, the physicist
kept any sign of condescension from his voice. "Hardly, sir. Anything we
could throw at it, whether a million SCCAM projectiles or another star, would
simply be sucked in. The more we tried to destroy it, the larger it would
become, though we wouldn't notice its growth, since it would still be only a
point in space. Furthermore, we already know from measurements sent back by the
first drone that this wanderer consists of much more than a single collapsed star.
Much more.
Perhaps several hundred suns." He shrugged.
"Some of my colleagues believe that because of the wanderer's speed and
theoretical mass, it may be an object only guessed at by recent mathematics: a
collaxar. A collapsed galaxy, sir, instead of a single star."
"Oh" was all the President said
immediately. Upper mandibles scraped at the lower pair as he considered this
information. "There is a political analogy, young man," he finally
ventured. "Something like an idea whose time has come. The more insults
and arguments you throw at it, the more powerful it becomes, until one is
overwhelmed by it."
"Yes, sir," the technician agreed. "I
wish all we were dealing with here was an idea, sir."
"Don't underestimate the destructive power of
an idea, hatchling," the President admonished him. He glanced at a wrist
chronometer banding a truhand. "Twenty-four minutes till my next
appointment. Good day, gentlesir."
"Good day, Mr. President," the technician
said; then he left the chamber.
Each of the beings who had joined briefly for the
momentous meeting returned to his own task. Each had much to do that did not
relate to the subject of the meeting, and glad of it. Being busy was a
blessing. It was not healthy to dwell on the unavoidable premature death of
over three billion of one's fellow creatures.
"Your offer," the withered woman screamed,
"is worthy of a kick in the groin!" She lowered her voice only
slightly. "However, I am an old, weak woman. You are younger, larger,
stronger, healthier, and wealthier." One hand curled defiantly around the
hilt of a crooked blade jutting out from a hole in the dirty brown rag of a
skirt. Her other hand held the object under discussion. "So what am I to
do?" she finished expectantly.
"Please don't get so excited," the young
man standing across from her pleaded, making quieting motions at her with his
hands as he looked nervously from side to side.
No one in the shifting mob of sidewalk vendors and
buyers was paying any attention to the argument. But, being an outworlder, the
young man was sensitive to the old lady's accusations. After all, he and his
bride were scheduled to be on Moth for only three days be- fore moving on to
New Paris with the rest of the tour. The last thing he wanted was to be thrown
in jail, on his honeymoon, for fighting with one of the locals.
"Really," he explained desperately to her,
adjusting his rain-soaked mustard-and-puce weather slicker, "thirty
credits is all I can afford. Have some sympathy for me. My wife is back in our
hotel. She's not feeling very well. The daily rain and constant cloud cover is
depressing her, I think. I want something to cheer her up. But we have a long
way to travel yet. Thirty credits is all I can afford for a trinket."
The old woman proudly drew herself up to her full
height. Her eyes were now level with the young man's chest. She held the object
of contention firmly in one hand as she shook it accusingly at him. The slim,
graceful bracelet of some silvery metal was inlaid with fragments of polished
wood and stone.
"This wristlet was worked and set by Cojones
Cutler himself, infant! Do you have any idea, any idea, what that
signifies?"
"I'm sorry," the youth tried to explain,
sniffing, "but I've been trying to explain all along that I am only a
visitor here."
Clearly the woman restrained herself only by some
great inner effort. "Very well," she said tightly, "never mind
the honored name of Cojones Cutler," She indicated the oval bulges set in
the bracelet. "Look at these whirlwood cabochons- forget the topazes for
now." As she turned the bracelet, the naturally hardened) polished sap
facing the wood broke the dim daylight into points of azure-and-green fire.
"Hardly a tree in a million has the genetic
deficiency necessary to produce such colors, boy. Hardly one in a million, and
those grow only in the far north of Moth, where the nomads hunt the Demichin
devilope. Why, it takes-"
"Oh, all right." The young man sighed,
exasperated. "Anything to get this over with. Thirty-five credits,
then." He couldn't have been more than twenty-two or twenty-three. His
face was soft and earnest. "We'll just have to stay at a lower-class hotel
on New Paris, that's all."
The old woman stared up at him and shook her head in
disbelief "You talk of hotels, and me with three starving children and a
husband long dead. You can stand there and talk of hotels, brazen child, while
offering me thirty-live credits for the finest bracelet I've been lucky to get
on consignment in twenty years. Twenty years!" Her voice rose to a hoarse
shout again. "Make me a decent offer or go room with the devil, I
say!" she screeched, loudly enough to turn a few heads in the crowd.
"But don't stand there innocently and insult a poor old woman!"
"For Church's sake," the youth pleaded,
"lower your voice."
Sheltered beneath a rain cape of Violet-gray charged
slickertic, the young man who had been idly observing the noisy byplay of buyer
and seller licked the last sweet traces of thisk-cake honey from his fingers.
Then he rose and sauntered toward the quarreling pair,
Slightly under average height, with smoothly arcing
cheekbones and deeply tanned skin, he did not present a particularly
eye-catching figure. A thatch of curly red hair roofed his skull, hair the
color of a field of fireweed on the open tundra. It tumbled over his fore- head
and ears. Only the odd movement of something under the right side of his rain
cape indicated anything out of the ordinary, but the object-whatever it was-
was too well concealed to be identified.
"... and if there's nothing better yon can
say," the old woman was raving on, "then you'd better-"
"Excuse me," a quiet voice interrupted. "I'd say tbirty-five
credits for that bracelet is a fair price."
Mouth agape in puzzlement, the young husband stared,
uncomprehending, at the slim youth, and wondered why a native should interfere
on his behalf. The old vendor turned a furious gaze on the brazen interloper.
"I don't know who you are, sir," she
rumbled dangerously, "but if you don't mind your own business I'll-"
She stopped in mid-sentence, her mouth frozen in an 0 of shock,
"You'll do what, old woman?" the youngster
asked. "Send me to bed without supper?" Sensing an. advantage without
knowing its origin, the dazed bracelet-buyer was quick to act.
"Thirty-five credits is really a fair price, as he says."
"Yes ... I ..." The old woman, appearing a
little stunned herself, hardly seemed to hear the offer. "Thirty-five,
then, and be done with it."
"You're certain?" The outworlder, now sure
of his purchase, was anxious to ingratiate himself with the seller. Since he
was a good deal bigger than the new arrival, he took a step forward. "If
this boy is intimidating you. I'd be glad to ..."
Something moved and partially emerged from cape
folds. It was leathery, thin, and brightly colored. Without actually
recognizing the object, the outworld tourist nonetheless had an immediate
impression of serpentine lethality. His hand proffered his credit slip instead
of closing into a fist.
"Here's your money, then."
Mesmerized by the caped figure, the old woman mechanically
processed the credit slip through her cardmeter; she handed it back to the
buyer without even troubling to check the reference number.
"The bracelet," the young visitor urged
impatiently.
"Hrnmm? Oh, yes." She handed it over.
Flushed with pleasure at his imagined bargain, the tall tourist vanished into
the milling crowd of humans and aliens.
Slowly the old woman studied the unimposing figure
standing before her. Then she abruptly threw thin but still muscular arms
around him and squeezed tightly. "Flinx!" she shouted exuberantly.
"Flinx, boy, you've come home!" She shook the lanky youth out of
sheer Joy, for the familiar feel of him. Jostled, Pip the mini- drag shifted
uncomfortably on Flinx's shoulder and attempted to tolerate the roughhousing
with fine reptilian indifference.
"For a little while, Mother Mastiff," the
youth re- plied quietly. He grinned and nodded in the direction of the departed
outworlder. "I see you're having as much fun as ever."
"Fun!" she snorted derisively, making an
obscene gesture in the general direction of the marketplace into which her
customer had disappeared. "Pathetic, most of them. They suck the enjoyment
from trading. Sometimes I wonder how the Commonwealth hangs together, with
cement like that." A triangular
head flanked by eyes of fire peeked out from beneath the slickertic. The old
woman eyed it with evident distaste. "See you're still dragging that
creature around with you."
Pip responded with a nasty hiss. There had never
been any love lost between Mother Mastiff and the minidrag.
"Many times I think it's Pip who drags me,
Mother," the youth argued.
"Well, no matter perversions I can't cure you
of, boy. At least you're here." She whacked him on the left shoulder in
mock anger. "Here you are ... you
good-for-nothing, forgetful, heartless lump of immature meat! Where have you
been to? It's been over a year. A year, paragon of ingrates! Not a tridee tape,
not a card, nothing!"
"I am sorry. Mother Mastiff," he
confessed, putting his arm around her bony shoulders. She shrugged angrily, but
not hard enough to dislodge his arm. "It wasn't that I didn't think of
you. But I was far from modem communications."
"Ah, in trouble again?" She shook her
head. "Is that the way I raised you?" He started to reply, but she
cut him off hastily. "Never mind that now. Where were yon? Come, tell me
back at the shop."
They started down the street. Aromatic scents and
the cries of Drallar's inner marketplace filled the air around them.
"Come, boy, tell me, where were you, that you couldn't let me know if your
worthless carcass was still intact?"
Flinx considered his response carefully. He had good
reasons for wanting to keep his whereabouts of the past year secret. What
Mother Mastiff didn't know she could never reveal.
"I took a job, sort of," he finally
explained.
She gaped at him. "You ... a job?"
"I'm not lying," he argued uncomfortably,
unable to meet those disbelieving eyes. "I set my own hours and work
pretty much as I want to."
"Now I just might, just might believe you.
What kind of job?"
Again he glanced away evasively. "I can't say
exactly. I'm sort of a teacher, a private tutor."
"A teacher," she echoed, evidently
impressed. "A private tutor, eh?" She let out a snicker. "What
is it you teach? Pickpocketing, breaking and entering, or general theft?"
"Now what would I know about such things?"
he countered in astonishment. "Is that how you brought me up?" They
both chuckled. "No, I'm kind of a general-purpose instructor in
basics."
"I see" was all she said this time, so he
was spared the difficulty of explaining what kind of basics he taught) and to
whom. Especially to whom; it was not time for Mother Mastiff or anyone else to
know about the Ulru-Ujurrians, the race he had adopted and which had adopted
him. The race that could turn this corner of creation inside out.
"Never mind me," he insisted, staring at
her. "Here I take money and set you up in one of the fanciest shop
districts of Drallar, with top-flight stock, and how do I find you? Like
this!" He indicated her ragged clothes, torn skirt and overblouse, the
ugly muffin of a hat perched precariously on long, straggly hair. "Out in
the street in the rain and damp, clad in scraps."
Now it was Mother Mastiff's turn to glance away.
They turned up a cobblestone street and entered a less frenetic section of the
city.
"I got itchy nervous, boy, sitting in that
fancy store all day. I missed the streets, the contacts, the noise-"
"The arguments and shouting," Flinx
finished for her.
"And the gossip," she went on.
"Especially the gossip." She eyed him defiantly. "At my age it's
one of the few disreputable delights I haven't grown too old for."
Flinx indicated the street ahead. "So that's why we're not headed for the
shop?"
"No, not that stuffy snuffbox, not on a
beautiful day like today." Flinx studied the gray, overcast sky, blinked
at the ever-present mist, but said nothing. Actually, it was a rather
nice day for Drallar. It wasn't raining. He had been home for two weeks and had
yet to see the sun.
"Let's go to Dramuse's stall. I'll treat you to
lunch."
Flinx expressed surprise. "You buy someone else
lunch? Still, after the profit you made on that bracelet ..."
"Pfagh! I could have gotten that callow stripling up to
fifty credits easy. Knew it the second he set eyes on that bracelet. Then you
bad to come along."
"One of these days. Mother, you'll go too far
with some knowledgeable offworlder and he'll turn you in to the Ring's police.
I broke in because he seemed like a decent man on his mating flight, and I
didn't want to see him cheated too badly."
"Shows what you know," she snapped back.
"He wasn't as ignorant as he made you think. You weren't there to
see his eyes light up when I mentioned the street my shop is on and told him
that's where it was stolen from. He knew what he was about, all right. Did you
see him shout for the police? No, he was cuddling his hot property like any
decent good citizen. Here." She stopped and gestured beyond a gate to
tables covered with brightly dyed canopies.
They had entered the last of the concentric rings
that formed Drallar's marketplace. This outermost ring consisted entirely of
restaurants and food stalls. "They ranged from tiny one-being operations
with primitive wood-fired stoves to expensive closed-in establishments in which
delicacies imported from the farthest corners of the Commonwealth were served
on utensils of faceted veridian. Here the air currents stalled, weaving
languorous zephyrs of overpowering potency.
They entered a restaurant that used neither wood nor
veridian plates and was somewhere between the opulent and the barely digestible
in terms of menu. After taking seats, they ordered food from a creature who
looked like a griffin with tentacles instead of legs. Then Mother Mastiff
exchanged her gentle accusations for more serious talk.
"Now, boy, I know you went off to look for your
natural parents." It was a sign of her strength that she could voice the
subject without stumbling. "You've been gone for over a year. You must
have learned something,"
Flinx leaned back and was silent for a moment. Pip
wiggled out from beneath the cape folds, and Flinx scratched the flying snake
under its chin. "As far as I know," he finally responded tersely,
"they're both long dead." Pip shifted uneasily, suddenly sensitive to
his master's somber mood. "My mother ... at least I know who she was. A
Lynx, a concubine. I also found a half sister, and when I found her, I ended up
having to kill her."
Food arrived, spicy and steaming. They ate quietly
for a while. Despite the heavy spices, the food tasted flat to both of them.
"Mother dead, half sister dead," Mother
Mastiff grunted. "No other relatives?" Flinx shook his head curtly.
"What about your natural father?"
"Couldn't find a thing about him worth
following up."
Mother Mastiff wrestled with some private demon, and
finally murmured, "You've run far and long, boy. But there's still a
possibility."
He glanced sharply at her, "Where?"
"Here. Yes, even here."
"Why," he said quietly, "didn't you
ever tell me?"
Mother Mastiff shrugged once. "I saw no reason
to mention it. It's an obscure chance, boy, a waste of time, an absurd
thought."
"I've spent a year pursuing absurdities,"
he reminded her. "Give, Mother."
"When I bought you in the market," she
began easily, as if discussing any ordinary transaction, "it was a
perfectly ordinary sale. Still don't know what possessed me to waste good
money."
Flinx stifled a grin. "Neither do 1. I don't
follow you through "
"Find the dealer who sold you, Flinx. Perhaps
he or she is still in business. There's always the chance the firm kept decent
records. I wasn't too concerned with your pedigree. Might be there's some
additional in- formation in their records that wasn't provided with the bill of
sale. Not likely, now. But all I was interested in was whether or not you were
diseased. You looked it, but you weren't." She sipped from a mug.
"Sometimes those slavers don't give out all the information they get.
They've got their reasons."
"But how can I trace the firm that sold
me?"
"City records," she snuffled, wiping
liquid from her chin. "There would have been a tax on the business, Try
the King's tax records for the year I bought you. Waste of time, though."
"I've plenty of time now," he said
cryptically. "I'll try it and gladly." He reached out across the table
and patted a cheek with the look and feel of tired suede. "But for the
rest of the day, let's be mother and son."
She slapped the caressing hand away and fussed at
him... but softly.
The following day dawned well. The morning ram was
light, and the cloud cover actually snowed some signs of clearing. Flinx was
spared the shocking sight of sunlight in Drallar when the clouds thickened
after he started toward the vast, rambling expanse of official buildings. They
clustered like worker ants around the spines of their queen, whose body was the
King's palace.
Damp, cool weather invigorated Flinx. Moist air felt
familiar in his lungs; it was the air of the only home he had ever known. Or
could remember, he corrected himself.
He stopped to chat with two side-street vendors,
people he had known since childhood. Yet at first neither of them recognized
him. Had he changed so much in one year? Was he so different at seventeen from
what he had been at sixteen? True, he had gone through a great deal in that
year. But when he looked in the mirror it was no stranger he saw. No fresh
lines marred his smooth brown skin, no great tragedy welled out of cocoa eyes.
Yet to others he was somehow not the same.
Possibly the crashing kaleidoscope that was Drallar
simply made people forget. Resolutely he shut out the shouts and excitement of
the city, strode past intriguing stalls and sights while ignoring the
implorings of hawkers and merchants. No more time to waste on such childish
diversions, he instructed himself. He had responsibilities now. As the leader
of an entire race in the Great Game he must put aside infantile interests.
Ah, but the child in him was still strong, and it
was a hard thing to do, this growing up ...
Like a granite ocean the myriad walls of Old Drallar
crashed in frozen waves against the sprawling bastion of bureaucracy which was
the administrative center of Drallar and of the entire planet Moth. Modern
structures piled haphazardly into medieval ones. Beyond lowered the King's
palace) spires and minarets and domes forming a complex resembling a gigantic
diatom. Like much of the city, the building looked as if it had been designed
by a computer programmed with the Arabian Nights instead of
up-to-date technologies.
Flinx was crossing the outermost ring of stalls when
two striking figures passed in front of him-a man and woman, both slightly
taller than Flinx but otherwise physically unimpressive. What was striking
about them was the reaction they provoked in others. People took pains to avoid
the couple, even to avoid looking in their direction. But they did so
carefully, to be certain of not giving offense.
The couple were Qwarm.
Barely tolerated by the Commonwealth government, the
Qwarm were a widely dispersed clan of professional enforcers, whose services
ranged from collecting overdue debts to assassination. Despite being shunned
socially, the clan had prospered with the growth of the Commonwealth. Since the
beginning of time, there had always been a market for the services they chose
to provide.
Flinx knew that the two walking past him were
related in some fashion to every other Qwarm in the Commonwealth. Both wore
skin-tight jet-black jump- suits ending in black ankle boots. Those boots, he knew, contained many things
besides feet, A decorative cape of black and rust-red streamers fluttered from
each collar to the waist, like the tail of an alien bird.
Having heard of the Qwarm but never having had the
opportunity to see one, Flinx paused at a small booth. Pretending to inspect a copper-crysacolla
pitcher, he surreptitiously eyed the two retreating strangers.
Standing behind them now, he could no longer see
their faces, but he knew that the bodies inside the jumpsuits would be as
hairless as their heads were beneath the black skullcaps. Red foil designs
marked each cap, the only decorative touch aside from the streamers on their
clothing. Various pouches and containers hung from each black belt-pouches and
containers which held a great many varieties of death, Flinx knew. If he
remembered correctly, each belt would be joined in front by a buckle cut from a
single orange-red vanadium crystal, which would be inlaid with a gold
skull-and-crossbones. Their uniform was sufficient to identify them.
The crowd parted for them without panic. To run
might be to give offense. No one desired to give offense to a Qwarm.
Flinx took a step away from the booth-and froze.
Unbidden, as it often was, his talent had unexpectedly given him an image. The
image was of incipient murder. He hadn't sought the information. The most
frustrating feature of his peculiar abilities was that they of- ten functioned
most effectively when he had no need of them.
Instantly he knew that the man and woman were a
husband-wife team and that their quarry was very near. He tried for a picture
of the quarry and, as he half expected, saw nothing.
Even more bewildering were the waves of curiosity
and confusion that emanated from the Qwarm couple. Flinx bad heard that the
Qwarm were never puzzled about anything, least of all anything related to their
work. Someone was nearby whom they had to murder, and this puzzled them.
Strange. What could so puzzle a pair of professional killers?
Flinx cast about for an explanation and found only a
mental blank. He was human and only human once more. So he found himself torn
between common sense and his damnably intense curiosity. If only that powerful
sensation of uncertainty from the couple hadn't leaped into his mind. Nothing
should puzzle a Qwarm so. Nothing! Cause concern, yes, because murder was still
illegal and if caught they could be tried and punished by the authorities.
But confusion?
Impossible!
Suddenly Flinx found himself walking not toward the
receding solidity of the administration center but back into the depths of the
sprawling, chaotic marketplace. The black-clad pair were easy to follow. They
were utterly devoid of suspicion. Qwarm stalked others; no one followed a
Qwarm.
Despite Pip's nervous stirrings on his shoulder,
Flinx moved closer. Still the Qwarm gave no indication that they were at all
aware of him. At the moment he had nothing in mind beyond following the two
killers to the source of their confusion.
A small crowd formed a bottleneck just ahead. The
black-clad couple paused and talked together in whispers. Flinx thought he
could sense muscles tensing. They ceased conversing and seemed to be straining
to see over the heads of the cluster of beings ahead of them.
Moving forward, Flinx encountered a low section of
ancient wall off to one side. Part of it was occupied by seated figures staring
over the heads of the crowd. No one spared him a glance as he mounted the wall
and joined them. Seated securely on the damp, slick stone, he found he could
easily see over the heads of even the tall avians in the crowd, which consisted
mostly of local humans sprinkled with a few warmly bundled thranx and a
smattering of other alien types. His position afforded him a clear view of the
center of attraction. He could also keep an eye on the Qwarm, off to his right.
In front of the crescent of laughing, appreciative
creatures was a small raised stage. Flinx experienced a jolt of recognition.
Jongleurs, magicians, and other entertainers were using the public stage to
perform their various specialties for the entertainment of the crowd and the
enhancement of their own empty pockets. Not much more than a year and a half
ago, he had been one of those hopeful, enthusiastic performers. He and Pip had
gone through much since those days. He felt the snake relax, responding to his
nostalgic mood.
A juggler currently working the stage finished
manipulating four brightly colored spheres. One by one he tossed them into the
air, and one by one they vanished, to the apparent mystification of the
performer and the appreciative oohs and ahs of the crowd. The watchers applauded;
the juggler collected. Life advanced.
Flinx smiled. The material of which the balls were
composed remained visible only when heat was steadily applied-such as that
generated by the juggler's rapidly moving hands. When that activating body heat
was removed, even for a couple of seconds, the spheres became invisible. Behind
the stage, Flinx knew, the juggler's assistant waited to catch the carefully
thrown invisible objects. Timing was essential to the act, since the assistant
had to be in just the right position to catch the spheres.
The juggler departed. As the next act came out on
stage, Flinx felt a supple dig at his mind. For a brief instant he was
experiencing the same feeling as the Qwarm. Looking over, he felt that they
were straining to see a little harder.
He turned his attention to their intended victim.
A tall, robust-looking individual, the figure on
stage was not as dark-skinned as Flinx. Black hair fell in greasy strands down
his neck. He was dressed simply in sandals, loose slickertic pants, and a shirt
opened to show a mat of thick curls on his chest. The shift sleeves were
puffed, possibly to hide part of the act. Try as he would, Flinx could see or
detect nothing remarkable about the man-certainly nothing that might require
the attention of two Qwarm instead of one. Yet something here worried someone
enough to engage the services of those dread people.
Holding on to a shiny cord, the man was pulling at
something still hidden behind the stage backdrop. The jokes and insults he
alternately bestowed on whatever was at the other end of the cord were not
particularly clever, but the crowd was well baited, anxious to see what could
absorb such comments without responding.
It was beginning to drizzle again. The crowd, used
to omnipresent precipitation, ignored the rain. The jokes started to wear thin,
and the crowd showed signs of restlessness. Having built the suspense, the
rope-handler vented a violent curse and gave a hard yank on the cord. Flinx
tensed slightly, now really anxious to see what was at the other end of the
tether.
When the creature finally wobbled unsteadily around
the backdrop, its appearance was so anticlimactic, so utterly ludicrous, that
Flinx found himself laughing in mixed relief and disbelief. So did the rest of
the crowd.
What emerged from behind the wall was probably the
dopiest-looking creature he had ever seen, of a species completely unknown to
him. Barely over a meter and a half tall, it was shaped roughly like a pear.
The ovoid skull tapered unbroken into a conical neck, which in turn spread out
into a wide, bulbous lower torso. It stumbled about on four legs ending in
circular feet tipped with toe stubs. Where the neck began to spread into the
lumpy body, four arms projected outward, each ending in four well-developed, jointless
fingers. The thing gave the impression of being rubbery, boneless.
The creature was dressed in a vest with holes cut at
equal intervals for the four arms. Baggy, comical trousers completed the
attire. Four large holes were set around the top of the head. Flinx guessed
these were hearing organs. Beneath them, four limpid eyes stared stupidly in
all directions. Occasionally one or two
would blink, revealing double lids which closed like shades over the center of
each pupil.
A single organ like an elephants flexible trunk
protruded from the top of the bald skull. It ended in a mouth, which served,
Flinx guessed, as both eating and speaking organ ... assuming the thing was
capable of making noises.
As if this grotesque farrago of organs, limbs, and
costume wasn't hysterical enough, the creature was colored bright sky-blue,
with green vertical stripes running from neck to feet. Its
owner-manager-trainer gave the cord another sharp yank, and the apparition
wobbled forward, letting out a comical honk. Those in the front of the crowd
burst into laughter again.
Flinx only winced. Although the tugs on the cord
didn't seem to be injuring the creature physically, he didn't like to see
anything mistreated. Besides, no matter how hard its owner palled, Flinx had the
feeling that the creature was moving at its own speed, in its own time.
Then, abruptly, Flinx wondered what he was doing
there. He ought to be bunting down officials and records, not watching an
unremarkable sideshow. The training which had preserved him as a child in
Drallar began to reassert itself. It was none of his business if the Qwarm
wanted to kill an itinerant animal trainer. He could gain nothing by intruding
himself into this affair, Flinx reminded himself coldly. His curiosity had
gotten him into trouble often enough before.
He began to slip from his perch as the man in
question ran through his routine, prancing about on stage while the crowd
laughed at his antics and at those of the poorly trained but funny-looking
creature. As the owner attempted to get the creature to execute various
movements and the thing clumsily tried to comply, the laughter rose steadily.
Flinx was about to abandon his place when something
happened to give him pause-at a command from the owner, the creature spoke.
It had an arresting, well-modulated, and undeniably
intelligent voice, and it spoke quite comprehensible Terrangio despite its
alien vocal organs. At another command, the creature switched to symbospeech,
the commercial and social dialect of the Commonwealth. The alien's voice was a
high, mellifluous tenor that bordered on the girlish.
It was reciting gibberish. The words each meant
something, but the way the alien was stringing them together made no sense.
Over this rambling monologue, the trainer was speaking to the crowd.
"Alas," the man was saying, "this strange being) who lives to
delight and amuse us all, might possibly be as intelligent as you or I. Yet it
cannot learn to speak understandably, for all that it could be our
superior."
At this the alien produced- on cue from its trainer,
Flinx suspected- another of its hysterical honks. The crowd, momentarily
mesmerized by the trainer's spiel, collapsed with laughter again.
"Unfortunately," the trainer went on when
the roar had subsided, "poor Ab is quite insane. Isn't that right,
Ab?" he asked the alien. It responded with more of its nonstop gibbering,
only this time all in rhyme. "Maybe he's glad, maybe he's sad, but as the
philosopher once said, he is undoubtedly mad," the trainer observed, and
the alien honked again, beaming at the crowd.
Flinx made an attempt to plunge into that alien
mind. He achieved just what he expected, which was nothing. If an intelligence
capable of something greater than mimicry existed there, it was hidden from
him. More likely, there was nothing there to read.
Flinx pitied the creature and idly wondered where it
bad come from as he jumped down off the wall and brushed at the seat of his
clammy pants. No doubt the Qwarm were going to perform their job soon, and he
had no morbid desire to stay around to discover what method they were going to
employ.
It hit him like a hammer blow when he was halfway up
the street. The imagery had come from the Qwarm. Turning and walking quickly
back toward the crowd, he had a glimpse of them heading for a nearby building.
The image they had unexpectedly projected explained the cause of their
confusion: Their intended victim was not the simple animal trainer but rather
his subject.
It was reputed that the Qwarm did not hire
themselves out for killing cheaply or frivolously. Therefore, one had to assume
that in utter seriousness, and at considerable expense to someone-they were
about to murder a foolish, seemingly harmless alien.
There was no hint of worry or suspicion in the
trainer's mind, and nothing at all in that of his muddled ward. The minds of
the Qwarm held only continued confusion and a desire to complete their assigned
task. They could not question their task aloud, but they wondered privately,
The stone-and-wood structure they vanished into was
slightly over two stories tall, backed up against several other old, solid
edifices. As if in a daze, Flinx found himself moving toward the same building.
Listening with mind and ears, hunting with eyes, he stopped at the threshold.
No one was standing guard inside the doorway. And why should they? Who would
trail Qwarm, especially these Qwarm?
He stepped into the building. The old stairway at
the far end of the hallway showed one of the Qwarm ascending out of view. It
was the woman, and she had been pulling something from a pouch. Flinx thought
the object she removed might be a very tiny, expertly machined pistol of black
metal.
Cautioning Pip to silence, Flinx approached the
railing and started upward, alert for any movement from above. As he mounted
the rickety spiral he ran his last image of her over again in his mind.
Probably a dart pistol, he mused. He knew of organic darts that would dissolve
in a victim's body immediately after insertion. Both the dart and the toxin it
carried would become undetectable soon after injection.
The staircase opened onto a second floor. Flinx
turned his head slowly. Both Qwarm were standing by a window. One of them
pulled the shade aside and peered through cautiously.
A quick glance revealed that this floor was being
lived on. It was sparsely but comfortably appointed. In a far, dark corner an
attractive but tired-looking young woman was huddling on cushions, cuddling a
much younger girl protectively in her arms. She was staring fearfully at the
Qwarm.
Flinx returned his attention to the assassins. While
her companion held the shade back, the woman was readying the black pistol, her
arm resting motionless on the windowsill. Without question, she was about to
murder the alien.
He had learned everything he could here; there was
no point in staying around. As he started to retreat back down the stairs, the
woman in the dark corner saw him and drew in a startled breath. No normal
person would have noticed it, but to the Qwarm it might just as well have been
a scream. Both whirled from the window, startled. Pip was off Flinx's shoulder
before the youth could restrain the minidrag.
Reaching for his boot top, Flinx beard a slight phut
from the supposed dart pistol. The explosive shell blew apart the section of
floor he bad just been leaning against. Then he rose and threw the knife in one
smooth motion at the other Qwarm, who was fumbling at a belt pouch. It struck
the man in the neck. He went down, trying to staunch the Sow of blood from his
severed artery.
The female hesitated ever so slightly, unable to
make up her mind whether to fire at Flinx or at the darting, leathery little
nightmare above her. The hesitation was fatal. Pip spat, and the minidrag’s
venom struck the woman in the eyes. Unbelievably, she didn't scream as she
stumbled about the room, clawing frantically at her face. She banged into the
wall, fell over the twitching body of the man, and began rolling on the floor.
Fifteen seconds later, she was dead.
The man continued to bleed, though he had stopped
moving. Flinx entered the room and rapidly inspected side rooms and closets. He
was safe-for the moment. The little girl in the corner was crying softly now,
but the woman holding her merely stared wide-eyed at Flinx, still too terrified
to scream.
"Don't tell a soul of this," Flinx
admonished her as a nervous Pip coiled once more around his right shoulder.
"We won't ... please, don't kill us,” the woman
whispered in fear. Flinx gazed into blank, pleading eyes. The little girl
stared at the two motionless bodies, trying to understand.
Flinx found himself staggering back toward the
stairway. Without even bothering to recover his knife, he plunged down the
steps. Somehow he had completely lost control of events and as had happened too
often in the past, events had ended up controlling him.
At the bottom of the stairs he paused, regarding the
open doorway as an enemy. A glance right and left showed that this floor was
still deserted. There had to be a back way out; he went hunting and found a
little used exit opening onto a narrow, smelly alley. The pathway appeared
empty. After a careful search, he started down it at a brisk trot. Soon he was
back on the streets. The moment he was convinced he wasn't being followed, he
turned and angled back toward the stage, approaching it from a new direction.
As for the woman with the child, he suspected she
would find new lodgings as quickly and quietly as possible. She might notify
the police and she might not.
By the time be reached his destination, the show was
concluding. He slipped easily into the protective wall of bodies. Nothing had
changed: The trainer was still making
jokes at the dopey alien's expense and the alien was bearing it all with the
serenity of the softheaded. And that oval head did look soft, Flinx
reflected. So why bad the Qwarm felt it necessary to use such dangerously
identifiable explosive projectiles?
A respectable amount of applause and some tossed
coins were awarded at the end of the show, as much for uniqueness as for
polish, he suspected. The trainer scrambled about after the coins without
regard for dignity.
The crowd started to disperse. Apparently the alien
act was the last for the afternoon at this location. Flinx sauntered casually
backstage, where he found the trainer counting his money and inspecting his few
props. Almost at once, the man grew aware of Flinx's attention and looked up
sharply. On seeing that it was only a youth, he relaxed.
"What do you want, youngling?" he inquired
brusquely.
"We have something in common, sir."
"I can't imagine what."
"We both train aliens." Pip moved suddenly
on Flinx's shoulder, showing bright colors in the cloud-filtered light. The man
frowned, and squinted as he peered close.
"I don't recognize your pet, boy."
Whoever this fellow was, Flinx thought, he wasn't well
traveled or informed. Minidrags were not common, but their reputation far
exceeded their numbers. Yet this man obviously didn't know one when he saw one.
Flinx found his attention shifting to the alien,
which stood patiently to one side, muttering rhythmically to itself in some
unknovm language. "In any case," he explained, "I'm curious
about your pet. I've never seen anything like him." To make
conversation, he went on, "Where did you get its name from?"
Flint's politeness disarmed the man a little. "It
came with the poor dumb monster," he explained, exhibiting more sympathy
than Flinx would have suspected of him. "I bought it from an animal dealer
who thought it no more than that. But the creature has some kind of
intelligence. It can speak as well as you or I, and in many languages. But in
none of ‘em does it make sense. Oh, Ab's quite mad, it is, but he can learn.
Slowly, but enough to serve in the act." He smiled," now filled with
pride. "I was smart enough to recognize his uniqueness. No one else has
ever been able to identify Ab's species either,) boy. I hope it's a long-lived
one, though, since this one's irreplaceable.
"Far as the name goes, that's kind of a funny
tale. Only time he's ever made sense." He frowned. "I was trying to
decide what to call 'im when he gave out with one of his crazy ramblings."
He turned and eyed the alien. One egg-yolk eye watched him while the other three operated independently, Flinx
considered that a creature capable of looking in four directions at once must
have a mind of considerable complexity, simply to monitor such a flood of
neural responses.
"What's your name, idiot," the trainer
asked, pronouncing the words slow and careful. "Name!"
"Mana, Orix, Geimp nor Panda," the liquid
tones ventured promptly, "my name is Abalamahalamatandra."
While the creature continued to mumble on in verse,
the man looked back at Flinx. "Easy to see why I call 'im Ab, hey?"
he bent over and wiped at his muddy boots. "Dealer I bought him from had
no clue to his species. Just assured me he was docile and friendly, which he
is."
"It's remarkable," Flinx observed,
Battering the man as he studied the blue-and-green lump, "that as mad as
Ab is, you've managed to teach him so much."
"Told you, boy, all I've taught Ab are the
rules of the act. He's a mind of his own, of sorts. I said he can talk in many
tongues, didn't I?" Flinx nodded. "Terrangio and symbospeech are just
two of 'em. Every once in a while Ab gives me a start when I think he's said
something almost sensible," He shrugged. "Then when I try to follow
it up he goes on blabbin' about the taste of the sky or the color of air or
stuff I can't make any sense of whatsoever. You're curious about 'im, are you?
Go over and say hello, then."
"You're sure it's all right?"
"I said he was friendly, boy. In any case, he's
got no teeth."
Flinx approached the alien tentatively. The creature
observed his approach with two eyes, which crossed as he neared. Flinx smiled
in spite of himself. Experimentally, he extended a hand as if to shake the
alien's.
Two eyes dipped downward. One smooth hand came up
and slapped Flinx's palm. Flinx drew his hand back sharply, more surprised than
hurt. As if in admonition, another hand came around and slapped at the one
which bad struck Flinx. Apparently enchanted, the alien commenced slapping its
four palms together, entirely ignoring Flinx.
The alien palm had been hard, flat, and cool to the
touch.
The owner was speaking again. "Ab will eat just
about anything except," he finished with a smile, "me and thee."
Rising, he walled up to Ab and booted the creature hard. It ceased slapping
itself and resumed mumbling steadily, like an idling engine. "C'mon, sit
down for a while, you stupid monstrosity.”
Showing no sign of pain, Ab sat down on the ground
and began cleaning its feet with all four hands. In that position it looked
like a demented triclops trying to pull its toes off. Again Flinx found himself
grinning unintentionally.
"Have to do that when I'm not watchin'
'im," the man explained, "or he'll wander off."
"I can see why you use Ab in a comedy
act," Flinx observed readily. "What I can't understand is why anyone,
least of all a Qwarm, would want to kill it."
At the mention of the assassin clan the trainer lost
his composure, his emerging friendliness, and most of the color in his face.
"Qwarm?" he stammered.
"Two of them," Flinx elaborated. He nearly
turned and indicated the building with its window facing on the stage. Then he
thought better of it, "I don't know why they changed their minds," he
lied, "but I know for a fact that they want your pet dead."
"Qwarm?" the man repeated. At that moment,
Ab appeared to be the more balanced of the two. Looking around frantically, the
man grabbed a small black satchel. A couple of coins fell from a half-open
pocket. He ignored them.
"You train aliens too?" he bloated
hurriedly. "Good. He's all yours now, boy."
"Wait a minute!" Flinx protested. Things
were happening too quickly again. "I don't want to-"
" 'Bye and luck to you, boy!" the man
shouted back to him. He put out a hand, vaulted a nearby railing, and vanished
on the nm into the milling crowd nearby. "Hey, hold on'" Flinx
shouted, rushing to the railing. "Come back, I can't take care of-"
There was a tentative honk from behind. Flinx turned
and saw Ab staring blankly at him while mumbling steadily. When he turned back
to the crowd, the trainer was out of sight, though his terror still lingered
like the scent of cloves.
Flinx stared over and down at the striped blue
alien. "Now what am I going to do with you?" The fix he now found
himself in was his own fault, of course, if be had taken care not to mention
the Qwarm by name ... Well, no matter now. He started to walk away. A fresh,
louder honk stopped him.
Ab had stood up and was following Flinx. At the
sight of that utterly open, helpless face, Flinx's coldness shattered. Whatever
else he did he couldn't leave the poor thing alone. It would probably remain
where it was, cleaning itself, until someone took charge of it or it starved to
death.
Served him right. He had started the day in an at-
tempt to find out something about himself. Instead, he'd killed two Qwarm and
acquired an alien simpleton by default.
"I can't keep you,'* he told the bubbling
creature, "but we'll find a place for you as quickly as possible." One
big eye blinked disarmingly at him.
"Mur'til burtill?" he sang.
"Yeah, come on," Flinx instructed.
"I'm going to finish the day the way I should have started it." He
started off; a glance behind showed the creature following dutifully, weaving
on its four legs. Spouting sing-song nonsense, it trailed Flinx through the
crowd, apparently as happy with its present master as it bad been with the
former one.
Flinx was not happy with the stares his strange
companion drew, but there was nothing that could be done about it. As soon as
he finished with the records department, he would get rid of the creature.
There was a knock at the door,
The woman sent her silent little girl into the
bathroom. Then she walked over to lean against the door and listened with one hand
on the bolt. "Yes?" she finally asked quietly.
"You have a delivery," a soft voice
replied.
That was the code sentence. She glanced at the
covered bodies of the black-clad man and woman lying beneath the window and
threw the bolt sharply.
"Thank you for coming so quick," she said
gratefully. "I don't care how you dispose of them, just-" She choked
on the rest of the words.
The man on the other side of the doorway was not
from the discreet service she had contacted. Dressed entirely in black, devoid
of hair even to the shaved eyebrows, he was clearly a mate to the corpses in
her chamber.
His gaze indicated that he bore her no animosity,
but that he would as soon kill her as talk with her. Her hand went to her lips,
and she slowly backed away from the door as the man entered. He was tall- very
tall. He had to bend to fit beneath the portal.
His stare traveled across the room, lingering
momentarily on the two shapes beneath the blankets. Embroidered red whirls on
his skullcap caught the after- noon light, as did the skull engraved into his
belt buckle. It gleamed like alien blood in the room.
"I didn't," the woman started to say, then
she slumped inwardly, her hands falling limply to her side. "What does it
matter now," she muttered, with the resignation of those who have no hope.
She sank down on the pillows in the far corner, where she entertained business
far too frequently. "It's a rotten life, probably hopeless for the poor
child, too. Kill me if you want. This is all too far above me. I can't light
any more."
Ignoring her, the man strode past her to kneel above
the two bodies. He did not seem to believe these two could be dead. When he
finished, he rose and turned to her. The fury in his eyes was so bright that in
spite of her declaration she shrank back a little deeper into the cushions.
"I have no quarrel with .you or your
child," he explained, with a curt nod in the direction of the bathroom.
"Why, though, did you not notify us instead of calling for others to take
away the dead?"
The woman laughed hollowly. "Nobody contacts
the Qwarm if it can be avoided, no matter what their situation."
"True. I note your point," the tall
specter acknowledged without humor. "I suppose it would have been too much
to expect." Moving to the window, he leaned out and made a beckoning
motion.
Shortly, four men entered the room. They were not
Qwarm. Carefully they loaded the bodies into two long cylinders. When they
departed, the tall hunter turned his attention back to the silent woman in the
corner. There was a soft murmur from the region of the bathroom.
"Mommy... can I come out now?"
Suddenly the woman looked frightened again. Her gaze
shifted rapidly from the tall figure to the bathroom door and back again.
"I said I have no quarrel with yon,
woman." He leaned close over her, ice-eyed, hollow-cheeked. "Our
quarrel is with whoever was foolish enough to have done this thing."
Reaching into a pocket at his belt, he brought out a fistful of metal bars.
In spite of her fear, the woman's eyes glowed. Here
was more money than she had ever seen at one time in her life. It represented
many, many weeks during which she would not have to entertain visitors in the
room.
"Describe them," the Qwarm said tightly,
extending the metal.
The woman licked her lips as she considered. She did
not have to consider long. "Not them," she corrected.
"Him."
For the first time since entering the apartment, the
specter showed some emotion: surprise. "Only one?" he inquired in a
disbelieving, warning tone. "You are certain? Might he have had friends,
accomplices?"
"I don't know," she insisted. "I saw
only one man. Boy, maybe. He was young, less than twenty for certain," She
grimaced. "I'm good at estimating such things. No taller than myself, dark
skin, red hair ..." She went on describing Flinx as best she could, from
clothing to demeanor.
When she had finished, the man handed her the metal
bars, not throwing them at her feet, as her visitors did. Exhibiting an
unnerving politeness, he murmured a startlingly gentle "Thank you"
and turned to leave.
"You're not ... going to kill us?" the
woman wondered, still unable to comprehend her good fortune.
For the second time the tall figure showed surprise.
"You have been only a witness to unfortunate events you could not affect.
You have done nothing detrimental to me or mine, and you have been helpful. We
will not see you again, and this business will be concluded satisfactorily very
soon now." He closed the door behind him quietly.
Stunned, the woman sat on the pillows and stared at the
gleaming metal in her hands. She tried not to think about the promise of
silence she had made to the youth as he fled from her rooms. But what could she
have done? Money or not, she eventually would have told the Qwarm anything he
wanted to know, voluntarily or-she shuddered-otherwise. And she had the child
to think of.
She managed a slight smile. At least she might have
given the boy a chance, through one slight oversight on her part. She had told
the Qwarm the truth when she said she had seen only one man. But she had failed
to mention the small flying dragon that had slain one of the two dead ones. Let
the Qwarm form their own conclusions from the state of the two corpses.
The tall man had carried through on his other
promises, so she assumed he had told the truth when he said he would never see
her again. Nevertheless, after letting her frightened daughter out of the
bathroom. She set about making preparations to find new lodgings. The money
represented by the metal bars would permit them to leave Moth, and she was in a
rush to do so.
Administrative offices wove in and about one an-
other like copulating squid. Though raised on Drallar, Flinx still had a
terrible time trying to locate the offices he wanted.
At first sight, minor bureaucrats were inclined to
regard the persistent youth with contempt. Such bellicose thoughts, however,
always brought a quivering, questioning little head out from beneath the folds
of Flinx’s clothing. It was amazing how rapidly once-indifferent civil servants
took an interest in Flinx's problem. Helpful as they tried to be, he still
found himself shunted from one department to the next. Planetary Resources
bounced him down to Taxation, which kicked him up to Resources again.
Finally he found himself in a small, dingy
compartment occupied by a sixth-level bureaucrat in the King's government. This
lowly tape-twister was a tired, withered old man who had started life with
great expectations, only to turn around one day and discover that he had become
old. He sighed unencouragingly when Flinx once again explained his request.
"We don't have slave records here, boy."
"I know that, sir," Flinx acknowledged,
settling himself into a chair so ancient it was actually made of real wood
instead of plastic. "But money changed hands not just between seller and
buyer, but between seller and the government in the form of taxes. Slave sales
still require more documentation than most today. I'm assuming that hasn't changed in the past, oh, dozen
years."
"Not that I know of, boy, not that I know of.
Okay, we'll give it a try. What do they call yon, and what is the name of the
one whose sale you wish to trace?"
"I'm called Flinx. The name I wish to trace is
Philip Lynx, and I have the exact date of the transaction.” The man nodded when
Flinx gave him the date.
"Couldn't do much without that," he
admitted. He rose and tottered to the wall behind him. It was lined from wall
to wall, floor to ceiling, with tiny squares. Examining the wall, he finally
touched several minute buttons. One of the squares clicked and extended itself
into a meter-long tray. A single thin piece of dark plastic popped out of the
tray.
Removing the thin square, the old man inserted it
into a boxy machine on the left side of his desk. Then he turned it to face the
left-hand wall, which was coated with a silvery-white substance.
At that point he paused, one wrinkled hand hovering
over the controls of the machine. "I need to know the reason and
justification for showing this, boy," he announced pleasantly. Flinx laid
a discreet but ample bribe in the hovering palm. After transferring the money to a pocket, the hand activated the
controls on the device.
"You don't have to tell me," the old man
went on, "and it's none of my business, but why this transaction,
exactly?"
"You're correct, it's none of your
business." "The old man looked resigned and, disappointed, turned
away from Flinx. Motivated by some perverse impulse, Flinx blurted it out:
"It's myself that was sold. I'm that same Philip Lynx."
