TTie Galactic Milieu and the Pliocene Exile THE GREAT INTERVENTION OF 2013 OPENED HUMANITY S WAY to the stars By the year 2110, when the action of the first volume in this saga began, Earthlings were fully accepted mem- bers of a benevolent confederation of planet colonizers, the Coadunate Galactic Milieu, who shared high technology and the capability of performing advanced mental operations known as melafunctions The latter—which include telepathy, psy- chokinesis, and many other powers—had lurked in the human gene pool from time immemorial, but oniy rarely were mani- fest The five founding races of the Milieu had observed hu- manity's development for tens of thousands of years After some debate, they decided to admit Earthlings to the Milieu "in advance of their psychosocial maturation" because of the vast metapsychic potential of humanity, which might eventually exceed that of any other race With the help of nonhumans, people from Earth colonized more than 700 new planets that had already been surveyed and found suitable Earthimgs also learned how to speed the development of their metapsychic powers through special training and genetic engineering However, even though the number of humans with operant metaftmctions increased with each generation, in 2 HO the majonty of the population was stiii "normal"—that is possessing metafiinctions that were either meager to the point of nullity or else latent, unusable because of psychological barriers or other factors Most of the day-to-day socioeconomic activities of the Human Polity of the Milieu were earned on by "normals", but human metapsychics did occupy privileged po- sitions in government, in the sciences, and in other areas where high mental powers were valuable to the Milieu as a whole At only one period between the Great Intervention and 2110 xin XIV SYNOPSIS did it seem thai the admission of humanity to the Milieu had been a mistake This was in 2083, during the brief Metapsychic Rebellion Instigated by a small group of Earth-based humans, this attempted coup narrowly missed destroying the entire Mil- ieu organization The Rebellion was suppressed by loyalist metapsychic humans and steps were taken to insure that such a disaster never would occur again A certain number of bat- tered rebel survivors did manage to evade retribution by passing through a unique kind of escape hatch, a one-way time gate leading into Earth's Pliocene Epoch, six million years in the past The time-gate was discovered in 2034, during the heady years of the scientific knowledge-explosion subsequent to the Great Intervention But since the time-warp opened only back- ward (anything attempting to return became six million years old and usually crumbled to dust), and since it had a fixed focus (a point in France's Rhone River Valley), its discoverer sadly concluded that it was a useless oddity without practical application After the time-gate discoverer's death in 2041, his widow, Angelique Gudenan, learned that her husband had been mis- taken The Intervention had seemed to open a Golden Age for humanity, giving it unlimited lebensraum, energy sufficiency, and membership in a splendid galaxy-wide civilization But even Golden Ages have their misfits in this case, humans who were temperamentally unsuited to the rather structured social environment of the Milieu As Madame Gudenan was to dis- cover, there were fair numbers of these, and they were willing to pay handsomely to be transported to a simpler world without rules Geologists and paleonlologists knew that the Pliocene was an idyllic period, just before the dawn of rational life on our planet Romantics and nigged individualists from almost all of Earth's ethnic groups eventually discovered Madame's "underground railroad" to the Pliocene, which operated out of a quaint French inn located outside the metropolitan center of Lyon From 2041 until 2106, the rejuvenated Madame Gudenan transported clients from Old Earth to "Exile," a presumed nat- ural paradise six million years younger After suffenng belated THE NONBORN KING XV qualms of conscience about the fate of the time-travelers, Ma- dame herself passed into the Pliocene and operation of her inn was taken over by the Milieu, which had found the time-warp to be a convenient glory hole for dissidents By 2110, nearly 100,000 time-farers had vanished into an unknown destiny On 25 August 2110, eight persons, making up that week's "Group Green," were transported to Exile Richard Voorhees, a grounded starship captain, Felice Landry, a disturbed eigh- teen-year-old athlete whose violent temperament and latent mind- powers had made her an outcast, Claude Majewski, a recently widowed elderly paleontologist. Sister Amene Roccaro, a phy- sician and burnt-out pnest, Bryan Grenfelt. an anthropologist following his lover. Mercy Lamballe, who had preceded him through the gate, Elizabeth Orme, a Grand Master metapsychic who had lost her stupendous mental powers after a brain trauma, Stem Oleson, a misfit planet-crust driller who dreamt of life in a simpler world, and Alken Drum, an engaging young crook who, like Felice, possessed considerable latent metapsychic power Group Green discovered, as other time-travelers had before them, that idyllic Pliocene Europe was under the control of a group of mavenck humanoids from another galaxy The exotics were also exiled, having been dnven from their home because of their barbarous battle-religion The dominant exotic faction, the Tanu, were tall and hand- some In spite of a thousand-year sojourn on Earth, there were still less than 20,000 of them because their reproduction was inhibited by solar radiation Since their plasm was compatible with that of humanity, they had for nearly seventy years utilized the time-travelers in breeding, holding Pliocene humanity in benevolent serfdom Antagonistic to the Tanu and outnumbenng them by at least four to one were their ancient foes, the Firvulag Often called the Little People, these exotics were mostly of short stature, although there were plenty of human-sized and even gigantic individuals among them They reproduced quite well on Pli- ocene Earth Tanu and Firvulag actually constituted a dimorphic race— the former metapsychicaily latent, and the latter possessed of operant metafimctions, mostly limited in power The Tanu. XVI SYNOPSIS with their higher technology, had long ago developed mind- amplifiers, collars called golden lores, which raised their latent mind-powers up to operancy Firvulag did not require tores to exercise their metafunctions Certain of their great heroes were the mental equals of the Tanu in aggressive action, but most Firvulag were weaker For most of the thousand years that Tanu and Firvulag re- sided on Earth (which they called the Many-Colored Land), they were fairly evenly matched in the ntual wars fought as part of their battle-religion The greater finesse and technology of the Tanu tended to counterbalance the superior numbers of the cruder Firvulag But the advent of time-traveling humanity tipped the scales in favor of the taller exotics Not only did Tanu-human hybrids turn out to have unusual physical and mental strength, but humans also enhanced the rather decadent science establishment of the Tanu by injecting the expertise of the greatly advanced Galactic Milieu It had been strictly for- bidden for time-travelers to carry sophisticated weaponry back to the Pliocene, and the Tanu were very conservative in the types of military hardware that they permitted their human slaves to build Nevertheless, it was human ingenuity that even- tually gave the Tanu almost complete ascendency over their Firvulag foes (who never mated with humans and generally despised them) Most of the enslaved time-travelers actually lived a pretty good life under their Tanu overlords All rough work was done by ramapithecines, small apes who wore simple tores compelling obedience and who were, ironically, part of the direct hommid line that would climax in Homo sapiens six million years in the future Humans who occupied positions of trust or engaged in vital pursuits under the Tanu wore gray tores These did not amplify the mind, but did allow telepatmc communication with the Tanu, who were also able to administer punishment or reward through the device If psychological test- ing showed that an arriving tune-traveler possessed significant latent metafunctions. the lucky person was given a silver tore This was a genuine amplifier similar to die golden collars worn by the exotic race, but having control circuits Silver-tore hu- mans were accepted as conditional citizens of the Many-Col- ored Land Rarely, and only if they proved themselves, the silvers might be granted golden tores and full freedom THE NONBORN KING xvn The expanded tore technology, developed from the original golden devices worn by the Tanu, was the fruit of a single misfit genius—Euseblo Gomez-Nolan, a human psychobiol- ogist who was eventually granted gold and who rose to become the President of the Coercer Guild, one of the five metapsychic quasi clans that formed me basis for Tanu society Under the sobriquet of Lord Gomnol, Gomez-Nolan played a manipula- tive role in the power politics of the Many-Colored Land until he fatally overreached himself The overall destiny of both the Tanu and the Firvulag was subtly guided by a mysterious woman who belonged to neither race but served as guardian to both This was Brede the Ship- spouse With her mate, the Ship, a gigantic rational organism of mtergalactic travel, she had originally brought the exotics to Pliocene Earth Brede could foresee the future—although not perfectly — and she came to know that the destinies of Tanu, Firvulag, and time-traveling humanity were inextricably united A pivotal point in thisJOint destiny was reached with the arrival of the eight members of Group Green at the Tanu reception center. Castle Gateway It was Tanu custom to test all arriving time-travelers im- mediately for metapsychic latency Latents, and those with unusual talents of other kinds, were sent south to the Tanu capital of Munah. located on the Aven (Balearic) Peninsula in the nearly empty saline basin of the Mediterranean Normal humans were shared out among the Tanu cities, taking their places in the working or (in the case of presentable women) breeding pools Presorted caravans, escorted by gray-tore hu- man troops, normally left Castle Gateway each week Group Green proved to be anything but typical when ex- amined by the Tanu overseers in residence. Lord Creyn and Lady Epone Most notable was Elizabeth Onne The tnp through the time- gate had restored her to metapsychic operancy, a fact which Creyn was instantly aware of Elizabeth's awesome power of farsensmg and redaction (mind-alteration) were convalescent. but when she recovered, it was evident that she would be far superior to any Tanu having those particular powers Creyn predicted that a "wonderful life" lay ahead for Elizabeth m the Many-Colored Land She herself was not so sure The Milieu XV111 SYNOPSIS had expressly forbidden the time-travel of any operant meta- psychics, since such persons would be in a position to exercise unfair mental domination over normal humans in a primitive environment mat lacked the mental restraints of the Milieu's "Unity." Elizabeth was a totally nonaggressive personality as well as a self-centered one, and the only way she found to defend herself from what she regarded as a temptation to hubris was flight—either physical or mental. A second member of Group Green, the recidivist youth Aiken Drum, was found to possess powerful latencies. He was collared with a silver tore and promised that if he behaved himself (a dubious prospect) he would enjoy special privileges after being trained in Muriah. Aiken's friend, the huge ex- driller Stein Oleson, tried to escape from imprisonment in the castle, killing several guards with his Viking axe. Stein was subdued with a controlling gray tore and was earmarked, be- cause of his heroic physique, to become a kind of gladiator in Muriah. Richard Voorhees, the disgraced starship captain, also tried to escape. He stumbled into the chamber of the Tanu coercer Lady Epone, who brain-burned him and consigned him to a prison dormitory where other "normals" awaited the departure of the weekly caravan to Epone's city of Finiah, situated far northeast of the castle, on the River Rhine- The anthropologist Bryan Grenfell had no metapsychic la- tencies, but Creyn was nevertheless impressed by his profes- sional credentials. It seemed the Tanu had a certain urgent need for a cultural anthropologist! Bryan was also destined for Mu- riah and accepted the prospect with equanimity, since he ex- pected to find his beloved Mercy Lamballe in the capital. Claude Majewski. the old paleonlologist, and the female priest Sister Amerie were tested and showed no latencies. But when Lady Epone attempted to test the girl Felice Landry, the little athlete seemed to go into hysterics. Her agitation made an accurate mental calibration impossible. Felice perpetrated this charade because she knew very well that she possessed very strong latent mind-powers; but she had no intention of being subjugated by a lore, especially after she discovered that both she and Sister Amerie were to be used as brood stock by the Tanu. In a private moment with the nun, Felice grimly resolved to "take" the entire Tanu race. Ludicrous though this THE NONBORN KING xix vow of revenge seemed at the time, Sister Amerie felt no inclination to doubt Felice's ability to carry out her threat. When caravans left Castle Gateway that evening. Group Green had been split in half. Bound northward for Finiah with a sizable group of normals were Felice, Sisler Amerie, Claude, and the still groggy Richard. Six gray-lore soldiers and Lady Epone conducted the train, which rode horselike Pliocene beasts called chalikos. Also in this group were Basil, a mountain- climbing former don; Yoshimitsu and Tatsuji, who wore sa- murai garb reflecting their heritage; and one Dougal, who had been driven half-mad by the unwelcome attentions of Lady Epone. The southbound caravan was much smaller. Led by Creyn with a minimum two-guard escort, it consisted of the unforced Elizabeth and Bryan, Aiken Drum in his silver collar, uncon- scious Stein wearing a gray tore, and two other latent humans who had been gifted with silver: Sukey Davies, a former ju- venile officer from a colonial satellite, and Raimo Hakkinen, a glum Finno-Canadian forester. The caravan heading for Muriah look ship at the River Rhone and made a fairly uneventful trip south. Creyn proved to be a tolerant overlord, deeply sympathetic to Elizabeth. Aiken Drum and Raimo became buddies and co-conspiralors, and Aiken discovered that the latencies inside his brain were unfolding at a wondrous pace that boded all kinds of fun and games. Stein recovered from wounds inflicted during the fracas at the castle. and he and Sukey pledged themselves to each other after she entered his mind and helped lo heal a severe psychic trauma. In the riverside city of Darask, Elizabeth helped a human gold- tore woman, Estella-Sirone, give birth to twins—one Tanu and one Firvuiag. And when the party eventually arrived in Muriah, they were greeted by a triumphal procession of magnificent Tanu chivalry, all clad in glowing, multicolored glass armor- The welcome was primarily for Elizabeth, who was soon to discover herself a pawn between several scheming factions at the Tanu court. Meanwhile, on the trail north of Castle Gateway, the other four members of Group Green were plotting a prisoner revolt. Felice, a professional athlete, was abnormally strong, and her XX SYNOPSIS latent metapsychic powers enabled her to mind-control animals She also had a small steel dagger, little more than a toy. which had been overlooked by searchers When the caravan reached a remote shore of the Lac de Bresse. Felice's plan for escape was put into action Richard, disguised in Amene's religious garb, surprised the head guard and stabbed him to death Then Felice compelled the caravan's escorting pack of huge bear-dogs to attack Lady Epone and the other soldiers In the ensuing fray, the samurai Tatsuji was killed, as well as the entire escort of gray troops Richard approached Epone. thinking that she, too, was dead But the exotic woman seized him with her powerful mind, in spite of the fact that she was nearly torn to pieces Richard would have perished had he not stabbed her with Felice's little dagger (Much later, the nun, who was a physician, deduced that the nearly invulnerable Tanu were fatally poisoned by iron weapons For this reason, they had proscribed the use of iron in Pliocene Europe, making do with copper alloys and a kind of supertough glass, vitredur, in its place ) Felice coveted Epone's golden tore. knowing that the mental amphfer was capable of releasing the great metafaculties now locked within her brain But before she could take the tore from the Tanu woman's body, mad Dougal grabbed it and threw it into the lake Amene had to drug Felice with a sedative to prevent her from killing Dougal Bewildered and frightened, the ex-pnsoners realized that news of the fight must have been tetepathically flashed by the dying Epone to the nearest fort They would have to disperse quickly One group elected to follow Basil, the ex-don They would sail in small boats down the Lac de Bresse to the Jura Mountains Claude, the 133-year-old paleontologist, was more wilder- ness-wise after years of roughing it on wild planets in the Milieu He advised his friends of Group Green to avoid the open lake and instead head into the heavily forested Vosges Mountains, which were much closer than the Jura The sur- viving samurai wamor, Yosh, decided to go his way alone, heading north in hopes of reaching the sea The large group of escapees out on the lake was eventually almost entirely recaptured and taken in chains to the city of Finiah But Claude, Richard, Amene, and Felice went deep THE NONBORN KING xxi into the Vosges, where they Finally made contact with a group of free outlaw humans, fugitives from Tanu settlements, who called themselves Lowlives The Lowlife leader was an old woman, Angelique Gudenan, former keeper of the time-gate and the ultimate author of Pli- ocene humanity's degradation Around her neck was a golden lore, the gift of the Firvulag, those deadly enemies of the Tanu, who had formed a very tentative alliance with the Lowlives Madame had modest metapsychic powers The killing of Epone by the escapees were unprecedented Never before had a mere human been able to bnng about the demise of one of the tough exotics, who normally enjoyed life spans of hundreds of years Tanu searchers, under Lord Velteyn of Finiah, now swarmed the Vosges region, looking for the ones who had done the deed The remnant of Group Green, together with Madame Gudenan and some 200 Lowlives, hid in a great hollow tree until things should cool off Inside the refuge, Madame explained to the newcomers her great plan to free Pliocene humanity from the Tanu yoke, a task she had undertaken in order to expiate her own guilt Madame's deputy, a Native Amencan named Peopeo Mox- mox Burke, who had once been a judge, was keenly interested in Amene's theory about the deadliness of iron to the exotic race This might be an invaluable secret weapon in the liberation of humanity A friendly Firvulag named Fitharn Pegleg joined the Low- lives inside their sanctuary and told Group Green the legend of the Ship's Grave The great space-going organism that was Brede's mate had died in making the leap from its home galaxy to our own Tanu and Firvulag, passengers in the Ship led by Brede. escaped from the hulk m small flying machines just before it impacted upon the Earth, making a great crater known as the Ship's Grave For some time. Lowlives, working with Firvulag, had searched for this ancient site Even though a thousand years had passed, it was possible that some of the sophisticated flying machines left at the Grave might still be operational And inside one of them, entombed after a ntual duel, was the body of Lugonn, Shining Hero of the Tanu. together with his sacred weapon, the Spear The latter was not a blade, but rather a XX11 SYNOPSIS photonic projector that delivered laserlike blasts of energy. This Spear, in the hands of Lowlife humanity, could turn the balance of power - Madame's people had looked in vain for the Ship's Grave. But Claude, knowledgeable in future geology, told them that the crater could only be the astrobleme known as the Ries, located some 300 kilometers to the east, beyond the Black Forest, on the northern shore of the Danube River. It was decided to mount a new expedition at once. With luck, the searchers might return before the end of September. The Hcvulag would then Join humanity in a joint attack against the city of Finiah—provided that me fighting took place before the start of the Grand Combat Truce, which began at dawn on October 1. Unknown to Filham, who agreed to accompany the party, the Lowlives who remained behind intended to go to another site designated by Claude, where they hoped iron ore might be found. They would smelt whatever iron they could and then forge weapons to be used in the Finiah attack. The iron was to be kept a secret from the Firvulag, since Madame was dubious of their loyalty. After receiving permission from Yeochee IV, King of the Firvulag, the expedition set out. Itcomprised Madame Guderian, Richard, Felice, Chief Burke, a former aircraft technician named Stefanko, a dynamic-field engineer named Martha, Claude, and Fitham. Felice was especially anxious to go. She was certain that the body of the ancient hero, Lugonn, would have a golden tore about its neck that she could appropriate. Disaster struck the party even before it reached the Black Forest. In a Rhineside swamp, a giant pig killed Stefanko and badly wounded Chief Burke. Frail Martha, who had borne four children in quick succession as a Tanu slave, began to hem- orrhage from the shock. It seemed that the expedition would have to be abandoned. But Martha insisted that she would recover, and Felice agreed to carry the sick woman if need be. Martha was a vital member of the group, now the only one with the technical skill to put the photon Spear and/or a flyer into operation once the expedition found them. The Firvulag Fitham agreed to take Chief Burke back to the Lowlife village of Hidden Springs, where Amerie was recuperating from a broken arm. After many vicissitudes, the reduced expedition crossed the THE NONBORN KING XXlll Black Forest range and came into the territory of a certain Sugoll. Only nominally under the authority of the Firvulag King, Sugoll ruled a large band of grotesque mutant Firvulag called Howlers. His own hideously deformed body was hidden beneath a handsome illusion- Sugoll at first scorned to assist the expedition and threatened to kill the humans. But when Claude pointed out the source of Howler deformity—radio- active rocks among which they had lived for many genera- tions—the ruler relented. Claude hinted that the Howlers might relieve their plight by seeking help from human geneticists— if such persons were released from Tanu slavery. The liberation of humanity (and helping out the expedition) was thus to the Howler advantage- Sugoll finally agreed to assist the party in finding the River Danube, on which the humans could easily voyage to the Ship's Grave. Once again the four travelers set off. On 22 September they arrived at last at the crater. Richard and Martha, who had become lovers, set about repairing one of the flying machines and the great Spear. Feiice, after a fit of rage brought on by her discovery that Lugonn's skeleton had no golden tore, calmed herself and was a model of co- operation. Even so, time was getting desperately short if they were to meet the deadline before the Grand Combat Truce. Martha's old affliction returned and she grew dangerously weak from loss of blood; but she would not let them return to Hidden Springs until the testing of the photon weapon was complete. Meanwhile, a great Firvulag army had gathered on the bank of the Rhine opposite the Tanu city of Finiah- Additionally, several hundred Lowlives had been recruited from scattered wilderness hamlets and surreptitiously armed with iron- At dusk on the twenty-ninth the flyer finally landed at Hidden Springs with the Spear ready for use. But Martha was in shock from hemorrhaging, and Amerie could only rush her away for trans- fusions and pray for a miracle. The distraught Richard could not even remain with his beloved; he had to pilot the flyer in its bombardment of Finiah. ^ Screened by Madame Guderian's limited metapsychic power, the flyer hovered over the city while Claude blasted holes in both city walls. Then he turned the Spear on Finiah's barium mine, the only source in the Many-Colored Land of the elemeni XXIV SYNOPSIS thai was vital in making all kinds of tores- The mine was destroyed, and waves of Firvulag, wearing the illusory shapes of hideous monsters, invaded the city alongside Chief Burke and his Lowlife forces. After a desperate fight, Finiah fell. Its surviving Tanu populace, including the ruler. Lord Velteyn, fled in the direction of Castle Gateway. The erstwhile human slaves (some of whom had been quite content in their bondage) were given the choice of freedom or death. Those wearing gray or silver tores had to submit to their removal with an iron chisel, a painful process that left many of them in a state of profound nervous collapse. Both Claude and Madame were wounded by bolts of Vel- teyn's psychoenergy during the air attack. Richard lost the sight of one eye, but managed to return the flyer safely to Hidden Springs- There he discovered that Martha had died. Mad with grief, he took her body and soared away in the gravomagnet- ically powered aircraft, to wait for his own death in an orbit thousands of kilometers above Pliocene Earth. Below, Felice was walking toward the ruins of Finiah. She bitterly regretted missing the war; but she knew that she would find her long-sought golden tore somewhere in the devastated city, and then she would attain the powers needed to fulfill her vow to destroy the Tanu race. Felice finally did find a tore; it raised to operancy her latent powers of farsensing, psyhcho- kinesis, coercion, and creativity. Some time would have to elapse before she learned to use these powers correctly, and so she returned to Hidden Springs in order to assist Madame Guderian in the next phases of the liberation of humanity. Meanwhile, far to the south in the Tanu capital of Muriah, the other four members of Group Green encountered an utterly different face of the Many-Colored Land. Upon their arrival, the Green quartet and their fellow hu- mans, Raimo and Sukey, were presented to the Tanu aristocracy at a lavish feast. Elizabeth learned from Thagdai the High King that she was to be taken to Brede Shipspouse in order to be initiated into Tanu ways—an unprecedented honor. After the initation, which might take a month, she would be impregnated by the King and found a new dynasty of fully operant (i.e., torcless) Tanu-human hybrids. Queen Nontusvel seemed en- THE NONBORN KING xxv rirely agreeable to this arrangement and Elizabeth herself showed no emotion as Thagdai unfolded his plans- The other honored prisoners learned their own fates. Bryan the anthropologist was commanded to make a careful study of me impact of humanity's advent upon the Tanu socioeconomy. A certain faction, headed by Nodonn Battlemasler, the most powerful son of Thagdai and Nontusvel and heir presumptive, maintained that the coming of humanity had been detrimental to Tanu culture rather than beneficial, as Thagdai and most of the Tanu aristocracy believed. Bryan, using the advanced an- alytical methods of the Milieu, was to settle the matter. It went without saying that Thagdai felt confident that Bryan would confirm the royal policy. The gigantic Viking Stein, Raimo Hakkinen, and Sukey Davies were forced to display their talent before the company, Sukey's silver tore had activated a powerful latent faculty of redaction. She would be apprenticed to the Redactor Guild, headed by the compassionate and civilized Dionket, and learn the art of mental healing. Poor Raimo, who possessed only a weak psychokinetic power, found out that he was destined to become the sexual plaything of Tanu women, who found it difficult to conceive by their own males. Stein was presented to the festal throng as a gladiatorial candidate for the Grand Combat, the annual rituai war between the Tanu and Firvulag in which certain humans also participated. Stein was about to be auctioned off to the highest Tanu bidder when an incredible event threw the entire mass of Tanu aristocracy into a turmoil. Aiken Drum put in his bid for Stein- This charming young rogue's awesome latent mind-powers had been released in a psychic torrent by the donning of the silver tore. So great was the power of Aiken's liberated mind that he had actually burned out the control circuits of the silver tore. He was now in the process of going fully operant— metafunctional without artificial augmentation. Only Elizabeth, who had been a masterclass teacher of young metapsychics back in the Milieu, knew what was happening. The Tanu re- alized that Aiken Drum was far above the usual type of human latent; but they were not yet aware just how menacing his potential would be. As the Tanu nobles began to bid for his friend Stein, Aiken XXV] SYNOPSIS was aware that the big Viking was in mortal danger Not only had Stein taken Sukey as his life-mate (an action that the Tanu deemed treason for a silver-lore woman), but he was also one of those individuals fundamentally incompatible to the tore's operation If Stein wore his gray collar for very long, he would go mad and sink into death Most humans who wore gray were tested for compatibility before being torced Stein had received his collar as a means of subjection after his bloody battle in Castle Gateway The Tanu did not really care how long he lived Alken, however, did, and so he entered the bidding against the Tanu, pledging to the King that as payment he would dispose of a Firvuiag monster, a certain Delbaeth, who had been terrorizing the adjacent Spanish mainland The King was stunned, not only by Alken's audacity but also by the glimpse of power he had perceived upon bnef examination of the young trickster's mind It hardly seemed possible and yet this little human mountebank, who wore a gold-fabric suit all covered with pockets, just might be a threat to Thagdal himself The King's sense of hovenng doom was reinforced when a member of the Tanu High Table, Mayvar Kingmaker, the head of the Farsensor Guild, declared that she was in favor of Alken's bid and would see that he was trained for the task as her protege Thagdal viewed Mayvar as a mischievous old crone who might simply be making a gesture On the other hand, she was not called "kingmaker" for nothing Shaken, Thagdal accepted Alken's bid for Stein Delbaeth was a menace that the King should have dealt with long ago, and now the monarch was backed into a comer by the wily human's maneuver Both Alken and Stem would be introduced to Tanu chivainc practice by the Lord of Swords, and then they and a large troop of knights would go on a Quest against the formidable Delbaeth Following the portentous banquet, there was desperate re- active scheming among the so-called Host of Nontusvel—chil- dren of Thagdal and the reigmng Queen Thagdal had had other wives during his two-millennium lifetime, and he had had thou- sands of other children by both Tanu and human women, since his germ plasm was considered peerless (This was the basis THE NONBORN KING xxvu for his sovereignty ) But the Host considered themselves to be the elite, and had long entertained dynastic aspirations contrary to ancient Tanu custom The Host leader was Nodonn, greatest battle hero of the Tanu, head of the Psychokmetic Guild, and ruler of Gonah. a nch city situated on the coast of Armonca (Bnttany) Unlike his totipotent father, however, Nodonn suffered from a repro- ductive handicap His offspring, who were not numerous, did not display important metapsychic powers Nodonn was a member of the Tanu hierarchy, the High Table, as were other Host notables such as the twins Fian and Kuhal, who shared the post of Second Lord Psychokmetic, Culluket the Interro- gator, Second Redactor to Dionket, Imidol the Second Coercer, who was the reluctant subordinate to the human Coercer Guild President Gomnoi. and Riganone, a female wamor who in tended to challenge old Mayvar for leadership of the Farsensors There were some 200 other members of the Host, but not all of them were first-class mental powers, nor did the Host have a majority of High Table seats But their dynasty might attain supreme power if Nodonn succeeded Thagdal Now, however, this succession seemed to be endangered not by Alken Drum, whom the Host dismissed as a mere meta- psychic nova who would burn out almost as soon as he fiared up—but by Elizabeth If King Thagdal had fully operant children by her, these would undoubtedly form the nucleus of a hybrid elite, more powerful physically and mentally than the pureblooded Tanu The scheme to use Elizabeth in breeding had been proposed to the King by Gomnol The Host rightly suspected that this de- vious human Coercer Lord intended to make a place for himself in any new order that included human operants After anxious consultation, the leaders of the Host decided that Elizabeth would have to die This would not be easy to accomplish, since she was an operant Grand Master whom no single Tanu could overcome by means of mental attack If the Host acted together, however, using the multimind thrust called metapsychic con- cert, they might be able to destroy her (Unfortunately for this plan. the individualistic Tanu found such cooperation to be very difficult Only under the most firm coordination could they achieve metapsychic concert Culluket the redactor and XXV111 SYNOPSIS Imidol the coercer would finally succeed in organizing the effort ) Several weeks passed Elizabeth was subjected to rather inept attacks by the Host Knowing that the attacks would increase in effectiveness, she escaped by accompanying Brede Shipspouse into the latter's room without doors, a chamber proof against mind-penetration Brede had plans of her own for Elizabeth that had nothing to do with the schemes of Thag- dal, Gomnoi, or the Host The Shipspouse, guardian of both the Tanu and Firvulag races, perceived Elizabeth as one who might lead them (as Brede apparently could not) out of their barbarous and feckless battle-culture into a truly civilized so- ciety of the mind Elizabeth was in no mood for Brede's large-hearted hopes She was sunk in despair, feeling that she was the only meta- psychic adult in a population of malignant children, who had no response to a superior being other than trying to kdl it out of fear Elizabeth rejected any thought of spiritual motherhood or sharing Brede's guardian role All she wanted, she told the Shipspouse, was to sail away in the great red balloon she had brought with her to the Pliocene to sail away and be left alone, at peace Alken Drum, under the tutelage of Mayvar Kingmaker, became more and more adept in the use of his melafunctions Mayvar gave him his initiate's golden tore, but he was quick to show the elderly Tanu woman that he had no need of any artificial amplifier He would wear the tore to deceive the other Tanu, however Mayvar also gave Alken a certain simple de- vice that she guaranteed would give him victory over the mon- ster Delbaeth—provided he could use the weapon without any Tanu member of the Quest finding out about it Stem. loo, received training as a Tanu man-at-arms He womed about Sukey, separated from him as she prepared to begin her redactor apprenticeship Stein's fears were confirmed when he perceived a telepathic cry of fear emanate from his wife He rushed to the headquarters of the Redactor Guild and found her recovering from an operation A traitorous human physician. Tasha-Bybar, had reversed the sterilization proce- dure obligatory to all time-traveling women, making Sukey THE NONBORN KING xxix ready for King Thagdal's droit du seigneur (Tasha, a great heroine to the Tanu, had perfected this restoration of fertility, making possible the Tanu breeding scheme that utilized human women Her students did their work in each Tanu city as female newcomers arrived Because of the female sterilization require- ment originally promulgated by Madame Gudenan, only one- fourth as many women as men elected to time-travel to the Pliocene ) Stein was reunited with Sukey—only to discover that the infamous Tasha was spying upon them Realizing by Sukey's telepathic confession what Tasha had done—not only to his own wife but to thousands of other human women —Stem killed the doctor on the spot His deed was discovered by the redactor Creyn, who seemed oddly sympathetic Creyn promised to conceal their part in Tasha's death, giving Stein and Sukey the first hint of the existence of a Peace Faction among the normally bellicose Tanu This group cherished the heretical notion that one day Tanu and Firvulag would be brothers in sun as well as in shadow At the September Sport Meeting in Munah, both Alken and Stem were required to display their fighting prowess in the arena, before the grand and petty nobility of the Many-Colored Land If the pair passed muster, they would be accepted as members of the Tanu battle-company and the Delbaeth Quest would proceed Stem fought first and dispatched a monstrous hyenalike an- imal with his battleaxe Then it was Alken's turn His antagonist was a species of crocodile seventeen meters long It had been brought to the Munah arena just for him by Nodonn Battle- master, who had recognized Alken as a force to be reckoned with The anthropologist Bryan Grenfetl had been spending his days studying Tanu culture in company with a genial hybrid, Ogmol On the night of Aiken's testing, Bryan was in the royal box together with the King and Queen, Aluteyn Crartsmaster, the President of the Creator Guild, the fey human Genetics Master Greg-Donnei (ne Gregory Prentice Brown), and other notables Bryan was introduced to Nodonn upon the Battle- master's arrival, but he had eyes only for Nodonn's new wife, XXX SYNOPSIS Lady Rosmar— who was none other than the bewitching Mercy Lamballe, Bryan's own love-at-first-sight, whom he had help- lessly followed to the Pliocene. Mercy now wore a golden tore and had developed tremendous psychocreative powers. In the arena, Aiken met the giant crocodile. Astride a chal- iko, wearing golden glass armor and armed only with a glass lance, the trickster was terrified. He lost control of his mount and was thrown to the sand. The rules permitted no use of overt mental power against the beast, but Aiken eventually conquered it, using only his native cunning. The Tanu spec- tators went wild at his bold performance. King Thagdal and Nodonn had a more chilly response. Having proved themselves, Aiken and Stein now undertook the Delbaeth Quest- The expedition consisted of several hundred knights and was led by the King himself- Nodonn was there to keep an eye on Aiken. Two High Table members, Tanu- human hybrids of great mental power, became partisans of the trickster. They were Alberonn Mindealer and Bleyn the Cham- pion. The colorful troop began the Quest at the large city of Afaliah, at the base of the Aven Peninsula. Its crusty old lord, Celadeyr, no particular friend of the Host, was nevertheless scornful of the notion that a human such as Aiken might get the better of the awful Delbaeth. For three weeks the Quest chased the monster, who bombarded the knights with lethal fireballs and effectively kept them at a distance. Finally the Firvulag disappeared into a vast network of caverns out on the Gibraltar Isthmus, and King Thagdai and Nodonn demanded that Aiken admit he was beaten. Aiken refused. He and Stein stripped themselves of their glass armor and prepared to follow Delbaeth underground. By law, the Quest had to end in three days, when the Grand Combat Truce would begin and Tanu and Firvulag would forswear fighting until the start of the ritual war- Aiken demanded that he be allowed those three days; and supported by his partisans, he was given his chance. Using his psychocreative power, Aiken turned himself and Stein into bats and they flew into the depths. They encountered Delbaeth two days later and killed him by means of the secret device Mayvar had given Aiken. Just THE NONBORN KING xxxi before they left the Firvulag's cave. Stein pointed out to Aiken that the waters of the Atlantic were pounding against the west- ern wall. The narrow Gibraltar Isthmus, forming a sill between Spain and Africa, was all that separated the ocean from the deep empty basin of the Mediterranean. With the start of the month-long Truce, both Tanu and Firvulag from all parts of the Many-Colored Land began to converge on Muriah's White Silver Plain, a large salt flat where tent cities, grandstands, lists, and the battlefield for the Combat proper were located. Because they had adopted war-mounts and other human innovations, the Tanu had won the Grand Combat for forty years running, and the Firvulag had become more and more bitter. However, the recent fall of Finiah cheered the Little People—and inspired them to adopt a few Lowlife fighting customs themselves in hopes of changing their luck. The new tactics were opposed by the old Firvulag Battlemaster, Paliol One-Eye; but he was forced to bow to the will of the younger generals Sham and Ayfa, a husband-and-wife team. In the Lowlife village of Hidden Springs, Madame Guderian discussed her plan for liberating humanity from the Tanu yoke. Phase One had been successful. Finiah with its barium mine was a deserted ruin. Phase Two would be more audacious. Under cover of the Truce, a small group of Lowlives would infiltrate the tore factory down in Muriah and sabotage the irreplaceable ma- chinery. The undertaking would be hazardous in the extreme, since the factory was situated inside the fortresslike Coercer Guild complex, presided over by the renegade human. Lord Gomnol. Phase Three involved the permanent closing of the time- gate. Madame had a plan for doing this herself, and Claude insisted upon helping her. An implied fourth phase of the liberation involved the mak- ing of iron weapons by humanity. It was arranged that the freed human population of Finiah, as well as some of the Lowlives who had come from other parts of Europe to join in the Finiah fight, would found several Iron Villages. They would mine. smelt, and forge the "blood metal" in preparation for the ul- timate bid for human freedom. Eleven people, including Madame and the Group Green XXX11 SYNOPSIS survivors, left Hidden Springs to implement Phases Two and Three. They were disguised as loyalist human refugees from Finiah. At the city of Roman, Madame and Claude separated from the others and went off to hide near Castle Gateway, while the others proceeded south to the capital The two groups would try to synchronize strikes against the time-gale and tore factory. The Muriah-bound group included Felice, Sister Amerie, Chief Burke, the alpinist don Basil Wimbome (liberated from a Finiah prison), and five other dedicated Lowlives. Felice's metapsychic powers were developing nicely and the longer she wore her golden tore, the stronger her mental faculties became. She also carried the photonic Spear- It had been totally dis- charged in the Finiah fight, but the saboteurs hoped that their former Group Green companion, Aiken Drum, would find some way of putting it back into action. As the group approached the Tanu capital, a telepathic call was sent to Aiken, telling him of the Lowlife conspiracy. The saboteurs took for granted that Aiken would be loyal to humanity and eager to assist them. But they were wrong. Down in Muriah, Aiken and Stem and Elizabeth learned at the same lime of the impending assaults on the tore works and the time-gate. Elizabeth had reluctantly helped Brede attain metapsychic operancy; but she was still determined to escape from Muriah in her red balloon and live alone. Stein eagerly welcomed the prospect of a strike against the Tanu; but Aiken feared that the exotics would read Stein's simple mind and discover the plot, and so he and his new ally Gomnol (who professed to be sympathetic to humanity) put a mind-block into the big Viking. Neither Gomnol nor Aiken anticipated that Stein would leak the sabotage plot to his redactor wife, Sukey - The alliance between Aiken and Gomnol Lord Coercer was a devious one. Neither man really trusted the other, but they had been forced into a coalition of necessity. Aiken aspired to be King of the Many-Colored Land and would need plenty of help to fulfill his ambition. Gomnol, cordially hated by the present heir to the throne, Nodonn, knew that his previous position of strength as a supporter of King Thagdal was crum- bling. The Tanu monarch was on a downhill slide and might very well take Gomnoi with him THE NONBORN KING XXX111 The King had believed that the Tanu race benefited by the admixture of human genes and the utilization of human tech- nology- But now Bryan Grenfeli's cultural survey, recently completed but still secret, showed that humans would even- tually dominate the Many-Colored Land if Thagdal's policy continued. The King suspected (correctly) that his eldest son Nodonn planned to use the survey to discredit him publicly during the Grand Combat. Additionally, the King had suffered another blow to his prestige when Brede forbade the imple- mentation of Gomnol's mating scheme between Thagdal and Elizabeth. Elizabeth was now taboo, and the King would not become the father of an operant superrace as he had hoped. On the contrary, that honor might very likely fall to Aiken Drum! Sunk in despair, Thagdal confided his fears to Queen Non- tusvel, who knew just what kind of diversion would cheer her spouse. By royal command, she demanded that Sukey be given to the King. Dionket was forced to yield the young woman up. As Thagdal took his pleasure, Sukey let slip a vengeful thought about the northern saboteurs soon to invade Muriah. The Queen overheard this thought and notified Nodonn's brother Culluket the Interrogator, a sinister and powerful member of the Host faction. Culluket wrung from Sukey all that Stein had inad- vertently told her of the plot, with the result that Stein and Sukey were both condemned and thrown .into prison to await death at the Combat's finale- Aiken, even though he was known to be Stem's close friend, managed to convince Culluket that he knew nothing of the plot. But the Host continued to believe that both Aiken and Gomnol were in league with the Lowlife conspirators. Meanwhile, the party of saboteurs had reached Muriah and were ready to strike. They called Aiken to their hiding place and rather reluctantly turned the inoperative Spear over to him. He promised to attempt to recharge it, but really had no inten- tion of giving it back to the saboteurs. It was to be a key element in his own schemes later. When Aiken failed to return at the appointed hour with the Spear, the Lowlife party began its penetration without him, trusting that Felice's growing metapsychic powers would be strong enough to destroy the tore factory XXXIV SYNOPSIS The Lowlives entered the Coercer Guild complex in dis- guise. Felice melted the factory door with a bolt of mental energy—only to find that some sixty knights of the Host, led by Imidol the Second Coercer and Culluket the Interrogator, were waiting in ambush. The humans managed to kill fifteen Tanu, either with iron weapons or with Felice's mindbolts- But the girl herself was eventually stunned, and the rest of the saboteurs, saving only Sister Amerie, Chief Burke, and Basil, were killed. The tore factory was undamaged. Gomnol arrived when the fighting was over and coolly told the Host that he had everything in hand. But they refused to believe his protestations of innocence. Having improved their teamwork in metapsychic concert during the futile attacks on Elizabeth, they now combined to mind-blast Gomnol to death, knowing that the terrible Felice would be blamed. The girl was then divested of her golden lore and taken off by Culluket for interrogation. The other three saboteurs, badly wounded, were cast into the same prison as Stein and Sukey to await the end. Far to the north of Muriah, in the vicinity of the time-gale at Castle Gateway, Madame Guderian and Claude prepared to act. They had made message holders from amber, a material known to pass successfully through the reversed time-warp, and enclosed notes warning the twenty-second-century opera- tors to halt all time travel because of the enslaving of humans by me Tanu. As the sun rose, the two old people, rendered invisible by Madame's metapsychic power, rushed toward the gate area. High in the sky, Aiken was searching for them. He did not want the time-gate closed, since this would deprive him of potential subjects once he became King- Before Aiken could spot his quarry he was seized by a miniature tornado and flung far away. He had been anticipated by Nodonn—who had plans of his own for the old couple. As Claude and Madame approached the gate, the image of Nodonn filled their minds. He was not there to stop them, but to explain why he was permitting them to succeed. Because of Tanu popular sentiment. Nodonn had not dared to close the time-gate himself; yet he knew that it posed a mortal threat to his race's survival. He now told Claude and Madame that they must do their work visibly, so that there would be no doubt THE NONBORN KING XXXV where the responsibility for the gate's closure lay. Then he let them go. Hand in hand, the two old people stepped into the recycling time-warp and returned to the twenty-second century. Their bodies crumbled to dust, but the amber message holders sur- vived. The time-gate was shut down forthwith. Now the time of the Grand Combat had almost arrived. The petty nobility of the Tanu showed a strange liking for Aiken Drum, and his kingly aspirations had become a very serious matter. Also, he now had the photonic Spear in working order. This sacred weapon had last been used officially in a duel of two great heroes back at the Ship's Grave, when Tanu and Firvuiag first arrived on Earth a thousand years earlier. The Tanu hero Bright Lugonn had wielded the Spear; the Firvuiag hero Sharn the Atrocious had used a similar laserlike weapon called the Sword. In later years, the Sword had been used as the Grand Combat trophy and currently it was in the care of Nodonn Battlemaster. Aiken's possession of the Spear gave a further air of legitimacy to his aspiration. According to Tanu chivalric usage. Aiken would be permitted to fight Nodonn, Spear to Sword, if he managed to attract a suitable number of adherents during the Grand Combat. A threat to Aiken now materialized from a strange source: his friend Stein- Suffering in prison with Sukey, who had mis- carried of their son, Stein's mind was failing under the malig- nant influence of his gray lore. At the same time, the mental block installed by Gomnot began to weaken. It seemed that Stein would unwittingly betray Aiken's link with the saboteurs and his conspiracy with the late human Lord Coercer. Resisting the temptation to kill Stein and Sukey, Aiken begged Mayvar to get the pair out of Muriah, beyond the range of the Host's mental snooping. Mayvar agreed to this, then went to a meeting of the clandestine Tanu Peace Faction, which hoped that Aiken would succeed in his bid for the kingship and bring a new era of peace and civilization to the Many-Colored Land- Besides Mayvar, the Peace Faction included the hybrid High Table members Bleyn, Alberonn, and Kattinel the Darkeyed (who announced that she was betrothed to none other than A Sugoll, ruler of the Howlers), Dionket the Lord Healer, Creyn, XXXVI SYNOPSIS and two banished Tanu stalwarts who might play special roles in the upcoming Grand Combat- One of these was Leyr, father of the hybrid Katlinel, who had been Lord Coercer before being deposed by Gomnol. Now that the latter was dead and his post vacant, the Host would put Imidol forward as a presidential candidate. The Peace Faction urged Leyr to challenge young Imidol in order to keep the Coercer Guild from Host control. Leyr was much older, but it was known that Imidol was weaker than Gomnol, so there seemed a slim chance that Leyr might win. The other banished Tanu present at the secret meeting was Minanonn the Heretic. Five hundred years before, he had been Battlemaster. But his pacifistic temperament was anti- thetical to the barbaric Tanu battle-religion, and he had been forced into exile deep in the Pyrenees. The Peace Faction hoped that, in the event Aiken defeated Nodonn, Minanonn would fight against Kuhal Earthshaker for the presidency of the Psy- chokinetic Guild- However, Minanonn refused to compromise his principles. Leyr did agree to go up against Imidol. Later that same night, on a mountain above Muriah, Eliz- abeth and her great hot-air balloon awaited the arrival ofCrcyn. He was to bring Stein and Sukey to her and the balloon would carry all three to safety. Bul when the Tanu redactor arrived, he brought not two people but three. Curled up unconscious in the carriage was Felice. Creyn had found her in a cell next to the others, near death after torture by Culluket. Felice, like Stein, now wore a gray tore- But Sukey had been given a pair of iron shears to remove the devices once they were safely off the ground. There was only one problem: The balloon gondola carried only three. Elizabeth was despairing and furious. Both Brcde and Dion- ket had pleaded with her to remain with them, doing important work that only a Grand Master metapsychic such as herself was capable of. But Elizabeth did not want the responsibility— especially if it meant that the Host would never relent in trying to kill her. Faced with the wretched Felice, Stein, and Sukey, she felt caught in the Shipspouse's web. Finally, Elizabeth sent the three freed prisoners away in her balloon. Then she returned to Brede's room without doors and THE NONBORN KING XXXV11 withdrew into a fiery mental cocoon that isolated her from all other minds, The First Day of the Combat began. It was a day of bloodless sporting events and ceremony. Mercy came to watch the thrilling contests with Bryan, who was literally dying for love of her. Then she left him in order to challenge old Aiuteyn Craftsmaster for the presidency of the Creator Guild. At the same time, the balloon carrying Felice, Stein, and Sukey drifted westward and landed alongside the Long Fjord east of Ml. Alboran. Felice recovered her senses—and more. In his tortures, Culluket had unwittingly duplicated a drastic mind-altering technique that Elizabeth had used on Brede to raise her to operancy; now Felice had gone operant, too. She no longer needed a tore in order to exercise her metapsychic powers; and these powers, at least the destructive aspects of psychokinesis and creativity, were greater than those of any other person in the world. Felice was finally in a position to take revenge on the Tanu. Her plan was to blast open the Gibraltar Isthmus with psy- choenergy, letting the Atlantic flood the empty Mediterranean Basin- The battleground of the White Silver Plain below Muriah was well below sea level. It did not bother Felice that thousands of Firvulag and humans would also drown in the cataclysm. She did not trust the Firvulag protestations of friendship (neither had Madame Guderian), and most of the humans in Muriah were creatures of the Tanu. In order to implement her plan, Felice required Stein's help- As an ex-driller of the Earth's crust, he had the technical knowledge to instruct her where to blast. At first. Stein refused to consider Felice's terrible scheme. He had no grudge against the Tanu—none, thai is, worth such a hideous retribution. At that point, Felice triumphantly told Stein that King Thag- dal was responsible for Sukey's miscarriage, the guilt for which Stein had mistakenly borne himself. In his rage, Stein gave Felice all the help she needed. He showed her how to steal the fjord so that a head of water would build up in the Alboran Basin. Then he had her begin to blast open the Gibraltar Isth- mus. XXXV111 SYNOPSIS Powerful as she was. Felice faltered before the job was complete. In her extremity of hatred, Felice prayed help from whatever powers of darkness might exist—and the help came from somewhere, and she was able to open the Gibraltar Gate at last. A monstrous cascade of seawater began to fill the Alboran Basin, backing up behind a loose rubble dam near the Long Fjord. On the Second Day of the Grand Combat, the culminating event was the selection of the Combat leaders by means of a manifestation of powers. The nine Firvulag leaders of long standing were unchallenged and accepted by acclamation. Wicked old Pailol One-Eye, the Firvulag Battlemaster. gave a demonstration of his formidable metapsychic power. The selection of Tanu leaders was not so orderly. Things began tamely enough when Bleyn, Alberonn, Lady Bunone Warteacher, and Tagan Lord of Swords stood forth unchal- lenged. And then Dionket appointed Culluket his deputy, as was expected; and Nodonn similarly deputized his brother Ku- hal Earthshaker since he himself would serve as Battlemaster. But a furor broke out when Gomnol's empty place was claimed by both Imidol and the exiled Leyr. The two agreed to duel for the coercer leadership on the field of battle rather than to manifest powers at that time- Then it was the turn of Aluteyn Craftsmaster, Lord of the Creators. He was challenged by Mercy, and in the subsequent manifestation she was victorious. Rather than banishment, proud Aluteyn chose death. He went off to a huge glass vessel called the Great Retort, in which those condemned to die at the Com- bat's end awaited their fate. Mercy, the new Lady Creator, declined to fight in the Combat. She deputized Veiteyn, erst- while Lord of devastated Finiah, as her champion. The final Tanu leader to stand forth was Mayvar, President of the Farsensors. She chose Aiken as her deputy rather than the Host's nominee, Riganone. After King Thagdal designated Nodonn as Battlemaster, all of the company retired to feasting and entertainment. Tomorrow the actual Combat would begin, lasting for two and a half days with only a few recesses. During that time, the sump behind the rubble dam across the Medi- terranean Basin would fill with ever-deepening water... The last, fateful psychocreative blast that had let in the sea THE NONBORN KING XXXIX also caused Felice to fall from the balloon. Stein and Sukey could find no trace of the girl. After cutting off his wife's silver tore so she could not transmit a telepathic warning to Muriah, Stein guided the balloon into a northerly current of air and soared far away, heading for freedom in a remote part of France. The only person at the Grand Combat with an intimation of approaching disaster was the deposed Creator, Aluteyn Crafts- master. As the Grand Combat proper began, he perceived subtle geophysical hints of the encroaching sea and tried to give warn- ing while imprisoned inside the Great Retort- He was ignored. Tanu and Firvulag met in their ritual war with no thought except for their ancient rivalry. The human Raimo Hakkinen, forced to lake part in the battle, was rescued from slaughter by Aiken Drum- Then Raimo attempted to desert, but he was found out and condemned to the Retort for cowardice. Unlike the previous forty Grand Combats, which the Tanu had won easily, this contest showed signs of being a squeaker. The Firvulag used new tactics, learned at Finiah, against the battle-mounts of Tanu and torced humanity. The Little People pulled ahead in the body-count scoring, even though the Tanu retained a lead in the more significant banner-capture tally. Veiteyn of Finiah, too anxious for vengeance after the loss of his city, was responsible for a Tanu fiasco. Aiken Drum, on the other hand, engineered a number of triumphs by means of tricky maneuvers, which delighted the more progressive Tanu but enraged the reactionaries of the Host, most notably Nodonn Battlemaster. The rivalry between Aiken and Nodonn for the battlemas- tership became more heated during the second day of fighting. At a war feast, Nodonn tried to discredit Aiken by dramatically producing Bryan Grenfell and his adverse study of humanity's impact upon the Many-Colored Land. Some of the Tanu aban- doned Aiken because of this; but large numbers still were prag- matic enough to stick with him. In the duel between coercers, Imidol of the Host defeated the elderly Leyr- Tough old Ce- ladeyr of Afaliah took the place of the defunct Veiteyn as Second Creator under Mercy. Shortly before the Combat's start, Brede Shipspouse had secretly taken healing Skin to the prison cell in Muriah where xl SYNOPSIS Chief Burke, Basil, and Amerie lay dying. The three were fully recovered by the last day of the Combat and Brede ted them, mystified, to a room high on the Mount of Heroes inside the Redactor Headquarters, which overlooked the White Silver Plain. Inside this room were lockers full of twenty-second- century equipment that the Tanu had confiscated from time- travelers- More important, Elizabeth was there, apparently in a deep coma. Brede instructed the three to take charge of the equipment and Elizabeth, and wait until the following morning, when they would know what to do. On no account were they to leave the room until then. The Grand Combat approaches its finale, in which the cham- pions of the Tanu and Firvulag armies would meet hand to hand. The generalized phase of fighting had given the Tanu a narrow lead over the Little People, but this could be upset during the Heroic Encounters. The Firvulag were especially hopeful because neither Nodonn nor Aiken could participate in the first round of Encounters. Each battlemaster-candidate now had four heroes (leaders) pledged to him, and the candidate whose people won the most duels against the Firvuiag heroes would stand forth in the culminating Encounter of Battlemasters against Pallol One-Eye. In the Encounters, Aiken's partisans won two and lost two. Nodonn's won one, lost two, and tied one. This meant that Aiken would meet Pallol. If he lost, the Firvulag would win the entire Grand Combat. Aiken maintained that he could beat the Firvulag ogre if the Tanu High Table allowed him to do it in a human way, using the same trick he had used to overcome Delbaeth- Reluctantly, Nodonn and his people had to agree- Aiken went out and downed the Firvulag Baitlemaster just as he had promised, and the Tanu were declared winners of the Grand Combat. Heartbroken by their narrow loss, most of the Firvulag de- cided to leave the battlefield before the award ceremonies. Not even the prospect of seeing Aiken and Nodonn battle it out with Spear and Sword seemed worth waiting for. Only the Firvulag royalty and their attendants remained for the finale. The Tanu victory was ceremoniously proclaimed and Aiken awarded the trophy Sword of Sham (a photon weapon like the Spear). Instead of offering it in fealty to King Thagdal. thus THE NONBORN KING xli acknowledging the Tanu's overlordship, Aiken drove the Sword into the ground. Thagdal signed to Nodonn to take it up as King's Champion. Meanwhile, Aiken's allies girded him in the harness of the Spear. The two squared off and began their duel just as the catac'ysmic flood from the encroaching Atlantic swept over the White Silver Plain. The mind-cries of the thousands of drowning people roused Elizabeth from her self-imposed coma. She and her three human companions looked out from the mountain refuge upon dev- astated Muriah and a submerged White Silver Plain- Redactor House contained a number of survivors and Chief Burke pre- pared for their evacuation. Not all of those combatants and spectators caught on the White Silver Plain perished—although a majority of the Tanu, who were especially vulnerable to immersion, did lose their lives- Some few Tanu were cast ashore by the flood wave or managed to use their metapsychic powers to save themselves. Humans and hybrids in fair numbers swam to safety. Aiken Drum climbed aboard the ceremonial Krai cauldron and later rescued Mercy. The Great Retort, with its load of condemned, floated on the surge and, ironically, brought salvation to Alu- teyn Craftsmaster, Raimo Hakkinen, and numbers of others, mostly human. At the end of Volume 2, it was evident that an entirely new balance of power would now prevail in the Many-Colored Land. The Firvulag were strong under their new co-monarchs. King Sham-Mes and Queen Ayfa. The Tanu cities, stripped of their most powerful metapsychic talents, were now vulnerable to attacks by Lowlife humans or the Little People. Most of the Tanu leadership, including Brede Shipspouse, had perished. Those Tanu remaining alive would have to decide whether or not to pledge allegiance to a human usurper who promised that he could save them from annihilation. Now begin Volume 3, which, after a brief review of times gone by, picks up the chronicle in the period following the Great Flood. THE DEAD AND THE WOUNDED AND THE BRAIN-BURNED HAD all been evacuated, and the highland forest lay innocent in Pliocene moonlight- Spicebush and orchids mingled their fra- grance in the undergrowth. Flying squirrels came out of their hiding places and began to soar among the rowans and birches. Up against the slope of the Mont-Dore volcano, where the trees thinned, the deadly hemisphere was motionless, faintly glimmering- It had a diameter of about fifteen meters. Its mirror surface gave it the aspect of a colossal witch ball partially buried in the mounta'inside, punctured by a tall, slender snag. A single heroic squirrel came sailing out of the woods, zoomed, stalled out, and made an expert landing on the snag not far above the mirrored curve. "Nervy little bugger," muttered Leyr Lord Coercer. "No. just curious," the human Sebi-Gomnol said mildly - The little animal darted down the barkless trunk, extended a paw, and touched the hemisphere. Nothing happened. Head down, the squirrel sniffed, then appeared to come to a conclu- sion. It dropped onto the mirror, immediately lost its purchase, and went sliding to the ground, landing in an aggrieved heap. Bitter laughter broke from the observers as the creature scuttled off. "Now he knows as much as we do," Bormol of Roniah observed. "If only we had learned our lesson as cheaply'" There were six shining personages standing at a respectable distance from the hemisphere. One was a human being with an extraordinarily large nose and the others were members of the handsome Tanu race, more than two heads taller than the man. All of them wore fantastic glass armor studded with faceted spikes and gemstones, the open helmets crested with 1 2 THE NONBORN KING horn? or heraldic beasts. The figures glowed with a soft internal radiance. The human was smoking a cigar. "Sixteen warriors of the Roniah battle-company slain," said Condateyr. Bormol's chief deputy. "To say nothing of the twenty or thirty grays and silvers killed back at Castle Gateway before we could even bring up the Hunt. Operant humans' Great Tana, they've never let operants come through the time- gate before! That's why we called on you at once, Battlmasler." Nodonn inclined his head in acknowledgment. The rosy- gold light suffusing his magnificent form dimmed the blue- and green-glowing armor of the others. His mind, as usual, wore an enigmatic smiling overlay, and his spoken words were very soft. "The time-gate. The damned time-gate." Bormol said, "The mental thrusts that overwhelmed the castle guardians were easily screened off by stalwarts of my Hunt, Battlemaster. But the Lowlife invaders had some kind of high-technology weapon as well, one that projected a co- herent energy beam. When we finally cornered them, they used the thing on us. Our metapsychic shields were impotent against it until Condaieyr and I thought to coordinate a massed mind- defense according to the ancient discipline. Barely in time, at that." Sebi-Gomnol grinned at the Lord of Roniah around his cigar. "And you made a strategic withdrawal behind the barrier. Very prudent. Coercive Brother." "I have learned to be prudent where you humans are con- cerned ... Coercive Brother." Gomnol ignored the insulting little pause and addressed himself to Nodonn. "Battlemaster, the weapon used by these human metapsychic operants is undoubtedly some type of port- able photon cannon. Its operation is similar to that of your sacred Sword of Sham, the trophy of the Grand Combat." Nodonn indicated the mirrored hemisphere. "And that thing they're hiding behind?" "What the science of my future world would call a sigma forcefield. I presume that it took a while for the invaders to get the generator working." Bormo! said, "None of our weaponry or psychocreative energies can penetrate that bloody silver bubble. You can far- sense dimly through it if you really work at it, but these aliens use a thought-mode that's all but incomprehensible. Most of PROLOGUE 3 them have been asleep for several hours now ... much good il does us." Aluteyn, President of the Guild of Creators, asked Gomnol: "Just how strong is this sigma-field, son?" "It would be completely impervious to any attack we could mount against it, Craftsmaster." The human's smile had a touch of chauvinism. Leyr Lord Coercer glared down at his human Second. "I thought the rules of your human time-gate establishment for- bade taking such equipment out of your world?" "That's true. Coercive Lord. No modern weaponry is al- lowed to be exported to the Pliocene. Strictly forbidden by the Concilium of the Galactic Milieu." Gomnol shrugged his sap- phire epaulieres. "Of course, the Concilium also proscribed the translation of operant metapsychics." Stout old Aluteyn exploded in a picturesque blasphemy- "But somehow, more than a hundred of the bastards have sneaked through! And beat the baltocks off our brother Bormol, here! Now what? I say, now whaiT' He brandished a radiant emerald fist at the rounded forcefield, which reflected a miniature moon and an anamorphically distorted forest skyline. "I summoned you here hoping for useful advice. Creative Brother," Bormol responded with dignity, "not rhetorical ques- tions. The alien invaders sleep now, but they'll wake up- And when they do... I presume they have a way of shooting their weapon from inside that sigma-field." "It depends on the type of generator," Gomnol said. "But we can assume they do," The six of them united in a crude metapsychic concert to scan the hemisphere with their farsense; but the interior was an inchoate blur. Straining with the mind's ear yielded only the cycling mind-waves of the sleepers and a single steely thread of awareness—a watcher—whose mental emanations were al- most completely outside the normal Tanu limit of perception- Finally, Gomnol said to the Lord of Roniah, "Recapitulate the day's melancholy events once again. Coercive Brother. Leave out no details." Bormol's mind, with Condateyr assisting, showed the four others a full-sensory reprise of the disaster. The arrival of the crowd of alien operants was first discovered by a gray-lore soldier on the battlements of Castle Gateway. (Luckily, he 4 THE NONBORN KING survived the enusing massacre.) The invaders passed through the time-portal at the unprecedented time of eleven-hundred hours, rather than at dawn, as had been the unvarying custom for the more than forty years of temporal translation- There was no one outside the castle waiting to intercept them during the brief period of disorientalion following exit from the time- warp; and when gray soldiers from the castle finally did emerge to investigate, they were felled by a powerful metacoercive blast. This alerted the silver-tore castellan, who in turn notified the two Tanu overlords in residence at the time. The operant newcomers had then turned their mental weap- ons, as well as some type of low-power photonic sideanns, against the castle staff. A farspoken alarm went out to Roniah, which lay a little over 30 kilometers away. But by the time Bormol and Condateyr arrived with a Grand Hunt two hours later, the invaders were gone, the Tanu overlords and about half the Castle Gateway personnel were dead, and the ordinary time-travelers in their prison compound were catatonic from some kind of redactive brain-drain that the operants had in- flicted- Bormol's pursuing force was hampered by metapsychic bar- riers and mirages thrown up by the operants; but eventually these weakened, and the trail of the invaders' small all-terrain vehicles could be readily followed. The aliens headed west, across the steppe of the Plateau du Lyonnais and down into the forest that lay between the tableland and the enormous Mont- Dore stratovolcano. The chaliko mounts of the Hunt were more efficient than the alien ATVs in cross-country travel, once the chase took to the lowland. Nearly a dozen of the fat-wheeled contrivances were abandoned by their drivers in a hellishly dense bamboo swamp; and two more were found later on a game trail, stomped into bloody junk amid the spoor of hoe- tusker elephants. It was shortly after sunset that the fleeing operants made the mistake of following a westward-trending valley that nar- rowed to a box canyon as it ascended a steep slope. Fatigued, frightened, and trapped, the operants had let their metapsychic screen waver for a brief moment, allowing Bormol's keenest farsensors to discern the nature of the enemy—one hundred and one human beings, all operant, some in very poor physical condition and all suffering from profound mental trauma. They PROLOGUE 5 were equipped with eighty-nine miniature trailered vehicles that were jammed to the rolibars with twenty-second-century ma- teriel. A cautious offensive probe by Bormol and his top coercers brought forth only feeble metapsychic retaliation. The skirmish at the castle and the long pursuit had seemingly worn the in- vaders out. And now they were cornered. Disdaining to fight mentally, the Roniah Hunt had charged, mind-yelling its exuberant battle-cry.. - only to be met by the photon cannon. After the shambles of retreat, rescue of the wounded, and regrouping, it was learned that the operants had zapped one canyon wall, built a ramp with the debris, and escaped the cul- de-sac. At nightfall, scouts reported to Bormol the new phe- nomenon of the giant mirrored hemisphere; and at that point, the Lord of Roniah decided to pack it in and call for help from the Battlemaster and his senior advisors... Nodonn said, "There is one point 1 find curiously disturbing. The human prisoners at Castle Gateway. The ordinary time- travelers detained in the holding area. You say they were drainedT Bormol was emphatic. "Minds wiped cleaner than the White Silver Plain, Battlemaster. Tabutae rasae. Damnedest thing I ever saw. It's a good thing it was early in the week and we only had two days' worth of prisoners. Those sixteen Lowlives are nothing but vegetables now. Whoever did that job had to be the devil's own redactor." "And he found out everything that the prisoners knew about us" growled Leyr. "And wiped them clean," Gomnol added, "which implies that the recently arrived time-travelers might have been able to tell us something useful about these emigre operants. Inter- esting." "We know that some of the aliens—if not all of them— are-what the humans term 'masterclass'," said Condateyr. "Oth- erwise they would not have been able to kill the Tanu overlords. Lord Moranet and Lady Senevar were highly skilled in both coercion and redaction." Nodonn Battlemaster opened his mind and shared his stately train of thought with the others: Certain of these aliens have awesome metapsychic powers 6 THE NONBORN KING greater than our own. However, they did not use them to the fullest potential against Bormol's Hunt, but relied instead upon a physical weapon. Additionally, they chose to flee our forces, rather than taking a stand. Some of the aliens show evidence of being weakened. Hurt. These human metapsychics, the elite of their race, have been driven to the extreme of Exile, a course officially forbidden to them. Ergo, they can only be outlaws from the Galactic Milieu. But that is a contradiction in terms! All metapsychics of the future world partake of a mental fel- lowship called Unity. There can be no outcasts. No rebels. "None that we know about, Battlemaster," said Gomnol aloud. "But Tanu knowledge of the Elder Earth comes perforce from human time-travelers. And what did normal humans— even latents like myself—really know what the metapsychic faction and the inner workings of the Galactic Concilium?" His smile had a wry twist as he touched the golden tore behind the blue-glass gorget of his armor. "We had to come here, to the Pliocene, to find the true kinship of shared thought, the exercise of godlike powers. Thanks to you Tanu." • The sun-flood that was Nodonn's mind illumined dark cysts of malice deep within the human coercer's heart; but Apollo's face was serene, as always. "Your gratitude to us is noted. Adopted Brother. Now dem- onstrate it tangibly! You arc capable, as we are not, of asking these alien invaders who they are and what they want. You will use the human mode of farspeech that we Tanu cannot perceive." Gomnol's guilty spurt of fear brought insouciant reassurance from the Battlemaster. "Oh, yes, Eusebio Gomez-Nolan. We know about it. A harmless bit of schoolboy secrecy to bolster the pride of you human gold-tores. But now it can be useful. Mindspeak to these invading Lowlives, Second Coercer. And be sure that you tell me truthfully what response they make." Gomnol's glowing blue form seemed to toner, his face went ashen within the fantastic helmet, and the cigar fell from his mouth. The metapsychic grip of the Battlemaster, compounded of ali five mental faculties focused in precise neural assault, closed upon him for the briefest instant. It was the most frightful pain that Gomnol had ever experienced. It was replaced at once by lingering pleasure. Nodonn waited patiently until the human recovered his cqui- PROLOGUE 7 librium. Then he repeated, "Mindspeak, Second Coercer-" Gomnol slowly exhaled. His own mental screens were up now to mask his discomfiture, his hatred. "You - -. and the Craftsmaster must stand by. In case the invaders react aggres- sively. That photon cannon could—" Old Aluteyn said, "Nodonn and I can act in concert and put up a tough little shield. As long as we know what to expect. we can shelter the lot of us. Get on with your job, son." Gomnol's confidence rapidly restored itself. He nodded gravely, struck a pose, and reached out with all of his coercive power. His thought-pattern was now indecipherable to the Tanu; but they were hilly aware of its superlative technique—the gentle insinuating flow through the force-field, the abrupt con- centration into a tidal thrust, and the irresistible impact of the Second Coercer's mind upon that weary-alert pattern of cold consciousness lurking inside the mirrored sphere. Gomnol spoke and the hidden watcher was constrained to answer. Leyr's bitter commentary on the performance of his sub- ordinate crackled on the Tanu intimate mode; Just look at that pushy little runt's operation. Brothers! Only len years since we gave him gold, and already his powers of coercion nearly rival my own! How long will he be content to be Second, eh? The others kept their minds shuttered. It was an uncom- fortable question. After a time, Gomnol withdrew his mind from the hemi- sphere and spoke to the others with great effort. "He says.. his people only want to be let alone. They'll leave Europe, because of the Tanu hegemony. They'll go to North America. Never return." "Tana be thanked!" Bonnol growled. "And speed the day." But Gomnol made urgent protest. "You don't understand. This whole group.. -all of them arc masterclass operants! There's been some kind of failed metapsychic coup d'etat in my world, six million years in the future. This group is what's left of the losers- But they nearly won! This small group of human rebels almost overcome the metapsychic magnates of all six races of the Galactic Milieu! -.. They're in terrible shape now, but they'll recover- And when they do, if we could ally them to us—" "The aliens must be destroyed." Nodonn's thought and voice were storm-loud. 8 THE NONBORN KfNG "But think of the advantage of an aliiance' The Firvu- lag—" "Any advantages would accrue to humanity. Second Coer- cer' These operant humans do not wear the golden tore They can never be part of our fellowship " "Of course you're right, Battlemaster'" Leyr exclaimed He threw Gomnoi a monitory thought "You get a gnp on yourself, Number Two " Aluteyn Craftsmaster's mind-tone was withering "Dammit, son—why should these operant humans join with us when they're probably capable of taking over the whole Many-Cot ored Land, given a little rest and recuperation7" "And another photon cannon or two put into operation," muttered Bormol "If we all act in metapsychic concert, our wil! can prevail," Gomnoi insisted "There are thousands of us gold-lores and only a handful of operant invaders Some of them are dying The others are devastated by failure and world-toss They'd jump at an offer of friendship, I tell you'" The Battlemaster said repressively, "I have farspoken the King He concurs with my decision " In a last effort, Gomnoi sent a plea arrowing to Nodonn on the intimate mode Think Battlemaster think' Unique opportunity' Leadenn- vaders is magnateConcilium MarcRemiIIard Whole fanuly- Renullard operated highestlevel HumanPoiityMiIieu' Marc/ recovered + others potential KEY HostNontusvel ambitions vs Firvulag No I saw Marc traumatizedvulnerable Others muchweaker Acting metaconcertcoercion Host + Me easily No Marc is JonRemillardbrother' And Jon =• Jack the Bodi less" Marc nearly match for brother I remember Milieupol- icking No Moonlight glistened on the sweat droplets trickling down Gomnol's face From the dark forest came a faint whickering sound and the thud of clawed feet The armored chaliko mounts of the party came trotting forward at Leyr's telepathic com- mand Nodonn vaulted into his saddle, kindling his own faene PROLOGUE 9 aura of rose and gold about the beast's jeweled caparisons "I have also farspoken my Host-brothers," Nodonn said, looking down on Gomnoi "Hual Greatheart and Mitheyn, Lord of Sasaran, will coordinate a Grand Quest Hual will bring the Sword of Sham down from Gonah, and I will wield it against this Lowlife crew Milheyn will come north from Sasaran with a land force strong in psychokinesis, creativity, and coercion We will allow the invaders to move westward into the Valley of Donaar Somewhere in the Grotto Wilderness, at a place of our choosing, we will annihilate them " "As Tana wills," said Gomnoi in resignation After wiping his face with a white handkerchief, he reached for a fresh cigar, mounted his own chaliko, and rode away with the others Three days later, near a nver that would one day be called the Dordogne, a massed body of Tanu chivalry swept down upon the crawling tram of twenty-second-century vehicles, but since the operant humans, even in their weakened state, far surpassed the exotics in the faculty of farsensing, the Tanu attempt at ambush was unsuccessful Sophisticated equipment, initially unfamiliar to the fleeing metapsychic rebels and clum- sily stowed to boot, was now arrayed competently Solar pow- erpacks were fully charged, small arms and personal force- screens were at the ready, and the photon cannon was emplaced for tactical advantage Four hundred and nineteen Tanu knights, including the Lord of Sasaran and Hual Greatheart, were slain in the ensuing conflict Twice that number of exotics, virtually the entire roster of survivors, fell wounded Nodonn Battlemaster saw his Flying Hum decimated and his favonte chaliko blasted out from under him in midair He narrowly missed dropping the precious Sword of Sharn into the Donaar River, and lost not only his Apolloman dignity but his temper as well Leyr Lord Coercer forfeited an arm, half a leg, and the left lobe of his liver He had to spend eight months recuperating in Skin, during which time his subaltern, the human Sebi Gomnoi, consolidated his own position and resolved to chal lenge his fading supenor in the next year's Manifestation of Powers The invading operants made their way to the Atlantic Coast 10 THE NONBORN KING There they linked their modular ATVs to form boats, whistled up a fair psychokinetic wind, and vanished into the sunset After a two-month hiatus, the lime-gate resumed normal operations Heeding the Battlemaster's counsel, Thagdal, High King of ihe Many-Colored Land, decreed that the entire alien invasion debacle had never happened And for the next twenty-seven years, the Tanu kingdom in exile prospered until the Gibraltar Gale was opened and the Empty Sea filled -L13£ POST DILWIVIM 1 THE GREAT RAVEN OVERFLEW THE DESOLATION OF MURIAH. She had to travel far from her mountain these days in her searches, since the near coasts of Spain and shrinking Aven were nearly picked clean of booty, the bodies buried ever more deeply in silt beneath the rising Mediterranean. She had scav- enged the easily accessible golden tores months ago, and found the great treasure. The pickings were now all the more precious for their rarity- Muriah, below her, had its ruin softened by a spreading verdurous shroud. After nearly four months of the rainy season, the former Tanu capital of the Many-Colored Land seemed to have surrendered to rampant Pliocene vegetation. Tendrils and runners and shoots from ornamental shrubs—unrestrained now that most of the little rama gardeners had perished—smothered the courtyards, the grand stairways, and the filigreed walls of white marble. Fresh growth even probed open doors and win- dows and clambered onto the roofs, thrusting the red and blue tiles awry. Trees sent out erratic withes from their splintered trunks. Spores and seeds, washed or blown into the crevices of pavement and masonry, sprouted in ghoulish abandon. The sweeping esplanades, the sporting arena, the Square of Commerce, the mansions, and all the proud structures built by the Tanu and their clever human slaves were being inexorably pushed and pried apart. Fungi, mosses, and vulgar flowering 13 14 THE NONBORN KINO weeds loosened the once gleaming courses of alabaster and the dulled mosaics- The colonnade of King Thagdal's palace had its heavy pillars unseated by the irresistible growth of little brown mushrooms. Unlit silver torcheres along the deserted boulevards were tarnished black by sea mist. The facades of the five metapsycnic guild-halls had their heraldic colors de- faced by dark splotches of mildew. Even the lofty glass spires, their faerie lights dark forever, were encrusted with dried salt and scabby lichen. Circling, the raven concentrated her search along the north- ern perimeter of the ruined city. The entire docks area was now submerged. Sullen waves lapped halfway up the escarpment below the Coercer Guild Headquarters. Skylights in one section of the huge structure had been smashed and the tore factory inside held no treasure now. The raven had seen to it. Her farsensing eye bored deep, seeing through water and rock into me submarine caves that once had been high and dry above saline Hals rimming the Catalan Gulf. Months ago when Muriah city was alive, she had hidden in one of those caves with her doomed friends. There the trickster had come, robbing her! (But she had seen to thai matter as well.) And sooner or later she would see to the other unfinished business, for she was a creature methodical in her unsanity, this bird that glided in a gray March sky over a gray new sea, endlessly searching. She scanned cavern after cavern where flotsam lay piled, cast up by the Flood's first cataclysmic surge and later en- tombed as the waters rose. Some of the caves still had air in their upper chambers. It was in one of these that she at last perceived the telltale density-signature of precious metal. Gold. Her harsh joy-cry echoed from the Aven cliffs. She plum- meted, coming out of the dive just above the leaden water, and poised motionless with great ebony wings outspread. Then a small woman with a cloud of fair hair appeared in place of the raven; a woman dressed in a cuirass, greaves, and gauntlets of gleaming black. Felice laughed out loud and was abruptly na- ked, pale as salt-rime except for her wide dark eyes. THE POSTDILUVIUM 15 She pierced the water as cleanly as an arrow of flesh. A single torpedotike movement took her through the sea-tunnel and into the cave. Shining like a wan bluish corposant, she walked over the water to a narrow ledge where the body lay. She laughed again at the sight of the dead enemy—until she realized that the dingy glass armor was not amethyst, as her deceiving blue light made it seem, but ruby-red. Redactor Guild red. "No!" she shrieked, dropping to her knees beside the corpse of the Tanu knight. His jaw hung slack and his wrinkled eyelids were closed. He wore no helmet. Lank fair hair still clung to his half-exposed skull. His golden tore was befouled in adi- pocere from the decomposing head and neck. "Oh, no," she wept. "Not yet." She scratched away the moldy matter hiding the breast- plate's heraldic motif, gasping and whimpering until the design was fully visible. It was a stylized tree laden with jeweled fruits, not the transfixed caput mortuum of Culluket the Inter- rogator. Peal after peal of laughter rang in the dank cave. What a fool she was. Of course it wasn't him. Felice jumped to her feet, grasped the hinged gorget plates of the ruby armor, and ripped them from place. They fell to the rock floor with a loud chiming sound. And then the severed head fell, for she pulled away the tore so violently that the vertebrae were disarticulated. She held the tore high. It blazed incandescent and was clean. She plunged back into the water and in a moment the raven was rocketing skyward, gripping a golden circlet in powerful talons. Her mind's voice shouted triumph and profound relief- She called out to her Beloved as she had done so often, using the declamatory mode of mental speech that could span con- tinents and oceans and reverberate around the world like the sonorities of dying thunder. Culluket! She called. High in the featureless gray above drowned Aven she called. The devils answered. 16 THE NONBORN KING Felice's exaltation changed to terror. She shrank within an opaque thought-screen and sent the bird body hurtling in the direction of the Spanish mainland, protected from friction-bum by a subconical psychocreative shield. Only when she reached the vicinity of Mount Mulhacen did she slacken the furious dash and venture a cautious peep to see whether or not the devils had tracked her- They had not. Once again, she had eluded them. She dropped all the screens and voiced a raucous, defiant croak. Then she flew home, the newest bit of treasure secure in her claws. 2 MORE THAN EIGHT THOUSAND KILOMETERS WEST OF EUROPE, the great bulldog tarpon of the Pliocene Epoch had once again begun their spring migration to the spawning grounds around Ocala Island and the Still-Vexed Bennoothes. It was time for the saint's elder brother to suspend his weary star-search in favor of his sole form of relaxation—hunting the silvery mon- sters. The man in the skiff watched the fish come with his farsense He was motionless and made no sound, hidden behind a mass of mangroves and flowering epiphytes in the Suwanee estuary on the west side of the island. He deliberately limited his mind's stupendous vision to the river channel within a few hundred meters of his hiding place, for he had his rules in the stalking of the big tarpon and he would not violate them. Not con- sciously- In the manner of their kind, the fish surfaced and rolled in the sparkling blue water, taking gulps of air. Scales larger than a handspan reflected the tropical sun like mirrors. With their undershot jaws, glaring black eyes. and bristling gills of lurid scarlet, the tarpon resembled cruising dragons rather than or- dinary fish. Numbers of them exceeded three meters in length and they were capable of attaining an even greater size as the fisherman knew only too well. When hooked, a bulldog tarpon would fight with maniacal ferocity, sometimes for twenty hours. 17 18 THE NONBORN KING He watched them parade by while the sun soared higher, bringing a sheen of sweat to his deeply tanned skin He wore only a pair of stagged dungarees, bleached by age and sail water His self-rejuvenating body was as powerful and firmly muscled as ever; but his face showed, as on a chart of flesh and bone, the pain-etched odyssey of the failed idealist. Only when one particularly large specimen of tarpon glided past, its jaw-plates scarred from an enconnter several seasons past. did the fisherman's mouth curve in a reminiscent, one-sided smile of peculiar sweetness. Not you, he told the huge fish. You've had your turn on the hook. Another A greater. Engrossed as he was in the study of the tarpon, he was instantly aware of the featherlight scrutiny" the farsense of the children, spying on him again, even though all of the inhabitants of Ocala knew that it was strictly forbidden to disturb him when the tarpon were running. None of the surviving senior rebeis would dream of it, remembering only too well the capabilities of the one who had led them in their challenge of the galaxy. But the second generation, now grown to restless young adult- hood, was less inclined to reverence. Even his own children, Hagen and Cloud (never having been told of his aborted plans for them had the Rebellion succeeded), believed that his mental powers were diminished by time—and by his thus-far futile scrutiny of some 36,000 Pliocene solar systems in an attempt to locate other coadunate minds- The disdain of the youngsters had been shaken only once: last fall, when Felice Landry in her extremity besought help from what she believed were dark forces- So powerful had been the girl's projection of need that the operant metapsychics of Ocala, there on the other side of the world, had clearly farsensed what she was trying to accomplish at Gibraltar He had smiled at her temerarious rage in that whimsical manner of his. and said: "Why shouldn't the Angel of the Abyss take care of his own?" And forthwith he had combined and focused the psy- choenergies of the forty-three surviving conspirators of the Metapsychic Rebellion, plus the uncoadunate but immense THE POSTDILUVIUM 19 creativity of their thirty-two mature children, and vouchsafed the totality to the madwoman. And the Empty Sea filled. This had been a mere hint, a shadow of his potential. But it was enough to make the more imaginative of the youngsters reassess their derogation of the lonely star-searcher. Sitting there in the skiff, he felt them sweep him again, ever so discreetly He knew what they were up to They were bored with their exile on Ocala, bored with the murderous intrigues and harsh restrictions of their elders, and above all bored by their own lack of coadunale menial Unity (for none of the fleeing rebels had possessed the specialized training required of metapsychic preceptors). Now that Europe, the mysterious and alluring Many-Colored Land, was known to be in a slate of chaos, the more ambitious members of the second generation were hatching callow schemes of conquest. Not for them the patient search of planet after planet for kindred minds, the dream of a rescue from exile The children had hopes of achiev- ing power and Unity right here on Pliocene Earth. And the bolder ones entertained an even greater ambition. An unthink- able one. Out in the channel, the enormous fish cavorted in the sun. He lifted his rod from its case, opened the tackle box, inspected the reel mechanism with his deep-vision, mounted it, and began to thread the line. The fly rod was laminated bamboo. Grafted by himself more than twenty years ago. He had made the reel as well. But that fishing line was the product of a world six million years removed from the Pliocene Su- wanee estuary. Tapered, balanced, and irreplaceable, subtly armored in the trace against the tarpon's steely jaws. it merged to a vulnerable 6.75-kilo test tippet that gave the fish an almost overwhelming sporting advantage over the angler. To catch even the least of those splendid brutes on a flyrod with such a gossamer thread (and without using any metapsychic force— that went without saying!) was a supreme achievement. But this season, he intended to aim beyond supremacy toward the ultimate. He was going to take one of the Old Ones, the glit- tering leviathans of the tarpon clan thai approached four meters in length and nearly three hundred kilos in weight. He was 20 THE NONBORN KING going to bring in one of those fish on the frail tine, with his homemade fly rod- 1 can do it, he told himself, smiling the attractive one-sided smile One old monster against another. The farsense of the children slid over him again. Closing his mind to every other input. Marc Remillard set- tled down m the skiff in the sunshine, waiting for his prey. 3 IN GORIAH, AFTER MIDNIGHT WHEN THE MOON WAS DOWN, the cloud cover broke along the Bntlany shore and the meteors of March appeared in all their splendor. In a fit of playfulness, Aiken Drum ordered the lights in the city to be extinguished and had Mercy roused from sleep and brought to where he waited on a narrow parapet surmounting the highest spire of the Castle of Glass. She stepped out into the amazing night and cned, "Ah!" Spraying among the western constellations were countless arching white sparks, and larger meteors with lucent silver tails, and occasional orange fireballs slashing the sky with bold strokes of afterglow. All of them rushed outward from a tight central focus like spokes in a starry wheel, or petals unfurling endlessly from some astral chrysanthemum. The meteors flew over the heads of Aiken and Mercy and dived behind the mass of Breton Island across the strait. Some of them quenched themselves in the black sea. The night was filled with a faint rustling sound, like ethereal whispering. "For you!" Aiken exclaimed magniloquently, compassing the spectacle with a possessive sweep of his hand. "One of my more modest productions, but still worthy of a Tanu queen!" Laughing, she came to him. "Not yet a queen, my shining braggart, in spite of all your saucy promises. But the star- 21 THE NONBORN KING 22 shower is lovely—not that I believe for a moment that you caused it " "Doubting me again, woman^" The small man in the gleam- ing suit all covered with pockets lifted both arms A dozen of the meteors seemed to plummet straight down at him, emitting a scorching hiss, and shrink to form a coronet of white lights that scintillated insanely He held it out to her with a triumphant gnn "I crown you Queen of the Many-Colored Land'" "Illusions'" she cned "Thai for your shifty love-gift. Lord Lugonn Alken Drum'" She snapped her fingers at me starry diadem and it died to embers, sifting through Alken's hands like dwindling coais through a grate But as his face fell she suddenly smiled at him there in the blazing darkness, making his heart heel half-seas over "But I do love the real meteors, and you're a dear trickster to have called me out to see them " She kissed him full and long, with her wild eyes wide open, and while he was disarmed and his mind-shields awry, she caught him unprepared with a redactive probe "You do love me'" she exclaimed "The hell I do!" He mustered his defenses, reasserting self- control, trying to escape her mental scrutiny without hurting her The great metapsychic faculties that had continued to grow throughout the winter months—those powers that had evoked admiring subservience or sullen awe from the surviving Tanu Great Ones—failed before Mercy-Rosmar "I don't love you'" his mind and voice protested "It isn't necessary " Her