Rheumy eyes squinted at him, but the man said
nothing, merely nodded slowly. Aware that he had learned more than he was
entitled to, he activated the projector. A series of seemingly endless tiny
figures appeared on the wall. The oldster was experienced at his task. He
scanned the figures and words as they flashed past on the wall faster than
Flinx could follow. Abruptly, the flash flood of figures slowed, then began to
back up, and finally it stopped,
"Here we are," the clerk declared with
satisfaction, using a built-in arrow to indicate one thin line. "A tax of
twenty-two credits paid to the municipal fund on the sale in the city of one
boy Lynx, Philip. Selling price was," and he ran off figures and facts
Flinx already knew. Date of transaction, time ... Flinx grinned when the name
of the purchaser was read. So, Mother Mastiff had paid the tax under a false
name.
"That's all?" he inquired when the wall
unexpectedly went dark. "Nothing on the origin of the shipment, where it
arrived from?"
"I'm truly sorry, boy," the old man confessed,
sounding as if he meant it. He turned and folded his hands on the desk.
"What did you expect? This department holds only financial records. But
..." He hesitated, then went on. "If you want more information, if I
were you I'd look up Arcadia Organics in the slave traders' offices. That's the
firm that sold you. They might still retain some records themselves. They're
not the largest concern of that type on Moth, but they're not the smallest,
either. That's what I'd do if I were you, boy."
"I'd rather not," Flinx admitted.
Returning to the slave market under any circumstances was a disquieting
prospect. "But since that's where my only remaining hope leads, I suppose
I must." Rising, he nodded thankfully to the old man. "You've been
very kind, old sir." He turned to go.
"Just a minute, boy." Flinx turned, and
winced reflexively as he caught something thrown at him. It was a small but
still substantial credit chip-the same one he had given the oldster moments
ago. His gaze went to the aged clerk, who could expect little more in the way
of promotion or money in his lifetime. His eyes framed an unvoiced question.
"I don't have much drive, never did, and I'm a
stranger to greed. I'm afraid," he explained slowly. "Also,
compassion- that's out of keeping with being a successful bureaucrat."
"I can see that, old sir," Flinx
acknowledged, respectfully tossing the chip back. It clattered faintly on the
tabletop. "That's why you're going to keep this."
"I don't take bribes," the old clerk said
firmly, ignoring the chip, "from those more unfortunate than myself."
"Appearances can be deceiving, old man,"
Flinx insisted, giving the impression that he wasn't boasting. "Keep
it." He turned and left the room, left an uncertain yet gratified human
being staring after him.
Flinx spent the night with Mother Mastiff, regaling
her with tales of his trip to Earth. He detailed his visit to United Church
headquarters on the island of Ball, told of his eventual discovery of who his
natural mother was, and something of her death.
He told a carefully edited story, for he left out
his encounter with the daughter of Rashalleila Nuaman, who, had turned out to
be his half sister. Nor did he mention the Baron of the AAnn, Riidi WW, or
Conda Challis, or that unfortunate merchant's mysterious off- spring,
Mahnahmi-the girl with the angelic visage and wild talents. Most important, he
left out any mention of his journey to Ulru-UJurr and his commitment to educate
the innocent geniuses who were the Ulri-Ujurrians themselves.
Whether she could figure out that there was more to
his tale, Flinx could not tell. With Mother Mastiff, one was never certain
whether a lie had been believed or tolerated. In any case, she did not comment
until he mentioned his intention of looking up the slave firm which had
originally sold him,
"I don't know, boy," she muttered.
"Do yon think it wise?"
"Why not? All they can do is refuse to talk to
me."
"It's your state of mind that concerns me,
Flinx. You've been throwing yourself into this search for a long while. I worry
what you'll do if this last trail dead-ends on you."
He did not look at her. "Let's see what Arcadia
Organics tells me, first."
She tapped the arm of the plush chair she sat in.
"Better to leave yourself some hope. You'll drain it too quickly."
Now he stared at her in surprise. "Mother
Mastiff, what are you afraid of? Of what I might find?"
"I haven't stood in your way during this mad
chase of yours, boy. You know that. Though I'd rather you spent your time
looking for a fine young lady of wealth and form to settle down with." She
leaned forward out of the chair. "It's only that I don't like to see so
much of you put into a wild-drizer chase. By your own ad- mission, it has left
you almost dead several times now." Flinx wondered what she would say if
he told her about the encounter with the two Qwarm he-and Pip-had killed this
morning.
"I'm sorry” Mother Mastiff. It seems this
search is controlling me, not the other way around. I've got to know. My
mother I found out about. Suppose . . . suppose my father is still alive?"
"Oh, what of that!" she shouted angrily.
"What would that mean? Would it change you any, boy? Would it affect your
life?"
Flinx started one reply, settled himself down, and
switched to another. "I tell you what. Mother. If he's a fine man of
wealth and form, I'll bring him back here, and maybe then I can finally get you
to settle down."
She gaped at him momentarily, then broke into a
robust cackling laugh which did not seem to die down until the last vestiges of
daylight did. "All right, boy, you go," she finally agreed, sniffing
and blowing her nose. "But be certain you take that gargoyle with
you." She pointed to a far corner of the room, where Abalamahalamatandra
was honking and rhyming steadily to himself. "I will not have that monster
living in my house, and I certainly can't keep him downstairs in the store.
He'll scare away customers."
"Who, Ab?" argued Flinx desperately. He
had hoped to unload the helpless tag-along on Mother Mastiff. "What else
can I do with him? I can't let him follow me around."
"Why not?" she countered. "He seems
happy enough doing so."
"I was thinking maybe you could take care of
him for a while," he pleaded. "Besides, Ab doesn't frighten people;
he makes them laugh."
"Maybe he makes you laugh," she snorted,
"maybe he makes others laugh," She jabbed a leathery thumb at her
bony sternum. "But he doesn't make me laugh. I want him out of my house
and out of my shop, boy.” She thought a moment, then ventured brightly,
"As to what you can do with him, well, you're going to the slave market
tomorrow. Sell him. Yes," she finished, well pleased with herself,
"maybe you can make a profit on your inconvenience."
"I can't," he whispered.
"Why not?"
He thought rapidly. "Having once been sold
myself, Mother, I can't see myself selling another creature. I'll let him
follow me, I guess, until I can find him a kind home."
Flinx turned to eye his new ward while Mother
Mastiff grunted in disgust. There was no way he could tell her that he was
keeping Ab around because he was still curious as to why the Qwarm wanted him
dead.
Ab honked and gazed cryptically back at him with two
vacant blue eyes.
The following day dawned damp and drizzly. That was
not the reason behind Fhnx's shivers, however. A modest walk had brought him to
the outskirts of the slave market, and he was discovering that, despite his
determination, the atmosphere was having a chilling effect on him. Pip squirmed
anxiously on his shoulder, uncomfortable at his master's state of mind. The
only member of the little group who remained unaffected was Ab, singsonging
irrepressibly behind Flinx: "Neutron, neutron, who you are, why is an
organ camelbar?"
"Oh, shut up," Flinx muttered, aware that
his admonition would have no effect.
He made his way, frozen-eyed, through the stalls. The
beautiful maidens and dancing girls were present, just as in the old spacers'
tales and marketeers' stories, but they danced much more reluctantly and
unenthusiastically than those stories would lead one to believe, Nor were they
as sensuous and appealing as in those tales, neither the men nor the women.
They were here, though. That Flinx knew. Drallar was
a prime market world, a crossroads of the Commonwealth. Whether male, female,
androgynous, or alien, the prime product was not put out on the avenue for the
common herd to gawk at. In the streets around him, such dealings were
consummated quietly, in secret. It was better that way, for it was rumored that
sometimes there were souls who were not sold freely or honestly.
There were various beings for sale, as the
Commonwealth boasted a glut of organic power. A few thranx were present, though
not many. The clannish insects who had amalgamated with mankind tended to care
better for their own. He saw a thorps and some seal creatures from Largess, the
latter looking more comfortable in the dampness of Moth than they would have on
most Commonwealth worlds,
One covered balcony provided seats for a handful of
well-dressed prospective buyers. Few if any of them would be the ultimate
owners, he knew. Most were merely intermediaries for respectable employers who
wished not to be seen in such a place.
Presently he noticed spirited bidding on a
bewildered, narcotized boy of six. For all his blondness and differing features,
the lad reminded Flinx of a similarly lonely child of many years ago. Himself.
For a crazy instant he thought of buying the child
and setting it free. Free on whom, though? Mother Mastiff would certainly never
take in another foundling; he'd never understood what had possessed her to buy
him.
Ab knocked Flinx back to reality, bumping clumsily
into him from behind.
"Watch where you're going, you opinionated
piece of elastic insulation!"
A bulging blue orb winked at him, lids fluttering
uncertainly. "To give offense in any sense," he began sensibly, only
to finish with "lox are a very metaphysical bird, it's heard."
"No doubt about it," Flinx shot back
distastefully. He forced himself to a faster walk. He was anxious to leave this
place.
The sign over the office door in the street behind
the stalls was tastefully lettered-not flashy, but eye catching, It bespoke a
firm of moderate status, one which took a certain amount of pride in itself.
The door was clean, polished, and made of intricately carved wood brought down
from Moth's snow-clad northern continents. It read: ARCADIAORGAMICS.
Home to the helpless and homeless, Flinx thought.
The name sounded much better than Slave Dealer,
He reached out and touched the silent buzzer. After
a brief wait, the door slid aside silently. It turned out to be much thicker
than it looked from outside. The delicate woodwork was a thin veneer laid over
metal.
Completely filling the portal was a massive humanoid
of solemn demeanor. He glanced down at Flinx and addressed him in a deep,
throaty voice: "Your business here, man."
"I've come to see the owner, about an earlier
sale of his."
The giant paused, appearing to listen. Flinx noticed
a small ghnt of metal, some sort of transmitter, built into the left side of
the humanoid's skull. The installation looked permanent.
"The nature of the complaint?" the giant
inquired, flexing muscles like pale duraplast.
"I didn't say it was a complaint," Flinx
corrected cheerfully. "It's just something I'd like cleared up." With
Pip's aid, he knew, be could force his way past even this brute, but doing so
would not help him gain the information he sought. "It's a question of
pedigree."
Once more the man-mountain relayed the information
to parts unseen. His response this time was to move aside with the same
mechanical precision as the door. "You will be attended to," Flinx
was assured. He would have preferred the invitation to have been phrased
otherwise.
Nevertheless, he stepped into the small chamber, Ab
followed, his rhyming loud in the confined space. The room was empty of
furniture.
A hand the size of a dinner plate gently touched
Flinx's shoulder-not the one Pip rested on, fortunately, or circumstances might
have become awkward. "Stand, please," Seeing no place to go, Flinx
readily complied.
A polelike finger touched a switch. There was a hum,
and Flinx felt himself dropping. Forcing himself to be calm, he affected an
attitude of pleasant indifference as the floor and room sank into the ground.
Before very long he found himself in a much larger room. It was spacious and
neatly decorated, and it fit the man who moved around the table at its far end
to greet Flinx as he stepped out of the elevator.
Twisted and braided dark ringlets cascaded over
forehead and neck. The man was a little taller than Flinx and roughly three
times his age, though he looked younger. A pointed vandyke and curled-up
mustache gave the slaver the appearance of a foppish raven with clipped wings.
A very large star-ruby ring on the man's pinky was the only meretricious detail
in the office.
After greeting Flinx politely, the man escorted him
to a lavishly brocaded chair. A proffered drink was declined. Flinx thought the
fellow looked disappointed at the youth of his visitor, but he tried hard not
to show it. After all, Dralar was home to spoiled children as well as spoiled
adults.
"Now, what can I do for yon, young master? My
name is Char Mormis, owner and third generation in
Arcadia Organics. Don't tell me- it's a young
lady you're looking for. I knew it! I can always tell." While Char Mormis
spoke his hands charted each sentence like a seismograph measuring tremors.
"I can always tell when they're hunting for comforting." He winked
lewdly across the desk. "Name your tastes, young master. Arcadia can supply
you."
"Sorry, Mr. Mormis," Flinx said, "but
Fm not here to buy."
"Oh." The slaver looked crestfallen. He
leaned back in his chair and tugged at the point of his beard.
"You're here to sell?" he asked
uncertainly, eyeing the rhyming Ab, who stood by the elevator entrance.
"Neither," Flinx informed him firmly.
Mormis let out a reluctant sigh. "Then you
really are here over a question of pedigree. Oh well. How may I help you, young
master? Is there some question of inaccuracy?" He appeared genuinely
distressed at the prospect. "It pains me to think we might be responsible
for such an error. We are not dealers in the highest-priced merchandise,
but," he added conspiratorially, "we have the advantage of being
honest."
"Relax," Flinx advised the slaver.
"I'm not accusing you of anything. I just need some information. It
concerns a boy named Philip Lynx you sold to a woman named"-he
grinned-"it wasn't her real name, but that doesn't matter. The boy's name
is correct. He was four, five years old at the time of sale."
Mormis spread his hands. "I'll tell you what I
know, of course. We retain permanent records of every one of our
transactions." Faith, but he was so smooth, so polite, Flinx mused. "But first, young master, you must
satisfy me that you have a right to such information. Slaves have a right to
their privacy too, you know. We respect the rights of our purchased as well as
those of our purchasers."
"Glad to hear it," admitted Flinx.
Mormis' studied the confident youth seated across
from him. "Let me guess. The boy was bought to be a companion for you.
You've grown up with him. Now you've become curious about his original
background. Or maybe he's asked you to inquire about it to satisfy his own
curiosity. You look to be about his age."
"I am," agreed Flinx. “I’m him."
Mormis did not appear as surprised as the elderly
clerk had been at this information. He simply slumped into his chair and looked
weary.
"I was afraid it might be something like that.
You must realize, Mr. Lynx-“
"Just Flinx."
"Very well. Yon must see, Flinx, that we have
clients to protect in such cases. If it is revenge you seek, if you are on some
kind of personal vendetta ..."
Flinx shook his head impatiently. "Nothing of
the sort. I give you my word, I'm only trying to find out what happened to my
natural parents."
Now Mormis looked sad. "Such cases are known.
Very persistent people who gain their freedom often seek such information. All
such searches I know of come to naught. If the sale of the child was voluntary,
the parents go to great pains, usually successful, to conceal their identities
forever. If the sale was involuntary, then the seller goes to the same lengths
to disguise his identify. Even if you were to get into the archives on
Terra itself-"
"I've already done that," Flinx informed
him.
Mormis's eyes widened slightly. "You've been to
Earth?"
"I've been in the Church archives on Bali
itself. Eventually I managed to find out who my mother was. She'd already been
dead many years." Surprisingly, he found he could relate the information
without pain. It was as if he were talking about someone else, not himself.
There was only a cold emptiness in him.
Mormis looked at him with fresh respect. It was
evident in his tone as well. "You are an unusual young man."
"So I've been fold," Flinx commented
drily. "Now, about my request?"
"Yes, certainly." Mormis activated an
electronic filing system rather more modern than the one Flinx had visited
yesterday. It coughed up a tiny rectangle, which the slaver inserted in a
projector.
"Here is the original record of sale,"
Mormis told him, pointing to the wall screen. "Look for yourself."
Flinx was already doing so, raptly. His early self
was spelled out on the wall, a human being metamorphosed into figures. Height,
weight, hair and eye color, and every other vital statistic imaginable was
shining brightly on the wall. He had to smile again when he saw the name of his
buyer: the Grand Ladyess Fiona Florafin. Mother Mastiff was right-slavers were
concerned only about the legitimacy of a purchaser's credit.
Once again, that which he most hoped to find was
absent. Remuneration was recorded as having gone to the House of Nuaman,
presumably to enrich the coffers of his now-deceased aunt, the murderous
Rashalleila. That fitted with what he already knew.
Of his natural parents he found less here than he
already knew; there was nothing about his mother to match what he had spent a
year learning, nothing at all about his still-mysterious father.
"Thank you, Char Mormis," he forced
himself to say tightly, struggling to hide his disappointment. Finally, he had
reached the dead end he'd feared. There was no place else to go, nowhere more
to search.
The matter was finished.
"I appreciate your kindness." Flinx's hand
moved in the direction of his credit cardmeter.
Mormis waved the gesture off. "No, thank you,
Flinx. The pleasure was mine. It's always heartening to see merchandise that
has done well for itself. You are an independent citizen?"
"Have been since the day I was bought, thanks
to my buyer."
"You know, it's odd ... Can't I persuade you to
have a brandy?"
Flinx shook his head. Despite Mormis's courtesy, the
man was still of a breed for whom human lives were chips on a gaming table. He
wanted out.
But there was something prodding at Mormis.
"It's strange ... I have an excellent memory for people- nature of the
business, you understand." Flinx nodded without speaking. "But ... I
think I remember your sale."
Flinx sat down abruptly.
"Yes, I'm sure of it. At that time it was my
father, Shan Mormis, who was running Arcadia. I was still learning. But your
sale, your sale ... it sticks in my mind for some reason. You've brought the
memory back to me, for two reasons. The first concerned your buyer. An old
woman?"
Flinx nodded vigorously.
"That grandiose name on the manifest"-the
man gestured toward the wall-"didn't match her appearance. Does that make
sense to you?"
"A squat, heavy woman dressed in neat rags,
with a vocabulary like a spacer?"
"That description seems to fit," Mormis
confessed, caught up in Flinx's excitement. "You keep in touch with your
former owner?"
"She was never really an owner in the usual
sense," Flinx explained, a pugnacious yet affectionate picture of Mother
Mastiff forming in his mind.
"I suspected as much, considering your present
status. Such a contrast between appearance and given name-how could one forget?
The other memory concerns the one other person who was bidding for you."
Mormis looked embarrassed. "You were not a quality item."
"My value on the scale of such things doesn't
depress me," Flinx assured him.
"Self-deprecation …, a good trait in mer- in a
citizen," the slaver corrected himself hastily. "It was the spirited
bidding for your unremarkable self between two extraordinary persons which
remains in my memory."
"What of the other bidder?" insisted Flinx
eagerly.
"Well, he was human, quite human. Huge he was,
built like a city wall. Would have fetched a pretty price on the stage. Sadly,
he was on the wrong end of the business. He must have weighed as much as two
good- sized men. Heavy-planet upbringing, no 'doubt. All white-haired he was,
though I think it was premature. Two meters tall, easily." Mormis paused,
and Flinx had to urge him to continue.
"There must be more."
Mormis strained at his memory. "So many over
the years ... that face, though. A cross between a libertine's and a prophet's.
And I think he wore a gold ring in one ear. Yes, I'm sure of it. A gold ring,
or at least one of golden hue."
"A name. Char Mormis a name!"
The slaver
rambled on. "You weren't sold very high, Flinx. I think the fellow had
reason to leave the bid- ding when he did. He left in a rush, and as I recall
there were an inordinate number of soldiers milling about. But I shadow-play a
scenario. I never heard him mention a name."
"Anything else?" Flinx pressed him,
refusing to be discouraged. "Why did he want to buy me?"
Mormis looked away, as if Flinx had touched on
something the slaver would have preferred not to discuss. "We do not
inquire into the motives of our customers. Once the transaction is completed,
subsequent events pass into the jurisdiction of the authorities. Our businesses
to sell, not to judge."
"But he left before the bidding closed,"
Flinx mused. "Then it's conceivable he could have outbid the woman who
bought me?"
"Naturally, that's possible."
"You can't remember anything else about
him?"
Mormis pursed his lips in disapproval, "After
twelve years? I think it's remarkable I've remembered what I have. If you will
entertain a hypothesis, I would say that, considering the limited bidding for
you, the fellow looked on you as an investment."
Flinx didn't reply. He was thinking. A very large
human, prematurely white-maned, gold ring in one ear ... He grimaced. It wasn't
much to go on.
"I need more information." Pip, aroused
from his nap, poked his head out.
Mormis started. "By the chains of the sky,
there it is!”
"There what is?" a puzzled Flinx wondered.
“Your quest is impossible, young master, but I will
not dissuade you. That- that is the other thing." He was pointing at Pip.
Intrigued, the minidrag stuck a questioning tongue out at the slaver. Ab sang
on in the background.
"It is the second one I have seen. The other
... the other rode on the shoulder of the bidder who ran. I swear it would be
the same creature, save that I think his was smaller!"
Flinx's neatly organized thoughts collapsed like a
bridge whose foundation had failed. In their place turmoil reigned.
So far as he knew, Pip was the only Alaspinian
minidrag on Moth. If another lived on the winged world, he was sure be would
have learned of it by now. Suppose Pip was the same minidrag which Mormis
insisted had ridden his would-be buyer's shoulder? That implied that for Flinx
to have ended up with the flying snake was a coincidence too extreme to be
believed. Could his unsuccessful purchaser, have planted Pip in the alley where
Flinx eventually discovered him, for Flinx to find?
If that was what had actually happened, it indicated
much more than a casual interest in Flinx, from a person not connected with Nuaman
Enterprises. An employee of his aunt's? But to what end, what purpose?
I will go mad, he silently screamed.
"A name," he demanded, "give me a
name, Char Mormis!"
The slaver recoiled at the youth's violence. "I
told you, he never voiced one. Nor could I tell where he was from. I recall no
distinctive accent. Beyond his size and the earring, I can tell you
nothing."
"I understand, I understand," Flinx said
carefully, trying to control himself. Words stormed through his brain.
Alaspin, Alaspin, old friends a-claspi'n.
"Recipe for salad dressing ... two SCCAM bars
without messing." Ab rambled nonsensically.. "Shirted on conclusion
of the composition) wise not to bear a cockatrice," the alien finished. He
continued in an unknown language.
When Flinx finally got his raging thoughts under
control, he forced himself to speak slowly.
"What would you do if you were in my place?" he asked the
slaver. "I value your advice."
"Were I in your position," Mormis
instructed him through thoughtfully steepled fingers, "I would go to
wherever home is, return to your work, and save your money and possibly your
sanity."
"Next suggestion."
"Assuming you have unlimited time and funds,
young master, I would go to Alaspin. That's where your little beast conies
from, is it not?" Mormis ex- tended a paternal hand in Pip's direction,
but drew it back hastily when Pip hissed sharply at him. "If the creature
is as rare as it is reputed to be, and as dangerous ..."
"It is," Flinx assured him.
"... then you might have a chance of locating
one other who once also kept one."
So, Flinx thought, it had come to this: a search for
a man who twelve or so years ago had appeared on Moth with a minidrag on his
shoulder. A man who might never have been to Alaspin but who might have
acquired his lethal pet elsewhere. But a destination was better than nothing.
"Thank you again, Char Mormis." Flinx rose
to leave, and saw that the elevator had returned, along with its hulking
operator. "I just wish," he offered in parting, "that one as
nice as you were engaged in some other business."
"The morality of it can weigh heavily at
times," the slaver confessed as the lift door closed on Flinx and Ab.
"But not," he concluded softly after the elevator was on its way
surfaceward, "enough to make this one want to quit."
It was a busy, fruitful day, and Mormis thought no
more of his interesting visitor. By the time darkness had come and he locked up
for the night, he had forgotten the incident completely.
The modest Mormis tower home lay in a nearby inurb,
one of many such restricted enclaves in Drallar. It was a pleasant evening, and
Mormis decided to walk. His monolithic manservant strode comfortingly
alongside.
Out of necessity, the streets were relatively well lit.
Perpetual cloud cover hid any light the planet's bright moon. Flame, might have
thrown on the pavement.
Mormis tagged his thick cloak closer about him. He
was afflicted with bursitis, an ancient disease. Mournfully he mused that the
only part of his life which was not well lubricated involved his aching joints.
Physicians and wishans, none could help.
When he was halfway home, a strong yet gentle voice
called out of shadows to him: "We would request of you a few minutes of
your time, Char Mormis of Arcadia. We wish minimum delay m your homeward
journey."
Despite the assurances in that voice, Mormis reacted
as any man in his profession might. Voices in the night usually meant only one
thing on Moth, where darkness was the shield of beings with less-than-civil
intentions.
Throwing aside his cloak to give himself maximum
mobility, he turned, hunting for the source of the request. As if in response,
a figure emerged from the fog around him. It approached on four legs, foothands
and truhands all extended in a pose of insectoid placation. Vast compound eyes
shone bright with reflected light from the street illuminators.
Mormis took in the shiny, exfoliating chiton, the
deep purple coloring. But neither the thranx's obvious age nor his conciliatory
manner served to relax him. He hadn't had any dealings with a thranx in some
time. Not that they didn't own slaves. For all their vaunted logic, the thranx
were still a race of individuals, some of whom were as subject to vice as their
human counterparts were.
So he retreated from the advancing figure and
ordered his manservant to take defensive action. When the insect was pinioned,
then, perhaps, he would talk.
The massive, blue-cloaked golemite lumbered forward.
The slaver was not eased in mind when the fragile-looking insect stood his
ground. "Really, Char Mormis," he observed in the delightfully
musical voice of the thranx, "inhospitality is hardly the mark of a
successful businessman. I am disappointed. And this looking for a hidden weapon
on my person...."
Mormis was about to interrupt to say that it was the
thranx who was about to be disappointed when his fears were partially
confirmed. A second figure emerged from
the fog to intercept his servant.
The new figure was human, somewhat taller than average
but slim and unimpressive. His advanced age was belied by the suppleness of his
movements. He looked like an ambulatory birch tree. Gray hair, cavernous
wrinkles, and other age signs were held at bay by eyes that were coal-black
shards.
This steely-looking
scarecrow blocked the advance of the servant, who reacted rapidly and directly.
A short but furious scuffle followed in the middle of the street. The great
mass of Mormis's servant seemed to obliterate his opponent, but when movement
ceased, it was to reveal the tall, lanky stranger standing over the motionless
bulk of the golemite.
The tall man, part Oriental, shook his left arm.
There was an audible popping sound as joints rear- ranged themselves. When he
spoke it was without panting, and in the same reassuring tone as that used by
the watching thranx; "I have not injured him. He will wake soon, after we
have finished."
Mormis's left eyelid twitched uncontrollably. His
fingers quivered.
"You would not reach the beamer," the
thranx told him, in a voice so confident that Mormis lost all hope.
"Please be so kind as to refrain from such irrational hostilities and
listen to what we have to ask."
The slaver considered. Then he slowly slid his hand
away from the concealed weapon within his shirt. He consoled himself with the
fact that this odd pair) what- ever their intentions, looked neither brutal nor
immune to some common-sense reasoning. So he tried to calm himself as the
elderly thranx moved toward him. The slim human, he noted with relief, remained
next to the motionless body of his servant.
The thranx was tall for one of his kind, Mormis
observed, tall enough so that the rainbow-hued compound eyes were nearly level
with the slaver's own. The thranx was bundled tightly against the chill, though
Mormis knew the dampness was to the insect's liking. They were hothouse-world
creatures. He could hear the soft puffing as air moved through the insect's
spicules.
"You have me at a disadvantage," he
declared, dropping his hands to his sides. "J can do nothing but what you
wish." Meanwhile he searched for identifying signs. Both sets of vestigial
wings were present, protruding from shiny wing cases on the thranx's back. A
never-mated bachelor, then.
The insect noted the slaver's gaze, "No, you do
not know me. We have never met before. Char Mormis." An impressed Mormis
realized that his questioner was speaking perfect Terrangio instead of the
galactic lingua franca, symbospeech. Few thranx could master the smooth vowels
of mankind's principal language. For the first time a little of the tenseness
left him. Violent beings were usually not this well educated.
"You have the advantage of me, sir."
"We require some information," the Insect
responded, showing no inclination to reveal either his name or that of his
human associate. Mormis masked his disappointment. "We have learned that
earlier today you had a visitor."
"I've had many visitors," Mormis
countered, stalling.
"This one was a young man. Or an old boy,
depending on your perceptiveness. The boy had as companion a small, dangerous
flying reptile and an alien of peculiar type."
Since the thranx already knew this, Mormis saw no
sense in denying it. "I admit to receiving the person. you describe."
In an oddly human gesture, the thranx cocked its
valentine-shaped head to one side. "What did the boy want of you?"
Natural caution took over for Mormis, and he replied
without hesitation. "I said I remembered the boy," he declared
slowly, finding apparent fascination in the patterns water made on the street.
"But I also had many other visitors. It's impossible to remember the
details of every conversation. My days are hectic, and talk tends to run
together."
The tall human took several steps forward. "We
are wasting time with this one." He extended a hand and flexed long, skilled
fingers in a way Mormis didn't like. "I could always-"
"No, no complications," the thranx
interrupted, much to the slaver's relief. "But, as you say, we waste time.
Rather than debate morality ..." He reached into his thorax vest and
brought forth a credit cube of fair size. A glance assured Mormis it was
genuine.
"Still," Mormis said smoothly, "in my
business it is necessary from time to time to reconstruct certain
conversations, Odd, but suddenly I find the one you mention coming back to
me."
"A remarkable surprise," the tall man
commented sardonically.
Anxious now that he had managed to turn a dangerous
situation into an opportunity for profit, Mormis spoke freely. "It was a
trivial matter, interesting for one reason. The boy was originally sold by Arcadia."
"What did I say?" the tall human told his
companion.
"It seems the lad has done well since
then," Mormis went on.
"Well enough," the thranx commented
enigmatically.
. "Now
the orphan is hunting diligently and foolishly for his natural sire and dame. A
harmless but expensive obsession. He searches now for his father."
"And you were able to give him
information?" the man asked.
"No, I had no such details. However, I did
relate to him an intriguing anecdote involving the circumstances of his sale. If
you wish it) I can-"
The thranx cut him off impatiently, checking a wrist
chronometer as he spoke. "That is not necessary. We need to know only what
he intends to do now, where he is going."
Mormis backed off. "Revealing that information
would be unethical, sir." He glanced significantly in the direction from
which credit cubes of impressive size came. "To reveal such would be a
violation of confidence."
"You are neither physician nor padre," the
tall man rumbled, "so don't prattle to us of confidentialities and
revelations."
"You have been paid enough," the thranx
declared quietly, adding in a politely blood-curdling way, "we are through
wasting time."
"The boy might," the slaver ventured as
quickly as he could) "be traveling to Alaspin. He seemed anxious enough to
go there. Driven, one could almost say. I would guess that at this very minute
he is on his way to Drallarport."
"Your civility and common sense are
respected," the thranx told him, finishing a touch sarcastically,
"along with your wonderfully responsive memory. We will bother you no
longer. Go home. Char Mormis."
Turning in the way of the thranx, the insect started
off into the fog at a fast jog. The tail human followed him easily, stepping
over the body of Mormis's manservant.
The slaver watched as the odd twosome was absorbed
by the mist. "It's sure I won't bother either of you," he muttered to
himself, slipping the credit cube into his shirt. His slave was breathing
noisily now. Mormis walked over and kicked the recumbent bulk hard in the ribs.
A second kick produced a weak groan.
Then the massive humanoid sat up. He biinked and
looked up at Mormis. "I request abjuration, master," he muttered
dully. "I no excuse) but opponent was much more than-"
Mormis kicked him again. "I know that, idiot.
Get up." He found he was shivering, though not from the dampness.
"I'm in a hurry to get home ..."
"Exalla Cadella morphine centalla, espoused
lost in the woods. A time to conjure redonjure skull face from under the hoods,"
Ab hummed softly.
Flinx turned and called back to his dutifully
trailing acquisition, disgust plain in his voice, "If you have to ramble,
can't you at least say something sensible once in a while?"
Four arms made incomprehensible, meaningless gestures.
The upper half of the blue torso leaned slightly forward. One bright-blue eye
winked blankly at him, and the trunk atop the smooth skull weaved in time to
some unspoken alien rhythm.
Flinx sighed and continued trudging up the road.
Carts were scarce this late at night-early in the rnorning, rather. Since
taking leave of Mormis's place h& bad seen none plying the streets.
Supper still sat warm and heavy in his belly. He had
eaten in a small comestabulary partway out of the city proper. Quda
chips had come with his stew, and he had amused himself for a while by throwing
the circular chips into the air, whereupon Pip would launch himself,
lightninglike, from his shoulder to snatch them before they could hit the
floor. The minidrag was extremely fond of anything heavily laced with salt.
Flinx had halted the game only after the owner approached him to plead
desperately for an end to it. It seemed that the venomous fiying snake's dives
and swoops were unnerving the rest of his customers.
It should be light soon, Flinx mused as he neared
the major route leading from. Drallar to the city's shuttleport. There landing
craft transferred local goods to great KK-drive starships waiting in orbit and
brought outworld goods into the city. Along this broad avenue he was sure to
encounter either a jinx driver looking for a first-morn fare or one of many
huge powered cargo transports. The latter he could always obtain a ride on,
sometimes with the knowledge and consent of the operator, often without. In
spite of his present relative affluence, he knew, old talents often came in
handy.
As morning neared, the mist-fog thickened. To an
outworlder it presented an imposing obstacle to travel. To a native of Moth, it
was as natural and expected as a sunrise. Drizzle ran steadily off Flinx's
slickertic cape. At least, that was the way it appeared to an on- looker.
Actually, the drops never touched the material itself. A steady static charge
kept the rain from ever making contact with the always-dry cape.
Flinx noticed a huge skimmer parked close by the
last warehouse bordering the busy right-of-way. It was stacked vrith many tons
of cargo.
A bipedal figure suddenly appeared out of the fog,
stumbling toward him. Pip was off his shoulder in an instant. Flinx started to
reach for the fresh blade in his boot, then hesitated. He sensed no aura of
danger about the figure. A shouted command brought Pip back; the anxious
minidrag hovered in a tight spiral over Flinx's head. Pip's response assured
Flinx that the weaving form ahead wasn't dangerous; if it had been, Pip would
have ignored the command.
The figure stumbled onward, something gripped
tightly in one hand. As the man neared, he seemed for the first time to take
notice of Flinx. His glazed eyes appeared to clear slightly. Summoning fresh strength,
the man increased his pace and steadied himself some- what. For a minute Flinx
thought he might have to free Pip after all. Then the man's pupils filmed over
again. He tripped on nothingness and fell sideways into the drainage ditch
lining the right-hand side of the access road Flinx was walking on.
His body formed a dam for the running water. The
runoff rose and began to flow around the man's arm and shoulder, the limp limb
a long, slowly bleeding dike. Nor was the shoulder wound the only one visible
on the man. He had been badly hurt in an efficient, professional manner.
Sidling cautiously up to the corpse, Flinx found he
was trying to watch every direction at once. His erratic talent, naturally,
revealed nothing at the moment. Yet no one, injured or healthy, charged from
the darkness at him. He returned his attention to the body.
The black skullcap with its embroidered crimson
insignia had fallen from the hairless pate when the man fell. Several portions
of the tight black suit were soaked with blood. The fringed cloak was torn. It
hung loosely from a single neck clasp.
Further examination was unnecessary. The Qwarm was
dead. Yet Flinx persisted, disbelieving. It was known that the Qwarm were
masters of many bodily functions. Imitating death was a useful way to lull the
suspicions of an intended victim. But Flinx was positive this one was not
faking, nor vrould he ever fake anything again.
Curious, he kneeled to examine the object clutched
convulsively in the assassin's right hand: a short, grayish metal cylinder that
looked much like pewter. A tiny red light was still gleaming near the
cylinder's middle.
Flinx found a loose scrap of pavement and passed it
carefully between the out-pointing end of the cylinder and the air. There was a
tiny ping, and a millimeter- wide hole appeared in the thick section of
stone.
To protect the many inquisitive children prowling
the night streets of Drallar, Flinx touched a stud at the haft of the weapon.
The red light went out. A repeat pass with the stone did not produce a
puncture. Flinx pulled the tiny device free of its former owner's death grip.
This Qwarm toy was a phonic stiletto. It generated a
thin beam of sculpted sound that would put a hole through just about anything.
It fit neatly in a man's palm, generator and all, was easily concealed, and was
almost impossible to detect or defend against.
Flinx rose and looked around worriedly. Having
killed two Qwarm recently, he could understand another one with an activated
weapon coming toward him. But this Qwarm had run into something else before he
had had a chance to ambush Flinx. Or had he really been after Flinx?
Moving on four stumpy legs, a mumbling Ab walked
over and bent to pick, cretinlike, at the clothing of the dead man. Hands and
eyes moved, apparently enraptured by the commingling of blood and water in the
ditch.
Had the killer been after Flinx, or were they still
pursuing the moronic alien in his charge? He didn't like to consider the first possibility,
because that would mean they now knew he was responsible for the death of two
clan members back m the old house fronting the stage. In that case he had to
move faster than he had intended. Once an enemy was known to them, the Qwarm
clan would never rest until that enemy or every member of the clan was dead. It
would help him to know whether they knew.
Falling mist was rapidly obliterating any hint of a
trail, but drops of dissolving blood still showed against the pavement clearly
enough for him to trace them around the prow of the huge cargo carrier. They
led to the entrance of the warehouse. Careful examination of the personnel door
showed that it had been keyed open, and Flinx did not think it had been done by
the building's owner.
Every instinct, everything in him, warned against
entering the blackness inside. That was countered, as usual, by his relentless
curiosity. He slipped through the slight opening. A dim light shone in a near
corner, near mountainous heaps of extruded plastic casings. Treading softly,
with a dim shape fluttering nervously overhead, he moved toward the light.
Suddenly he could sense unease, even fear. Marshaled
against it was a frightening coolness. Both were far from here and moving
rapidly away from him. From the lighted region he was approaching he detected
nothing. Very slowly, he peered around a last, four-meter-high yellow case.
Six bodies filled the space his astonished gaze en-
countered. Six! They lay draped over crates, contorted on the metal floor, and
bunched beneath overturned casings. Four were women, two men. All were clad in
the by now too-familiar black. Several showed naked skulls, their caps missing.
Copious amounts of blood lent murderous highlights to the devastated scene.
Several of the smaller crates were shattered. It must have taken some unknown,
awesome force to crack those seamless containers.
In a few hours, Flinx knew, some warehouse
supervisor would arrive to open up, and get the shock of his or her life.
There were only dead Qwarm here, no sign of any
other intruders, Flinx couldn't conceive of anyone or anything that would
attack, let alone destroy, such a large number of professional assassins. He
stiffened. A hint of a far-off mental scream had touched him, alerted him once
more to something that continued to move away from this place. Whatever it was,
he considered, it might not continue to move away.
Once again Flinx looked back at the crumpled, silent
bodies, some of which were partially dismembered. Again he noted the cracked
plastic casings strewn casually about. Some great force had been at work here,
for reasons Flinx could not imagine. That distant mental shriek continued to
echo in his mind as he found himself backing away slowly from the nightmarish
scene. Darkness closed tight around him once more.
Something touched his shoulder.
His sigh of relief when he found it was only Pip,
returning to his perch on his shoulder, was enormous. Then he was out of the
structure, running steadily toward the main roadway ahead. The mist was no
longer a friend but a deceiver, biding something terrifying and mysterious from
sight.
Moments later he reached the road. From below he
heard the bellow of kinkeez and other animal-powered conveyances, mixed
with the roar and hum of machines. A short climb, a downward slide and
scramble, and Flinx was over the embankment and on the roadway itself. Somehow
Ab managed to keep all four of his feet under him as he stumbled on without
complaint after his new master.
The owner of the meepah-rickshaw balked at
the sight of Flinx's quadrupedal companion. Credits overcame his uncertainty,
however. Soon the two-legged meepah was racing toward the shuttleport at
its maximum stride, Flinx getting the speed he was paying for. Happily, nothing
flew out of the rising mist-fog from behind to strike at either owner or rider.
At the port, Flinx had the misfortune to encounter
one of those many bureaucrats whose sole purpose in life seemed to be
complicating that of others, from which they obviously derived a false and
pitiful feeling of superiority. "Let me see your tunnel pass, boy,"
the man demanded condescendingly.
Flinx turned and glanced anxiously back the way he
had come. The moving walkway leading back into the central terminal building
was almost empty. Despite the early hour and the absence of any pursuit, he was
expecting one or more black-clad specters to appear among the tired
businessfolk and travelers. Drallarport operated round the clock, twenty-eight
hours a day.
"I don't have a tunnel pass, sir," he
responded, forcing himself to modify the sharpness he heard in his voice.
"I ..."
That was enough to engender a wide leer of
satisfaction on the other's fat face. No, he was not stupid, this one. His
mental malady ran deeper than simple ignorance. Malice requires a certain
amount of intelligence before its wielder qualifies as truly irritating.
"No pass, and attempting to enter a private
access tunnel," he snorted through pursed lips. Ostentatiously, he jabbed
a button on the callbox at his waist. Two large, nononsense humans
appeared and glowered threateningly at Flinx. They were soon joined by an
out-of-breath, elderly little man. In appearance, he was sufficiently ordinary
to make Flinx's plump tormentor look unique.
"What is it, Belcom?" he asked the fat one
curiously while eyeing Flinx.
"This child," Belcom declared, as if he
had just learned the identity of a multiple-murderer, "is trying to sneak
into this restricted area without a pass." "I wasn't trying to
snea-" Flinx began in exasperation, before the newcomer cut him off.
"This is a guarded section, boy. No visitors allowed." While tired,
probably from finishing up a night shift, the man was at least polite. "If
you want to watch the ships lift, try the cargo landing."
"I don't have a tunnel pass," Flinx
finally succeeded in explaining as he fumbled at a belt pouch beneath his
slickertic, "because I'm not boarding as a passenger." From the pouch
he extracted a small, virtually unbreakable slip of polyplexalloy. The
information implanted in it was unforgeable.
Blinking back fatigue, the new arrival studied the
card. When he looked up at Flinx it was without lethargy. He turned a vicious
Raze on the smug subordinate next to him. That worthy took in his superior's
glare and reacted with the attitude of someone who has just discovered a
poisonous insect crawling up his leg yet is afraid to swat at it for fear of
being stung.
"Of course this gentleman doesn't have a
pass, Belcom. Don't you ever inquire before you make an idiot of
yourself?"
Aware that he couldn't respond without demeaning
himself further, an uncomprehending Belcom simply gaped blankly at the little
man. After allowing Belcom's embarrassment to last to the point of eyestrain,
his superior finally continued: "He has no pass, you damn fool, because he's
not a passenger. He's an owner. Private registry vessel."
“I-" Belcom stammered, glancing worriedly at
Flinx. "He was so young- I didn't consider, didn't think-"
"Two reasons for not promoting you, and
excellent ones at that," his supervisor snapped venomously. Turning to
Flinx, he framed sincere apologies with an officious smile. "Terribly
sorry for the inconvenience, sir. If there is anything I can do to redress the
insult suffered, anything at all..."
Flinx thought he saw a commotion at the far end of
the moving walkway behind him. "Just let me through," he said
crisply. Both guards moved solemnly aside; they watched as Flinx and his odd
charge loped up the corridor. Neither turned to watch or listen as additional
execration continued to fall on the unfortunate Belcom.
Though he had studied hard the past year and a half,
Flinx was still no pilot. But most craft were so complex that manual operation
was out of the question for all but the most skilled individuals, and the
shuttiecraft he settled into was no exception. So it was fully fitted out with
automatic controls. Anyone capable of delivering coherent instructions to the
ship's computer could pilot it.
Firm pressure forced him back into the acceleration
couch as the little vessel boomed skyward, lifting cleanly out of the reaction
pit. Shortly thereafter he was curving out into free space.
Nograv relaxed him physically; the fact that now no
Owarm could slip up behind and stick a sonic stiletto or something equally
exotic into his neck relaxed him mentally.
Behind, Ab whistled and rhymed cheerfully.
The alien accepted nograv as readily and good-
naturedly as it had the damp atmosphere of Moth.
Approaching tangency with a particular orbit, Flinx
took a moment to belch once while admiring a great swath of glowing gold
splashed across the sky. It was one of the two remarkable "wings"
that had given Moth its name. Whichever god had designed Flinx's home world had
finished with a flourish of finger- painting.
Each tan-shaped wing was composed of highly reflective particulate and
gaseous matter, narrow near the surface, fanning out and diffusing as gravity
weakened away from it.
Like a dauber wasp, the shuttlecraft nestled itself
snugly into the ellipsoidal fuselage of Flinx's ship. From that structure projected
a long tube which ended in a fan-shape, something like a wineglass: the KK-
drive posigravity-field projector.
Flinx's ship was a gift from his extraordinarily
gifted pupils, the race of ursinoids who inhabited the proscribed world of
Ulru-Ujurr. They had used blueprints and scavenged material to construct it. In
shape and capabilities it was much like the racing yacht of Flinx's sometime
benefactor, Maxim Malaika. Only the much-less-sybaritic furnishings were
significantly different.
The Ulru-Ujurrians had christened it Teacher.
Flinx punched in the coordinates of Alaspin, added a
maximum cruising speed, and then permitted himself to lie down. With only the
most general description to go on, he had to try to find a man who might not
ever have been to Alaspin. Added to that was the possibility that the slaver's
memory was open to question-not to mention the fact that the Qwarm were intent
on preventing him from locating anything ever again.
Some comfort came from Ab's antics. The alien was
fascinated by the ship's workings. Certainly Ab had been on at least one other
craft before, but slave quarters left little chance for study. Flinx had to be
careful. Automatic and foolproof as interstellar navigation had become, the
accidental manipulations of an idiot like Ab could delay his trip seriously.
As to what he would do if he reached Alaspm and
learned nothing, Flinx had no idea. At such moments Flinx wondered why he
bothered so much. What, after all, were a mother and father but an accidental
combination of humanity, a chance commingling of chromosomes and such which had
produced ... himself.
Of all the myriad things he was ignorant of, one of
the greatest was his own motivations. Beside them, stellar physics was simple
child-gaming. Why try to-assuage his loneliness? Knowledge of his origin
couldn't do that. But maybe, he mused, when he finally knew, it might keep him
from crying quietly so often.
Traveling almost as fast as a Commonwealth
peaceforcer, the Teacher sped through the void, carrying its small cargo
of one melancholy human youth, one indifferent flying reptile, and a spritely
alien mad poet wrapped in an enigma.
In his long and busy life, the lanky old man had
undergone many security screenings. The one he was forced to endure today had
proved as thorough as the most extensive he' could recall.
Once cleared, he was finally admitted to a very dark
office. What furniture lay within appeared placed haphazardly, without regard
to esthetics or function. Nothing in the way of decoration showed anywhere.
That extended to the single figure waiting to greet him. Like the room, the
thickly hooded shape conveyed a feeling of somber staleness. It stood, rather
than sat, behind the single heavy desk. Where a face would have been, darkness
and many folds of cloth served instead. They disguised even their wearer's size
and form. There was nothing deceptive about the soft voice that issued from
beneath the heavy shrouds, though. It was sibilant in a way the taller man could
almost place.
"Business has been finished?" the shrouded
one asked. No casual greeting, no hopeful hello to waste time. No exchange of
names.