memment bubbled up "Necessary7 But you'd take my pleasure-gifts, wouldn't you—love or not, you archdeceiver' And you want them now Admit it' Well, then The fading redactive lancet softened to a sweet searing burst that coursed along his nerves and sent him falling, aflame like the meteors m helpless sexual transport "Enchantress," he groaned, flat on the giass floor of the turret with his feet tangled in the skirts of her flowing peignoir Then, as he recovered. he began to laugh to cover the other emotion Mercy knelt beside him. cradling his head and kissing his THE POSTDILUVIUM 23 eyelids "Don't be afraid," she said "It will all work as you planned ' "I'm not afraid of anything'" he protested "Together, we'll lick 'em all. Lady Wildfire ' "I don't mean that, you schemer ' She looked down at him. relaxed in her lap with his head against her swollen belly "But you do almost make me believe you can bring the glory back " "I can' Trust me I've got everything worked out How to handle the Firvulag, the way to win the loyally of the Tanu diehards, the restoration of the economy—all of it I'll be king and you'll be queen, and our winter dreams will alt come true " His face with its golliwog gnn was bright with jacky-lan- thom radiance He felt Mercy's mind start with an abrupt sense of de]'a vu that was so intense that it made even the sleeping fetus stir "I've seen your face before," she said wondenngly "Back in the Old World I'm sure of it It was in Italy in Firenze " "Not bloody likely The only time I came to Old Earth was on my tnp to the auberge and I went right to France with no detours That was after you'd already gone through the time- gate ' 'I saw you, she insisted "Or was it a picture of you7 Perhaps in the Palazzo Vecchio^ But whose portrait'7" "Not an Italian gene in my bod," he murmured, reaching up to stroke her hair Meteors sketched a surreal hdio behind her head "Dalnada, where I grew up, was a Scottish world And all of us test-tube brats had certified tartan chromosomes " He levitated until their lips met She melted into him again, as he knew she would, triggering the neural conflagration that he could not help craving in spite of his fear When he regained his senses, still lying in her lap, the baby was kicking him in the ear and the damn meteors exploding in pyrotechnic mock ery "Shame on you for disturbing my darling Agraynel," Mercy said Alken felt her maternal thought-song soothe the unborn girl Suddenly, for no apparent reason, his eyes filled with tears Mortified, he whirled his most impregnable mental barrier into 24 THE NONBORN KING place so that Mercy would not know how much he envied the baby. He said. "Only one more month until it's born. And then I'm going to have you, my Lady Wildfire! Find out how you knock me out of orbit—and give you some of your own back with interest!" "Not until May," she chided him. "At the Grand Loving, as we agreed." "Oh, no! That's just the official wedding- You aren't going to hold me off that long! -. And come to think of it—why shouldn't I lake you metapsychically right now, just the way you've been mind-screwing me?" His arms closed around her shoulders, pulling her strongly down. His coercive power began to bore into her softness "Show me how you do your magic sex! Show me—or I'll just find out by experimenting!" "You may not!" she cned, countering him with a psycho- creative riposte that atl but blinded him. "It would make a fearful womb-quake in addition to the neural surge. That's the way we women are made- It would be bad for the baby." He released her. The damned fear came again, and so did the tears. "To hell with the baby." Her face came close to his. Her expression of indignation changed into tenderness. "Ah, poor little one. I see. I see." Her lips descended to drink his tears. He thrashed wildly to escape her physical embrace, sprawl- ing onto the floor. His mouth lightened to a thin slot and his eyes were wide and black. "1 don't want that from you! Ever." "Ah, well." She shrugged. "But you needn't fear it, really. It's quite natural for the two womanly functions to combine in the loving." "You don't love me, and I don't love you. So why pretend? And I don't need your pity, dammit!" He cast about desper- ately, to put her in the wrong. "Why haven't you ever let me pleasure you? Not once! Always ready to blast me into a coma— but never letting me touch you. Am I so disgusting?" "Don't be silly. It's the baby, I tell you." "When Nodonn was with you, the two of you fucked up a bloody hurricane—and no worry about the baby, then. And that poor bastard of an anthropologist had all the sweet hough- THE POSTDILUVIUM 25 magandy he wanted from you The whole damn capital knew what you two were up to'" Her smile was easy. "Agraynel didn't mind then, in the second trimester But now she's all close-crowded and impa- tient to be born " "Don't give me that " He got to his feet, his face no longer alight and his voice metallic "You won't let me get into you because you're still mourning for Nodonn " "How could 1 not?" she admitted coolly She levitated and stood before him The pale chiffon of her gown seemed to npple in the sidereal concussions He shouted in fury "Mayvar told me all about your precious Sun-Face! A fine king he would've made' The Tanu ruler is supposed to pass on his superior genes to the people—but do you know that your wonderful Nodonn was damn near stenie7 The great Battlemaster' He lived eight hundred years and had only a handful of children. And not a first-class power in the lot! Mayvar Kingmaker rejected him He was only declared crown prince because the Host of Nontusvel forced him on the Thagdal- Why do you think Mayvar was so glad to see me come along'7 Why do you think she named me Lugonn, after the real crown pnnce?" Mercy clasped his waving hands They stood face to face in bare feet and she was several centimeters the taller Softly, she said, "It's true that you are the chosen ot the Kingmaker And perhaps you would have won your duel with the Battlemaster on the White Silver Plain . and perhaps not Nodonn is dead Drowned. But you're alive, Lord Alken-Lu- gonn, and master of Gonah m Nodonn's place Who would have thought that would happen, when we met all drenched and puking like puppies, adnft in a golden cauldron in the midst of the Great Flood! Less than five months we've been together—and yet I feel I've known you an age, you Lord of Misrule You'll be king! Don't doubt it I see—i know' There isn't a Tanu or a human gold in the Many-Colored Land with menial prowess to equal your own No other could have picked up the pieces of this shattered world as you did and begun the rebuilding That's why I'll stay with you, work with you And 26 THE NONBORN KING after 1 bear the Thagdal's daughter I'll marry you and be your queen. In May, at the Grand Loving, as we agreed As for your own children, we'll see what the good Goddess sends " The rage rushed out of him, leaving only a wayward thought: But if only you loved me. I'd be safe Her mind smiled back, changeable as the western sea. All during their time together they had played this game; and until now, he had believed himself the winner, immune to the en- chantment that had bound the others to her. She said, "You fear me, and you hope to gain control through love But are you willing to love me in return, giving and sharing? Or would you only rule?" The deep barriers that hid the truth crumbled within him. "You know I already love you." "Enough to demand nothing of me in return? Unselfishly?" "i don't know." Her voice and mind-tone became fey and heedless. "And what if I won't return your love, you Hermes Chrysorapis? What will you do with me then?" He folded her in his arms, burying his face in the fragrant hair cascading over her shoulder, sensing the ironic tnumph behind her question. She knew She knew He broke away and stood alone The sky was graying with false dawn. The meteors diminished- He said, "1 didn't really cause the star-shower. The meteors come every spring at this time. They mark the end of the rainy season. But I wanted to surprise you with them." "What will you do with me if I won't love you?" she re- peated "1 think you know." He gave her his hand and they entered the lightless lower, leaving the last of the meteors exploding in cool darkness. JUST ONE MORE DAY. AND TONY WAYLAND WOULD HAVE MADE his escape. Just one more day, and he could have gone out normally with the caravan to Fort Rusty—then made his get- away with nobody the wiser. But the Howlers had attacked the iron Maiden Mine before the caravan left- And now Tony knew he was going to die ... As that Pliocene rara avis, a metallurgical engineer and fully sane ex-silver (his psychocreative faculty was modest at best; he owed his high status under the Tanu to an improved refining technique introduced at the Finiah banum mine), Tony was under strictest orders from his new bosses in the Lowlife Steer- ing Committee to avoid life-threatening situations He usually undertook troubleshooting tours among the Iron Villages only during daylight, when hostile exotics were seldom abroad. Sir Dougal, the stalwart bodyguard assigned to him by Old Man Kawai, shadowed him everywhere Dougal's pseudomedieval eccentricities were more than counterbalanced by a fanatical devotion to duty and by expertise with the compound bow And, truth to tell. Tony was also gratified to have at least one person left who still addressed him as "Lord." The majority of the Lowlife iron-working community were offensively egali- tanan, if not downright contemptuous of a declasse silver such as himself. He had cooperated with the Tanu—and done it willingly Thus he was a traitor to the human race. 27 THE NONBORN KING 28 Not that anyone dared snub Tony to his face' Far from it. since his talents were invaluable If the free humans of the Vosges wilderness—Lowhves and Finiah refugees, now united —were to avoid Tanu enslavement, the Howler menace, and possible Firvulag treachery, iron production was a strategic nec- essity The "biood-metal" was poisonous to all branches of the extragalactic race that shared Pliocene Europe with em battled humankind, and the use of iron weapons had been a key factor in the destruction of Tanu Finiah by a coalition of Lowlives and Firvulag Tony Wayland had been one of the top prizes in that human triumph Most of the other noncombatant silvers had been flown safely to Tanu territory when Lord Velteyn evacuated his doomed city But Tony had been un- lucky A sneering band of Lowlife invaders had caught him fla- grante delicto in the Finiah Pleasure Dome, too besotted after an interlude with a Tanu charmer to distinguish the skyrockets going off in his head from the noise of the city's Gotterdam- nierung So they frogmarched him off, hauled him before a Lowlife tribunal, and gave him the choice faced by every other torced human following the fall of Fmidh. Live free or die Tony, a total pragmatist, had submitted to the abscission of his silver tore and the ensuing weeks of agonizing psychic adjustment But he hadn't forgotten—or forgiven He would have run away to the Tanu in a tnce, except for the still greater disaster that had destroyed the exotics' capital of Munah and snuffed out most of the ruling nobility The Great Flood had bred such havoc that he was at a loss to sort out the main chance Fort Onion River and the other gray-tore guard stations along the track to Castle Gateway were long abandoned The stronghold itself, useless now that the time-gate had closed, was reputed to have been taken over by the Firvulag The Little People had also seized the small citadel of Burask on the dan- gerous western trail leading to Armonca and Gonah By and large. Tony had little choice but to remain in the Vosges with free humanity He pretended to cooperate whole- heartedly with the Lowlife insurgents, even though life in the THE POSTDILUVIUM 29 newly established Iron Villages along the Moselle was a brutish comedown irom the fine-honed delights of Finiah There were six of the settlements, with a total population of about 400—mostly male Five villages were clustered in the vicinity of the future French city ot Nancy Their names were Iron Maiden, Hematite, Mesabt, Haul-Foumeauvilie, and Vulcan Each had an open-pit mine and a simple smeltery inside a heavy log stockade Iron Maiden, the largest, served as a storage depot for iron produced by the others It was situated adjacent to an area of disease-killed conifer forest, and on Tony's suggestion, had a naval-stores distillery operating on the side Vulcan and Haul-Foumeauvi lie had small primitive blast furnaces and rolling mills Upstream and south of this quintet, approximately midway between them and the Lowlite headquarters at Hidden Springs, 90 kilometers distant, was the largest new settlement. Fort Rusty Here was the principal metalworkmg establishment, where the pigs and bar-stock were turned into weapons The fort also had a lime-burner and d cluster of charcoal ovens These vital raw materials were sent down the Moselle to the mining and smelting towns via raft, as were food and other supplies Caravans of draft chalikos and girarfid helladothena hauled the iron into Fort Rusty Since the setup was so new, very little attempt had been made as yel to export iron weapons to other Lowlife bands But the word had gone out And all through the rainy season hardy expeditions from the Pans Basin and (he High Helvetides, and even from Bordeaux and Albion, had come slinking into the Vosges, demanding their share of blood-metal The new- comers were pressed into the labor force, crushing limestone or stoking the insatiable coke ovens for a few weeks, then paid off in cold iron and sent back to their own haunts ready for action All winter long, ever since late November, Tony Wayland had labored twelve and fourteen hours a day He was a one- man training program, an analytical laboratory, a production supervisor, quality controller, and all-around soot-stained dogs- body Everybody praised him, but no one was his friend except demented Dougai, who popped in and out of his knight-errant 30 THE NONBORN KING persona like a Shakespearean actor who kept forgetting his lines Tony could only bide his time in patience, waiting for the political situation in ihe Many-Colored Land to shake down If the rumors brought in by the last gang of iron seekers could be credited, the times were finally ripening' An upstart human was said to have installed himself as ruler of the late Nodonn Battlemaster's nch domain of Gonah in Brittany There were hints that this usurper was accepted—even welcomed— by the demoralized remnant of the Tanu High Table It was said that he would marry the Battlemaster's widow, that he would elevate forced humanity to a parvenu aristocracy' (And how poor Tony's bare neck had itched at that last intimation, and how searing had been the memory of his lost tore's ecsta- cies ) As the rainy season neared its end, Tony planned to make his move Perhaps when that group of Lowlives from the Upper Laar finished their tnck and departed from Fort Rusty with a load of axes, knives, and iron arrowheads, he could follow them secretly, then join up at a safe distance from the Vosges, when the inevitable posse sent after him got fed up and returned home Loyal, unquestioning Dougai would go along with him if he pulled his liege-lord act, and if they reached the Laar they could sail down it to the Atlantic and be practically on top of Gonah Tony never doubted that he and Dougai would receive a fine welcome from the new human monarch—as well as a pair of shiny golden tores It all might have happened just as he planned, had not this Howler attack left him well and truly fucked A pumpkin-sized boulder came rolling down the gully, through the broken palisade, and smashed against the log wall of the barracks like a cannonball "Dammit, boys, they're still out o' crossbow range'" The mine foreman, a lantern-jawed crypto-hillbilly named Onon Blue, coughed and hawked and spat The chinking between the half-meter-wide oak boles exploded inward with each im- pact The beleaguered men inside the liny fortress choked in a swirling cloud of pulverized clay, moss fibers, and sawdust Sir Dougai ignored the bombardment Muddy sweat dnpped THE POSTDILUVIUM 31 from his ginger beard into the meshes of his titanium chain mail His knightly surtout with its blazon (gules, a lion's head erased or) was spotless as always The twenty-second-century fabric was ionized to repel soil "Hell-hounds' Show thyselves'" quoth he, sending bolt after bolt from his powerful compound bow through the embrasure Another bouider slammed the wall, making the entire fort trem- ble As the vibration died away, a faint screech could be heard m the distance "Aha' Aha'" cned Dougal "Die, misbegotten Howler scum'" Onon Blue squinted through the loophole next to the me- dievalist "They're totm' up a big un', Doogie Can you stop 'em from rollin' it7" "Out of range," said the knight flatly From upslope came a thunderous rumble Bemammo, his voice gone falsetto with panic, fell back from his loophole shrieking "Back' Get back' This next moth er's bigger than a VW egg' And dead on the mark'" The defenders flung themselves to the sides, cursing Tony Waytand alone stood at his slit, paralyzed, unable to tear his gaze from the huge chunk of granite bounding down upon them Far up the hill. safe from the miners' iron-tipped arrows, a horde of goblins leaped and cheered They glowed faintly in the morning mist "'Ware, milord'" Dougai shouted Tony felt himself scooped up in mailed arms and flung several meters to the right Almost simultaneously there was a cataclysmic impact One of the great logs in the western wail buckled inward The logs above it sagged fractionally with a hideous squeal The structure still held finn—for the moment, but if one of those missiles hit the root, which was of a much weaker barky-pole-and-slab con struction, the place would come down around their ears Onon, sprawling in the dirt, didn't even bother to get up He crawled toward the northeastern comer of the barracks, where most of the surviving miners crouched behind a wall of leather sacks filled with iron arrow blanks "We're done tor, boys Only nine of us mother's sons left agin that whole passei 32 THb NONBORN KING o' spooks! They'll bust up this place, then mind-fly us like they done the other poor bastards outside." Tony crept to join the others, useless crossbow slill clamped under one arm. Only Dougal still stood defiantly at the western wall, where smaller rocks continued to thud against the splin- tering oak. He smote the golden lion on his breast- 'Then, childish fear avaunt' Wilt thou stand craven before night's dark agents, thou whoresons? Not I!" He grabbed a fresh handful of arrows "Now, gods, stand up for bastards'" At his next shot, the bowstring snapped and set all the weapon's pulleys spinning impotenlly. Douga! said, "Oh, shit." He came back to the despairing huddle and dropped to one knee in front of Tony, drawing a steel dirk and holding it point- up before his face. "I have failed you. Exalted Lord My life is forfeit But if you command it, I will use this misencord to spare you and these minions agonizing death at the hands of the Howler demons." "Who you callin' a minion?" snarled Orion Several of the other men, mouths gaping, shrank back from the kneeling figure. "Goddam loony'" one muttered "Call him off, Wayland'" said another. But at that moment three huge rocks impacted, and the vee of the broken log jutted inward more acutely. Little Beniamino licked his lips and rolled blood- shot eyes. "Doogie's got a point, guys. The ones that were ambushed outside died quick. But if the friggerty Howlers capture us, they might take their sweet time with the snuffin' party—like when they grabbed poor Alt and Veng Hong last month." Dougal lowered the point of the dagger until it was level with Tony's diaphragm. "Say but the word, milord. We will meet again before the throne of Asian." "Hold it!" the metallurgist exclaimed, cringing against the eastern wall. He held out his crossbow- After a pause, Dougal sheathed his blade and took the weapon with a courteous bow. Tony told him, "We still have the arbalests. Sir Dougal, even though they don't have the range of your compound bow. And the logs may be bending, but they're still in place. Fort Rusty and the other villages should know by now that we're in trouble. THE POSTDILUVIUM 33 We missed the ten-hundred-hour sked. If we can just stand fast until they send reinforcements—" "Keep dreaming, Wayiand," a miner said bitterly. Another man curled up, head between his knees, shaking with soundless sobs Hamid, who ran the turpentine still, consulted his wrist gyrocompass to ascertain the direction of Mecca six million years into the future, then prostrated himself and began his final prayers. Orion Blue went to one of the eastern apertures that over- looked the Moselle and scanned the mist-hung waters through a small monocular "Hellfar an' white lightnin'!" he ejaculated, drawing back from the loophole as though electroshocked "There is suthin' comin'' But sure's shit it ain't no troops from Rusty." Everybody except Hamid and the weeping miner crowded for a look A large raft was drawing up to the landing stage It bore a towering wooden apparatus resembling a derrick on a wheeled platform. The upper part of the contraption had a pivoting arm with a scooplike container at one end and an amorphous bulky object at the other A complex web of rope tackle linked the arm to the carnage- When the barge was made fast, three monstrous Howlers attached cables to the wooden engine, settled themselves into a troika hitch, and began hauling the thing toward the village's open gate "Maledizione!" wailed Beniamino "Una bombarda!" "What the hell is that?" Tony asked. Sir Dougal studied the machine with professional interest "A mangonel. Or could il be a perrier^ A bncole? Funny. . I never heard of Howlers using mechanical devices before." "What does it rio?" Tony yelled in exasperation. "It just might be an onager," Dougal mused. He turned gravely to Orion Blue "May I borrow your spyglass for half a tick?" The mine foreman turned it over without a word Douga! stared intently, muttering beneath his breath. "Not a classical ballista- Counterweigh ted Od's bodikins—I think I've got it' It's a trehuchet'." Beaming, he handed the monocular back to Onon. 34 THE NONBORN KING Tony was nearly screaming. "What—does—it—do?" The knight shrugged. "Well, it's a medieval catapult, you see. They'll finish us by lobbing rocks at the roof." "Hell/or!" Orion groaned Tony watched the approach of the siege engine with fatalistic awe. The middle monster of the hauling team was a hideous prodigy that Dougal identified as a "fachan." It moved m awk- ward hops because it had only a single columnar leg. An arm- less hand more than a meter wide, equipped with black claws, sprang directly from its chicken-breasted trunk. Its head had a cyclopean eye and a froggy mouth from which an obscenely prehensile tongue lolled. The fachan's yokemates were some- what more conventional horrors: a two-meter crested lizard with fiery carbuncle eyes, and a tall warthog, sky-blue, that walked on its hind legs. As the Howler trio toiled into the village compound, they filled the air with valorous hoots. Their compeers on the high ground above the fort responded gleefully, then sent a veritable avalanche of stone cascading down on the log barracks. The sheer volume of the fresh assault now provided an ironic respite to the trapped miners. Enough rocks had piled in front of the western wall to form a salient angle, a wedge-shaped mass that tended to deflect rolling missiles to the nght or left of the target. When it became clear to the exotic foe that the boulder-bowling maneuver had lost its effectiveness, the Howlers on the hill cut off their bombardment to await the arrival of the trebuchet. Dougal raised his arms. The glittering links of mail and scarlet surcoal made him a splendid figure in the dusty gloom- "Mount, mount, my soul, thy seat is up on high' Whilst my gross flesh sinks downward, here to die " He closed his eyes with a sigh of theatrical melancholy - "Damn ree-tard'" Orion grabbed up the crossbow, which the knight had discarded, and a leather bucket of iron-tipped quarrels. "Snap out of it, Doogie! Haul yer ass over yonder to the front wall. Those spooks on the machine are comin' in range of a crossbow shot!" Dougal shed his aura of detachment "What sayest thou, 0 lean unwashed artificer7" THE POSTDILUVIUM 35 "They got their internal slingshot over next t' naval-stores shop' And they're ciunbin' all over it Gettm' ready, I 'spect. But they're exposed, and you kin pot the suckers if you calc'late a good trajectory " Dougal, Tony, and most of the miners rushed to join Onon at the northern wall. The flat area between the barracks and the industrial buildings was strewn with bodies, both human and chaliko. When the Howlers launched their surprise attack, a caravan loaded with pig iron had been on the point of leaving for Fort Rusty. The trebuchet now rested in a position about 90 meters from the barracks, partially screened by one comer of the wood-distillation shed. A large pile of conifer stumps next to the naval-stores shop provided partial cover for the enemy, but the men inside the barracks could see a dark shape moving in the upper part of the siege engine, probably adjusting its tackle. "Enemy on the move!" Bemammo peered through one of the western loopholes. "They're coming down the hill— circling to the north. Gonna help their buddies with ammo for the bombarda, I bet." Shapes far out of crossbow range now drifted between the far section of the village palisade and the iron pit, where the red ore made a shocking contrast to the jungle greenery, like an open wound in the land An eene silence had fallen, broken only by creaking noises as the Howler engineer tinkered with the trebuchet Douga! took aim. Wunng went the crossbow. On the other side of the compound, something let out a gurgling bellow. A sky-blue carcass tumbled from the trebuchel tower, seeming to shrink to a much smaller black form before disappearing from view A chorus of angry howls went up from behind the stump pile. "Hee-ya/i!" Onon smote his thigh joyously, still holding the monocular to his eye- "Look sharp' T'other side o' the pile! Suthin' movin' in that palmetty thicket!" Wunng. An apparition like a tanged furry pushball leaped into the air, vestigial limbs flailing, uttering screeches like a catamount 36 THE NONBORN KING As it dropped out of sight it. too, shape-shifted into a different form "A hit. a very palpable hit'" quoth Dougal "That's two," Onon chuckled Tony clapped the big knight on one mailed shoulder "Well done, my man " "Your servant, milord " Bemammo drew in a sharp breath "Hey—the throwing arm on the machine is moving They must be getting ready to fire " Dougal squinted desperately through the arbalest sight "I can't see a fuckin' thing I mean, the foe eludes mine eye, Goodman Napoli, and I—hoo boy' Here she comes'" The counterweighted lever was drawn fully down The en- tire mechanism vibrated Abruptly, the counterweight fell, the arm whipped up, and a block of granite that must have weighed 50 kilos came whistling over the roof of the barracks It landed on the far side with an echoing crash "Bismallah'" cned the Son of the Prophet, falling to his knees once more "That's cooked us " "Do something, Dougal'" Tony urged his heroic vassal But the ginger-bearded head wagged in helpless chagrin "I cannot descry the demons clearly, milord They skulk behind the still- shed " "Still'" Tony's face lit up "The naval stores' Tar, pitch, turpentine—barrels of the stuff in the wood-distillation shop if you could hit it with a flaming arrow—" A heavy thud betokened the fall of another rock less than five meters short of the barracks "They got us bracketed," groaned Onon "Get outa the line o' fire, ever'body'" They scattered Tony cursed wildly, trying to modify an arrow shaft so that it could be launched by the crossbow Somebody found a parfleche full of flammable pitch and Bem- dimno used his skill as camp cook to quickly kindle d light The first missile to find its mark fell through the roof JUS! as Tony solved the arrow problem The place became a bedlam of noise and swirling debns A falling timber struck one of the THfc POSTDILUVIUM 37 miners across the shoulders, pinning him to the floor As men struggled to rescue the victim, shouting and coughing. Tony finished lashing the pitch-smeared wad to the shaft and touched it off He thrust the firebrand at Douga! "Only one chance Right through the open window of the still-shop Kill, big fella'" Dougal aimed and let fly—and then everything seemed to happen at once Another great rock shattered the roofjust above the loophole where Tony and Dougai were standing Planks and rafters rained down while they tned to shield their heads Tony felt himself falling, there was a tremendous whoomp, a prolonged clatter, a ragged chorus of distant exotic screams As Tony fetched up in a tangle of roof poles like a broken doll caught in a pile of giant's pick-up-sticks, he heard Orion's Johnny-Reb yell and presumed that the fire-arrow had found its target Then oblivion claimed him He woke up, splinted and bandaged The face of Denny Johnson, Lowlife Warlord Pro Tern, beamed down at him like a bitumen-painted mask The Hidden Spnngs medic named Jafar was there, too, and so was the chief honcho. Old Man Kawai himself Tony tned to speak His mouth would not open "Wha' hop'n^" he inquired mushtly The doctor lifted Tony's head, proffered a glass of water with a straw, and helped him to dnnk "Your broken jaw's wired shut Take it easy " "Aths muths be'er " The metallurgist managed a crooked smile "So cav'ry 'nve juths in thime, eh'7" Denny nodded "Our barge from Fort Rusty landed a gang of fighters while the spooks were trying to douse the burning catapult and rescue their wounded We finished them all off " Old Man Kawai said, "You and the other defenders put up a magnificent resistance, Wayland-san Free humanity owes you a priceless debt " "Thumfnggin' vic'ry, "Tony muttered weanly "Thpookths nailed thir'y, for'y of uths " Kawai hastened to explain His sallow, incredibly wnnkled 38 THE NONBORN KING face trembled with animation "The human losses are lamen- table. Wayland-san. but even so, these comrades have not died in vain We gained invaluable intelligence from this encoun- ter " Tony interrupted with an invalid's petulance "Doogy' Where'ths Doogy9" The doctor messed around with some kind of monitor device stuck onto Tony's forehead "He's becoming overexcited " Tony tned to nse up His eyes were wide "Don' mean ol' Doogy 'ths decuf" Kawal said, "Sir Dougal is alive and recovering So are five other of your companions " Tony gave a sigh and relaxed "Rm' " He began to drift off—but then his eyes snapped open and he regarded the aged Japanese with piercing intensity "Intelhgenths9 Wha' intelti- genths9" Denny Johnson bent over the bed "All these months, we've blamed the spook attacks on Howlers—the deformed mutants who never accepted the alliance between humanity and the Firvulag We knew the hostiles had to be Howlers, because the Little People have been our bosom buddies ever since the Fall of Fmiah That's what we thought " "You mean those thpookths—" Kawai's black button eyes glittered angnly "The dead bod- ies of your attackers shape-shifted back to their normal form What Denny and his troops discovered during the mopping up was not the remains of mutants, but of normal Firvulag Our putative allies " He shook his head "Madame Gudenan never trusted the Little People Her doubts have been confirmed The Firvulag have mounted these treacherous strikes hoping to force us to abandon the Iron Villages They fear the blood metal, in spite of our avowals that we would never use iron weapons against our friends " Tony blinked "Mebbe juths Firv'lag hotheadths " Denny said, "The corpses wore obsidian armor They were regulars in me army of King Sham and Queen Ayfa And their use of the siege engine shows that they aren't wasting any time THE POSTDILUVIUM 39 in adopting new methods of warfare now that the balance of power has shifted in their favor " "We would never have discovered this,' Kawai added, "if you had not withstood them so valiantly " Tony moaned He turned away "He's got to rest now,' the doctor insisted The wounded metallurgist mumbled one last phrase, then subsided into sleep Kawai's brow wrinkled anxiously "Doctor Jafar9 What did he say9" "i think"—the physician frowned in puzzlement—"it was 'Take me back to Finiah'"' 5 LADY ESTELLA-SlRONE, THE WIDOWED HUMAN CHATELAINE OF Darask, had been so certain that Elizabeth would approve the chalet that she sent her major domo on ahead to make prepa- rations. together with those who had volunteered for the do- mestic and security staff. The main body of refugees remained encamped at the western end of Lac Provencal. From there it was only a half-day's ride to the hunting lodge on Black Crag, in the midst of the Montagne Noire region of southern France. By the time that Elizabeth and her four friends and their escort of loyal human and Tanu gold-tores arrived for their inspection tour. the redoubtable Hughie B. Kennedy VII had his mistress's rustic retreat swept and garnished and ready for guests A table in the pnvate dining room adjoining the master suite (which was proposed as Elizabeth's apartment) had been set with the Irish major dome's idea of a light lunch- marinated mushrooms, poached froglegs in champagne aspic, stuffed green olives, smoked salmon, plovers' eggs a la Christiana, ham souffle with asparagus tips, glazed quails cerisette, cold roast hippanon, Waldorf salad, pat6 de foie gras, sourdough bread- rolls, oranges rubanees, and carob-chip cookies- It was the first festive and civilized meal that the five leaders of the Munah evacuation had seen in months They fetl to in an atmosphere of bittersweet celebration. It was evident that the mountain hideaway was eminently 40 THE POSTDILUVIUM 41 suitable for Elizabeth's needs, and Creyn would stay with her The others, however, would continue to Hidden Spnngs as they had planned It was possible that the separation would be permanent, despite their being able to communicate through the golden tores now worn by Basil and Chief Burke. Thus the conversation was desultory, with the pain of parting spoiling everyone's appetite Finally they left off the attempts at false cheer and remi- nisced about the terrible journey that was now virtually at an end The interminable trek along the devastated Aven Penin- sula, during which the tnracial mob of evacuees grew to a logistic and psychosocial nightmare. The treacherous moon- light flit of the Firvulag contingent, who absconded with the bulk of the survival gear just as the worst of the rainy season came upon them The struggles with sick and injured and de- feated and exploitative refugees The headlong flight from Cel- adeyr of Afaliah and his gang of ancien regime fanatics- The dreadful tnp across the Catalan Wilderness, following a little- used track that degenerated into a quagmire alive with ven- omous snakes, giant mosquitoes, and biting leeches- - - And then sanctuary The foothills of the eastern Pyrenees, rich in mines and plantations, and the dangerously depleted cities of Tarasiah and Geroniah eager to welcome new citizens (By then news of the Firvulag seizure of Burask in the distant north had seeped southward, and there were hints that other inadequately defended cities were next on the hit-list.) Perhaps a third of the 3700 displaced humans and Tanu decided to resettle in Spain. The rest, hoping to reach their old homes, continued to the smiling shores of Lac Provencal, where the generosity of Estella-Sirone of Darask showered them with every comfort. (They were, after all, the companions of Eliz- abeth, who had saved the Lady's life in childbirth.) The decimated Languedoc cities vied with one another in sending recruiters to the refugee camp Even more intriguing offers came from distant Gonah in Armorica, where Aiken Drum was consolidating his position, offering high status and nches to any rootless Tanu who rallied round, and a golden tore to any human fighter who pledged fealty to Lord Alken- 42 THE NONBORN KING Lugonn Alken had sent his persona] farspoken invitation to Elizabeth herself, promising her complete autonomy "under his protection " She had declined with cool thanks Dionket Lord Healer and other surviving members of the Peace Faction went off to join Minanonn the Heretic in his remote Pyrenean enclave, where the erstwhile Tanu Battle- master presided over a tiny population of Tanu, Firvuiag, and a few free humans, all dwelling together in Spartan amity Dionket had urged Elizabeth, for her own safety, to go with them But she knew, even without metapsychic foresight, that pacifistic withdrawal could never be her destiny in the Many- Colored Land Later, n had been more difficult to tell Chief Burke and Basil Wimbome and Sister Amene Roccaro that she could not accompany them to the Lowlife center at Hidden Springs She required an isolated retreat, where she could stay for the immediate future, recuperating and meditating upon the new role she had freely chosen "And so," Elizabeth said, rising from the luncheon table, smiling as she brushed crumbs from her black gown. 'the fatal moment is almost upon us Shall we go and explore the bdl- cony9 I think it goes all around the chalet " Creyn was out of his seat and opening the half-glazed doors before the others could stir The Tanu had put off his rough traveling clothes for the meal and wore again the scarlet and white formal robes of a high-ranking redactor As he followed the others into the sunlight, his pupils shrank to pinpoints, the inses within his deep eyesockets becoming an unearthly, opaque blue His fair hair had been cut short for the exodus, and he towered behind Elizabeth like some attenuated El Greco seraph, looking both worldly and vulnerable He was six hundred and thirty-four years old, and he was prepared to stay at Black Crag Lodge for the rest of his life, if need be, acting as the senior servant of the human woman whom Brede Shipspouse had called "the most important person in the world " Basil leaned on the railing, affecting to admire the eastern panorama "I should think this place would suit you admirably, Elizabeth'" His voice was too hearty "Isolation, security, d magnificent natural setting—and our friends at Darask on the THE POSTDILUViUM 43 other end of the lake near enough to keep you comfortably supplied Lady Estella-Sirone was quite right The lodge is a perfect hermitage It's an Odin-seat' A perch for scanning the world'" All of them laughed at the mental image he projected, except torcless Amene, who growled, "Not another damn mindread- ers' in-joke'" "A funny picture " Elizabeth took the nun's arm "Imagine a third-rate production of a Wagner opera A plaster mountain with a lot of strobe lightning and tinny thunder And me as a Nordic goddess, posed on top of my fake Asgard, wearing a winged helmet and a tembly portentous expression as i survey Middle Earth down below If I spot any mortal jiggery-pokery, I have this handy basketful of thunderbolts to smite with " "Except, you don't," Amene said "No " "And therein lies the bloody rub " Peopeo Moxmox Burke spoke fiercely, even resentfully, all the while trying to shore up the inexpert mental screen that decently veiled his emotions from Elizabeth Damn the golden tore' !f it weren't neces- sary Good old Basil caught wind of his floundenng, the im- pending gush of anxiety and maudlin sentiment that was going lo make things even worse for Elizabeth and all the rest of them And with hih donnish tact. Basil bespoke Creyn on the intimate mode Help him Help us all put a lid on it There was no overt sign that the Tanu had heard But im- mediately the two human men found that it was possible to rein in their misgivings and present a civilized front, both externally and in the outermost, "social" aspect of their mental auras Basil was the epitome of practical common sense Burke, the former judge, was the archetypal Red Man, all stoic and stem like a carving in cedar If Elizabeth was aware of the metapsychic maneuvering, she let none of them perceive it She walked along the balcony inspecting the quaint woodwork, marveling at the breathtaking vista In the southwest, glittering against the sky and dividing 44 THE NONBORN KING it from the dark lowlands, was the white fess of the high Pyrenees The air was calm, faintly oppressive, with that pre- ternatural transparency that often forecasts a storm in the moun tains "I can farsee Minanonn's country," she said "A valley, with tall snowy peaks all around it, like Shangn-La " "You would have been safer with him and Dionket," Amene said "Or even up in Hidden Springs, with us We can't trust that bastard Celadeyr He can fly, you know, and carry one person What's to prevent him from coming up here and kid- napping you9 You'd make a great hostage And our tncky little pal Alken Drum might just have similar plans " Elizabeth faced her three human friends, projecting a great wave of comfort and reassurance Creyn hovered in the back- ground She said, "I've tned to explain why 1 can't live with Minanonn, or even up in the Vosges with free humanity I can't show partiality I must remain approachable by all factions in the Many-Colored Land if my new role is to be successful And that especially includes Atken Drum and Celadeyr of Af- aliah " With one finger, Basil traced the features of a grotesque carving on the balustrade It was a goblin face "And what about the Firvulag7 They outnumber us nearly ten to one now, and Sham and Ayfa are quite a different breed of cat from poor old King Yeochee Lady Estella's man Kennedy told me that Little People from the Helvetides have been farsensed gathering in the vicinity of Bardelask That's a rather small citadel on the Rhone, about 80 or 90 kloms north of Lac Provencal The place is exceptionally vulnerable, with Lord Daral and most of his banner-knights having been drowned in the Flood Kennedy thinks that the Firvulag plan to pick off the weaker cities one by one m spite of our cardboard armistice agreement Sham and Ayfa can always blame the attacks on Howlers " "If you came to Hidden Springs with us," Burke said, "we could protect you with iron " Elizabeth taid a small hand on one oi the Native American's massive, scarred forearms "I have my own methods of defense THE POSTDILUVIUM 45 now, Peo Believe me The Firvulag won't harm me Neither will anyone else " Burke scowled, touching his new golden tore with a ritu- alistic gesture "If there should be the slightest threat—from any quarter—you must call on us We can't forget what Brede said about you " "Brede'" Elizabeth laughed, turning away from them "The Shipspouse always was a melodramatic old soul And she knew very well how to manipulate the lot of us'" The Grand Master metapsychic whirled around, arms opening She seemed to embrace the three of them, enfolding their souls in great wings "But manipulation's not my way I'm going to be a magnet— not a force majeure " Amene appealed lo the Tanu redactor "If she needs us, Creyn—will you calP" "I will. Sister " He hesitated, then added with regret, "If you intend to continue on to Sayzorask with the caravan today, you must leave here very shortly I'll wait downstairs to say goodbye " He withdrew with a courteous nod Tears gleamed in Amene's eyes The symbolic separation of the three human friends from Elizabeth had been made in an instant, with none of them expecting it until the finality was upon them "Don't worry " Elizabeth's face and mind still smiled "It'll be all right We all have our jobs to do Thai will help " Basil broke the spell, stepping forward to take Elizabeth's hand "Creyn fine chap Human as they make 'em He and his people will take good care of you I'm confident " "Dear Basil " She kissed him on his weathered cheek He moved back, then paused at the balcony door "You can coun' on me to do my utmost in the Sugoll matter And when this is over and things have quieted down, I'm going to take you mountain climbing, just as I promised " She projected mock skepticism "You're going to have to prove to me that there's a Pliocene Everest over there in the Alps' I can't farsense anything of the sort, you know " "It exists'" He waved an admonishing index finger "Very difficult for amateurs to estimate height, you know Especially 46 THE NONBORN KING with the mind's eye " With a last farewell gesture, he vanished inside the chalet It was Burke's turn He loomed over the woman in black, his face immobile, and spoke haltingly through the unfamiliar mind-amplifying device 1 will learn farspeech technique Talk you overkilometers My dearest Peo I am still not sure that it was wise for you and Basil to take the golden tores Creyn tested us Wecompatible he proved You not worry aboutus Only answer when weneed advice "You know FH always be ready to advise you," she said aloud "That is my way But you and Basil and the other strong ones must lead humanity and the exotics of good will I can't The evacuation of Munah was only the beginning, but it was a good start, thanks mostly to you Even the Firvulag who ran away learned that friendship between the human and exotic races is possible Necessary " "Hah " The Native American let all his lawyer's cynicism show "The exotics were docile enough nght after the disaster, when they were still glassy-eyed from shock None of those Tanu and Firvulag ever had their world pulled out from under 'em before " Unlike us poor time-traveling human schmucks' "So they were willing enough to follow my leadership on the trek out of Aven But you saw how fast things deteriorated once we approached Afaliah on the mainland Just one sniff of business-as-usual, one psychological anchor—and kapow' Same old arrogant Tanu and bloody-minded Firvulag mindset as before Things couid have turned very nasty if the Little Folks hadn't scarpered off into the bushes about then " They communed wordless reassurance for a moment Then she asked, "How many human refugees do you plan to take all the way to Hidden Springs9" "We've narrowed it to thirty stout hearts and true Useful technicians, daredevils who won't stick at our little aircraft salvage expedition We've scraped up twelve former gravomag specialists with flightdeck training " "Wonderful' And if Sugoll and Katlmel will help—" THE POSTDILUVUJM 47 'They'd belter " Burke was somber "Felice and the others who knew the precise location of the Ship's Grave are dead " Elizabeth and Burke had forgotten Amene But at the men- tion of Felice's name, the nun could not help uttering a low cry Burke's thoughts were written on his face Oh, hell Me and my big mouth Aloud he said, "It's time for me to go " He wrapped his great arms about Elizabeth, said. "Mazel lov'" and strode rapidly into the lodge "I'm sorry that I interrupted," Amene said stiffly "But when he reminded me that—that Felice was—" Anguish drew the nun's face taut "And with Gibraltar on her sou!—to die that way—" Elizabeth said, "1 thought it best for the others to believe that But you loved her You deserve to know the truth " The pnest stood stock-still before the mmdreader Sister Amene Roccaro wore no golden tore, possessed no overt meta- psychic powers, but at that moment the temble knowledge passed from the other woman's brain to her own "Felice isn't dead,' said Amene "No " "How long have you been sure of it'7" "Perhaps six weeks I'd been hearing—farsensing, that is to say—these peculiar calls They hardly seemed human at first I paid little attention The day-to-day problems ot the journey were so overwhelming You lend to screen out other mind-emanations to conserve your own energies, otherwise you'd go crazy from the mental static But this calling—" "You're certain it was Felice7" "She farspoke me only once, when you were all on your way down the Rhone to invade the tore factory But I remember her mind-signature " Elizabeth turned away, stanng at the dis- tant mountains "It's a thing we Grand Masters are rather good at " "Elizabeth, why—why—" Amene's voice broke ah she tned to regain control of herself "Why did she do it^ 1 knew she wanted revenge, of course When we were first tested together in Castle Gateway, when the Tanu woman told us we'd have to bear Tanu children like the rest of the human 48 THE NONBORN KING slaves, Felice was beside herself with fury It was as if the enslavement of humanity in the Pliocene was a personal af- front " "You're a doctor as well as a pnest Do 1 have to spell it out to you9 You love her—but you know what she is " "Yes " The nun's tone was desolate Elizabeth began to move along the balcony, with Amene following They came to the eastern side of the chalet Lac Provencat was an azure expanse fading to slate near the horizon The storm would come from that direction "Do you remember Culluket, the King's Interrogator9" Eliz- abeth asked "I saw him only once After our stnke at the tore works failed and we were captured—he was the one who clapped gray slave-torcs on us and sent us away to die in prison Yes, I remember the Interrogator He wore glowing red-glass armor and he was the most beautiful Tanu male I've ever seen " "He look Felice and tortured her " "Oh, Jesus " "He worked her over quite a bit more than was necessary to extract information Dionket told me about it during the evacuation As the head of the Redactor Guild, Dionket knew what Cull was up to—but there was no way Dionket could interfere in the private affairs of the Host The torture—the algesis—is what forced Felice into metapsychic operancy and enabled her to take a full measure of vengeance According to her lights " Elizabeth paused "Cull's handiwork also seems to have forged some perverse link between the two of them That's why she looks for him, keeps calling his name on the declam atory mode Felice isn't sure that her dear torturer survived the Flood Unfortunately, I am Cull is alive, and he's gone to Gonah, where he hopes Alken will be able to protect him from Felice God help Cull if she ever tracks him down " The physician warred with the lover in Amene, momentar- ily, the professional won "Yes, I see what you mean Felice's character is profoundly sadomasochistic, of course The Inter- rogator gave her not only temble pain but also the mental power THE POSTDILUVIUM 49 she'd been searching for ail her life No wonder she loves him Elizabeth said nothing "What—what's to be done about Felice'' Her powers—' My God, not even Saint Jack the Bodiless or Diamond Mask could have blasted out that Gibraltar cut* Not single-minded " "Felice hasn't used her destructive power since the deluge Perhaps she can't Most of the time, she imagines that she's a black scavenger bird She gathers golden tores and hides them I don't know where She's very clever at screening, except when she calls to Cull " The women stood side by side at the railing, Elizabeth in her long black gown and tall Amene in a white coverall with a clerical rabat and dog collar at the neck A breeze had begun to stir the dark firs that crowded close to the lodge's isolated knoll A rock thrush, invisible, gave plaintive warning of changing weather "Could you help Felice with your deep-redact faculty9" Amene asked "Cure the psychosis7" "Possibly If she gave full cooperation But it might be safer to let her stay as she is, if it means restraining her use of the psychoenergetic functions This is one of the matters 1 have to think deeply about ' The nun drew back, looking at the other with dawning horror Elizabeth only smiled, resigned Amene said, "You'll have to decide so many things Elizabeth lifted a wry shoulder She had turned so that the pnest could not see her face "It's cold and lonesome on Olym- pus " Amene said. "If only I could help If any of us could—'" Elizabeth's hands were clutching the wooden rail, the ten dons while "You can do one thing Again For the sake of my scruples " "Yes Of course ' From one pocket of her coverall Amene took a narrow violet nbbon kissed it, and hung it about her neck like a yoke She recited the ancient formula again—as she had recited it for the sleeper wakened in the mountain sanctuary where they had 50 THE NONBORN KING watched the Flood; as she had recited it on countless nights during the long exodus while Elizabeth wept along with the winter rain pounding their improvised shelter "Only believe it. Elizabeth." "I try." i try- Amerie blessed the head still turned away "Come, child of God, and lay your burden down For he has said to his Church. 'Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them.'" "Bless me. Sister, for I have sinned." "Let the person who is thirsty come. Let whoever wants it accept the gift of the water of life." "I confess pnde I confess hubns, the sin of surpassing arrogance. I confess blasphemy of the healing Spirit. I confess contempt for lesser minds. 1 confess refusing love to other rational beings. I confess despair I confess the unforgivable sin and ask forgiveness. I am sorry- Help me to believe it! Help me to believe that there's a God who forgives the unfor- givable." Help me believe that I'm not alone. Help me 6 THE BIG WILD CHALIKO WAS TEARING UP THE SQUEF.ZE CHUTE with his claws, screeching and blowing, flinging his massive barrel against the stout wooden planks until the spikes fastening them seemed about to give way There were four gray-tore wranglers trying to hold him—two on the hackamore ionge- line and two on a foot rope They were broadcasting sheer panic when Benjamin Barrett Travis led the three Exalted Ones over to the corral to watch the breaking. "You really gonna face down that clawfoot killer, Brazos?" Alken Drum inquired, awestricken. "Sweet houghmagandy!" The penned chaliko reared up on its unfettered hind leg and gave a ringing bellow. It was a blue roan standing at least twenty hands, with black fetlock feathering and mane and a startling biack-rimmed walleye. "Tana's left tit!" blasphemed Alberonn Mindeater. "It's as big as a rhino!" Brazos Ben fingered his silver tore The chaliko settled back into the chute with a wooof\ "Hell, he ain't near as snorty as some wild ones I've suppled out. He ain't even mean by nature. Just scared." 'Travis is quite right," said the Interrogator "The animal's mind is awash with profound fear. The bndling device, the equipment affixed to its feet, the saddle—these, combined with its loss of freedom and the presence of people, have nearly 51 52 THE NONBORN KING driven it insane Only its natural intelligence, and the fact that it has not actually been hurt, restrain it from suicidal violence " Brazos Ben smiled thmly at the redactor "And don't you forget I been talkin' to him for a week, Lord Cull. You saw how he eased back when I give him a farsqueak Chalikos are smarter'n horses at recogmzin' a friendly mind " "Then why not Just mind-bend the beast to tame it^" Alberonn wanted to know. "Why go through all this nde- 'em-cowboy physical tosh?" "A chaliko's gotta be broke both ways. Lord Alby Oth- erwise he's only good for gold or silver nders. No gray or bareneck could even touch him. After a chaliko's been suppled and trained to the usual body and voice commands, then he gets mind-broke. Course, i speak to my cntters all along the way, even m the physical schoohn'. But with my method, you can tram up twenty times the wild stock you could mmd- bendin'—and take less time doin' it. You can use gray and bareneck trainers steada silvers right up until the final postgrad telepathic autopilot programmm' It's a little different tramin' domesticated beasts. Easier But the Banlemaster"—Brazos Ben broke off, eyeing Alken—"I mean, the late Battlemaster wanted Goriah to be the best-mounted outfit in the Many- Colored Land come Combat time. And that meant usin' plenty o' wild stock." Across the corral, the chaliko neighed Brazos Ben extracted a small tin of snuff from his breast pocket and tucked a pinch behind his cheek- "Well—you Exalteds ready for some ac- tion9" "Sic 'em, BB!" Aiken chortled The breaker went off to the chute while Aiken, Culluket the Interrogator, and Alberonn Mindeater approached the fence of the round enclosure and found a spot that was not too muddy Although it was not raining, the sky was dark and louring and a cold wind blew in from the Strait ofRedon beyond the stables The three men wore traditional Tanu storm-suits of colored leather with peaked capuchons and over-knee boots Alken's suit was gold with black piping, the Interrogator's deep red. and Alberonn's turquoise to indicate his status as a creator- THE POSTDIUJVIUM 53 coercer. Alberonn's human heritage showed in his chocolate skin, which was a sinking foil to his green Tanu eyes and the bush of fleecy blond hair that escaped from his hood- The hybrid High Table member was half a head taller than Culluket and towered over diminutive Aiken like a fairytale giant. "My late brother Nodonn counted this man Travis as one of the most valued of all his servants," Culluket remarked. Across the corral, Brazos supervised the removal of the hind- foot hobble. "I wish we had fifty more like him," Aiken said. "Getting large numbers of trained mounts will be critical to my strategy against the Firvulag At least, until I track down those aircraft." "It's a bad sign that the Little People have chucked their old prejudice against riding," Culluket said. Aiken nodded. "One of my spies reported that they're even trying to domesticate those little hippanons for the gnomies to nde! And we know they've been stealing tame chalikos from all the outlying plantations around the eastern cities for the warrior-ogre battalions." Alberonn said, "Bleyn farspoke me that the same thing is going on down around Rocilan. Raids, sneak attacks, am- bushes- All blamed on Howlers, of course. But the situation is getting beyond makeshift countermeasures down there in Candy City. The petty lordlings and the forced humans just aren't responding to Bleyn's leadership, not even when Lady Eadnar commands it. Bleyn's an outsider, even if he is her brother-in-law, and he has no authority. Dammit, Aiken—' I've a good mind to go down and marry Eadnar now, not wait until the Grand Loving in May!" "You cannot. Creative Brother," said the Interrogator "It would be even more inflammatory than Bleyn's action. Old Lady Moma-Ia is mulish about respecting the mourning period for her late son. She thinks that even May is too soon for a wedding." Alberonn was glum. "I should have let the old bat drown But there she was on the floating wreckage with Eadnar—so what could 1 do?" "Here comes trouble," Aiken observed, poking his head 54 THE NONBORN KING through the corral bars. The wranglers were opening the chute. Brazos Ben, chewing meditatively, now held the longe-line in his left hand and another rope, attached in some complex fash- ion to the chaliko's front ankles, in his right. The animal skit- tered out Into the heavy mud, its walleye rolling and its prancing claws making loud squushing sounds. "What the hell's that rig on its feel?" Alberonn asked. "1 thought Ben was going to ride the beast." "Shut up and watch," ordered Aiken. Brazos Ben was no longer soothing the chaliko's mind through his silver tore. in fact, he seemed to be deliberately provoking the creature to misbehavior, tugging sharply on the hackamore line. The animal's flanks began to heave- Its neck twitched and its head strained. Just as Ben maneuvered it to the center of the corral, it exploded into a frenzy of bucking. The stirrup-pieces of the big, chairlike saddle slapped against its withers. Mud flew to the four winds and Aiken hastily slammed up a PK shield- Now Ben carefully drew in the foot line, which ran from the right side of the saddle down through a ring on the right ankle hobble, up through a pulley at the cinch, down to the left hobble, up over me high stirrup plate, and out to the breaker. "BB calls it a running W," Aiken said. "You gotta use it right, or you ruin the chaliko. But it really puts the fear o' God into uppish brutes." With the line tightened, the huge chaliko perforce fell to its knees in the muck- Ben held him there, talking softly and making a clucking sound. He rubbed the creature on both sides of its neck but didn't try to catch its panicked eye. After a few minutes, he slacked off the W-line and let the chaliko rise. Still speaking to it, he urged it to begin walking with a gentle tug on the longe. The chaliko reared, shrieking, and gathered itself to run; but before it could step out, Ben pulled the W-line. Once again the big animal stumbled slowly to its knees, sinking deeply into black ooze. "Now Travis is back in the beast's mind," Culluket said, admiration brightening the somber beauty of his face. "Telling it who the master is—but gently. See? The animal responds. THE POSTDILUVIUM 55 It's no fool. But it's going to try to break loose again, just to be sure." The procedure was repeated, with Brazos Ben now hum- ming tunelessly as he managed to have the chaliko move a dozen obedient steps at the end of the longe-line before it erupted into defiant bucking and claw-slashing. Ben spat to- bacco juice and tipped the animal ignominiously into the slop- Hunching down, he massaged the chaiiko's face, remonstrating and clucking- The skinned-back ears turned forward and the corded neck muscles relaxed. Ben let the big roan up, flicked the longe. and stood with a satisfied smile as it trotted slowly around him, responding now to the command of the hackamore. And the dry thought came; He's all broke, Exalteds. They gave him a heartfelt Slonshal1. The trainer motioned to one of his assistants to take over the two ropes, stood for a few minutes probing the chaliko's mind to insure that it plotted no more deviltry, then waded out of the soupy,corral back to Aiken, Culluket, and Alberonn. "You won't ride him today, then?" the hybrid asked, dis- appointed. "I could, usin' the W. But I'd rather not. Those claws can cut a rope too easy at a trot. All he really needed was to figger out who was boss. A few days now to gel him halter-wise and we'll start ridin'. I don't think this baby'll need any more hobbles." "Terrific work, BB!" said Aiken. "I presume you handled livestock back on Elder Earth," said Alberonn- Benjamin Barren Travis spat politely over his shoulder. "Hell, no. Lord Alby. Wouldn't I've loved to. though' Naw— 1 inherited my daddy's desk as comptroller of Westex Foodex of El Paso, the biggest exporter of Hispano-American food- stuffs in the Milieu." His pale eyes twinkled. "Never want to see another retried bean long 's 1 iive - -." He hitched up his jeans. "I plan to mosey over'n' begin mind-breakin' a really top-notch white stallion, lords. Y'all wanta help? If you ride longside, it reinforces the programmin'-" 56 THE NONBORN KING "Sounds great'" Alberonn enthused "You go on with Ben, Alby," Alken said "Cull and I have some things to discuss " To the breaker he said, "You come on up to the Castle of Glass for supper tonight, BB And bnng Sally Mac " "Right y'are, Battlemaster " With a casual wave, the man in the mud-caked Levis ambled off in the company of the titan warrior, reminiscing telepathically over omery steeds he had known "Commander Congreve just farspoke me." Alken told the Interrogator "There's a whackin' big batch of recruits just arrived, and you and me better get back to check 'em out Thirty-eight Tanu and nearly a hundred humans—including twelve golds and a gang of silver technicians Most of 'em are from Afahah Old Celadeyr has instigated some kind of purge— thrown out all his human executives and managing technicians, and made things so hot for the hybnd aristocracy that they fled lock, stock, and barrel " "I'll find out soon enough what's going on down there " "The rest of the arrivals are from that Spanish town the Craftsmaster took over Calamosk " "Bleeding Goddess' They'd be cravens from the Retort— the nff-raff scheduled to be executed at the end of the Combat' You'd accept such trash7" Alken's beady gaze was cold "Bull me no shit, Pretty- Face It's all a new deal in this Many-Colored Land You forget7 And once upon a time, I was considered a bit nff-rafry myself Let's fly " They pulled down the transparent face-shields of their cap- uchons and soared into the air Little splatters of rain ticked against their moving bodies They flew over the chaliko farm, which was north of Gonah alongside the strait, crossed or- chards, olive groves, and gardens, and approached the city itself Gonah was built upon a great nse and covered nearly four square kilometers Most of the buildings, except the magnifi- cent central citadel and certain dwellings of the Great Ones, were built of cleanly whitewashed stone roofed in rose-red tile THE POSTDILUVIUM 57 The mansions of the Tanu were adorned with spires and filigree buttresses of rose and gold, honoring the Psychokmetic Guild heraldry of the late Nodonn Formerly, the glass castle had featured the same color scheme, but smce the coming of the usurper, most of the rosy elements had been stripped away and replaced with accents of jet-black or midnight-purple, these unique tinctures having been adopted by the new Battlemaster At night, every dwelling of the commonalty was picked out in a mynad of small oil lamps strung along roofs and garden walls The Tanu structures were completely outlined in meta- activated faene lights of many different colors, and the Castle of Glass blazed golden and amethyst— bnghter than it had ever shone during Nodonn's tenure—a beacon visible all the way to the disemboguement of the River Laar 30 kilometers away As the two levitants descended toward the main receiving area near the eastern city gate, Alken observed, "Commander Congreve has discovered a really big human gold in the net today His name is Sullivan-Tonn, originally from Finiah on the River Rhine Ever heard of him7" The Interrogator blasphemed lundiy 'That fat funk-pisser' If he'd only used his powers as a warnor should, Finiah might have withstood Gudenan's attack' Do I know him—'' And the data were spread out for Alken to study Aloysius X Sullivan, yclept Sullivan-Tonn Ninety-six years old, rejuvenated, resident in the Pliocene nearly thirty-two years Once Kung Professor of Moral Theology at Fordham Univer- sity, and later a highly placed supervising psychokmetic under Lord Velteyn of Finiah Tonn' s primary metafunction was enor- mous (he was capable of levitating forty people or nearly five tons of inert matter), but his usefulness to the Tanu was limited by his pacifism, which masked an invincible timidity He was notorious for having refused point-blank lo use his PK in Grand Combats, Hunts, or any other aggressive activity, but he had performed his other duties faithfully After the fall of Finiah he assisted in the aerial evacuation of noncombatants and ul innately made his way to Castle Gateway, which was then being used as a relief center for refugees When the deluge 58 THE NONBORN KING came, Tonn was safely ensconced in the small Spanish city of Calamosk, attendant upon his teenaged Tanu fiancee Lady Olone, who had been forced to miss the Grand Combat because she was recuperating in Skin, having broken her back in an ill- considered attempt to fly on her own Olone, a luscious honey blonde and a coercer of formidable raw talent, had accompanied Tonn to Gonah "I'll deep-probe the pair of them for you." Culluket said. "but it's obvious why they've come Clone's father died in the Flood and the Craftsmaster's too tough to give in to her win- some wiles Tonn can be a self-nghteous ass and Oly is a sly chit, but 1 think we can count on their loyalty " Alken and Culluket descended to the receiving barracks, where the Tanu and gold-tore human newcomers had been segregated from the humbler arrivals Congreve, a hulking gold wearing full blue coercer armor, smote his breastplate in salute and lost no time in presenting his telepathic appraisal. Greetings Battlemaster and Exalted Lord Interrogator' Aside from Sullivan-Tonn and Lady Olone, the day's tot-up in the gold includes mostly minor powers Those from Afaliah are respectable hybrid nobility who couldn't stomach the reaction- ary dictates of Lord Celadeyr Eleven pureblood Tanu from Calamosk are former fellow prisoners with Aluteyn in the Great Retort [classification] Thanks Congreve Suffering shit Four traitors six wife- murderers and a tax-evader among our exotic jailbirds But with so few Tanu survivors every one who's willing to follow me has to be made welcome Cull you give 'cm a good vetting Especially the traitors' That goes without saying Shining One And I will also take pains with these twenty lesser human golds from Calamosk in like manner Retort-fodder condemned for cowardice during the Combat Now please give courteous attention to Tonn and his doxy who take their detention here with ill grace. "All hail to you, conquering Battlemasler Alken-Lugonn!" declaimed a portly individual attired in splendorous vestments of cense and gold But before Sullivan-Tonn could continue. there was a guttural shoul THE POSTDILUVIUM 59 "Aik' Aik—is it really you9" From the motley group of gold-tore humans burst a scrawny man with tow-colored hair and flat, vaguely Mongoloid fea- tures He wore a plaid flannel shirt, twill trousers, and heavy forester's boots with lug soles Dropping to his knees before the diminutive usurper of Gonah. he mumbled, "I mean. Lord Lugonn Sorry to bust in on this other guy's shtick, but—" Thunderstruck, Alken threw back the golden hood of his rain-suit "Raimo' You ol' woodchopper, you'" "If you want me, kid, I'm all yours And I brought some pals, too " "If I want you—" yelled the Shining One The two fell into each other's arms, giggling like maniacs "Well'" Sullivan-Tonn drew himself up in frosty hauteur The tender reunion was interrupted as Culluket's mind be- spoke Alken on the intimate mode Congreve prehmprobe finds thisRaimoHakkmen loaded hot- data urge you permit me fulldeep ream him immediately '"Forget it Indignation "Ray, baby—you mean they were gonna roast you'5 Just for going over the hill in the Combat^" Listen ShimngOne thisone muchinfo PeaceFaction Dionket + MmanonnHeretic countertactic CeloAfaliah also— Sullivan-Tonn brayed, "Lord Alken-Lugonn, please let me continue'" The thoughts of Alken and the Interrogator crackled on the intimate mode Cull question sillyfartTonn not Raimo handsoff MINE I know Raimoyourfnend ShmingOne but he knows much- value even re Felice Allow squeezeout— You keep clawsoff Raimo FehceobsessedsadistCullu- tortugator Raimo rumor Felice took SPEAR from botlomNewSea Christ' Selfjustificalion Thought that get yourattention Well'7 You agree interrogation1' Raimo know where Felice + Spear are9 60 THE NONBORN KING Nodata. DeadpalRaimo saw Birdgirl flying Belies. Local- Firvulag bespoke pal re FelicehavingSpear Musl deepdig to get straights. You agree ream? No!... Yes... shit'. Later then. But when / say so and with My supervision reamout job and you fullrepair his brain after. You hear Redactive Brother/Grand Vizier/CullPretty Face? I hear and affirm your authority King. (But you/I must find scatophilousalgolagniacbitchgoddess before she comesafter US why did I notkill her when I had chance?) Scorn. Don't you know? "Now!" Aiken exclaimed brightly out loud. The mental repartee with the Interrogator had lasted approximately ten sec- onds. Aiken thrust the continuing mental admonitions of Cul- luket aside and let the full wattage of his charm flow out upon Raimo, Sullivan-Tonn, the willowy Lady Olone (who had been watching Aiken intently ever since his arrival), and all of the other Tanu and human newcomers standing about the cheerless reception chamber. Emboldened, Sullivan-Tonn exclaimed: "We've been treated outrageously by this military flunky of yours. Lord Lugonn- His men have presumed to examine our baggage—and a clumsy oaf dropped a priceless bottle of twenty- four-year-old Jameson's Reserve! I was barely able to rescue it in time with my PK." "Shocking," said Aiken, frowning. He tipped a subliminal wink to the commandant. "Surely you know, Congreve, that an Exalted Personage of Lord Suilivan-Tonn's rank is exempt from such procedures. You are rebuked." Congreve gave the chest-high salute. "I abase myself, Bat- tiemaster. Such examinations have been a standard security precaution taken with all human persons seeking permanent residence in Gonah Because of the blood-metal peril, the rul- ing was enforced stringently under Lord Nodonn." "Nodonn," Aiken noted, "is fish food. And 1 say that from now on, both human and Tanu arrivals will be given an equally cordial welcome. Remember that, or you'll answer to me." Sullivan-Tonn simpered with pleasure He drew the demure Olone forward and presented her to Aiken and the Interrogator "Lady Olone of Calamosk, daughter of the late Lord Onedan THE POSTDILUVIUM 61 Trumpeter, who is to become my bnde at this year's Grand Loving " A momentary flash of fire from the girl's mind was hastily curtained She bowed gracefully Grinning, the Shining One planted a lingering kiss in the palm of her hand In a low voice, she asked, "Is it true. Lord Battlemaster, thai you will be king?" The black eyes sparkled "As Tana wills, lovie!" "With all the kingly prerogatives?" A smile stole over her coral lips Sullivan-Tonn's face was immobile "The game," Aiken assured her, "goes with the name." He strode over to the smirking Raimo, draped one arm over his old pal's shoulder, and called out: "Now, all you folks_ be of good cheer' Aiken Drum is here! No more detention, no more searches, no more nasty interrogations You're all coming along with me to my Castle of Glass, and we're going to have a party.'" 7 OLD ISAK HENNING NAGGED AND NAGGED AND FINALLY HUL- dah agreed to make the weary climb up to the promontory— even though she knew it was going to rain—and keep watch until midnight. "We're the only ones left to give warning, girl!" Bony thumbs dug into her strong upper amis. Isak's filmed eyes rolled anxiously in the direction of the cave's inner chamber. "It's the most dangerous time of all! Full moon after the vernal equine?! The Hunt's bound to come. Every year it happens Now you listen to me, girl! When you spot 'em flying over the lagoon from Aven, you light the signal fire- All Kersic is depending on you'" "Yes, Grandpa " "He might be calling to 'em! Even in his sleep!" The old man's voice was a malignant hiss. "Yes, Grandpa." Trembling, Isak scooped up glowing coals from the cooking fire into a ceramic beaker. He heaped on ashes to slow com- bustion. Huldah took the beaker and the thick torch of tallow- soaked reeds he had prepared. "Now you know what to do with these!" he barked at her. "What?" she asked. "The signal, you damn stupid cow!" he exploded "If you 62 THE POSTDILUVIUM 63 see the Flying Hunt, you use the hot coals to light the torch. Then use the torch to light the big pile of wood!" Huldah smiled. "Light the torch- Light the wood. Yes, Grandpa." The old man fairly screeched. "But only if you see the Hunt, dammit! Only if you see them coming at us from among the stars—all twisting and rising and falling like a knotted snake made of rainbow light!" "All nght." She stood slanng down at him with an air of detachment There was no physical beauty about her, only strength and health Her lips and cheeks were shiny from the butter-fat roast dormice they had had for supper. Her doeskin shift was still fairly clean. Her breasts, swelling now for a reason Isak could well guess, stretched the leather between their outthrust nipples. "Well?" he roared. "Get going, you overgrown bitch!" She remained standing in the cave antechamber. Her bur- dened hands hung slackly at her thighs. "You will not hurt the God while I'm gone, Grandpa." Isak's glance shifted. "You just get going on up to the promontory. Do your duty and leave him to me." He was breathing rapidly. 'The Flying Hunt could be on its?, way to Kersic right now!" "You will not hurt the God." Huldah set the pot of coals and the unlit torch down on the rock floor. Isak tried to dodge away but she was too fast for him, seizing his sticklike arms and pressing them against the sides of his rib cage as she lifted him up. He kicked and howled and spat rage at her, dangling in the air, held at arm's length by the titaness. Finally he burst into tears. She put him down with great solicitude, crouched beside him as he collapsed, and wiped his face with one comer of her slit skirt. "You will not hurt my God from the Sea," she said, satisfied. "No." He could not stop shuddering. The musky smell of her was overpowering- "I'll go then," she said. "And if I see the Flying Hunt, I'll light your signal fire. Even though there are no other people left on Kersic to see." 64 THE NONBORN KING "There are, there are," wailed the old man. He covered his face with his hands- "No," Huldah told him. "They sailed away when the salty water rose. There's only you and me and the God now." She gave Isak a tender pal on his sun-freckled bald crown and picked up the firemakmg things "And the Flying Hunt won't ever come again. The water's loo deep It's deep enough lo pour into the slot where the sun goes down, so the Hunters can't come through any more to get us " "Damn crazy cow," Isak mumbled "Go, Go Keep a sharp watch." "All right. Il won't do any harm." She left him still huddled in a heap and set off into the dusk. The sky was the color of a duck's egg over the water, deepest blue lashed with violet mare's tails above the spine of Kersic A few stars, fuzzy, were coming out. Huldah hummed tune- lessly as she strode along. It was damp and chilly, but she didn't mind. And the God was well-covered with his rug of woven rabbitskin strips- Her heart lifted with thinking of him. So beautiful, so joy- bringing even in the endless sleep! (His poor lost hand would soon be fixed when lazy Grandpa finished the last sanding and smoothing ) If she humed back after the futile vigil there would still be time to worship him, and Grandpa would wake up and watch and groan "I hate you. Grandpa," she said Pushing through the high marquis, she came at length to the land's end where there was a cleared space among twisted umbrella pines, and a tall silver-gray pile of wood Huldah put down the firepot and the torch and went to the sheer western up of the promontory- She sal on the edge with her strong legs dangling and the rising wind tickling as it blew up her skirt. Down there in that cove, in a place of sharp reefs that the waters now covered, she had found him The wonder. The marvel. The joy. The God from the Sea. His eyes had never THE POSTDILUVIUM 65 opened during the months she had nursed him; but she knew that they would some day, now that his terrible hurts were healed He would awaken and love her. "Then we will kill Grandpa," Huldah decided 8 ON THE MAGHREB SHORE OF AFRICA. BLACK WAVES LAPPED at the base of the Rif Range and the old volcanic hills that had once anchored the southern end of a broken rubble dike. A thin drizzle had started. Kuhal Earthshaker, Second Lord Psychokinetic. had camped in the most sheltered spot he could find, a steep-walled wadi carrying a trickle of water that vanished into beach shingle before ever reaching the New Sea. There were palms and blooming acacia trees, and a poignant cluster of pink narcissus nodding in deep shadows beside a little spring. He had propped the Firvulag coracle up like a dome above a fairly dry niche. Fian rested beneath it. Kuhal had managed to light a fire with his feeble creativity, but the supper pickings were meager: a palm heart, a couple of baked bird's eggs with their embryos, some delicious bui insubstantial acacia flowers fried in the last of the hamster fat. A snake of mouth-watering dimensions had got away. Kuhal knew better than to cook the abundant but poisonous narcissus bulbs- Fian moaned. The drizzle was turning into sharp gusts of rain that tapped on the coracle skins. COLD! cold cold COLD COLD 66 COLDCOLD cold THE POSTDILUVIUM i/i know. cold cold COLD 67 COLDCOLD cold The sleeping-robe that Kuhal had made from small animal pelts was now almost falling to pieces. Its sinew threads had rotted and most of the fur had fallen from the fragile leather- He had tried to mend it with fresh skins, but the older portions tended to tear away from the patches. He tucked the ragged thing as closely as he could about Fian, then went off to scout more wood for the fire. He found dead branches on a tree up the arroyo. Thorns ripped his hands as he broke them up and heaped them onto the smoking fire. He crept back under the coracle's shelter and took off his soaked and slimy poncho, draping it over a thwart to serve as a curtain and heat-trap. The antelope hide stank abominably. Fian stirred, plucking at the bandages of dirty rose-gold fabric that covered his dreadful head wounds. Kuhal restrained his brother's hands and pressed them firmly back beneath the fur coverlet. They were clammy, the skin stretched tight over stark bones and tendons, pulse fluttering in the web of blood vessels. dying. No. we die together... No. we die cold?... No! socoldbloodsiowsheartslows NO I/I WARM US!! The conjoined mind struggled. One half was frantic to cut loose and make an end to months of suffering. The other, remorseless in love, commanded life. 68 THE NONBORN KING [psycho A kinetic] [vaso A dilator} \stimu A lation} A A H The pain was coming mostly from the infected facial nerves- Thai and the damp cold- Having mustered up barely enough PK to boost his brother's impeded circulation, Kuhal now steeled himself to assume the pain again with his redactive faculty. His strength was almost inadequate to manage the shunt. This would be his tenth night in a row without sleep, the outer limit. They would have to lay up here tomorrow. Rest well, gel warm and dry, find some substantial food. Plan's will to live had diminished almost to nullity, Sleep, Fian. yes Sleep, dearbrother. yes Sleep, soulmirror. yes Sleep, gentleintuitor. yes Sleep, lovedselfwounded yes Sleep, Fianmindofmymind, sleep. [slow-wave thela rhythm] Sleep. For most of the day, Fian had been delirious, and the mental tempests of the right hemisphere of the Brain assaulted the fatigue-drugged defenses of the left until Kuhal himself suffered a hallucination. He had trudged along the eternal beach, towing Fian through the shallows in the derelict Firvulag coracle. Suddenly he had THE POSTDILUVIUM 69 seemed to see a city in the mists far out on the water. It was as luminous as an earthbound sun— Muriah, reborn in splen- dor! Kuhal heard the Tanu women singing the Song, cheering arena crowds at the Spring Sport Meeting, glass trumpets sounding, and me clangor of jewel-bright swords beating on glass shields. Bewitched, he dropped the coracle rope. Home! They were almost home! After months of creeping westward along the African shore, wretched castaways, half-crazed and starving, battered into metapsychic impotence, a miracle had happened. Arms outstretched, Kuhal waded toward the vision, into deep water. The more seriously injured brother, with greater intuitive power in his share of the Brain, recognized the phantom for the sham it was. Summoning up a pulse of coercive force, he had compelled Kuhal to return, to take the rope in hand. "Now we will go to the Blessed Isle together," Fian had said. But Kuhal's brainstorm had passed. Obstinately, he chose life for them. They came ashore. "I am dying slowly," Fian had said. "Why not make an end to it?" "You won't die. I won't let you. We're going to get back to the European mainland. Just as soon as the rains stop, the wind will shift to the south. I'll rig a sail for the coracle." "It won't do us any good to cross to the other shore. The others are all dead in the Flood." "We don't know that! Our farsensing power is too weakened to perceive beyond earshot—if that far." "Kuhal! Mind of my mind. Death is all there is for us... if we are to remain united." Screaming, Kuhal had denied it. Death was unthinkable. Separation was unthinkable- "Trust me! You've always trusted me, followed me. We're one." And the pain flowed forth, and hopelessness, and Fian said, "If you won't follow me, I may have to go alone," "No!" At Kuhal's lowest conscious level the truth crept out: / am afraid... THE NONBORN KING 70 Sitting in the rain-beaten shelter, Kuhal Earthshaker who had been Second Lord Psychokinetic to the great Nodonn held his sleeping twin tightly. The fire was hissing; soon the rain would put it out. Fian's brainwaves were slow and peaceful. He felt no pain. But for the wakeful brother it was otherwise: [slow thera] [slow theta] FEAR [slow theta} [slow theta} 9 IT WAS POURING AND GETTING PRETTY DARK BY THE TIME THAT the ronin Yoshimitsu Watanabe came to the twelfth troll-gate on the Redon Track. "Rotten Firvulag extortionists," he grumbled. He reined in and considered the matter with weary disgust. He'd lost so much time already, swimming flooded fords and detouring around washouts and landslides- If he reached Goriah at all tonight it would be in the wee hours, when hospitality was hard to come by. even if a traveler had money. And if he was broke... Yosh's famished chaliko took advantage of the halt to scratch up a few chufas from the muddy earth. He urged her forward again with a soft, "Hup, Kiku." She came to the edge of a precipice and looked down at the foaming torrent below, whick- ering uneasily. The defile was narrow but extremely steep, clogged by downed timber. It was spanned by a simple bridge of adze-flattened logs. At either end of this were the "gates," man-high cairns, each topped by a pole from which dangled a colored parchment lantern shaped like a fantastic horned skull. Large fireflies imprisoned inside were a fitful source of illu- mination. If a wayfarer wanted to use the bridge, it was obligatory to drop the customary offering into holes at the base of the cairns. Gate-crashers were subject to being eaten by the troll. 71 72 THE NONBORN KING Yosh unfastened his capelike straw mino and let it slide off so that the ominous magnificence of his red-laced uma-yoroi would be clearly visible to any nocturnal predator. In two swift movements he replaced his straw rain hat with the armored kabuto. When his hands came down from his head, they gripped the makeshift (but lethal) nodachi that had been sheathed behind his right shoulder. He held the longsword before him. He and Kiku stood as motionless as an equestrian statue. The ghostly lanterns bobbed and flickered. Tepid rain rattled on the jungle greenery and a few tree frogs peeped a spring madrigal. "Now, listen here, you!" Yosh said in ringing tones. "I'm a man of honor. I hold to the Human-Firvulag Alliance- I've paid your damn tolls all the way from the Paris Basin without a mumbling word. But now I've got only three silver bits left- If I give them to you, I'll be flat skinned when I pull into Goriah city tonight- No money for a bed, for food, fodder for my mount, anything. So I'm not paying! You'll have to take it out in trade!" The frogs fell silent, leaving only the sound of rain and the cascade's muffled drone. Suddenly a green glow sprang into being at the near end of the log bridge. Something tall and dripping and hideous bounded onto the trail, menacing the Japanese warrior and his horselike steed. The apparition was reptilian, with webbed hands and a scaly body. The head re- sembled the homed skull of the lanterns, covered in pebbly hide, and there were enormous bulging eyes that shone like green searchlights. Before the thing could pounce, Yosh opened his mouth. He summoned forth the kiai—the spirit-shout of the ancient bu- jutsu masters—a vocal vibration of such stupefying volume and horrific timbre that it seemed to strike the troll like a physical blow. The creature staggered and fell back on one knee, clapping its taloned flippers over the sides of its head. Urged on by Yosh, the chaliko mare leaped- She was a huge animal, more than nineteen hands. Her forefeet, armed with semiretractiie claws larger than a man's palm, landed only THE POSTDILUVIUM 73 centimeters from the troll's paralyzed body. The point of Yosh's great nodachi hovered above the belly of the Firvulag. "The sword is iron—not bronze or glass," Yosh said. "You speak Standard English? This is a blood-metal weapon! Nopar o beyn! One prick, and you're warm meat. I've killed twenty- two Howlers and two Tanu with this nodachi, and I'm ready to pop for my first Firvulag if you just blink ugly." The troll let its breath out in a fluttering gasp. "You—say you hold to the Alliance, Lowlife?" "1 have so far. Are you going to be reasonable about the toll?" The creature's eyes blazed. "Don't I deserve to make a living? Three times the bridge washed out this winter and I had to fix it! Two bits is cheap. I'm not even making my main- tenance expenses. And besides, the royal tax gougers take a thirty percent rake-off." The sword didn't waver. "I can't afford it. Times are hard in the North Country with the world turned upside down since the Flood. That's why I'm going to Goriah. Well? You ready to die for a lousy two bits?" The monster's radiance dimmed. "Oh, hell. Pass and be damned lo you. Look—can I shape-shift and get up? This cold mud is murder on my lumbago." Yosh nodded and lifted his sword. The reptilian form quiv- ered and seemed shot through with sparks of color that co- alesced into the softly gleaming body of a medium-sized exotic. His face was seamed, his nose long and pointed, and his beady little eyes glowered from under extraordinarily bushy red brows. He wore a conical scarlet cap with matching breeches (now soaked with mud), a ruffled shirt laced at the throat, a leather jerkin embroidered in exquisite designs of twined stylized an- imals, and hobnail jackboots with turned-up tips. "Look, we can make a deal," the troll said. "You're still more than thirty Lowlife leagues from the City of the Shining One. A long way to go on a bad night. And like you said, your wallet's short of the jingties. You'd need even more than those three bits to find decent up-putting in Goriah. But my brother-in-law Malachee runs a nice lavem just a few kloms 74 THE NONBORN KING from here where you can gel a good meal and a flop and a bag of roots for your brute for only two bits- Then in the morning I'll let you across for a cut rale: one silver piece instead of the usual two. What say?" Yosh's eyes narrowed. "No shit?" The Firvulag turned up his hands. "Humans and Little Peo- ple are allies! King Sham and Queen Ayfa made it official. Nobody'll zap you in your bed at Malachee's." "But a human staying at a Firvulag tavern—" "Not so common in the hinterlands, but getting pretty usual around this neck of the woods, especially since the Shining One sent out his call for recruits. Our people can use the business! Look, I sent two other Lowlives to Malachee's al- ready tonight. Footsloggers- You'll have company." Yosh grinned. He slid the longsword back into its scabbard on his back. A touch of his heels and a slight body movement on his pan caused the chaliko to draw away from the bedraggled exotic. "Okay. I accept the deal. How do I find this place?" "Go back along the trail until you come to that turn leading to the cliffs alongside the Strait of Redon. Hang a right at the cork-oak grove, then follow the ley until you run smack into a tumulus. That's it- Malachee's Toot. Tell 'em Kipol Green- teeth sent you." He shambled to the edge of the gorge, then looked back over his shoulder. "That battle-yell of yours is really a tradi- tional Firvulag gag, you know. But the old tricks are the best. No hard feelings." Giving a sardonic salute, Kipol Greenteeth sank into the ground. The tumulus, when Yosh found it, was the size of a large circus tent and overgrown with brush. It looked utterly deserted there in the stormy night, isolated on a wind-swept heath per- haps half a kilometer from the strait. The rain had quit for the moment. Tom bits of wrack scudded across the sky like squad- rons of witches. Along the southwestern horizon was a pearly glow that silhouetted low coastal hills. That tantalizing light behind the headland came from Goriah, Aiken Drum's new headquarters, now the de facto capital of the Many-Colored THE POSTDILUVIUM 75 Land. With a human operant ruling the old Tanu kingdom, it was going to be a whole new ball game in the Pliocene Exile. "And I can hardly wait to play!" Yosh told patient Kiku. He'd make a more impressive entrance arriving al Goriah in daylight, anyhow. Kiku would be fresh and sporting the handsome garniture that he'd made. They'd tow a gaudy stack of hawk kites right up to the city gates to catch people's at- tention. Then he'd ride into Goriah dressed to the nines in his gorgeous Muromachi Period samurai armor, with his sword at present-arms. He'd offer thai sword of. hand-wrought iron to Lord Aiken-Lugonn. And at last Yoshimitsu Watanabe would no longer be a ronin, a masterless wave-man adrift on the sea of life. He'd be a goshozamurai—an imperial warrior! Briefly, Yosh wondered what his twenty-second-century colleagues at Rocky Mountain Robotics back in good old Den- ver, Colorado, would say if they could see him in that hour of glory. Reality brought him back to Pliocene Earth. His laminated armor was heavy and leaked like a sieve. His belly flapped empty against his spine. Poor Kiku was reduced to mouthing a scraggly broom bush. Where could the damn tavern be? He rode around the hil- tock, shining his solar-battery torch into depressions and shrub- bery. All he found was a little standing stone, thin and about half a meter high, with a black ideograph painted on it. As he leaned from the saddle, studying this, he heard distant coarse laughter and music. Coming from inside the hill—? "Hello!" he shouted. The congenial sounds melted into the whistling wind. "Is anybody in there? Is this Malachee's Toot? Uh—Kippy Greenteeth sent me!" There was a grating rumble and the chaliko shied back. A rectangle outlined in dim yellow light, measuring nearly three meters high and somewhat less in width, appeared on the slope before him. The earth sank to reveal a sizable tunnel lit with flaming wall cressets. Passageways led off right and left. Al the far end was a big wooden door with two peepholes like THE NONBORN KING 76 crimson eyes, from behind which came muffled noises of ine- briate laughter, singing, clinks and smashes, and other indi- cations of rampant conviviality "You stand there all night, Lowlife—or come in7" A Firvulag adolescent, hunched and slightly spotty, but wearing a superior smile, beckoned Yosh forward As the war nor followed the exotic youth into the nghthand passage, the entrance to the hollow hill sealed behind him Keeping his panic in check (as well as Kiku, who had gone skittish in this novel environment), Yosh rode into a dry earthen chamber where all manner of bales, sealed jars, filled sacks, and odd- ments of domestic equipment were lying about The stripling slouched against a barrel, picking at an in- flamed blackhead on his nose with one grubby fingernail He indicated a space along one wall where straw covered the floor "You put animal there Tie to nng in wall Roots to eat in sacks You do feeding, grooming Chalikos no like me " He giggled and a shadow of sinister fehnity distorted his features Kiku snorted and showed the whites of her eyes Yosh dismounted As he tended to the animal's needs, he felt the gaze of the exotic seeming to bore into the backplate of his corselet, where the great curved nodachi was still strapped The boy's halting English was truculent "You leave blood- metal sword here In storeroom " Yosh didn't look at him He continued to rub down Kiku with a handful of straw "No I keep my weapons and my armor with me And in the morning, I check to be sure that none of the gear I stashed out here has been misplaced I'd really be cut up if any of my things got lost—" In a split second he whirled about, the sword chopping down in a lightning laijutsu motion to stop just short of the stunned Firvulag's forehead "—and you might be cut up, too. kid If you fuck around with my chaliko Understand7" "Maia-cAee1" the youth screeched Yosh was using the sword innocently to slice open a sack of roots when the dwarfish exotic innkeeper came bustling in "Now, now' What's this commotion, Nuckalam, my lad7 THE PosTDruJvruM 77 A new arrival7 Welcome, human fnend'" Malachee's face was plump and rosy His pointed ears protruded from a crown of silky white hair He had sleeves rolled to the elbow, very clean hands, and wore a bibbed leather apron Giving the sword a brief glance, he winked at Yosh "Of course you may keep your weapon with you. sir But sheathed at all times, please No demonstrations of martial art are allowed in Malachee's Toot " The boy Nuckalam, his face broken out in ugly white fear- patches in addition to the original spots, curled his lip with forced bravado "He say he cut me up with blood metal' Sonabitchmg Low- life'" Malachee hoisted a reproachful eyebrow at Yosh "A misunderstanding "The wamor beamed suavely at Mala- chee, ignoring the epithets that the Firvulag youth mumbled in his own tongue After his sword was cased on his back again, he took two silver slugs from his uchi-bukuro and held them out to the innkeeper "Permit me to pay in advance as a measure of good faith Your good brother-in-law recommended your establishment highly " Malachee twinkled, took the money, and led the way to the public room As the wooden door swung open, Yosh had an impression of pulsing ruddy light, tumultuous noise, a smell of roasting meat and spilled beer, and a press of exotic merrymakers who ranged in size from apple-cheeked manikins carousing un- derfoot to chandelier-grazing ogres Not one of the Firvulag wore an illusory aspect, as was the almost invariable custom of the race when having commerce with humankind Yosh was interested to see that in spite of the size variance, none of these Firvulag were physically deformed, like the mutant Howlers, nor were they meanly dressed The medium-sized individuals, had they been attired in twenty-second-century garb, would have passed unnoticed in a typical barroom crowd on Elder Earth Malachee had to shout above the din "Right this way to a nice table' You can sit with two compatriots of yours'" The decor of the public room featured polished gnarled THE NONBORN KING 78 roots, slabs of ornamental minerals, massive supporting timbers embellished with gargoyle carvings, and ingenious use of fun- goid motifs. As Yosh followed his host through the throng, Firvulag patrons drew away with wary expressions. Some scowled and muttered. For all the royal decrees, detente was obviously still a fragile thing. In the hazy glare at the other end of the room a gigantic tosspot was flailing his arms in the air like a demented windmill. He sang out a single imploring word in a surprisingly rich baritone: "Vaaf-na!" The rest of the company chorused: "Vafna! Vafna!" Yosh felt himself being pushed down onto one of the mush- room-shaped wooden stools at a wall table. Malachee yelled in his ear. "Enjoy the entertainment! I'll have your supper sent out! The two bits includes all you want to eat and drink! You'll share your sleeping room with these travelers, here! Thanks for coming!" The deep red light was brightening to orange at the far side of the room. Yosh cast an appraising glance at the two humans seated with him. One was a strapping youngster with a peach- fuzz beard, wearing shabby fringed buckskins. The shy smile with which he welcomed Yosh hinted at a childish simplicity. The other man was considerably older. His threadbare blouse and torn cape were of the type worn by gray trooper noncoms- He had a stubbled underthrust jaw, greasy hair falling over eyes slitted in hostility, and the coiled-spring demeanor of an incorrigible hard case. "Hey, guy," the young man exclaimed to Yosh. "That's a hell of a bonzo outfit! And didn't those spooks give you room] Shooo!" He lowered his voice to a conspiratorial rasp. "Is that a sword on your back? Hey—is it iron?" "Yes," said Yosh. The hard case glowered above the rim of his beer mug. "You some kinda Mongolian, slaunch-eyes?" "Japanese extraction," said Yosh equably. "North American native." "Man, are we ever glad to meet up with you!" said the THE POSTDILUVIUM 79 youth. "All's we got's between us is a bronze pig-tickler and a vitredur skinning knife. I's sure we'd get massacreed in our bed tonight, y'know? Shooo! But with your iron, we'll rate respect'. Hey—I'm Sunny Jim Quigley, and this here's Vilkas. Who you be?" "My name is Watanabe." Yosh's reply was almost drowned out by the reiterated musical howl of the big Firvulag. "Vaaaaf-naV "Vafna! Vafna! Vafna! Vafna!" chanted the other patrons. They thumped beakers, knife handles, and fists on the tables- Unseen drummers took up the beat. There was an abrupt hiss, a poof, and a flash. The tavern rocked with cheers. A pianolike instrument struck up a strong bass figure and five little Firvulag women came prancing coltishly into the area of fiery radiance. They sang teasing challenges in the exotic language, and the male tavemgoers responded in mellow har- mony. The damsels wore full skirts reminiscent of bucolic Mitteleuropa. Their headpieces, bodices, and the cuffs of their scarlet boots were lavishly adorned with gemstones that gave off hypnotic glints, filling the room with whirling tiny lights as the dancers circled to accelerating tempo. Yosh strained to see clearly in the red murk. Those women! Were they really—? The singing grew wilder. The dancers' challenge and the response of the Firvulag men blended into a rapport of almost palpable eroticism- One short musical phrase, almost shouted by the spectators, cued the women to leap one by one into the air. As they rose, their costumes vanished like smoke and it seemed that smooth-skinned nymphs with blazing hair writhed inside an inferno of hot colors. Percussion instruments clashed and rang and the mixed voices reached a hammering crescendo. And then the incandescent bodies were consumed. The sound fell away, lost in languor, melancholy as the fall of bright ashes- The light cooled- A different female form materialized, sol- itary and rarefied, her breasts and thighs scarved in flowing vapor- She sang a brief lyric of heart-stopping purity and sad- ness. When the last note died, so did the auroral light. 