From beneath his embroidered skullcap the elder
Qwarm responded, "There has been interference." A finger rubbed at an
upper lip and obliterated an itch. Hairless lids blinked once.
Beneath its many folds the other speaker appeared to
twitch violently, though control of its voice remained unbroken. "It
cannot be. Neither the Church nor the Commonwealth government realizes
...!"
Shaking his head briskly, once, the tall Qwarm
leader explained, "There has been no evidence of official interference, or
even of interest, insofar as we can discover. Both members of the clan who had
been as- signed the task were apparently in position and preparing to carry out
their work when they were interrupted. Whether they were interrupted on purpose
or by accident we have been unable to discover. It does not matter now. Both of
the clan are dead."
"It matters very much to me,"
rumbled the hooded shape.
"You will be notified as to the identity of the
fool who interfered when we gather in his body," the Qwarm declared
coldly. "At present we know no more than you. We thought such knowledge,
together with the postponed completion of your assignment to us, was within our
grasp. Something ... happened." Vast unpleasantness burned back of wise
old eyes. "Much outrage was felt within the clan at the death of our
brother and sister. Such a thing has not happened in a long time. Punishment
was decreed. A large group of clan members, the largest gathered together, in
one place in some time, was assembled to exact proper revenge." Now the
Qwarm's anger gave way to confusion.
"It was believed at first that he who
interfered acted alone. Such was apparently not the case. He has powerful and
as-yet-unidentified associates or allies. All we know is that none of them
appear to be associated with the government. All of the assembled were murdered
mysteriously," Long, deceptively thin fingers opened and closed slowly.
The hooded figure eyed the movements cautiously.
This old man was dangerous, like a well-used weapon-worn and dulled on the
outside, but still an efficient killer. It would not do to push him, especially
in his present mood.
"If no official agency of Church or
Commonwealth is involved," the soft voice ventured, "then there is
still time for this business to reach a satisfactory conclusion." Then it
added, as an afterthought: "There will be no additional money for the
additional time involved, you realize."
"That is of no import."
"Really?" Now a hint of disdain crept into
the whisperer's voice. "I thought that money was paramount among your
kind, businessfolk that you are."
"We are a clan, an extended family first,"
the Qwarm corrected him, "businessfolk second. Our reputation protects us
more than our abilities. That is why anyone who kills a single Qwarm cannot be
permitted to live to tell of it. Such a tale would impair our efficiency and
place isolated members in danger."
'This business of killing is still a business,"
the figure rasped from beneath its shrouds.
"Rest assured," the Qwarm leader replied.
"Whether we regard it as a matter of business or clan morality should not
matter to you. You have hired us. We will carry out the terms of our contract
satisfactorily for you-even if it carries us to the ends of the galaxy."
"I wish not to see you again until you can
bring me word of that," the figure intoned forcefully, evidently
unimpressed by the Qwarm's speech. "Whether you kill this interferer or
his friends is your business. Kill however many you must, but kill foremost the
creature called Abalamahalarnatandra."
"As I have declared, it will be done."
That seemed to end the meeting, except that a touch of human curiosity overcame
the Qwarm. His professional poise lapsed briefly to reveal an emotional
creature beneath.
"I would still like to know why you or anyone
else is willing-nay, eager-to pay the absurd sum of one million credits for the
killing of a single alien being."
"I am sure you would," replied the hooded
shape, a hint of amusement in its voice. When nothing more was forthcoming, it
was clear that the discussion was over.
As he turned to leave the room, the Qwarm saw the
hooded figure move. Light poured through the open doorway from the hall beyond.
Despite the figure's rapid movement, the shaft of fresh light in the dark
chamber seemed to sparkle off a cornea that was not human beneath those
enfolding shrouds.
Then again, the Qwarm elder reflected as he strolled
down the hallway of the eighty-second floor, in the brief instant he could have
misinterpreted the effect of the light.
Not that it mattered anyway. The Qwarm clan had
often accepted assignments from nonhumans and nonthranx. This present
employer's desire for anonymity was hardly remarkable.
Rage boiled within him, though he didn't show it as
he left the office tower. So many of the claa dead! People saw his set face and
parted to let him pass. This" had become much more than a simple job for
the clan. It did not matter that no one save a single woman and child-now
painlessly if somewhat belatedly-eliminated, had learned of the Qwarm's failure
on the commercial world of Moth. It was enough that the Owarm themselves knew.
It was enough that they had been outraged.
So it was that law-enforcement officials throughout
the Commonwealth noted the unusual activity among black-clad, skullcapped men
and women on various worlds and wondered at it. They would have wondered much
more if they had known that all the frenzied activity was caused by- the
actions of a single innocuous- looking young man ...
The Teacher slipped
into a stabilized parking orbit above Alaspin. A few preparations and then
Flinx and Ab were dropping planetward.
Pip hissed softly as Flinx considered what he had
learned during their journey to the frontier world they were approaching. The
planet was warm, though not especially humid, consisting mostly of patches of
jungle spotted about vast, sweeping savannas and reedy river plains.
Alaspinport was a small city by Commonwealth standards. In fact, this
little-explored globe boasted a very modest humanx population.
Considering that, Flinx had been surprised at the
number of ships hovering above Alaspin's surface. There was evidently
interstellar traffic disproportionate to the populace. In a way, that should
not have surprised him. Alaspin was rich in two things: gemstones and history.
The prospectors, mining companies, and many universities and research
institutions with interests on the planet could account for the kind of heavy
traffic to and from the surface that he encountered.
Despite overcrowding, it was no problem to secure
his shuttle at the port. Lodgings were plentiful, and he got a room in a modest
hotel in town.
Walking through the hot streets, he saw that the
population was divided almost equally between humans and thranx. If anything,
there were more of the busy, active insects than humans. They tolerated the
dryness and thrived in the heat of midday.
The mixture of scientists and fortune hunters was a
peculiar one. Flinx passed studious individuals arguing alien sociology, then
overheard a conversation dealing with the smuggling rates on Catchalot. Alaspin
was filled with two institutions: libraries and brothels.
One of the greatest multiple-culture populations in
this part of the galaxy had risen and passed on here before the Commonwealth
was more than a dream in a few visionaries' eyes. "It's true, Flinx,"
the Junoesque, henna-haired concierge was telling him upon his return to the
hotel. "They say that the Alaspinians explored a1 through the region of
the Commonwealth and beyond."
"Then why aren't there any left?" he asked
reasonably.
She shrugged. "According to the research folks
I've chatted with, the locals liked long-range exploring, but never gave a
thought to colonizin' anyplace else.' She made a show of adjusting the complex
of straps beneath her yellow-and-silver dress as she explained the function and
operation of the water-retrieve and other devices in his room.
"Xenohistorians I've bad stay here told fine
the Alaspinians died out less than eight-y thousand Terran standard years ago.
They think it was a gradual thing, not sudden like. Almost as if the
Alaspinians had lived a full racial life, got tired, and decided to diffuse out."
She manipulated the air purifier and tempioner. There was a soft hum, and cool
air filled the room.
The hennaed coiffure, the garish make-up were a
disguise, he suspected. There was a vulnerability beneath the paint that
appealed to him.
"You're a damn sight younger than most of the
solitaires I get in here, Flinx. You said you're not a miner?"
"No," he confessed, beginning to wonder if
she was as vulnerable as he imagined. He smiled in what ha hoped was a pleasant
yet neutral manner. "I tend more toward research- you might even say
sociology."
"That's okay," the landlady declared
amiably, `I like intellectuals too. If they aren't snobbish about it. You're
not snobbish, I think."
Ab saved Flinx the necessity of commenting by
chiming in with a particularly loud rhyme. Distracted the hotel owner gazed at
the alien with distaste. Mild distaste, because no one could look at Ab and not
be amused.
"You going to keep that thing with you?"
"If it's permissible. Ab doesn't get in the
way. Ho won't trouble anyone."
"Doesn't matter to me," the woman
responded evenly. "Is it clean?"
"As far as I know."
She frowned. "What's that supposed to
mean?"
"Ab performs objectionable bodily functions, if
by has any, out of my sight."
"That's okay then. Only thing is, I don't know
whether to charge you double room rate for two, or single with a pet. Which is
it?"
"Whatever you think appropriate," Flinx
advised her.
That was the wrong thing to say. She smiled broadly
at him. "Whatever I think's appropriate? I'll remember that." Her
gaze traveled over him. Somehow he got the impression she wasn't admiring his
attire. "Yes, you're a damn sight younger than most. If you need anything
... later ... if the air controls don't work right, you 1c me know." Her
voice dropped an octave. "It's hot during the day, but it can get chilly
here at night."
Flinx swallowed. "I'll be sure and let you
know, ma'am."
"Mirable," she corrected him.
"Mirable Dictu." She sidled toward the door. "It's nice to find
someone who's not ... Fanatic about what they're here for. Scientists get too
wrapped up with thinkin' and the prospectors never do. Good to have a guest who
embodies a bit o' both."
His last view was of her perambulating form drifting
suggestively toward the stairway. Fie almost called out to her. However ... He
sighed. With serious business unfinished, he had no time for such foolery. But
if Alaspin proved to be the final dead end, as he half suspected it would, then
he might have time and need of some sympathetic company. In that event, he
might strike up a more serious friendship with the voluptuous Mirable.
She was the first one be asked about the enormous
man with the white hair and gold earring. As expected, Mirable had no knowledge
of anyone fitting that description.
Several days of questioning around the town produced
memories of numerous men with rings in their ears, some of the ornaments gold
or gold-colored. But if the men were the right size they didn't wear the
earring, and if they wore one they were never big enough. O they were large
enough and beringed, but their hair was brown or red or black or blond.
A cargo loader finally told Flirts of a friend who
almost fit the description. The only thing be was unsure of was the earring's
color. In a burst of excitement, Flinx tracked the man down and found that he
still worked in Alaspinport.
Unfortunately, he was only twenty-two years old and
had never been to Moth in his life. Nor did he know offhand of anyone
resembling himself who was older.
That disappointment had nearly caused Flinx to give
up.
"Eh, my handsome young guest," Mirable bad
chided him, "so many years you think on this, and then a couple of days
and you're ready to forget it?"
He stayed on Alaspin and kept asking questions.
Various inquiries around the town the next day
elicited no leads, but did bring Flinx to the office of a garrulous,
enthusiastic clerk. He was in charge of Temporary Residences and Flinx had to
see him to get hi permit stamped so he could legally remain on Alaspin.
"Entry to Alaspin is strictly limited and
watched," the clerk rambled on. "You already had a taste of our rity
procedures when you set down at the port." Flinx nodded. They had
seemed unusually thorough for a frontier world. “That's because of the
gems." The clerk winked. "Local police have to keep tabs on everyone.
Claim stealing, robbery- we have our share, Adds to the spice of life
here."
Sure, Flinx thought, when you can sit in a nice,
cool office and watch the arrests and shootings on the tridee.
"And it's not only the gemstones," he went
on. "Oh no. Constant fighting between the research people and the
prospectors. Constant. It's not easy keeping peace between them. Each group has
little sympathy for the other. The scientists think the miners are destructive
Neanderthals, and the miners consider the scientists cloud-walkers each with a
fat credit pipeline to some research group."
"I don't understand," Flinx admitted
openly. "A little conflict I can see, but persistent battling- what for?
Isn't each group after different things?"
The clerk shook his head at the newcomer's
ignorance. "Let me give you an example. Have you ever heard of the Idonian
Mask?"
Flinx shook his head.
"It cost the lives of sixteen people, on
Alaspin and off, before the Commonwealth finally stepped in. Declared it a
treasure of the people and appropriated it for the Pre-Commonwealth Societies
Museum on Hivehom." He eyed Flinx. "The mask was about your height
and twice your width, Flinx and decorated with sixty thousand carats of
flawless blue diamonds set to form the face and history of some long- gone
local god or politician or chief thug they don't know which yet. All done on
worked, poured crysorillium."
"Now that
I've heard of," Flinx interrupted.
The clerk nodded, smiling , sagely "Uh-huh …
rare heavy metal that looks a little like iridescent azurite, only greener and
much tougher. Thranx call it fonheese, or
Devoriar metal. They prize the stuff, but it's even more valuable to men,
because there's none of it on Earth, and little on the other explored worlds.
Here they call it blue gold.
"Itinerant old dirt-grubber found the mask
first, nearly forty years ago," the clerk went on. "I still remember
the first faxes of it. Beautiful thing. The local scientists went crazy on
seeing it. They said it held clues to a hundred missing years of Alaspinian
history. Of course, tire miner and his buddies were only interested in how many
diamonds and how many kilos of crysorillium they could get out of it.
"The mask went back and forth, changing hands
between miners and scientists and back again, losing a certain amount of metal
and diamonds with each transfer and replacing them with blood. Nor were all the
deaths between contesting miners and researchers, no. I remember the story of
two thranx scientists who published simultaneous identical interpretations of
the mask's upper writing. They ended up in a duel and killed each other. That's
why the Commonwealth government had to step in and take the thing over, to
prevent any more deaths. Even so, the last two people the mask `killed' were
murdered over a plot to break into the museum and steal it."
He waved a hand at the bustling street outside the
office window. "From what's been learned, they say Alaspin once boasted
several hundred different societies, united by a worldwide system of
engineering and weights and measures, that sort of thing. But each society
different. There are tens of thousands of mapped ruined structures out there,
Flinx, and that's estimated to be only a small portion of the total. Each
culture worshipped its own gods. So, you see, it became kind of a sporting
competition to see whose temples could be the most lavishly decorated. Jungle
and swamp have taken many of them over, but it's still a treasure hunter's
paradise out there, for anyone who wants to risk the weather, the hostile flora
and fauna, and the aborigines."
"Aborigines?" Flinx exclaimed. That was
enough "c set the clerk to gabbing again.
"The sociologists working here aren't sure about
tae abos. They don't seem to bear much resemblance to reconstructions of what
the original Alaspinians were: like. 1`1o one can decide for sure if they're in
fact degenerate remnants of the original dominants, or simply another
semisentient group that's evolved to take the place left by the vanished major
culture." He fumbled with some tapes. "I've got to get back to my own
work young man. Sorry if I bored you."
"No, you've been very informative," Flinx
told him honestly.
"That's Alaspin then, son. A place where
fortunes and reputations can be made, sometimes together. And I am sorry,"
he added, remembering his visitor's original reason for corning, "that I
don't know of your oversized quarry with the gold ring."
Flinx left the office, and found himself wandering
in no particular direction through the town. Casual conversation and random
questioning had gained him nothing. His best chance for finding out anything
lay with the local arm of the Commonwealth peaceforcers. They should have
records of just about everyone why ever set foot on this world and passed
through the screenings at the port. But a direct inquiry would likely be met
with questions. The police did not supply faxes and biographs to anyone who
walked in off the street and asked for them. He didn't think they would
cooperate without a few answers- answers Flinx would rather not give.
Passing a street vendor, be palmed a food stick and
replaced it without being detected. Old habits were hard to break. But stealing
the right fax tape would be hard to do, perhaps even impossible. The local
peaceforcers would not be city-soft.
That left him with only the prospect of endless
questioning ahead. Angrily he mused that coming here had probably been a
mistake. Mother Mastiff was right-he was going to find nothing In his an anger
he didn't notice that he was now walking through a section of town he had not
been to before.
Besides, there were his responsibilities to the
Ulru-Ujurrians. Without his supervision their innocent experiment could prove
dangerous to themselves and to others. They needed him to explain the rules of
civilization as they constructed their own.
What was be wasting his time for, then? Probably the
man he sought had never set foot on the soil of Alaspin, had acquired his
minidrag elsewhere, just as Flinx had. Time was passing. Why, in a little while
he'd be twenty. Twenty! An old man.
A tightening on his shoulder caused him to look that
way and speak comfortingly. "l Know, Pip ... don't worry." The
minidrag stared back up at him with slitted, anxious eyes. "I'm just
nervous, that's all." But it wasn't Flinx's state of mind which had caused
his pet to tense. The source lay ahead.
A group of locals- prospectors, by the look of their
clothes-were chatting in front of a business which managed to flourish a garish
front even in the still bright light of late afternoon. Concluding their
conversation, one man and the two women miners left and walked on up the
street. They turned to wave a goodbye, which the two men who stayed behind
returned before entering the building.
Flinx had a good look at one, less so at his
companion. The man nearest him was short, his skin darker than Flinx's but not
black. That color was reserved for his hair, which fell straight and slick to
just above his shoulders. Cheekbones bulged in his face like apples in a
child's pocket, and his nose was as sharp and curved as the fins of an
atmosphere flier. The other man was not nearly so swarthy, and was of a
different ethnic background.
These details were interesting but they were only
incidental to what had caused both man and minidrag to tense. Each man had
displayed a curled form on a shoulder, one on the left, the other on the right.
Even from a distance there was no mistaking that blue-and-pinkish-red pattern
of interlocking diamond shapes.
Minidrags!
Tame ones, probably as domesticated as Pip. His pet
was the only miniature dragon Flinx bad ever sec. While he had known that Pip
came from here, he had no idea that the practice of domesticating the venomous
creatures was popular. Certainly it wasn't widespread, because be bad wandered
through mach of the town without seeing any tame flying snakes. Until now.
He increased his speed and found himself facing the
entrance. If nothing else, he would learn something of his pet on this trip.
The two men inside living as they did on the snakes' native planet, likely knew
more about minidrags than Flinx had been able to learn on his own. Seeing the
two men together, he suspected that the bond achieved between man and reptile
led to one between men capable of taming such a dangerous animal, It was a
suspicion compounded of equal pares naivete and reason. If he was right, they
would greet him as a friend.
Despite his anxiety, the entrance to the structure
stir gave him pause- the two men had entered a simiespin. Flinx was familiar
with the notorious, barely tolerated simie booths. Places of unrefined
amusement often advertised such booths for use.
In a simie booth, an individual's thoughts were
read, amplified, and displayed three-dimensionally in the booth user's mind.
The dreamlike simulacrum was complete with all relevant sensory accompaniment
sight, smell, touch, everything. All it took was the modest fee. .
Naturally, a simie booth was private. Intrusion into
a private booth, during which the intruder could also partake of some private
dream, was one of the most universally decried offenses in the Commonwealth.
This because the most unassuming individual could rid him or herself of the
most depraved, obnoxious fantasies no matter how hellish they might be, without
harming anyone.
Since booth owners didn't care what fantasies their
patrons conjured up, simies were once considered obscene and bad been banned.
The resultant great legal battle had finally been decided in favor of the simie
manufacturers. Freedom of thought, one of the pillar principles of the
Commonwealth, was brought to bear on the argument, and it was that which had
finally defeated the censors. That, and the solemn testimony of a Church
medical team. The team had deplored the uses to which the booths were sometimes
put while simultaneously ruling that the booths had therapeutic value.
What Flinx was confronting was something at once
less disreputable and more unsettling. In effect, a simiespin was a greatly
enlarged simie booth which surrounded an entire establishment-a restaurant, a
bar, sometimes even a travel agency. Preprogrammed, the simiespin machinery
projected mass three-dimensional illusion. It provided an always- changing
environment, keyed by the random thoughts of its patrons but preprogrammed with
nondestructive simulacra. The thrill was in never knowing where a visitor might
find himself next.
Simiespins vied with one another in the detail of
their programming and the intensity of their simulations. Unwary visitors had
been known to suffer from spells of madness, unable to cope with the rapid-fire
change of environments, but these cases were insufficiently common to close the
simiespins down. Ample warnings were posted outside to keep the unwary and
uncertain from entering.
There was additional protection, as Flinx discovered
after paying the fee and entering. He found himself in a long hallway, dark and
lined with fluorescent murals depicting scenes from different worlds. It was
more than a mere entranceway. He could feel a tickling at his mind.
Behind those decorative murals lay expensive,
sensitive equipment, which the law had determined necessary. If any of them
felt that Flinx's mind or that of any other prospective patron was ill equipped
to handle the fluctuating environment of the spin, alarms would sound and human
or mechanical attendants would appear. They would announce with regret that
those so analyzed would have to search elsewhere for amusement.
It was interesting that although a simiespin could
serve food and drink that by themselves produced mental effects, there was no
age restriction. What has required was a firm grasp on reality. Children were
notoriously weak in that area, and so in general were barred from entering. But
those children whom the machines passed were welcome within, whereas certain
adults were rejected. It could and did lead to occasional embarrassment for
overconfident parents, when they were denied entrance and their offspring were
passed on.
Flinx found himself wondering how many politicians
would be refused admittance to a simiespin. He was not surprised when the
machinery also passed Ali. His alien tag- along had no grip on reality, and so
was freely granted admittance to the lesser madness ahead.
Before him the door pulsed with an internal ruby
glow, a promise of pleasure beyond. A sensuous mechanical voice murmured
softly, "You have paid for and have been granted permission to sample our
palette of a thousand worlds. Your pet"-an apparent reference to
Ab-"may enter with you but must be kept under control at all times. You
will be charged ..." and the voice quoted various figures; the rate went
downs-the length of time increased. "On your way out or in, partake of the
invigorating refreshments we offer," the voice concluded. Flinx nodded. It
was a bar, as he had suspected.
Smoothly the pulsing red door slid into the floor.
Flinx braced himself mentally and walked forward. Ills initial reaction was one
of letdown. The simiespin chamber was huge, a good three stories high inside. Though
it didn't look like an ordinary gathering chamber at present. Instead of
benches and booths and a bar, he found himself looking at a sloping beach
studded with boulders. It was evening. A sun much pinker and hotter than either
Moth's or Alaspin's was turning the drifting stratus clouds above the color of
purple-lavender waves lapped sonorously at the yellow sands. A few strange
plants swung lazily in the hot breeze of, the water, almost in time to the
humming sound of unknown, source.
Nearby a man and a woman lay entwined in each
other's arms. Their filthy prospectors' clothing was grotesquely out of place
in the idyllic scene, but neither appeared to mind. They were elsewhere anyway,
no doubt partly as a result of whatever they were sucking from a nearby boulder
through a pair of long, sturdy plastic siphons.
"Where are we?" Flinx asked, his curiosity
at the vision around him overcoming his unease at invading the couple's
privacy,
The man didn't object. Palling the tip of the siphon
from his lips, he eyed Flinx and muttered dreamily, "Quofum, I think.
Quofum."
That was a world Flinx had heard of once. It
supposedly lay far from the Commonwealth's boundaries, somewhere along the
inner edge of the Arm. Only a few humans and thranx had ever succeeded in
visiting it. Something was wrong with space in that region, something which
caused Quofum to appear only occasionally at the coordinates recorded.
Fabled Quofum, where the sky was as clear as a
virgin's conscience and the wine-colored seas tasted of everything from ouzo to
Liebfraumilch. For the oceans of Quofum were varied, though the sea-stuff
normally ran about nine percent alcohol. In the endless oceans of Quofum, so
the tale ran, swam fish who were never unhappy.
Stepping off the wooden landing, he found his feet
sinking slightly into warm sand. Then he was by the edge of the sea, which
stretched endlessly to the horizon. Sunset outdid itself as he kneeled at the
edge of the water. Purple comfort ran over his knees and extended hands. Pip
stirred uneasily on Flux's shoulder, shook him with a start back to reality. It
was the most perfect illusion Flinx had ever experienced.
Cupping his hands, Flinx dipped them into the sea,
brought them up, and sipped a double palmful of ocean. The flavor of the
seawater was rich, fruity, and strong, with a powerful bouquet and a gentle
perfume caused by the warming effect of his hands.
Rising, he noticed the stains on his jumpsuit and,
frowned.
Someone chuckled.
Looking behind, he saw the two minidrag tamers he
had followed in, leaning up against a wave-worn rock. The one with the aquiline
nose called to him. His accent was unplaceable.
"Join us, young dragon lord, and sit with your
fellow, reptiles."
Flinx started up the beach, brushing fitfully at hi,
pants.
"Don't worry," the swarthy man assured
him, "the stains will disappear the moment you leave. They're as unreal as
the sand and the drunken oceans."
Even so, Flinx could still taste the smooth wine in
his mouth, feel the wetness where it had swirled around his wrists and knees.
The sand remained hot underfoot. Yet despite the heat, he realized, he was
comfortable. No wonder only those of stable mind were permitted entry into such
places! One with a less solid grasp of reality could go quite mad here.
As if to test his thoughts, the sky above suddenly
blurred, as did the landscape around him. When :he brief moment of
disorientation had passed, he saw storm clouds overhead. Rain was falling
steadily, and lightning crashed around him as electrons warred 3n the heavens.
Flinx blinked away drops that he knew weren't real, that were only the
products of machinery so sophisticated and sensitive that few humanx really
understood how they operated. But he had to blink, the water dimmed his vision.
Jungle and high ferns closed tightly around him, the
startling climax vegetation of a cold-weather rain forest. He felt stifled, and
looked around frantically for the simiespin entrance. Naturally, he could see
nothing so out of keeping with the forest simulacrum. Rain continued to pelt
his head ant shoulders, sending Pip deep into the folds of Flinx's jumpsuit
material. Ab singsonged behind them, oblivious to the cold downpour.
Except ... Flinx wasn't cold.
"We're over here," a laughing voice called
to him.
He hunted but saw nothing. "Where?"
"Behind the big tree, straight ahead. We
haven't moved."
Flinx walked around a meter-thick bole which looked
like a cross between a Terran redwood and a bundle of black lizards tied
together. As he walked past, he tapped the trunk. It responded with a
stentorian bark that made him jump.
His response prompted another laugh, nearer now.
Behind the tree, the two minidrag tamers stood as before, only now they were
leaning up against a rotting stump. Rainbow- hued fungi formed a riot of color
on the dead wood.
"First time in a simiespin, compadre?" the
small man asked with a grin.
"Yes. I had some idea of what to expect
but" -he took in a deep breath- "it's still awfully disconcerting.
Especially the suddenness of the changes."
That's one of the attractions," the other man
countered. "As it is with everything in life."
"Don't pay any attention to Habib," the
short one advised. "One drink and he turns morbidly philosophical He
extended an open hand. "My name's Pocomchi." A nod toward Pip, peeking
out from beneath Flinx's shirt top. "You're the youngest I've ever seen
with a tame drag."
They were already on a first-name basis-good. As.
Flinx shook the proffered palm, Pocomchi extended Me other. It held a large,
fat mushroom. At least that's what it looked like. Flinx reached for it. As be
did so, the large triangular head cradled next to the short man's neck lifted.
A slight sneeze from that head and Flinx would be dead. But at a word from its
master, it relaxed.
The mushroom turned out to be full of a brown
liquid. It looked like gravy, but it held the kick of the whole bull. After a
stunned taste, Flinx handed it back.
Meanwhile, Pip's head was weaving back and fords, up
and down in jerky, dancing motions. His excitement was understandable. Since
Flax had found him, this was the first time he'd ever set slitted eyes on
another of his own kind. The two minidrags opposite were appatently more used
to others like themselves. They regarded Pip with only mild interest.
"I'm Flinx," he replied when he had his
breath back. As they sat down across from him, Flinx made a seat on the stump
of another dead bush; the spongy mold crushed to cushion his backside against
the hard wood.
"Tell me, is this a chair I'm sitting on, or...
?"
"You guess as well as we," the one called
Habib told him languidly. "All life's an illusion."
"There he goes again," grumbled Pocomchi
goodnaturedly. He pointed behind Flinx. "Since that's remained constant, I
assume it's not an illusion." Flinx saw that the man was gesturing at Ab.
"He's a ward of mine. Crazy as a drive
lubricator from too many fumes, but completely harmless."
"Funny-looking creature," Pocomchi
decided. he swigged his mushroom.
Flinx studied his seat. It looked exactly like a
dead stump. As he regarded it, it tuned into an eight legged, blue-furred
spider-shape which rolled bug-eyes and hearing organs at him. It didn't move,
however, and seemed content to support him. Somehow Flinx managed not to jump.
But his new friends noticed the irrepressible
twitch. "First time in a simiespin for sure," Pocomcln chuckled, as
the sky turned pale puce above them. Then his expression turned curious,
although the friendliness remained in his voice. "And maybe the first time
on Alaspin as well? But that makes no sense. Dragon lords are few, Flinx. I
don't recall seeing you before."
"I'm from offworld, all right," be
admitted. For some reason, he didn't hesitate to reveal information to these
men. Anyone who could tame one of the empathic telepaths called minidrags could
employ them only for defense, never to attack or bully or cajole others. The
snakes wouldn't do it. They would never associate with such a being in the
first place.
If these men were not informative, they might at
least be potential allies.
"Not only is it my first time here," he
continued, "but it's Pip's as well. He was abandoned on my home planet
when we were both much younger. In a way, I suppose," he concluded, fondly
rubbing the minidrag under one pleated wing, "it's more of a homecoming
for him than it is anything for me."
"Your dragon is as welcome as you,"
Pocomchi assured him. He leaned back into the supportive limbs of a
multitentacled creature. As Flinx watched, the alien octopus-shape became a
small tornado. Wind whistled and howled all around them. The jungle was gone.
"Isn't that right, Balthazaar, old
fellow?" Pocomchi had reached up to rub the neck muscles back of his
snake's skull. The big minidrag was obviously as much older as it was larger
than Pip.
"How does one get a drink in here?" Flinx
asked.
"If you don't want to try the mushrooms, or
other decor," Habib told him, "you can always tuck-a-tube." He
extended a hand downward to pull a red siphon out of the ground. "If this
doesn't appeal to you, there's a fairly standard mechbar back there." He
pointed at a giant bird, which abruptly turned into an emerald cactus. "I
much prefer the tube, because it matches the simie."
"I don't understand," Flinx confessed,
taking the tube with one hand and eyeing it uncertainly.
Habib smiled. "The liquid changes to match the
new environment. You never know what you're going to be sipping next."
Flinx made a face, and Habib hastened to reassure him. "You can't get
sick. This is a legitimate place. Plenty of modifiers included in the drinks to
make sure no one gets ill. The owner's proud of his reputation. Wouldn't do to
have customers puking all over his simulacra."
Habib retrieved the tube, stuck it in the corner of
his mouth, and leaned back. "How do I get one?" Flinx asked studying
the ground unsuccessfully.
"There's one by your right hip," Pocomehi
informed him. "It was sticking out of the left leg of that spider thing
you were sitting on a few minutes ago."
Looking down, Flinx saw the whirlwind he was sitting
on change into a blue stalagmite. Now they were in a cave filled with
chromatically colored formations: stalagtites, helicites, flowstone, and much
more. Cool cave air hung motionless around him.
One of the helicites sticking to his seat was longer
and straighter than its neighbors. It was also flexible, Flinx discovered when
he pulled on it. Sticking it into his mouth, he sucked experimentally. A thin
syrup flowed through the tube, with a taste redolent of overripe pomegranate.
It coated his throat. The sweetness did not make him sick.
There was, he decided, plenty of time to ask the
important questions. For now, he would enjoy the simespin's delights and the
company of these two companionable men.
At least an hour passed, although within the
simiespin there was no way of knowing the exact time, before Flinx spoke again.
"What do you two do?" Curious, he examined
them, the quick-moving, enthusiastic Pocomchi and his lanky, mournful
companion. "Surely you're not attached to one of the scientific teams
working on Alaspin?"
"Who, us-archeologists?" gasped Pocomchi,
eyes flashing in the dim light. The cave simulacrum, apparently proving
popular, had been returned. "Fine chance you'd have, Flinx, of finding one
of those brain-cases in a simiespin. No, they get their kicks down in the town
library that the Commonwealth maintains for them."
"You go to extremes, Poco," Habib
insisted. He ran a hand through thick, curly black hair. "Even the thranx
among them aren't strictly mental machines. You see thranx in here too, don't
you?" With an arm he gestured toward a cluster of sparkling aragonite
crystals, delicate as flowers. A male and female thranx were sprawled on their
stomachs, immersed in illusion and each other. The male was caressing his
companion's ovipositors suggestively.
The cave vanished as snow started to sift down over
them. Now Flinx's seat was a rough block of solid ice. Yet he remained
comfortable, even as the breath congealed in front of his mouth.
"We wander around a lot," explained
Pocomchi.
Habib leaned back into a snowbank and sucked silver
from the siphon. "What we actually do, Flinx, is ... not much." He
noticed the youth staring at his associate. "Tell the boy where you're
from, Poco. He's shared with us."
"I was born and raised in ..." Pocomchi
hesitated. "Just say it was on Earth, near the middle of what teachers
call the Hourglass. Near a place called Taxem." Fhnx admitted ignorance of
the name, thou«h he knew of the Hourglass, where the two smaller continents
met.
"It's an old archeological site," Pocomchi
went on. "I grew up surrounded by ancient temples. When I was seven I was
running the tiller in my family's quartomaize field when something went clunk
and the machine stopped. I sat there and cried for hours, afraid I'd busted the
damn expensive thing." He grinned at the memory as he watched Ab's antics.
"My mother finally heard me crying over the
locator I always wore ... there were creatures called jaguars living in our
neighborhood. When she and my uncle came out and moved the tiller, they found
I'd hit a buried stone head about twenty-six hundred years old. It was on our
land. The local museum paid one hundred fifty credits for it. I got ten whole
credits of my own to spend. I bought out part of the local sweetshop and for a
week I was sicker than a boa flying to swallow a maiden aunt." He took a
swig from his tube, which now projected from the head of a glowing fish. They
were underwater, Flinx noted with interest. Bubbles rose from his nose and
mouth, yet it fell as if he were breathing clean air.
Its sensory apparatus was beginning to handle the
extreme shifts in environment. Ab seemed to float in the water behind him.
"I've been trying to stumble over
credit-producing heads and related stuff ever since," finished Pocomchi.
"In short, he's as money-hungry as I am,"
Habib put in with a supple smile. "We're as bad as a Moth merchant."
Flinx bridled slightly at the deprecatory comment
directed at his home world, then relaxed. Why should he take umbrage at the
reference? He was no merchant. And if he had one friend in that trade, it was
off-balanced by a dozen enemies.
"So now you know what we're bunting for,"
muttered Habib, after explaining that he came from a part of Earth called
Lebanon. " What are you hunting here?"
"A man."
From nearby, Ab let out a startlingly clear bit of
nonsense rhyme. Habib sat forward; he seemed to notice the alien for the first
time.
"Why's that with you?"
"His associate," quipped Pocomchi.
"Both Flinx and I share the same fate."
"I acquired Ab by default," Flinx
explained yet again, as Habib threw his grinning partner a sour look. "I
haven't the heart to abandon him, and I'm not sure I could sell him. Besides,
Ab's not good for anything except singing madness and serving as the butt of
bad jokes."
"Never seen anything like it before,"
Habib admitted.
"Neither have I," added Pocomchi.
"The simie admitted him?"
"I don't think environment affects Ab,"
Flinx theorized, as the subject of the discussion drew lines in the snow.
"Once in a while he almost makes sense. I'm afraid Ab exists in a universe
of his own."
Ab bent over to stare with a single eye at something
on the ground. Apparently the thing was moving, since Ab's head inclined to
follow it between his legs. Slowly he tucked head and then neck beneath him,
until he fell over on his back- if it was his back and not his front- into the
snow. Flinx smiled sympatheticaly, while both men laughed.
"See?" Flinx said. "He's too pitiful
a creature to just leave someplace."
"You sure you're not a slaver?" Pocomchi
inquired with sudden sharpness. "You don't look the-"
"No, no," Flinx corrected, shaking his
head rapidly "I'm just here looking for a man."
"For what?" Habib asked with unexpected
directness.
Flinx hesitated, and finally said, "Personal
reasons."
"You want to kiss him or kill him?" Habib
pressed disarmingly, not put off by Flinx's disclaimer. But then, Flinx knew,
this was a frontier world, where such civilized subtleties as obfuscation were
unknown.
"Honestly, I'm not sure, Habib," he
admitted, considering for the first time what he would do if he actually
found the person he sought. "It depends on whether he's the end of a trail
or simply another signpost on it." Sighing, he repeated his description of
the man in question, for the hundredth-odd time on Alas pin:
"A very big man, age uncertain but not young.
Over two meters up, two hundred kilos in between, maybe less. Wears a gold ring
in hits right ear, or used to. Ire may or may not have a minidrag with him.
Don't tell me about the cargo handler at the port. I've already met him, and
he's not the one I'm seeking."
"Sounds like it could be ..." Habib was
murmuring thoughtfully, but his companion was already waving his hands with
excitement.
"Sure, we know him"
Flinx started, and slid off his ice block to land in
a shallow pool of thick petroleum. They were in a swamp again. a dark morass
dominated by carboniferous plants from which swung chittering oil-black
creatures with flaming red eyes. A red sun blasted the noon sky overhead,
stabbing through black-white clouds.
Minx saw only Pocomchi.
"Don't look so startled, lad," the Indian
urged. "It's not a common man you've described. The one we're both
thinking of fits, even to the gold earring." He shook his head, smiling at
some secret thought. " A character, even for Alaspin, he is."
"Could you- where is he?" Tins finally
managed to stutter as he fought to untangle himself from his siphon tube.
Habib made an expansive gesture eastward. "Out
there, doing the same things we do. Got a claim of sorts that he works with a partner."
He leaned forward slightly. "Personally, the grabbers I've talked with say
she's working an empty slot."
"When was the last time you saw him there, or
knew for sure that he was at this place?"
"Three, maybe four months ago," Pocomchi
considered, scratching the bridge of his impressive nose.
Flinx sagged inwardly. By now the man could be
anywhere, even offplanet. But it was something! A reason to remain.
Habib rose and sauntered toward Flinx, waving his
tube. "If I were to tell you some of the stories about your man, dragon
lord, you wouldn't ..." His mouth opened wide, and he gaped querulously at
Flinx. Then his hands went out in front of him reflexively as he fell forward,
metacarpal bones buckling as they hit the now- firm gravel floor of the desert
under them. Three suns burned hellishly above; a fourth was sinking over the
distant horizon.
Flinx had a glimpse of a hair-thin wire attached to
a needle the size of a nail paring protruding from Habib's back, near the
spine. A slight phut, and the needle
and wire were withdrawn. The faint smell of ozone lingered in the air as he
threw himself flat.
While Flinx crawled over the sand and gravel toward
Ab, Pocomchi was moving toward his friend calling to him wildly.
The instant Habib hit the ground, a tawny leathery
shape had left his shoulder. Now it was joined by Balthazaar, and then Flinx
felt a familiar weight leave his own arm. Like leaves in a dustdevil, the three
winged demons circled one another in the air. Then they were streaking as one
toward a gleaming boulder of solid cirriae off to Flinx's right. Several
violent hisses sounded behind them, a reptilian equivalent of a sonic boom.
Flinx continued toward Ab, shouting for the alien to
lie down. Two blue orbs moved, eyeing him quizzically. The slight puff of
displaced air sounded above Flinx. Artificial desert sunlight reflected from a
long, silvery thread. The thread ended in a sharp, tiny shape which struck the
quadrupedal alien just under one ate its four arms. A faint crackling sounded,
as if a hand had been dragged across a coarse wool blanket.
Ab stopped in mid-verse and appeared to quiver
slightly. Then lie resumed rhyming as if nothing had happened. Flinx reached
him, got his arms around three legs, and yanked. Ab tumbled to the sand. He stared
at his master with a blank but almost hurt expression.
Glancing behind them and to the right, Flinx save
that Pocomchi was kneeling next to the motionless form of Habib. Slowly, as if
fearing what he would learn, he extended a palm. It touched his companion's
back rested there a moment, then was brought away.
"Get down, Pocomchi!" Flinx yelled
frantically. The Indian didn't look over at him, and made no move to comply. He
appeared dazed. Maybe it was unconcern, Minx thought, when muted curses and
screams began to reach him from behind the tall spire of yellow quartz.
As he waited and watched, the boulder changed into a
giant diamond-bark tree, whose brown exterior flashed with blue sparks. Three
shapes fluttered out from behind the, tree.
Pleated wings braked as Pip came in for a landing,
tail extended like a hand. It curled around Flinx s shoulder, the body then
folding itself around the youth's extended arm pleated wings collapsing flat
against the cylindrical body. Flinx could feel the tenseness in the miridrag;
he noted that his pet was panting nervously. Slitted eyes continued to dart
watchfully from side to side.
A second minidrag, the constrictor-sized Balthazaar,
draped itself around the back and arms of the grieving Pocomchi. The long,
pointed tongue darted in and out worriedly, touching cheek, touching eyes,
touching.
Flinx watched Habib's minidrag settle to a curled
landing on its master's back. It lay there briefly, then slid forward to
examine the head. After several minutes, great pleated wings unfurled. The
flying snake fluttered forward until it was hovering in front of Habib's face.
Leathery wings beat at the air violently, sending wind into the motionless
man's mouth and nostrils.
More minutes, until the minidrag finally settled to
earth by the still head of Habib. It coiled itself, and they remained like
that, face to face, unmoving.
Flinx finally realized he was still holding on to
Ab's legs. As soon as be released him, the alien righted himself. Indifferent
to all that had taken place, Ab proceeded to inspect a tree root.
Keeping his eyes on the citrine boulder, Flinx
crawled over to sit next to Pocomchi. He was still cautious, but felt less and
less that any danger still hid behind the massive yellow rock.
There was no need to state the obvious. He had seen
death in Habib's eyes before the man hit the sand.
"Look, I'm sorry," he whispered tensely.
"We'd better try to get out of here."
"Why?" Pocomchi turned anguished eyes on
Flinx. When he spoke again, Flinx realized his question had nothing to do with
a reason for leaving the simiespin.
"We never stole a claim, we made no serious
enemies," the little man went on. His eyes returned to the slim prone form
below them. The sand and gravel beneath it abruptly, uncaringly, changed and
became blue grass.
"Three years. Three years we've been grubbing
and carving and stinking on this end-of-civilization world. Three years! Other
people hit it big all around us. But not us, never us." His voice rose.
"Why not us? Why not us?"
Flinx made calming motions. Other patrons were
beginning to look in their direction. The one thing he didn't want now was to
be asked unanswerable questions. Reaching out, he tried to grab Pocomchi by the
shoulders, to turn him toward him.
The moment be was touched, Pocomcbi shook the hands
violently from him. "Don't touch me!" Ire trembled; his voice was
full of homicidal fury.
After a moment's hesitation, Flinx sat back on hi,,
haunches. While waiting, he occasionally eyed the yellow massif, which had now
become a cluster of sutro branchings.
Pocomchi seemed to calm himself a little. Flinx decided to wait, despite
possible danger to himself, until the tormented Indian regained a measure of
self-control.
So be turned his attention to the corpse at his
feet. There was no blood, no visible wound. Leaning close, he saw where the
needle- tipped wire bad touched. A small hole bad been made in the back of
Habib's shirt. It was blackened around the edges. The peculiar smell still hung
above the spot: ozone.
At least, he reflected gratefully, the philosophical
miner had not suffered. Death had been instantaneous, brought on at the moment
of contact with the needle.
A hand touched his shoulder. He glanced up
anxiously, then relaxed. Pocomchi was standing above him, looking down at the
body of his friend. His firm, assured grip was comfort enough for Flinx.
"I'm okay now, Flinx. It's just that- that
" He fought for the words. He wanted them to be right. "Habib was
about the only man on this world that could stand me, and be was one of the few
that I could stomach. Three years." Abruptly, he rose and turned to face
what was now a clump of trees long extinct on Earth but still flourishing in
mind tapes.
"Come on," he instructed Flinx as he
started toward the small cluster of elms, "I want to see the dirt."
After a last backward glance at the body, Flinx
hurried to catch up with the Indian. "What about your friend?"
Pocomchi didn't look back at him. "He'll lie
there until the place closes. First the management will run their drunk crew
through to help out those able to walk. Then they'll come through again and
sweep up the incapacitated.
"Habib would like that, when they find out he's
more than drunk. First they'll panic-probably think it's something toxic that's
snuck into their siphon mixture. Then they'll locate the real source of death,
electrocution, and go crazy trying to find the malfunction in their simie
machinery.
"When that doesn't turn up anything," he
concluded bitterly, "a few credits will change hands and they'll give him
a proper, if circumspect, burial. The Church will make sure of that."
They were almost around the grove of elms when the
trees became a pair of enormous mushrooms. Flinx found himself slowing, putting
out a restraining hand. "Don't you think maybe ...?"
Pocomehi shook his head curtly. "Balthazaar
would never have come back if any kind of threat remained. Nor would your drag,
I suspect."
Flinx murmured agreement. It was not the time to
argue- and he settled for letting the Indian round the corner first. When
nothing sent him reefing back in his death throes, Flinx moved to join him.
There were two bodies on the ground. One was clad in
a yellow-green dress suit, the other in a casual coolall. Flinx had a bad
moment, but it gave way to what he expected to feel when Pocomchii put a foot
under one corpse and flipped it over. The dress suit fell aside, revealing a
familiar skin-tight blackness beneath.
Barely restrained anger gave way to puzzlement as
Pocomehii checked the heads. A floppy green hat fell aside to show a
black-and-crimson skullcap beneath. "Qwarm," he muttered with a
frown. "We've had no dealing with them. Habib and I hadn't discovered
anything worth killing over, nor have we offended anyone that badly. Qwarm are
expensive. Why would anyone want to have us killed?"
Something clicked, and he jerked his bead up to see
Flinx staring patiently back at him. "You. Why do the Qwarm want you
dead?"
"Not me," the youth explained, pointing
behind him.. "It's Ab they want. Though they want me too because I got too
curious about why they wanted Ab."
"I'm not sure I'm following you, Flinks."
By way of an answer, Flinx pointed at the two
awkwardly sprawled venom-scarred bodies. "If two of their members,"
he explained, "hadn't reacted without thinking, I might not be involved
with them at all Habib might still be alive." He gestured loosely at the
corpses. "So might they."
Pocomchi's reply was laced with contempt. "What
do you care about a pair of soulless murderers like these?"
"They're humanx," Flinx responded quietly.
Pocomchi grunted eloquently. Then he raised one foot
over the body he had overturned and brought it down with a hard, twisting
motion. There was a cracking sound, as of shattering plastic. Kneeling, the
Indian tore open the back of the black shirt. Several square plastic cases were
linked together around the assassin's waist. A thin but heavily insulated cord
ran from one case to a tiny, childish-looking plastic gun lying on tae floor.
"Supercooled dense battery pack," Pocomchi
explained, examining the arrangement. He touched a small switch on the cord
before picking up the toy gun by its insulated handgrip. "Delivery
terminal," he declared. "Fires a small needle attached to a
wire."
Flinx had heard of this weapon but had never seer
one before-But then, there were many ways of killing, and the Qwarm undoubtedly
knew most of them.