80 THE NONBORN KING There was silence. Then every exotic in the place leaped up to utter a final deafening "Vafna?" "My God," said Yosh. Drops of sweat trickled down the youth's brow. "Shooo!" The rough-hewn bareneck named Vilkas emptied his mug, slammed it onto the table, and blasphemed the Tanu Goddess. "Gave you a nice little buzz, didn'ey? Real tum-on—right? Well, enjoy it, suckers, and eat your hearts out. 'Cause that all you're gonna get. All any of this peg-up lot'll get." He swept his arm wide to indicate the mob of bleary-eyed, grinning habitues, slowly emerging from the dance's spell. "Damn Fir- vulag bitches! They only do it by remote control till their menfolk marry 'em. And us humans're on the wrong frequency, so we don't get none—and they know we can never force 'em because of the goddam teeth. So the spook cunts laugh at us! They know we got hardly any Lowlife women." "Teeth?" said Yosh blankly. "1 never got close enough to a Firvulag female to look one in the mouth. What's special about their teeth?" Sunny Jim looked away, abashed. Vilkas gave a bark of mirthless laughter. "Not regular teeth, slaunch-eyes." He glared meaningfully at Yosh for a moment, then whispered, "Other teeth. Down there," "Ah." The ronin smiled coolly. "1 can see how that would cramp your style. You don't look like the type to ask politely. Or get many offers of free samples." A serving lad materialized at Yosh's elbow and began to unload a tray. There was a platter of big broiled ribs coaled with pungent sauce, a bowl of something smelling like oyster stew, a loaf of purple-tinted bread, and an enormous tankard of beer. As a final touch the waiter set down a saucer filled with tiny mushrooms, the caps scarlet with white flecks. Yosh reached out- "What's this? The appetizer?" A hairy hand clamped his wrist- "Go easy on those hoobies, slaunch-eyes- Firvulag get high on 'em, but they'll send a human to hell faster 'n' methyl alcohol." Vilkas released his grip with insolent slowness. "Unless cheap fungo trips are your style." He scowled at the waiter. "More beer, dammit!" THE POSTD[LLIV[UM 81 Sunny Jim ventured a conciliatory smile. "Aw, Vilkas. Hey' Why'n'cha stash that crap?" His eyes appealed to Yosh. "Vilkas don't mean nothin'. He's just a li'l squiffed from too much spook beer. Past month's been mighty rough on him. He was in Burask when the Howlers tore the town to pieces, and before that—" "Shut up, Jim," said Vilkas. His beer arrived and he downed a liter without pausing for breath. Yosh regarded Vilkas without passion. "Kampai!" he toasted, taking a swallow of the brew- "Ah, Burask. I missed the fes- tivities, worse luck. But a week or so afterward I did meet up with a party of Tanu fleeing the city." He began to spoon up the oyster slew. It was fit for the Galactic Gourmet. Jim's eyes bugged. "Holy blue shit, guy! What happened?" "Theiroffensive mind-powers were weak. I decapitated two. The others fled. Unfortunately, the golden tores of the van- quished were damaged by my sword. But I did acquire a fine chaliko for my efforts." "Lucky bastard," muttered Vilkas through the suds. "Lucky slaunch-eyed friggerty bastard. You wanna know what my luck's been?" Jim interrupted what was evidently a familiar tirade. "And now you're on your way to Goriah, are you?" At Yosh's nod, he exclaimed, "Hey! So are we! When the word come that this human who wants to be king was passin' out gold collars— why, I like to busied my butt hittin' the trail outa the home swamp! And ol' Vilkas ... well, he didn't need that much per- suadin' to come along after Burask." "And Finiah before that!" shouted the man who wore the blouse of a gray trooper. "I escaped the soddin' Lowlives after they barenecked me, but the Tanu at Burask treated me like a traitor! Never have any luck. Not here—not back 'n the Milieu. Lithuanians just born stone losers. Wouldn' even give us our own planet! Hell—even fuckin' Albanians got a planet, but not us. Y'know what the highass Concilium toid us Lithuani- ans? 'Go colonize a Cosmop world!' Said we di'n have nuff ethnic dynamism, fchrissake. So we could go share a planet with a lot of lousy Letts and Costa Ricans and Sikkimese'" He THE NONBORN KING 82 choked down the last of his beer and slumped forward, head on the stained tableboards. "Bloody Yanks got twelve planets. Bloody Japs got nine. But nothin' for the poor Lithuanians." He began to sob. "Aw, Vilkas," said Sunny Jim. "Hey—come on." Yosh considered the precious pair. They weren't much to look at, but even a couple of scruffy ashigaru would give him greater face than if he arrived at Goriah unattended. He had enough extra gear to fix them up. The boy could manage the string of hawk kites while the reprobate soldier bore the stan- dard and the mesh bag with the Tanu heads. 'The track between here and Goriah is still somewhat haz- ardous," Yosh said. "You can come along with me tomorrow. Jim, if you like- Vilkas, too. All I'd ask is that you carry a few of my things." "Hey—that's damn nice of you, guy!" Sunny Jim was ju- bilant. "No spook gonna mess with us if we stick close to you and that iron sword' Isn't that a great idea, Vilkas?" The greasy head lifted. "Super." The bloodshot gaze fixed on Yosh had become horribly sober. "What did you say your name was, slaunch-eyes?" Yosh put down the rib he had been chewing and smiled, as if at a peevish child. "You can call me Yoshi-sama." he said. 10 THE RECEPTION PARTY WAITED ON THE GORIAH QUAY AS THE ship from Rocilan was slowly warped into its slip. All the sable banners emblazoned with Lord Aiken-Lu- gonn's impudent golden finger hung sodden in the thin rain. The aristocratic riders on their elaborately caparisoned mounts were quite drenched; but Mercy had warned Aiken against tampering with the elements today, even in the interests of hospitality. Screening off the rain—or indeed any extraordi- nary manifestation of metapsychic prowess—would be a sole- cism in Tanu eyes, marking the kingly aspirant as deficient in humility. The gray-tore docking crew wrestled an ornamental gang- way into position, in a fine show of pageantry, Aiken's new company of gold foot soldiers took up honor-guard formation. their gleaming brass-and-black-glass half-armor looking all the more resplendent for the sparkling drops of water beading it. Flunkies brought a mounting stool to the foot of the ramp. Alberonn Mindeater himself led forward four white chalikos for the disembarking guests. On board the ship, a single hom note sounded. Several Tanu ladies in Aiken's train raised their glass carnices and responded with a fanfare. Eadnar, widow of the late Lord Gradlonn of Rocilan, began to descend the gangplank, fol- lowed by her venerable mother-in-law Lady Moma-Ia, her 83 84 THE NONBORN KING sister Tirone Heartsinger, and Tirone's husband Bleyn the Champion Alken doffed his golden hat with its dripping black plume, levitated discreetly until he stood full upright on his saddle, and threw wide his arms in a gesture of welcome "Slonshai'" cned the mind and voice of the diminutive usurper of Gonah, and the power of his utterance made the rocky harbor walls reverberate "Slonshai'" he said again, reaching out to join Mercy's greeting with his own as the visitors mounted the waiting chalikos And "Slonshai'" he roared for the third time, making the ship's sails billow and the gulls nse up from all the piers and pilings like a confetti cloud of gray and pink and white From the throats and minds of those assembled on the quay came the haunting strains of the Tanu Song, its melody so strangely familiar to the exiles of the twenty-second century Li gan nol po'kone niesi, 'Kone o lan li pred near, U taynel compn la neyn, N1 blepan algar dedone Shompn pone. a gabnnel, Shal u car metan presi, Nar metan u bor taynel o pogekone, Car metan sed gone mon There is a land that shines through life and time, A comely land through the length of the world's age, And many-colored blossoms fall on it, From the old trees where the birds are singing Every color glows there, delight is commonplace, Music abounds on the Silver Plain, On the Gentle-Voiced Plain of the Many-Colored Land, On the White Silver Plain to the south There is no weeping, no treachery, no gnef, There is no sickness, no weakness, no death There are riches, treasures of many colors, THE POST-DILUVIUM 85 Sweet music to hear. the best of wine to dnnk Golden chanots contend on the P!am of Sports, Many-colored steeds run in days of lasting weather Neither death nor the ebbing of the tide Will come to those of the Many-Colored Land The honored guests from Rocilan Joined in the singing, but at the last verse, bereaved Alberonn and Eadnar wept openly, and old Lady Moma's seamed visage hardened into a mask of gnef, and Mercy's mind-voice lost its music and keened instead the Celtic lament, Ochone, ochone' They all fell silent The seabirds drifted back to their resting places The harbor waters were dead calm. a rain-pocked leaden sheet Alken said, "Welcome, Most Exalted Ones of Rocilan " His mind declaimed The laughter and the joy will come again— and the love and the sport and the many-colored treasures of the heart The Shining One promises it' Lady Moma-Ia peered at him sharply "You are shorter of stature in person than your farseen image hints, Battlemaster And much younger " "I'll be twenty-two years old on the day before the Grand Loving. Farseemg Lady," said the rogue "On my home world, Dalnada, I'd already be four years into my majority And old enough for elected office if my fellow-citizens hadn't banished me as a menace to the public welfare'" Morna's subvocalization was still mentally audible Under- standable "As for my size," he added, smu-king, "I was quite big enough for Mayvar Kingmaker, your late guild-sister " She bridled dangerously at the innuendo, but he swept on "And if the Flood hadn't interrupted my duel with Nodonn, I'd have cut him down to size, too " "So you say," the lady retorted "Lofty talk seems to be a commodity in iong supply about Gonah this time of the year That, and the flouting of sacred tradition " Her glance fell on her widowed daughter-in-law, Eadnar, communing wordlessly with Alberonn, who still held the bndle of her 86 THE NONBORN KING chahko "It is your shameless example, Battlemasler, pre- suming to affiance yourself to Mercy-Rosmar in defiance of our mourning customs, that has led Eadnar lo profane my late son's memory " Alken shifted elocutional gears abruptly, abolishing any hint of saucy bravado and speaking to the older woman on the intimate telepathic mode with all of the earnest charm he could conjure Farseeing Lady Moma-Ia, you're a First Comer—a pillar of your guild, a person of great wisdom as well as metapsychic strength You're aware of the danger we face, with so many of the battle-company having perished in the Flood The Foe is poised to take advantage of any show of weakness now that they outnumber us, and they will not scruple to go against tradition if it will hasten our downfall' Consider the so-called Howler attack that devastated Burask, in which the invaders made unprecedented use of bows and arrows And the skir- mishes in the alpine foothills around Bardelask where ogres and imps have been seen mounted on chalikos and hippanons, m contravention of their most ancient custom' The Foe are planning to pick off, one by one, those cities that have lost their strong lords and fighting ladies Even Ro- cilan, on the Atlantic coast and a protectorate of Gonah, is vulnerable to the Fuvulag of the Grotto Wilderness The lovely Eadnar is a creative genius in textiles and the confectionery arts—but she is hardly the person to undertake the defense of your city against a well-armed force of mounted monsters' This is why, at my insistence, Alberonn Mmdeater has pressed his suit in spite of your mourning customs You know he's emi- nently qualified Why—it's to Rocilan's honor that it be gov- erned by a High Tabler, and a fighting specialist, to boot' Add to this the fact that Alberonn saved Eadnar's life, and your own, m the Flood "We owe the Lord Mmdeater more than we can repay," Morna said aloud, stiff-faced "We welcome him with humility and Joy Nevertheless—" Aha I see what you take little (rouble to hide' It's Me you really object to My meddling in Rocitan affairs My THE POST-DILUVIUM 87 trampling your tradition My taking of Gonah and aspiring to be king' You are a human And a rascal' I know But if you'll just use your great ultrasenses to look past my sawed-off body and my humanity and my youth and my bragging, naughty ways you'd see that I'm the very one this kingdom needs now to lead it I'm the one who can rebuild at the same time that I send the Foe packing' Who believes it9 Bleyn and Alberonn do, and follow me now as they did in the last Grand Combat Mercy-Rosmar, the President of the Creator Guild, has agreed to be my wife And here's the Second Redactor, Lord Culluket, come to Go- nah just this past month to throw in his lot with the Shining One Four of the five eligible High Table survivors accept me at my word' Won't you9 "it's true what they say aboul your sly mind and forked tongue " But the old woman's face had softened into a wintry smile "One moment you're a disingenuous mountebank, and the next—" "Not all that impossible a candidate for High King'" He giggled, clapped his broad-bnmmed golden hat back onto his head, and squinted at the wet plumes that now dnpped in front of his eyes 'At home on dear, soggy Dalnada, we'd call this a fine soft morning Whai say. lady dear, that we take a jaunt of inspection9 Just a wee detour on our way to the Castle of Glass9 I'd like you and the other Exalted Ones of Rocilan to see all the great things I've done, refurbishing the Grove of May for this year's Loving You'll be amazed'" "Oh, very well," said Morna The other guests and the members of the welcoming party, who had been mingling and chatting gravely, now felt silent and expectant Mercy, sitting her white chahko sidesaddle. took up Alken's suggestion as though n were a spur-of-the-moment thing and not something the two of them had planned from the start Psychocreative force streamed from her, and her wild opalescent glance made even the lovely sisters of Rocilan look almost wan in comparison "Let's fly'" Mercy exclaimed "It's a grand day for d 88 THE NONBORN KING Faery Rade'" She threw back the hood of her velvet Kinsale cloak, so that her fine auburn hair darkened and coiled in ringlets from the rain "Away with all you soldiers and at- tending lords and ladies—we'll not be needing your company until we return to Gonah You dear guests, follow me' Fly away' Fly away'" She mounted aloft into the downpour, leaving Alken mo- mentarily open-mouthed This detail of flying had definitely not been planned, and of the others, only Culluket was capable of self-levitation Alken would have to carry the four Rocilan guests and Alberonn himself, violating the humility precept No stigma attached to the pregnant Mercy, who by Tanu custom was permitted any caprice, but she'd put d right one across him "What the hell," Alken said, shrugging "Up. up and away' I'll be breaking a whole raft more of your holy fewkm' rules to save you from the Firvulag, so we might as well wipe the slate of this piece of silliness right now " He waggled both hands The rain slopped falling on the Tanu aristocrats and the trickster, deflected by his psycho- kmetic power "If we were on Dalnada," he said, "we could nde in nice comfy aircraft instead of on these overgrown turnip eaters But hang tight' I'm working on that little prob- lem, too'" Effortlessly, he drew them all along with him, the chalikos seeming to canter through the moisture-laden clouds They caught up quickly with Mercy, who only laughed, and soared eastward over a low range of heavily wooded hills Beyond them the broad River Laar made a northerly bend before curving down to the Tainted Swamp and its outlet to the Atlantic A well-graded roadway from Gonah paralleled the nver at this point, and it was alive with traffic Carts drawn by hellads and chaliko caravans brought loads of dressed stone, carved tim- bers. rolls of sod, and bailed-and-burlapped ornamental plant stock into a raw clearing adjacent to the Laar The eight flying nders swooped low, decelerated to a walking pace, and drifted JUS[ above the crowns of big magnolia and black-gum trees Workers were everywhere down below Humans, both bare THE POSTDILUVIUM 89 neck and gray tore, supervised gangs of diligent, child-sized ramapithecme apes who dug and raked, cleared and planted, fetched and carried This area along the river is all new since Tirone and 1 were married." Bleyn remarked 'What's it going to be, Alken^' A fancy campground for the Firvulag guests Surprise'" Bleyn's jaw dropped He looked like a thunderstruck Sieg- fried Tana s Teeth' You can't invite them''"'' "it goes against all precedent'" Moma said "Firvulag would never— "They've already accepted," the Shining One interrupted her blithely "Only the biggies, of course King Sham and Queen Ayfa and their close henchfolks We kept the guest list modest Two or three hundred With luck they'll bring pres- ents Tirone Heartsmger protested, "But the Little People always have their own Grand Loving celebration Tanu and Firvulag join in the Combat as is proper for Foes But never in the Loving'" Alken said, "The common ruck of Firvulag can do as they please, dear lass But 1 have special reasons of state for getting the royals to attend our bash It'll be very educational for em to see how the Tanu and torced humanity have rallied round Me'" "If we can be sure that the city-lords will ' Atberonn growled, his mind troubled and showing it clearly Alken now brought the party wafting down They rode along a broad tanbarked way that wound through the riverside grove Mercy said, 'My Lord Lugonn and 1 have devoted a lot of thought to this year's Maying We've been planning all winter long to show the people of the Many Colored Land a Loving such as they've never seen before Her mind opened to them, showing the work she had done on Elder Earth, where she had directed historical pageants recreating the her itage of medieval Europe for sentimental colonials The tncks of Mercy's theatrical trade would lend a fresh and erotic luster to what had been, in Tanu tradition, a charming but rather 90 THE NONBORN KING naive fertility festival Thanks to Alken, that poiymathic jack of all-trades, and to her own expertise as President of the Creators, she had been able to translate her most fantaslic designs into reality No matter that it meant looting Gonah of resources and lying up the city's labor force for most of the winter and spring A spectacle had been announced, and would be duly produced "We'll keep all the good old aspects of the Grand Loving," Mere) said, projecting reassurance at Lady Moma "The pledging of hearts and the Maypole Dance and the marrying and the lovemakmg on the dew-starred grass of May But there'll be wonderful new delights as well " The visions rolled forth from her mind in a flamboyant cascade The old trystmg grounds will be gloriously redecorated—finer than our dear people ever dreamt of There 11 be fresh entertainments as well as the familiar ones—new songs and dances and comical skits and dramas of romance, and bright masquerade costumes for everyone in our innovation of the Night of Secret Love And the food—' You know how I adore creating good things to eat Wait until you taste our new picnic lunches and moonlight feasts, and the grand aphrodisiac wedding banquet to climax the nuptial celebration' Even the visiting Firvulag will find our hospitality impossible to resist You know what perfume fetishists they are well, we've transplanted nearly sixty cartloads of orchids and night jasmine and scented wa- terlilies for the riverside lagoons The Little People should be almost embalmed in fine fragrance'" "And when they finish exercising their noses," Alken said, 'they can try out other parts of their anatomy Back against the slope we've built a whole rabbit warren of new mossy grottos Just the kind of nooky-nooks the Wee Folk fancy for their spring jollification " "With an added feature " Culluket the Interrogator smiled coldly within the shadow of his hooded burgundy cloak "Ob- serve the fine line of sight through that northwestern notch between here and the high turrets of the Castle of Glass back in Gonah Do you perceive it. Lady Morna7" "Very clever," said the farsensmg dame "No rock forma- THE POSTDILUVIUM 91 lions to block your surveillance of the Foe I'm glad to see some evidence of prudence amid this frantic ostentation " Alken grinned indomitably in the face of her disapproval "It's all for prudence's sweet sake. Lady Moma, don't you see9" "Perhaps I do," she admitted grudgingly "Let's see how the main amphitheatre is shaping up'" Mercy suggested And she was off and galloping The company followed the lanbarked avenue inland An- cient plane trees with mottled trunks, some more than four meters in diameter, stood sentinel on either side of the arrow- straight traditional Tanu ley that extended off into the mist On either side of the allee ramas worked on flowerbeds, or pruned shrubs, or scraped moss off the benches of the soon-to-be- refurbished bowers More little apes clambered over the roofs of the many vine-hung pergolas, removing wasp nests, killing bird-hunting spiders, and driving off the colonies of bats that had made free with the Grove of May since last year's Grand Loving They rode on more slowly, and finally the focal point of the pleasance loomed ahead "A new maypole'" exclaimed Eadnar delightedly "And so tall'" She went dashing off to examine it. followed after a moment's hesitation toy her laugh- ing sister. Tirone They ignored the rain that pelted them as they left the shelter of Aucen's PK bubble Casually, he ex- panded the mental force-field's radius to nearly half a kilo- meter "Tana's mercy'" cned Lady Moma in spite of herself "You surpass the powers of Kuhal and Fian of the Host. when they used to roof over the sports arena in Munah'" "You don't say7" chirped Alken He cocked his head at distant Eadnar, who had now stopped, together with Tirone, to accept a bouquet of daffodils from one of the silver-tore landscape architects "Nice to see the little widow acting more cheery Perhaps she's looking forward to May " He gave Alberonn Mindealer a playful mental jab, to which die hybrid responded with decently veiled emotions Moma said, "My daughter-in-law is young—scarcely sev- THE NONBORN KING 92 enty-lhree—and bears up under our tragic loss more readily than I " Morna studied a goldfinch with a bright red face that sat on a budding bush, singing sweetly "But life must go on " "Especially in spring," said Alken Mercy, nding sedately at his side, had her thoughts enclosed in bright opacity A secret smile turned up the comers of her mouth They rode into an open area that had been a mere meadow before Mercy's imagination got to work on it Now it was transformed into a smardgdine bowl, a gently sloping amphi theatre that swept down to a flat dancing ground Flocks of sheep cropped the lawn Beyond was a turfed earthwork stage framed in evergreens, and in back of this. Jutting from a trun- cated knoll, rose the towenng maypole The tip of the bare wooden spar was lost in low-hanging mmbostratus Some 30 meters to the left of the pole waited a heavy-duty cart with a crew of grays "Now for my biggest surprise'" said Alken He wmked at Mercy "I had this up my sleeve, etiquette or no etiquette'" Eadnar and Tirone now rejoined the party "It's a splendid maypole." said Tirone "1 wonder you could find a slender tree of such imposing height " "We couldn't," Alken admitted laconically "It's an artifact Reinforced But that's just for starters. Creative Sister Here comes the real scouseroo'" He called out in farspeech You guys all set1' The teamsters chorused Ready boss' The jester made a mesmeric pass in the air Tarpaulins whipped from the cart, revealing squat wooden crates Another pass, and lids flew off, to pile into a clattering heap Alken frowned, pushed back his hat, unbuttoned the cuffs of his golden suit, and shoved up his sleeves "Stand back'" he bellowed Every smew tensed as he gath- ered his psychokinesis "Shazoom'" From the open boxes flew hundreds of thin metallic sheets that fluttered in the misty air like golden leaves A directorial gesture from Alken made them nse and fall. dancing in a THE POSTDILUVIUM 93 butterfly swarm The gold foil formed a stream, split, twined, braided, and writhed Like glittering fluid the sheets circled the pole, then those nearest the base spun faster, seeming to melt onto the wood More swiftly than the eye could follow, the rest of the gold blended into place, gilding the tall spar from butt to tip in a seamless sheath of yellow brilliance The psychocreative welding job having been accomplished, the maypole stood steaming in the rain while the workmen cheered "There has never been such a splendid maypole." breathed Eadnar "You know its symbolism, do you not. Shining One^" Alken nodded solemnly "Oh, yes That's why I worked so hard It's got to be extra glonous if it's to represent Mine " "And how much of Gonah's treasury was expended in this quest for verisimilitude'7" inquired Lady Moma archly Alken was polite "Not so much that we won't replace it twenty times over with what I'm going to take away from the Firvuiag And not by plunder, either' Fair and square— almost—provided I can con Sham and Ayfa into agreeing to my modification of the Grand Combat come next October " "Another human novelty^" Moma was almost resigned "I'mjust loaded with 'em," Alken told her warmly "You'll get the complete scoop at the Loving " Mercy said, "This is why the festival this year must be the most magnificent in all the history of the Tanu exile on Earth— to lift the spirits of our people and to impress the Firvulag To force them aft to take our new regime senously We'll have three days of nonstop celebration " "And at the grand finale," said Culluket the Interrogator. "all of the guests—Tanu and Firvulag and human—will wit- ness the coronation of Lord Alken-Lugonn and Lady Mercy- Rosmar as King and Queen of the Many-Colored Land " The minds of the hybnds, their ladies, and the dowager of Rocilan were frozen in astonishment Nobody noticed that the PK shelter had evaporated with Alken's pole-gilding ploy and the rain was softly falling on them once again "Too soon'" cned Bleyn "Eventually, yes But the full- blooded Tanu aren't ready to accept a human king, Alken' It 94 THE NONBORN KING was more than sixty years before Alberonn and I were admitted to the High Table—and Kathne! only last year—because of our human genes " "The High Table admitted Gomno!," Alken said "He was human " "He forced acceptance—and was hated for it." Momd snapped "Mercy's human," Alken said "Is she7" the interrogator murmured, smiling "My late brother, the Battlemaster, thought not " This was news to Alken On the intimate mode he bespoke her Say what^ Telepathic mirth Nodonn had GregDonnei do my geneti- cassay Olddear claimed I more Tanugenes lhan human PoorGreggy mad ofcourse Later I winkle this LadyWildfire' Aloud Mercy said, "There are only twenty-five hundred or so pure-blooded Tanu left alive—and most of those are minor powers Nearly twice as many hybrids survived because of their greater physical endurance My Lord and I have estimated that he will have a clear advantage in petty-nobility acclama- tion " "Celadeyr of Afaliah and his traditionalists might fight rather than acquiesce," said Lady Moma gnmiy "And I can well understand their feeling Celo and I are both First Comers— and you. Young Baltlemaster, flout the very religious principles that drove us to this exile in the first place'" Tirone, who had secretly been a member of the Peace Fac- tion, now interjected a thought that was soft but clear That old battle-religion must pass away now dearest Kinsmother Brede herself said it And many of us see Lord Alken-Lugonn as the agent of this change Moma's consternation flared "You It see what battle means. my girl, if this human youth tries to seize the throne without High Table consensus'" Eadnar's objections were practical "Even if you count a majority of the High Table electors on your side. Shining One, the obduracy of Celadeyr may provoke a fatal division in our THE POSTDILUVIUM 95 cities' chivalry The Firvulag would take advantage of any infighting—and perhaps finish what the Flood began " Bleyn said, "All we ask, Atken, is that you act prudently' Don't declare yourself until you're sure that the city-lords will follow you and not Celo If you seize the crown and the dis- sidents ignore your proclamations and commands, you'll look tike a fool " Morna said, "The entire Tanu power structure is based on unanimous loyalty to the sovereign He's not a mere ruler, elected in the way the Little People choose their vulgar dem ocratic monarchs Our king is a father to us all'" Alken was still grinning, but contempt burned behind his black eyes Softly he said, "There are more than eighty thou sand Firvulag waiting to pounce on our asses, friends Do you want a king and battlemaster7 Or would you prefer a daddy to tuck you in while the demons howl outside the window7 Some- one to wipe your little twats when your bowels gush the fear of death7" "We want you," the Interrogator stated His probing ultra- sense flicked over the others like an icy beacon "Only you have the fullness of aggressive power and the ability to de- velop the metapsychic concert that we must have to defeat our enemies " He paused "And the Firvuldg are not the only Foe " The scathing mental face of the trickster underwent a light- ning transformation Now his loyalty, his willingness to defend them if they would only accept and love him shone incontro- vertible For an instant he let them glimpse his vast metapsychic strength before veiling it with an acid drape of self-mockery And then he conjured up memories for them to ponder, and wooed them with that lilting menial eloquence that so rarely earned over into his spoken words Away with your doubts and fears, my friends' Remember the Kingmaker s prophecy about me She never lost confi- dence in the man of her choice Remember how I killed Delbaeth the Shape of Fire, and the Firvulag Battlemaster Pallol One-Eye' And if you hesitate because I conquered them by trickery, then recall how 1 triumphed on the field of the 96 THE NONBORN KING Grand Combal, and how the great captains and the petty lords flocked to my impudent banner Tagan Lord of Swords hailed me' And Bunone Warteacher, greatest of the fighting tacti- cians' And you, Alberonn—and you, Bleyn' Remember how the commons and nobles alike loved me for my audacity and daring^ Remember the mysterious way that the Spear of Lugonn came to my hands7 (And even though that sacred Spear is lost for the moment, I know where it must be and I'll have it back—never fear') Remember how my right to challenge Nodonn was ac knowledged by the whole battle-company7 And by Brede' 1 would have won the Duel of Battlemasters if Tana hadn't had her own ideas about sweeping the chessboard clean and setting up a new game You still hesitate7 Have you no religion, then7 Consider, my fnends Alken Drum is alive and well, lord of the Castle of Glass and ruler of Gonah by manifest usurpation, suzerain over Rocilan and Sasaran and Amalizan and sundry other set tiements about Bordeaux and Armonca' And where is the one who once held all that7 Drowned (Mercy could not help the mind-cry, and Alken heard No- donn' My Nodonn') Oh, fnends You know the Tanu must have a king—and if it's not me, then who7 Do you want Celadeyr of Afaliah7 He says he doesn't aspire to the throne, and I believe him My sources have told me that the poor old boy is convinced that the Flood presages the end of the Many-Colored Land' He's training his little army for something called the Nightfall War—and as I understand it, that's a kind of Rdgnarok or Armageddon that'll nng down the curtain on both the Tanu and Firvulag And it's balderdash' Sharn and Ayfa aren't anticipating any apocalypse They re out to win and stomp our necks' (And they had to respond It's true No fatalism in the Little People They're scuttling the traditions that held them back The Flood was a Goddessgift to them ) Listen to me' If" we stand on our hind legs and fight them, we must have a leader You High Tablers know that I'm stronger THE POSTDILUVIDM 97 than you Then who f Mmanonn the Heretic7 I understand he was a real npper when he was Battlemasler But he's d pacifist now—no more suitable to defend you trom the Firvulag than Dionket the Healer' The only other High Tablers eligible are Kdtlmel the Darkeyed and Aluteyn Craftsmaster—if you want to forgive her treason in marrying the Lord of the Howlers, and his deposition by Mercy (And once again they had to say No None of those could lead us against the Firvulag ) Alken Drum sat his big black chaliko A single drop of water clung comically to the tip of his long well-shaped nose The mouth that could tense in an instant to a malignant slot now smiled as he mind-embraced them ail, letting his power shine forth Aloud, Alken said, "You see how things stand In the king sweepstakes, I'm the only candidate who hasn't been scratched Those who object to a human ruler on principle may kick and scream and cuss—but in the end, they'll be forced to accept me Hell—even old Celo might come to his senses if he thinks we have a real chance to lick the Foe " Culluket said, "My redactive knowledge of the Lord of Afaliah affirms the last comment of the Shining One Celadeyr is stubborn, and he has been incredibly stupid to expel his human technicians But he is by no means insane Nor suici ddl " But Bleyn was still inclined to cavil "The trouble is, the reactionaries just don't know you as well as we do. Alken That's why they're balking Why—eight cities have yet to reply to your Grand Loving invitation, and Celo's turned you down flat If you announce a May coronation you're laying yourself open to a fiasco ' "Somehow," Alberonn said, we must force the hand of the fence straddlers and win as many of the dichdrds as possible " Alken's brow screwed and his visage glowed with intense cogitation Then his eyes began to dance and he turned to his affianced bnde "Merce, lovie. d'you remember when we were noodlmg all this, and you told me some of the canny things the old English monarchs did to keep their vacillating vassals 98 THE NONBORN KING m hand9 Henry VIII and Good Queen Bess especially How they traveled around the realm, stopping at one city after an- other, putting the arm on the wishy-washy and exerting the royal charm and even rattling a sword or two^" Mercy saw Alken's drift at once "Royal progresses, they were called A grand political tool'" And again there came to her that strange feeling of dqa vu, the tantalizing certainty that she had seen Alken's crafty and triumphant face before Italy' The portrait in the palace in Firenze "I'll do my royal progress before the coronation—not after," he was saying "I'll visit each city in turn and explain just how things are in this Many-Colored Land, using my own brand of friendly persuasion and sweet reason And a few surprises I've been cooking up'" "And who could deny you to your face, my devious Shmmg One?" A current passed between Alken and Mercy Was the old wariness weakening against her better judgment9 But he was a rare one' "This maneuver could work." Culluket said "It has just the nght mix of humble pie and regal condescension and blatant gall You go to the cities First, as an aspirant should, and then the city-lords may come confidently to you in recognition of your power " Aiberonn nodded to the Interrogator "And we three to pro- vide High Table prestige as we accompany Alken The Lady Creator's absence will be understandable " "I like it," said Bleyn tersely "We have enough Tanu and human gold recruits now in Gonah to mount a respectable show of strength " Alken refastened his cuffs and straightened his hat With an offhand PK chicane, he banished the moisture from all their garments and recreated the metapsychic umbrella "We'll sneak up the Garonne Valley very quietly, and ooze over into Spam And the first place we hit is Afaliah'" Lady Moma was speechless Eadnar and Tirone radiated strong anxiety "There's not that much danger." Alken reassured them "Celo's gang of mind-benders are strictly second-rate, and 1 THE POSTDILUVIUM 99 can easily put the clamp on the old gaffer himself We'll put a fine face on it Pretend that we don't know how he's been undermining me I mean—he's never come nght out with any blatant provocation Even his refusal of the Loving in vitation was medium-polite, and I can say we never received his letter " Culluket said, "If Celo cracks, the others should fail into your lap like npe oranges " "Ready for juicmg," the jester agreed "Well, how about it7 What say we get back to Gonah and start polishing up the fancy armor'" He launched them and their animals into the air, still fending off the rain, saying to Mercy, "I hope old Peliei and his sages are right about the rainy season being almost over I'm still a little green at levitating big groups And there aren't any com- puterized flight vectors to help a guy fly through soupy moun- tain passes in this Pliocene Exile " Mercy laughed gaily "You'll manage somehow, my tricksy one " You nonbom kinglmg from far Dalnada six million years hence' And had some fine Italian genes migrated to stern Scot- land9 And had they gone on, frozen in vitro, to burgeon again in an obstetnc lab on a Milieu planet, engendering this strange young man who was determined to make her his queen'5 Whose portrait had worn Alken's face'' The train of nders sped through the sky toward Gonah, where glass turrets shone against a widening patch of blue The obsessive question gnawed at Mercy and spilled over into an madvertently projected thought Alken's mind was elsewhere, but the Interrogator responded with flawless courtesy, on her intimate mode May I assist your recollection with my special talent Lady Creator9 If you would Redactive Brother This maddening image' If you could sort out my memones and let me put a label to it A matter of utmost simplicity for a redactive specialist Oh' 100 THE NONBORN KING I'm glad the revelation amuses you Lady I must agree that the resemblance is remarkable What a dangerous-looking fel low that Florentine politician seems to be' Some day you must tell me all about him 11 THE FARSEEING RAVEN RANGED ABOVE THE MAGHREB SHORE The rains had brought grass and drifts of pink and yellow flowers to the slopes, and all the gullies were turned into slim oases that seemed to point in astonishment toward the new blue sea The bird rejoiced.m the many-colored landscape Natural beauty, more than anything else, helped her to keep the terrors at bay Aloft in spring sunlight, climbing the wind above this world she had helped to create, there was sanity and forget- ful ness She detected sentient life—and gold Her mind engendered a psychokinetic gale and she sped eastward The initial flare of life-aura fell below her farsensing threshold, but the predatory bird managed to track it into a wooded ravine with steep sides The scent of precious metal, living and dead, excited her to the point of madness She accelerated her metapsychic wind until black feathers npped from her pinions and she shrieked with pain and elation And then she arrived, calmed the air, and landed on an outcropping of rock near a trickling spring There in a tittle clearing, one Tanu castaway knelt beside another's body The raven studied them, feeling that she knew this pair They were identical twins This was clear in spite of the fearful head wounds that disfigured the corpse The weeping 101 THE NONBORN KING 102 survivor was still beautiful, with the classic features of the Host of Nontusvei. He had evidently just returned from hunting, for the body of a fawn gazelle and a crude spear fashioned from a glass dagger tied to a sapling lay on the ground beside him- He wore rose-gold rags, and the dead twin was similarly dressed in remnants of Psychokinetic Guild finery. It seemed that the dead man had been unwilling to wait for his brother to return with food- A clump of deadly pink nar- cissus growing beside the spring had been partially grubbed up, and one half-eaten bulb lay on the ground- The gigantic raven lifted her shoulders. Her harsh call— pruuk pruuk—caused the mourner to look up, trembling and wide-eyed. With great interest, the raven perceived that this twin was literally half-wined. He and his brother had evidently shared a mental symbiosis of the utmost intimacy; they must have been capable of mighty feats before the Rood had smashed them and marooned them here in North Africa. But with the death of his brother, the living twin was reduced to a state of latency even lower than that of a "normal" human being. The enormous bird glided down to stand near the head of the corpse. The bereaved Tanu stared mutely at the bird, his green eyes dim with tears and his mouth a taut square of an- guish. Only when the raven's beak poised above the dead man's throat did the other cry out: "Fian!" She did know them, these rose-gold twins! A paroxysm of anger dissolved the bird body, and a slender human woman wearing blue glass armor stood there. She wore no helmet and her hair was a buoyant platinum cloud. Her eyes flashed with the wrath of Hecate. Kuhal Earthshaker recognized her, too. He remembered the vast dark room inside the Coercer Guild stronghold, the massed force of Nontusvel's Host awaiting the human assault on the tore factory, the Lowlife saboteurs armed with iron. They had been led by this small awful woman. Kuhai remembered psy- chocreative detonations, falling masonry, mental and physical strife—and the glory of the Host victorious amid the smoke and blood, in spite of this female monster's power. This was THE POSTDILUVIUM 103 Felice, who had slain his sister Epone and vowed lo destroy the entire Tanu race—only to fail defeated in Imidol's ambush and then submit to Cullukel's torture. Felice laughed. She held his puny consciousness as if in a pair of tweezers and poked among the wreckage. Kuhal and Fian! My Beloved's brothers. What a funny kind of mind ... you were the left hemisphere and he was the right. A syzygy, an aion couple' Kuhat Earthshaker the Second Lord Psychokinetic and Fian Skybreaker his better half! Her mad giggling coarsened into grating croaks. The great raven again flapped black wings and Kuhal cringed away, both hands gripping his golden tore. Felice's mind-voice turned petulant: But where is the Beloved where is he? 1 call and call and only the faraway devils and the nonbom Shining One answer. They try to trick me' 1 reject them. He is the only one I love and want! Where is he who willed my destruction and instead raised me to operant life? Kuhal whimpered aloud. His broken identity teetered on the edge of dissolution. Cull is gone! And Imidol is gone and Mayvar and the King and the Queen and the glorious Battlemaster' They are all gone. As dearFian my Self is gone and i/-am alone and powerless. You have conquered avenging DeathBird. The raven's glittering eye seemed to wink. Once again her cruel beak approached dead Fian's throat. The knobbed catch of his golden collar rotated, impelled by Felice's PK, and the semicirelets opened. The bird jerked the gold free- Now the living twin groveled on the ground. His arms were wrapped protectively about his own neck. Derision colored the raven's thought: Oh ... keep your tore for a while. Earthshaker. She leapt into the air, carrying the gold, and set off for the Spanish mainland. Kuhal uttered a single mind-cry, so pro- found in its desolation that it rang from one end of the New Sea to the other. Then he collapsed unmoving. 104 THE NONBORN KINO Felice crossed the Mediterranean and flew tirelessly into the Betic Range, up the valley where the swollen Prolo-Andarax raged through jungles on the flank of Mount Mulhacen. Even in the time of the Galactic Milieu, Mulhacen thrust above the rest of the Sierra Nevada and had small glaciers on its shaded slope. In the gentler Pliocene Epoch the mountain rose some 4200 meters, with snowfields only on the summit. The bird flew higher and curved around to approach the north face. The growth of tropical hardwoods gave way lo laurel thickets. In more arid places there were pines and tangled rhododendrons bearing clusters of white or carmine blossoms. A sabertooth cat sunning itself on a rock yawned. Its slitted eyes followed the giant raven, puzzled by the glint of gold against the sky. She rode an upwelling air current that let her view the distant turquoise embayment of the Gulf of Guadalquivir to the north. Beyond that hunched the Dark Mountains where wild Firvulag lived. She sideslipped, lost altitude, and dived toward the in- viting gorge of the River Genii, nearly home at last after the long day's hunt- Rock thrushes and warblers trilled a welcome. Fat brown trout leaped in the river As usual, her friends waited outside the entrance to her lair. Otter with his gift of fish. Roe Deer and her child, who would share sweet milk. Yellow Panda holding tender bamboo shoots fetched all the way from the lowlands. Squirrel and Woodrat with nuts and mealy tubers. Dwarf Mastodon cheerfully waving a branch with gleaming purple fruits. Felice stood before them and smiled, holding the golden tore- "See? Another one!" The lynx. Pseudaelurus, rubbed adoringly against her bare legs. The other fnends, basking in the warmth of her mind, crowded close with their offerings. She accepted them all: the food, the garlands of flowers brought by the weaverbirds, the fragrant dned grass that the mice and coneys had heaped for a fresh sleeping couch. "Thank you! All of you," she said, dismissing them after they had had their fill of communion. The sun set and a chilly wind began to blow from the Genii Canyon Several of the song sparrows lingered to sing to her THE POSTDILUVIUM 105 while she kindled her fire with mental flame and got supper cooking. As often happened in the evening, the devil voices started in again, telling their lies and displaying their marvels, reminding her how they had helped when her strength failed at the sundering of the Gibraltar Isthmus She ignored them, and presently the devils fell silent Mad she might be; but she wasn't foolish enough to mindspeak them on a far-carrying mode that might betray her precise where- abouts. Let them just try to tnangulate her' Let any of them try—the faraway devils, Aiken Drum, or even futile Elizabeth! Felice knew how to hide from them. (And she only called for the Beloved from high in the sky where there was no danger.) The cooking fire fell to embers. She made the verandah area of her lair neal and then stood quietly for a moment under the brightening stars. It was good that the rain was nearly over. The flowers in her hair and around her neck exhaled a richer perfume now that they had begun to die, and that was good, too Felice took Fian's golden tore and entered the cleft in the mountain She could see quite well in pitch-darkness, but she wanted to enjoy the treasure at its best, and so she lifted two fingers and generated a bright flame of psychoenergy. The mica-laden rocks glistened. Her den was a talus-cave, not one carved by water, and the interior was perfectly dry Beyond her steeping place the way was blocked by a slab of rock weighing many tons. Felice waved the tore at it negligently and the rock slid aside In the smaller chamber behind, gold lay piled m heaps higher than her head: a Niebelung hoard acquired through four months of patient searching These thousands of exquisitely fashioned mind-amplifiers had once clasped the necks of Tanu and their privileged human minions, liking their latent brainpowers into metapsychic operancy. But now those proud tore wearers were dead in her Rood, their bodies swept from the submerged White Silver Plain and flung up for the scavengers to find—and Felice. She had robbed bodies rotting in the shallows and sought out skeletons buried in sill And when this plunder dwindled she hunted down wretched survivors and seized gold from those THE NONBORN KING 106 too weak to defend themselves from a bird with a body longer than a human ami. She fought them fairly and refrained from using her operant powers in offense. Beak and talons alone were usually sufficient to defeat the demoralized castaways who once had lorded it over the Many-Colored Land- Felice pitched her new acquisition onto the nearest pile, There was a rich clang as the equilibrium was upset- Golden tores went slipping and rolling in all directions—to reveal something else, haif'hidden in the tangle of precious metal- She lifted it easily in spite of its considerable weight. It was a great lance of gold-lustre glass, attached by a cable at its butt to a jeweled case, from which hung broken straps. Felice bran- dished the Spear and pressed one of the studs on the armrest. As usual, there was no result. Immersion in sail water had shorted out the photon weapon's power-supply module. It was as inoperative as it had been when Felice took it from the real Bright Lugonn at the Ship's Grave. The false Shining One had duped her later and got the Spear away; but the Flood fixed him. Now the Spear was hers again forever. She lay the trophy gently on its bed of gold and left the treasure-cave for her own couch of dry grass- The middle of the night brought cold air from the mountain summit, and she had the nightmare again. But toward dawn, when the lynx curled up at her feet to keep warm, Felice slept in peace. Kuhal Earthshaker lay insensible throughout most of that day, crushed by bereavement and Felice's desecration. When he finally awoke, evening had come, and with it small things seeking his brother's body. Cursing, he drove them away, and then set about washing and preparing. There were no fresh clothes; but around Fian's neck he hung the heavy Janus-face medallion of their joint escutcheon, the only ornament that they still retained. He carried Fian to the shore, then brought down the coracle. Setting his brother adrift, he knelt on the salt-crusted rocks and tried to sing the Song. But without Fian, there would never be music again, so he merely recited the words. Once again, out THE POSTDILUVIUM 107 over the water, he seemed to see a glowing city in the haze. Fian in his skin boat followed the light-path that led to it, going home. After a long time Kuhal summoned up his last reserve of strength. His farspeaking voice shouted: Wail for me Brother! And a disembodied answer came; ... So there you are! The reverie of grief vanished and Kuhal again knew terror. He stood paralyzed, staring at the luminosity out over the sea. It was no pearly mirage this time but a harsh glare, krypton- discharge green, rapidly growing in intensity. A farspoken voice emanating from the light spewed obscenities about the aether and addressed Kuhal on the intimate mode: Why the bloodyhell you been hiding in frogfucking basalt ravine instead of staying in open where 1 could track you down? We heard your Fiandeathshout allway over in Afaliah! A Tanu knight all armed in glowing aquamarine and riding an enormous chaliko materialized out of the mist and floated down to earth. "Celo? Is it you?" Kuhal's physical voice was a cracked whisper. "Of course it's me, you poor stupid shithead. Who else? I'm the only levitant left with the power to carry another, short of that little gold rapscallion or Tonn the Turncoat. And small chance they'd come and save your ass!" "I thought,.. Fian and I thought that we were atone. The only ones left." The fierce old face with its silver brows glowered. Celadeyr of Afaliah sent an inexpert redactive probe into the younger man's deranged mind. "Great Goddess, what an idea! But 1 don't wonder you thought so. considering the state you're in. We've managed to rescue other survivors, but all from Aven or the European shore. How in Tana's Name did you ever get yourself marooned in Africa?" But Kuhal did not reply. He had fainted. The old hero of Afaliah gave vent to his pity in more curses. He spotted the coracle far out on the water and used his creative 108 THE NONBORN KING power lo englobe it in a pyre of astral flame. When he had sung the Song for the dead twin, he loaded the living one behind him on the chaliko's broad back and launched them into the air, 12 ELIZABETH RELAXED HER CONCENTRATION AND SMILED. "I'M glad he was finally rescued. Poor man. Imagine him thinking he and his brother were the last Tanu alive." Creyn could not help the thought: I remember Another who also despaired at being alone. "I learned how wrong I was." (The deep doubt persisting was far beneath Creyn's perception.) The Tanu healer reached across the table with his long arm and poured more coffee for both of them. Thunder grumbled around the heights of the Montagne Noire. Rain started again, spraying the small leaded window panes on the eastern side of the chalet until it was impossible to see outside. "Aside from Culluket," Creyn observed, "Kuhal Earth- shaker is the only High Table survivor of the Host of Nontusvel. The other fifteen members of the Host who escaped the Flood are minor talents." "I presume that Celadeyr will put Kuha! into the Skin and try to cure him so that he can be enlisted into the disloyal opposition. After all, the Second Lord Psychokinetic would be quite an ally if his powers were restored. What are the odds for full recovery?" "Not high. The Skin depends not only upon the skill of the practitioner but also upon the patient's own willpower. And Kuhat has lost half his mind. Celo's healer is Boduragol. a 109 THE NONBORN KING 110 competent enough operator—but I doubt whether even Dionket himself could restore Kuhal completely Even under the most favorable prognosis, he'll be laid up for the better part of a year " "His power of teiepathic projection was almost nil," Eliz- abeth said "I had no idea the twins were there in Africa until Kuhal gave that temble cry last night " There was a simultaneous flash and explosion as lightning struck Black Crag Lodge for the fourth time that stormy eve- ning The electrical charge drained harmlessly away "With all these atmospherics," Creyn remarked, "I wonder that you're able to farsense to Africa at all I find that my own mental vision is completely blocked beyond Amalizan But then, 1 am not a Grand Master " She smiled at him, setting down her cup "No But it's time I began teaching you some of the specialized techniques of higher farsensing The static filter is well within your com- petence, given practice " She demonstrated the program and worked with him, strengthening and correcting, while his wide- field farsight strained to penetrate the lomzation of the storm Finally, she told him Enough He sank back into his chair, his ageless seraph's face bathed in perspiration "Yes I see " The mind-tone was rueful "1 also see that I have a depressing amount to leam before I can be of much assistance to you in your surveillance " "Have some more coffee," she suggested "It helps We're lucky that the bush thrives here in the Pliocene' But sen- ously, you can be a real help to me, even now I'm still not as strong as I was back in the Milieu I must use a dispropor- tionate amount of effort just to maintain the focus at great distances You can be an extra set of mental eyes if you link up with me during observation—seeing details I might miss " "I understand " For a moment his mmd was silent, private "Will my helping you increase your chance of locating Felice''" Elizabeth's brow tensed The image of the Raven Girl was ominously clear in both their minds "Creyn, I don't know what we're going to do about her She presents the most ap- palling danger' No metapsychic of the Galactic Milieu pos- THE POSTDILUVIUM tl sessed such creative and psychokmetic powers As far as 1 know, there has never been such potential for physical destruc- tion concentrated in a single individual before " "Not even in your patron saints9 Or their adversaries in the Metapsychic Rebellion9" "No single operant of our Milieu could have done what Felice did " Rain beat upon the black windows "Especially that last psychocreative stroke that opened Gibraltar 1 never had an opportunity to examine Felice's mind after she attained operancy But if we could locate her, and if I could do a deep- redact, it's just barely possible that the danger from her could be neutralized " Even though the operation might be fatal to both of us Creyn's mind cned out You must not sacrifice yourself That is not your destiny' You are to be our guide 0 Brede Revenant' "Don't call me that'" she cned, her mind shrinking away "I don't know my destiny and neither did Brede, damn her'" The old bitterness glared from Elizabeth's subliminal levels "The Shipspouse was very confident in her self-nghleous- ness but perhaps her transporting you here to Earth was a great objective evil Ii seems obvious to me now that you Tanu and Firvulag will survive here on Earth long enough to affect human development in some manner But my race might have been better off if the lot of you had snuffed each other out a thousand years ago back in the Dual Galaxy'" "Brede's prescience foresaw a greater good for both races," Creyn said ' After how much suffering9 For how many millions of years9" Elizabeth's voice broke She had erected a featureless curtain hiding her emotions, but Creyn. as an expenenced red- actor, perceived the pndeful truth He said, "If Brede's meddling with the destiny of our races was presumptuous—evil—then surely the manifest results show that her action was a fortunate sin What your philosophy would call a felix culpa " Elizabeth's laugh was brittle "You're getting to know hu- 112 THE NONBORN KING manity quite well, aren t you7 Even to playing our little ca- suistical games " "I only know," he said simply, "that the motivation ofBrede and her Ship was noble and unselfish As was her guidance of us until the end " "We all know she meant well Even when she dragooned me A lot of autarchs have been convinced that they knew what was best for their subjects The human rebels in the Milieu had that sense of conviction Very top-lofty they were' You see, they knew for a fact that human minds have the greatest meta- psychtc potential among the races of our galaxy Therefore, it was logical to them that humanity must play the dominant role in the galactic civilization Immediately The Milieu was far too important to be left to the guidance of inferior mentali- ties But the Milieu could not be force-fed into accelerated mental evolution, any more than children could be matured to superadulthood by Ihe insane techniques that the rebels advo- cated To force maturation is not only evil but ultimately fu- tile—whether we speak of the advancement of a single child or the perfection of a galactic Mind " She showed the Tanu healer a brief glimpse of the havoc engendered by Marc Remillard and his cabal, and the price paid to restore mental equilibrium "And this is why I am afraid " "You see an analogy," he said, "between the Metapsychic Rebellion and Brede's manipulation of Tanu and Firvulag des- tiny You fear that if you take Brede's place, you may abet her—sin " Elizabeth sighed "If that's what it is Back in the Milieu, the Concilium had billions of minds to provide a consensus The Mind knew it was right, and the rebels were wrong But what do I know9" The wind rising outside the chalet made a noise like coursing beardogs on a demonic Hunt A gust came down the chimney, scattering baisam-scented smoke from the fireplace, and il was Creyn who had to block the swirling ashes, since Elizabeth seemed helpless to deflect them and even welcomed the stinging tears that they evoked After the distraction, when she had THE POSTDILUVIUM 113 wiped her eyes, the two of them settled down to the senous business of the night It was by far Ihe most favorable time for farsearching, when the sun—a much greater obstacle to uitrasensitivity than any storm—was blocked by the mass of the planet At night a mind could roam more freely, delve more readily into secret places, hsten to the remotest whispers, speak most persuasively to the reluctant mind's ear Even in premetapsychic days this was common folk knowledge Night was when the sorcerers did their work, when unseelie beings prowled and danced, and when mortal men most fitly let their consciousness rest along with their bodies, breaking free of the day's pain and tedium in dreams As Elizabeth's mind linked to that of Creyn, the room around them seemed to dissolve, leaving them suspended above the tempest-washed massif of the Montagne Noire Concentrating all volitional force into her farsensmg faculty, towing him along with her as easily as a kite, she ranged afar Observe and leam' See below us, huddled against Black Crag, small islets of life-aura marking the mining settlements Concentrate this ul- trafaculty and zoom in to view individual people, one by one or in small groups Use this power to hear ordinary speech or the declamatory or conversational modes of telepathy (It is virtually impossible, even for a Grand Master, to probe the deep thought levels at distance It is also difficult or impossible to farsense a person who has erected a supenor thoughlshield There are certain artificial screening devices—for example, Brede's "room without doors" projector—thai similarly block farsight) Now observe how we search for a known mind We have stored its signature, so our coarse searching faculty can range swiftly afar, ignoring all the other auras, until we home in on the soughl-for personality And there he is' It is Chief Burke, asleep with the other members of his party in acampjustoffthe Great South Road, some thirty kilometers 114 THE NONBORN KING below Roniah. (Blessings on you, loved brothers and sisters. Rest safely and well.) And now, Creyn. it is your turn to work. Join me and strengthen me as we attempt a much more difficult search, pinpointing a known mind that is certain to be half-screened and wary. We will do this so insmuatively that he will not detect us. We will make no attempt to eavesdrop upon his words or thoughts. Range northeast—for he is most likely in residence at his capital of High Vrazel in the Vosges Mountains. See Sham- Mes, the new young monarch of the Firvulag, who has im- pudently styled himself High King of the Many-Colored Land. Behold the doughty general at home... His six children roast chestnuts at the fire and use a hot poker to mull another mug of cider for their hard-working daddy. The fierce genera) wields a sharp obsidian blade, mutters a blood-chilling oath. We are sure of this, even though we can't hear him, from the disapproving expression on the face of his wife. Queen Ayfa, leader of the Warrior Ogresses. Again Sham's black-glass knife flashes. Chips of wood fly. The axle slips sweetly into its socket and the children cheer. Sham sets the completed wooden chal- iko onto the living-room tiles and the children crowd around the wheeled beast, each one eager to be the first to break tradition by nding the novel toy. Tradition is a frangible and sometime thing in High Vrazel these days ... And now let us attempt the most difficult search of all: Felice. Consider her signature. Consider potential modes of screen- ing- Untrained in metapsychics, her concealment mechanisms would be primitive; but the great creative potential resident in the madwoman makes refinement of technique unimportant. We will not likely succeed in our search. Nevertheless, we will try. On each and every pervigUium we will try- Range south. South beyond Amalizan, beyond Tarasiah. Curve westerly, afar. Beyond Aluteyn Craftsmaster's new es- tablishment on the River Iberia. Beyond the frowning turrets of Afaliah where the grim old creator-coercer lurks behind THE POSTDILUVIUM 115 strong stone ramparts, brooding over the broken-minded one who now sleeps drcamlessly in Skin Soon it will be dawn. The approaching sun is heralded by a distinctive aethenc thunder There is a program to counter solar ionization, but it is much more difficult than the storm- emendator- Observe and follow. Cling fast and look sharp. We search! This is her aura thai we seek, and it is known that she hides in the Betic Cordillera, the southernmost range in Spam. Sweep. Scan Ignore the fuzzy mental blobs of the Firvulag, of the scattered Howlers, of the tiny colonies of outlaw humans, of the occasional outpost of Afaliah depen- dents. Focus wide, focus narrow! Use the mind's eye and ear and the special seekersense that tunes only to the aura .. There is nothing (But why? Sham was screened, and you found him easily ) Sham's powers are those of an infant. But we'll wait. The black bird flies at dawn, and sometimes it calls- When thai happens, her mind opens as she listens for him, for her Beloved. She would not respond to us. but she may let fall an inadvertent clue to her eyne's location Then we can— (Elizabeth. Thai.) I see. I see and hear. Above Mount Mulhacen! Of course . She would be holed up there' And now come forth to call. Cultukel! The raven soars toward the stratosphere The sky above the Sierra Nevada is cloud-free and lucent in dawn. Culluket! I know you're alive. She calls to him who joined with her in mutual thanatophilia, satisfying himself but unaware that her fulfillment would also come, after she had escaped from him, when she did to the helpless earth what had been done to her Culluket, answer! See her wheeling in the high light, glistening. No mind- screens cover her now, no psychocreative wall guards her cast- ing Ursense as she seeks the hated love. But he is a redactor, a mind-changer, a mind-borer, a mind-masker. He is guileful and strong and the shadow of the bird passes over him unaware THE NONBORN KING 116 Cullukel.. -you must be there. Help me So find him, YOU! (Elizabeth! Has she perceived us?) No. Creyn, be silent! You helped me before 1 turn again to you now! Help me find my Beloved. Tell me where he is. Talk to me! Do you see me flying here? If you speak to me, this time I'll answer you' See her triumphal replay of the love-deed, the opening of the Gibraltar Gate- See, through her memory, exactly how the cataclysm was accomplished. 0 God, how (In simultaneous relief and shock, for her power was not singular after all, but augmented.) Help me again I won't hide from you. We can be friends. Listen, Creyn! No. wait—1 must phase in still another emen- dator. Not only is this transmission faint, but it is also mulliple- an inexpert metaconcerted effort, poorly aimed, coming from a vast distance. And it is not on the exotic thought-mode. Nol on the bastard mode of the torced humans here in the Pliocene It is on the unique human-operant mode . God almighty, my own mode' Help me, Creyn. Prop me up, dear friend. Trace this, identify its source, find oul anything you can about it Devils? Is that you? Yes, Felice. Hello, Devils. Hello, Felice We've called you for such a long time / know But 1 didn't trust you. I have so many enemies Poor Felice. We only want to help. We did help you. Help me again. Show me where Cull's hiding. Who? ... Ah So. How interesting. Never mind thai. Show me now! Dear Felice We would if we could But we're far away from you. Far from him, too. To find him, we'd have to come to you All the way from North Amer- ica. Ohhhh Not to worry. We'll be glad to do it. We've been so anxious to meet you. THE POSTDILUVIUM 117 No.' You could steal... could try to trick me' Just like that damn little gold swindler. Aiken Drum! We wouldn't do that, Felice. We're not like Aiken or your other enemies. We'll prove our friendship We'll do more than find your lover- We'll bring him to you! You could do that? One of us is a coercer-redaclor of masterclass stature. The rest of us are strong, too. And we're young, Felice. Like you! We believe in action. You won't mess around with ME. Of... of course not We want you to be our leader - You're stronger than any of us. Maybe. But when you act together, l^isien. Only one of you can come. That won't work, Felice. We'll need at least five to coordinate the retrieval of your Culluket. Five? All right. But that's all. You understand? Perfectly. We can help you in other ways, too, you know. And you can help us! . Now indicate your precise location in Spain. I'm here. Do you see my lair on Mount Mulhacen7 We do. We'll come to you in fifteen days. Wait for us Goodbye, Felice our friend. Goodbye, Devils. Elizabeth sat across the table from Creyn. The storm was gone. Sunbeams from the eastern windows struck the embers in the hearth, turning them into dusty white lumps "When i first arrived in the Pliocene," Elizabeth said, "I farsearched the entire planet hoping to find other operant human beings like myself." "I remember It was the evening thai we rode from Castle Gateway to Roniah. You pul a strong barrier up, but I was aware that you were ranging." Elizabeth slumped in her chair, her face haggard. Creyn sent a telepathic summons lo Mary-Dedra, the gold-lore human 118 THE NONBORN KING woman who had once been a confidant of Mayvar, who now served as Elizabeth's personal attendant. The farspeaker said, "I detected only a single ambiguous trace on the human mode. It seemed to be clear over on the other side of the Earth. I knew my scan was incompetent be- cause my ultrasenses were still convalescent, and so 1 dismissed that faint indication as an echo- But it was real." "You were unable to scrutinize it closely?" "Long-distance farsensing is a specialized business requiring great stamina. A healthy Grand Master can make brief stabs— something like the way human swimmers make deep skin- dives. But it's impossible to sustain the effort without special supportive equipment or help from a number of other minds." She passed a weary hand over her forehead. "Now, with your help, i should be able to gain some information about these so-called devils. But I know who they must be." God, I know too well. They shared the knowledge. Creyn said, "They have been out of the Tanu mind for a long time. Twenty-seven years. When the group of operant humans came through the time- gate and contended against our battle-company, we suffered a terrible defeat. The affair was expunged from the official record when the invaders left Europe. Only a few of us—most notably the late Gomno!—actively speculated on what had become of the human operants. We can guess why he would be interested! But Gomnol's farsensing ability was only moderate. He never tracked them down." "The rebels are in the Western Hemisphere. In a region that was called Florida on Elder Earth." Elizabeth's eyes closed and she drifted in pained abstraction. "I was only seventeen at the time of the Metapsychic Rebellion. An apprentice preceptor on an obscure little snowy planet. But I was already a part of the Unity—and I'll never forget the reaction of those three hundred billion exotic minds to the attempted coup- The Milieu had taken such a chance with us, Creyn—admitting humanity to their wonderful civilization while we were still psychoso- cially immature. And we betrayed their trust." THE POST-DILUVIUM 119 "I understand that the Rebellion was brief, that the active phase lasted only a few months." "True. Nevertheless, the scars took years to heal. It was humanity's most profound humiliation.. .The Human Polity acted as ruthlessly as it had to do to put down the conspiracy. There was great suffering among the innocent. In the end, though, the Milieu was stronger than ever." "Another felix culpa?" She opened her eyes and regarded the exotic man quizzi- cally. "Human history seems to abound with them." An inner door opened. Mary-Dedra, carrying a tray with breakfast, entered with a diffident mental greeting. Creyn rose to leave. "Will you be strong enough to range out again tonight?" he inquired. "Oh, yes." Elizabeth was resigned. "We'll have to track Felice's devils to their home ground. Count them, identify them positively if we can, then decide how best to counter their threat- You rest up and join me at seven." She smiled mor- dantly- "Then we'll try our first little trip to hell and gone." 13 IN A BAYOU OF THE SUWANEE ON THE WEST COAST OF OCALA Island, it was two o'clock in the morning The gigantic silver fish was quiet for the moment, sulking deep in the moon- dappled black water, taking a recess from its contest with Marc Remillard For sixteen hours the bulldog tarpon had fought to break free of the pertinacious tether linking it to the man The tarpon was 430 centimeters long and weighed 295 kilos Set in one comer of its jaw was a 5/0 hook with a strongly armored leader (for the tarpon of the Pliocene Epoch had sharp teeth) The tippet, that section of the tine that actually held the fish, was so weak that it could be snapped by a 7-kilo weight Never- theless, the tarpon had been unable to free itself, so great was the skill of the angler who had played it Now both man and fish were reaching the limits of their endurance Before long, either the fisherman would make a mistake in judgment, be- trayed by his agonized muscles, and the line would break— or the tarpon would succumb to syncope and float helpless at the end of the fatal thread while the gaff descended Marc eased the butt of his big flyrod in the heavy leather cup of his belt, waiting for the fish to recommence the fight The only sounds were distant splashes of leaping mullet and the squawk of a night heron Marc's breathing was slow and controlled as he exerted a biofeedback maneuver to flush fatigue 120 THE POSTDILUVIUM 121 products from the cells of his burly shoulders and arms His ultrasenses were deaf and blind He could not perceive the lurking tarpon's movements because he would not Even at this climactic juncture, he gave the fish the sporting advantage he deemed suitable He did not track n with farsight, nor attempt to coerce its movements, nor exert any psychokmetic force upon it. nor strengthen rod, reel, or line beyond their normal specifications by means of his creativity In one way only did Marc deviate from the angling technique of nonmetapsychics He fished alone, and so he exerted mental power to steady the skiff so that it would not founder dunng the struggle Now Marc was aware of a subtle change in the tension of the line One moment the water of the channel was as flat as a pool of ink—and the next, it blew open with volcanic vio- lence An immense writhing shape, glistening under high moonlight, cannoned more than six meters into the air, turning end over end Its saucer-sized eyes reflected a funous orange and its gill covers rattled like a gigantic raganella Marc bowed to the fish, lowering the tip of the fly rod to ease the line while it was vulnerable in the air The great silver creature crashed back into the water with a splash like a falling grand piano A split second later it was up again, twisting and thrashing in a second leap The skiff rocked Streaming with water from head to toe. Marc shouted encouragement to his adversary It was the largest tarpon he had ever hooked, and it was nearly his The fish ran at him Marc took in slack As he expected, the tarpon erupted again, this time in a soaring saltation that earned it on an impact trajectory with the skiff Laughing uproariously, Marc sen! the craft whizzing out of the way— just barely The tarpon's reentry sent a wave over the gunwale that half filled the boat Marc banished the water with his PK a moment before the tarpon came up on the opposite side and whirled on the surface like a runaway dynamo, trying to throw the hook It went down again and the reel whined as the fish raced for the flats on the left side of the channel Marc guided the skiff after it, alert for the next leap And it came, with the THE NONBORN KING 122 enormous plated body climbing up, up, as if in slow motion, tossing diamond drops to the moon in an expanding cloud, clashing its jaws, uttering an explosive grunt at the top of its leap, and then falling back with an impact that nearly sent Marc overboard- But the hook was still secure. The tarpon ran again and the man followed. The next leap was half-heaned, the great body leaving the water for only a fraction of its length. Its subsequent surface struggles seemed weaker, not even raising foam. Marc could not resist calling out to the fish on the declamatory mode: Now you gorgeous bastard! Now I've got you... A powerful beam of light stabbed out of the darkness upriver. It transfixed Marc standing there in the boat, ready to make the delicate adjustment of line tension. Physically as well as mentally blind, he froze- The tarpon leaped. The fragile 6.75-kilo test tippet snapped. Papa we've found her we've found Felice! Too late, the psychoenergelic beacon died. It was Hagen's, as was the thought projection so jubilant and heedless, rapt in its own triumph. The launch carrying the young people came knifing down the bayou, then slammed to a halt as though meeting a glass wall. It fetched up wallowing and shuddering in a mass of chop some 150 meters away from the fisherman. Off the bow of the skiff, the giant tarpon was rolling, gulping air, savoring freedom. Marc scanned it carefully, making sure it had sustained no serious injury during the long battle, and then disengaged the hook with his PK. The fish sank slowly into the black water. Marc's farsight saw it swim off in the direction of the gulf. Papa... Cloud knew, even if her brother did not, what their intrusion had cost. Her regret and apology welled out only to strike another barrier. The metapsychic wall that had restrained the launch now dissolved and the current carried the larger craft down upon the skiff. Marc reeled in the slack line, watching the launch approach. The three other occupants were, as he had expected, the arch- THE POSTDILUVIUM 123 conspirators among the younger generation: Etaby Gathen, Jil- lian Morgenthaler, and Vaughn Jarrow. These were attempting to put a bold front on their blunder. It was plain that none of them had anticipated anything other than welcome when they sped out from Lake Serene to "surprise" Marc with their news. The two craft met. Jillian stopped the launch with her PK, dropped the anchor, and ran to the stem to take the skiff in low. Hagen put the ladder down, mind still asmile, stubbornly determined to tough out the faux pas- "Felice is in Spain, Papa. just as we suspected. Holed up in a cave on Mount Mulhacen in the Sierra Nevada." Picture. Bearing. "And, get this! She's freely invited us to come to her!" The wall remained up in Marc's mind- He grasped the ladder and vaulted into the launch, disdaining levitation. The young people fell back, their minds now united clumsily in apology, Only Cloud showed an overlay of genuine sorrow at the loss of the great fish. The children of rebellion, all in their mid-twenties, were formally dressed. There had been a party that night at Lake Serene, the culmination of which had been the successful con- tact with Felice. Hagen and Elaby were elegant in tropical dinner jackets; Vaughn, sporting the same outfit, managed to look disheveled and oafish as usual. Dark Jiflian wore a batik pareu of soft barkcloth. Cloud's gown was as luminous as her mind. shimmering faintly in the moonlight. The erstwhile challenger of the galaxy, naked to the waist and barefoot, dripping water onto the polished deck, confronted the five. "You were told not to come. Never to come when the tarpon are running." Hagen expostulated, "The hell with the fish. Papa' We've got her! Felice—" He broke off, hands clamped to the sides of his head, screaming. The sharp odor of vomit rose in the warm night air, and in the aether was the stench of terror as Hagen saw for the first time the true aspect of Abaddon. But then came Cloud, rushing at their terrible father with her sweet coercion THE NONBORN KING 124 fully arrayed and her redactive faculty flung wide to curtain the worst of the reality, and dull its memory. Hagen staggered backward and fell into the arms of Elaby and Vaughn. The fisherman, his mind veiled again, waited- Under Cloud's ministry Hagen's retching and his sobs quieted. He steadied on his feel, pulled away from the others, and stood swaying, covered in filth. "Papa—you—must—listen," he gasped. Marc had to smile at the persistence- The slight cleft in his chin was emphasized by oblique moonlight and the shadows made his heavy brows appear winged. The thick curly hair that lately had become frosted in defiance of his self-rejuvenating faculty was still sopping wet. False tears of salt water shone on his prominent cheekbones and the thin-bridged nose with its finely flared nostrils. Marc refused to accept the data proffered by Hagen's mind. "Tell me." he demanded. "She—she's agreed to let us come to Europe. To meet with her. We promised we would help her locate and destroy some Tanu redactor who put her to the torture. Papa—you've got to let us go!" The mind-vise settled softly into place once again and ex- erted minimal pressure, causing the young man to catch his breath in apprehension. He was a less emphatically drawn rep- lica of his father, without Marc's bull neck and dark-socketed eyes. Like his sister, Hagen had inherited the reddish-gold hair of the long-dead Cyndia Muldowney—and her reckless per- severance as well. "It's a priceless opportunity for us' Felice can be manipulated, I tell you. If we can trick her into accepting some of your docilization equipment, then Elaby and Jillian and Cloud and I have the watts to pin her down! It'll be dan- gerous. since she'll only let five of us get close to her. But if you advise us on tactics through farspeech, I know we can bag her." The brain-screws lightened. Hagen groaned and clenched his fists until the nails bit inio his palms. He felt Cloud's ameliorating redaction ready itself to assume the full pain- burden if need be. THE POSTDILUVIUM 125 "Five of you," Marc repeated- "Onfy five can come, she said. I don't know whether she's telling the truth about being able to detect any extras, but we daren't chance it." "You and Cloud, Elaby and Jillian—and Vaughn for the farspeech conferences, I presume." "Yes." The gentle one-sided smile grew more chilling. "And what will you do with the dragon—presuming you can subdue her?" "Use her to dominate Europe! To force Elizabeth to raise all of us to adept status—full coadunation!" Papa we can't slay here rotting with you oldones we can't we won't we'll die here on this damnisland! The mind-ctamp eased. Marc spoke mildly- "I had planned to begin training you this summer to assist me in the star- search. Of all the second generation, you have the greatest potential competence—the stamina combined with broad-spec - tnim metafunction." "Damn you!" screamed Hagen Remillard. "Won't you ever admit that there's nobody oui there^. This Pliocene galaxy's too immature for coadunalion of its Mind! You're alone. Papa— you and the rest of them. And we're alone with you! This Elizabeth is some kind of a Grand Master preceptor who can at least put us on the first steps toward coadunation right here on Earth." Marc turned to his daughter. "And you think that my way is futile, too?" She threw open her uttermost mental depths: Yes Papa. There is no coadunate nonhuman race in this galaxy to rescue us from exile- All that there is is here. "And you support this kidnapping foray? This buccaneer's raid?" Cloud turned away, walls again in place, voice incisive. "There are other human beings in Europe. People of our culture, who would sympathize with our aims. Now that the Flood has undermined the Tanu society, it seems likely that the entire region will fall under Firvulag domination if we don't intervene- And the Firvulag are operants. Papa. Remember that. Their THE NONBORN KING 126 mental development has been stalled by pig-headed custom up until now, and they've never learned to act in true metaconcert because of individualist traditions But their attitudes arc chang- ing rapidly Even if the Tanu arc led by Alken Drum, they arc too greatly outnumbered by the Firvulag to prevail But humans and Tanu together could withstand the Firvulag easily with our help " "And with some of the weaponry you have stored away," Hagen added Marc said, "There is something else in Europe " The five young people stared at him "The site of the temporal singularity The time-gale " Opacity "Your real ambition is to reopen it From this side That's the ultimate goal of this entire adventure' Did you really think you could conceal the truth from me7" Resignation, a perverse relief, flooded Hagen's mind "Of course you're nght. Papa We'd do anything to have what you threw away' Now kill me if you think it'll help coerce the others into believing in you But it won't, you know " Before Marc could react, Elaby Gathen thrust Hagen aside His thought-projections burst forth in a compelling blaze, as irresistible as it was unexpected, staying Abaddon's wrath Just long enough to provoke curiosity and a wry appreciation In that illuminating instant. Marc knew that the plan of conquest, the search for Fehce, the time-gate design—all of it—was not Hagen's conception at all, but Elaby's Elaby Gathen the un- obtrusive one, the efficient one, the synthesizing one The clever one who now wailed with mind wide-open for Marc's redactive probe (and who did not flinch at the brutality of it) Elaby Gathen who dared to love his daughter and exert puppet- mastery over his son In the young man's mind was smcerc respect for the leader of the Metapsychic Rebellion, together with regret for the great dream gone agiey But there was also in Gathen a determination, as implacable as Marc's own, that he and his young contemporaries be given the chance to direct their own fate THE POSTDILUVIUM 127 Marc said, "I wish I had noticed you before Before all this had solidified " Elaby Gathen said, "Sir, we have Gudenan's entire body of data in the computer archives We have the technological parameters and the manufacturing specs for all components of the device If we gained control of Europe, we'd have access not only to the lime-gale site, but to the raw materials Gudenan used, the rare earths and the niobium and cesium that are inaccessible m Pliocene North America Based in Europe, we could compel the assistance of whatever Milieu technicians still survive among the time-traveler population II would take time and organization, bul Gudenan's device could be built " Marc laughed "Thus effectively setting up a two-way gate And you expect me to agree to this^ The agents of the Mag- istratum have no interest in you children But I assure you that even after twenty-seven years, they would have a lively interest in me'" Elaby's mind and voice evoked the most exquisite tact "After we've passed through to the Milieu, we would naturally arrange for the destruction of both pieces of apparatus The sites themselves could be obliterated You know that there's a unique geological factor at work in the generation of the sin- gularity, restricting it to that small region of the Rhone Valley If the geology is significantly altered, the time-gate will be permanently closed " "You'd still be safe, Papa," Cloud said, moving close to Elaby "And we " Her voice trailed away, but her mental speech completed the phrase We could go home Elaby Gathen said, "You could supervise the demolitions on the Pliocene end of the time-warp yourself, sir " The launch turned on its cable The tide was nsing in the estuary, countering the sluggish flow of the Suwanee Soon the tarpon would leave their feeding in the gulf reefs and come up the nver again But Marc had lost interest in the btg fish now The frustration coming just at the brink of victory had left him tight-coiled and cheated of catharsis He had failed to master the adversary, and now it was gone To begin all over again was insupportable 128 THE NONBORN KING Gather) was outlining his scheme with cool reasonableness. "We'll need two days to gather equipment and finish stocking Jillian's ketch in Manchineel Bay. The actual voyage to Europe will take up to eleven days. Phil says the Atlantic weather systems are perfect. There'll be no adverse winds to counter our PK. Vaughn will keep you informed of our every move. Once we've contacted Felice, you can advise us precisely how you wish us to carry on." Marc said, "All of you may go—except Hagen." "Papa—no!" the son cried. The eyes of Abaddon burned under winged brows. "This escapade is highly dangerous — foolhardy, even. You have badly underestimated Felice. But I know her only too well, since I was the one who forged the metaconcert linkage. Your plan of binding her with the docilization equipment is futile. None of the devices would hold her—any more than they'd hold me!... You'd have to use guile, act on her unsane aspects and force her to chain herself." His mind turned to Cloud; You would have the redactive skill Daughter virtually equal to my own. I am not sure you would have the courage. She replied; Papa 1 would do anything to reach this goal. I know. His cast of mind darkened, sorrowing- He would have to let her go, even if this venture led to her death. He dared not risk her taking Cyndia's way. The daughter was lost. But the son— "Why must 1 stay here?" Hagen demanded truculently - "In case the others fail. There must be a successor for the star-search." The young man raged, "You old fool! Can't you ever stop living in a dream world? I'll be damned if I spend the rest of my life shackled to that fucking equipment, hunting for some- thing that doesn't exist!" The other four drew back, appalled. There was an intolerable flash of light and a gush of heated air. Hagen's body wavered, melting in the effulgence- His cries rose in pitch, changing to harsh, rhythmic hisses. Something huge and silvery, burning THE POSTDILUVIUM 129 in a coat of astral Fire. fell over the stem of the launch with a colossal splash- Marc said to Elaby, "You will take Owen Blanchard with you to Europe in Hagen's place- He was the best of my coercers in the Rebellion and he'll do for a backup farsensor in the all too possible event that something happens to Vaughn, here. Owen will carry my own authority, and he'll see that I receive an accurate account of your actions." "But, sir, he's so frail," Elaby began to say. "Then you'll take very special care of him!" Marc thun- dered. "Blanchard goes." "Yes, sir." Cloud's mind was weeping. "Papa, poor Hagen ..." Marc's hand suddenly held a severed leader with a big artificial fly dangling from it. Among the grizzly streamers and scarlet hackle was a glint of pointed steel. "Don't worry about him. I've decided to begin training him tonight instead of wait- ing until summer." Out on the black water, a tarpon rolled and gulped air, making a patch of glistering bubbles. The fish's scales had an eerie luminescence- Marc Remillard observed the creature with satisfaction. He began to climb over the transom back into his skiff. "I'm sure Hagen will be ready to settle down and apply himself to his education. After he's had a little time on the hook." THE END OF PART ONE ^B£ G^mp LOUIhG 1 IN THE EARLY WEEKS OF THE PoSTDfLUVIUM, SUGOLL OF Meadow Mountain sought and obtained full franchise for his subjects, the deformed outcast Firvulag known as Howlers. These mutants, who had split off from the main body of Little People some hundreds of years previously, now once again pledged fealty to the Firvulag throne at High Vrazel and ratified the election of the co-monarchs Sharn and Ayfa. Sugoll also agreed to abide by the Firvulag-Lowlife Entente engineered by the late Madame Guderian and King Yeochee IV, as well as the armistice between the Tanu and Firvulag that had been promulgated by the usurper, Aiken Drum. Because of the isolated location of his domain east of the Black Forest Range, Sugoll remained unaware thai Firvulag forces continually violated both peace accords all during the winter months, attacking Tanu cities and Lowlife settlements and putting the blame on renegade Howlers- King Sham and Queen Ayfa otherwise gave little serious thought to their remote mutant subjects until early in January, when the following communication was delivered to High Vrazel: TO THEIR APPALLING HIGHNESSES AYFA AND SHARN-MES, Sovereign Lords of the Heights and Depths, Monarchs of the Infernal Infinite, Mother and Father of All Fir- vulag, and Undoubted Rulers of the Known World 133 4 THE NONBORN KING FELICITATIONS FROM SUGOLL, Lord ofMeadow Mountain and Chief Among Those Called Howlers, Your Obedient Vassal. May I humbly invite you to rejoice with me upon the occasion of my nuptial celebration, in which the Most Exalted Creative Lady Katlinel the Darkeyed, late of the Tanu High Table, condescended to become my spouse. for which grace praise be to Teah the Almighty. Know now. Highnesses, of a matter of gravity that has claimed my attention for many months and lately ap- proaches full resolution: In times preceding the last Grand Combat there came to my lands an expedition of Humans under mandate of your lamented predecessor, Yeochee IV. seeking the site of the legendary Ship's Grave. A certain scientist of this party vouchsafed to me infor- mation that has proved to be of vital import to my people. Namely: That our principal settlements in and about the Water Caves of Meadow Mountain have inadvertently been located adjacent to deposits of dangerously radio- active minerals; and these have, in the course of our centuries of sojourn, affected the germ plasm of my people, occasioning deleterious mutations whose mel- ancholy manifestations are only too well known. The hypothesis of this scientist was subsequently con- firmed by another. Lord Greg-Donnet Genetics Master aka Gregory Prentice Brown, formerly of Muriah and now an honored citizen of Meadow Mountain, who was paramount among the human genetic specialists in the Many-Colored Land and who once held a prestigious position in a noted medical school of the Galactic Milieu. Greg-Donnet has, during the past month, undertaken an analysis of our situation with a view toward amelioration. You will rejoice with us. Highnesses, when I tell you that there is indeed hope now for our poor afflicted peo- ple. Some might be restored to an approximately normal THE GRAND LOVING I aspect through a modification of the Tanu "Skin" healing technique if suitable practitioners among our erstwhile Foe can be persuaded to cooperate with us. Others of our mutant subjects must look to the future, which may see the normalization of generations yet unborn by the abolition ofteratogenetic factors, by genetic engineering, and by other eugenic measures—some of which may be implemented even now under your benevolent auspices. Know, Highnesses, that Greg-Donnet has declared that we must go forth from this hazardous dwelling place into lands free from radioactive contamination. We have re- solved, therefore, to quit our domain here in Meadow Mountain just as soon as the rains abate, and to present ourselves to you in High Vrazel—loyal subjects prepared to occupy such demesnes as it may please you to grant us for resettlement. Know further that Greg-Donnet advises that our pool of damaged genes must be reconstituted with an influx of normal Firvulag germ plasm, this to be an adjunct of the more difficult genetic engineering operations, which must await the training of skilled technicians. To this view, our people avow to you that they hereby renounce the old antagonism that precluded social and sexual inter- course between us and our normal brothers and sisters. At this year's Grand Loving of Firvulag, I intend to lead forth in the mating rituals a contingent of winsome vir- gins from our most distinguished families, who will take husbands in the traditional manner from the ranks of your stalwart lads- The damsels will, of course, be adorned with the most alluring of illusory bodies, and they will come lavishly dowered with Meadow Mountain's con- siderable material substance. As a further expression of our affection, gratitude, and goodwill, and so that all Little People may share with us our joy at reunion with long-separated kinfolk, we are prepared to underwrite 136 THE NONBORN KING the entire expense of this year's Grand Loving of Fir- vulag. Expect us at High Vrazel about two weeks after the spring equinox. At that time you will doubtless have selected a suitable site for our habitation, as well as given thought to the matter of interim fosterage of the brides with the families of suitable bridegrooms-elect. I am, ever at your service. Highnesses, SUGOLL. "I call that nerve!" exclaimed Sham, fetching his writing-desk a smash with one massive fist. Sealing wax and account books and memo-plaques and a twenty-second-century voicewriter and the King's favorite goblet (the one made from Lord Velteyn's skull) went dancing over the polished oak planks. "Call in that Howler courier, dammit! I'll give him a return reply that'll zorch that misbegotten Sugoll from his stinking deformed toenails to his homy crested occiput! Move in on us, will he? And with a sex-mad mob of monster brides I'm to foist off on our people at the Loving? Ten thousand tumbling turds!" "But he sounds rich," Afya remarked meditatively. Sitting at her own desk adjacent to that of her husband, she nibbled the end of a silver Parker pen with delicate pointed teeth. The royal study deep inside Grand Ballon Mountain in the fog-bound Vosges was cosy and bright, warmed by a big brass brazier that glowed within a free-standing ceramic stove shaped like a hollow turnip. A sideboard still held remains of the royal lunch, taken today in camera. The walls were hung with a judicious selection of captured banners and Tanu weaponry, spoils of the last Combat- Fat candles that incorporated three wicks in each waxy barrel illuminated the twin desks. "That