"The wire rolls onto a spool inside the
handgrip," Pocomchi was telling him evenly. "It serves two functions:
to deliver the lethal charge and to guide the needle to its target. A good man
with one of these"-he hefted the little weapon easily-" isn't stopped
by any kind of shielding. If you're good with the guide system, I understand,
you can shoot around several corners. An opponent wouldn't get a shot at you,
or even a clear look. Or a chance ... to fight back."
Flinx knew Habib had been electrocuted instantly.
Then why…?
He found himself walking out from behind the
mushrooms, to look across a newly born brook. On the far side, Ab had an
artificial yellow-and-pink flower in one hand. A big blue eye was bent close,
studying the petals.
"I don't understand," Flinx muttered, half
to himself.
"I don't understand either," snapped
Pocomchi. Then he became aware that Flinx was staring, and not referring to the
killing that had just taken place.
"It's Ab..., my alien," Flinx told him
eventually. "That needle hit him. I saw
it hit him. I heard it. The charge went into him, and he doesn't show any
sign of it. I've heard of natural organic grounders before, nervous systems
which can shuttle enormous voltages harmlessly through their own bodies-but
never in an animal, always in plants."
Pocomchi shrugged. "Maybe your Ab is a plant
imitating an animal. Who knows? All that should matter to you is that he was
immune to this particular kind of murder."
Fliax was looking around nervously now. "This
means they know I'm on Alaspin. I've got to move." He started off to his
right. "Are you coming, Pocomchi? I could use your help."
The Indian laughed sardonically. "You're a fine
one to be asking for my help, young dragon lord. You're marked for dying. Why
should I go anywhere with you? I can think of a dozen simpler ways to commit
suicide."
Flinx stopped. He stared hard but unthreateningly
back at Pocomchi. "I need to find the man you told me of, even though he's
probably just another false lead. You're the only one on Alaspin I know who
could find him for me. I don't expect you to come with me out of friendship.
I'll settle for hiring you. Why should you go anywhere with me? Why not?"
he finished, rather heartlessly. "You have other immediate
prospects?"
"No," Pocomchi whispered blankly, "no
other immediate prospects."
"But money isn't sufficient reason for you to
come with me," Flinx went on relentlessly. "So I'll give you a better
reason. I'd be very surprised if they don't try to kill Ab and me again."
Pocomchi rose and brushed at his pants to wipe off
imaginary sand. "That's no reason."
"Think Pocomchi," Flinx urged him.
"It means that you and Balthazaar will have a chance to meet some more
Qwarm."
The Indian glanced up at him, uncomprehending for a
moment. Then his expression tensed with the realization of what Flinx was
telling him. "Yes. Yes, maybe we will have a chance to meet some of that
kind again. I'd like that." He nodded slowly, forcefully. "I'll go
with you and guide you, Flinx." Turning, he spat on the two limp bodies
and started to murmur in a guttural, alien tongue.
Flinx reached out, took Pocomchi's unresisting arm,
and tugged him toward the exit. The man allowed himself to be led, but never
ceased his muttering, which was directed at the two corpses they were leaving
behind.
They crossed the small brook. In midstream it turned
into a river of molten lava. Flinx felt gentle heat swirling around his legs,
when they should have been burned to cinders. But he took only the barest
notice of the effect. His mind was full of thoughts unconnected with the
sensory gluttony provided by the simiespin machinery.
"Come on, Ab!" he shouted behind him. Blue
eyes focused on him. With a good-natured singsong having something to do with
vultures and fudge, the alien followed the two men across the glowing pahoehoe.
By the time they reached the simiespin exit, Pocomchi had recovered enough to
pay for his stay with his own credcard, though from time to time be would
resume his muttering.
Finally they were on the street outside. Flinx
started back toward his motel, Pocomchi walking alongside. The last remaining
light of the Alaspinian evening was fading to an amber luminescence. Expecting
a new kind of destruction to stab at them from behind every crate and barrel,
from every rooftop and floater, Flinx found his gaze shifting constantly at
imagined as well as real movements.
A hissing cry sounded suddenly- a reptilian wail.
Both men paused. Behind them, a leathery winged shape rose into the sky. It
passed over their heads, soaring on brilliantly hued wings as it lifted into
the sunset. For a minute it paused there, above and slightly ahead of them,
circling as it climbed. A dream-dragon out of a childhood fairy tale, its
colorful diamond pattern caught the fading sun.
Abruptly it gave another short cry; it had reached a
decision. Wings pushing air, it shot off in the direction of the setting sun.
Light and distance combined to obscure Flinx's view of it in a very short
while.
Both men resumed walking. "I wondered what
Habib's minidrag would do," Flinx murmured thoughtfully. "I always
wondered what a tame minidrag would do if its master died."
"Now you know-they turn wild again,"
Pocomchi elaborated. "Hazarez was a good snake." He eyed the sun,
which had swallowed the last sight of the shrinking dark dot. "Balthazaar
will miss Hazarez, too."
"We're liable to miss a lot more," Flinx
assured his companion, "if we don't get off these streets before dark. The
Qwarm prefer two sets of clothing: black cloth and night. I've got a few little
things in my room I want to collect. Then we can rent a floater and get out of
the city." He increased his pace, calling back over his shoulder,
"Get a move on, Ab- I'm in a hurry!"
Four legs working effortlessly, the blue-green alien
complied without any indication of strain.
Darkness owned that corner of Alaspin by the time
they reached the modest hotel Flinx was staying in. His room pass keyed the
transparent doorway. Panels slid aside, admitting both men and Ab to the
unpretentious lobby.
Flinx headed straight for the lift; his rooms were
on the third floor. Pocomchi and Ab trailed close behind so close that when
Flinx halted as if shot, the Indian nearly ran into him.
"Flinx?" Pocomchi inquired softly, alert
now himself.
An,amorphous, oppressive something had fallen like a
thick curse over Flinx's thoughts. For a moment he had difficulty classifying
the source. Then he knew. The mental stench of recent death permeated the
entire building.
He told himself it might merely be a lingering
aftereffect of the simiespin experience, a sort of mental hangover. It could
also be the result of his often-morbid imagination. But he did not think so. He
was trying to rationalize away his fear of what must have taken place here.
Instead of taking the lift, he tried to lean in the
direction where the brain-smell was strongest. It led him toward the opposite
side of the lobby. Mirable's quarters and office were here.
When he placed his palm over the call contact, he
heard a reassuring buzz within. But no one came to open the door or check on
the caller. He repeated the action, with the same result.
He tried to tell himself she could be out of the building.
That must be it. His bill was paid for two more days in advance, but it would
only be polite to leave a message explaining his sudden departure.
Picking the light stylus from its holder in the
wall, he inscribed his good-bye on the electronic message screen. Then he
pushed the transcribe button. When she returned, her presence would activate
the screen machinery. His light images would be turned into voice and played
aloud for her.
Replacing the stylus, he turned to leave. Pocomchi
caught him and nodded at the doorway: "Listen."
Flinx obeyed. He heard something, then realized it
was the message he had just left. 'that meant Mirable had to be in her
apartment.
Why didn't she respond?
Experimentally, he placed a hand on the door and
pushed. It slid back a few centimeters into the wall. That didn't make sense
either. If she was within, surely she would have set the lock. Even on a
relatively crime-free world-let alone a boisterous planet like Alaspin - such a
device was standard equipment, built into the doorway of every commercial
establishment.
The door continued to slide back under his pressure.
He peered inward.
A voice called from behind him, "What's going
on, Flinx?"
"Shut up."
Pocomchi was the sort of man who had broken limbs
for less than that, but something in Flinx's manner induced him to comply
without protest. He contented himself with watching the hotel entrance and the
lift doors, while keeping an eye on Ab.
Shoving the door all the way into the wall, F1inx
noticed a dark spot near its base. A thin stain indicated that a fluid-state
switch had been shattered. That tied in with the broken lock mechanism.
Slowly he walked into the room. Internal machinery
detected his body heat and brightened the chamber in greeting. It was decorated
with the sort of items one might expect to be chosen by a woman whose dreams
were rapidly leaving her behind. The flowers, the little-girl paraphernalia, a
few stuffed animals on a couch, all were nails desperately hammered into a door
against which time pressed relentlessly.
Then he saw the leg sticking out from behind the
couch. The trussed body of Mirable lay naked beyond. Most of the blood had
already dried.
A vast coldness sucked at him as he kneeled over the
rag-doll shape. One eye stared blankly up past him. He put a hand up and closed
it gently. The other eye was missing. A look of uncomprehending, innocent
horror was frozen on her face. About that he could do nothing.
Why she had shielded him, as she apparently had, he
could not imagine. Whether out of some strange loyalty or the like, or out of
pure stubbornness, she had not talked immediately. That would please ordinary
criminal types, but not the Owarm. True sadism was not a luxury professionals
could afford, and they had done a professional job on her. But he did not
understand why they had killed her. It was almost as if her obstinacy bad
irritated them.
Quickly he left the room and the body, surrounded by
now- dead dreams. He almost expected to see Pocomchi and Ab lying dead across
each other. But both were standing there, Ab mumbling amiably to himself and
Pocomchi waiting silently. The Indian said nothing.
Flinx's gaze went immediately to the lift. He did
not think anyone had seen them enter the building; if they bad, he would not be
standing here now.
"They're upstairs, I think," he told the
expectant miner.
"I know where we can rent a skimmer now, if
you've got the money," Pocomchi told him.
"I've got the money." Flinx took a step
toward the lift. Pocomchi caught his arm, hard. Both minidrags stirred.
"You did me a right turn, back in the
spin," the Indian said tightly. "Now it's my turn." He jerked
his head toward the lift and the floors above. "This isn't the place or
time. They've chosen both. When the time comes, we'll be the ones who've done
the planning."
Flinx stared at him for a long moment. Pocomchi
stared back.
"It was the woman who owned this hotel,"
Flinx finally explainod flatly. Pocomchi let go of his arm, and they started
slowly for the door. "She should have told them about me immediately."
Both men checked the door and the street beyond. It
was empty.
"Then she did tell them," Pocomchi said.
Flinx nodded. "Not right away."
"Why not?" the Indian wanted to know as
they exited and turned right down the street. Nothing fell from above to explode
between them; no one challenged them from behind a corner.
"I don't know," he admitted, unable to
blot the pitiful image of her twisted form from his mind. "It was a
;stupid, foolish thing to do."
"She must have had some reason," pointed
out Pocomchi.
"I think ..." Flinx's tongue hesitated
over the words. "I think she liked me, a little. I didn't think she liked
me ... that much."
"One other thing." Dark eyes turned to
Flinx in the dimness. "As soon as we started for the elevator, you. knew
something was wrong. How?"
If nothing else, Flinx owed this little man some
truth. "I can sense strong feelings sometimes. That's what hit me when we
went in. An overwhelming sensation of recent death."
"Good," Pocomchii commented curtly.
"Then you know how I feel." He increased its speed, and although
Flinx was a fair runner and in good condition, he had trouble staying alongside
him. "Let's travel," Pocomchi urged him, seemingly not straining at
the wicked pace. "Let's get that skimmer."
As they ran they passed several late-evening
strollers. Some examined the racing triumvirate curiously. A few stopped to
gawk at the four-footed apparition loping along behind the two men.
But as he panted and fought to keep up with
Poeomchi, Flinx knew that no death lay behind any oŁ those staring eyes. That
threat was behind, receded with every additional stride they took into the
night. As the warm air enfolded him he wondered how much longer it would stay
behind him.
In comparative silence, the skimmer drifted across
the waving grassland of Alaspin.
Flinx had the feeling he was riding a bug over an
unmade green bed. Neither the topography nor the vegetation was uniform in
height or color. Here and there the familiar green gave way to a startlingly
blue sward, and in other places to a bright yellow. Heavier growth, sections of
bush, forest, and jungle, protruded like woody tentacles into the sea of reeds
and grass.
He studied the individual seated next to him, in the
pilot's chair. Pocomchi seemed to be perfectly normal, very much in control of
himself. Still, Flinx could sense the tension in the man, along with the
anguish at his partner's death. Both had been pushed aside. To any other
onlooker, the Indian's attention would have seemed to be wholly on the rippling
savanna beneath them. Flinx knew otherwise.
From their position, roughly a meter above the
waving stalks, he inclined his head to squint up at the warm buttery beacon of
Alaspin's star. It was a cloudless day, too hot for human comfort, too cool for
a thranx to really enjoy.
"I still don't know where we're going,
Pocomchi."
"The last I know of your man," the Indian.
replied conversationally, "he was working his claim near a city reputed to
be of Revarn Dynasty. Place called Mimmisompo. We're three days out of Alaspinport-
I'm hoping we'll reach the city some time this afternoon." Unexpectedly,
he smiled at his companion. His voice changed from the uncaring monotone Flinx
had gotten accustomed to over the past several days.
"Sorry if I've been less than good company,
Flinx." His gaze turned back to the terrain ahead. "Habib was the
type to mourn, not me. I'm kind of surprised a myself, and I certainly didn't
mean to shunt my misery off on you."
"You haven't shunted a thing off on me,"
Flinx assured him firmly. "Intimate deaths have a way of shaking one's
ideas about oneself." He wanted to say more, but something ahead caught
his attention. Pip squirmed at the abrupt movement, while behind Ab rambled on,
oblivious.
Just in front of the leisurely cruising skimmer the
sea of high grass had abruptly given way to a winding, curved path roughly a
hundred and fifty meters wide. Where the path wound, the tall growth bad been
smoothly sliced off a couple of centimeters above the ground. Some torn and
ragged clumps of uncut reeds pimpled the avenue, which looked to have been
created by the antics of a berserk mowing machine.
While Flinx tried to imagine what kind of instrument
had sliced away the grasses, which grew to an average height of several meters,
Pocomchi was pointing to some gliding, bat-winged avians armed with formidable
beaks and claws. "Vanisoars," he was saying, "scavengers
prowling the open place for exposed grass dwellers." Even as he spoke, one
of the creatures dove. It came up with an unlucky furry ball in its talons.
"But the path, what made it?"
"Toppers. Hexapodal ungulates," he
explained, examining the path ahead. He touched a contol, and the skimmer rose
to a height of six meters above ie topmost stalks. "This grass looks
fresh-cut. I think we'll see them soon."
The nearly noiseless engine of the skimmer permitted
them to slow to a hover above the herd of huge grazing animals. The largest
member of the herd stood a good three meters at the fore shoulder. Each of the
six legs was thick, pillarlike, to support the massive amored bodies. Hexagonal
plates covered sides and back.
Massive neck muscles supported the lowered,
elongated skulls. Most remarkable of all was the design of the snout. What
appeared originally to have been 2rmored, the nostril cover had lengthened and
broadened to form a horn in the shape of a double-bladed ax.
Flinx watched in fascination as the creatures
methodically cut their way through the green ocean. Lour ered, ax-bladed heads
swung in timed 180-degree arcs parallel to the earth, scything the grass,
reeds, and small trees almost level with the ground. Then the lead creatures
would pause briefly, using flexible lips to gather in the chopped vegetable
matter immediately around them.
Behind the leaders, immature males and females
followed in the path of the adults. They consumed the cut-down fodder prepared
for them by the leaders. A few small females guarded the end of the procession,
shielding the infants from a rear assault. The younger toppers had no
difficulty downing their share of food, which had been pounded to soft pulp by
the massive footpads of the larger herd members in front of them.
It seemed an ideal system, though Flinx wondered at
the need for a few adults to shield the calves. The smallest, he estimated,
weighed several tons. He questioned Pocomchi about it.
"Even a topper can be brought down,
Flinx," he was told. "You don't know much of Alaspin." He nudged
a switch, and the skimmer moved forward slightly. "See?"
Flinx looked down and saw that one of the lead bulls
was standing on its rear four legs, sniffng the air in a northerly direction.
The enormous nose horns looked quite capable of slicing through the metal body
of the skimmer.
"Let's see what he's got," Pocomchi
suggested. He headed the little craft sharply north. Flinx had to scramble to
keep his seat.
In a few minutes they were above something winding
its patient way through the reeds. Flinx had a brief sight of a long mouth
lined with curved teeth, and glowing red eyes. It snapped at the skimmer and Flinx
jerked reflexively.
Pocomchi grinned at his companion. "That's a
lance'el." He swung the skimmer around for another look. They passed over
a seemingly endless form laid out like a plated path in the grass. Row upon row
of short legs, like those of a monstrous millipede, supported scaly segments.
Flinx couldn't make an accurate estimate of its size.
"I knew it'd be well bidden," Pocomchi
said easily. "That's why I kept our altitude. We'd have made that fellow a
nice snack." A hiss-growl came from below; angry eyes stared up at them.
Pocomclu chuckled. "We've interrupted his
stalk, and he's not happy about it. It's unusual for a lance'el to strike at a
skimmer, but it's happened." Another growl from below. "They can jump
surprisingly well. I think we'd better leave this big one alone."
Flinx readily agreed.
Pocomchi had turned the skimmer and increased their
speed. They were back on their southwesterly course once more. As the sun
reached its zenith they were racing over bush and free-lined streams as much as
grassland.
I think we're all right," Pocomchi murmured,
checking a chart. "Yes." He shut off the screen and returned his
attention forward. "Another ten minutes, I think."
The time passed. Sure enough, Flinx discovered the
first reflections from stone and metal shining at them from between tall trees.
"Mimmisompo," his companion assured him, with a nod forward. He
slowed the skimmer, and in a minute they were winding carefully through soaring
trees hung heavy with vines and creepers.
"We're on the edge of the Ingre," Pocomchi
informed him, "one of the largest jungle-forests in this part of Alaspin.
Mimmisompo is one of many temple cities the archeologists don't consider too
important."
They were among buildings now, lengthy multistory
structures flanking broad paved avenues. Brush and creepers grew everywhere.
The fact that the city wasn't entirely overgrown was a tribute to the skill and
precision of its engineers. An abandoned city in a similer section of Earth
would have been all but eradicated by now.
It was a city of sparkling silence, an iridescent
monument to extinction. Everywhere the sun struck, it was reflected by a
million tiny mirrors. Mimmisompo had been constructed primarily from the dense
gold-tinged granites Flinx had seen employed in Alaspinport. The local stone
contained a much higher proportion of mica than the average granite. Walls
built of such material gave the impression of having been sprinkled with broken
glass.
The architecture was massive and blocky, with flying
arches of metal bracing the carefully raised stonework. Copper, brass, and more
sophisticated metalwork were employed for decorative purposes. It seemed as if
every other wall was fronted with some intricate scrollwork or bas-relief.
Adamantine yellow-green tiles roofed many smaller structures.
As they traveled farther into the city, Flinx began
to get some idea of its size. Even that, he knew, was an inaccurate estimate,
considering how many buildings were probably hidden by the jungle.
"Maybe it's not an important city," he
mused, "but it seems big enough to attract at least a few curious
diggers."
"Mimmisompo's been grubbed, Flinx," his
companion told him. "No one ever found a thing. At least, nothing I ever
heard of.”
"What about all those fancy engravings and
decorations on the buildings?"
"Simple relics and artifacts are throwaway
items on Alaspin," Pocomchi informed him. "This is a relic-rich
world. Now if some of those worked plates"-he gestured out the transparent
skimmer dome at the walls sliding past them-" were done in iridium, or
even good old-fashioned industrial gold, you wouldn't be looking at them
now."
"But surely," Flinx persisted, "a
metropolis of this size and state of preservation ought to be worthy of someone's interest. I'd expect to see at
least one small survey party."
Pocomchi adjusted their course to avoid a towering
golden obelisk. A broad grin split his dark-brown face. "I've told you,
you don't know Alaspin. There're much more important diggings to the north,
along the coast. Compared to some of the major temple-capitals, like Kommonsha
and Danville, Mimmisompo's a hick town."
"Stomped flat, sit on that, push it down and
make it fat."
"What's he drooling about now?" Pocomchi
asked, with a nod back to where Ab
squatted on all four legs.
Flinx looked back over the seat idly. Ab had been so
quiet for the majority of the journey that he had almost forgotten the alien's
presence. But instead of playing dumbly with all sixteen fingers, All appeared
to be staring out the dome at something receding behind the skimmer.
"What is it, Ab?" he asked gently.
"Did you see something?"
As always, the alien's mind told him nothing. It was
as empty as a dozen-diameter orbit. Two blue eyes swiveled round to stare
questioningly at him. Two bands gestured animatedly, while the other two
executed incomprehensible idiot patterns in the air.
"Behind the mine the ground has stomped
subutaneate residue lingers in the reschedule. Found itself often comatose. If
you would achieve anesthesia, take
two fresh eggs, beat well, and by and by up in the sky leptones like lemon
cream will..."
"Well?" Pocomchi asked.
Flinx thought, scratching the scaly snake head,
which was curled now in the hollow of his neck. "It's hard to tell with
Ab, but I think he did see something back there. There's nothing wrong with his
sensory input."
Even as he slowed the skimmer and brought it "c
hover, Pocomchi considered. He cocked a querulous eye at Flinx. "You
willing to waste some time to check out an idiot's information?"
"Why not," the youth responded, "since
we're probably on an idiot's
errand?"
"You're paying," Pocomchi replied
noncommittally. The skimmer whined slightly as its driver turned it around.
Slowly they retraced their path.
"Whatever it is has to be on the starboard side
now," Fiinx declared, carefully studying the landscape "That's the
side Ab was looking out."
Pocomchi turned his attention to the ground on his
right. In order to see clearly past him, Flinx had to stand. His head almost
bumped the top of the transparent canopy. Jungle-encrusted ruins passed by on
monolithic parade.
Several meters on, both men saw it simultaneously.
"Over there," Flinx said, "under the
blue overhang."
Pocomchi angled closer to the walls, then cut the
power. With the soft sigh of circuits going to sleep, fm little vessel settled
birdlike to the ground. A few shards of rock and shattered masonry crunched
beneath the skimmer's weight.
A touch on another control caused the canopy to fold
itself up and slide neatly into the skimmer's roof behind them. In place of the
steady hum of the engine, Flinx now heard jungle and forest voices emerging in
the silence. They were cautious at first, uncertain. But soon various unseen
creatures were whistling, howling, cooing, bellowing, hissing, and snuffling
with increasing confidence beneath the blue sky.
The noises fascinates Ab (didn't
everything?)."There is a large depression in the sermoid," he began.
Both men tuned out the alien versifying.
Their attention instead was focused on the massive
azure overhang to their left. It resembled blue ferrocrete, although that was
impossible- ferroerete was a modern building material. It stuck outward, a
thrusting blue blade shading a space fifteen meters square. In the sheltered
region beneath the overhang was a familiar, self-explanatory outline.
Pocomchi turned his gaze to the depression in the
earth. Flinx, his own thoughts still on the blue monolith, followed the Indian
out of the skimmer.
"I haven't seen that color before," he
told Pocomchi.
"Hmmm?" murmured the Indian, intent on the
outline pressed into the ground. "Oh, that. The ancient Alaspinians
colored a lot of their formed stone. That overhang isn't granite, it's a
cementlike material they also used. Probably a lot of copper sulfate in this
one, to turn it that dark a hue." He traced the outline in the ground with
his feet, walking around it.
"A pretty good-sized skimmer made this
mark," he announced. "Light cargo on board." Turning, he
struggled to see through stone and jungle, wails and trees. "Somebody's
been here recently, all right." Eyes intently focused on the ground, he
walked away from the outline until he was standing beneath the blue overhang.
"A good place for a first camp. Here's where
they unloaded their supplies," he noted, examining the dirt. He walked out
from under the sheltering stone and looked up across dense brush which formed a
green wave against the side of the structure. It sounded like corduroy against
his jumpsuit.
"They've gone off through here, Flinx."
Turning, he eyed his anxious young companion. "Yes, it might be your
massive mystery man with the gold earring. Whoever it was, they've spent some
money." He pointed to where the brush had been smashed down repeatedly to
form a fair pathway that was only now beginning to recover from the tread of
many feet. "They made a lot of trips to transfer their stuff deeper into
the city. I thought everyone had given up on this location years ago."
He started back toward the skimmer. Flinx was gazing
with interest at the azure overhang, wondering at its original purpose. A
temple at least a hundred meters high towered behind it. The massive blue form
had fallen outward, leaving a gaping hole in the temple wall. Beyond he could
barely make out a darkened interior lined with shattered masonry, dangling strips
of punched metal, shade-loving plants, and the emptiness of abandonment.
"What do we do now?"
Pocomchi grinned at him and shook his head.
"You've hardly heard a word I've said, have you? There's the remnants of a
service trail back here, clear enough for us to follow. Since they felt the
need to walk it from this point, I think it's safe to assume we can't get the
skimmer through. Hopefully your quarry will be at the other end of the trail.
Anyway, I'd like to meet anyone foolish enough to think there's anything worth
taking out of Mimmisompo. I hope they've got easy trigger fingers and an
inviting nature."
"Let's get going, then," ventured Flinx.
"Easy, dragon lord." He indicated the sun.
"Why not wait till we've a full day to hike with? No one's running
anyplace, least of all the people we're hunting. I think they're pretty deep
into the brush." A hand waved in the direction of jumbled stone and bushes
where the trail lay. "There are creatures crawling around in there that
I'd rather meet in daytime, if I have to meet them at all. I'll set up a
perimeter, and we'll sleep by the skimmer tonight."
A radiant fence was quickly erected in a half
circle, with the skimmer inside. Another compartment of the compact craft
produced inflatable mattresses and sleeping material. It would have been safer
to sleep in the skimmer, but the small cockpit was cramped enough with two men.
Two men trying to sleep inside, together with Ab and a pair of minidrags, would
have been impossible.
Their temporary habitat was topped by an inflatable
dome, which would serve as weather shield in the event of wind or storm. The
semipermeable membrane of the dome would permit fresh air to enter and allow
waste gases to pass out, but would shunt aside anything as thick as a raindrop.
Outside, the radiant fence would keep curious
nightstalkers at bay, while Balthazaar and Pip could be counted on to serve as
backup alarms in the event that anything really dangerous showed up. As for
arboreal predators, the great majority of them were daylight hunters, according
to Pocomchi.
Flinx leaned back on the soft mattress and stared
out the dome toward the trail site. He was anxious to be after whoever had made
it, impatient to have this search resolved once and for all. But this was
Pocomchi's planet. It would be wise to take his advice.
Besides, he thought with an expansive yawn, he was
tired. His head went back. Through the warm tropical night and the thin
material of the dome he could count the stars in strange constellations. Off to
the east hung a pair of round, gibbous moons, so unlike the craggy outline of
Moth's own rarely glimpsed satellite, Flame.
The single moon of distant Ulru-Ujurr was larger
than these two combined, he thought. Memories of his pupils, the innocent
ursinoid race which lived on that world, pulled strongly at him. He felt
guilty. His place was back there, advising them, instead of gallivanting around
the Commonwealth in search of impossible-to learn origins.
A fetid breeze drifted through the single window,
set above and to the side of his bed. Soft crackling noises, like foil
crumpling, drifted in to him. In a little while, the alien lullaby had helped
him fall sound asleep.
First sunlight woke Flinx. Rolling over, he
stretched once and was instantly awake. Pocomchi lay on the mattress next to
him, snoring stentorianly for so small a man. He stretched out a hand to wake
the Indian, and frowned as be did so. Something was missing, something so
familiar that for a long moment he couldn't figure out what was gone.
He woke Pocomchi, sat up, and thought. The motion of
rising brought the absence home to him. All at once, Flinx was moving rapidly,
searching behind the mattress by the skimmer body, on the opposite side of
Pocomchi's bed. Nothing.
Zipping open the doorway, he plunged frantically
outside and almost ran toward the jungle before remembering the radiant fence.
Standing by the inside edge of the softly glowing barrier, he put cupped hands
to his lips and shouted, "Pip! Where are you, Pip!"
His eyes swept the trees and temple tops, but the
searching revealed only silent stone and mocking greenery. Though both must
have seen what had become of his pet, all remained frozen with the silence of
the inanimate.
Turning, he ran back into the dome and climbed into
the skimmer. Rubbing the sleep from his eyes as he deflated the mattresses,
Pocomchi eyed him but said nothing. Better to let the lad find out these things
for himself.
Flinx crawled behind the two seats, back into the
storage area where Ab had ridden. "Come on out, Pip. The game's not funny
any more. Come out, Pip!"
When he finally gave up and rose, vacant-eyed, from
the cockpit, he saw Pocomehi packing away the inflatable dome and taking down
the fence. The Indian said nothing, but watched as Flinx moved to the edge of
the brush and resumed calling. By the time the youth had shouted himself
hoarse, Pocomchi had stowed all their supplies.
One thing remained for Flinx to try. Standing by the
shadow of the azure overhang, he closed his eyes and thought furiously. From
the skies, he imagined to himself, from the skies, a terrible danger! I need
you, Pip, it's threatening me. Where are you, companion of childhood? Your
friend is in danger! Can't you sense it? It's coming closer, and there's
nothing I can do about it!
He kept up his performance for long minutes, until
sweat began to bead on his forehead and his clenched fingers turned pale.
Something touched him on the shoulder, and be jumped. Pocomchi's sympathetic
eyes were staring into his.
"You're wearing yourself out for no reason,
Flinx," his guide told him. "Calling won't help." A hand
gestured toward the sweep of dense vegetation. "When something calls the
minidrag, it goes. This is their world, you know. Or hadn't you noticed that
Balthazaar is gone too?"
Flinx had been so thoroughly absorbed by Pip's
disappearance that he hadn't. Sure enough, the old minidrag always curled about
Pocomchi's neck and shoulder was nowhere to be seen.
"Since I found him at the age of five," he
tried to explain to the little man, "Pip and I have never spent a single
day completely apart from each other." His gaze roved over the concealing
jungle. "I just can't believe he'd simply fly off and abandon me. I can't
believe it, Pocomchi!"
The Indian shrugged and spoke softly. "No
minidrag is ever completely tamed. You've never been on Pip's home world
before, either. Don't look so brokenhearted. I've had Balthazaar fly off and
leave me for several days at a time. He always comes back.
"In case you've forgotten, we have other things
to do here. There's that trail to follow, and your ringwearer to find. We won't
be skimming out of Mimmisompo for a while yet. When they want to, both Pip and
Balthazaar will find our thoughts."
Flinx relaxed a little.
"They're wild things, Flinx," Pocomchi
reminded him, "and this is a wild place. You can't expect the two not to
be attracted by that. Now let's make up a couple of packs and start the hard
part of this trip."
Moving mechanically, Flinx helped his guide prepare
a set of light but well-stocked backpacks. When Pocomchi was helping him on
with his own, showing him how the strappings worked, a sudden thought occurred
to him.
"What," he asked worriedly, "if we
find what we've come for, and then when it's time for us to leave for
Alaspinport Pip hasn't come back?"
Pocomchi stared straight at him, his eyebrows
arching slightly. "There's no use in speculating on thai, Flinx.
Balthazaar means as much or more to me as your Pip does to you. We've been
through a lot together. But a minidrag's not a dog. It won't slaver and whimper
at your feet. You ought to know that. Minidrags are independent and
free-willed. They remain with you and me because they want to, not because they're in need of us. The decision to return
is up to them." He smiled slightly. "All we can do if we come back
and they're not here is wait a while for them. Then if they don't show
..." He hesitated. "Well, it's their world." He turned and
started off toward the trail.
Flinx took a last look at the sky above. No familiar
winged shape came diving out of it toward his shoulder. Setting his jaw and
mind, he hefted the backpack to a more comfortable position and strode off
after Pocomchi. Soon the skimmer was lost to sight, consumed by stone and
intervening vegetation.
Every so often he would turn to make certain that Ab
was still trailing behind them. Then he would turn forward again. His view
consisted of tightly intertwined bushes and vines and trees, parted regularly
by the bobbing back of Pocomchi's head. The Indian's black hair swayed as he
traced the path through the jungle encrusted city. Sometimes the growth had
recovered and grown back over the path, but under Pocomchi's skilled guidance
they always reemerged onto a clear trail.
Although he knew better, he could think only of his
missing pet. Emotions he thought he had long since outgrown swelled inside him.
They were ready to overwhelm him when a cold hand touched the right side of his
face with surpassing gentleness.
Angrily he glanced back, intending to take out his
feelings on the owner of that chill palm. But how could anyone get mad at that
face, with its mournful, innocent eyes and its proboscidean mouth where its
hair ought to be, tottering after him with the stride of a quadrupedal duck?
"Worry, worry, sorry burry," ventured Ab
hopefully, "key to quark, key to curry. Black pepper ground find in me
mind" - this delivered with such solemnity that Flinx half felt it might
actually mean something. While he was pondering the cryptic verse, he tripped
over a root and went sprawling Pocomchi heard him fall and turned. The Indian
shook his head, grinned, and resumed walking.
Flinx climbed to his feet and hitched the pack
higher on his shoulders. "You're right, All, there's no point in tearing
myself up over it. There's nothing I can do about it." His gaze turned
heavenward, and he searched the powdery rims of scattered cumulus clouds.
"If Pip comes back, he comes back. If not"- his voice dropped to a
resigned murmur- "life goes on. A little lonelier, maybe, but it goes on.
I'll still have things to do and people to go back to."
"Call the key, call the key," Ab agreed in
singsong behind him. "To see it takes two to tango with an animated
mango." He stared expectantly at Flinx.
"Farcical catharsis." The youth chuckled,
smiling now at his ward's comical twaddle. What a pity, he mused, that the
poetically inclined alien didn't have enough sense to make real use of his
talent. But he had become used to tuning out Ab's ramblings, so he concentrated
on the path ahead and ignored the alien's continued verbalizing.
"Key the key that's me," Ab sang lucidly,
"I'll be whatever you want to see. Harkatrix, matrix, how do you run? Slew
of currents and a spiced hadron."
They walked all that day and afternoon. When
Pocomchi found a place suitable for night camp, the path still wound off into
the jungle ahead. With the experience of an old trailwalker, and maybe a little
tangle, the Indian somehow managed to concoct a meal from concentrates which
was both flavorful and filling.
The fullness in his belly should have put Flinx
rapidly to sleep. Instead, he found himself lying awake, listening to
Pocomchi's snores and staring at the sky. The trouble was that the weight in
his stomach wasn't matched by a more familiar weight curled next to his
shoulder. Eventually he had to take a dose of cerebroneural depressant in order
to fall into an uncomfortable sleep.
Morning came with anxious hope that quickly faded
The minidrags had not returned. Silently they broke camp and marched on.
Poeomchi tried to cheer his companion by pointing
out interesting aspects of the flora and fauna they passed. Ordinarily Flinx
would have listened raptly. Now he simply nodded or grunted an occasional
comment. Even Pocomchi's description of temple engineering failed to rouse him
from his mental lethargy.
They paused for lunch in the center of a series of
concentric stone circles. Shade was provided by a fivemeter-high metal pillar
in the center of the circles. It was supported by the familiar metal buttresses
on four sides. The pillar itself, fluted and encrusted with petrified growths
and slime, had corroded badly in places.
"It's a fountain," Pocomchi decided while
eating lunch. He gestured at the silent tower, then at the gradually descending
stone circles surrounding them. "I expect we're sitting in the middle of a
series of sacred pools that were once used for religious and other ceremonies
by the populace of this city. If subterranean Mimmisompo stays true to the
Alaspinian pattern, then the water for this was piped underground to here,
probably through metal pipes by gravity." One finger traced the spray of
ghost water. "It shot out of the fountain top and then fell down these
fluted sides before spreading out and overflowing from one pool to the
next." Leaning forward, he took a bite out of a concentrate bar.
"Judging from the slight incline of the pools,
I'd guess the drain is right about there." He pointed. "See the
formal, carved bench? That's where a priest could sit and bless the waters
flowing out of the cistern. On the right of the bench there should be a-"
Abruptly, he quieted and strained forward.
Flinx felt a mental crackle from his companion and
stared in the same direction. "I don't see anything. What's the
matter?"
Pocomchi rose and gestured. "There, what's
that?" Still Flinx could see nothing.
The Indian walked cautiously toward the cistern out,
flow, hopping down from one level to the next. When he reached the region of
the stone bench, he leaned over the last restraining wall and called back to
Flinx. There was a peculiar tightness in his voice.
"Over here" he said disbelievingly, is a
dead man."
The remains of his concentrate bar dangled forgotten
from Flinx's hand as he peered over the cistern wall. Sprawled next to one another
on the right side of the sacred bench were three bodies. Their skullcaps were
missing, and their black suits were torn and ragged in places. Two men and a
woman, all very dead.
Each body was feathered with twenty-centimeter long
shafts of some highly polished yellow-brown wood. Five tiny fins tipped the
back end of each shaft. Flinx guessed that each body sprouted at least sixty or
seventy of the small arrows. Or they might have been large darts, depending on
the size of their users.
"So, they followed us here," he muttered.
Pocomchi was searching the surrounding jungle with
practiced eyes. "They did more than follow, Flinx- they preceded us. They
must have watched us set down, then circled somehow to get ahead of us on the
trail." His gaze dropped to the corpse immediately next to him. Like the
other two, it was missing both eyes.
"They knew we'd come through here, so they set
up a nice, efficient little ambush." Water trickled from the lowest
cistern into the outflow drain, an anemic remnant of the once-substantial
volume which had tumbled through this place ages ago. Pocomchi kicked at it and
watched it darken his boot.
"This isn't the first time this has
happened," Flip: told him. His eyes weren't as experienced as Pocomchi's,
but he could search the witnessing jungle with his mind. "The Qwarm were
ready to ambush Ab and myself back on Moth. Something killed them there,
too."
Pocomchi threw him a surprised look. "Really? I
don't know who was responsible for saving you, then, unless there are Otoids on
Moth I haven't heard about." Bending over, he wrapped a hand around one of
the several hundred shafts, pulled it free, and held it out to Flinx.
The point was fashioned of crudely reworked metal,
with five spikes sticking out of it. "This is an Otoid arrow,"
Pocomchi explained, turning it over in his hand. "They shoot them out of a
slkambi, a sort of blowgun affair. Only they use an elastic made from native
tree sap instead of their own weak breath to propel these. They're not too
accurate, but" -he gestured meaningfully at the bodies- "what they
lack in marksmanship they make up for with firepower."
"You're right," Flinx informed him,
"there aren't any Otoids on Moth. What are they?"
"You'd think I'd have a simple answer for that
one, wouldn't you?" Pocomchi replied, scanning the jungle wall once again.
"Well, I don't. Nobody does, for sure. They're vaguely humanoid, run to
about half your size. Furry all over except for their tails, which are bare.
They're not very bright, but in the absence of the temple builders they've
become the dominant native race. Manual dexterity helps them. Each of two hands
has ten fingers, with three joints to each forger. They can climb pretty well,
but the tail's not prehensile, so they do most of their traveling on the ground."
"An interaction, disreaction, can't you see
it's time to be, to activate the ancient key," Ab murmured. "Peter
Piper picked a peck of pickled pheromones."
The alien was waddling down the pool levels at high
speed. Both men would have laughed at Ab's absurd. locomotion if it weren't for
the three dead humans lying in front of them.
"Ab," Flinx began, intending to bawl the
alien out for disturbing them. Then he heard the rising hoots, the sort of war
cry a human baby with an unusually deep voice might make.
Ab was pointing and curiously feeling several
objects sticking out of his back. The points had barely penetrated the outer
epidermal layer. Plucking one out, he handed it to Flinx and smiled broadly.
"Poor boy toy toy," he commented. "Tickle fickle tickle."
"Come this way, Ab," Pocomchi ordered
urgently. "No boy toy. You too, Flinx," he snapped, wrenching at the
youth's pack. Flinx did not move. He was staring at Ab, who appeared to have
suffered no ill effects from the dozen or so arrows sticking out of him.
All hint of casualness was missing from Pocomchi's
demeanor now. "Let's move it. If they get between us and the skimmer,
we're finished. Come on, or I'll leave you and your idiot to greet them on your
own."
Flinx found himself running back down the trail they
had laboriously traced this far. Ab kept pace easily. Cries sounded ahead of
them, and Pocomchi came to e gasping halt.
No good. They've got us cut off." He looked
around wildly. "We've got to get around them somehow." Something made
a thauking sound as it landed is the dirt barely a quarter meter from Flinx's
feet. An Otoid arrow.
Flinx noted that Ab had acquired another dozen of
the feathered shafts. If they bothered the alien, he gave no sign of it. Flinx
decided that either the secondary skin was incredibly dense or else some
internal mechanism was sealing off each wound as it occurred. Or perhaps both.
Time later to study the alien's remarkable
physiology. Time if they managed to escape.
Pocomchi was on his knees, using his beamer on the
nearby trees. He shouted angrily at Flinx, "What are you waiting for,
Flinx, an engraved invitation? Or do you want your eyes to end up in an Otoid
stewpot?"
Flinx joined Pocomehi in retreating back to a
cluster of broken tree trunks and tumbled masonry. Dimly perceived shapes moved
from time to time in the trees around them. Whenever he detected such movement,
he fired.
Pip did not magically appear to save him.
Arrows glanced with metallic pings off the stone
around him, made dull thumping sounds as they stuck in the thick logs. Every so
often Flinx risked taking an arrow to reach out and pull Ab down next to him.
While the murmuring alien did not seem to be suffering at all from the
missiles, Flinx had no idea when his body might suddenly lose its immunity to
them. Ab rolled over, pulling the shafts curiously from his skin and rhyming
nonstop, utterly indifferent to the battle surrounding him.
"How many do you think there are?" Flinx
asked, ducking as a brass-tipped bolt sparked off the rock near his head.
Pocomchi replied in between rising and firing, and
ducking back under cover. "No idea. Nobody knows bow numerous the Otoid
are. Xenoanthropologists aren't even sure how they breed. And, as you might
suspect, they aren't kindly toward visitors."
Abruptly he snapped off a lethal burst from his
beamer. Flips peered between rock and log, had a glimpse of a wildly
gesticulating form falling through filtered sunlight and branches. He heard a
distant crash as the native hit the ground.
While continuing to rain an impressive number of
missiles on the three interlopers, the Otoids kept up a steady chatter among
themselves. Flinx couldn't tell whether their conversation consisted of various
forms of encouragement or of insults for their enemy.
Not that it mattered. It seemed that hundreds of
green eyes, gleaming like peridots among the trees, confronted them. Like most
men, he wasn't going to be able to choose his place and manner of dying.
He wondered what exactly the aborigines did first
with dead men's eyes. As he was wondering, there was a hissing sound in the
air. A blue energy beam considerably thicker than the ones put out by their
small hand beamers passed over Flinx's head. It struck with devastating force
among the densest concentration of natives. A great yelping and screeching
reached them as a monster tree, a cross between an evergreen and coconut palm,
came smashing down among toe concealed Otoid. Flinx saw where the blue bolt
sliced cleanly through the trunk.
A second burst of cerulean destruction flashed above
them, tearing through leaves, vegetation, and not a few furious natives. To
give them credit, the awesome display' of modern weaponry didn't frighten the
Otoid away, although the hail of yellow-brown arrows slackened noticeably.
Flinx turned on his side and shouted in the
direction from which the shots had originated, "Who is it, who's
there?"
Both he and Pocomchi stared anxiously down the
fragment of trail that remained in view. A figure stepped out of the bushes,
cradling an energy rifle nearly as tall as Flinx. It was a heavy military
model, Flinx noted, and was probably meant to be mount: on a tripod. Somehow
its wielder managed not only to lift the weapon, but to operate it. Makeshift
stings pad most of the weight on the man's shoulders.
And the man was big as two men. He had a voice to
match. "This way!" the figure bellowed at them, in voice that sounded
more amused than worried. Around came the muzzle of the massive rifle, and
another thick bolt carbonized trees and natives alike. "Hurry it up,
there, you two! They regroup fast."
Pocomchi was up and running then. Flinx was right
behind, darting around rocks and bushes, jumping over fallen logs. Occasionally
each man would turn to snap off a shot at the arrow-flingers in the trees. Ab
kept pace easily, though Flinx had to make sure sow flower or bug didn't
distract the simple-minded creature.
While they ran, the bulky sure ahead of them stood
in place atop the slight rise, firing down into the clusters of howling,
frustrated Otoid. They had almost reached him. Flinx found himself scrambling
up a crumbling masonry wall the last couple of meters. Pocomchi was just ahead
and to Flinx's right. The wall seemed a million miles high.
At its top stood their rescuer. Up close he was even
more massive than he had looked from a distance. His white hair curled and
fluttered in the warm breeze, and his face was half court jester, half mad
prophet. Obsidian eyes, brows like antipersonnel wire, a sharply pointed chin-
all were dwarfed by a nose any predatory bird would have been proud of. It rose
like a spire from the sea of swirling features which eddied around it.
His trousers, bright mold-green, ran into boots that
sealed themselves to the pants legs. Above the waist he wore only the rifle
straps and a massive power pack for the weapon, which crossed a chest full of
white hair like steel wool and resembled an ancient bandoleer. His arms were
covered with a similar grizzled fur. Though those limbs were bigger around than
Flinx's thighs, the man moved with startling agility, like a graceful gorilla.
There was a curse, and Flinx turned to his guide. A
small, feathered shaft protruded from the back of Pocomchi's thigh. The Indian
slid downward a little. His fingers dug at the rough rock; he trailed blood on
the white stone as he fell.
Reaching out and across, Flinx caught the back of
Pocomechi's shirt just in time to halt his fall.
"Hurry
up, dammit!" the rifle-wielder shouted down at them. "They're gettin' over
being scared. Now they're mad, and there's more of them coming every
minute."
"My friend's hurt!" Flinx called up to
him.
"I can make it," Pocomchi said through
clenched teeth. He and Flinx exchanged glances; then both were again moving up
the uneven stone facing.
Somehow cradling the huge rifle in one arm, the
giant above them reached down one treelike forearm and got a hand on Pocomchi's
shirt top. The material held as Pocomchi all but flew the last meter to the too
of the wall. Flinx scrambled up alongside them.
Pocomchi took one step forward, his face tightening
in pain, before he stopped to yank the shaft from is leg.
"We've got to get back to the temple," the
big man rumbled, letting loose another recoilless blast from the rifle. He
looked squarely at Flinx. "I can't cover us with this and carry him too."
For an answer, Flinx slipped his right arm between
Pocomchi's legs and hooked it around the man's right thigh. Then he took the
Indian's right arm in his left hand, bent, heaved, and swung the swarthy miner
onto his shoulders.
"I can manage him," Flinx assured the
bigger man. Both of them ignored Pocomehi's protests. "Just show me the
way."
Teeth formed a line of enameled foam beneath the
incredible nose. "It's a right good fight you two made of it till I got to
you, young feller-me-lad. Maybe we'll all make it back unskewered."
With the man's powerful rifle keeping the pursuing
Otoid at a respectful distance, they started down into seemingly impenetrable
jungle. Flinx hardly felt the weight on his back.
Just when it appeared that they would run up against
an impassible rampart of bushes and vines, the big man would gesture left or
right and Flinx would find himself running down a gap only an experienced
jungle hand would have noticed. Ab skipped along behind them, apparently
enjoying all the excitement.
The sounds of Otoid crashing and racing through the
trees alongside them grew louder, more perceptible. While the terrible fire
from the heavy military gun cut down any aborigines who ventured too near, it
still seemed to Flinx that they were tightening a ring around the fugitives.
Flinx's concern wasn't alleviated by the expression
on the big man's face. Sweat was pouring down him now, and he was breathing in
long, strained gasps, despite his strength. The tripod blaster was beginning to
sap his reserves. It was not meant to be used like a handgun, much less to be
carried and fired while on the run.
"I don't know, young feller-me-lad," he
said blinking the sweat from his eyes and talking as they ran. "They may
cut us off yet."
They ran on, until Flinx's heart felt like a hammer
on his chest and his lungs shrieked in protest. The formerly light Pocomchi now
seemed to be made of solid lead.
Then, just when he thought he couldn't move another
step, he heard a shout from his huge companion. Wiping aside perspiration and a
few soaked strands of hair, Flinx thought he could see a dark rectangle looming
ahead of them. The ancient portal rose a good four meters high and two across.
It formed an opening into a creeper-wrapped temple built of sparkling green stone.
The temple appeared isolated from any other structures. Its color enabled it to
blend inconspicuously into the surrounding forest.
The building was low, compared to many of the
imposing edifices Flinx had passed in Mimmisompo proper-not more than two stories
aboveground, flat and broken on top from the action of persistent, prying
roots.
Apprehensively he studied their apparent
destination. "In there? But it's small, and there's nowhere to retreat to.
Can't the Otoid ...?"
"You can always try to make it back to your
skimmer, lad," his rescuer suggested pleasantly.
Arrows continued to fall around them as they
staggered, exhausted, toward the catacomblike entrance. One bolt whizzed past
so close that it slit Flinx's shirt under his left arm. Glancing down and over,
he saw that the point had nicked the skin and he was bleeding slightly.
Just ahead, several figures ducked down into tall
grass. Emerald eyes glinted malevolently at them.
"It's no good," Flinx wheezed, defeated.
"They're ahead of us now."
"'How many?" the big man asked, crouching
alongside Flinx and swinging the rifle around.
"I don't know, I don't know," Flinx
panted, wondering if be would be able to stand again with Pocomchi's weight on
his back. Next to him, Ab imitated his posture and offered a hopeful verse.
Flinx was not comforted.
"Little devils know how to fight, how to hide
themselves. If they ever get organized, they'll run the prospectors and the scientists off Alaspin."
Flinx, in spite of his near-total exhaustion, found time to be curious. But the
big man apparently felt he had said nothing remarkable.
"Got to chance it, lad," the man decided.
"Chance it, fance it, dance and prance
it," agreed Ab excitedly.
"We can't stay here and we can't go back."
He started to rise. "I'll go first. That'll give you a little time ... and
some shieldin', if you can stay back of me. If we can just--"
Popping sounds came from ahead of them. Several
fist-sized globes of red fire emerged from above the dark doorway in the
temple.
Glancing higher, Flinx thought he could see a figure
moving about in a long, narrow gap in the green stone. From that position it
fired a weapon which produced the energy globes.
Where each ball struck there was a small explosion.
Flames leaped briefly skyward, only to disappear and leave a map-sized pillar
of light-brown smoke in their wake. Those Otoid blocking the approach to the
temple broke and Pied-those who were still able to. Red spheres pursued them.
"That'd be Isili," Flinx's blocky savior
declared. "I thought for sure she'd be down in the diggin's. Lucky for us
she heard the commotion." He rose to his full height. "She'll cover
us. Come on." He started for the towering entrance, running with
lumbering, pounding strides that reminded Flinx of the herd of toppers he had
flown over only a couple of days ago.
Every muscle in his body strained, but he still
found himself falling farther and farther behind. Any second now, he expected
the sharp, exquisite pain of a metal point to penetrate his legs or lower back.
But every time an Otoid raised itself for a clear shot at the fugitives, or
moved to pursue, a cottony-crimson globe of energy would touch it, and both
would vanish in an impatient gout of flame.
Then, as he was tottering down carved stone steps,
he realized that he was descending into the temple. The steps gave way to a
level rock floor. Something thundered behind him. He experienced a moment of
panic, but it was only a makeshift wooden door slamming shut across the temple
entrance.
His eyes rapidly became accustomed to the slightly
dimmer illumination in the modest chamber. Small, independently powered lamps
were hung from the ceiling, mounted on rock outcroppings.
They reached the end of the entrance tunnel and emerged
into a brightly lit cleared room. Here the surrounding walls were embellished
with row upon row of magnificent carvings, mosaics of metal and stone
alternating with deeply etched friezes depicting scenes from ancient Alasninian
social and religious life.
Flinx had little time to appreciate the sculpture as
he sank, exhausted, to the floor, barely managing to set Pocomchi down gently.
Ab strolled over to a pile of excavated stone and commenced examining some of
the pieces.
Taking the stone steps three at a time, the man who
had led him to at least temporary safety mounted to a gallery which ran around
the top level of the chamber. The ornamental banister which bordered the
gallery was also made of carved stone. It was a good three stories above the chamber
floor.
Flinx saw him approach another figure, indistinct in
the distance, and talk briefly. Then he turned and shouted down to Flinx. A
slight echo shadowed his words.
"Relax, feller-me-lad! They've given up for
now. They'll count their losses, remove the eyes from their dead, and ceremony
for a while. Then they'll decide what to do."
"Surely," Flinx called up to him,
"they won't attack a position as well defended as this temple?" The
thick stone walls were making him confident. "Not with the kind of weapons
you have," he finished, with a gesture toward the rifle the man had leaned
against the nearby wall.
"Don't count on being safe tomorrow," the
man advised him pleasantly as be descended the stairway. He indicated the gun
as he reached the floor. "Any reasonable humanx wouldn't want to tangle
with a Mark Twenty, but these aren't reasonable or human or thranx, lad.
They're primitives, and primitive folk always have more courage than brains.
Resides, each of 'em probably thinks that if he dies in battle the gods will
favor him in the afterlife. At least." he amended himself with a modest
wink, "that's my theory."
"Are you an anthropologist?" Flinx asked
him uncertainly.
A great, roaring laugh filled the room, rattled
around the engraved walls, and filled each niche and hollow with monumental
delight. While the man enjoyed Flinx's question, the youth took the time to
note the piles of supplies stacked neatly in various spots around the room.
There was also an oversized mattress, a cell charger, and a compact autochef
complete with moisture condenser. All signs indicated that here was an
efficient, organized, long-term camp.
"Not me, young feller-me-lad," the man
finally replied after regaining control of himself. "I'll claim science as
a hobby, not a trade." Turning, he shouted up toward the high gallery and
waved at the figure standing by the long window there. "Come on down
Isili! Sunset's on. You know they won't trouble us any more today!"
Lowering his voice, he spoke conspiratorially to Flinx. "Isili's the
scientist. Me, I'm just a menial ..." He stopped, frowning.
"What's the matter?" Flinx watched as the
man walked over to him and continued on past. He saw him bend over,Pocomchi and
realized that the guide had not said a word since they had reached safety.
"He's asleep?" he inquired hopefully.
The big man rolled the slight Indian over onto his
stomach. The action revealed two broken shafts sticking out of the narrow back.
With an angry grimace, the white-hared giant plucked both arrows free, then
gently turned the Indian over onto his back. Flinx saw blood on the small
miner's lips.
"Hey, grabber-man," the huge man inquired
gently, "how do you feel?"
Pocomchi's eyelids twitched, his eyes opened.
"How should I feel?" He turned his head and looked back up at the
concerned face above him. "How did I get here?"
"The lad carried you."
Pocomchi raised his head slightly and smiled at
Flinx. "Thanks, Flinx. Waste of time, I'm afraid."
On all fours, Flinx crawled over to sit next to the
limp form of the man who had brought him this far. Pocomchi took in the
expression on the young face. He shook his head slightly, and winced at the
pain the effort caused him.
"Not ... your fault," he assured Flinx.
"My own ... carelessness. Should have sensed them." He forced out a smile.
The gesture was nearly beyond his rapidly fading capability.
"Anything I can get you?" the big man
asked gruffly.
"How about ... a shot of Tizone?" Flinx
started. Tizone was so illegal that few people even knew it existed. The giant
could only grin faintly.
"Sorry, grabber-man. Would I could."
"Thanks anywav." Pocomchi's voice was that
of a ghost now, the syllables poorly formed. Within him life had shrunk to a
soap bubble's consistency.
"I'm going to join Habib anyway," he
rasped, staring across at Flinx. "I'm not religious, but the sanctimonious
fool is there; I can feel him."
"Give him my best," Flinx choked out.
"Though that's not much to give anyone, these days."
"Not ... your fault," Pocomchi repeated.
His eye, closed. His lips moved, and Flinx had to lean close to hear. "If
... you ever see Balthazaar again ... give his neck a scratch for me."
"Two scratches," Flinx assured him, in a
torso scarcely more audible than the Indian's.
The soap bubble popped, the spirit in the small body
fled, and the third person who bad been good enough to aid Flinx since his
arrival on Alaspin was now just so much meat.
Slowly Flinx climbed to his feet, arranged his
jumpsuit, and glared at the silently watching giant. "As soon as it gets
dark, I'll make a run for the skimmer. Maybe they'll all be ceremonying, like
you said, and I'll be able to slip through. You'd better not try to stop me.
People seem to die in my vicinity."
Pursing his lips, the big human examined Flinx
appraisingly. "Well now, that's quite a speech, fella-me-lad. But,
frankly, you don't look like much of a jinx. You're just a little bitty feller.
And I'm about as unsuperstitious as they come. Besides, after they get through
arguing and partying, they might just decide that they don't want any more of
my Mark Twenty or Isili's popper."
Flinx paused. "You really believe that?"
"Nope," responded the man, turning to face
the gallery above, "but it's a nice thought. Isili," he shouted
again, "quit your gawking at the greenery and come meet our guest! Bet you
the Ots don't even bother with us again."
A rippling, slightly brittle voice called back to
thorn, "You're dreaming if you think that, Skim." But the figure put
the weapon down and descended the stairs.
Trying to force Pocomchi's death and what he thought
was his responsibility for it from his mind, Flinx studied the woman intently
as she approached.
She was about a twentieth of a meter shorter than he
was. Her skin was a rich olive hue, much like his own, but other features
pointed to a different ethnic heritage. Terran-Turkish, he decided, taking in
the doll-like face with its amber eyes, the too-wide mouth, and the natural
waterfall of sparkling hair that looked like pulled filaments of pure black
hematite.
She returned Flinx's stare for a moment, then
ignored him. "They'll be back," she assured her associate, in that
soft voice. Yet each word had an edge to it, suggesting that every consonant
had been filed to a fine point before being uttered. What he could sense of her
mind was as hard as duralloy.
Pretty she was, but not in a commercial sense. It
was the kind of beauty which would appeal to the man with a taste for the
exotic. Flinx thought of her as a rare dish. It might give you an upset stomach
or you might remember it as uniquely satisfying for the remainder of your days.
Ire suspected that, beneath the jungle suit, her
body was as wiry and tough as her thoughts. He nodded mentally. There were
blatant differences in size, sex, appearance, and much else between her and the
giant. But mentally there was a similarity of process and purpose, and that was
undoubtedly what had joined them together.
Of the obvious differences, one was that she did not
share the big man's desire to protect Flinx. "You've brought us a lot of trouble,"
she told him candidly. "We haven't had any trouble with the Otoid until
now."
"You're also the first visitor we've had in
weeks," her huge partner countered, "and welcome, lad."
First visitor ... then they hadn't seen the bodies
of the three Qwarm, Flinx mused. No point in mentioning them. He was already
unpopular with the woman. The announcement that he and Ab were being chased by
the brotherhood of assassins wouldn't exactly help change her attitude toward
him,
She noticed Flinx's live companion for the first
time, and her expression became one of distaste. "What's that grotesque
thing?" At the moment, Ab was singing something about Usander,
crystalware, and Peter the Great.
Once again Flinx bad to explain his ward. He
finished gratefully, "I can't say much except to thank you for my life,
both of you." The woman didn't look at him as she muttered something
inaudible. Flinx indicated the motionless form of Pocomchi. "I know my
friend would have been too. If it hadn't been for you, Mr. Skua. ..."
"September," the white-maned giant
corrected him; "Skua September."
"If not for you, I'd be dead and eyeless out
there some place."
"Would have been better all around," the
woman murmured, stalking over to the food supplies and viciously cracking the
seal on a carton. She pulled a tube free, took a seat on a smooth stone, and
sucked at the liquid inside the transparent plastic. Her gaze traveled from
Flinx to September.
"Would have been better if you'd left them. Now
we'll probably all die. Oh hell," she concluded, not looking at either
man. "I guess I'd have done the same thing, Skua. I'm going up for another
look."
September shook his head. "Isili, I told you,
the Otoids will not attack during-"
"Since when did you become an expert on the
Otoid?" she snapped back. "Nobody's an expert on the Otoid. I don't
think they'll attack at night either, but it's not completely dark out
yet." She climbed the stairway and reassumed her position at the long
window above the gateway. Her gaze was turned outward, the pulsepopper cradled
efficiently under one arm.
"Women!" September murmured softly, his
expression unreadable. A hundred shades of meaning were encompassed by the
single noun. He turned a bright smile on Flinx. "Would you like something
to eat, feller-me-lad?"
By way of reply, Flinx indicated Pocomchi's body.
"What, not squeamish are you, lad?"
wondered the giant disapprovingly.
"No, but don't you think we ought to bury
him?"
"Sure," September agreed, walking over to
the recently opened case of food. He removed several small, brightly colored
cubes, dumped them into his mouth, and chewed, "You pick him up," he
mumbled around the mouthful of organic slag, "and carry him outside. I'll
toss you our smallest excavator through the doorway. Isili and I will do our
best to cover you while you dig him a grave. I guess there's always a chance
you'll make it back inside."
Flinx didn't reply immediately. Instead, he walked
over to stand next to the food case. "Despite your untimely sarcasm, I'll
have a couple of those concentrates."
"Sarcasm? Sarcasm!" the big man rumbled,
spitting particles of food over the floor. "There's no such thing as
sarcasm, boy. Just a few of us in this universe who accept the truth and deal
with it accordingly. Sorry if I offended you, but outside the Alaspinport this
world doesn't take much notice of tact."
Flinx mulled over his situation as he masticated a
concentrate cube which tasted affectionately of beefsteak and mushrooms. He
knew the concentrate bore no more relationship to a once-live steer than it did
to a thranx vovey. But while it was artificial, it was a masterfully
composed artificiality, and his dried-out taste buds conveyed the efficacious,
nutritive lie to the rest of his body.
"What are you doing so far from the city?"
September asked.
Flinx wasn't quite ready to answer that question.
Not just yet. "I might ask you the same. You said she's the
scientist?" He gestured up to where the watchful woman continued her
sunset vigil.
"My employer, Flinx. It's stretching things a bit
to say we're partners. Isili Hasboga. We're not too bad a team. She's as
pessimistic as I am optimistic."
"Optimistic?" Flinx snorted. "On this
world?"
"Ah, now who's being sarcastic, young
feller-me-lad?" September inquired without rancor. "She's one of the
most knowledgeable Alaspinian archeologists I've ever met. What's more, she's
as avaricious as I, and that's greedy, lad. We have different reasons for
wanting wealth, but the aim's the same. Isili wants financial independence so
she can pursue the kind of research that interests her, instead of doing what
some prissy institution wants her to. My desires, on the other hand are more
basic."
"Why'd she choose you?"
"I'm good at what I do," September replied
easily. "I don't drink, narcotize, or simiedive on the job, and I'm
honest. Why not? It's as easy to be honest as it is to be a crook."
"You're an optimist, all right," observed
Flinx.
"She decided on this particular temple after
two years of research," the big man went on. "She needed someone to
do some of the heavy work and provide cross fire when required." Moving to
the near wall, he patted the huge weapon resting there. "This Mark Twenty,
for example. It's tough to see an Otoid in a tree. With this toy, you just
blast the tree. Never met another man who could use one as a hand weapon."
"So she supplies the brains and you the
muscle," Flinx commented. Refusing to be taunted, September simply grinned
back at him.
Flinx wondered if the giant could be upset. Despite
his outer boisterousness, there was much that hinted at an inner calmness and
confidence which would put him above petty arguing. And yet, something in the
man's mind-something buried deep, hidden well-suggested some terrible secrets.
"There's some crossover, lad," he
finished. "I'm not the village idiot, and Isili's much more than a fragile
flower, bless her curvilinear construction. What we find, we split
evenly."
"If we find anything," a voice tersely
called down to them. "You talk too much, Skua. Getting lonely?"
"Why, Grandma," September yelled back in
mock surprise. "what big ears you've got."
She didn't smile back. "All the better for
gathering reasons to have you discharged, and drawn up before a government
court for violating the secrecy terms of employment," she countered. She
glanced back out the portal at the near-blackness outside, then started down
the stairs.
"Ali, the lad's no claim stealer, silly
bog," September murmured coaxingly. She brushed past him. "What's the
matter, no Otoid for you to fry?"
"One of these days," she snarled with a
smile, "I hope one of those homicidal little abos puts a copper bolt right
into your-"
"Now, silly," he chided her, "no
dissension in front of our guest."
She might have had a retort ready, Flinx felt, but
her attention was drawn from the wordplay to Ab. Walking past him, she
inspected the alien closely, eyeing him up and down, walking a complete circle
around him. For his part, Ab ignored her and continued his rhyming.
"Funny," she muttered to Flinx, "I
think I recognize this fool, but from where I can't remember. What planet does
it come from?"
"Not only don't I know Ab's world of
origin," Flinx informed her, "but I wish he was back on it. Ab was a
slave, performing in the marketplace in Drallar, back on Moth. I acquired him
accidentally," he explained, leaving out a great many awkward details of
Ab's acquisition. "He's harmless. He also," he added with a touch of
awe, "seems to be immune to Otoid arrows and to massive electric
shock."
"I'd like to have the first ability
myself," she responded. Taking a stance directly in front of Ab, or at
least where she decided his front was, she stared straight into his eye and
said, hard and plain, "Where do you come from ..." She glanced at
Flinx. "What did you call him?"
"Abalamahalamatandra is what he calls himself,
but he responds to `Ab' " was Flinx's reply.
"Very well." She moved closer, almost
standing on a green-striped blue foot. "Ab, where do you come from?"
A blue eye rolled at her. "Hetsels, hetsels,
harmon nexus. Special nexus. Shoulder right and up a thousand nexus, spatial
solar plexus."
Hasboga made a disgusted sound while September
stifled a smirk, without much success. "That's one useful facility Ab
has," Flinx commented, smiling himself. "He makes people laugh."
"He's more than a pet, then," the
inquisitive scientist decided, studying Ab thoughtfully, "if he respond:
directly to questions."
"Not necessarily," argued September,
leaning back against a broken stone. "He might be only a mimic little
intelligence required for that."
"His comments are not repetitions of what's
been said," argued Hasboga in return.
"I had a pet once," whispered Flinx, but
no one heard him.
"Pet ... scandal smith," decided Ab,
promptly performing a quadruple handspring and landing on his hands. His trunk roved
over the floor, sucking up pieces of dropped concentrate. So absurd was the
figure of the inverted alien that both Flinx and September broke out in
laughter, and even Isili had to smile.
"Funniest-looking creature I ever set eyes
on," the giant declared. He brushed back the hair that had slid over his
face. It fell straight down again, but not before Flinx saw what he had almost
expected.
"The earring," he almost shouted.
"What?" September looked startled,; then
his thick brows furrowed with concern. "What are you staring at,
feller-me-lad? You all right?"
"It's the earring," Flinx finally
explained, pointing to the giant's head. "When you brushed at your hair, I
saw it. You got a gold ring in your right ear."
Reflexively, September reached up and fondled the
circlet, hidden behind his flowing white hair, yes, I do. Why so interested,
lad?"
"I just-"
"Just a minute," Hasboga interrupted,
stepping tween the two men physically and verbally. "Before this goes any
further, Skua" -she turned to confront Flinx-" we still don't know
what you're doing here. Just because you're young doesn't make you trustworthy
in my book. I'll buy your funny alien," and she standing on two legs and
two arms, scouring the floor for crumbs.
"But what about you and your unfortunate
friend?" she wanted to know. She jabbed a thumb at Pocomchi's body.
"His kind I placed the moment I set eyes on him. Alaspin is infected with
prospectors, like a pox. But you ..." She gave him the same thorough
examination she had bestowed on Ab "You don't look like a grubber, and
you're too young to be much of a scientist. So what are you doing here in
Mimmisompo?"
“You two are looking for your fortune,” he finally
replied, after a moments's hesitation. "I'm looking myself."
If it came to a fight, for any reason, he knew he
would have no chance against these two. He had to convince them he was telling
the truth. They had been friendly so far, but they had the strength to be.
The problem lay with Isili, he felt. While not
openly antagonistic, she was cautious to the point of paranoia. He tried to
reach out mentally to her and received impression of enormous emotion barely
held in check. Surprisingly little of it was directed toward him or September.
It was all wrapped tightly inside her. She was like the coil of an old-time
generator: on the surface; all was calm, but overload it slightly and wires would fly in all directions.
Taking a seat on a block of trimmed green stone, he
explained about his search for his true parents. He censored those details
which might upset or prejudice his hosts, avoided mention of Ulru-Ujurr and his
flight from the Owarm. His mere presence was unnerving enough to Hasboea. No
need to make it worse.
He finished with his search for a big man, one with
a gold earring and a small minidrag, who had tried to buy him over a dozen
years ago.
"Twelve years, standard time," he said,
staring hard at the watching September. "I was five years old. Do you
remember it?"
Isili's eyes widened, and she stared accusingly at
September. "A five-year-old child, Skua. Well, well." She gave Flinx
a knowing look when the giant failed to respond. "He remembers something,
for sure. This is the first time I've ever seen him speechless."
"Yes. Yes, I remember, lad," September
finally admitted, looking and sounding like a man reliving a dream he had
forgotten. "I did have a small minidrag with me."
"Did you leave Moth with it?" inquired a
tense Flinx.
"No." Something trembled inside Flinx. He
felt like a person with amnesia slowly regaining memory of lost events.
"It finally left me in a bar. I was drunk. Minidrags can be temperamental.
It probably decided I wasn't fit to associate with any more."
"I know how temperamental they can be,"
Flinx assured him. He forbade mentioning that Pip might have been the same
minidrag September had lost. "I ... used to have one myself."
"Then you do know. And you also probably know,
lad, that on Moth it's a severe crime to import venomous creatures. So I
couldn't very well march myself up to the nearest gendarmerie and ask for help.
Not without being thrown in jail for letting a toxic alien loose on the planet.
Sure, but I remember the slave auction." His memory of the incident
appeared to grow stronger the longer he thought about it. "I bid on you. I
was bidding on several in the same consignment."
"Several others with me?" Flinx frowned.
This didn't fit. "What others?"
"I'm not sure it's a good idea to tell you that
just yet, young feller-me-lad," the big man announced softly. For some
reason he appeared almost afraid of Flinx, as if the youth were a bomb who
might explode at any second. Flinx could not understand. The dialogue was not
following the scenario he had constructed in his imagination as to how this
momentous talk would proceed.
One way or the other, his last trail seemed to roc
drawing inexorably to a dead end. Already, one possible link was broken. His
meeting with Pip when. he was six years old appeared to have been accidental, A
coincidence only.
"For yourself?" he asked uncertainly.
September snorted. "I wouldn't know what to do
with a slave. No, lad, I was bidding for an organization."
The trail abruptly revealed a fresh length of
itself. Perhaps the giant wasn't the end after all.
"What organization?" he pressed the big
man. "does it still exist? Could it be traced if it's disbanded, traced
to its responsible individuals?"
"Easy down, lad," September advised him,
male ing calming motions with both hands. "You've already toil us you
found out about your natural mother last year."
"Yes. She's dead. She died before I was
sold." Silently he strained his erratic abilities, trying to see if the
information sparked any response in September's mind. He was disappointed. The
big man exhibited no reaction he could detect, mental or otherwise.
"As to my natural father, I know nothing,"
he continued, "I do know that my father wasn't the man my natural mother
was married to. I'd hoped that by tracing whoever was trying to buy me, I
aright discover some new information leading to him."
"That makes sense, feller-me-lad," agreed
an approving September.
"Nothing makes sense," growled Isili, who
had listened to about as much of Flinx's problems as she could stand.
"What about us, Skua?" She was stalking magnificently back and forth,
her ebony mane flying, her amber eyes glowing. "Nothing makes sense if all
the work we've put in here goes for nothing, and it will if the Otoid persist
after us." She stopped abruptly and whirled on him. "Months of
planning, years of research, and we come up with nothing!" She wrung her
hands in frustration. "I don't know why I tear myself up about it. I'm
probably all wrong about this temple. We've been excavating for nearly two
months and we haven't found anything beyond those." She indicated the
exquisite carvings lining the chamber's interior. "And we didn't have to
move a pebble to find them. Hieroglyphs, stores ... what a waqte."
"They seem unusually well preserved to me"
was Flinx's comment. He found her attitude peculiarly unscientific.
She startled him by trying to read his mind. The
force of her desire shocked him a little, although he knew she had no talents
of any kind. She possessed a powerful mind, did Isili Hasboga, but it was not a
mind of Talent.
"So you think the historical and scientific
aspects of our grub should interest me more, do you?" she eventually
inquired. "My real work is back
home, on Comagrave. There's a site in the Mountains of the Mourners that's
never been dug. No foundation or museum or university thinks it's worth
excavating." Her eyes blazed. "I know better! They're wrong, all of
them!"
Fanaticism in pursuit of knowledge, Flinx reflected,
was still fanaticism.
"I know what's there," she rambled on,
"under the garb mounds. And I'll find it, even though I have to mount and
finance my own expedition. But for that I need credits. All of us need
credits." She drew herself up haughtily. "That's why we're all on
Alaspin. As you are neither a scientist nor a researcher," she concluded
with a twinge of bitterness, "I don't suppose I can expect you to understand
that."
"Maybe I understand more than you think"
was his quiet reply. "I have a good friend, a young thranx who was once a
student archeologist in the Church, who would have symnathized completely with
your attitude at one time. She's since found other things to do." He
wondered how Sylzenzuzex was managing without him in teaching the ursinoids
back on Ulru-Ujurr.
"It's all for nothing anyway, now." She
slumped. "Damn all unreasonable, xenophobic aborigines! Damn this world
and its endless temples!" She sucked in a resigned breath. "Nothing
now but to try to get out and try somewhere else, Skua. Maybe they'll leave us
alone if we move to the other side of the city. But it's got to be somewhere in
Mimmisompo. It's got to be!"
Flinx had no idea what "it" might be. It
wouldn't have been discreet to inquire. Such a question would serve only to
heighten Hasboga's suspicion of him.
But, having found the man with the earring, he could
not let him go. Not till every question was satisfied. The internal portables
brightened, compensating for the vanishing illumination outside.
"If you're finished with your grubbing,"
he told September, "I'll hire you."
"You, hire me?" The giant smiled
condescendingly at him. "What'll you pay me with, lad? Stories, and
entertainment provided by your poor ward?" He indicated the gallivanting
Ab.
Flinx took no offense. He had come to expect such
disbelief. "Whatever your cost, if it's in reason, I can pay it. How
much?"
"That sounds like a sincere proposal,"
September confessed. Flinx thought the giant threw a mischievous glance at
Hasboga. "I suppose if we are going to give up here ..."
"Then both of you can go to hell!" Hasboga
exploded, the barely suppressed anger finally erupting. She stormed over to
glare down at Flinx.
"First you bring the Otoid down on us and now
you want to steal Skua. Well, my skinny stripling, you're in no position to
buy. Only to give. You owe me. We saved your miserable, barely begun life
because on Alaspin help is rendered without question to those who need it.
Don't you forget that." She turned away from him to confront an amused
September. "And, mercenary that you are, Skua, don't forget that you and I
have a contract. Of course, if you want to buy out from under me ..."
"What, from under you?" Bushy brows lifted
in mock astonishment. Flinx got the impression that maybe the relationship
between these two was something other than wholly professional. He winced at
the slap she gave the giant, but September only rubbed at the reddening place
on his face and grinned more widely, almost approvingly.
Stalking away from them both, she threw herself down
on the huge inflated mattress and buried her attention in a small,
self-contained reader screen. For Flinx, there followed several moments of
embarrassed silence.
"For a scientist she can behave awfully
irrationally at times, feller-me-lad," September confided to him. He
added, somewhat reassuringly: "These spells don't last much longer than
thev take. Watch." He winked.
Strolling over to the mattress, he sat down next to
her. She ignored him. He pretended to peer over hex shoulder at the screen.
"Now, Isili, it's not nice to act petulant
before the lad."
"Get lost!" she snapped. "I'm
busy."
"I can see that," admitted a seemingly
startled September, his eyes bulging as he focused on the tiny screen. "I
can tell what the man and the woman are doing, but the two tendril cats are-'
With an exasperated sigh, she looked up at him and
spoke in a tone one would use with a
child. "This is a perfectly plain
theoretical tract, as you can easily see."
"Oh yes, I can see it, all right." Sitting
back, he whistled solemnly at the ceiling. Flinx marveled at the man's elan,
considering that they might all be dead the next night.
Rolling over, Hasboga sat up straight, put her hands
on her hips, and glared at the giant. "Are you implying that I'm watching
pornography?"
"Oh no," September started. "No, no,
no, no. It's
just that, in front of one so young ..." He
gestured toward Flinx. "And tendril cats, too." He clucked
disapprovingly.
"Listen, you outrageous parody of a human
being, if you think you can embarrass-" She stopped. September was
grinning down at her. She fought to remember what she was about to say, but for
the life of her couldn't get a grip on her half- disintegrated thought. Her
mouth twisted and gradually broke into an almost shy smile.
The moment she realized what she was doing, her lips
immediately clicked primly back to a firm set. "It's important work,"
she muttered lamely. She gestured weakly toward Flinx. "Go bother our
visitor for a while and leave me alone."
Turning away, she went back to the viewer, but Flinx
could sense that the dark cloud of fury which had been hovering over her had
evaporated.
September obligingly walked back to flop down
heavily in front of Flinx. "See? Silly's not such a bad sort. In fact,
she's rather a good sort. Pity there aren't more like her." Commentary
came from the vicinity of the viewer, but it was garbled and indistinct and not
really angry any more.
"It's you that interests me right now,
feller-me-lad. You've come a great way and a hard way to find me. You want to
know about that day a dozen years ago, on Moth. I'll try to tell you what I
can. That way, maybe I can learn a little too." He sighed. "I suppose
you know who sold you, if you
found out about your natural mother."
"I do."
"Do you know why?"
"I think so."
September shook his head. "I don't think you
do. Not all of it. I can't tell you the rest, not yet. There are ethical
questions involved."
Flinx's laugh was so harsh that he wondered at it
himself. "You're talking to someone torn from his parents before lie can
remember, and sold like a piece of meat on a world not of his birthing."
"All right," September shifted agreeably,
"call it a business confidence, then. I probably will tell you, in time.
But I need to think on it. Remember, I didn't have to tell you I knew
anything."
"We'll let it pass for now," replied Flinx
magnanimously, since he couldn't coerce the giant anyway. His next question he
had to consider carefully. For a large part of his adult life he had framed it,
rephrased it, turned it over and over in his mind, considered how he would
present it to various people. He had developed and discarded a hundred
different approaches. Now the moment to ask had come. This might be the last
moment in a search that had taken him across half the Commonwealth and through
stranger adventures than most people could imagine.
He forgot all preconceptions, leaned forward, and
asked with unsophisticated innocence: "Are you my father?"
September took the question well. Maddeningly, he
didn't venture an immediate reply. Indecision was the last thing Flinx had
expected from the big man. September looked at the floor, using a
landing-skid-sized foot to move rubble in meaningless patterns.
Flinx strained in the silence with all his desire,
tried to bring his infrequent, awesome talent to focus on the man before him.
The falseness or truth of September's eventual answer could be the most
important thing in his young life. But, as so often happened, when he most
wanted his abilities to function, they mocked him. Some days they could operate
with the precision of a tridee beam, could pierce the nothingness between
worlds. Now, even his own thoughts were unreadable.
When September looked up, he wore an expression of
almost overwhelming earnestness. All thoughts of prevarication left Flinx. This
man was not going to lie to him. He stared so long and hard that for a second
Flinx wondered uncomfortably if the giant didn't possess unsuspected mental
talents of his own. But while his gaze was intense, it was only from
concentration.
"Young feller-me-lad, Flinx, believe me when I
say I wish I knew."
Stunned, Flinx could only cape back at him. A yes he
could have coped with. That was an answer he had been prepared to deal with a
hundred thousand time, in his imagination. A no would have been harder to
handle, but he would have been ready for that, too. But "I wish I
knew"?
So unexpected was the indeterminate answer that the
youth who had organized the Ulru-Uiurrians, who had outwitted the Church and
baffled Conda Challis, could only say lamely: "What do you mean, you don't
know?"
"Don't you think I wish I did?" September
hall pleaded. "I am uncertain. I am indecisive, I can't say for sure
because I don't know for sure. Positiveness of either possibility escapes me. I
can't shade it yes or darken it no. There's no room for maybes, feller-me-lad.
It's what I said plain, which means ... I could be."
"Let's not play," Flinx said slowly, coldly. "Did you ever sleep with my
mother, who was a Lynx of Allahabad, India Province, Terra?"
September shook his head, looking at Flinx as if for
the first time. "What an unusual young man you are. You've got brains and
guts, Flinx-lad. You're not by chance extremely wealthy, are you?"
"No, I'm not."
"Good," September commented with
satisfaction, "because if you were, and I said I was your father, you'd
have the natural suspicion of the wealthy and riot believe me."
"How do you know I'd have any intention of
sharing any wealth with you?" countered Flinx. "Maybe I'm looking for
my father out of feelings of anger. Maybe I'd want just to blow your brains
out."
"I wouldn't blame you," replied September.
"But A never slept with your mother, of that I am certain. Nor have I ever been to India Province, let alone the
city you mentioned. I've no idea who your mother was, and I doubt if I'd
recognize her face or name if you confronted nom with her this instant."
"No chance of that," Flinx assured hire.
"I told you, she's been dead since before I was sold."
"I'm sorry for that," September said,
expressing genuine-sounding sorrow for someone he had just claimed never to
have known.
Flinx's thoughts were full of speculation and garbage.
"I don't understand this, I don't understand."
"Who does?" mused the giant
philosophically.
"If you never even met my natural mother, let
alone slept with her, then how could you possibly be my father?"
"Like most circles, it all ties together,
feller-me-lad." September put both hands behind his shaggy head and leaned
back. "Why do you think I was there on Moth that day, trying to buy you,
and why do you think I didn't?"
"You didn't have the money to bid against
Mother Mastiff," suggested Flinx. "The old woman who finally bought
me." Then something else the slaver had mentioned came back to him.
"You left the auction in a hurry, and there were a large number of police
in the crowd."
"Very good, your sources have good
memories," commented September. "I had the money to buy you, and the
others. But I was a wanted man. Somehow the police knew I was on Moth. Since
the reward for me was considerable, they came a-hunting. I had to leave fast.
Purchasing you was one assignment I was never able to carry out. One of the few
I've never been able to carry out. By the by, how much is it worth to you to
find out if I really am your natural father?"
Flinx had never considered having to pay for the
final word. "I don't know. I have to think on that one myself."
"Okay," agreed the giant, "so do
I" He rolled over, pebbles scraping the floor beneath him. "We'll
talk more tomorrow. Right now I'm feeling done in. Saving your life was an
exhausting business."
Father or not, Flinx would cheerfully have strangled
the big man over the delay. But there was nothing to do, and he did not want to
risk antagonizing September. He was not a man to be pushed. Besides, he told
himself, he had waited this long, another evening would not make any
difference. And he was completely worn out himself. Anyhow, he doubted that his
hands would fit around September's enormous neck.
As it turned out, morning prevented any resumption
of their conversation. Automatic scanners performed their function. So did the
alarms they were connected to. The three sane occupants of the ancient temple
chamber came awake to a clamorous howling.
"Otoids," said Hasboga curtly, grabbing up
her pulsepopper and slipping off the safety. She ran for the gallery window as
Flinx was still blinking sleep from his eyes. By the time he was fully awake,
September had joined her atop the stone stairway. The two moved back and forth
along the wide slit in the temple front, firing frequently at targets below.
Dimly one could hear the incessant chatter of the Otoid.
Flinx joined them atop the stairs. Soon arrows began
pinging through the narrow gap with disconcerting frequency. September cursed
as fast as he fired. Standing alongside and watching the Mark Twenty cut down
trees and leave craters in the earth, Flinx felt comparatively helpless as he
snapped off an occasional burst with his own small handbeamer.
A bolt plunged onto the stone facing, falling almost
vertically by September's right hand. He glanced upward. "They're atop the
temple now," he muttered, "probably a mob of them. We can't hold this
gallery much longer."
"The tunnel," Isili suggested,
"fast!"
Flinx stayed between them as they ran down the
stairway. They raced across the chamber floor. Around a slight bend in the
inner chamber wall were five steps which Flinx hadn't seen before leading
downward, Ab joined them and studied the entrance curiously.
"They'll open the door we built soon
enough," September grunted. "This chamber has several back entrances,
which we blocked up, but you can be sure; they’re just waiting; for us to stick
our heads out one of them." He
indicated the low passageway at the bottom of the steps. Portable lights showed
a dry stone floor.
September was gathering up food packets and shoving
them into various pockets in the shirt he had donned on awakening. He pressed
an armful on Flinx. "This tunnel is where we've done most of our digging.
This is the only entrance-and exit, of course."
Several arrows pinged off the stone walls. September
whirled, raising the muzzle of the Mark Twenty. Blue fire cleared the gallery
window and left smoking stone and bodies behind.
"They might tire of this," he continued,
speaking as if they hadn't been interrupted. "If they don't" -he
ducked as a fresh bolt shot by overhead- "we'll have a choice of charging
them or starving. But I don't think they can overpower us down in there."
Then Flinx was fighting his load of containers as he
followed Hasboga down the steps and through the narrow, winding tunnel.
September trailed, covering their retreat.
In the dim illumination he saw that the tunnel was
roughly pyramidal in form, with a narrow strip of fat ceiling overhead.
Delicate bas-reliefs ran in a single strip along each wall; a third decorated
the small roof. Underfoot were smooth, alternating slabs of blue, green, and
pure white stone, the white shining like glazed tile, while the blue and green
remained convincingly stonelike. Ab loped along easily behind Flinx, singing
querulously.
Finally they stopped. Panting, Flinx dumped his load
of food containers. Hasboga settled her pulsepopper on a mound of recently
excavated rubble while September found a resting place for his massive weapon
slightly below and to her left.
Silence soon gave way to a deafening chatter as a
horde of Otoid warriors came surging and hopping down the tunnel.
"Ready," September whispered expectantly.
Though the aborigine battle cries were thunderous,
they were nothing compared to the roar of the two powerful guns as they fired
away at the screaming, attacking natives. Flinx felt like a fly trapped in the
landing bay of a cargo shuttle at the moment of touch -down.
The tunnel became a long, fiery gullet which
digested stone and Otoid with equal indifference. With so much firepower
concentrated in such a small space, Flinx's handbeamer would have been superfluous.
He conserved it's modest charge and let Hasboga and September do the
incinerating.
Eventually it dawned on the Otoid that they had
reached a point beyond which nothing living could pass. With much howling and
cursing, they retreated around the first bend and out of range. A deep swath of
charred, smoking corpses constituted a disquieting reminder of their presence.
Since the slight breeze blew always inward, the four inhabitants of the
tunnel's end received the full brunt of that noxious barbecue.
"Now what?" Flinx wondered, glancing from
Hasboga to the giant. Despite the apparent solidity of the stone walls, he was
nervous. "Could they cave in the tunnel and trap us here? Or smoke us
out?"
"As for the last," Hasboga told him,
"that's no problem, though we might have to share tanks." She pointed
to a pile of mining equipment in a corner. It included a pair of atmosphere
masks for poor-air digging.
"The original Alaspinians built these temples
well," she went on, indicating the walls around them. "With their
primitive tools, I don't think the Otoid could break through the ancient cement
sealing these stones. Even if they could, I doubt that they'd try it."
"Why not?"
"If they did that," September explained,
"they’d never get our eyes."
"Eyes again," Flinx murmured. "What
do they do with dead men's eyes?"
"Never mind, young feller-me-lad," was the
grim reply. "It doesn't make pleasant conversation." Flinx desided
not to insist on an explanation. If the subject troubled September, he wasn't
sure he needed to know.
"Try to starve us out," the big man
announced professionally, eyeing the far bend in the tunnel. "In any case,
I don't think they'll try another mass rush like that last one for a while.
They'll sit down and talk it over first." Leaving his rifle resting in
place, he turned and slumped down against the wall of protective rubble.
Flinx took the opportunity to examine the section of
tunnel they had retreated to. It wasn't so much a room or chamber here as it
was a slight enlargement of the tunnel proper. Possibly the engravings set into
the walls and ceiling were a touch more elaborate, a bit more plentiful. Three
meters on, the tunnel assumed its normal dimensions, and a couple of meters
beyond that the smooth walls ended in a dam of collapsed stone and rock.
Despite Hasboga's assurances, it was clear that the Alaspinian temple was not
invulnerable.
She noticed the direction of his gaze and said with
a certain amount of enthusiasm, "We've been drilling and clearing this
section, as you can see. We're trying to find out where this tunnel goes. I've
studied thousands of temple schematics, and this tunnel has no counterpart in
any of them that I've been able to discover. Also, those Alaspinian temples
that do have passageways or tunnels have them laid out with sharp angles,
regular and precise, all heading toward definite destinations. Usually they
lead to other structures. This one makes no sense. It just sort of winds off
uncertainly to no place. Compared to your usual Alaspinian road or passage, this
one's constructed like somebody's small intestine."
"What do you expect to find at the end of
it?" Flinx asked her.
She shrugged and smiled hopefully. "Storeroom,
if we're lucky. Iridium temple masks, city treasury, anything else valuable the
Mimmisompo priests wanted to hide and protect. Maybe even a religious scepter.
They usually used crysorillium, and sapphire to decorate those scepters. Might
even have some opalized diamonds."
"No doubt all of great scientific value,"
mused Flinx.
She threw him a warning look. "Don't criticize,
Flinx, until you've had to spend ten years on useless projects presided over by
pompous asses with well-connected parents. Remember, I'd rather be doing some
worthwhile research on my home planet. For me, this is a means to an end."
"Sorry," Flinx admitted. "I
was-"
September broke in. "Apologies later,
lad," he declared, rolling over to take up the trigger of the Mark Twenty.
Angry hoots were drifting up the tunnel toward them. "Here they come
again."
But the big man's concern was premature. The hooting
came no nearer, though it continued not far from them.
September peered over the top of the shielding wall,
"Probably having a final, violent disagreement over tactics," he
theorized pleasantly. The hooting grw louder, and Flinx thought he heard sounds
of fighting.
"Sounds lice they're plenty angry at one
another, Good! A couple of the warrior-primes are squabbling. They might end up
fighting each other. Otoids have short tempers. It's been known to
happen."
Hasboga nodded confirmation. "A few reports of
natives attacking miners and outposts and ending up by massacring each other
have been substantiated." She looked almost excited. "The only thing
the Otoids hate worse than themselves are human or thranx interlopers. We might
have a chance!"
"Lopers, mopers, lazy daze," came a
high-pitched verse from behind them. "Moping, moping, eating maize ... oh
say can you see the canticle me."
September glanced briefly back at Ab. The alien was
amusing himself at the far end of the excavation by, juggling rocks with his
four hands. Something struck the giant, and he eyed Flinx appraisingly.
"How about sending out your property as a
decoy?' It would tell us if they're too busy with each other to bother
us." He hurried on before Flinx could reply. "There's a chance the
Otoid will be so fascinated by him that they'll take him for a prize- he's got
four eyes, to our two apiece- and they’ll leave without risking any more dead.”
"No," an angry Flinx replied. He said it
firmly, so that there would be no mistake about it.
That did not keep September from arguing. "Why
not, lad? You've admitted he's a burden on you. He's obviously madder than a
bloodhyper and no good to anyone, and he might even slip through, depending on
how many shafts he can take."
"Ab," Flinx responded very slowly,
"is an intelligent creature."
September snorted. "It might save our
lives."
"He's completely helpless," Flinx
continued tightly, "totally dependent on our judgment. Furthermore, Ab
trusts me. I wouldn't send him out there" -he gestured down the
tunnel-" any more than I would a crippled cat."
"I was afraid of that." September sighed,
looking over at Hasboga.
"Our young lad is an idealist."
"Don't be too sure of yourself,
September," Flinx warned him. "Idealism's an affliction I can put
aside when I have to."
"Take it easy, lad," September cautioned
him. "Isili, what say you, woman?"
Hasboga turned to stare at her associate, then
looked across to Flinx. "The creature is the boy's responsibility and
property," she declared, her gaze never wavering from Flinx's face.
"We still don't know if the abos are fighting among themselves. Let's wait
and see what they do. I'm not ready to vote for anything drastic until we start
running out of food and water. Ab stays, if that's the way the youth wants
it."
"Musical, musical, think time
contusional," rhymed Ab, happily ignorant of the state of his fate and
unaware that it had just been informally decided.
"We'll wait on then," September agreed,
giving in gracefully. "I just don't like waiting, that's all." He
returned his attention to the tunnel. At least the cool air would slow the
process of putrefaction. If not, the stench of decomposing corpses could force
them to use the masks as efficiently as smoke would.
Quite unexpectedlv, the far end of the tunnel seemed
to become darker. Flinx squinted, unsure that his eyes were relaying the truth.
September leaned over the edge of their wall and tried to see around the first
bend. The darkness jumped a little bit nearer.
"What are they up to?" Flinx inquired
anxiously. "Filling up the corridor?"
"No," murmured the big man softly, "I
don't think so.”