shambling bastard won't get away with taking me for granted," Sham snarled. "Does he think he's dealing with a caretaker monarch like poor old Yeochee?" "We are the monarch," said the handsome ogress with the apricot-colored hair. "And I find Sugoll's letter intriguing." She retrieved the piece of vellum with her psychokinesis from where Sham had flung it to the floor. "Resettlement. H'mm." THE GRAND LOVING 137 "There's no room for them here in High Vrazel. There must be seven, eight hundred monsters up on Meadow Mountain! We'll have to try to divert them down to Famorei, in the Alps. Or maybe to the Grotto Wilderness, or even Koneyn. Te on a tightrope' As if we don't have enough trouble keeping the hinterlanders in line. Now we'll get a fresh batch of headstrong types who'll want to do things their own way, and never mind how it screws up my royal strategy!" "Nionel." Queen Ayfa smiled at the letter. "That's where they must go." Sham's great mouth snapped shut, aborting another tirade. His brows hoisted. His mind sent a gout of joyous appreciation splattering over his wife's psyche. She smiled indulgently. He bellowed, "Nionel! Of course! Refurbishing and staffing the place will keep those Howlers gainfully employed for years. We can have the Loving there in May, and then later on, this fall—" "The new Games. On our own Field of Gold at last." They embraced mentally, savoring the delicious suitability of it. Sugoll and his horde, undoubtedly wealthy, would be an asset to the Firvulag if they could be persuaded to repopulate and restore the ghost city of Nionel in the western wilderness, near the Paris Basin. Within Nionel's ambit lay the ritual bat- tleground of the Little People, which had been virtually aban- doned during the forty years that the Tanu had dominated the annual Grand Combat. "It's the only logical place to hold this year's Games," Sharn said. "Even if that treacherous little torcless cockerel did steal victory from us at the last minute, there's no way he can prepare a suitable Tanu fighting ground this year. And the White Silver Plain is under fifty-five meters of salt water." "If we couch the offer diplomatically, I think Aiken will agree. And there's your idea for donating a new trophy in place of the lost Sword to sweeten the deal.. -Oh, yes. This is all going to work out splendidly!" "There's still one dead mouse in the skilligalee, Ayfe. The damned brides." Ayfa considered. "They might be presentable. If their shape- 138 THE NONBORN KING shifting powers are sufficiently strong. And they'll have the doweries. Besides—how many of them can there be? Probably only twenty or thirty, given the size of the Howler gathering that the Lowiife Guderian reported to Fitham. Surely we have that many families who'd be eager to get off our shit-list by making marriages of convenience." "Yes," he mused. "It could be worked out. It'll have to be- We really can't afford to antagonize this upstart Sugoll, you know. Aside from staving off civil war, we mustn't forget that he's the one who knows the route to the Ship's Grave. One of these days, that information might be extremely useful." FROM SHARN AND AYFA, High King and High Queen of the Many-Colored Land TO SUGOLL, Lord of Meadow Mountain, our Beloved and Loyal Vassal: GREETINGS. It was with pleasure as well as sympathy that we received your letter informing us of your recent marriage and your hopes for assuaging your genetic disability. Come ahead to High Vrazel, and welcome! We do indeed have in mind an ideal new home for you and your people, which we will describe fully upon your arrival here. You do us great honor by offering your doubtless charm- ing daughters as brides-elect in the Grand Loving cere- monies. This matter, also, will be taken up in detail upon your arrival. Convey our heartfelt hopes for happiness and reproduc- tive satisfaction to the eager damsels. To your people we send our affection and assurance of continuing con- cern; and to you and your illustrious Spouse, the Lady Katlinel, our royal benison and the enclosed tokens of esteem, which might prove useful on your journey should you encounter any of the pestilential hyenas or amphi- cyons that unfortunately infest the regions west of the Rhine. Read the directions carefully before using. THE GRAND LOVING 139 We call your attention to the simplified mode of royal address that we have adopted. AYFA. HIGH QUEEN SHARN-MES, HIGH KING End: 3 Solar-Powered Stun-Guns. Husqvama Mark VI-G With the satisfactory response from the Firvulag throne in hand, Sugoll set in motion the monster ingathering; for Sham and Ayfa were mistaken in their belief that only mutants from the Feldberg area would be coming to High Vrazel. Many other concentrations of Howlers, who had drifted away from the radioactive caves of the heartland over a period of centuries, had learned about the hopeful genetic prognosis of Greg-Don- net—and they were determined to share in it. Bundling up their portable wealth, pathetic and hideous creatures forsook hamlets deep in Fennoscandia, trekking southward through the Amber Lakes where the winter nights were long and warm under perpetually cloudy skies. Other throngs of Howlers converged on Meadow Mountain from the haunted Swabian and Franconian Alb, and from the mineral- rich highlands of the Erzegebirge and far Bohemia. These latter brought with them quantities of jewels and precious metals, which they were accustomed to mine sheerly for the sake of their beauty, using them to decorate their twisted bodies in ironic splendor. Mutants from the Hercynian Forest west of the Rhine, mostly solitary and poverty-stricken, responded to Sugoll's invitation as best they could. They made their painful way through the Vosges and the Schwarzwald to the subter- ranean villages of the Feldberg, where compassionate Katlinel housed them in the dry upper caves, fattened them up, and provided them with fine new clothes- All of the able-bodied were put to work building boats or preparing supplies, in an- ticipation of the time when the meteors announced the advent of Pliocene spring. Finally the star-showers fell, the rains ended, and the un- derground rivers beneath the Feldberg dropped to navigable THE NONBORN KING 140 levels. Everything was in readiness. The great Howler Migra- tion commenced. Ten days after the equinox, rank after rank of mutants, ail well dressed and bearing whatever treasure they possessed, marched to the awesome borehole called Alliky's Shaft. Fol- lowing a brief invocation to Teah by Sugoll, the lift machinery began to creak and the big buckets descended with parties of torch-bearing travelers: males and females, hermaphrodites and neuters, children and old folks, the diabolically misshapen and the quasi-normal—Howlers all, singing an ululating farewell that floated up out of the depths like some chorus of the damned- Disembarking at the lowest level of Meadow Mountain's mineworkings. they tramped past heaps of garnets, yellow and pink beryls, and green tourmaline crystals that lay about in neglected profusion. The people then formed into single file and descended still deeper into the granite bowels of the Feld- berg, along natural crevices in living rock where the torches smoked in the chilly damp and tinkling water-drips punctuated the eerie Howler song. At last they came to a great underground chamber. Tubs of flaming oil blazed all along a newly constructed quay on the shore of a lake as black as a sheet of onyx. Here was massed an enormous flotilla of sturdy punts, manned by monstrous boatmen equipped with poles. Still holding their firebrands high and singing, the people climbed on board. With Sugoll's ornate craft leading the way, the boats giided off one by one until a torchlit train extended over the water as far as the eye could see, heading into impenetrable darkness. It was a Journey that few Howlers had ever made before. Beneath the Feldberg's mass were uncounted Water Caves with springs and dark cascades and streamlets and siphons in be- wildering complexity. The upper levels were well explored, as were the underground tributaries to the Paradise and Ystroll Rivers; but only a few hardy adventurers had ever dared to cross the Black Lake, and these were long dead, leaving only half-remembered tales of what lay ahead. Katlinel's farsight, limited underground, was their sole means of navigation. The boats entered a natural tunnel, wide but with THE GRAND LOVING 141 a low ceiling. The torches struck wavering gleams from wet mineral formations. The singing echoed and reechoed off the walls until the people finally fell silent in confusion and dismay, Then Katlinel, to divert them, opened her mind and told stories of the Tanu world and that of the normal Firvulag, climaxing with the momentous events of the last Grand Combat and the Rood, which she had learned of from the farspeech of surviving members of her Creator Guild. After five hours the fleet hailed al a suitable place for the people to rest and eat. Then the journey resumed with a fresh crew of boatmen, and Lord Greg-Donnet took over as chief entertainer, lecturing telepathically for hour after hour on the mutagenic effects of hard radiation and on bioengineering tech- niques for repairing damaged chromosomes. The torches gut- tered out one by one, passengers in the boats fell into a doze, and presently the only sounds were the swish and thump of punt poles, the splashing of water, and muffled whimpers from the sleeping children. More hours passed. Sugoll and Katlinel sat side by side in the bow of the leading boat while Greg-Donnet snoozed on a pile of leather cushions behind them. The Lord and Lady of the Misbegotten shared their hopes and fears on the intimate thought-mode, giving comfort to each other and even laughing over the surprise that awaited King Sham and Queen Ayfa- The monster ingathering had swelled the Howler number pro- digiously, until at the end, instead of the original 700 or so denizens of Meadow Mountain, the emigrants totaled nearly 9000. Of these, 1256 were virgins of marriageable age. About fifteen hours after leaving the Black Lake, the wake- ful travelers were conscious of moving air that carried scents of humus and green growing things rather than sterile wet rock. Sleepers stirred and came alert. The children began to chatter and whisper. Interrogative howls passed from one boat to an- other, up the line and down. Finally- Kallinel's farsight was able to confirm that they were, indeed, approaching the river's outlet. Ahead shone a wan glimmer. The boatmen leaned to their THE NONBORN KING 142 poles, propelling the craft as swiftly as they could around one last lengthy curve. A thin screen of boughs hung over the cave's mouth. Katlinel stood up, fingers pressed to the golden lore at her throat, and pruned the ramage away with an invisible blade of psychoenergy. Severed branches tumbled harmlessly into the water and the boats drifted into open air. They emerged from the base of a great forested cliff into a land silvered by the moon- Steppes clothed with rippling grass stretched away on either hand. Near the river were groves of majestic flabel- laria fan palms and weeping willows. The Howler people in the crowded punts began to shape- shift spontaneously, as if eager to mask their deformities now that they had finally left the caves. The horned and crested horror who had sat beside Katlinel from the journey's beginning now metamorphosed into a tall humanoid as handsome as any Tanu, wearing a jewel-studded hunter's jerkin and a peaked cap surmounted by a small coronet. Sugoll asked his wife, "Now that we are beyond the dense rock formations, is your farsense abie to trace the course of this river to its confluence?" She exerted her metafaculty, ranging southward for a few score kilometers. "Yes, I see it. There's a truly enormous river down there. It comes from the east. from a great lake in the Heivetides. Not far from its confluence with this stream, it makes a right-angle curve and flows northward." She showed the mental picture to Greg-Donnet. "Oh, it's the Rhine, all right," said Crazy Greggy cheerily. "Just as we hoped. All we have to do now is float on down to the landing at the High Vrazel trailhead—and then on to Ni- belheim itself!" "How long do you think it will take us to reach the landing?" Sugoll asked Katlinel. She concentrated. "Less than a day. The river flows swiftly with the spring runoff from the Alps. We could camp here for the rest of the night, then continue in the morning. These meadowlands should be reasonably safe from predatory ani- mals, and I detect no sentient life whatsoever." "If anything comes sniffing around," Greggy said fiercely, THE GRAND LOVING 143 "we can give it a blast from those presents that Sham and Ayfa sent. Wherever do you suppose they got such contraband? Of course, it was an open secret that time-travelers did smuggle in forbidden armaments and other goodies—but we privileged humans assumed that the Tanu destroyed them. What fasci- nating food for speculation!" He began to giggle. "How I'd love to zap me a hoe-tusker! Bring ten tons of gubbertushed elephant crashing at my feet!" Wistfully, he appended. "In Muriah, I never ever got to go on Hunts. The Tanu said 1 was too valuable." "And so you are, Greggy." Sugoll had been issuing tele- pathic commands, directing the boats to shore- Now he smiled down on the dapper little geneticist. "You are valuable to us as well. I'll see that you get to stalk some big game at a suitable time. But you must promise not to go haring off on your own. Losing you would be a catastrophe." The elderly man was quick with reassurances. He glanced around at the grounding punts and the passengers disembarking in the moonlight. "1 think you all look perfectly splendid in your illusory bodies! And you and Katy make a wonderful couple, Sugoll." The Howler lord's brow creased slightly. "You can discern no shadow of our true monstrous shapes?" "Not a trace! Not a—a debitissima!" "Let us hope," Sugoll said, "that our disguises prove as impenetrable to the Firvulag royalty. And to the bridegrooms at the Grand Loving." "Nine thousand?' Sharn croaked brokenly. "0 Goddess." "The riverguards counted 'em twice, Appalling One," said Fitham. "There seem to be well over a thousand virgins, too. All shiny red boots and flower garlands with ribbons, and so stiff with opals and sapphires and rubies that they can barely stagger." "But how do they look?' Ayfa inquired grimly. Fitham paused. He pursed his lips, screwed up his eyes, scratched one ear. and resettled his conical hat. Silence grew- "Well?" demanded the royal ogress. "Can you tell?" 144 THE NONBORN KING "In a dark bedroom. Majesty, if one were very homy—" Sham groaned "Thai bad7" "Their stuffings are ingenious and attractive. Appalling Ones, but I'm afraid they wouldn't deceive a true Firvulag for a gnat's eyeblmk " "We can't nsk having an official reception for them here in the Hall," Ayfa decided "There'd be a not " "At the least," the King sighed "If you want my advice," Fitham said, "head 'em off before they ever get to High Vrazel Meet *em on the trail with a slap- up picnic feast, plenty of musicians and liquor, and a welcom- ing committee of trustworthy nobles and their ladies, pnmed to be tactful (Don't ask any with eligible sons, of course ) Give this pack of monsters what my old fnend Chief Burke would call a schmooze-job' Chat 'em up Tell 'em you want to save an inconvenient side tnp to High Vrazel—where all the palace Jakes are on the blink' After all, they'll have far enough to go, marching to Nionel through the Belfon Gap " Ayfa broke in "We can tell them all about their fine new home Show them mind-pictures' Promise them discounts on materials for the renovation' Send them off with plenty of pack animals and ndmg stock to ease their journey " "Not my new herds of chalikos and hellads'" wailed the King "You can steal more," his wife said firmly "This is an emergency The quicker that mob of wretched little spnggans is out of the Vosges, the better " Sham shook his great head helplessly "But we're only postponing the problem—not solving it So far, our own people know very little about this migration But what are we going to do, come May9 We've agreed to let the Howlers sponsor the Loving'" "We'll think of somethmg by then," Ayfa said soothingly "And besides—you and I won't be around then Don't you recall7 We're going to spend the Grand Loving this year with Alken Drum and Mercy-Rosmar and what's left of the Tanu flower and chivalry over in Gonah " THE GRAND LOVING 145 "Well, Te be thanked for small favors All I' 11 have to worry about down there is assassination'" "Shall I put arrangements for the fancy picnic in tram, then9" Fitham asked "Do so," Sham commanded, ail business again "That's a fine idea of yours, Fitham And you're coming, loo, as master of ceremonies Get out your best clothes and the gold pegleg studded with bloodstones We're going to pamper and flatter that army of abominations until they're giddy They're never going to suspect that we're all throwing up inside' Do you think they brought their treasure9" "The nverguards reported that the Howler horde is well supplied with strongboxes and locked pouches " Ayfa gave a great sigh of contentment "Then everything is going to be all right after all " And so the festive meeting took place near the headwaters of the Onion River south of High Vrazel, in a pretty part of the forest where the bulbuls sang amid the giant ferns and blossoming trees dropped petals on a scene of rustic splendor The King and Queen of the Firvulag, sixty of their most discreet courtiers, an honor guard of Wamor Ogres and Ogresses, and almost the entire strength of the royal culinary corps starred in a day-long fete champetre that completely overawed the in- nocent Howlers Plied with food and dnnk. woozy from ovenndulgence in the psychoactive hooby mushrooms, the emigrants responded enthusiastically to the proposal that they repopulate Nionel The royal donation of some 400 fully trapped chalikos, twice that number of draft hellads with carts, and a breeding herd of the recently tamed little hippanons provoked transports of maudlin gratitude among the besotted monsters After a nice show of reluctance. Sham and Ayfa agreed to accept their joint weight in gemstones as a partial down payment on delinquent taxes owed by Ihe Howler nation to the throne over the past 856 years The matter of bnde-fosterage among the noble Firvulag families was delicately skirted This custom, Sugoll was told. 146 THE NONBORN KING had fallen into decline among the nonmutant populace; and given the large number of nubile Howler females, there would be considerable awkwardness reinstating ii at the present time. Smoothly, the two monarchs declared that the brides would be far happier (and more useful) accompanying their own families to Nionel. There they could not only participate in the work force, but also prepare connubial dwellings to share with their new spouses. At the Grand Loving, the Howler damsels would celebrate the mating rituals just as other Firvulag maidens did, the girls and boys pairing off on a basis of mutual selection. Queen Ayfa pooh-poohed fears that the mutant brides would be at a disadvantage. It was true that their numbers were dis- proportionally great; however, she would personally extend Loving invitations to the most remote enclaves of "wild" Fir- vulag—those only nominally loyal to the throne—insuring an extra supply of grooms, tf some of the Howler beauties went unclaimed this year, they would surely be snapped up at sub- sequent celebrations once word of their charm and generous endowment got round the Many-Colored Land. Upon this gracious note, the royal party took its leave. Sugoll, feeling a mountain of anxiety lifted from his shoulders. retired to his cloth-of-gold pavilion after decreeing a two-day period of rest and recuperation. All over the littered picnic grove, happily fuddled mutants collapsed snoring, reassuming their usual forms once they drifted into slumber. Only Katiinel and Greg-Donnet remained awake. As the moon went down and bonfires died out, the stately hybrid woman and the wispy academic in the clawhammer coat took lanterns and walked among the people to see that all were safe. Heaps of deformed and grotesque bodies, incongruous in rich clothing, lay in Dantean disarray on the trampled grass. There were empty flagons and dirty dishes everywhere. After they had walked awhile, Greg-Donnet said, "You didn't tell Sugoll, then?" "I couldn't bear to. Not yet. He's suffered such terrible worries all through the winter—and then the trip, and won- dering about our new home- He was afraid Sham would want to banish our people to some horrible wilderness like Albion! THE GRAND LOVING 147 Nionel will be a paradise in comparison. No.. .we must let him regain his spirits before telling him the bad news. And don't you lei any hint leak out, Greggy, or 1 shall be very cross with you," "No fear, no fear." The geneticist shook his marmosetlike head, "The King and Queen and their people put a very good face on it, I must say. But as I wandered about, I picked up a good many intimations of disaster. And you, my dear, with your redactive faculty, must have known the truth almost at once." "I suppose it was only logical," Katiinel said. "Howlers can see through each other's illusions easily enough- And they and the Firvulag share the same metapsychic pattern." Greg-Donnet gave a mournful sigh- "Only humans and non- redactive Tanu would fail to penetrate the disguises. Poor little loathly brides! Well—it was only a small part of the eugenic scheme, merging the gene pools. There's still the engineering and the possibility of using Skin." "But the people will be humiliated at the Grand Loving! Who knows what they might do? Oh, Greggy, it's such a shame." She paused, lifting her lantern high. Nestled together under a sheltering willow tree were three hideous little beings, pipe- stem limbs entwined, goblin faces relaxed and peaceful. They wore bejeweled kirtles, flower headbands, and little red boots. 2 PERCHED ON A LONE TREE IN THE MIDST OF THE BLOOMING savanna, the raven watched a pair of sabertooth cats cooperate in stalking their prey The smail herd of antidorcas gazelles, fawn-colored and lyre-homed, grazed on obliviously until the male machairodus spooked them by dashing out of a clump of high grass They fled downwind and the female cat, lying in ambush, sprang Almost nonchalantly she grappled with one of the gazelles and npped its neck open with a slash of her ten-centimeter canines Her mate bounded up, eager for his share While the prey still struggled, the raven flew down, on fire with the old lust The cats withdrew before her coercive blast and crouched, snarling and hissing, as the predatory bird at- tacked one of the gazelle's great black eyes The beak struck like an ebon dagger The animal's back arched and stiffened, and then it subsided, dead The raven drank the aqueous humor and fed on blood But there was no electnc release Never, as there used to be at the death She flew back to her perch and swayed there, logy and miserable, watching the indignant machairodus cats return to begin their meal No pleasure'Never any more Never the old surge of hot psychoenergy as the victim fell, confirming her power There were smail joys to be found in the gleaning of 148 THE GRAND LOVING 149 the gold, and comfort from the faithful friends on Mount Mul" hacen But never the glorious fulfillment Not even when she had penetrated the world It was his fault The sun above her expanded to a sanguine whirling thing She gnpped the branch and felt her mind lurch, her guts heave and disgorge cloned dark liquids Suddenly nerveless, her claws lost their hold and she tumbled heavily to the ground, wings all awry, to land in a puddle of stinking vomitus And then, as before and always, she was tied to a wheel- tike apparatus, prone, with hands and feet fiercely compressed by the torturer's manacles, and he focusing ever more sharply the pain that seemed to flood through every onfiee of her body The wheel turned, lowering her headfirst into the vat of filth Even though her mouth had been wedged open, she slopped her throat with her swollen tongue, staving off drowning, while fresh agony grew in her bursting lungs Just as the symphony of pain seemed to reach its crescendo, she was forced to a further extreme by the thrust of his impalement The sunburst The release The turn of the wheel into the air The humiliating ignominy as the combined ecstasy and anguish receded Stop, her mind pleaded with him Don't Don't stop9 He would cleanse her tenderly, laughing, his beautiful face hovering in torn scarlet mist, sometimes kissing her unbroken body (and this was the worst of all and brought her closest to crying out hate-love and defiance, and thus to the brink of imbecility) Scream, he told her gently Curse me aloud and it will be consummated But she would not utter a sound, shutting eyes and mind from the sight of him and the knowledge of what inevitably came next, the warm stream, the soft impacts on her face and eyelids You like it It's what you are, where you came from, what you're made of Stop Don't stop Let me die rather than know The agony of realization The reaming, refining pain burning through the brain along the channels opened by fury Stop Don't stop 150 THE NONBORN KING Scream, he invited Only scream for an end But she would not, and the wheel, come full circle, earned her down again into the feculent trough Her soul shrank, her identity hid away in the liny mental sanctuary that remained buned in contradictions of pleasure and pain, humiliation and rapture, love and hate He was destroying her, creating her Demolishing her, perfecting her Driving her insane as he un- wittingly .set free her superhuman metapsychic potential Kill- ing her in the act of love Stop Don't stop Torturer Beloved The raven flopped weakly under the enormous blood-sun The disk was spinning, throwing off foul-smellmg drops that bumed her, extruding a kind of jet—a vortex that sought her out and tried to pierce her again You will not, she told it There is no pleasure in the pain anymore None ever again until I invade and break you, 0 Beloved The passive earth was not enough At length, the sabertooth cats finished and sal in the sun, licking theu paws and washing their faces They were mag- nificent things, patterned with marbled squares thai merged into dark stripes and spots at the head and extremities The male strolled over to sniff the moribund raven But the bud was a repellent object, exuding suffering, and the cat merely gave it a contemptuous swat before turning away and leading its mate off for their afternoon nap The bird roused from its stupor and called Culluket Felice Is that you Beloved9 No it is I Elizabeth My poor Felice Let me help you Help9 Stop9 I can help you Stop the nightmares and the misery Stop7 Stop painpleasure9 It's not really pleasure That part is gone What's left is only pain A mind full of pain and guilt A sick mind Let me help Help9 Only he can help By dying Not true I can help Wash away all the filth forever Make you bright and clean and new THE GRAND LOVING 151 I can never be I am only fit to be despised shunned execrated shit upon Not true You can be healed Come to me Come9 But they are coming' Coming to me' To bow down and give homage and follow To gift me with my heart's desire Come to YOU9 Stupidstupidstupid— They are liars Felice They will not give you what you need They will only use you to gain what they seek They seek my Beloved To please me To restore my joy' No Ttiey lie to you Theydonotcannottheyaredarkangels— They are human beings Operant metapsychic humans Not devils9 Humans They lied Listen to me Felice You know that I was a powerful mmdheater in the Milieu 1 will heal you if you only come freely to me I will ask nothing in return I will not seek to bind you I am constrained by superego block never to harm a thinking being 1 only wish to see you healthy in mind and free and at peace The others cannot do this for you Perhaps they can' Ask them 1 will' And I'll find out soon enough if they're lying about bringing me Cull Test them Yes Yes Elizabeth9 Could you really erase the night- mare9 It's the wrong kind of pain you know I know It's part of your sickness To perceive pain as pleasure sometimes Your mental circuits are dislocated It happened when you were very young But you can be healed if you open to me admit me freely Will you come •' Come9 Stop the pain9 Don't stop' Yes9 No' CULLUKET' CULLUKET' CULLUKET' The raven took wing, crying harshly Down below on the Spanish steppe, the sabertooth cats dozed and the herd of ga- zelles grazed unmolested 3 HIGH ON AFALIAH'S SOUTHERN RAMPART, LOOKING DOWN UN- seeing upon the tumult of the afternoon fighting practice, the two old First Comers quarreled. "Principles! Principles'" raved Aluteyn Craftsmaster "Hun- gry people will tell you where to stick your principles' Celo, the Flood's unhinged your wits!" "Should 1 have remained a hostage to Lowlife gadgetry9" Celadeyr demanded rhetorically. "The thing was a symbol of everything Nodonn warned us against. Only human operators understood it' It was a tool of soulless Milieu technocracy!" "Well, it's nobody'stool now, you bungling idiot Why didn't you exercise your high-minded idealism on something less vital to the local economy? There can't be two weeks' worth of flour left in the southern warehouses! Sweet tittuping Tana—every city between here and Amalizan depends on your mill. Are we all supposed to eat parched groats and mush?" "Why not?" the Lord of Afaliah shouted. "They'd be-a damn sight more healthy for you than the sissified pastries and crois- sants and Gil Bias pancakes you usually stuff yourself with' Just look at yourself, Al. You're toting more lard than ever A fine excuse for a city-lord! If the Foe attacks your Catamosk. you'll look like a hippo in emerald armor leading the battle- charge! A diet of honest, old-fashioned food would do you good " 152 THE GRAND LOVING 153 "Thank you very much for the advice " The Craftsmaster's voice was silky He thrust his face with its silver-gold mus- taches and bushy brows nose to nose with that of his old friend. "Odd, isn't it—but I had the mistaken impression you called me down here to ask my help. not to read me a health-food lecture and insult my physique! Well, live and leam. And fix your bloody flour mill yourself!" He whirled about and went stomping toward the stairway "Al, come back." The words were forced out. The mind- plea was desolate. "I am a bungler. All I intended to do was disconnect the mill's robotics- Go back to direct control by people Modify the operation so that we weren't so dependent on the Lowlives." The Craftsmaster paused at the head of the stairs and waited for Celadeyr to come to him. "Did you think you were tinkering with some hydro-powered grist mill back home on Dual? That was your speed, Celo' Primitive machinery for a primitive mind." "This contraption . do you know it yields forty-three dif- ferent milling products? Everything from silk-sifted cake flour to the red-dog chaff we feed the hellads. Tracing the circuits of the flour-stream blender to allow for manual operation seemed straightforward enough, but I forgot about the sample analyzer with its additive-injection unit for quality control Bypass that and you get raw stuff with a funny color and unpredictable properties that brings the bakers screaming- Try to inject the additives manually and you end up with half-poisonous crap contaminated with benzoyl peroxide and potassium bromate and Tana knows what else." "This could be tncky, Celo, even for me. Where's the tech- nician who supervised the robotics before?" "Jorgensen drowned, with most of his senior staff. They were great sports fans. The fellow that took over was an insolent bastard. Bareneck—untorcable. according to the redactors Tried to pressure me Me! I zapped mm to a greasy smut." "That's useful." "Should I have compromised my authority?" Celadeyr bel- lowed. His face glowed incandescent and his hair crackled with THE NONBORN KING 154 static charges. "That wretched Mukherji thought he had me over a barrel! Said he'd do his job only if I granted him the privileges of a gold-tore! And his seditious trickery was be- ginning to spread among the other human technicians- Oh— they know very well that Aiken Drum has promised golden tores to every human who's compatible—and full civil rights to those who aren't- I've had Boduragol and his redactors deep- reaming alt the barenecks and the human golds in Afaliah, weeding out traitors." "But I'm a traitor, too, Ceio," The Craftsmaster's smile was sardonic- "I'm attainted! A deposed High Tabler who shirked his death-offering," "Don't be ridiculous, Al, You chose death over exile volun- tarily and then you un-chose it when circumstances changed. As far as I'm concerned, you're still Lord Creator. And to hell with Aiken Drum's redheaded Lowlife quim!" Aluteyn laughed. "Oh, no you don't. You don't rope me into your traditionalist suicide corps. I've learned too much about Aiken Drum in the past months to go against him! I'll dance at the little gold rapscallion's wedding in May and drink Slonshal to him and Mercy-Rosmar." "You'd accept him as kingT'' Celadeyr cried. "Why not? Minanonn's the only other possibility—and he won't play. I'll take the kid over Sham-Mes and Ayfa any day." Celadeyr gripped the Craftsmaster by both upper arms. Overflowing psychoenergy enkindled a furious aura about both of them. "It's the Nightfall War that's brewing. Al! Can't you see. Creative Brother? What's coming is the final conflict be- tween us and the Foe—the one we were about to begin when the Galactic Federation denied us our heritage and hounded us to Void's Edge! Brede forestalled the Nightfall that time when she carried us here with her Ship. But Brede's gone now, and this poor fool of an Elizabeth can never take her place. You belong with me, Al! We're of an age, coming up ors three thousand orbits from our birth on poor lost Dual. Pace the Nightfall with me!" "Celo—" THE GRAND LOVING 155 The Lord of Afaliah gestured down into the courtyard of the citadel, where an armed free-for-all was under way. "We're getting ready for it! All of the Tanu who are faithful to the old traditions. The loyal members of NontusvePs Host are here. Sixteen of them, including Kuhat Earthshaker." Aluteyn gave his old comrade a pitying glance. "Low-power hotheads—and I know all about poor Kuhal." "More people join us every day," Cetadeyr asserted stoutly, but his hands fell away from the Craftsmaster and the glow paled. "And the wild Firvulag in the mountains are sharpening their blades and stealing your chalikos and wailing for Sham's reinforcements before they pounce!.. .Who's running your plantations now that you fired the human administrators? Quite a few of them stopped off in Calamosk on their way to join Aiken Drum." Celadeyr looked away. "My son Uriel and daughter Feth- neya are installing Tanu overseers. As we had in the begin- ning." The Craftsmaster snorted. "And don't I know how much the younger generation's worth when it comes to hard work! When 1 ran Creation House, it was all we could do to find candidates for the practical disciplines. For agriculture, hus- bandry, game management. You'll find that your children's cronies are marvels at giving feasts and composing ballads and riding to the Hunt when the quarry's flea-bitten Lowlife ref- ugees. But to depend on them for production of your staple commodities—? Goddess give you the brains of a nit! This broken-down flour mill will be the least of your worries if the plantations fail." Celadeyr's face was as lusteriess as the parapet stones and his mind had gone shut. He said. in tones of utmost formality, "Aluteyn Craftsmaster, I adjure thee by our sacred Creator Guild kinship to come to my aid. The Nightfall War approaches and the Adversary is nigh." The First Comers faced each other unmoving. Then Atu- teyn's ice-blue eyes misted over and the thoughts came tum- bling out: 156 THE NONBORN KING Celo Celo lads we were together fellowimtiates under old Amergan (Goddess grant him rest in light) creators makers doers workers' Never faltering even in pain canng ourpeople's welfare building sheltering affirming life I chose Retort when death was proper but now it is right I live castmgaside weariness embracing duty As you must' "My vision is of the Nightfall War'" Celadeyr said "Or do you think I've gone mad'7" I think Flood loss sorrow ascendence of Foe rage at Rav- ensdeed have brought you to your own VoidsEdge Perhaps beyond We need not accept this as Nightfall' If we swallow pnde unite humans we can restrain Foe renew Many-Colored- Land So many colors And now all dark Celo our elder generation may not force end when young would choose life The Adversary comes' Humanity' Alken Drum' No Celo no He cannot be Not the Kingmaker's Chosen I had forgotten that "Then it's time you remembered," said a loud voice from nowhere A dazzling point of light hovered a few meters beyond the southern edge of the parapet, where the wall of Afaliah dropped off into the precipitous gorge of the Proto-Jucar The spark expanded into a radiance surrounding a crystalline sphere In- side. seated upon thin air with his legs crossed, was a small human wearing a golden suit all covered with pockets "You," said Celadeyr of Afaliah The sphere drifted toward them and descended, shivering to atoms as it touched the stone pavement Alken Drum doffed his plumed hat "Hail, Creative Brother of Afaliah I've been eavesdropping on you for the last ten minutes or so You really ought to listen to the Craftsmaster's advice He's a touchy old coot, but sen- sible in the main " The old champion was suddenly transformed into a jovian apparition that towered hugely against the sky with one hand portentously upraised "Die. upstart'" he bellowed in a voice THE GRAND LOVING 157 of thunder, and hurled his most potent mindbolt The resultant detonation and blast of green light caused all the knights down in the courtyard to freeze in their tracks, their mock battle forgotten "Battle companions' To me'" Celadeyr called but the voice of the hero was now as weak as the whisper of leaves, and his mind's cry of balked wrath seemed to echo futilely within the vault of his skull Celadeyr cast off his illusory aspect and strained to seize the usurper in his physical grip Not a muscle would respond He was immobile, helpless, and so were the stricken knights below "And we were such good friends on the Deibaeth Quest," said Alken regretfully "Don't you remember. Creative Brother^ Chasing the old Shape of Fire up one Betic and down the next, afraid to take to the air for fear he'd fry our glass-armored scuts?" The Shining One chuckled "If we hunted Deibaeth now, we'd have no such worry My powers have come on nicely, as you can see One of these days, I hope to have Dionket Lord Healer do my mind-assay right in front of the lot of you, so you can see what manner of lad aspires to be your king " Celadeyr's incandescent face had gone chlorotic In a raspy whisper, he said, "Free me Fight like a true wamor " "Fight you7" inquired the trickster lightly "Not bloody likely 1 don't take on cowards " "Cowards—'" Stepping close to the statuesque Tanu, Alken floated up until the two of them were eye to eye "You're a washed-up, worn-out, sad old death-seeking coward I'm willing to take on the Firvulag Who cares if they outnumber us ten to one17 But the great High Table Lord of Afaliah would rather lie down and die Or rather—march into the teeth of a mounted ogre battalion with a dotted line drawn on his throat and a tag that says CUT HERE'' The Craftsmaster said somberly, "The kid's not that far wrong about your deep motivation, Celo " "Adversary' Fight me fairly," begged Celadeyr, his face grimacing in torment 158 THE NONBORN KiNG Aiken lowered himself to the pavement. "I fight with the weapons I have. It's the only sensible way " And he waved one hand. In the air out over the gorge now hovered an armed and mounted host of some four hundred knights, with the brilliantly glowing forms ofCulluket, Alberonn, and Bleyn poised in the van. Behind them were Tanu and hybrid wamors representing all five of the Guilds Mental, the strength of their auras con- firming the power of their minds. Respectfully, the rainbow army lifted their weapons- A re- sounding salute rolled over the battlement. "Slonshal, Cela- deyr! Slonshal, Lord of Afaliah!" "We're not here to fight," Aiken insisted, and the warm cajolery seeped into Celadeyr's brain willy-mlly. "We're here to demonstrate that there's hope for us all if we unite against the Foe. I had to leave most of the fighters at home in Gonah, but I did bring this bunch for you to review—and there's also my new elite guard of human golds down on the ground just outside your city's north gate, if you'd care to give 'em a far- eyed once-over." Celadeyr extended his mental vision. There seemed to be at least a thousand troops out there -.. and the gale of Afaliah was opening to them. The ranks of mounted men and women were led by officers with metapsychic auras Some of the rank and file glowed and some did not—but all were collared in gold and bearing most peculiar armament. "Go ahead," urged Aiken. "Take a really close look at their weapons Our late great Battlemaster might have talked a good game about abolishing Lowlife technology, but he wasn't stu- pid enough to follow his own principles. Like you were. Cre- ative Brother' The cellars at my Castle of Glass in Gonah were stuffed with seventy years' worth of contraband—including the things you see. Zappers. Stun-guns. Solar-powered blasters. Double-barreled Rigby .470 elephant rifles. Air guns with steel- pellet ammo. Some disruptors Just about every kind of portable proscribed weapon you can imagine smuggled past the unsus- pecting officials at Madame Gudenan's estabbshment by sneaky time-travelers who wanted a small advantage over their fellow THb GRAND LOVING 159 Pliocene exiles And there may be other caches besides the one I found Do you have one, Celo? No? Then perhaps we'd better pul the same question to your son Unet and daughter Fethneya " Celadeyr's eyes came back into focus A sad smile played over his lips "No, I didn't know about [he contraband caches But it would help explain something that puzzled me—rumors that the Foe had developed fearsome new weapons after they destroyed Burask. The late Lord Osgeyr was notoriously cov- etous, and it would have been just like him lo have stored away the forbidden arms instead of destroying them." Aiken said, "Thanks for the tip I'll check into that " The army of sky-nders was on the move, their chalikos trotting smartly on air over the city rampart, and then beginning a slow spiral down into the great courtyard The knights of Afaliah formed into an involuntary honor guard "1 had another reason for coming," Aiken said Celadeyr discovered that he was free at last He made no move to threaten the gold-clad youth. "I think I know " Aiken wagged a finger "Now—don't jump to false con- clusions' We're all in this together, I told you. United against the Foe' No—I came because the wedding invitation we sent you seems to have gone astray " Ceiadeyr could not help an incredulous obscenity The golliwog was all sincerity "We never heard a word from you Mercy was desolated So was I How could I cel- ebrate my nuptials without my old friends from Afaliah'' My comrades of the Delbaeth Quest? So I'm here to reextend the invitation Personally " "Come on, Celo," said Aluteyn Craftsmaster gently. "I had to choose life Now it's your turn." Celadeyr stood there, hands at his sides, feet wide apart- His fingers clenched once and relaxed His eyes closed, cutting off the physical image, at least, of the Adversary. The reluctant affirmation came. Aiken fairly sparkled with pleasure. "Kaleidoscopic' You won't regret it. Creative Brother There are tots of ways we THE NONBORN KING 160 can help each other in these lough times For instance—" Alken snapped his fingers Another astral bubble materialized and wafted down to the parapet Inside was a samurai wamor in full Muromachi pan- oply, wearing a golden tore The sphere evaporated and the wamor bowed "Lord Celadeyr, Craftsmaster—I want you to meet d new friend of mine named Yosh Watanabe A technician of great ingenuity' Thai armor of his used to be made of hundreds of little iron plates—but he replaced them with tabs of mastodon hide and melted the iron and made himself a blood-metal sword He's lived free almost from the first day he came through the time-gate—and yet he couldn't wait to join up with Me' Celo— you and Yosh want to gel together for some serious consul- tation Back in the Milieu, he was a pretty heavy robotics engineer And he also flies a mean kite " Yosh winked at the Lord of Afaliah, who stared back at the samurai with a wild surmise Alken said, "Now, the rest of my gang and me have to be moving right along We'll spend the night, but then we're off for Tarasiah and a few other places on an inspection tour and to deliver a few more messed-up wedding invitations' But Yosh will be glad to stay on here for a few weeks to help you with your problems You can bnng him back to Gonah when you come up for the wedding And the other fun and games " "I see," said Ceiadeyr faintly 'That okay with you, Yosh''" Alken inquired "Whatever you say, Chief," said the samurai affably He turned to the Lord of Afaliah "What say we take a little survey of the balls-up nght now9" Celadeyr didn't move But the Craftsmaster put an arm around his old friend's shoulder and began drawing him toward the stairway "That's a good idea," Aluteyn said "And 1 think I know where we can find some of the special tools and components needed for me repair job Celo—is Treonet's iab still intact9" The Lord of Afaliah nodded Aluteyn explained to Yosh "'One of my late guild-brothers THE GRAND LOVING 161 was a keen fosterer of Elder Earth microprocessing and other electronic doodads His mansion has an attached lab and one of the biggest technical libraries in the Many Colored Land We'll go there, set you up in style, son You can shuck your fancy ng-out, too. and get into some more practical clothes I don't suppose you'd mind if I watched while you worked^" 'My pleasure," said Yosh "See you all at supper," said Alken, and vanished like a blown-out flame Celadeyr shook his head "And thai would be our king " "The idea," Aluteyn Craftsmaster observed, "might grow on you " SHE CAME OUT INTO THE EVENING CALM FOR A LAST BREATH of air before summoning the women. The moon, pregnant as she was. hung new over the Strait of Redon. It would not mature until May Day, which was an excellent portent for the Loving; but Mercy's time had come. The balcony of her tower suite was broad, with shrubs and flowers planted in golden ums. She rarely went out there now, for ihe amethyst faene lighting installed by Alken-Lugonn seemed chilling and melancholy to her. How different it had been in Nodonn's time' Then the jewel-lamps strung along the crystal balustrade and in the angles of the opaque glass walls had gleamed warmly rose, and she had only to will it and the daemon lover himself would appear beside her to share the setting of the sun behind Breton Island, flame tones sinking at last to star-studded violet. On a night such as this one, they would make a joint wish upon the shy crescent moon. And now the bones of the glorious Apollo rested in the New Sea's mud "But mine will lie here." she told die babe inside her, "in this land of Bnttany where I was born six million years from now- And one day, Georges Lamballe and Siobhan O'Connell will wander along the beaches and headlands of Belle He and find a stone with a thin film of carbon and phos- phor streaking it. And it will be me " 162 THE GRAND LOVING 163 The ferns leaped, sharing the pain, and she was overcome with remorse. Peace darling Agraynel peace Grama veinofmyheart To- night you will be freed. The unborn relaxed Mercy tned again to fathom her child's mind; but under the easily perceptible surface emotions the personality was ungraspable, a fearsome bright otherness, hun- gering The preconscious of the Thagdal's hybnd daughter was a humming vortex impatiently waiting to suck a new world of physical sensation, no longer comforted by the limited stimuli available to the womb-bound. The infant yearned without knowing for richer inputs than waterborne sounds of maternal heart and lungs and digestive tract, or the dim redness seen through filmed eyes, or vague tactilities dulled by her fetal coating of vemix caseosa unguent, or the omnipresent taste and smell of ammotic fluid More' the inarticulate teiepathic voice seemed to cry. And the mother replied: Soon Agraynel's ultrafaculties (as those of all term fetuses, whether potentially operant or latent) were totally onented toward love- need. She beat with her weak psychokinesis against the uterine prison, plucked at Mercy's consciousness with feeble redaction; strove to create an unbreakable bond between the two of them. even as she tried to gain freedom; coerced most strongly of all And thereby was forged mat commonplace miracle, the metapsychic link between every normal mother and child. Love' called the insatiable wee mind. More love' Mother loves you. You love Mother Sleep The child-mind drifted away, content. Poor Alken. Mercy thought, comparing And then. Nodonn My Nodonn "But it is not our way" protested Lady Moma-la "A mother of our battle-company should travail courageously until vic- torious' And especially you. who may well be the founding matnarch of a new Host'" "We will conduct the birth in the way I've decided." Mercy said 'The Lord Healer has come to assist me with the Skm- 164 THE NONBORN KINO and ail of the noble ladies now awdit us in the audience cham- ber " "All of them9" Moma was as awed as she was dismayed "For this most private, sacred moment7" "The female knights who accompanied Lord Alken-Lugonn will have to