It was Hasboga who first realized what the natives
were doing. "They're taking out the lights," she informed them, even
as another several meters of darkness appeared. "Rather than cover up the
reflectors, they're just taking them down and moving them out of the
tunnel."
"They won't take out the last three,"
September said grimly, hunkering down over the bulky stock of his rifle and
shifting a little to his left. Howling and shrieking cut off further
conversation as another mass of tightly packed natives came surging around the
turn in the tunnel. September kept his weapon aimed near the precious light and
shattered one alien after another as they tried to climb up to the unbreakable,
self-powered sphere. Hasboga tried to hold back the rest of the screaming wave,
and Flinx helped as best he could with his tiny pistol.
But they were so densely packed and there were so
many of them that September was finally forced to bring his own weapon to bear
in order to drive them from the corridor. One aborigine in the mob was able to
reach the lamp. Triumphantly he wrenched it free from its mounting.
Shouting their victory, the mob retreated up the
tunnel to safety, bearing the precious light with them. Now there were only two
spheres left, one halfway down from the just-removed light to their position
and the other a couple of meters in front of Hasboga. Beyond that, night had
claimed the tunnel.
"They'll be regrouping again," September
decided wanly, "for another charge. Buoyed up by their success. Some
warrior-prime is in full control now." He used a hand to indicate the
second light, partway to the tunnel bend. "If they get that one we're
going to be in big trouble."
That led him to revive the discussion of a few
minutes earlier. He gestured back toward the singsonging Ab. "What about
it?"
Hasboga eyed the alien, turned a speculative stare
on Flinx, then sighted back down her own weapon. "Not yet. They may not
get the next light."
September growled softly but did not argue. As the
prospect of death grew more real, Flinx noted, the big man's sense of humor was
suffering.
Several hours passed before the peace and quiet was
shattered by a terrible screaming and mewling. Flinx didn't jump this time, his
ears were still numb from the last attack. But although they waited expectantly
for the anticipated charge, it did not materialize.
"Why don't they come?" muttered Hasboga
tightly, trying to see around the distant bend of a now-dark section of tunnel.
"Trying to rattle us," suggested September
coolly, apparently unaffected by the spine-chilling cacophony. "Ignore it
and stay ready. The noise can't hurt us."
"Not physically" was Hasboga's response.
"Primitive or not, that's mind-tingling stuff."
The bloodcurdling concert continued, unendingly. It
was beginning to make Flinx twitchy when it started to fade. Once begun, the
cessation of the shrieking and moaning accelerated rapidly, until all was quiet
again. Almost too quiet.
"By O'Morion," ventured September in
amazement, "I think they've left."
"Maybe they did start fighting among
themselves,"guessed Hasboga, not daring to believe it.
"No, someone's coming," Flinx informed
them, and then instantly cursed himself for saying it.
September's eye went back to the sight of his
weapon. Several seconds passed before he thought to glance uncertainly over at
Flinx.
"How do you know, young feller-me-lad? I can't
see or hear a cursed thing."
"I have unusually good hearing," Flinx
lied.
He was receiving impressions of some kind of mind up
ahead. Beyond that he could sense nothing. His mind had been overloaded with
input from emotionally wracked minds since the previous day, minds both
advanced and aboriginal. Right now he couldn't evaluate the ones approaching
them any more than he could separate granite from gneiss.
"I hear something, all right," Hasboga
whispered, cuddling her pulsepopper tight as an infant. In the silence they
heard the slight crunch of rock underfoot.
"Trying to slip a couple of good bowmen close
to us, while we're worn out from the last charge" was September's
decision. "One tactic that won't work." He adjusted the focus on his
sight slightly and lowered the energy level-no sense wasting power on only a
couple of the abos.
In the silence of the tunnel, only their own soft
breathing could be heard. That made the gentle, pedantic voice that abruptly
spoke sound louder than it actually was.
"Please don't shoot," it requested, in
perfect terranglo but with a slight accent. "I do hope you are all
uninjured."
"That's certainly a tbranx voice," a
wondering, confused September said firmly. He stood up and peered into the
darkness. "Come on ahead, whoever you are!"
The crunching resumed. Soon a pair of figures
emerged into the light. One was a dignified thranx of considerable age,
evidently the one who had called out to them. His antennae dropped, and his
chiton was turning deep 'purple. Both wing cases had been treated for the
cracking of maturation, but the insect walked with sureness, and the shining
compound eyes still held a brightness few young thranx possessed.
His companion was a tall, slim human of comparable
age. His eyes were simple, and there were no ommatidia to throw back rainbows
at the stupefied watchers, but they gleamed a little in their own way from
beneath slightly slanted brows.
"As fast as we come, it's never been fast
enough," the thranx announced tiredly. "None of you are damaged?”
"No, no," Isili Hasboga responded. She
tried to see past the two figures into the darkness of the tunnel. "What
happened to the Otoid?"
"I'd like to say," the tall human replied,
in oddly stilted Terranglo, "that we landed among them, discussed the
situation pleasantly, and convinced them to leave in peace. Unfortunately, they
are belligerent far in excess of their intelligence." He appeared
embarrassed. "Our skimmer is just outside the entrance to this temple. We
have some heavy weapons in it."
"Frankly, it wouldn't disappoint us if you'd
exterminate the little bastards completely," September declared, rising
and brushing rock dust from his hands and clothes.
"I am sorry," responded the thranx, with
frosty politeness, "we are not in the genocide business."
For a thranx to speak such perfect Terranglo was
most unusual, Flinx knew as he moved for a better look at their rescuers. In
fact, in his whole life he had only met one thranx who spoke the language of
man like a native. That was . . .
"Truzenzuzex!"
he shouted,
stumbling forward past a dumfounded September. "Bran Tse-Mallory!"
The two partners, prospector and archeologist stared
blankly as their young visitor exchanged noisy greetings with the two peculiar
saviors.
Tse-Mallory was smiling his thin little smile, whip
masked more enthusiasm than it ever revealed. The Eint Truzenzuzex made
clicking sounds in High Thranx indicative of greeting mixed with great
pleasure, then added in Terranglo: "Again to see you is a delight, young
Flinx."
September gazed open-mouthed at the evident reunion;
then his brows furrowed in concentration and he simply watched and listened.
"I am warmed mentally and emotionally, though I
cannot be physically," announced the thranx philosoph. "So I must ...
ask you to remove your arms from ... around my b-thorax ... so I can …
breathe."
"Oh, sorry," Flinx apologized, removing
his arms from around the old insect. Once again the eight breathing spicules
pulsed freely. "But what are you doing here, old friends? Of all the
places in the universe, this is the last that I'd expect?"
"Everything in its proper time plane,
lad," Tse-Mallory broke in, making calming motions with both hands.
"At present, I suggest we remove ourselves from this confined place. The
aborigines who are left may elect to return. We would not be able to properly
direct our skimmer's weapons from this deep in the earth."
"I'm for that," grunted September, willing
to accept salvation without explanation. "The rent on this rat hole's been
paid." He gathered up his Mark Twenty.
Led by Tse-Mallory, the little party of saviors and
survivors started back down the tunnel.
Hasboga increased her stride to come up alongside
Flinx. She was relieved, confused, and wary all at once. "You obviously
know these two," she murmured accusingly.
"They're old friends, as I said," Flinx
readily confessed.
"What are they doing here? Not that I'm sorry
they appeared, you understand," she added hastily, lest she seem
ungrateful, "but you told us you were here alone, except for the one dead
in the temple."
"I told you the truth," Flinx insisted
easily. "I was as surprised to see them as you and September were."
At a sudden thought, he glanced back over his shoulder. Sure enough, Ab was
still sitting back in the alcove, playing with rocks.
"Move it, Abalamahalamatandra!" he shouted
impatiently.
Ab looked up from where he was squatting near the
rear of the wide place in the tunnel. "Come some, fly high," he
murmured, perhaps to himself, maybe to Flinx, possibly to nothing and no one in
particular.
Twelve stones were arranged in a neat circle in
front of Ab. With additional stones the addled alien was creating an abstract
and seemingly meaningless design in the center of the circle. Ire had found the
stones in a small hollow in the floor where his foot had fallen through during
the fighting.
At his master's urging, he rapidly pushed the
stones, diamonds, tanzanites, and a couple of fist?sized black emeralds back
into the little hole. They fell the balk' meter to the bottom of the hollow.
One of them bounced off an Alaspinian doubledevil mask, a meter high and wide,
made of solid platiniridium and faced entirely with faceted jewels. It lay atop
a small hillock of similar artwork.
"Go flow," ordered Ab as he scrambled to
his feet and gamboled down the corridor after Flinx.
Emerging into the central temple chamber they had
abandoned earlier, the tired survivors were greeted by the warmth and friendly
daylight filtering in through the gallery window high above and through the
once dark doorway. Fragments of broken wood from the shattered makeshift door
lay strewn all over the floor.
Hasboga took one look and moaned at the sight of the
supplies they had been unable to take with them into the tunnel. Everything
edible was gone, everything nonorganic broken, torn, battered into uselessness.
The sleeping mattress was tiny flakes of plastic drifting in the gentle jangle
breeze. Their autochef, the sole means of synthesizing a decent meal, was scrap
metal, the smaller sections missing. Undoubtedly the cannibalized metal would
find its way into hundreds of Otoid arrowheads.
"That's the end of it," she sighed,
bending over and picking listlessly through pieces of a shredded dream.
"I've no grant money to replace this." She probed through the rubble
and held up a bent, half-unwound spool of study tape.
"How they hate us," she murmured. "Why?"
A hand the size of a good book covered her right:
shoulder. September looked down at her with a mixture of paternal and
nonpaternal affection. "We'll scrape up the credit somewhere, Isili, if
you really want to come back here one day. It's only money. I've been richer
and broker than this a couple of dozen times in my life. The scale always
balances."
"Not for me it doesn't," she replied
viciously, throwing the tape into the rest of the vandalized pile.
She sniffed loudly. "I will not cry. It's unscientific
and unbecoming and solves nothing."
"Damn right," agreed September, turning
away from her so she could let the tears flow without embarrassment. "I
said we'd raise the credit from somewhere, and we will!" He studied the
Otoid bodies which lay strewn about the chamber. Several black-lipped holes
showed in the temple walls. Both were testimony to the effectiveness of
whatever weapons the two odd newcomers claimed to have in their skimmer.
"They paid for it," the giant finished, examining the Otoid dead.
"Our sorrows to you," Truzenzuzex clicked,
making a gesture which looked much like a sign of blessing, "but we should
hurry. Those who would return would be angrier than the ones who lie quietly
here." The aged philosoph watched as September moved to comfort Hasboga.
"We don't know you and you do not know us," he pointed out. "We
have access to certain funds. Your loss touches me." The valentine head
swiveled slightly; he looked up at the tall human standing nearby. "Bran,
may we not aid these two?"
Hasboga brightened and looked uncertainly from man
to insect. "Noble sirs, we'd be forever in your debt!"
"We are not nobles," Tse-Mallory corrected
briskly. "My name you now know. My companion"- he touched the
insect's b-thorax lightly-" is a theoretical philosopher holding the rank
of Eint among the thranx. We were both once of the United Church and served
it."
"Who do you serve now, Tse-Mallory?" asked
September.
The slightly wrinkled face smiled cryptically.
"Our own curiosities. Your names, sir?"
"Isili Hasboga, my boss," September
responded, ignoring the disgusted look she gave him, "and I'm Skua
September. We'd appreciate any loan you could make us, humanx."
Tse-Mallory found himself looking eye to eye with a
man twice his own mass. "September ... that name I know from
something."
The giant grinned. "Can't imagine how or where
from, Tse-Mallory, sir."
"I see you are not violently opposed,"
Truzenzuzex told his friend. "We can discuss matters of money and memory
later, after we have left this dangerous place. If you will all hurry," he
once more urged them, "our skimmer is hovering just outside."
Everyone moved ... less one.
Flinx had not heard much of the Preceding
conversation. He stood off to one side, staring down at the: eyeless body of
Pocomchi. Now he turned sharply.
"Just a minute." While the others stopped
to stare at him, he moved as if he had all the time in the world and started
brushing dirt and dust and gravel off Ab. As always, the alien allowed himself
to be cleaned without comment.
"Everyone's in too much of a hurry," he
continued. "Me, I'm not going anywhere with anyone until I get some things
straight in my own mind." Truzenzuzex stared at him disapprovingly, but
Flinx was firm. "Not with you or with Bran, until we ..." Something
clicked and now he spoke rapidly. "You've both been following me. You must
have been following me, or you wouldn't be here now. Unless you have some
dealings with September or Isili, and judging from the little exchange I just
overheard, you didn't know each other until just a few minutes ago."
September looked curious, Hasboga merely confused.
"I don't know why you've been following
me," Flinx went on forcefully. "I want to know." After a brief
pause, he added, almost indifferently, "It was you two who killed all those
Qwarm back in the warehouse on Moth, when I was on my way to the
shuttleport."
Hasboga's confusion gave way to the kind of worry
and nervousness that mention of the assassin clan always engendered.
"Qwarm? What's this about Qwarm?" She eyed Flinx as if he had
suddenly turned into a dangerous disease.
"Quiet," instructed September. "Let
them talk it out, lsili."
"Oh
no," she objected, "not this lady. Credit loan or no credit loan, I
don't want anything from anyone who's had dealings with the Qwarm." She
smiled gratefully but cautiously at Tse-Mallory. "Thanks for your offer of
aid, sir, but you can keep your money and your arguments with the Owarm to
yourselves. We'll raise the credit elsewhere."
Tse-Mallory finished listening, then turned back to
Flinx as if Hasboga had never opened her mouth. "Yes, we killed them
before they could kill you, Flinx."
That explained the fading mental screams and sounds
Flinx had sensed while fleeing from the warehouse. Tse-Mallory and Truzenzuzex,
those aged beings, had been concluding their grisly work. No doubt the Qwarm
had been very much surprised.
"Then you have been following me," he
declared, more curious than accusing.
"All the way from Moth," Tse-Mallory
replied, "but you are only partially correct, Flinx."
Truzenzuzex raised a truhand and foothand, pointed
to Flinx's left and behind him. "Primarily, Flinx, we've been trying to
catch up with it."
For a second Flinx stood staring blankly at the
philosoph. Then he turned and gazed silently behind him. So did September and
Hasboga.
Ab noticed all the silent attention, giggled his
alien giggle, and began to rhyme noisily at his new audience.
Flinx turned away from his charge, to eye the myriad
corpses scarring the temple floor, the ruins of September and Hasboga's camp,
and discovered that try as he might he couldn't find a thread of logic in
anything that had happened.
September was apparently of the same mind. "You
two have been chasing that crazy four-legged whatsis," he announced in
disbelief, "and killing 0warm because of it?" He shook his massive
head in amazement, that great proboscis cleaving the air like a fan. "You
don't look like madmen."
"Neither are the Qwarm," Flinx added
dazedly. "Why is Ab's death so important to them?"
"Abalamahalamatandra, you called to it back
there in the tunnel," Tse-Mallory mused maddeningly, ignoring everyone's
questions. "Ab for short. It has a name. Interesting."
"You're avoiding me, Bran," Flinx half
snapped at the tall Oriental. "That's not the Tse-Mallory I know who
pondered the inner workings of the Krang. Why do the Qwarm want Ab dead?"
"Not the Qwarm," corrected Truzenzuzex
quietly. "Never the Owarm. If they want anyone dead, it's you, Flinx,
because of the trouble you've caused them. But to them Ab is only a statistic
at the end of a voucher. They are hired by those who want others dead, in this
case your accidental companion." The philosoph looked sad, angry.
"The Qwarm clan is a lingering evil from unenlightened, pre-Amalgamation
times. Why the Church and Commonwealth tolerate it I have never understood. As
for Ab there are impressive forces that want him extinguished. Not simply dead,
but obliterated, disintegrated."
"But why?" Flinx pleaded, uncomprehending.
"Look at him." He gestured at the innocent, versifying creature. "Why
would anyone want such a harmless creature killed, and why take such pains to
do it?" Turning back to face Truzenzuzex, his next question revealed how
much he had grown since they had last seen him. "Even more interesting,
why would two individuals of your abilities want to go to the trouble of
preventing it?"
"Why did you bother to rescue him that first
time, before we could do so?" Tse-Mallory asked.
Flinx didn't look at him as he replied irritably,
"I have a talent for getting my nose stuck in other people's business. I
spend a lot of time trying to yank it out. Actually, I didn't intend to
interfere. It was Pip who?" He broke off in mid-sentence.
"I do not see the minidrag," Truzenzuzex
admitted. "Your pet is dead?"
"Not dead," Flinx corrected him. "But
I don't really know. This is the planet of Pip's birth. The man who guided me
here also had a tame minidrag, Balthazaar. Both flew away together, in the
middle of the night. Possibly forever, although," he added hopefully,
"there's always a chance they'll return." His tone grew firm.
"You're both trying to distract me. I'm not setting foot in any kind of
skimmer with you two devious old men" -Truzenzuzex made a clacking noise-
"until I find out why someone wants poor Ab killed and why you both want
him alive." He shook his head in puzzlement. "It doesn't seem to me
that either Ab or myself is worth all the attention that's been given to
us."
Bran Tse-Mallory responded by glancing impatiently
from Flinx to the rubble-and-body-littered temple entrance. "This isn't
the place or time, Minx."
Flinx folded his arms and took a seat on a nearby
stone. "I disagree."
Isili Hasboga was picking sadly through the remnants
of her scientific equipment. As she spoke, she brushed strands of hair from her
face. "I have to agree with your friends, Flinx. The Otoid will come back,
twice as many the next time. When they do return, I don't want to be
here."
"Sorry, silly," said September. "I
have to side with the boy." He flashed Flinx a look of support.
"You've got some interesting friends for one your age, feller-me-lad. Stay
obstinate. I'll stay, too."
"Very well then," whistled Truzenzuzex
exasperatedly. "Bran?"
Tse-Mallory made a negative sound. He eyed
September, who was rocking on his heels, humming to himself and supremely
indifferent to the possibly imminent arrival of several thousand rampaging
aborigines. "If you'll pick up that formidable-looking Mark Twenty, Mr.
September, and come outside with me, we'll keep watch while these two
chatter." September nodded his acquiescence and moved to shoulder the
rifle. "Try to be brief, will you, Tru?" Tse-Mallory asked his
companion.
"If there is one among us who is guilty of
persistent loquacity," came the reply smoothly, "it is not I"
"Debatable" was Tse-Mallory's simple retort,
as he followed September up the steps leading out of the temple.
"Not without being guilty of the crime of
debating!" shouted Truzenzuzex, but by that time Tse-Mallory and September
were out of hearing range.
On the grass outside, both men took up positions on
board the skimmer. "The lad indicated the thranx is an Eint and
philosoph," September said conversationally. "What of you?"
"I mentioned we were at one time both in the
service of the Church. I was a Chancellor Second."
September appeared impressed, though not awed.
"Pretty high. Wouldn't have guessed it. Myself, I never had much use for
the Church."
"Nor did Tru and I, after a while. That's why
we left it." Jungle sounds drifted innocently out of the green wave,
helped them relax a little. "And you, sir?"
"Oh, I've done a little bit of
everything," September replied modestly, "and had a little bit of
everything done to me." He did not elaborate, and Tse-Mallory did not pry.
Settling himself down on his four trulegs,
Truzenzuzex folded truhands and gestured with foothands as he talked. Behind
Flinx, Ab was arranging stones in a circle (ordinary stones, this time) and
singsonging softly to himself.
"Flinx, what do you know of the double-world
system Carmague-Collangatta and the planet Twosky Bright?"
Flinx thought a moment, then looked blank.
"Little more than what you've just told me, their names. I've never been
to either. I think they're all well-populated, highly developed worlds."
"Correct," said Truzenzuzex, nodding.
"All three are important contributors to the Commonwealth economy; stable,
advanced worlds. They're all going to die ... or at least most of the people on
them are probably the worlds themselves, also."
"Their suns are going nova," Flinx
guessed. He frowned. "That would be quite a coincidence."
"I
would expect you to be an expert on coincidences, boy. Your assumption is
incorrect. The situation is this. Many years ago, but not too many, a
Commonwealth science probe mapping behind the dark nebula called the Velvet Dam
discovered a sun disappearing into nothingness. Of course, it wasn't
disappearing into nothingness, only into something that partook of the aspect
of nothingness."
"I don't think I understand," Flinx
admitted.
"You will. Your Lewis Carroll would have. He
was a physicist himself, I think? No matter. The star in question was being
smashed down into a rogue black hole. Such an object has been theorized, but
this is the first one detected. Its course has been determined. We know enough
to predict that only a small percentage of the populations of all three worlds
could be rescued before their respective suns vanish into the rogue."
Flinx's own problems were forgotten as he tried to
conceive of disaster on the scale Truzenzuzex was describing to him. He sat
quietly, thinking, before it occurred to him to ask, "But why tell me
this? What does it have to do with your being here?"
Truzenzuzex shifted his stance slightly, his claws
making tiny scratching sounds on the tunnel. "Because your acquisition,
your acquaintance, your ward, or whatever you wish to call him"?he pointed
with a truhand at the rhyming Ab? "may be the one possible chance for
those worlds' salvation."
Having nothing intelligent to respond to that
incredible bit of information with, Flinx kept silent.
"A black hole is the ultimate state of
collapsed matter, usually a star which has fallen in on itself," the
philosoph explained. "In the case of the rogue, we believe that it may
consist of not one but many collapsed stars. Dozens, perhaps hundreds. We do
not have instrumentation capable of telling us by direct measurement, but we
can approximate from the speed with which the star detected by the probe was
absorbed. For a collapsar, the mass of the rogue is immense."
"How could anyone, especially Ab, least of all
the creatures in the galaxy, help you? Nothing can turn or destroy a collapsar.
At least," he added quickly, "nothing I ever heard of. I see no
connection, Tru, sir." For a moment he displayed the attitude of a
schoolboy ignorant of the answer to a teacher's question.
"I would not feel foolish at that
failure," Truzenzuzex confided to him. "You have much company."
Some bitterness crept into his voice. "Both the Commonwealth High Council
and the Court of Last Resort of the United Church are of the opinion that nothing
can be done to save the three worlds. They are attempting to rescue small
groups of the three populations without causing panic, which will be
inevitable. They refuse to consider the alternative."
"There's an alternative?" Flinx looked
startled.
"We are hopeful" was all the philosoph
would admit to. "But both Bran and myself feel that anything which might
save billions of lives and uncounted trillions of credits, no matter how absurd
it sounds, is worth serious and not jocular consideration. Our strongest
assurance that we are on the track of something potentially helpful has been
the frantic attempts of other parties to eliminate that hope. How your
poetically inclined alien is involved in this I will tell you in a moment.
"While Bran and I are no longer connected to
the Church, we still retain sympathetic connections in the bureaucracy. In the
Commonwealth government, too. Through these we learned of the death sentence
hanging over the three worlds in the path of the rogue. We felt as helpless and
sorrow-filled as anyone. However, we elected to try to do something. Our
specialty is the pre-Commonwealth, pre-Amalgamation history of this part of the
galaxy. To make many weeks of tedious research brief, we learned of a possible
connection between an ancient race and a similar destructive appearance of a
rogue collapsar. Somehow, somewhere on this side of the galactic center, the
menace was met and dealt with.
"That in turn led us to search for anything
that might tell us what became of the device which dealt with the first rogue.
Rumors of a being of unknown type were brought to us by our agents. The being
was at that time reported to be in the city of Drallar, on Moth. This being
sang nonsense rhymes and performed as a comic foil in a simple street entertainment.
We were not on Drallar at the time, but we succeeded in obtaining copies of
recordings from a tourist who witnessed the being's performance. This
intellectual expressed astonishment that Bran and myself should be interested
in such things.
"We were very excited when we saw the first
images of your Ab," the philosoph went on. "He matches up with no
known race. However, it was not his appearance, rather; one of his rhymes we
heard while viewing the recording, which caused my breathing spicules to lock
to the point of fainting and caused Bran to utter an oath I had not heard from
him in eighteen years. You see, Flinx, one of the rhymes contained a mention of
the race we believe successfully stopped the intrusion of a rogue collapsar
approximately eight hundred thousand Terran years ago on the near side of the
Shapely Center. That race was called the Hur'rikku."
There was a gasp, followed by a metallic clattering.
Isili Hasboga had dropped the armload of tapes she had so laboriously salvaged.
They sprawled across the floor. Several of them had cracked, and thin
microscopic tape had unreeled from the twisted spools.
She made no move to recover the tapes. Her
expression showed shock; her eyes were wide in disbelief.
Flinx saw something moving nearby: A truhand was
plunging into a pouch in the philosoph's thorax vest. Perhaps it was the abrupt
shock of Hasboga's reaction- perhaps his talent chose that perverse moment to
function- in any case, he sensed what was racing through the elderly thranx's
mind.
"No, Tru!" he shouted, rising and stepping
between the insect and Hasboga. "She's not a spy, she's an archeologist.
Wouldn't she know of the Hur'rikku?"
Truzenzuzex turned blazing compound eyes on Flinx
and considered his words. The hand relaxed; the concealed weapon in the pouch
never emerged.
All at once, Hasboga came out of her moment-long
trance. She turned her gaze to the floor, saw and remembered what had happened.
Suddenly she was scrambling to retrieve her precious tapes. Occasionally she
would glance back at the watchful Truzenzuzex, aware that something had upset
him, but she never suspected that the old insect had been prepared to kill her
simply on the basis of her reaction to what he had told Flinx.
"You are not a spy," he decided, the fire
fading from his eyes. "I see that now."
"Me?" She looked back in confusion.
"A spy? Spy, for whom?"
"I will tell you in time," he murmured.
"When you indicated a familiarity with the Hur'rikku I ... Excuse
me." He executed a thranx gesture of apology seasoned with contrition at
his own stupidity. "Too many deaths are already involved in this matter.
Bran and I can take no chances. The Commonwealth and the Church are already
suspicious of our actions, and they dislike having others inquire into matters
they consider wasteful. Then there are those who would like to see the rogue
proceed unchallenged on its course of destruction."
"Who or what are the Hur'rikku?" Flinx was
still a bit shaken from the severity of the kindly philosoph's murderous
reaction to Hasboga's knowledge.
His antennae still aquiver, Truzenzuzex proceeded to
explain. "The Hur'rikku are the half-legendary race who, scientists
postulate, erupted from the region near the galactic, center some nine hundred
and fifty thousand years ago."
"They weren't half legendary," argued
Hasboga. "They were completely legendary. Myths about then exist, but no
physical proof has ever been found for which alternate explanations couldn't be
provided."
"No physical proof, this is so," admitted
Truzenzuzex. "But they frightened the ovipositors of the Tar-Aiym."
His mandibles clicked in thranx laugher. "Of the Tar-Aiym we do have
physical proof."
Flinx knew the truth of that statement from his
experiences of over a year ago.
"We
know that about the time the Hur'rikku are rumored to have begun their
expansion outward from the galactic center, this entire section of space was
dominated by the Tar-Aiym. Roughly half a million Terran years ago, the
indomitable Tar-Aiym were thrown into a racial panic. It seems reasonable to
assume that the Hur'rikku were the cause of this."
Hasboga made a derisive sound. Truzenzuzex ignored
her and continued on. "The Tar-Aiym scientists constructed numerous new
weapons to counter the Hur'rikku threat. One was the defensive weapon known as
the Krang. Another was a simple plague. That destroyed not only the Hur'rikku
but the TarAiym themselves, and all life in the region we know today as the
Blight, before finally destroying itself.
"At this point in time the Hur'rikku are mostly
a legend. They exist because your friend Ab sings of them." A truhand
gestured to where the alien was delightedly juggling a dozen rocks. "The
Hur'rikku are like the rogue. Like it, we have no direct perception of
existence. But we can see how it acts upon other objects. Similarly, we know
the Hur'rikku existed because we know of their effect upon the Tar-Aiym. In
fact, that is all we know so far of the Hur'rikku- that they existed. That and
the fact that perhaps they may have found a way to counter the danger posed by
a wandering collapsar- and a few other less-impressive myths."
"But you need physical proof!" Hasboga
objected.
"Evidence need not be physical," was the
insect's calm reply.
"You philosophical scientists are all the
same," she said in exasperation. "You support hypotheses with dreams
embedded in foundations of supposition."
Truzenzuzex was not upset by the disparaging of his
chosen field. "So, Flinx, as little as we know of the Tar?Aiym, we know
even less of the Hur'rikku. And yet ... your alien talks of them."
Flinx turned disbelieving eyes on the humming Ab.
"You think that Ab might be ...?"
"No." Truzenzuzex was quick to correct a
blossoming misconception. "We do not think your Ab is a Hur'rikku. The
last Hur'rikku died five hundred thousand years ago. What Bran and I believe is
that he j more likely to be a very old member of some race living on the
periphery of the Blight, a race that retains memories of both the Tar-Aiym and
the Hur'rikku and their exploits. The legends of the Hur'rikku and the
collapsar are known. It is part of one legend that the Hur'rikku threatened to
use on the Tar-Aiym worlds the device which had stopped their rogue. If true,
that would go far to explain the unprecedented panic among, the warrior Tar-Aiym."
Flinx turned to watch Ab's juggling act. Noting the
smoothness of the blue skin, the supple arms and legs; the clearness in the
four limpid blue eyes, he reflected that the alien didn't look old. He reminded
himself than he was judging Ab's appearance by human standard.. Among Ab's
race, smooth skin and bright eyes might be signs of advancing senility.
"The legends seem to imply," Truzenzuzex
went or, "that beside this Hur'rikku device, something like the Krang is a
larva's toy."
Flinx was pacing the floor worriedly. "Couldn't
we try to use the Krang against this new rogue?"
Thranx laughter spiced with sarcasm preceded the
philosoph's response. "Just how would you move it" Flinx? You'd have
to move the entire world of Booster, on which the Krang is located and from
whose core it draws its power. Besides, if my initial supposition is correct
and the Krang does generate a Schwarzschild discontinuity it would not harm a
collapsar. Quite the contrary."
He leaned forward and stared hard at Flinx.
"Then there is the question of who could operate the Krang. I recall your
saying that you had no idea how to operate it.
"Well, that's true also," Flinx almost
panicked, trying to cover his mistake. Truzenzuzex had always been suspicious
of Flinx's abilities. He hid his concern in wonder. "Something that would
make the Krang seem to be a child's toy ... incredible."
"An ultimate weapon." Truzenzuzex nodded
slowly.
A sharp
laugh sounded from nearby. Ultimate weapons indeed! You and your tall friend
are madder than this alien. No such thing as an ultimate weapon can exist. If
it did, it would have destroyed everything in the galaxy by now, once it had
been activated."
"Not if in activation it neutralized
itself" Truzenzuzex argued charmingly.
"You can't convince me with semantics."
"I know, young lady. You require physical
proof." More Thranx chuckling, a sound like seashells sliding against each
other. "We think it worth trying to locate such proof, if it does exist.
We have nothing to lose except three worlds."
After a moment's silence, Flinx pointed back at Ab,
"How do you know Ab knows anything more about the Hur'rikku than he's
already said?"
"He appears to be a limitless fount of
information, Flinx. or haven't you noticed that he never repeats the same rhyme
twice?"
"'That may be so," Flinx conceded,
"but he only talks nonsense."
"Much of it probably is nonsense that will
always remain incomprehensible to us." Truzenzuzex was agreeable.
"But some of it is not."
"How do you propose to get any more Hur'rikku
information out of him?"
Truzenzuzex sighed deeply, an eerie whistling sound
in the near‑empty chamber. "We've chased him across two planets now
so that I can do just that. But why don't you do it, Flinx?"
"Do what, sir?"
"Ask him. Ask him about the Hur'rikku."
"I ..." Flinx noticed that the philosoph
had switched on a tiny recorder attached to his thorax vest. The insect was
serious about this. Well, he could play along. Turning, he faced Ab and said
sharply, "Ab! Abalamahalamatandra!" All twelve rocks fell to the
stone floor, their juggler ignoring them save for a single blue orb. He gazed
wanly at the stones until they stopped bouncing.
"What about the Hur'rikku, Ab?" F1inx
asked, feeling like an idiot as he talked sensibly to his ward. "Tell us
about the Hur'rikku. Tell us about how they stopped the collapsar rogue."
Nine and five, five and nine, loverly to dine if
fine. 'Ricku, 'Ricku, sing to hicks, haiku you, you key me."
"There, you sec?" Flinx turned and spread
his hands I
in a gesture of helplessness. "It's useless‑
he's crazy."
"Not completely," countered Truzenzuzex.
"It's simply a matter of points of tangency. You have none. Bran and I
have learned several. For example, Neinenive
is a Geeprolian translation for Har'rikku neuter. They had three sexes, it
seems. Ab is trying to convey information, but it's garbled through maybe a
dozen languages at a time, all of which he's trying to pronounce as
Terranglo."
Flinx Threw Ab a look of pure incredulity before
returning his attention to the expectant philosoph. "You mean Ab's been
making sense all along?"
"No. Some of his chattering seems to be pure
nonsense. The trouble is separating out the sense. Or perhaps I am wrong and
everything he is saying would make sense if only we had some way of breaking it
doom. His name, Abalamahalamatandra, for example. I wonder if that's just a
collection of conveniently collected syllables, or if it actually means
something." The philosoph rose from his squatting position. “ Let us take
your Ab along, probe and prod him, and see what other insightful nonsense he
can spout."
Tse‑Mallory and September clambered back down
the steps and stood at the base. "Patience, shipbrother," Txuzenzuzex
called to his companion. "We are coming."
"Now," TaerMallory responded in Terranglo.
"We've wasted too much time here. September and I killed two Otoid scouts
a few minutes ago. They must be returning. There axe also the Qwarm to
consider."
F?inx started. He had almost forgotten about the
professional assassins, with all the amazing talk of test races ultimate
weapons, and a coherent Alb.
"You brought a fair‑sized skimmer,
sirs," said September. "I think we can all fit inside."
"We can if you take no more than that."
Tse‑Mallory indicated Hasboga, who was laden with tapes, real books, and
a few modest Mimmisompo artifacts.
"Nothing here for me," September commented
with a grunt. "I can always come back for whatever the abos
leave."
` Why
bother, Skua?" Hasboga wanted to know. "We found nothing here. We
probably never would." Her gaze roamed the chamber floor a last time.
"We tried the wrong building. I see no profit in returning. Next time
we'll try somewhere else."
"Sure we will, silly," September said
reassuringly. "We'll raise the credit somewhere, don't worry," Ire
shifted the enormous Mark Twenty from his shoulder to a ready position.
"Gentlesirs, if you'll lead the way I'll endeavor to keep an eye or two on
the tree trunks, in case the need rises for me to incinerate one or two
overcurious little green brothers."
"We will chance your expertise in the
jungle." Tse-Mallory's mouth twisted in distaste. "Though I wish
you'd phrase your intent in a less primitive fashion. All intelligent beings
are brothers, you know. The Otoid as well."
A reflective grin split the giant's tanned face.
"I had a brother once. Didn't like him either. I ..." He cut the
story short with an expansive gesture. "After you, gentlesixs and
lady."
As they emerged from the sheltering stone walls of
the temple, Flinx found himself nervously eying every branch and vine and
creeper, convinced that a thousand Otoid were concealed nearby. At any second
he expected to feel a rain of darts, loosed from the nearest trees.
Ahead of him, Truzenzitzez was murmuring deeply in
Low Thranx. Nonsense rhymes and songs emanated from Ali with the usual
unconcern of the mad. Only now they seemed to be in response to the philosoph's
hypnotic mutters. Some were in Ali's mangled Terranglo, the rest in languages
unknown to Flux. But twice, he thought he heard mention of the Hur'rikku, so
perhaps the philosoph was learning something after all. Privately, Flinx
couldn't help but think his two wizened friends were engaged in a fruitless
chase founded on a futile assumption.
All the jungle noises which assaulted his ears were
animalistic and indifferent. There was no sign of the native Otoid. It was only
a short walk to the hovering skimmer.
Tse‑Mallory employed a control panel on his
belt to deactivate the protective energy shield surrounding the craft and then
to have it sink to the ground for easy boarding. It was a small cargo craft,
much larger than the tiny two‑man ship Flinx and Pocomchi had traveled
in.
That forced Pocomchi and Habib into his thoughts
again. Indirectly, at least, he was the cause of their deaths.
Why, he mused in anguished fury, did so many people
have to perish around him, when what he sought was neither wealth nor power but
only knowledge of his origins?
Tse‑Mallory boarded the skimmer first,
followed, with the always unexpected agility, by Truzenzuzex, then Hasboga and
September. As soon as Flinx entered the broad cockpit, with Ali bringing up the
rear, TseMallory touched a switch and the canopy door slid shut.
The engine whined expectantly. Soon they would be
back in Alaspinport, where he could press September to finish his explanation,
no matter how much the giant tried to put off Flinx's questions this time. His
gaze rose curiously, why he didn't know, to the transparent roof. Something
moved against the clear sky. Squinting, he stood on tiptoes and peered so hard
the back of his eyes hurt. Then Flinx was jumping up and down, shouting
violently, "Stop the skimmer, stop, stop!"
Tse‑Mallory hit a switch reflexively, and the
craft, which had commenced a slow turn, came to an abrupt halt. September was
struggling to reclaim his rifle from the cargo area, while Truzenzuzex was
digiting the skimmer's heavy armament uncertainly.
"What troubles you Flinx?" the philosoph
inquired'; glancing back over a shoulder turned Tyrolean purple.
For an answer Flinx continued to stare skyward,
though be gestured with his right band toward the control panel. "Put back
the canopy," he requested. Tse-Mallory started to object. Flinx s voice
rose almost hysterically! "The canopy‑put it back!"
The human scientist exchanged looks with his thranx
companion, who simply shrugged. Tse‑Mallory activated a control, and the
transparent polyplexalioy dome slid back into the body of the skimmer, leaving
only transparent sides, doors, and front windshield in place.
Hasboga moved to stand alongside Flinx. She stared
into the sky. "I don't see anything, Flinx," she said with surprising
gentleness.
"There," he told her, pointing.
"Coming toward ‑as out of the sun ... it has to be ... I'm sure it is!"
Two shapes wove a descending spiral, dancing on the
air. Two small dragon‑forms stark against mountains of cloud. One was
noticeably larger than the other.
A hundred meters above the skimmer, they finished
their aerial choreography and separated. Balthazaar flew off in the direction
of the sun. The other began a steady twisting dive toward the open skimmer.
"That's a dragon!" Hasboga gasped,
reaching for her sidearm. Flinx put a restraining band on hers.
"No, it's all right, Isili. It's mine. It's
Pip." His voice was cracking, despite his best efforts at self‑control.
A familiar diamond‑patterned shape braked,
pleated wings backbeating the air, tail and lower body hooked out and extended.
Flinx raised his right arm out from his side. Pip dropped for it, tail curving
around the proffered perch. The pleated wings folded tight to the body, and
then the flying snake was ensconced in its usual position of rest on Flinx's
shoulder.
Reaching down, its master affectionately stroked the
back of the triangular head. While the minidrag, as always, showed no outward
sign of emotion, Flinx could sense a feeling of pleasure in his pet. Empathy
cloaked him like the warm glow of stones surrounding a wood fire. Several
moments passed in silence before Flinx noticed that everyone in the skimmer was
staring at him.
"Your pet came back," Truzenzuzex finally
said, explaining Pip to the still‑uncertain Hasboga and September.
"I am pleased for you, Flinx. I remember what you two meant to each
other." With that, he turned and activated the skimmer controls.
Hasboga eyed the snake warily, but settled back in
her seat as the lithe craft picked up speed. Soon they were speeding back
toward Alaspinport, traveling just above the waving grass of the savannas.
When the exuberance experienced on his pet's return
had faded some, Flinx thought to turn and look over at September. The giant was
enjoying the ride, since someone else was doing the piloting for a change.
Thick fingers were running absently through his wild, wavy white hair. His nose
interrupted the view behind him like a plow.
"Skua?"
September faced him and offered a pleasant, toothy
smile. "What is it, young teller‑me‑lad?"
Flinx glanced significantly down at his now‑occupied
tight shoulder. "My minidrag. His name is Pip." He touched one
leathery wing, and the snake shifted sleepily. His attention returned to
September. "Twelve years ago, back on Moth, you lost a young minidrag,
remember?"
"I see what you're thinking, lad."
September put both hands around one knee, which resembled a knot on a tree, and
leaned back again, thinking. "All minidrags look the same to me, lad. As
to whether your Pip happens to be the one I lost, I'm
guessing it's possible. I never named my snake, so there's no way of knowing,
is there? Minidrags aren't common off Alaspin. I wouldn't know of any others
that had been on Moth then. Might have been. If your Pip is the one., that
would be an interesting coincidence, wouldn't it?"
"Yes, it sure would." Flinx kept his voice
carefully even.
"Signifying nothing." September finished
with that, and turned his gaze to the scenery slipping past outside.
Flinx did likewise, watching the savanna roll past
as Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory skillfully maneuvered the craft over low
hills, around trees and upthrust, unweathered rock spires.
"Signifying nothing," he murmured softly
to himself.
At Alaspinport, Flinx was forced to reveal that he
had his own ship. That was fine with Tru and Bran. Flinx permitted them to
commandeer it‑on one condition. "I'm not through questioning
September," he whispered to Tse‑Mallory.
The scientist regarded him somberly. "You'll
have him around for a while yet, Flinx. Hasboga has undoubtedly told him of our
plans. For their own protection, we must take both with us until this matter is
resolved. If not, they will be questioned by the Qwarm. I don't think they
would be permitted to live."
Neither Hasboga nor September objected to a free
trip off Alaspin once it was explained to them what might happen if they
remained. Both appeared to be under the impression that they would be delivered
immediately to some larger, safe world like Terra or New Paris. Flinx didn't
exactly lie about that, he simply neglected to tell either of them that they
would be taking a long route around.
As they left the surface of Alaspin, Truzenzuzex's
damnable curiosity prompted him to ask Flinx how he had acquired the impressive
sum necessary to purchase and operate a private, system‑jumping vessel
like the Teacher. Flinx could not explain that the Teacher
had been built by his precocious pupils, the Ulru‑Ujurrians. Yet it
was extremely difficult to lie believably in front of someone as perceptive as
Truzenzuzex. So, in what he hoped was a natural tone of voice, he explained
that he had purchased the ship out of the money given him by Maxim Malaika as
reward for his part in discovering the Krang. When he ran out of money to
operate the vessel, he would have to sell it.
Truzenzuzex appeared to accept this facile
explanation readily enough, though Flinx could detect a familiar twinge of
suspicion in the philosoph's mind even as he acknowledged the story.
Presently, they entered the Teacher with the insect
explaining that Flinx's fast ship was the reason they were so long in tracking
him down on Alaspin. Meanwhile, Flinx went about the difficult task of
assigning quarters to everyone on a ship that had not been designed with
passeneers in mind.
"We've always been just a step behind you,
Flinx," Truzenzuzex said. "On Moth we had to stop and deal with the
Owarm, while you made your way to the shuttleport. Then you outdistanced us
because we were forced to take a commercial ship to Asaspin, one which stopped
several times along the way, while you raced here directly. We were lucky to
find you as soon as we did."
They entered the spacious lounee, spacious because
Flinx enjoyed space and the Teacher had that to spare. The room accommodated
them all comfortably.
The philosoph gazed around approvingly. "A fine
ship you have for yourself, Flinx."
"Adequate" was the youth's response.
"I do not understand where the name came
from."
"A whim." Flinx managed only a half‑lie
this time. "I've always had thoughts about being a teacher."
"An admirable profession. One to which too few
beings dedicate themselves. I find most, sadly, to be teaching because they
have good minds but no imagination. Teaching is charity for the
intelligent."
Leaving the lounge to Hasboga and September, Flinx
led the two scientists to the pilot's compartment. Three walls were embroidered
with controls, the fourth showed naked space.
"Where do you want to go?" he asked, hands
poised over the ship's instrumentation.
For the first time, Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory
did not have a ready answer. Both glanced at Ab, who had trailed the three
forward and was now rhyming at a rapid pace. Flinx couldn't tell whether the
philosoph was making any sense of the alien's verses.
"Actually," Tse‑Mallory had to
admit, "we don’t know yet. Somewhere in the Blight, but we need at least a
clue from your Ab. For now, head in the direction of Hivehom. It's best if we
leave Alaspin's vicinity."
Flinx conveyed the requisite orders to the
navigation computer, which responded promptly, though it hesitated at the lack
of a specific destination. A bald of deep purple formed at the nose of the
ship, visible manifestation of the great KK drive's posigravity field. At
minimal acceleration, so as not to interact with Alaspin's gravity well, the
Teacher began to move out of orbit. Once they were the minimum safe number of
planetary diameters out, the drive would be fully engaged and the ship would
leap ahead at a multiple of the speed of light.
"There's a ship coming into orbit." Flinx
gazed interestedly at a gauge on the console.
"Not much traffic to this world," murmured
TseMallory. To Flinx's surprise, both he and Truzenzuzex moved to activate
several sensor controls and the large screen.
"Monitor configuration," Tse‑Mallory
instructed as he manipulated several controls.
"Monitoring." Truzenzuzex's delicate
truhands made fine adjustments.
Flinx was prepared to leave the ship's controls on
automatic. However, he turned curiously instead of walking from the chamber.
"Wait a minute. What's all the excitement about?" While Pip shifted
on his shoulder, he stared at the, two scientists, who were watching
instruments with intense concentration. Flinx's gaze narrowed. "The
incoming ship ... You still haven't told me who hired the Qwarm. I think I can
guess, judging from what you told me about certain forces who want to see the
rogue destroy Carmague‑CoIIangatta and Twosky Bright. But I can't be
sure."
"We intend to tell you, Flinx." Tse‑Mallory
spoke without taking his attention from the controls beneath his hands.
"Does it matter so much to you? It's Ab they're after."
"I'd like very much to know why someone's
trying to murder me because of Ab. That is," he added sarcastically,
"if it wouldn't be too much to ask, since I've given you the use of my
ship."
Both scientists were immune to sarcasm.
Truzenzuzex's truhands continued to fine‑tune controls, but he beckoned
Flinx to his side with a foothand. "You wish to know, Minx." The
youth moved alongside him. "There they are." He indicated the shape
neatly focused on the computer tridee tracker. "Do you recognize that
configuration? You are a bright human. I am certain your guess is correct. Now,
who would stand to benefit most by the damage to Commonwealth production and
population the rogue collapsar would cause?"
Flinx considered his supposition in the new light of
the image displayed on the viewscreen. It confirmed what he had suspected, all
right. But seeing physical proof was a good deal more ominous than simply
supposing.
September and Hasboga walked into the piloting
chamber. "I thought," September bellowed, "that since we're on
our way, it might be fun to ..." Frowning, he stopped. He squinted hard at
the picture on the screen. "Funny ... that looks like an AAnn courier
ship." Hasboga looked questioningly at him. He ignored her, crossing the
floor in several huge strides to peer closely at the screen. "No ... no,
by Pallanthian's Ghosts, it's a destroyer!" He turned a no‑nonsense
gaze on Tse‑ Mallory. "What's an AAnn warship doing inside
Commonwealth boundaries?"
"Boundaries, Mr. September?" Tse‑Mallory
trying to look innocent. "You can't draw boundaries in space."
"No, but you sure can on navigation
charts," September shot back. "No one makes mistakes light‑years
deep, not with automatic positioning equipment."
"No one said they had made a mistake," Tse‑Mallory's
voice was even, composed. He returned his attenention to the controls in front
of him. "You needn’t sound so melodramatic, September. You rave like
tridee fisherfax. Everyone puts too much reliance boundaries. Absurd, whey the
boundary of the AAnn Empire and that of the Commonwealth are hundreds1 of light‑years
high, wide, and deep. You can't build a fence, not even with the best deep‑range
monitoring systems. You can monitor worlds, but not parsecs.” He quieted for a
moment to watch as the AAnn warshL,y slipped into orbit around Alaspin.
"There is nothing on Alaspin capable of
resisting regular warship. So the AAnn will not make trouble. On the contrary,
they will probably claim to be experiencing trouble of their own and request
assistance. Mutual aid for emergencies involving deep‑space ships is
thoroughly covered by the treaties."
"What happens," September wanted to know,
"when a Commonwealth peaceforcer shows up and detects no sign of damage on
board?"
Tse‑Mallory smiled softly. "Mr.
September, the AAnn will not linger about Alaspin. They will satisfy themselves
that what they have come for, meaning Ab, is no longer on the planet. Then they
will depart rapidly. No doubt they axe tracking us at this very moment."
Hasboga stifled a gasp. "But while they may know about this ship, through
Qwarm informants, the cannot be sure Ab is aboard. They must check Alaspin,
first. By the time they know for certain, we will be v long way
elsewhere."
"Pretests will be lodged over the unauthorized
orbit,” Truzenzuzex declared. “Word will reach Terra and Hivehom. There will be
accusations, denials, apologies, concluded with promises not to do it again. We
have done the same thing within the Empire. So long as nonstrategic worlds like
Alaspin are involved and nobody gets killed, there's not much the offended side
can do short of starting an interstellar war. The AAnn know they're not strong
enough for that, and the Commonwealth is too conciliatory for it. So ...
nothing will happen."
"It might as far as we're concerned."
Flinx looked significantly at the philosoph, who nodded slowly in response.
"True FIinx. The presence of this ship means
that the reptiles have lest patience with the Qwarm." He permitted himself
a small sighing sound of satisfaction. "That is not surprising,
considering how ineffective the assassin's clan has been. They could hardly
know who has been interfering with them."
Tse‑Mallory chuckled at that remark.
Truzenzuzex turned a somber gaze on Flinx.
"This does not mean, however, that the Qwarm are finished with you. So
long as they continue to believe you are responsible for their difficulties,
they will continue to try to kill you."
September ventured a summation, "So we're
running from both the reptiles and the Qwarm."
"And the Commonwealth and Church as well,"
Tse‑Mallory added.
Flinx looked uncertain. "Why them, too?"
"Remember, Flinx," the former Chancellor
Second admonished him, "those organizations believe Ab is nothing more
than a wild wish in the minds of two senile renegades."
Now it was Truzenzuzex's turn to laugh, a rapid
clicking of all four mandibles.
"The Owarm are trouble enough, but I would
rather deal with them than with minor bureaucrats. If we are detained
officially, I wouldn't be surprised to see some minor functionary turn Ali over
to them to keep the Empire pacified."
"Slow down, just a minute." Comprehension
was beginning to dawn on Hasboga's dark features. "If we're going to avoid
Commonwealth officials how are you going to set Skua and me down anywhere where
we can raise financing?"
"We'll put you down on Burley, or on Terra, or
wherever you wish," Tse‑Mallory assured her, "as soon as we
have completed our little experiment."
"1f you think I'm going to run off into the
Blight and heaven knows where else with you in pursuit of some crazy theory, while
the Qwarm and the AAnn try to kill you, you're out of your minds!" Her
fury was exceeded only by hex incredulity.
There was a brief moment of disorientation. A slight
shudder passed through the Teacher indicating that they had just
exceeded light‑speed. Pulled by the KK field, the ship continued to
accelerate.
When no one said anything, Hasboga walked over to
stand next to Tse‑Mallory. Eyes flashing, she shouted up at him, "I demand
you put us down on the nearest developed Federation world!"
The scientist sounded contrite. "Sorry, can't
do that. We have no time to waste. The mere presence of the AAnn destroyer
within the Commonwealth indicates that they axe growing desperate. We can't
risk delays or detours. I think they cannot fallow us, but the AAnn are
efficient. They may be able to pursue us based on the particulate matter
produced by this ship's KK generator. We cannot afford to linger. Several
billion lives are at stake."
Fuming, she turned away from him. "Oh, come on!
You've as much as said yourself that the Hur'rikku device is half myth. You
can't really expect to find anything."
Tse‑Mallory's
eyes could not mask what he felt toward her at that moment. "Those whose death
see as certain will climb a rope made of one straw, if such a rope can be
provided. We are searching for that straw. Isili Hasboga, no one's personal
desires axe going to obstruct this search until if is concluded.”
Hasboga looked ready to argue further, but Flinx
interceded. "Please, Isili," he pleaded with her, "bear with
them. Truzenzuzex and Bran Tse‑Mallory are good humanx. If they didn't
have a good reason for what they're doing I would never have agreed to provide
them with a ship."
"Easy to say," she snapped angrily,
"when your own life is at stake anyway!"
So ferocious was her reaction that Pip started, and
stared threateningly at the source of the angry emanations being directed at
his master. Flinx calmed the minidrag. The flying snake settled back on his
shoulder, but kept a watchful cold eye on the woman.
Flinx spoke softly but firmly. "If that's the
case, why didn't I leave Ab behind to be killed by the AAnn? True it might not
take the Qwarm off my back, but the AAnn would no longer have an interest in
me. So maybe I have a little more than just self‑preservation at stake,
wouldn't you say?"
"I'm sorry." She looked away. "It's
just ... I've just had several years' work ruined, first by Otoid arrows, now
by finding myself involved in something I couldn't care less about."
Unable to argue further with Flinx, she turned her
fury on September. "What about you, stupid? You worked nearly as hard on
the excavating as I did. Now it's behind us and we're broke. Broke! Don't you understand?"
He gazed down at her gently. "A stranger to
impecuniosity I am not, silly bog. Me, I'm just a little ole hydrogen atom
drifting in the galactic wind. Actually, I find the direction of our present
drift kind of intriguing. Probably not profitable, but sometimes it's nice to
enrich something besides one's pocket." Turning, he took a chair near the
rear of the chamber. "Besides, I've been on Collangatta. Not Carmague,
though I could always see it hanging green‑and‑white in the sky
overhead, and not Twosky Bright, but I've been to Collangatta. I liked the
Collas. They're a friendly open sort. They know how to enjoy life. They made me
feel welcome, something that doesn't always happen to me on a newly visited
world. They made me feel at home.
"So, silly, before I see their world freeze
over and turn into a round grave frosted with frozen gases, I’ll take a chance
to save it." He gazed jovially at 'Tse-Mallory. "Best thing this
undertaking has going for it, near as I can see, is that the Commonwealth
does't think it's worth trying. That's a good‑enough recommendation for
me." She turned away from him huffly, and he rose and turned her. She
struggled, but couldn’t move those massive arms.
"Isili, all accumulated wealth does is make you
worry about the tax collector, and it's getting harder and harder to fool the
computers. Plenty of time yet to acquire the stigma of wealth. Or, in your
case, of fame."
"Do you really think that's it, Skua?" She
gave him a pitying look. "That I'm desperate to get back to my pet project
so I can have my fax in all the tridee tapes?"
"Not entirely," he admitted. "You're
a little too devoted to science for that. But then, you're not wholly immune to
it, either. You're human, Isili. It's a curse we all have to bear."
"Speak for yourself." The smooth interjection
came from near the console.
September let Hashoga leave his grasp and looked
that way. "I stand corrected, Your Bugship."
"Nothing personal." Truzenzuzex's reply
was couched as mild amusement coupled with gratification. "Look at it this
way, Hasboga." She kept her gaze resolutely elsewhere. "You've been
unlucky enough to fall in with a couple of old fools, and you know what the old
human saying says about them. So you might as well try to help instead of
binder us. There's nothing you can do about it anyway. We can be as fanatical
about saving lives as you can be about exhuming their remains."
She whirled. "You're all crazy, every one of
you" She stalked out of the cockpit, heading for the lounge.
September ought to have been upset. He wasn't, Flinx
noted. The giant accepted everything with an equanimity which hinted at great
mental as well as physical assurance.
Abruptly, Flinx decided he liked the enormous human,
whether or not the man was his true father. No, he would not try to coerce
further information on that subject from September. He was beginning to realize
that such knowledge would flow from September in his own time, and that
patience would gain far more information than arguing.
Rising from the chair, September moved to follow his
employer. He winked at Flinx. "Alcohol has a way of dissolving anger the
way acid does plastic, feller-me‑lad. Isili won't be really happy until
she's digging up ancient junk again. But 1 think I can keep her fury at a level
where she won't drive us all insane before thus voyage is over."
Long days passed as the Teacher chased its own field through emptiness. Tse‑Mallory
and Truzenzuzex employed a substantial part of the ship's computer in probing
Ab, trying to make sense of rhymes which sometimes employed terms and words
from six different languages at once, some of them no longer spoken anywhere,
some using words that were fourthhand translations from the original. It was
exhausting, frustrating work, made no easier by Ab's good‑natured desire
to make everything sound like Terranglo.
"We have formed a hypothesis," Truzenzuzex
was saying to Flinx one day as they sat in the lounge listening to Ab burble
endlessly nearby. "Bran and I have decided that not only is Ab not
speaking nonsense, but that everything he
says makes sense. We simply haven't the time or equipment to track down
everything he is saying, to translate it properly. Half of our translations are
largely intuitive, and the rest at least partially so."
Flax's gaze went upward, to where Pip was darting
lazily among the three‑dimensional false clouds in the simulated late‑afternoon
sky projected by instrumentation in the walls. "Everything seems to make
sense to Ab, but then, everything a madman says makes sense to himself."
He glanced at Ab. "I don't know how you'll ever find the world you want
from him."
Ab abruptly turned two blue eyes on Flinx.
"Cannachanna, banarana, lemon pie and apple vana. What ticks inside the
helical mix?"
"There, you see?" Flinx said. "It's
the same as…" He stopped and stared at the philosoph. Tru was sitting on
the thranx loungeseat, gazing blankly into the distance. "Tru?"
Truzenzuzex stared a moment longer, then turned to
Flinx. "That's it."
Flinx felt groggy. "What's it?"
"The world ... maybe." The philosoph was
muttering to himself as he raced on four legs and foothands for the lounge
computer terminal. Still dazed, Flinx followed.
"It is an old Visarian name for a main sequence
star inside the Blight. The star is RNGC 1632 on Commonwealth charts." He
was shouting commands to the computer while trying to talk into the intercom at
the same time.
Tse‑Mallory appeared in the room in response
to the more coherent instructions. The tall scientist was only partially
dressed, still wet from an unfinished shower, and quite indifferent to his near
nudity. "What's happened, ship‑brother? Something at last?"
"Cannachanna, Bran."
While Truzenzuzex worked with incredible speed at
the terminal, Tse‑Mallory walked over to sit next to Ab. Water glistened
on his body under the bright artificial light as he regarded the alien, who was
playing with his fingers.
"Cannachanna, remember. Remember
Abalamahalamatandra." He was gazing unblinkingly into one blue eye, doing
things with his eyes and voice and hands. "What about Cannachanna?"
Ab winked all four eyes in sequence and sang
pleasantly, "Go, go, go, fast, fast, fast. Needle‑pie death from
underwear past. Kalcanthea tree for I am …" and on and on, as usual.
But that was enough; it was a confirmation.
Tse-Mallory and Truzenzuzex came as close to kicking up their heels as Flinx
had ever seen them.
"The computer," Truzenzuzex said, when he
got his breath back and finally responded to Flinx's questions, "has
accepted the reference, liven a transposition, and plotted a course. We are on
our way, at last. Praise to the Hive!"
The most astonishing transformation the information
produced occurred not in the two scientists, but in Isi Hasboga.
"You mean the Hur'rikku actually existed?"
she asked Tse‑Mallory, her eyes shining in disbelief and wonder.
"So it would seem. We're heading for a
Hur'rikku; world right now. It's located in the proper position for such a
world, on the far center‑side of the Blight. That's where the Hur'rikku
expansion would have reached to when they encountered the Tar‑Aiym. It's
also the logical place to establish a threat, to mount major weapons
system."
"I can't believe it," she said, "I
can't believe it. Such things don't happen in real life."
"The incredible always happens in real
life," Tse-Mallory chided her. "Its the expected which makes up most
fiction."
"A Hur'rikku world," she was murmuring.
"A. Hur'rikku world." She looked up with such caked desire that Flinx
was embarrassed. "We'll be the first humanx to see it. Do you ... do you
think I might have a chance to do some fieldwork?"
Tse‑Mallory smiled; his voice was fall of
assurance "Hasboga, we're all going to be doing a great deal of fieldwork.
Or do you think we're simply going to orbit the world the Hur'rikku inhabited,
find a continent sized sign in symbospeech saying `Ultimate WeaponFollow the
Arrow,' and walk right up to it?"
She was so excited at the prospect of being the
first archeologist to set foot on a legendary world of a mythical race that she
hardly heard Tse‑Mallory's stern sarcasm.
Flinx had been through the Blight once before. It
looked no different from any other section of normal space, save for having a
slightly higher population of stars than the Arm in which the Commonwealth lay.
It still gave him the shivers. Once these myriad worlds had been home to dozens
of intelligent races. Now only lower forms lived there, all higher varieties
having been exterminated in the ravening plague unwittingly unleashed by the
panicked Tar‑Aiym half a million years ago.
Even those two usually aloof beings, Tse‑Mallory
and Truzenzuzex, were affected. They kept themselves busy with Ab and stayed
out of the control cabin, stayed away from its wide port and its panorama of
stars. Instead, they discussed abstruse philosophies in arcane languages, or played
games of such complexity with the ship's computer than an onlooker could not
even figure out who eventually won, much less how the game was played.
Three weeks passed when they announced that Ab
possessed an approximate vocabulary of twenty‑eight trillion words, in
three million, four hundred sixty thousand languages, of which at least two
million were no longer used and two hundred four thousand were purely
mathematical.
These figures did not indicate the mind of an idiot.
Isili Hasboga, now expectant and happy, reveled in
the comparative luxury of the Teacher. It was her first time on a private
craft, since position and finances had always relegated her to economy‑class
transports whenever travel between worlds had been necessary.
What Hasboga found impressive merely amused
September. His interest was in the practical workings of the ship. There were
times when the giant worried Flinx, such as when he found September staring
intently at some aspect of the Teacher's construction. Eventually he relaxed,
telling himself that if the giant discovered anything unusual about the ship,
he would probably ascribe it to some vagary or peculiarity of the firm which
had constructed it. Which would be trice. Just so long as no one guessed at how
peculiar the Teacher's manufacturers were.
Flinx found he was left pretty much to himself. The
ship ran without help. Checking and rechecking its smooth operation took little
time. He had to find otter excuses not to stare out the ports. What made him
and the two scientists truly uncomfortable was not the emptiness of the
inhabitable planets around them, but the inescapable deep‑down fear that
somewhere on one of those worlds a viable remnant of the Tar‑Aiym's
unstoppable plague still lurked, waiting to infect some unsuspecting explorer
with an age‑old malignancy.
The system of Cannachanna looked no different from
many others Flinx had seen schematized on fie ship's screen. There were only
three planets circling the hot K‑type sun. And unless the Hur'rikku were
suited to extraordinary extremes of temperature and pressure, they could not
have lived either on the massive, frozen gas giant circling farthest out or on
the sun‑blistered globe that skimmed scorchingly close to the primary.
That left only the middle planet of the three. Thougl.1 farther from its sun
than Earth was from Sol it would still be a hot world. But at least it
possessed an atmosphere humanx could breathe. It could support life. It was the
only possibility.
"Of course," Tse‑Mallory reminded
everyone as they started surfaceward in the shuttle, "we have no evidence
to show that the Hur'rikku were anything like ourselves, or even that they were
a carbon‑based form."
But then, they had little evidence of any kind
concerning the Hur'rikku.
That this world had been inhabited by some race was
amply confirmed by the Teacher's scanners. All four major continents were
dotted with ruins. They were extensive enough to indicate that at one time ins
the distant past the world circling Cannachanna had supported a sizable population..
With nothing else to go on, Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory
opted for touchdown near the largest city they could find. It was located near
the west coast of the northern hemisphere's largest continent. The shuttle
landed softly under Tse‑Mallory's skilled direction as Flinx stared out
at a sky the color of molten iron. The star Cannachanna shone through the
pulsing redness like an engorged blood vessel.
Pure white sand shushed
under the shuttlecraft's skis as they touched down. Only a slight crosswind
made the landing other than ordinary. Instrumentation indicated that the vast,
mountainless plain they had set down on was hot. It was after midday, and the
outside temperature registered nearly 45°C in the fresh shade of the shuttle.
The little group stepped down the ramp onto the
white sand. Flinx and Hasboga were sufficiently darkskinned not to require
protection from the sun beating down relentlessly through crimson‑hued
clouds. Truzenzuzex was practically comfortable, except for the dryness of the
air. He was the one who recommended and produced proper creams and sprays from
the ship's dispensary to protect the more delicate skins of Tse‑Mallory
and September.
While the others stood in the shade of the shuttle
wing, Truzenzuzex led Ab out onto the surface. Ab immediately kneeled and
rhymed as he traced incomprehensible designs in the sand.
They listened intently as the philosoph addressed
them: Ab cannot be hypnotized, though the Tunnels know Bran and I have tried.
But through various techniques I think I can gain his attention more closely
than one could using normal speech. Doing so somehow depends on the pitch of
one's voice.
"These last few days prior to our arrival Bran
and I have been querying Ab constantly about the weapon. Since he has not
provided us with any directions, we feel we might just as well start here and
move from city to city, in the hope that something will trigger Ab to provide
the proper response."
"Do we have to stay here?" Hasboga was
staring yearningly at the distant city. Towers of well‑preserved metal
and unknown materials loomed tantalizingly over gypsum dunes.
“Hashoga, we are not here for simple exploration. My
own curiosity presses me toward the city common sense and a more desperate need
hold me back from it." Truzenzuzex looked sad. "It must be this way,
at least until we find what we have come for."
Hasboga was not appeased. "First you drag Skua
and me all this way and then you tell me I can't so much as have a close look
at one of the greatest discoveries in the history of humanx science. Here we
are on the world of a race no one really believed even existed." She
kicked angrily at the sand, sending a powdery white spray downwind.
They were standing on a world of hot ice, Flinx
thought.
Tse‑Mallory eyed her reprovingly. "This
world will always be here, Isili Hasboga. Whereas Carmague‑Collangatta
and Twosky Bright will not be, unless we can find the weapon and make it
work."
"Even if the thing is here, it probably isn't
functional. You realize that, of course." September's gaze shifted from
Truzenzuzex to Tse‑Mallory.
The tall scientist smiled back at him and shrugged
slightly. "We're nothing if not optimists, September, It's in the nature
of bumanxkind to defy the odds."
"That's the difference between us," September
said; turning his attention also to the distant, archaic metropolis. "It's
in the nature of Septemberkind to ride with the odds. That's how I've lived as
long as‑" He saw Flinx gesturing for attention. "Something
happening, young feller‑me‑lad?"
Flinx was pointing at Ab. "He's going to do
something."
Tse‑Mallory's reply to September was
forgotten. Even Hasboga's interest was distracted from the city.
Ab turned in place as if searching intently for
something no one else could see. Finding a direction, he waddled off toward the
southwest. When he got roughly ten meters from the shuttle, he stopped and
hunted around his feet. After concluding a careful survey of the sand he was
standing on, he sat down with a thump, reached out with three arms, and commenced
etching a fresh slew of abstract patterns while singing to himself. He was as
happy as any three‑year‑old in a sandbox.
"Wonderful." Hasboga threw her hair back
and ran both hands over it. "The end of the noble quest. What do we do
now?"
Though obviously disappointed, Truzenzuzex didn't
show it in his reply. "We could not reasonably expect that the alien would
immediately lead us to the weapon. Now we must begin our search in
earnest." Hasboga's expression brightened, and the philosoph hastened to
add, "From the air."
"Why the air?" she wanted to know,
downcast.
"Before we commence the laborious task of
examining these cities on foot, there is a chance Ab may recognize or be
stimulated by some larger pattern."
Gathering up Ab, who as always came along without a
fuss, they returned to the shuttle. The ramp was sucked in behind the last
boarder, the engines engaged, and the little vessel turned to rise into the
wind.
Behind, a few human and thranx footprints remained
in the sand. Gentle wind began patiently to erase them.
Beginning with the largest on each continent, they
went at high speed from city to city. Soon they were traveling over far smaller
urban centers than the one they had set down next to. At each new city
Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory would glance hopefully over at Ab. Each time
Ab would stare delightedly at the new landscape beneath the shuttle, would
rhyme ceaselessly, and then Truzenzuzex would read the computer interpretation
of what Ab had said and the shuttle would change course once again.
Several days of such searching convinced Tse‑Mallory
that they might be on the planet a long, long time. Hearing this, Hasboga grew
nearly as hot as the air they were flying through. She insisted on being set
down in some city, any city, to
pursue her work.
Unable to refute her arguments, Tse‑Mallory
and Truzenzuzex finally agreed. She might discover something useful to them,
and it would be quieter on board the shuttle without her.
September opted to join her, as much because the
aerial search was beginning to bore him as for any other reason. They
disembarked on the outskirts of the first city they had visited, taking along
ample supplies and sufficient weaponry to defend themselves, although there had
been no sign of hostile life.
Indeed, this world boasted little in the way of
animal life and not much in the way of vegetation. Most of Cannachanna II's
surface ran to desert, some low, some high. The largest living thing they had
found so far was a sort of nervous‑looking pink cactuslike plant which
soared fifteen meters or more into the angry sky and was several meters around
at the base. Its root system, Tse‑Mallory observed, must be astonishing.
Water flowed below, rather than on top of the land.
There was little in the way of large bodies of fresh water. The land showed the
sameness as the cities. And each city was like the next, differing only in
size. They were full of crumbling, disintegrating stonework and pitted metal
structures, inhabited now only by insinuating winds and fading memories. The Teacher's shuttle flew over each with
the same hopes, departed with identical disappointment.
"The Tar‑Aiym built better cities but
fewer, judging from what we saw of Booster." Truzenzuzex was staring out
at the desert sliding past beneath them. "That fits with what we know of
the Hur'rikku's rumored prolificacy and helps to explain the Tar‑Aiym's
fright."
"You're sure that Ab's not one of them?"
Flinx indicated the alien, who was strapped into a chair facing a wide
viewport.
Tse‑Mallory shook his head. "The shape of
the doors we have seen on low passes is enough to demonstrate that, whatever
else Ab is, he is not a Hur'rikku. They were much smaller than All, smaller
than ourselves. Closer to the Otoid of Alaspin, if you need a race for comparison.
Whereas the Tar‑Aiym, as near as we can tell from similar evidence on
their world of Booster, were massive creatures far larger even than your friend
September. And yet," he mused, staring out over the wastelands of metal
and rock and sand, "the tiny Hur'rikku succeeded in terrifying the greater
Tar‑Aiym to the point where they lost control of their military science
and created something which ultimately destroyed, them all."
Truzenzuzex looked unhappy as he preened his
antennae with a truhand. "We are wasting time, I fear. We cannot spend
forever on this world. Another week, and I recommend returning to hire
additional, nongovernment help." At Flinx's look of surprise he added:
"It is in my nature to be impatient, friend Flinx."
As the shuttle banked sharply to leave the city they
had just inspected, the philosoph slumped in his loungeseat. "Ab still
shows no indication of responding to anything on this world. I fear that he
might not react to the weapon even if we passed directly over it. And since we
have no idea what to look for, if it does not resemble a humanx weapon we could
pass the thing by in equal ignorance. How many cities have we inspected, ship‑brother?"
"Fifty‑five, counting the last."
Truzenzuzex made a sound indicative of mild disgust
mixed with personal recrimination. "We could check out a thousand fifty‑five,
I'm afraid, without any hope of success."
His companion smiled back at him stolidly.
"Possible, but we must examine those thousand and however many more. Three
worlds await our‑"
Truzenzuzex waved resignedly. "Yes, I know, I
know. But it seems so hopeless. If we could only pry some clue, some hint as to
where the weapon was kept, out of Ab, we might find it. On Booster the location
of the Krang was evident from its size, its position of isolation and
importance, and the uniqueness of its construction. We have detected nothing
similar on this world, nothing out of the ordinary in any city."
It was then that Flinx, keyed by Truzenzuzex's
words, bad one of those rare moments of intuition which he could never predict.
Yet that flash of intuition probably was not the result of his special talents
at all. There was nothing extraordinary about the thought that occurred to him.
It might simply have been that he, unlike the scientists, could think only of
simple possibilities. Ile had already voiced half a hundred opinions on the
possible location of the weapon prior to this one. None had been worthwhile.
But this one definitely was.
"If I," he said casually, rubbing the back
of Pip's head, "had built a really powerful weapon, I'd want to make awful
sure that if it went off accidentally no one would get hurt."
"In the ocean, perhaps?" mused Tse‑Mallory
uncertainly. "But there are signs that the oceans were heavily used,
perhaps as a food source. We have seen no place of sufficient isolation to
construct or locate such a weapon."
Truzenzuzex left his antennae alone. "Not on
this planet, no. I would not put a device capable of destroying a collapsar on
any inhabited world."
Tse‑Mallory merely nodded slowly,
comprehending. The philosoph went to the shuttle controls and reset its course
for the camp set up in the northern hemisphere by September and Hasboga several
weeks ago.
"We have studied this world in hopes of finding
something huge and different. The weapon could be small and ordinary‑looking
as well. But before we try combing every building, I think it behooves us to
try your theory, Flinx."
Flinx shook his bead. "But if it's in this
system and not on this planet, how do we find it?"
"Your same thought holds, Flinx."
Truzenzuzex leaned away from the controls. "Any race cautious enough to
place such a dangerous device off its world would take care not to lose track
of it. They would want to know where it was at all times. As yet we have not monitored
persistent surface sources of radiation for any energy traveling out into
space. Such energy should be produced by the most sophisticated, reliable
machinery the Hur'rikku could construct. They would be designed to be long‑lasting
and self‑repairing, in case of peripheral damage."
September was sick of the desert and rejoined them
willingly and gladly. Hasboga reacted to the word that they might be leaving
the planet permanently somewhat less enthusiastically. She was on the verge,
she assured them, of uncovering secrets of the Hur'rikku which would keep
Commonwealth researchers busy for decades. September half convinced, half
coerced her onto the shuttle.
"We may have to return tomorrow, if this idea
reveals nothing," Tse‑Mallory said in an effort to placate her.
"We may not discover any energy being beamed offplanet. A few circumpolar
and equatorial orbits should be enough to tell."
Hasboga fumed and argued and cried and having no
choice, gave in.
Sensors on board the Teacher had previously recorded over a hundred sources of radiation
from still‑funetioning Hur'rikku machinery. Many seemed to be homing
beacons. These were located on the outskirts of vast urban areas, near spacious
plains that might once have been shuttleports or some other kind of staging
area.
Three such beams were still broadcasting with enough
power to reach deeply into space, well beyond where an incoming craft would
need to pick them up. One beam emerged from the ground near the largest city on
the south polar continent and dissipated itself in the general direction of
Sagittarius. Flinx was more tempted than he could say to try to follow that
immensely powerful radiant arrow to its ultimate destination.
But they desperately needed to locate something
somewhat closer to home. So Flinx had the computer plot the beam's course for
future reference. Someday, perhaps...
A second beam led the Teacher and its anxious occupants to the fourth moon of the
peripheral gas giant. They traced it to some small ruins, better preserved than
any they had seen on the inhabited world itself. There was some erosion,
however, since the moon possessed an atmosphere of its own. They had difficulty
convincing Hasboga they couldn't afford to linger near the wonderfully intact
Hur'rikku structures.
The third beam directed them to a fourth planet, one
the ship's instruments had not detected during their initial rapid approach to
the Cannachanna systen. That was not surprising, however: The fourth planet
war, less a world than a drifting moon, about a third the size of Earth's. It
orbited Cannachanna twice as far out as the gas giant did. It was a bleak,
meteor‑scoured globe, relentlessly uninviting, coated with a thin crust
of frozen methane and ammonia. It had no free atmosphere. One side always faced
sunward; the other perpetually gazed at the abyss of interstellar space.
They found a tiny receiver on Cannachanna IV. The
beam from the Hur'rikku world ended there. A quick search of the receiving
installation revealed only receiving equipment. There was nothing remotely like
free‑standing device or weapon. Everything was tied to the receiving
station.
The team commenced a slow, low‑orbit probe of
the moon‑world's surface. Detectors showed nothing below them but
reflective frozen gas and dead rock.
Truzenzuzex was watching the monitor's monotonous
reports flow dutifully to readouts in the piloting chamber. "This is the
end, I suppose," he said dolefully. "'ride might as well attempt to
follow the first transmission to Sagittarius." He shook his shining, jewel‑eyed
head. "I fear I am almost too old to mare such a journey."
Tse‑Mallory's expression was equally
disconsolate, even as he tried to sound optimistic. "There is still a
chance. We have not finished the survey yet. And we can always return to the
second planet and begin again. The supposition we're pursuing may have been
error."
"True," agreed the pbilosoph.
"Gentlesirs." Flinx glanced back from his
position by the monitors. "There's an artifact ahead of us."
That announcement precipitated a rush by the two scientists
toward the smaller screens located in the main console. Sure enough, according
to the instruments they were approaching a comparatively small solid object of
indeterminate composition. It remained stable above the small planet and lay in
a straight line with the transmission ending on the rocky globe's opposite
side.
With all instruments operating and alert for any
sign of a reaction from the device, the Teacher
nudged cautiously closer.
A fourth voice added itself to the general
discussion: "See flivver run and diver, hopscotch moplatch, puddin'n
thatch a house and teach a mouse." Ab lectured them in that vein for half
an hour, then turned away and resumed his solitary singing.
Truzenzuzex ran the entire recorded dialogue through
the vocabulary they had laboriously constructed for Ab. It produced one
recognizable Terranglo word: "Bang."
The philosoph could hardly contain his excitement.
"Gentlesirs, I think we've found our weapon."
But the actual sight of the artifact, when they had
drawn near enough to inspect it visually, was disappointing. Certainly it
displayed none of the visual awesomeness of the quiescent Tar‑Aiym
weapon, The Krang‑or, for that matter, the impressiveness of many humanx
weapons Flinx had seen or heard of.
September was urged forward, to venture his opinion.
It was not complimentary. "A single SCCAM shell would make basic particles
of that thing. That's the most pitiful excuse for an ultimate weapon anyone
ever dreamed up."
"A germ," Tse‑Mallory pointed out,
"does not look particularly impressive either, but a certain variety once
wiped out every creature in the Blight, including both the Tar‑Aiym and
the Hur'rikku."
Flinx edged the ship in until they were floating
only fifty meters from the artifact. It was about a hundred meters in length, a
roughly cylindrical shape with four curving sides which met at two pointed
ends. Things that looked like long antennae protruded another few meters from
each of the two ends. It resembled a four‑sided banana, only it was
straight instead or curved.
The artifact was a rusty‑brown color, but it didn’t look quite like metal. Starlight and the observation lights
of the Teacher gleamed off its sides.
It had a candy‑slick luster reminiscent of plastic. But it wasn’t a
plastic, either, Flinx mused as he studied the readout.
Where two curved sides met, the material assumed a
translucence completely out of keeping with its otherwise solid appearance.
Turning a work beam on the surface through one port, they discovered that the
entire substance was translucent, although no matter how powerful the light
shined on it, one could only see about a meter into the thirty‑meter
depth of the artifact.
The light also revealed that all four sides were
graved with a tiny, surprisingly florid script. Small protrusions and
indentations broke the smoothness of :as sides with a decidedly random
regularity.
They could find nothing that looked like an entrance
port, muzzle, trigger, exhaust, generator‑in short, nothing that would
lead an onlooker to believe he was examining a weapon. It was a hundred‑meter
length of metal‑glass‑plastic something that was determinedly
inocuous in appearance and inert in state.
At the scientist's urgings, Flinx guided the ship in
slow circle under, around, and back over the top of t long alien form. Then the
Teacher slipped between small planet
and the device. If this maneuver interrrpred any vital transmission or
broadcast, it didn't show in the continued inactivity of the device.
Tse‑Mallory looked anxious. "That's the
weapon, air right. Ab confirmed it. It's got
to be the weapon.' Flinx had never seen him so nervous.
Alongside him, compound eyes regarded the motionless
artifact unblinkingly. Then the philosoph moved to activate specific sensors on
the control console.
Hasboga appeared, looking sleepy. Her lethargy
vanished when she saw the artifact. September quieted her, tried to explain
what they had found and what they were doing. She listened, but her real
attention was reserved for the inscriptions cut into the device's flanks.
"A diffusion scan won't penetrate the material. Truzenzuzex's gaze moved
from one readout to the next. "Still no evidence of any movement relative
to the planet below or to our ship. Nor is the artifact emitting any radiation‑at
least, not any variety this vessel is equipped to detect. And there is no
connection of any sort to the surface below." He turned from the controls
and regarded them thoughtfully. One truhand rubbed idly at his lower mandibles.
"This exceptionally unexceptional ghost from
the Hur'rikku past must be the weapon. We have Ab's one significant, if
colloquial, reference to it. We have the fact that it is here, in the safest
place to store a powerful weapon in this system. Yet it persists in maintaining
a pose of innocence. What we have observed on the Hur'rikku world does not
prepare me to accept this as a deception. I confess I do not know how to
proceed to prove it is otherwise.
"How is it supposed to work?" Hasboga
edged closer to the curving main viewport, beyond which the device drifted.
"Not that I care how big an explosion it makes, you understand."
Tse‑Mallory did not smile. "We don't know
that it explodes."
"Well, does whatever it's supposed to do. But
I'd like to have a closer look at those inscriptions on it."
"You may have your chance," said
Truzenzuzex. "We may have to decipher them in order to learn how the
device operates. Certainly the mechanism has not manifested itself to us."
"The inscriptions might not be
instructions," Flinx pointed out prosaically. "They might simply say
`This ultimate weapon manufactured by H'pel's Ultimate Weapons, Inc.', or
something like that."
A valentine‑shaped head swiveled to face him.
"We'd best hope otherwise, Flinx."
Tse‑Mallory indicated agreement. "I feel
like a Neanderthal cornered by a Smilodon. Someone has just handed me Mr.
September's Mark Twenty and I have ten seconds to figure out how to use it.
Probably I'd end up employing it as a club." He gestured at the floating
enigma. Lights from the Teacher's ports shone eerily on the dull‑colored
surface. "If we aren't careful, we're liable to end up like that
Neanderthal, looking dumbly down the barrel of a Hur'rikku weapon whip: we
pound on its trigger. We'd better be careful which of those protrusions and
indentations on its surface we stick our manipulative digits into. I'd much
rather learn how to activate the device from a distance. However," be
added, without evident concern for his personal safety, "if someone has to
jump up and down on it to make it go off, that is what we'll do.
"But we won't do it here, where it will do no
good. First we must convey the device to the present location of the
rogue." He turned his gaze on Flinx. "There's a planetless binary
system in the path of the rogue. Wa should reach that spatial vicinity at the same
time as ox slightly after the rogue if we depart from here now and, drive at
maximum velocity for rendezvous. We will have the rare opportunity to observe
the influence of a massive collapsar on another stellar object. We will also
see," he said, directing his words subtly to Isih Hasboga, "what will
happen to the suns of CarmagueCollangatta and Twosky Bright if our research
turns out to have been incorrect."
"Suppose that's the case." Hasboga looked
subdued. "What will you do then?"
Tse‑Mallory smiled very slightly. "Then
Tru and I will go hunting down the next best legend." He glance back to
Flinx. "I think there is ample room. The cargo hold is standard?"
Flinx nodded. "The Teacher was modeled on a
small freighter. I haven't had any occasion to handle freight" ‑another
small lie‑" but there's no reason wily the hold shouldn't be
functional." He indicated the Hur'rikku artifact filling the port.
"The ship's hold should be able to contain several objects that
size."
The Teacher's attitude was altered so that the huge
cargo doors in its tail were facing the object. Flinx operated the hatches and
watched telltales indicate that the huge metal panels were performing properly.
The hold was little more than, a vast open sphere
within which all kinds of cargo could be stored at null g. At present the
cavernous space was empty. There would be plenty of room for the Hur'rikku
device.
Gradually Flinx activated the posigravity tractor
beams, used for manipulating large cargo. Every muscle in his body was a touch
tenser than usual. No one knew if the powerful tractors would have an adverse
effect on the artifact. Only instruments indicated when the tractors locked on,
however. The artifact remained as quiescent as before.
"Slide it into the ship, Minx," said Tse‑Mallory,
watching different sensors. "Slowly."
Through the use of rear‑facing tridees they
were able to see the artifact. Tse‑Mallory looked up, smiled, and nodded
with a touch of impatience. Several minutes had passed.
"It's all right, Flinx. You can bring it in
now."
Minx glanced up from the controls, confusion and
uncertainty mixing in his expression. "Bran, that's what I've been trying
to do. The tractors are set on maximum pull‑ but the thing’s not
budging."
Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory checked
instrumentation, confirmed that the ship's cargo handlers were operating
properly. Everything read normal, performed efficiently‑yet the artifact
refused to enter the Teacher. Flinx
had an idea, which Tse-Mallory quashed.
"Why don't we just back the ship around the
object?"
"No good, Flinx," Tse‑Mallory
explained. "If the tractors can't move the object, then I'm not sure it
will move along with the ship. Try again."
Flinx did so, then tried a third time, each time at
a different setting, using the four tractors in differing configurations.
Hasboga looked awed. "It hasn't moved a
centimeter." She stared at the screens.
"Young feller‑me‑lad?"
September looked from the screens over to the control console. "What's
your manipulation capacity?"
"Two hundred and fifty thousand tons, dead‑weight
mass, per tractor. I've tried employing them along the same axis, one million
tons of putting power. No good‑it doesn't move."
September looked thoughtful as he stroked his chin.
"Even if that artifact is unusually dense stuff, I don't imagine it
weighing anywhere near that much."
"`Unusually dense leaves a great deal of room
for variation, Mr. September," said Truzenzuzex. "The duralloy this vessel is made of is composed of
exceptionally dense metals." A truhand fluttered in the direction of the
screens showing the device. "That object may be composed of super‑dense
material."
"Maybe it's as dense as the collapsar,"
ventured Hasboga.
Truzenzuzex stiffed a laugh; the woman was not a
physicist. "If that were so, then our device would weigh as much as
several galaxies. I think that unlikely. We will have to find something more
powerful to pull with."
"Or push with," Flinx murmured.
Truzenzuzex made a sound indicative of agreement
mixed with hesitancy. "There are other ways to employ a KK field."
I see what you're thinking, you two." Tse‑Mallory
looked doubtful and rot a little worried. "I don't know. It's risky, very
risky."
"But worth trying." Flinx was sure it
would work. "Instead of trying to pull the device, we'll position the Teacher behind it, line up on course,
and push with the field."
"Why not just pull it with the field?"
Hasboga asked.
"No," Tse‑Mallory replied, "we have to try to push. A Kurita‑Kinoshita field is spherical
when formed, but when you pass light‑speed it becomes teardrop‑shaped.
The tip of the drop extends only to include that solid matter which is firmly
connected to the field projector, meaning the ship. It's possible, but if the
field contracted sufficiently, and it should at the speed we'll be traveling,
then we could lose the artifact."
"We are much more certain of retaining control
of it if it is riding in the front bulge of the field." Truzenzuzex was
gesturing with all four truhands and foothands now. "Assuming that the field
exerts sufficient pressure to move it, which is by no means certain."
"We could lose the artifact that way also,
Tru."
"That is so, ship‑brother," the
philosoph conceded. "But can you think of anything else to try?"
"No. No." Tse‑Mallory had to admit
there was nothing else to do but try it.
"I'm not sure I understand your worry,
Bran," Flinx confessed.
Truzenzuzex tried to explain, although spatial
physics was not his area of expertise either. "Even in the leading bulge
of the sun mass, the Kurita‑Kinoshita field is narrow, Flinx. The higher
the speed, the flatter and more angular the bulge. If we should misjudge
slightly coming out of Kurita‑Kinoshita space, space plus‑ or
improperly form the field‑then all or part of the Hur'rikku artifact
could emerge into normal space while we are still in space‑plus. The
result would be either partial disintegration of the object or, if it drops
whole into normal space, its loss. We would continue to travel at plus‑light‑speed
velocity, while the artifact would be kicked out at an angle from our present
course into normal space, at a speed of several ... well, before we could so much as twitch an antenna, let alone slow
speed or reverse direction or both, the artifact would have long vanished. Our
chances of relocating it in free space would border on the infinitesimal.
Flinx looked crushed. "Maybe we'd better try
something else, then."
But it was the querulous Tse‑Mallory who
objected to that idea. "No, Flinx. Tru is right. We have to try pushing
with the KK field." His eyes wandered to the waiting artifact. "Even
if it is resting in a stasis field, no stasis field can resist the pressure of
a KK drive."
"You left out one thing," September
interrupted. "Known. No known stasis field can resist a KK.
Flinx edged the Teacher around until the great
curving disk of the field projector was properly positioned with regard to the
floating artifact. Truzenzuzex had the computer check all positional
calculations four times to make certain the field would engulf the Hur'rikku device
from precisely the required distance.
"All clear here," said Tse‑Mallory,
looking up briefly from the readouts he was monitoring. "Engage the drive,
Flinx."
Within the immensely complex instrumentation of the
ship, Flinx's subsequent instructions were computer‑conveyed to the
appropriate sections. A diffuse sphere of radiant purple energy began to form
in front of the Teacher's projector.
No one in the ship's piloting chamber could see the field begin to take shape.
It was bidden in front of the projecting disk. So was the Hur'rikku artifact.
But the field appeared in the form of changing readouts and shifting dials on
the chamber's instruments.
Very slowly, the Teacher
began to accelerate out of the Cannachanna system. It passed through the
space where the alien device had been floating. Since it was no longer there,
it was proper to assume that the artifact was now perilously ensconced slightly
forward of the KK field's gravitational nexus.
Muted congratulations mixed with expressions of
relief on board the ship. "It's got to be there," Flinx confirmed
after an instrument check. "We're using twice the power to accelerate half
as fast as normal. The ship is handling the load all right, though."
Tse‑Mallory lapsed into thought, pleased but
puzzled. "I thought that once the artifact was moved, the stasis field
would either collapse or be left behind. Yet if Flinx is correct, Tru, the
stasis field is traveling with the device."
"There may be no stasis field involved. Our
first guess, involving super‑dense construction, may be the correct one.
There is also a type of stasis field that is not really a stasis field in the
way we know it. A theoretical state of matter that is called FCI, fixed cosmic
inertia." His mandibles moved idly, nibbling at one another. "I
wonder, I wonder. Such a state of matter has been postulated but not proven
mathematically. Not yet. An FCI object would appear to be motionless, Bran. Yet what one would see would not be
the object itself, but only its most recent manifestation. The real object
would consist of undetectable but very real energy built up within the object
itself. The object moves, or seems to, with us. But the energy it has built up
trails behind it."
"Tru," a bewildered F1inx, interrupted,
"you're leaving me behind, too."
"Briefly, Flinx," the pbilosoph explained,
"what we may have ahead of us is an object that appears to move but in
reality is motionless‑the universe shifts around it. If we could move it, it would release its true
inertial energy." He shook his head. "I still do not understand how
that could be sufficient to affect a collapsar." He moved to a computer
terminal. "I have work to do, gentlesirs."
Straining to move something which Truzenzuzex
insisted wasn't really moving, the Teacher
raced out of the long‑dead system, carrying them at maximum speed
back through the Blight. Flinx tried with every instrument on board to detect
the trail of energy which Tru hypothesized the Hur'rikku device was leaving
behind it. He found nothing.
However, if what Tru suspected was correct, then the
artifact had been building up FCI force for over a half million years. Trying
to imagine what such power could do (if indeed it existed) if released in one
small place simultaneously left Flinx a little dizzy.
So instead he found a small ball, and he and Pip
played a lot of catch.
What no one had yet detected, since it had taken
great care not to be detected, was another ship, which had arrived in the
system of Cannachanna shortly behind them. Instead of following them to the
world of the Fur'rikku, it had been content to remain just behind the horizon
of the gas giant, concealed by that protosun's energy fields and extensive
tenebrous atmosphere.
It had remained there, monitoring their activity
without rest. While its occupants had to take care not to be observed, a
caution which somewhat inhibited the efficiency of their surveillance, they
were still able to track the Teacher's hasty departure and plot its course.
As soon as the Teacher passed into space‑plus,
this small but very fast craft sped at engine‑warping velocity to a
thinly populated world on the fringes of the Commonwealth. There it made
contact with a mining colony which was as efficient in its true function as it
was at its geological deception.
By now the Teacher was many parsecs distant. That
did not matter to the crew of the small vessel. In conveying their information
to the inhabitants of the station they bad accomplished their assigned task.
The beings who had piloted that ship and who ran the
purported mining station below were neither human nor thranx. They had longish
mouths filled with sharp, pointed teeth, and expressions which conveyed their
utter contempt for anything not like themselves, Their skins were hard, shiny,
and scaly, the minds beneath crested skulls active and devious.
Carefully scattered throughout the Commonwealth were
others of their kind, some disguised surgically to resemble men. (None were
disguised to look like thranx, for these were a bipedal, two‑armed folk,
in no way insectoid. Their blood, unlike that of Earthly reptiles, was warm.
And though they preferred a warm, dry climate, they now moved vigorously about
the cold world they occupied.
There were several functional mine shafts around the
station. The AAnn occupied this borderline world by treaty with the
Commonwealth, so appearances were important. The mine shaft beneath the station
itself contained, not valuable mineral deposits, but a subatomic‑particle
acceleration communicator, known more commonly as a deep‑space beam.
Metamorphosed into a stream of charmed positively
charged quarks, a message could be flashed from accelerator to accelerator,
world to world, at dizzying speed, far faster than a restricted tridee beam. A
tridee beam employed high‑speed leptons to carry its messages. Tridee
leptons and Kurita‑Kinoshita sun fields traveled through space‑plus.
But the less‑than‑perceptible quarks moved through something so
esoteric it could not be properly described, and so had been labeled null‑space,
or space‑minus.
At each successive receiving station the positively
charged charmed quarks were carefully redirected and reaccelerated to their
next destination. Eventually they would reach an ultimate destination. Instead
of being reaccelerated there, the unstoppable beam would be read by a
subelementary‑particle counter and its message deciphered. Only another
counter lying directly in the path of the message could intercept it, and the
chances of that ever happening were as remote as the region where such beams
eventually ended up. Only an enormous vessel, not smaller than a dreadnought,
was large enough to contain a deep‑space beam station.
So the Teacher raced on, oblivious to the fact that
its probable destination had been guessed. Its inhabitants were of mixed
emotions. But no matter what each individual wished for in the way of an
eventual destination, all hoped that their journey would soon meet with
success.
Months later, they finally arrived in the vicinity
of the Velvet Dam. A swirling blackness, the dark nebula hid everything behind
it from view of any humanx‑occupied world.
That is what the rogue will be coming through in
less than nineteen years, on collision course with the sun of Twosky
Bright." Tse‑Mallory studied the shuddery emptiness coolly.
"Unless we do something to stop it. It will announce itself to general and
amateur astronomers then because of the hole it wil leave behind as it sucks in
gas and particles from the nebula." Flinx stared at the vast black brush
stroke through which only a few large suns shone faintly and tried to imagine
it with a hole cut out of its middle. The scale of the danger they were soon to
confront was beginning to be appreciated. It was one thing to talk about a
collapsar, another thing entirely to confront it.
Under Tse‑Mallory's instructions, the Teacher
altered its course slightly for the last time, to rendezvous with the predicted
position of the binary system and the onrushing collapsar. The Hur'rikku
artifact remained in position ahead of the field center.
September compared their feat thus far to a seal
swimming the Atlantic Ocean with a ball balanced on its nose. Flinx knew what
the Atlantic Ocean was‑it was one of Terra's three major bodies of water.
But a seal?
"It looks kind of like a Largessian, young
feller‑me-lad," the giant informed him. "Only smaller, without
hands, and with a smaller head."
That description enabled Flinx to conjur a picture,
though it was difficult to imagine one of the lazy natives of Largess swimming
an ocean while balancing anything on its nose.
Days passed, and the ship gradually decellerated
under the two scientist's careful supervision. They could still drop the device
in a trillion cubic kilometers of empty space. Having successfully brought it
this far, neither man nor thranx was prepared to risk losing it. Finally they
slowed to a point where everyone experienced a brief instant of somewhere‑elseness
and nausea. The Teacher had returned to normal space.
Ahead of them should be the twin‑sun system
newly catalogued as RNGC 11,432 and 11,433. Everyone hurried to the fore
observation port, in the observation‑piloting blister, as the ship was
positioned to provide them with a view.
No one spoke about the sight which greeted them
until Tse‑Mallory said quietly: "Gentlesirs and lady, we are a few
days late. The rogue has already arrived."
What lay slightly to one side of them as the Teacher
slowed to a stop was a sight that almost precluded description. The rogue, the
multiple collapsar, could oz course not be directly observed, but its effects
could. And they could be heard, as was amply proven whey. Flinx opened all
sensor equipment to monitor the precise position of the rogue. A violent, teeth‑grating
scream filled the room before Flinx, in a cold sweat, could lower the volume.
Hasboga winced, her hands covering her ears to shut
out that inorganic wailing. Her eyes were squinched tightly closed. Next to
her, September reached out with a comforting arm. No humorous twinkle was in
his eyes‑ not now.
Flinx turned the sound level down to where the howl
was bearable, but he could not bring himself to cut i
out entirely. There was something mesmerizing about
that shriek, an effect caused as much by the knowledge of what was behind it as
by the sound itself. He became aware of his own rapid breathing, and forced
himself to calm down.
"What is it?" Hasboga glanced up at
September and leaned against his massive shoulder. "I've never heanv
anything like it in my life."
"I doubt anyone has, Isili." September
wore a peculiar expression as he regarded the phenomenon visible through the
port. "A man being killed slowly has L tendency to scream. Interesting to
learn that a star reacts the same way."
"You are romanticizing," Truzenzuzex
commented. "That so‑called scream is only the result of torn‑apart
matter releasing energy as it is sucked into the collapsar."
Flinx reflected that although the philosoph's
explanation was more accurate, September's provided a more effective
description.
Leaving the controls on automatic, he moved in for
better look. RNGC 11,432 was an orange, K‑9 supergiant. Its companion
star, which rotated counterclockwise as opposed to its giant brother, was far
smaller but much hotter, a yellow‑green furnace. From each sun, according
to the direction of its rotation, a long tendril of glowing matter extended to
Flinx's right. One curled in a tightening clockwise spiral to vanish into
nothingness; the other twisted inward from the opposite direction. Around both
tendrils clustered a vast, diffuse cloud of energy particles and gases which
had also been pulled from both stars. A black circle rested in the center of
that cloud, a circle that looked like a black cutout on fluorescent paper. At
its center was a minuscule point with the mass of suns.
How many stars lay crushed and collapsed to that
point? Dozens, hundreds‑maybe thousands. How much of the universe had the
wanderer already gobbled up? Flinx envisioned whole galaxies with thin black
lines running through them, forming the trail of the wandering rogue where
suns, worlds, populations had disappeared.
Was there a pit in Andromeda? Perhaps a hole in the
middle of the Magellanic Clouds? Yet that was the force they were going to try
to counter with the metalglass‑ plastic something riding in front of the Teacher. Something which September had
estimated could be reduced to less than dust by a single SCCAM projectile.
Even the old philosoph's description of what FCI
could mean seemed insignificant by comparision with an object which presently
was draining the mass of two stars as easily as a sponge could soak up two
drops of water.
Too bad for Carmame and Collangatta, Flinx mused
silently. Too bad for the bright star of humid Twosky Bright. Too bad, too sad ‑for
the untold vanished worlds already destroyed in unknown galaxies unimaginable
ages ago.
They could throw a billion SCCAM shells, a hundred
suns at the rogue. Nothing could destroy it. The billion SCCAM projectiles
would add infinitesimally to the collapsar's mass. The hundred suns would add a
bit more. Both would only make the rogue that much more powerful, that much
more destructive.
Flinx was on the verge of suggesting they turn and
go home when Tse‑Mallory looked over at him and said matter‑of‑factly,
"I suppose we might, as well get started."
September commented without smiling, "You don't
mean that now that you've seen the thing you're going to try to do something
with that little‑bitty husk of iron or whatever it is?"
Truzenzuzex regarded the towering human seriously.
"The legend says it can do something. We are here. We will remain or track
the rogue until we learn whether it can or not. We have nothing to lose."
"Listen," September argued softly,
"the biggest bomb imaginable would only add to the rogue's mass,
right?"
Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory did not reply.
"Stubborn, I see. Well, it's in a good cause. I
wonder how much a miracle masses?" He guided Hasboga toward the door.
"Where are we going, Skua?"
"To the cabin. I'm wasting my time trying to
argue with brain‑cases. They may set that device off. It won't stop the
collapsar, but I wouldn't be surprised if it destroys us. If I can't talk them
out of it, I want to die the best way I know how."
"How's that?" she inquired mischievously.
As they left the room he was leaning over and whispering in her ear.
The philosoph watched them depart. "Fatalist."
He looked peeved.
There was something other than a touch of reproval
in Tse‑Mallory's voice. "True, Tru, but a fatalist with style."
More serious, he faced his friend. "He's right, you know. We may
accomplish nothing here other than our own destruction."
"Does that mean you believe we have a choice, ship‑brother?"
Tse‑Mallory reacted almost angrily. "Of
course not! Flinx, activate the engines and back us away."
Using minimal power, the Teacher left the mysterious Hur'rikku device once again floating
freely in space. Or, Flinx reflected, if you believed Truzenzuzex's theory,
space shifted around the stationary device.
Under the scientist's instructions, he positioned
the ship broadside to the device. It sat there in view of the starboard
observation port, as innocuous‑looking, enigmatic, and inert as it had
been in the system of Cannachanna.
Flinx had given himself over to the advice of two
far wiser heads than his own. A request for new instructions produced a
disconcerting reply from Tse‑Mallory.
"I don't know what to do next. Flinx. I suspect
the next logical step is for some of us to 1,0 outside and see what we can make
of those protrusions and depressions on the artifact's surface."
Truzenzuzex agreed. Both were preparing to don suits
when an insistent, deceivingly gentle bcepint~ from the main pilot's console
distracted Flinx's attention. Leaving the two scientists to their discussion,
he walked over and studied the active readout. It was one he hadn't had
occasion to use often before, but there was no mistaking that urgent call. He
wanted to make certain before causing any alarm, so he switched to printout for
confirmation.
SHIP OR SHIPS APPROACHING
"Bran, Tru," he called out, louder when
they didn't respond immediately. While he waited for a response, Flinx began
activating other sensory instruments and demanding information. Both scientists
came over, saw the brief readout, and moved rapidly to monitor other consoles.
Lighting up the main screen provided them with a
picture of eleven dots arranged on a grid. Other sensitive machines added
distance, direction, and velocity. They were not seeing the ships, of course,
only the energy manifestations of their respective drive fields.
Compared to the other ten dots, the one traveling
approximately in the center of the configuration was enormous. "That's a
dreadnought," Tse‑Mallory observed with frozen indifference. He
glanced glumly at his companions. "Analysis of drive fields indicates
they're not humanx vessels. It's a war sphere, alright."
"A battle formation, this deep in the
Commonwealth?" Flinx couldn't believe the AAnn would go to such extremes.
But then, it would require a fleet a hundred times the size of the force
nearing them to attack and possibly destroy three fortified worlds. Probably
the AAnn were taking what appeared to be reasonable gamble to insure that the
rogue was not diverted from its predicted path.
"This is a very sparsely explored, uninhabited
region of Commonwealth‑claimed territory, Flinx," Truzenzuzex
pointed out. "Anyone could slip in and out of here undetected with
comparative ease and safety."
"How much time?" Tse‑Mallory eyed
his shipbrother hopefully.
Truzenzuzex studied the instruments below faceted
orbs. "A dreadnought, several cruisers, the rest destroyers or research
vessels." He glanced over at Bran Tse‑Mallory. "They will drop
into normal space. in ten minutes." Thranx did not perspire, but Flinx had
the impression that the philosoph was trying to.
"If we're going to get away ..." Flinx
said, starting toward the pilot's console. A strong hand caught his left arm in
a gentle but unbreakable grip of restraint. Pip stirred nervously on Flinx's
other shoulder, and his master also sensed the seriousness in the tall
scientist’s, mind.
"We cannot simply leave, Flinx. We must make an
attempt to use the device. It may be that it is activated by what it eventually
destroys. In this case, that would be the collapsar itself."
"How," Flinx asked very slowly,
"would we do that?"
Tse‑Mallory smiled like a Churchman. "In
order to prevent the approaching ships from interfering, the artifact would
have to be accelerated rapidly toward the rogue. We know of only one way to
move it."
Flinx turned to a port, to where two distant stars
were vanishing from existence, and he tried to imagine suffering the same fate.
It was not pleasant to contemplate.
"We have no other option, Flinx.” Truzenzuzex
sounded sad, but quite as unshakable as his human associate.. "If we take it
with us, the AAnn will surely pursue. We certainly cannot risk letting the
weapon fall into their hands. This way, by destroying it‑and, only
incidentally, ourselves‑we can at least insure that does not
happen."
Flinx tried to calm Pip, who was hunting with
slitted eyes and pointed tongue for whatever was causing so much turmoil within
his master. But he did not fly at Truzenzuzex or Tse‑Mallory, for their
present thoughts where Flinx were concerned were ones of genuine sorrow and
fondness.
"We have a minute or two to search the
artifact's surface," Tse‑Mallory commented. "I'll see if I can
discover anything. If not, just leave me out there. At least, if driving the
device into the rogue works, I’ll have a nanosecond to enjoy it." He
started for the nearby observation lock where the suits were kept, then paused.
"There's a light on here.” He turned a quizzical gaze toward Flinx.
"A maliunction?”
Flinx instantly began searching the ship with voice
and instruments. Both registered two additional bodies: September and Hasboga.
There was no sign of Ab.
A sharp whistle sounded from both the console and
the door leading toward the lock. Flinx knew that signal from every emergency
drill he had ever been run through on a commercial ship.
"He's cycling the outer lock!" Truzenzuzex
moved to press his mandibles to the curved edge of the starboard port, trying
to see around it.
Flinx fumbled with the controls on the nearest
intercom: "No Ab! Don't do it‑wait!"
"Let him, Minx. Perhaps Ab knows what he's
doing." Tse‑Mallory sounded hopeful.
`It's not that, it's not that, Flinx explained
wildly, gesturing at six tiny lights on the lock door. They formed a pretty
pattern. "There isn't a suit on board, for human or thranx, that will
property fit him!"
Tse‑Mallory scratched the back of his neck
while he walked to stand by his ship‑brother. "Maybe our friend Ab
doesn't need a suit. Maybe ..." and then he was working hurriedly at a
part of the computer that had not been employed for months.
A sharp pop and whistle sounded over the intercom.
Slowly Flinx turned it off. He spoke almost inaudibly. "It doesn't matter
now. He's outside. There's no air in the lock." The innocent, stupid, but
harmless alien had become his responsibility. There was no rhyming, no singing
in the observation blister now, nor would there ever be again.
It was Ab who had led them to the Hur'rikku device.
Despite that, Elias had forgotten him completely is the excitement and tension
of the past weeks. Not that that was a decent excuse.
"Flinx, come here." Truzenzuzex was
beckoning with a truhand and foothand together. "I think you might be
interested in what's happening outside."
Flinx ran to stand beside the staring philosoph.
Ab's body was drifting slowly toward the long
redbrown artifact. It appeared that all four eyes were open. All four arms were
extended at right angles from the pear‑shaped body and angled downward to
meet the four extended legs. If the attitude the alien's limbs had assumed was
unintentional, it constituted the most regularized rigor mortis Flinx had ever
imagined.
A human would be twisted, contorted, and dead from
the cold vacuum by now. Ab might be also, but something about the precise
arrangement of those eight limbs led Flinx to think otherwise.
"He's definitely moving toward it," Tse‑Mallory observed, his voice tight.
"What could be more natural?" Truzenzuzex
was awed past astonishment. "He is curious and wishes a closer look. But I
still do not understand. Why should he be curious? Bran, everything we have
studied, everything we have surmised about the Hur'rikku, tells us that this Ab
thing cannot possibly be a member of that race. Bran?"
Tse‑Mallory did not glance up from the
readouts he was poring over, from the instrumentation he was manipulating.
"Quiet, brother. I'm working."
Truzenzuzex knew Bran as well as he knew himself. He
did not even trouble his brother with a reply.
Flinx's shock at what occurred next was so
overpowering that a startled Pip flew off his shoulder and fluttered nervously
around the domed ceiling of the room.
Three meters from the artifact, the body of
Abalamahalamatandra split into four equal parts. Each section held an eye, an
arm, and a leg. Moving independently by some strange method of propulsion, each
Ab‑quarter positioned itself independently facing one of the artifact's
four sides approximately opposite its equator.
Together, in a unison too precise to be accidental,
they moved toward the rust brown surface. About that time Flinx noticed the
similarity between the configuration of each interior part of the Ab‑quarters
and several depressions and protrusions on the artifact. Only idly did he note
that there was no blood or dangling organs visible where Ab's insides, should
have been. Those interior surfaces were irregular
but unbroken.
They touched the artifact simultaneously. Four arms
slid into four matching holes. Four legs did likewise, twisting and curving to
fit. Four eyes contacted flat,
stubby projections. Flinx could have sworn that, just before touching, the eye
nearest the port winked at him.
All four quarters of what formerly had been the
creature called Ab had merged smoothly with the Hur'rikku artifact. You could
hear breathing and little else in the observation blister of the Teacher.
Tse‑Mallory looked up, rubbed his eyes, and spoke. "He named
himself well, or was well named." Truzenzuzex and Flinx looked over at
him. "I put our Ab vocabulary to work on something we ought to have worked
on first‑his name. Abalamahalamatandra. A composite from four different
languages, two being derivatives from other languages, one derived from yet a
third. Together they form a couplet
in a language three hundred and fifty thousand years dead, which the computer
then compressed according to the rhyme scheme Ab used when
announcing his name. I got one word I'm pretty positive of out of the whole
business." He paused, then said anticlimactically: "Key."
"An informational key as well as a mechanical
one," Truzenzuzex mused as he turned his gemlike gaze back to the port.
"Certainly it was willing enough to impart information. We simply didn't
know enough to understand the answers."
"Ab's a machine." Flinx too was staring
back out the port. "The AAnn must at least have suspected what he is. No
wonder they wanted him destroyed."
"Slow down, Flinx." Tse‑Mallory
tried to caution him. "We know only that Ab's a machine, some kind of key.
We still don't know if he's the right kind."
"All that nonsense," Flinx was muttering
to himself. "All the years he must have wandered about aimlessly, taken in
hand by different races and different masters. I wonder how many secrets, how much knowledge, he babbled
to people who didn't understand."
Behind them a readout buzzed for attention. It
recorded information from several external sensors. Tse‑Mallory, the closest,
moved to read the information.
"Something is, according to this, happening to
the artifact. Also, we have three minutes to get away before the AAnn war
sphere arrives."
A soft yellow glow appeared and enveloped the entire
Hur'rikku device. "?`here!" Flinx pointed. Where the four parts of Ab
had touched the device, four black circles suddenly appeared. Inside those dark holes nothing could be seen. Part of the interior of the artifact was apparently gone, yet they
could not exactly see through it. When the black circles appeared, the yellow
aura vanished.
Within the artifact, something that was not normal
space had been created. Flinx was so intrigued that he forgot to panic. Yet
nothing more happened. There was no titanic explosion, no steady hum as from an
activated machine, nothing. The artifact continued to sit in free space,
unchanged save for four holes in its sides which met to form ... nothing.
"We can't wait any longer if we're going to get
away," Tse‑Mallory announced, examining a readout. "But is it
activated? Nothing's happened, no change in energy flow according to our
instruments. What else has to be done, dammit!"
"Bran," Truzenzuzex said slowly. "I
just don't know. But the Ab‑thing has certainly done something. I think we'd best leave
the device alone. It's a
chance, but humanx society has prospered because of the chances individuals
within it have taken. Also because our survival drive is so strong. At the
moment, my own is working overtime. Up the universe, ship‑brother.
Let us depart, and trust in the rhymes of the fool who was not."
Without another word, Tse‑Mallory activated
the KK drive. "I want to see whether we're going to be remembered as
prophets or fools. We'll stay in normal space and see what happens, unless the
AAnn come after us. I'm betting they'll be more interested in the device."
As they moved out of the immediate vicinity of the
Hur'rikku artifact, Pip returned to Flinx's shoulder.
Immediately thereafter the AAnn war sphere assumed a
cluster position around the ancient remnant of that mysterious dead
civilization. On board the Teacher, three
anxious faces studied long‑range detectors.
"They've encapsulated it." Tse‑Mallory
idly checked another screen. "No sign of pursuit."
"We are of no concern to them now,"
Truzenzuzex pointed out. He was worried, terribly so. "We may not know for
years, decades, or in our lifetimes if we have made a proper decision. The
device may take that long to function, or the AAnn that long to learn how to
operate it." The philosoph noticed Flinx's drawn expression, and chittered
his concern.
"It's just that I'm only now starting to
realize what Ab might be capable of doing," Flinx explained, "and
thinking about all the time I spent in his company. Or its company. I don't
know of many machines with personality. Ab had that."
Looking like a cluster of enormous metallic soap
bubbles, the AAnn flagship had slowed to a stop alongside the artifact. From
the honor chair aboard the dreadnought, Baron Lisso PN studied the dwarfed
silver of metal‑glass‑plastic with great satisfaction.
Messages of congratulations at that very moment were
undergoing composition and would soon be broadcast via the deep‑space
beam which ran the entire length of the enormous vessel to secret bases within
the Commonwealth. From there they would be relayed to the Empire.
There would be joy in many burrows, the Baron
reflected. After many long years of service to the Emperor and the Pack of
Lords, he might hope to find himself raised to that status, or even to be made
an adviser with a chance of succeeding the Emperor himself.
The desperate humanx ploy, ineffectual as it would
likely have been, had been stopped. Not only that but the object of all their
enterprise had been captured. It floated outside the warship. Now there
remained only tests to be run before it could be brought safely aboard. Baron
Lisso PN didn't believe anything‑much. less the relatively tiny object
outside‑could interrupt the course of the collapsar. That was a myth. Bu:
myths often had some foundation, so it would be best to be cautious until the
ancient artifact's harmlessness had been assured.
"Bring the object into the storage hold. Use
the method described to us by our informants within the Commonwealth. Back us
around it. Our tractors are far more powerful than anything the tiny humanx
vessel could have mounted, but we will push it when we leave, if that is
required.
"But it is best to study under convenient
conditions."
While the other ships of the war sphere watched
alertly for the approach of any humanx or Commonwealth force, the massive
dreadnought laboriously adjusted its attitude so that the rear of the main
globe backed up to the Hur'rikku device. Doors slid aside, revealing a vast,
airless, illuminated compartment within. Carefully it backed over the artifact,
encapsulating it. The massive four‑sided panels slid shut behind.
Several leading archeologists and other scientists
shunted over to the dreadnought from two fully equipped laboratory vessels,
accompanied by members of the dreadnought's military‑sciences staff.
They were greeted by the Baron and his executive
officer in the zero‑gravity vacuum of the cargo hold. The small group of
suited AAnn drifted, studying the artifact visually while a huge battery of
instruments examined it with senses no living creature possessed.
"Honored One," the executive officer said,
"a message relayed from the periphery ship Analosaam. They report that the humanx vessel continues to flee in
normal space and request orders to pursue and destroy."
"Request denied." The Baron was
unimpressed by their prize. It would not he much of a trophy to haul back to
Sectorcav. "Having failed in their futile attempt with this relic, they
may be trying to tempt one or more of our ships into following within detection
range of a Commonwealth or Church outpost. That would precipitate a useless
incident. Let our presence here remain undetected.
"As for any story they may choose to relate
concerning us, without proof no one would believe a tale telling of an Imperial
war force penetrating this deeply into the Commonwealth simply to capture a
device the Commonwealth government does not believe in anyway. Before anyone
could arrive here to check their story, we shall be gone homeward."
"Home." The word was breathed softly by
the physicist on the Baron's right. Personally, he was even less impressed than
the noble by the Hur'rikku artifact. Instrument readings relayed to him via his
suitcom indicated that the object floating before them was emitting not a doam of energy, was not composed of
explosive materials, and was to all appearances as inert and harmless as the
caps on his two front incisors. He was anxious to render his opinion. Then he
could return to the hot, shifting sands of his own home.
One by one the scientists present gave their
opinions. All agreed that if the device before them had once been a weapon, the
rot of ages had destroyed its viability. But by all means bring it back to
Sectorcav. Its inscriptions and interior would interest the archeologists, at least.
"Does that mean we can inspect it more
closely?" the Baron inquired impatiently. He too was ready to go home.
The chemist in charge felt confident enough to
reply. "As long as one avoids the still‑uninspected protrusions and
depressions, I should think it would be quite safe, Honored One. We are
monitoring for any change in the object's status, but I personally anticipate
none."
"Sure," a physicist‑metallurgist
added, "if it was capable of functioning, the humanx would already have
activated it."
"Logic and truth," agreed another, with a
positive°, twitch of his head.
Propelled by gentle kicks off the curving wall and
the encircling walkway, and trailing control cables, the group moved toward the
device. A few tugs on the cables brought them to a drifting stop alongside it.
"What are those black circles that appear to be
solid on the surface of each plane?" the Baron, no neophyte scientist
himself, asked the others.
"They may not be solid, according to some
readings, Honored One." The scientist sounded puzzled. "They show
properties of solid surfaces and of vacuum simultaneously. It is an interesting
but not necessarily dangerous phenomenon..."
Tse‑Mallory's face was an unreadable mask as
he looked up from the screen. "Still no signs of their giving chase. I
think they'll be content with having stopped us. Resolution at this distance is
difficult, but I believe they've taken the artifact on board the
dreadnought."
Truzenzuzex's usual placid demeanor broke for an
instant, as a foothand slammed with surprising force against the metal beneath
the bank of instruments. "Something should have happened by now, if the,
device was going to do anything. The machine Ab‑“
"Ab was no machine." Flinx sounded bitter.
Their foolish but charming ward had apparently quartered himself on a whim.
"Ab was somebody."
"It is something humanxkind has long
suspected." Seeing how emotionally Flinx was reacting, the philosoph tried
to comfort him by changing the subject a little. "For example, you humans
used to anthropomorphize certain advanced machines long before it was learned
that instincts were more accurate about such mechanicals than minds."
"I'm afraid it's finished, ship‑brother.
We must try another legend. Otherwise it will all be over for the people of the
three worlds."
Flinx turned his gaze away from the screen. Out the
rear port of the observation blister he could still see clearly the twin suns
RNGC 11,432‑3. The AAnn warships were far too small to be detected by tae
naked eye.
The position of the two spiraling trails of matter
being drawn off the two suns had altered as the rogue traveled deeper through
the system. While it was probably only his imagination he thought that the
circumference of both stars had shrunk noticeably. With a stomach‑wrenching
thought for the doomed people of Carmague‑Collangatta and Twosky Bright,
he turned back to his companions and discovered September eyeing him
questioningly. The giant and Hasboga, having discovered that annihilation
wasn't imminent, had returned to the observation chamber.
Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory's hunt had reached
an unsatisfactory conclusion. Now it was time to resolve his own.
Eyes full of blue wisdom watched him, almost seemed
to sense his question. "This ship is emergency coded to respond in a
dangerous situation only to my voice, September. I can let you and Hasboga off
or keep you aboard until I get satisfaction. I want answers and I want them
now."
Oddly, September seemed to approve of Flinx's
announced intentions rather than reacting angrily to them.
"You never told me what you were doing on Moth
trying to buy me. And you mentioned others, too. I want to know why you were at
that auction."
"I like your ship. Keep me on it as long as you
want." Was the giant laughing?
Flinx walked over, put hands on hips, and stared up
at that graven visage. September towered over him. He weighed more than twice
as much as the youth and could have broken his bones with one hand. Provided,
however, that the small, alert shape coiled about Flinx's right shoulder did
not interfere. Many men had found that "however" to be a fatal one.
Not that September intended to react belligerently.
"'Pon my soul, young feller‑me‑lad, if I ‑don't think
you're threatening old Skua." He smiled petulantly.
Flinx turned away, angry at himself now. "I'm
sorry. I don't like a universe where threats replace reason the way rock
replaces bone in a fossil. I especially don'6 like to threaten friends."
Eyebrows of white lichen lifted in surprise.
"So you regard me as a friend?"
Flinx spoke without looking at the giant. "I'd
like to think of you as one."
There was an odd catch in September's voice.
"I’d like that, feller‑me‑lad. So ... I'll tell you what you
want to know."
Flinx whirled and immediately tried to stifle his excitement.
He took a seat while September sat, lotuslike, opposite him. Hasboga turned her
attention to the stars, a little miffed at being ignored.
Tse‑Mallory and Truzenzuzex remained glued is
their respective instruments. Flinx knew neither would concede failure until it
was irrevocably displayed to them. Creatures of theory, they were the most
pragmatic and empirical of men.
"A little less than twenty standard years
ago," September began, "I found myself devoid off credit and
prospects. I've been poor several times in my life lad. It's not nice. I was
depressed, my brain wasn't functioning right ... the reasons need not concern
you. I took a job I probably shouldn't have.
"There was a firm, small, but associated with
some very important persons, I later found out. Their motives were good. They
believed they could through the use of their combined abilities, improve
humanity. Physically, not morally. For their theories to prove themselves,
normal conditions were essential for the raising of their `improved' children.
They found an ideal launching device in couples desiring to have children in
which the father was sterile. There are many organizations which supply viable
sperm to such couples. It provided the firm with an ideal, inconspicuous cover.
"Needless to say, the couples purchasing sperm
were not told that it had been improved.” The giant looked away. "I didn't
find out what was going on, you must understand, until after."
Flinx forbore asking until after what.
"The couples thought they were buying standard
spermatozoa full of high‑class genes. They had no way of knowing that
those genes had been toyed with. I applied and was accepted as a sperm
donor." He allowed himself a slight grin. "I'm sure it was because of
my size and strength, not my overwhelming brilliance. Remember I had no idea
what was going to be done to what I'd sold. There were numerous other donors
besides myself, of course.
"How many or how often they donated I don't
know. I donated several times. Donated, hell‑sold. And now you can see
why I can't say if I'm your father or not, Flinx. It could have been my sperm
that was implanted in your mother, or it could have been any one of many
others. Even a chromosome match now couldn't tell us, because of the
alterations made in certain genes by the firm's technicians."
"How did you eventually find all this
out?" Flinx found himself bizarrely fascinated by the tale. Alteration of
genes ... improvement of humanity‑ he was not so sure he was an
improvement, but the explanation went a long way toward explaining the source
of his erratic, peculiar talents.
"Most of the first group of altered offspring
were born on Terra or on worlds close to it. Most of them were born normal, but
there were some, perhaps a fifth, who were born malformed or genetically
damaged. Sometimes the damage was pretty gruesome.
"The firm's organizers, remember, were
essentially decent beings, men and women, human and thranx. They were properly
horrified, broke up the firm and disbanded. The government got involved. There
was a lot of talk of criminal proceedings, but the government couldn't find
anyone to prosecute, because they had, and still have no idea that the children
were damaged as the result of prenatal manipulation.
"To protect themselves as much as possible, the
firm's organizers set about a program of what you might call building up a case
for the future defense. They employed a network to recover as many of the
healthy children they'd produced, or to learn the whereabouts and identities,
as they could. Unfortunate malfunctions they had destroyed." September's
voice was flat.
"In order to preserve secrecy, this network
used as many former employees as possible. They explained that just by
donating, I could be considered an accomplice by a vengeful government. So I took
the job."
Flinx didn't inquire if September had tracked down
any unsuccessful children.
I was about to buy you at the auction on Moth, to
bring you back to Terra. They're raising several other healthy but abandoned or
orphaned altered kids in a special school back there. Meanwhile, the government
was beginning to learn things. They knew nothing of the children, but several
members involved with the firm had been arrested. They would recognize me. So
when a lot of local police showed up at the auction, I had to leave in a hurry.
I intended to come back later and repurchase you from whoever finally bought
you."
"Why didn't you, Skua?"
"Because shortly afterward the network
collapsed, some employees talked in exchange for immunity, and most of the
founders of the original firm were arrested. Judging from the hysterical
stories in the tridee faxcasts, I thought it would be a good idea to quietly
drop my association with the network and with the firm. I managed to lose
myself for a while."
"What happened to the founders?" Minx's
excitement was beginning to return. Father or not Septennber might not be the
end of his trail. "What about their records?"
"Sorry, feller‑me‑lad, I don't know
for a fact‑ but I do have big ears." He wiggled them for emphasis.
"From what I heard, the firm's records were destroyed in a fire."
"Well, the experimenters then." F1inx
tried to remain hopeful.
"Public revulsion forced some unusually stiff
penalties. Most of those involved were sentenced to selective
neurosurgery." Flinx slumped. He knew what that meant. "That part of
their memories dealing with the firm and its activities was erased. Their
personalities and most of their knowledge remain, but nothing about the firm or
its activities."
"I thought that was against Church
doctrine."
September nodded. "It is, but public outcry was
pretty violent, feller‑me‑lad. The Anti‑Science League had a
field day, as you can imagine. Sometimes Church opinion prevails. In this case
the Inner Chancellors and the Last Resort probably thought it prudent not to
insist. A rift in Church‑government relations wouldn't have benefited
anyone."
"But ... you could be my father."
"I don't deny it lad. Can't." He stretched
his legs out, winced. One had gone to sleep. "From what I know of you, I'd
be proud to be, but," he was forced to add, "it could have been one
of several dozen other donors."
"What if I'd been one of the malformed
ones?"
"Young feller," September said seriously,
"most of those poor predamned souls never knew it when they were killed.
Some of them were born without senses, some with new ones. Without arms, or
legs, or both. With extra limbs or two heads or no head. And there was lots
worse. Remember, most of the altered children turned out healthy‑if
anything, they were a bit stronger, a
touch smarter than the average. I'm not defending the firm now, understand.
Just telling you fact, and the fact is that that one initial batch didn't turn
out too bad."
First batch, Flinx thought. An icy fury built within
him. Pip moved nervously. He was an ingredient in a scientific stew. He was ...
Something September said came back to him.
"Some were born without senses," he'd said, "and some with new
ones." If his awkward abilities were the results of that misguided genetic
manipulation, then there might be others possessed of similar confusion and
talents, uncertain, terrified, unsure of their own unpredictable abilities.
And what of September? What went on beneath that
granite forehead, behind luminous azure eyes? Maybe son stared up at possible‑father.
Neither said a word.
"What could their function be?" Baron
Lisso PN questioned his science staff as he used a guideline to maneuver
himself over to the nearest black circle on the Hur'rikku artifact. One
physicist pulled herself over next to him. She held a boxy affair in both
hands. It looked like a small dumbbell, with a bright red plastic square
pierced by the handle. A cluster of buttons and switches and other controls
adapted for manipulation by a clawed hand studded the box's surface. Several
small disks fronted it and were directed at the mysterious black circle.
"Instrument readings remain inconclusive,
Honored One," she declared. "We cannot penetrate the black, areas.
Until we are more certain of their nature, I hesitate to subject the artifact
to any form of particulate inspection. Contact with energy or matter might set
the weapon off."
"Bah," said the Baron. "We have
already determined that if it was once a weapon, it is presently
dysfunctional."
Under the withering stares of the other homesick scientists,
the single remaining protester found herself backing down.
"Honored One," she managed to finish
worriedly, "no precipitate action to take:"
"It puts out no energy, takes in no energy. It
is dead, millions of time units dead. Yet you do not wish! us to proceed with
examination. The inscriptions, foe example," and he gestured at the
engraved script covering the artifact's flanks, "will provide much
information once they are deciphered. Perhaps some will aid is our mission to
obliterate those warm‑skinned humans and stiff‑jointed thranx who
infest so much of oar present portion of this galaxy.”
Reaching out, be traced one long character with a
gloved hand. The moment he contacted the artifact, the single querulous
scientist unwillingly sucked in her breath. Nothing happened. Turning, the
Baron eyed her condescendingly. Her suit tag indicated she was called Di‑Vuoyyi
LMMVCT. The suit hid most of her shape, but not all of it. Her hips were wide.
Perhaps later, after her unnecessary caution had been lost, he would endeavor
to show his ability to be forgiving and compassionate to mistake‑makers.
In his quarters, on the blue dune.
With the hand he tapped the peculiar, as‑yet‑unidentified
substance. "Dead, inert, harmless, as anyone can see." He drew back
his hand, compensated for the movement in zero g, and smacked the surface hard.
"Why do you not trust your own knowledge, lya‑nye? Why do you
doubt your own evident wisdom?" He moved until he was directly opposite
the edge of one of the dark gaps in the artifact's surface.
"We cannot see into this space, yet there must
be a space there. In the presence of instrumental indecision, we AAnn have
always reacted efficiently." So saying, be reached out a hand, fingers
spread, and shoved against the darkness. His hand passed through the black
surface and vanished; and for a length of time just this side of instantaneous,
he became the first and only one of his kind to touch Elsewhere.
Matter in Elsewhere triggered the device. Of course,
the device was not actually there, within the AAnn warship. It was somewhere
half a million years back in space, where the system of Cannachanna had once
been. It was connected to its present manifestation by an unimaginably vast
buildup of FCI energy. When Baron Lisso PN triggered it, that energy and the
actual device slipped, avalanched through a different state of space.
It all came together inside the AAnn warship. There
was no explosion as a result, however. The accumulated energy simply gave the
slingshotted artifact a little shove. The Hur'rikku device was a needle. What
it did was punch a tiny hole in the fabric of the universe.
Into the other universe.
Elsewhere waterfalled into Here. The Baron vanished.
The scientists around him vanished. Everything in the immediate spatial vicinity,
which consisted of eleven armed vessels of various sizes and their crews,
vanished. They disappeared in tiny flashes of supernal brilliance, going out of
existence like moths in a firestorm.
Only an electronic angel on board the Teacher saved
Flinx and his companions. The computer detected the danger and threw the ship
into space‑plus just in time to save it from annihilation. Since that
annihilation was racing toward them only at near light‑speed, the Teacher
didn't have to accelerate enormously. Only rapidly.
When they started picking themselves off the deck,
it was the resilient, armored Truzenzuzex who was firs on his feet and back at
the consoles. Long‑range scanners were activated, and the scene forming
behind them came into view. There was no need to increase their velocity. They
needed only to travel a little above light‑speed to outspace the pursuing
destruction.
Flinx and the others crowded around the screen. So
stunned was the youth that he didn't notice a terrified Pip had vanished out
the passageway.
"Gone." Tse‑Mallory studied the
detectors in disbelief. "They're gone, Tru. All eleven ships. Not a trace
of them."
"Somehow they activated the device,"
murmured Truzenzuzex. Awed, he studied the picture on the screen. "Humanx,
pay attention. What we are witnessing is unique."
Out of the region where the AAnn war sphere bad
drifted seconds before, something had emerged. An intense sphere of pure white
brilliance, it was bordered. by a black fire that could not be seen through. A
tentacle of that blackness which was more than black seemed to shine as it
stretched outward. That was impossible, of course. Nothing could glow black.
It was a distortion of every known physical law, yet
it existed, even if a normal spectrum would have been appalled by it. From
several hundred million kilometers away, a similar tendril of intensely glowing
white fire was extending out from the event horizon of the collapsar.
"It's drawing matter out of the black hole, out of the rogue," said Tse‑Mallory in a stunned whisper.
"That's crazy." September knew enough to
sound confident about that. "Things fall into black holes. They don't come
out of them again. Ever."
"Nevertheless, that is what is taking place, or
else we and the instruments on board this vessel have all gone mad."
Truzenzuzex's flashing compound eyes moved constantly from screen to other
instruments. "I would not wager on that possibility. But then, I would
never previously have wagered I would ever actually see an expandar. A white hole."
As it left the event horizon of the collapsar, the
stream of incredibly dense matter pulsed with increasing intensity, until it
was so bright that the Teacher's compensators
were hard pressed to stop down the light to where it wouldn't burn out the
detectors: It approached the expandar slightly above the angle of approach of
dark material from the latter's event horizon.
Mutual attraction altered angular momentum. Both
streams twisted, turned, spiraled in toward each other. At the center of the
two entwining spirals, they met.
On board the Teacher,
a gauge which measured levels of radiant energy exploded. Another simply
snapped. They had been pushed beyond the range their designers had imagined
existed.
Where the two tendrils, brilliant and black, came
together, a sphere of multicolored, incredible energy formed. It grew and
steadied as they watched.
"Imagine that at one time all the matter in the
universe was concentrated in one collapsar," Tse‑Mallory mused.
"It finally meets a weak point in space. The point gives and the two
universes or more meet. What you get is a very Big Bang. What you get, maybe,
is the new energy which later coalesces to form our present galaxies."
"You also get something which totally
annihilates matter," Truzenzuzex pointed out. "An efficient irresistible
weapon." The philosoph looked pale. "How do you stop an immense
concentration of matter? Why, with an equal amount of antimatter." Light
in the observation blister bounced off his eyes as if from a crystal
chandelier. "Thank the Hive we never explored the trap after Ab set it.
Any amount of matter, a single touch, probably would have been enough to set it
of. But that's not what shakes me." He paused a moment to collect himself.
"We were going to drive the Hur'rikku device
and ourselves into the collapsar. Had we done that, there would have been no
gradual matter‑antimatter annihilation, as we are seeing now. The white
hole would have been created within
the collapsar. All, all of the
collapsar matter would have been destroyed at the same time.
"If that collapsar contains the remains of a
hundred million suns, all would have turned to energy simultaneously." He
rubbed at his mandibles. "I've always wanted to know what a quasar looked
like, gentlesirs and lady‑but not from close up!"
He turned back to the screen. "The flow of
matter into antimatter appears relatively constant. That matches what the
instruments tell us. We have a new star, gentlefolk. A rainbow star."
Tse‑Mallory looked up from the console.
"Tru, the motion of the collapsar has changed. No," he added quickly
at the expression of alarm on the philosoph's face, "it's not moving
toward the white hole. No quasar in our back
yard. It looks like they're both going to orbit around the new star, if you can
call it a star. Distance between the two remains, I'm happy to say,
constant."
"How long will it burn?" wondered Hasboga,
her arm around September's left. "It's beautiful."
"You'll be able to see it for a few million
years at least, I'd guess,"
said Tse‑Mallory. "But‑ that's not where the real beauty will
come from." She eyed him quizzically.
"The Velvet Dam," explained Truzenzuzex.
"The extensive dark nebula that lies between here and the Commonwealth
worlds. When the energy from this steady annihilation reaches it, it will turn
a dark nebula into the most magnificent sight in our galaxy. I would not be
surprised if the colors become visible on Terra and Hivehom in the daytime. We
will not live to see it, I am sorry to say. But we have made a wonderment for
our grandchildren and the generations to follow."
They continued to watch until the clashing colored
energies of the rainbow star had faded to a small spot of brilliance on the
screen. Then Flinx put the Teacher on course for Twosky Bright, the nearest
major Commonwealth world. Primarily tranx‑settled, it would be a good
place for Trazenzuzex to communicate the knowledge of their accomplishment to
officialdom. He could also help raise research funds for Isili Hasboga, who
brightened at the announcement of the philosoph's intention to help.
Flinx paused a hand going reflexively to his
shoulder. The familiar form was not there. He did not remember when Pip had
left him, but it had been some time ago, he was certain. For a second he
panicked, thinking back to that awful time on Alaspin when he feared his pet
had abandoned him forever.
That was no worry here, however, and he relaxed. The
minidrag had to be somewhere aboard the Teacher. In fact, he mused, the
minidrag had been absenting itself for longer and longer periods ever since
they'd left Alaspin. No doubt, he thought reluctantly, the experience of brief
freedom had made his beloved pet permanently more independent. He would have to
cope with it.
It was no problem to excuse himself to go hunting
for Pip. Everyone else's attention was focused elsewhere. Truzenzuzex and Tse‑Mallory
were deep in a discussion of the new phenomena now receding behind them.
September and Isili Hasboga were equally engrossed in each other.
So Flinx went prowling through corridors and cabins,
shouting out Pip's name. The minidrag had to be somewhere in the living
quarters or the few other pressurized sections of the ship. Working his way
methodically back and down from the observation blister, he eventually reached
his own cabin.
"Pip! Come on out, Pip. It's all right. My mind
is calm now."
An answering hiss sounded from behind his bed. He
frowned. It was an unusually soft hiss. Was Pip sick? Maybe, he thought
worriedly, that was the reason for the extended absences. He took an anxious
step toward the bed.
`Pip, are you all ...?'
Something that resembled a tiny missile shot past
his ear, droning like a herculean bumble bee. He froze. A second shape whizzed
by him, then another, followed by three more. He stood in befuddled amazement
in the middle of the room as four, five, six tiny winged shapes dove and hummed
around his head.
There was a much throatier hiss from behind the bed.
Immediately all six shapes dashed over the covers in ragged formation.
Flinx found Pip coiled neatly on a rumpled blanket
on the other side, sequestered comfortably between the bed‑bulk and the
metal wall. As he watched, the winged sextet settled itself neatly around the
much larger diamond‑patterned Pip, looking for all the world like a
squadron of stingships hovering around a mothering cruiser.
Looking up, slitted eyes stared directly into his
own. Flinx felt a warm mental thrum pass between the minidrag and his own
sensitive mind. It was the second time he had become a father today‑first
to a new kind of star, and now to six undeniably cute cable‑shapes of
winged poison.
"All these years we've been together,"
Flinx murmured comfortingly, "and you turn out to be a she."
No wonder he‑she, he corrected himself‑had
vanished with the impressively muscled minidrag Balthazaar. No wonder their
return and parting had resembled the conclusion of some unseen aerial ballet.
Neither minidrag had abandoned his master. They bad merely taken a brief
sojourn in response to a higher directive that itself was part of the jungles
of Alaspin.
"You ought to have told me, Pip," Flinx ‑said
reprovingly, but he was unable to restrain a brad smile. As if in response, six
tiny empathic shapes soared up at him. They buzzed him, picking curiously at
his ears, pulling his hair, fluttering in front of his eyes with the ravenous
curiosity of all newborns, Pip watched to make sure everything was all right,
then nuzzled her triangular head deeper into the folds of the blanket.
Undoubtedly, Flinx mused, she was seeking maximum
warmth- but all the same, it could have been something akin to embarrassment.
*******************************************************
Note: Map of the Commonwealth and its Chronology Published in 05: Flinx in Flux
*******************************************************
ALAN DEAN FOSTER was born
in New York City in 1946 and raised in Los Angeles, California. After receiving
a bachelor's degree in political science and a master of fine arts degree in
motion pictures from UCLA in 1968‑69, he worked for two years as a public
relations copywriter in Studio City, California.
He sold his first short story to
August Derleth at Arkham Collector Magazine in 1968, and other 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. Since then, Foster has
published many short stories, novels, and film novelizations.
Foster has toured extensively around the world. Besides traveling, he enjoys classical and rock music, old films, basketball, body surfing, and weightlifting. He has taught screenwriting, literature, and film history at UCLA and Los Angeles City College.
Currently he resides in Arizona.