receive their instruction later But the others are ready I willingly forego my privacy I am Lady Creator, and it's my duty to instruct all of you in this For the future " Moma could not mistake her intention "Surely you don't think—" "When the others see it—and the way it affects the baby— they won't have it any other way Moma bowed her head "As you have said, you are Lady Creator But so many things have changed " Mercy smiled encouragement at the towering woman in the lavender robes Her eyes were a brilliant blue tonight and her aubum hair hung free She wore a long gauze shift, white with a golden hem, and her arms were bare, the skin very pale with a dusting of tiny freckles The yoke of the gown, where the golden tore shone, was slashed straight between her full breasts to a point just above the swell of the child "Dear Farseeing Sister Moma. you're Kingmaker Aspirant now, and second ranked among the Most Exalted Ladies But you've also been kind to a bereaved human woman—and once, eight hundred iong years agone, you midwifed Queen Non tusvel when she bore her first son The office wilt be only slightly different this time And, of course, Agraynel is a girl But as you'll see once her aura is separated from mine, she's going to be an exceptional person, worthy to be your godchild " Mercy took one of Moma's coo! dry hands and pressed it to her belly "Feel her Meet her' She's ready " The fetus gave a great bound and Mercy laughed The minds of the two women embraced "Now then Take me to the dais of the audience chamber, where all of them are waiting " The great room was very dim, and of course the stained- glass windows that glonfied il in daylight were night-masked There were no faerie lights, only sconces of candles casting d wavering orange glow about the stage No couch waited, no THE GRAND LOVING 165 chair, no birthing-stool There was only a golden table with two large basins—one beaten gold, the other transparent crys- tal, half-filled with warm water Beside the table waited Dion- ket Lord Healer, summoned from his voluntary retirement in the Pyrenees, holding a golden pouch in one hand and a glit- tering ruby blade in the other Ranged behind him, looking self-important and radiating not a little apprehension, were three Tanu maidens a redactor wearing scarlet and white, a psychokmetic dressed in rose and gold, and a blue-garbed coer- cer—this last none other than Olone, the bethrothed of Sut hvan-Tonn Very slowly, Mercy came to the front of the dais and stood alone The several hundred spectators were cloaked and hooded in white, unmovmg, their minds as carefully enshrouded as their bodies I greet you Sisters, Mercy bespoke them We respond to your summoning, the minds whispered Lady of Gonah I am here to demonstrate a new way of bringing forth life You know that my powers are great, and that they are also different from those of most creative persons among the Tanu My powers are gentle, not aggressive They are not for battle, but for nurture I will teach them to you For you may all, if you desire it, follow this way that I am going to show to you now She stepped back to the table, to Dionkel Moma and the three girls hovered in the background Mercy stood facing the audience of breathless women and closed her eyes The tail Lord Healer made a gesture From his golden pouch flowed an enveloping sheet of material thinner than the finest plass It settled over Mercy, perfectly transparent, like a veil covering a statue Her body began to radiate, the light concentrated most strongly in the swollen abdomen The white gown seemed to become as clear as the Skin, and in the midst of the light was a small form Something almost ectopiasnuc came from Mercy s body, shimmering through the abdominal wall, to float between her hands that were now outstretched A mind-gasp, instantly sup- THE NONBORN KING 166 pressed, arose from ihe crowd- Dionket's auslere face softened in a smile. The closest spectators were aware of a great web of redaclive and psychokinetic power from his mind blending with creative forces of the mother for her almost instantaneous healing. Dionket gestured and the Skin whisked away into nothing- ness- Through farseeing eyes, all of the women saw Mercy gazing down on her newbom. The baby was still enclosed in the fetal membranes. A gossamer bubble filled with fluid, the amnion, hovered just above Mercy's extended hands. The um- bilical cord, still attached to the placenta, was clearly visible. Now Moma lifted the golden basin and held it beneath the baby with the help of the psychokinetic lady-in-waiting. Dion- ket's ruby scalpel flashed briefly and the waters cascaded down- The Healer touched the baby again, freeing the cord, -and the membranes vanished with it into the bowl. Agraynel opened her eyes. She breathed easily after Mercy's lung-inflating kiss, enveloped in warm air. Now the redactive maiden stood ready with the crystal bowl, a silk sponge, and towels. The infant continued to hover in space, wriggling gently, as Mercy and Moma washed away the pasty vemix coating, leaving her skin pink and fresh. Mercy kissed the child again and she was dry. Young Olone stepped forward with clothing and a receiving blanket, and the small form was swaddled to the armpits. Mercy hugged her daughter, offered a breast. The baby was still too new to suck milk, but her mind was open and drinking, drinking. The crowd of awestricken women hardly dared to reach out—but with Mercy's encouragement, they came care- fully, bestowing feathery mental pats of affection. "Peace—for the naming." Moma's physical voice was soft. Nevertheless everyone in the audience hall heard. The old woman held high a tiny golden tore and there was a collective sigh. The three young ladies-in-waiting went stiff with anticipation. Who would it be? "Olone," said Mercy, beckoning with her mind. The maiden in the robes of the Coercer Guild took the child THE GRAND LOVING 167 into her amis, rapturous. You should be mine! How lovely you are! "I call you Agraynel ul-Mercy-Rosmarvur-Thagdal." Morma slipped the golden ring about the baby's neck and fastened the twisting catch. "The good Goddess grant you long life, honor, and happiness in her service." Slonshal, whispered the hundreds of female minds. Slonshal, sighed Dionket Lord Healer. Slonshal, Mercy told her daughter, as she took her back from the reluctant Olone. Her heart overflowed with joy for the first time since the Flood and the loss, and she reached out in playful query to Moma, who had come to lead her away. And are you a true Kingmaker Aspirant, Farseeing Moma- la? Do you have the sight? And does it show you this sweet little one as a queen? -.. The mind-voices in the hail were singing the Song in tones as soft as an aeolian harp. "I see Agraynel queen of our Many-Colored Land. Yes." Mercy uttered a delighted cry. "Do you' Oh, don't be teas- ing!" There were beads of sweat on the old woman's smooth brow. Her lips were trembling- "I speak the truth. I knew as she first breathed." Mercy stood still before the draperies at the rear of the dais. Her look was fey and wild- She had the baby drawn up tightly against one flushed cheek. The infant's eyes seemed enormous in the tiny face. "And her king!" Mercy cried. "Who will he be?" "He.. -is not yet born." "But you know who he is? Whose child he will be?" Mercy persisted. "Tell me, Moma! You must tell me!" Moma backed away, her face white and her mind walled up. "I cannot!" she said tremulously. "I cannot." She turned and fled through the heavy draperies, leaving Mercy staring wonderingly after, Dionket came and put a protective arm around the mother, and at the same time his redactive faculty slipped into her tired mind to fend off the inevitable question, the anxiety, and the fear. THE NONBORN KING 168 Mercy forgot. The baby snuggled into the front of her gown, began to nurse, and there was for Mercy nothing else to be concerned about. 5 HE WOKE TO THE AWFUL, NOURISHING KISS. His food, masticated and warm, without flavor, transferred from her mouth to his. The encouraging thrust of her tongue. Moist female fingers massaging his throat until he must perforce swallow. Her rhythmic two-note humming, monotonously timed to his heartbeat. He smelled the meaty aroma of the food and her unwashed body in its garment of half-cured skin, and smoke and enclosing rock- He heard, besides her voice, a distant tinkle of water and someone coughing and spitting far away, echoing. And bird- song. And the wind's harsh breath in mountain pines- His farsight was btind and his body paralyzed, but he could at least open his eyes. There was pain, even though the light was dim. A low moan escaped him. The humming cut oft abruptly. "0 God, is it you?" Hanging locks of very long, very dirty fair hair. A face, doughy-pale beneath grime, the nose short and flat, the eyes small, wide-set, too gray a blue, now popping with incredulous delight. The mouth agape, lips all smeared with the food lately shared. Carious teeth. "My God from the Sea. You're awake!" The face approached to blurriness and again there was the kiss, not nourishing this time but alive with joyful passion- 169 170 THE NONBORN KING When she freed his mouth her lips caressed his nostrils, his cheeks, his eyes and forehead, the lobes and shells of his ears, his beardless jaw and chin. "You're awake! Awake and living! My beautiful God!" He was incapable of any movement, except for his eyes; a mind immured, lacking any metapsychic faculty- When the woman leaped up and ran away, he saw stone walls, a kind of cavern arching into darkness above; but toward his feet (if they existed) was light. A querulous, sour old-man voice, interrupted in its cough- ing: "He is, is he? Well, let's see this miracle." Shuffling steps, panting exhalations all gurgly with phlegm. Her excited whispers: "Be quiet, Grandpa. Be careful. Don't touch him." "Shut up, you stupid cow, and let me see." The two of them bending over him. A great husky woman in a stained doeskin shift- An aged Lowlife man, bald and bearded, with reddened eyes and a cruel hawk nose, wearing tattered cloth trousers and a black mink vest, glossy and superb. The old man squatted down. Quick as a spider, one of his hands darted out, grasping. "Grandpa, no!" wailed the woman. The newly awakened eyes filled with pained tears. The old man had seized him by the hair and hauled up. When the tears spilled, there was the sight of a body covered to the breast with a fur robe. The aged tormentor lei loose of his hair and he fell back inert. Cackling, the old man tweaked his nose, pinched a cheek with rough fingernails, rolled his head from side to side with sharp slaps. "Yes! Yes! Awake! But helpless, you high-and-mighty lump of Tanu shit! You heap of dead meat!" The woman hauled the old man, squawking, to his feet. "You may not hurt the God, Grandpa!" she said in a terrible voice. There was a thudding sound, a pained gasp, whimpering. And the woman: "He's mine! I saved him from the sea and from death. 1 won't let you harm him." Again the thud and feeble cries. "Goddam it, girl, I wasn't going to do anything. Owww THE GRAND LOVING 171 ... You've put my back out, you galiumping bitch. Help me up." "First you promise, Grandpa." "I promise. 1 promise." And vicious subvocai mutterings. "Go bring his hand. And the oil wanning on the fire." Chuntering and snuffling, the old man went off. She knelt reverently and again there was the kiss from her slightly everted lips- He clenched his teeth weakly against her probing tongue. "No, no," she scolded gently. One hand smoothed his hair. "1 love you. You mustn't be afraid. Soon I'll make you very happy. But first there's a surprise." Grandpa was standing there with a skin bag and some kind of open container - "Can—can I watch?" the old brute asked. His eyes had become oddly bright and he licked his cracked lips. "Please, Huldah. Let me watch." Her chuckle was amazingly ironic. "You want to remember how it was with you." "Didn't I make his hand for you?" the old man whined. "1 won't make any noise. You won't know I'm here." "I know you spy on us at night. Silly old Grandpa. All right. But first the hand." A diminution of warmth. She was turning back the fur coverlet. Faintly his kinesthetic sense told of movement on his right side. Then he saw. She raised his right arm, and halfway below the elbow it terminated in a stump. From deep in his throat there came a sound. The arm was lowered. She cried out in pity. "Oh, poor God! 1 forgot you didn't know." Kisses. Terrible kisses. "When I found you at the edge of the lagoon, you were hurt. One of your glass gloves was gone. Your hand was all torn from the sharp salt-crusts that form on the rocks below our cliffs. And there was a hyena. I drove it away, but its spit was poison and your wound stank and wouldn't heai. Grandpa told me what I would have to do. He didn't think I would dare." The coarse face, full of devotion, came close, bathing him in fetid breath. She smiled and withdrew, and then she was holding something. 172 THE NONBORN KING A wooden hand. "I had Grandpa make this for you." Somewhere, the abom- inable old man was giggling. "I'll put it on you now, so you'll be whole again." Happily, she held it up for him to view The stump fitted into a kind of leather cup, and there were straps- The digits were fully jointed. "When you're welt, you'll be able to make it move. That's what Grandpa says " She tilted her head anxiously for a moment, casting a dartlike glance at the old man. "I hope he's telling the truth. He doesn't, always. But you mustn't think about that. Just think about getting well." He closed his eyes against the prospect. The old man's laughter trailed away into a paroxysm of hacking. Warm oil smell. "Don't worry Don't fret. I know what to do. How to bring the life-energy back " Insistent, primal, the two-note humming captured his heartbeat and began speeding it. The fur blanket removed. The oil smoothed and kneaded into his paralyzed flesh. Rolled over. She flexing and invig- orating the flaccid muscles On his back again, with her kneel- ing at his hips. "Come alive, my God of Joy. Come alive for me!" No, he besought the betraying energies No—not with her. But a sunlight radiance was responding to her coaxing, bright- ening the cave with rosy-gold glory. Its urgency could not be pent. She breathed, "Oh. yes Oh, yes." The brightness was engulfed by her. She was humming again to an ever-accelerating tempo, and rocking, and he was swept away in the tide of life 6 PEOPEO MOXMOX BURKE. I hear Elizabeth. 1 have seen your dilemma Peo. Madness! Found nearly 1000 bivouaced [location] west- shore LacBresse Sickstarvmghurt. Fighting amongselves Chivvied into thisplace by Howlers(?) FirvulagC7) Both 1 think. There have been peculiar migrations of How- lers during the past months- And the Firvulag sacked Burask and drove its bareneck populace into the Hercyman Wilderness. Part of the group you found consists of Burask refugees. The others are Lowlives whose tiny settlements were raided by the migrating Howlers. Just look perisherschlemiels' Thisplace shithole until our- party come force order kill crazies What HELL going do? HiddenSprings or IronVUlages never absorb suchrabble We abandon they goners. Besides Amerie won't leave She scents a mission' Well? Advise' They are human. Postpone returning to Hidden Springs. Your mission there will keep And Basil's embassy to Sugoil and Katlinel must be reorganized as well The Howlers have left the Feldberg. World turned upsidedown' Peo your mounted and armed force of thirty can deal with this wretched mob and at the same lime forward part of our 173 174 THE NONBORN KING own design Take them north At the head of the Lac de Bresse is a small river with a trail that will take you to a low divide. Across it and sixteen kloms to the west you come upon the headwaters of another nver. The Firvuiag call it the Pliktol. Follow it. It becomes raftable almost at once. About a hundred and sixty kloms downstream it merges with a larger nver the Nonol. (This is the one that flows past Burask.) Follow this Nonot River for another fifty kloms until you reach an extensive meadowiand that the Little People call the Field of Gold. (This lime of year it's a mass of buttercups and St. John's-wort. Later there are big yellow daisies.) On the right bank of the nver connected to the Field of Gold by a hanging bridge is the Firvuiag city of Nionel I thought just legend! No real Sugoll and Katlinel and their people have been given it by the Firvuiag on condition they restore it. II Take your mob of pathetickers there Peo. Sugoll will wel- come them Surely you Jest. He will Don't tell the mob they're bound for a Howler city. Just say it's a place where they'll be safe and happy.. Are any of them torced? No. I figure all torcers either spookkilted or Tanurescued Satisfactory While you're in Nionel you can confer with Sugoll about new expedition to Ship'sGrave He'll give you guides- You can leave Nionel with the guides and your dare- devils immediately after the May Day festivities- Drop Amerie off at Hidden Springs. You should probably stay there yourself and put Basil in charge of the expedition. I leave this to your discretion. There will probably be a stepup in Firvuiag hostil- ities this summer And sooner or later Aiken will make a move toward your iron. Wonderful. Things will remain quiet for now Peo. There's a twoweek truce on either side of GrandLovmg- You better benght about Nionelthing Elizapupikeh. Imean why Sugoll welcome us with fekucktehrabble? Morelikely we THE GRAND LOVING 175 arrive Nionel Howlers chopus mincemeat! Trust me. He will welcome your refugee mob because most of them are men. ? Trust me' And blessings Peo Oy. 7 THE FISHING CAME TO AN EARLY END THAT SEASON——NOT because the tarpon stopped coming, but because of Marc's own malaise and dejection, which were directly attributable to the idiotic European adventure. Once the ketch set sail he had tried to banish all thoughts of the young people from his mind; but they would not stay banished. The temptation to track them with his mind's long eye was irresistible, especially in the evenings when he was no longer distracted by supervising Hagen. He would sit then on the screened verandah overlooking Lake Serene, sipping his one vodka collins and letting the jungle noises of Pliocene Florida overwhelm his auditory nerves. Across the garden, the lamplight was soft in Patricia Casteilane's win- dow. But the last star-search had drained his libido more than he was willing to admit, and this time the recuperation was sluggish. Brooding, he would find the scene around him fading. and he would see a thirteen-meler ketch slatting doggedly over the calm Sargasso, propelled more by the psychokinesis of its crew than by any vagrant horse-latitude breeze. The midwatch was invariably taken by Jitlian and Cloud while the men slept. His daughter would couch herself like some pale nereid on the foredeck, generating the metapsychic wind. Back in the cockpit, the dark-haired boatbuilder at the helm maintained an east-northeast course so steady that the wake was a phosphorescent line drawn with a straightedge 176 THE GRAND LOVING 177 through tilting reflections of stars. Sometimes a flying fish would erupt, to gleam like the ghost of a drowned seabird before plunging back into fluid dark. Or there might be schools of luminous squid, or vast patches of snakelike elvers squirming silver in the moonlight- So young- So confident of success. But there was no way of predicting mad Felice's response to their overtures. Cloud and Elaby were strong coercers whose redactive faculty was also highly developed. Jillian was a PK lionness. Vaughn, in spite of his limited intelligence, packed a respectable psycho- creative wallop in addition to his usefulness as a farsensor- The ketch's lockers were packed with assorted weapons, as well as the docilizalion equipment (which might work), and a 60,000- walt hypnogogic projector (which probably wouldn't). In a direct mental confrontation, the children didn't stand a chance against Felice: Their only hope lay in overcoming her through guile. The guile of Owen Blanchard. Marc's farsight penetrated the ketch's fo'c'sie, which the venerable rebel strategist had commandeered for his private quarters. Blanchard tossed uneasily in his narrow bunk on this night, soaked in perspiration in spite of the mild weather. From time to time there would be episodes of Cheyne-Stokes res- piration, in which the breaths would come farther and farther apart, then cease altogether for nearly a full minute before resuming with a snoring gasp- Steinbrenner had said that the condition was probably benign. On the other hand, Blanchard was 128, with only one rejuvenation. He had adamantly refused to submit to Ocala Island's rather quirkish regen tank. How the old boy had raged against his impressment for the voyage! Marc had had to exert every erg of his own coercion and charisma to pry Owen loose from his beloved hurrah's nest down on Long Beach, a thatched hut where he lived with a collection of indolent cats, countless scavenging land crabs, and a plague of palm-cockroaches the size of playing cards. Owen Bianchard's sole interests, when he was not reminiscing over days of lost glory, were beachcombing for shells and playing his vast collection of classical music recordings. The 178 THE NONBORN KING cats made futile stabs at exterminating the roaches and crabs, but Owen didn't really mind sharing his hut with them The invertebrates ate a lot less than the cats, and the record-flecks were indestructible At the start of the voyage, when the ketch had wallowed in a smart chop in the Gulf Stream, Owen had been deathly sea- sick He rallied once they entered the region of calms, but still preferred to spend most of his time below, playing portentous selections by Mahler and Stravinsky on his implanted microm- ductor He was cool to the four youngsters and they in turn maintained a diplomatic aloofness from him It was impossible for them to believe that this frail aesthete had once directed a rebel armada in a near-successful strike against the Galactic Milieu Marc was only too aware of the undercurrents circu- lating among the young people In spite of their pledge to follow Owen's leadership, they would insist that Marc's deputy prove himself once they reached Spain If Owen moved too cau- tiously, there was a strong probability that the others would dispose of him, knowing they were temporarily out of Marc's reach And then some disastrous error would doubtless be per- petrated, and Felice would blast the entire foolhardy crew to ions Marc withdrew his farsight and came to himself Brows knit in a funous scowl, he gulped down the remnants of his dnnk and flung the glass into the dark garden Patricia's light had gone out Damn them all' Damn Owen Blanchard for surrendering to old age Damn the younger generation for their half-baked impatience Damn Cloud for not trusting Damn Hagen for being weak Damn the universe and all its empty stars "Hagen'" he roared Hagen' I'm inside With Diane Get nd of her' We're going to the observatory' At the time of the Galactic Milieu, only five solar systems (not counting that of Earth) had managed to engender intelligent beings who survived the penis of high technology and passed THE GRAND LOVING 179 into metapsychic coadunation, that state of mental Unity that admits of the peaceful, noncompetitive colonization of com- patible planets Marc Remillard's computer in the observatory on Ocata told him that there was an infinitesimal probability that a single coadunate world existed in the Pliocene Milky Way Galaxy He had mapped exactly 634,468,321 main-sequence stars of spectral types F2 to Kl, those adjudged most likely to have worlds harboring sentient life Over the past 25 years of exile, he had mentally probed 36,443 of them in search of a coadunate race and a new base for the dream that had failed In that search and that dream was life for him, and purpose He should have rested for another two weeks before resuming, but he would not No action or advice of his would affect the events in Spam (What outcome his subconscious wished for he did not dare to investigate too closely ) No the star-search was his work He would not let the young distract him from it any longer Together, he and Hagen selected the one hundred stellar candidates that would occupy his attention for the next twenty days They ranged in distance from 4000 to 12,000 light-years, but for a metapsychic of Marc's caliber, range was almost a negligible factor, provided that the mind could be focused upon the remote object of scrutiny with the necessary precision, and this maintained for a critical interval In the absence of an alerted "receiver," direction was accomplished with delicate auxiliary equipment temporarily fused to the operator's brain and supercharging it with energy Other equipment, heroically life-supportive, enabled the star-searcher to survive the expe- rience Hagen helped Marc settle into the body-molding metal-and ceramic casing, programmed the vitals, adjusted the blood- circulation shunt, and set the timer for the 20-day period The search would be earned on only at night During the sunlit hours, the searcher would sleep m oblivion-stasis "Ready9" The young man had the massive, completely opaque helmet suspended from its traveling hoist His face was white and his mind leaked apprehension—but not for his fa- 180 THE NONBORN KiNG ther's sake. Formerly, Marc had prepared for the star-search atone: Hagen's assistance was redundant... except as training. "What are you waiting for?" Marc's voice was already tired. "Put it on me." The thing came down. Fourteen liny photonic beams drilled Marc's skull and fourteen electrodes slipped into his cerebral cortex, sprouting invasive superconductive filaments. Two more needle probes linked to the refrigeration and pressurization systems pierced his cerebellum and stem. The pain was excru- ciating and brief. INITIATE METABOLIC REPROGRAMMING. Fluid filled the casing. Marc stopped breathing- The liquid circulating in his body was no longer blood; nor, strictly speak- ing, was he still a human being, but rather a living machine, protected both internally and externally from his own brain's hyperactivity. ENGAGE AUXILIARY CEREBROENERGET1CS- Each telepathic command came to Hagen via the computer's audible voice, and simultaneously on the VDT screen. His father was gone. The devilish mechanism was in complete control, waiting with cold patience while Hagen reiterated and verified each operation, then proceeded to the next thing on the checkoff list. ACTIVATE INSERTION, Hagen's hand on the command mouthpiece was slippery. He said, "Insert operator," and the armored mass rotted to a small platform atop a hydraulic lift. ACTIVATE ASCENSOR. "Take him up." The encapsulated body on its recliner car- riage rose toward the observatory dome. Automatically, with- out a sound, a segment of the roof rolled away. The lift slowed and halted. The stars of Pliocene April waited for Marc Rem- illard just as they would wait, in some month to come, for Marc's son. ACTIVATE DRIVE. "Close final linkage and drive," Hagen commanded. Co- ordinates for the first study were fed into the focusing decent. The visual display of the computer went blank, leaving only THE GRAND LOVING 181 small blinking SLIs. The searcher had begun his work and there would be no more communication until he ''returned." The interior illumination of the observatory was shut off. All of the systems were locked and impregnable, totally shielded, defended by a hidden array of X-lasers (as Hagen and every other inhabitant of Ocala Island knew only too well). No one, no thing could interfere. Hagen replaced the command mike on its bracket- He stood for a moment, looking up, seeing the slowly revolving carriage at ihe top of the lift cylinder occult the spangled sky. "Not me!" he shouted, his voice thick with hatred. "Not me' He fled, and the doors locked automatically behind him. 8 "WE'RE LOST'" TONY WAYLAND DECIDED "THIS DAMN RIVER can't be the Laar It's flowing north, not northwest." "I fear you're right, milord." Dougal squinted at the purpling landscape. It was welt past sunset. "We'd best make for shore, and after a good night's sleep try the fair adventure of tomor- row. Mayhap the mighty Asian will come to us in dreams, and set our feet anght for far Cair Paravel " He hauled on the sweep and guided the raft toward the right shore They grounded on mud in a grove of enormous lino- dendron trees whose gnarled branches were hung with swags of moss. "'Ware crocodiles," Dougal said casually, shouldering their packs of supplies. "We must seek higher ground." Leaving the raft, they slogged downstream for a few hundred meters and found a steep-sided hummock, which had evidently been a small islet during the late rainy season It supported a few cinnamon trees and currant bushes and had an area of open grass "This looks good," Tony said "At least the critters will have to work climbing up, and there's dnftwood for a fire." For once, setting up camp was relatively painless. After a frugal supper of bulrush tubers and grilled beaver, they slumped contentedly beside the fire "Our path of flight has been a rough one, milord." Dougal was combing his ginger beard- Leftover bits of beaver fell onto 182 THE GRAND LOVING 183 the golden lion emblem on his knightly surtout and skipped away from the soil-repellant fabric. "Do you repent of having taken French leave from Vulcan's stithy?" "Don't be an ass. Dougie- We'll find the way to Gonah. We'll try one more day on this nver and if it doesn't start a westerly trend, we'll take off overland. Damn... I wish I was a better orienteer I goofed off shamelessly during that phase of our training at the auberge " "It was a tedious exercise, I trow At any rate, our pursuers seem to have packed it in." "Let's hope so. That great black lout of a Denny Johnson is likely as not to hang us for traitors if he catches up with us." Tony began fiddling with their compass, a magnetized needle that had to be floated on a bit of chaff in a cup of water. "That can't be right," he muttered. "Move your bloody great slicer, will you?" Amiably, Dougal shifted his mild-steel bowie knife "That's better. You know, I thought we were home free when we reached this river It was just as that fellow from the Paris Basin told us back at Fort Rusty: the second major wa- tercourse west of the Moselle. But was the first river we crossed really majorf And this one did seem to appear rather sooner than I anticipated." Tony put the compass away and stared dispiritedly into the fire. "I might have known things were going loo wetl." "The path is smooth that leadeth on to danger," Dougal observed He was cleaning his nails with the knife. "I follow as your obedient servant, milord—but what will become of us if this Aiken Drum denies sanctuary?" "He won't He'd covet a metallurgical engineer even more keenly than the Hidden Springs Lowhfe contingent. I'm a prize, Dougie! There's going to be war between Drum and the Firvulag, you know, and iron weapons could make all the difference—" From the Jungle came an unearthly blatting, like a much- magnified and bungled flourish of brasses. "Hoe-tusker elephants?" Tony suggested, drawing closer to the fire. 184 THE NONBORN KING Dougal's eyes glittered beneath bushy red brows. "Or the evil presences of this enchanted wood! I sense them all about us ... the cruels and hags and incubuses, wraiths, horrors, ef- reets, sprites, orknies, wooses, and ettins!" Tony broke out m a muck sweat. "Damn you, Dougie! It's just some beast, I tell you!" The trumpeting was joined by an ensemble of roars and whoops and obscure, evil chittering. "Ghouls and boggles," the knight intoned. "Ogres and min- otaurs! The spectres and the people of the toadstools'" With a rustle of titanium chainmail he climbed to his feel. drew his great two-handed sword, and struck a noble attitude in the dying firelight- "Stiffen the sinews! Summon up the blood! Screw your courage to the sticking place, and we'll not fail!" "For God's sake pipe down!" Tony expostulated. Gaze riveted to the sword, Dougal declaimed: Wrong will be right, when Asian comes in sight- At the sound of his roar, sorrows will be no more. When he bares his teeth, winter meets its death, And when he shakes his mane, we shall have spring again. He grinned, sheathed the sword, yawned, and said, "That'll do it. Sack out in peace, old son." He curled up and was snoring within two minutes. Cursing, Tony put more wood on the fire. The Jungle noises got louder. In the rooming, the islet was bedecked with dewdrops and the night's fearsome bedlam gave way to melodious birdsong. Tony woke stiff and puffy-faced- Dougal, as always, was splen- didly dauntless - "Looks like a beautiful day, milord! Proud-pied April, dress'd in all his trim, hath put a spirit of youth in everything!" Tony groaned. He went to take a leak in the bushes. Watch- THE GRAND LOVING 185 ing him from a crystal-beaded web was a spider bigger than his hand- Somewhere in the misty woods back of the huge tulip trees, wild chalikos were whickering. At least. Tony hoped they were wild- They launched the raft again and sailed on- Their river merged with another coming from the east and the countryside became more open. "This just can't be the River Laar," Tony said. "It's sup- posed to flow through thick jungle for a couple of hundred kilometers, until it reaches the Tainted Swamp." "Something moving on the left bank," Dougal noted. "Bloody hell!" Tony was looking through his monocular. "Mounted-men! Or—no, by Christ, some kind of exotics! Steer right, Dougie. Quick, man, before they spot us!" The riders, numbering a dozen or so, were at some distance out in the midsl of a blooming steppe, apparently intent on coming upwind of a large herd of grazing hipparions. The right shore of the river was heavily forested. The raft drew in behind sheltering willows and its occupants scrambled onto the bank- Tony used the monocular again and spat an obscenity. "That's torn it. One of the hunting party has veered off toward the river. He must have seen us." "What is it—Tanu or spook?" Tony was puzzled. "Unless it's wearing an illusory body ..." "Give us a squint," Dougal ordered, taking the little tele- scope. He gave a low whistle. "Son of a bitch. I'm afraid it really is Howlers this time, not just regular Firvutag masquer- ading." The rider on the opposite bank seemed to be staring right at them through the screen of branches. "Do Howlers have farsight like regular Little People?" Tony asked. "Betcher sweet ass," the knight replied. "He knows we're here, all right. Still, the river's pretty deep at this point for a chaliko to swim." THE NONBORN KING 186 The exotic observer finally turned his mount and trotted slowly back to his fellows. Tony gave a gusty sigh of relief. "By the Mane of Asian," Dougal swore, "that was close." Tony was near panic. "We've gone wrong. I knew it- We came down the wrong river, and God knows which. Some tributary of the Nonol, maybe." His eyes darted from side to side. "We'll have to go back upstream. Hike- It'll be hell beating through the jungle unless we find a trail—" Dougal was looking through the spyglass again. "Something to tfie north. On that plateau beyond the river-bend." He started. "A fair citadel, methinks! But not Cair Paravel." His voice fell to an awed whisper. "El Dorado!" "Oh, for God's sake," exclaimed Tony. "Give me the frig- gerty glass." As he swept the skyline, he felt his heart sink- It was some kind of an exotic city, all right. But which one? It was on the wrong side of the river for Burask—and it didn't look ruined. But there weren't any other Tanu settlements this far north. "Whatever it is, it's bound to be bad news for us. We're hitting the trail." They packed up the supplies and began to hack their way through the riverine thicket toward higher ground. After about fifteen minutes of sweaty work, they came upon a game track roughly paralleling the water. "Keep your eyes open for animals," Tony warned. They set off south at a brisk pace. Dougal bearing his unsheathed sword and Tony carrying his machete. The sun climbed. The bugs came out. Leeches dropped from the broadleaved undergrowth and fastened to Tony's flesh. (He was wearing a short-sleeved shirt, worst luck. He envied Dougal the chainmail.) They paused by a creek for lunch, and when they got up to retrieve their packs, they found some species of small viper had taken refuge under them. It struck at Tony, narrowly missing his arm. Dou- gal smote it in two with his sword. About midaftemoon. when Tony estimated they might have covered eight or nine kloms. their little track abruptly widened to a veritable Jungle boulevard. Smack in the middle of it was a pile of turds the size of footballs. The two men came to an abrupt standstill. A light breeze THE GRAND LOVING 187 blew from behind them. There was a hint of thunder in the air and the ground beneath their feet almost seemed to vibrate. Tony looked up, shading his eyes. "Can't see any clouds. On the other hand—" "Look ahead," said Dougal, very softly. It was, amazingly, almost invisible against the harsh pattern of lights and shadows, standing completely motionless a short distance up the trail. They saw a stupendous triangular head with widespread ears like tattered fans, poised nearly five met- ers above the ground. The trunk was curled up, the distended nostrils scenting them. From the chin grew two downcurving tusks sleeved in skin for half their two-meter length. The beast was long-legged, dun-colored, with an air of affronted majesty. It might have weighed twelve tons. The deinotherium hoe-tusker studied the pair of humans, classified them as trespassing vermin, blared out a challenge like the trump of doom, and charged. Tony catapulted off the trail to the left and Dougal went right. Since Tony was screaming, the elephant followed him, Spindly trees splintered and snapped. The hoe-tusker wagged its great head and the ivory hooks uprooted larger trunks, which the beast tossed aside with its curling proboscis. Tony Jinked and slithered, still yelling at the top of his lungs, while the beast crashed after him Kike some ambulatory mountain, trum- peting in rage. Tony stumbled back onto the wide trail and ran flat-out, saving his breath. The hoe-tusker burst from the trees and came rumbling after him. The earth shook. Tony's legs pumped faster, but the elephant was gaining on him, never ceasing its hellish noisemaking. A spasm stabbed Tony's side. His vision reddened and his heart seemed about to burst- He tripped over a pile of dried droppings and went down, resigned to being trampled to death. From somewhere ahead of him there came a sizzling snap- Tony both heard and felt a thunderous impact, and then dust fountained up, completely enveloping him. The voice of the deinotherium was stilled and the shocked jungle seemed to be holding its breath all around. THE NONBORN KING 188 "Don't you love il?" caroled a blithe, squeaky voice. "Isn't it absolutely dumfounding?" The dust wafted away. Tony raised his eyes. Standing over him was a richly caparisoned chaliko. On its back perched a little old human with the look of a puckish marmoset. He wore the classic riding habit of the English gentleman hunter, re- markable only in that the taitcoat was turquoise instead of pink. Under one arm he cradled a heavy-duty twenty-second-century stun-gun. Tony stared. There were other chalikos and well-dressed riders, apparently of Firvulag stock. A handsome man and woman with the look ofTanu haute noblesse also held futuristic weapons. The marmoset hopped down, chucked Tony under the chin, and said, "Easy does it, laddie. You'll be all right now." Faithful Dougal emerged from the jungle, sword still in hand. Tony staggered to his feet. The elephant hunter had strolled over to his prostrate quarry and placed one foot on the trunk. "Ready with the camera, K.aty dear? Cheeeese!" The Tanu lady smiled and waved. Crazy Greggy shouldered his weapon and marched back. "And now we'd better be getting along. We'll take you lads home with us to Nionel. It wouldn't do at ail"—and the little man winked—"for you to be here when your animal friend wakes up." 9 AlKEN'S CAVALCADE RETURNED TO GORIAH ON THE TWENTY- first of April—quietly, at night, on the ground, for the partic- ipants in the Grand Loving were already converging on Armorica and the Firvuiag royal party was expected momen- tarily. As Aiken had ordered. Mercy was there waiting for him in the forecourt of the Castle of Glass, with only the necessary minimum of gray-torc hostlers standing by to lead away the drooping chaiikos of the Exalted Personages. The Shining One was in eclipse. The visor of his gold-lustre helmet was closed and its canary-diamond ornamentation and black plumes were dulled by dust. He bade no vocal or mental farewell to his noble traveling companions, who went sepa- rately to their apartments, Aiken dismounted by means of the block, nodded to Mercy, and cupped one of her draped elbows in his gauntleted palm. "My Lord?" she queried anxiously. They entered the foyer of their own wing of the castle. "Shall I help you to unhelm?" The corridor was lit with sconces burning olive oil in amber cups. A draft from the open casement windows set the flames flickering. The walls were alive with furtive shadows. After loosing the straps, Mercy lifted the heavy casque from Aiken's bowed head. He was gaunt and hollow-eyed and his springy red hair had 189 THE NONBORN KING 190 gone lank. He said, "Thanks. I'll carry it." They walked toward the stairwell. "But... the progress was a success!" she said, dismayed- His laugh was dry and humorless. "Oh, yes. Celadeyr seemed to cave in, the wily old bastard. But 1 had to kill the hothead protege of his who'd taken over Geroniah- And there was a terrible row at Var-Mesk with a coercive redactor named Mia- konn, one ofDionket's sons. A one-eighty switch on his peace- loving old man. And he was supposed to be one of my allies'" "What happened?" "The damn sod threw a banquet for us, and when we were all thoroughly sloshed he tried to brain-bum me. Would've done it, too, if Cull hadn't been on the ball. Fortunately, the Interrogator never gets drunk. He zapped Miakonn to a drooling idiol. But it was a squeaker. When we sorted things out, we found that most of the Var-Mesk nobility were loyal, so we Just installed a new city-lord. An old PK-creator who was in charge of the glass works." They came to the spiral staircase leading to their suites. But Aiken shook his head and went to an unobtrusive bronze door tucked away in a comer. He used his PK to slide it open- Behind it was a flight of steep stone steps that went down into blackness. "I want to take care of a little matter, lovie- You can come with me, or wait." "I'll come." He conjured a ball of illuminating psychoenergy. It floated overhead, lighting their descent. The door clanged shut behind them and locked. "You've darkened," she observed. "Not even the Flood so lowered your vitality." His voice was sepulchral in the stone shaft. "Part of the problem is, I'm tired to death- Levitating all those people takes it out of a man. Naturally, we didn't fly everywhere we went. But I always lifted the knights and their mounts to make an impressive entrance into the cities, while the elite human bri- gade stuck to terra finna. Hoisting four hundred people and chalikos isn't something f can keep up for more than a half THE GRAND LOVING 191 hour, though. And I'm drained for the next day or so after putting on one of my better performances; so three weeks of a progress—not to mention the Geroniah dustup and a small bagarre we had with a Firvulag raiding party around Barde- lask—well, I've had it. As you can see." "Poor Shining One." He gave her a wry glance over his shoulder. "You're looking fit. How's ... how's it getting along?" ft indeed! His jealousy was stronger, if anything. "Agray- nel's thriving. Her body and mind are perfect. She's adjusted well to the tore." Aiken grunted- "Lady Moma-Ia says she'll grow up to be beautiful and fortunate." And that's all you shall know' "You're back to normal after the pregnancy?" "I am Lady Creator." she replied. And my creativity is life- enhancing, whereas yours-.. "Does the best it can. Under the circumstances." He flashed the mocking smile. "I'll have recovered myself by the time the festivities begin. None of our distinguished guests will ever suspect how much this progress wrung out of me. Not even my own people knew—except for Cull. And he helped me put a good face on matters," "The Interrogator is a master of redaction. Among other things." She paused and her aspect was unmistakably accu- satory- "Your friend Raimo Hakkinen has nearly recovered from Culluket's deep-reaming. But you may find the poor man bitter." "I couldn't help it," Aiken snapped. "We had to know about Felice and Celo. We needed a word-by-word replay with full nuance analysis of everything buried in his subconscious." "But he is your friend. You might have dealt with him more gently and stilt gathered your intelligence data." "1 needed it fast." He stopped on the stairs and spun around. The lines of strain around his mouth were ugly. "Felice does have the Spear. After the Grand Loving, I'm going to have to figure out what to do about her. Christ, Mercy! D'you think I THE NONBORN KING 192 liked handing poor Ray over to Cull? But it had to be done- Kings have to do a lot of things that—that—" "They're ashamed of?" "I'm not ashamed'. I'll make it up to Ray. II was thanks to him thai we knew all about Celo's strengths and vulnerabilities. From the SOS Celo shot to the Crartsmaster. Ray was one of Aluteyn's closest human cronies until the old poop decided Chopper was getting too big for his britches." "And if Raimo presumes on his friendship with youT' "He won't, dammit." Aiken resumed his tramp down the stairs. Mercy had to hurry to keep up with him. "Well, 1 daresay you're right. Your Raimo wears the gold, after all, and once you saved his life. But there are other humans here in Goriah who bear you a grudge. And their numbers have grown since you went away." "What are you talking about, woman?" His weariness made even irritability an effort. "You promised that any human who rallied to your banner would receive a golden lore- That hasn't happened." "Of course not. We'd run out of tores! It's only the fighters and the folks in strategic occupations who get gold. And even then, not until Cull and his boys certify their loyalty. That's what I meant to do from the beginning." "Most of the human recruits had it otherwise." "Tough shit for them," Aiken said brutally. "I plan to do the best I can for everybody, but there are limits." "Ah, of course. The royal benevolence always has limits." They reached the foot of the stairs and stood before another door. It was even more ponderous than the last, fastened with a battery ofTanu coded-PK locks. There was also a gooseflesh- raising force-field that Mercy knew could not be a product of exotic technology. "I never intended the Many-Colored Land to be some kind of half-ass democracy," Aiken muttered. He manipulated the locks mentally to the tune of clickings and buzzings. Behind the door, bars were sliding back and latches lifting. The force- field cut off. "I didn't suppose you had," she retorted. "But you should THE GRAND LOVING 193 know that certain numbers of the newcomers who were torced with silver or gray, rather than free gold, are resentful. In spite of the pleasure circuitry! And the incompatibles, those unable to tolerate the tore amplification at all, feel betrayed- There's one group that Congreve had to discipline severely when they attempted to run away from their work detail down at the Grove of May." "I'll look into the matter tomorrow. Don't worry about it." Aiken swung the door open and touched a switch. A fluor ceiling lit. "I'll charm the socks off those mutineers, lovie. Now ... what do you think of thisT' She stood transfixed. What was evidently a former dungeon had been converted into a storage dump. The stone walls were coated with plastic sealant, and the atmosphere, in contrast to that of the damp and musty stairwell, was temperature- and humidity-controlled and redolent of some sterilizing agent. There seemed to be endless aisles of racks and shelving. Some of the stored goods had been anonymously packed in pods, but other items were shrink-wrapped in clear piass. The variety of small twenty-second-century weaponry was impressive. There was also a plethora of other sophisticated equipment confiscated from time-travelers, all items that the feudal-minded Tanu deemed unsuited to their culture. Mercy saw every kind of solar power cell, small fusion units, collapsible vehicles, a shrouded thing labeled LINK-BELT MINIMINER, another called FAIRBANKS MORSE MARINE ION CONCENTRATOR, a third desig- nated NOBLE GAS ATMOSPHERIC EXTRACTOR—MITSUBISHI HI LTD. There were antenna dishes and excavating zappers and mi- croorganic culture units. There were devices of unfathomable function shelved next to homely domestic appliances. "1 call it the General Store," said Aiken. He sat down at the console of a small inventory-control computer and spoke inaudibly into the mouthpiece. "Nodonn and Gomnol seem to have shared a certain pack-rat instinct for keeping paraphernalia that King Thagdal had ordered destroyed. The late Lord of Burask did. too, but on a much smaller scale. Gomnol's cache was raided by Bredejust before the Flood. Certain nonmilitary hardware was turned over to Elizabeth's little clique of do- 194 THE NONBORN KING gooders. The rest must have been destroyed by the Shipspouse. My people have searched the ruins of Muriah and there's no trace of it. The Burask hoard, on the other hand, was captured by the Firvulag." Mercy gasped. "Sham and Ayfa won't scruple to use it!" A small robot retriever came rolling silently along one aisle and stopped in front of Aiken. "Your requested material, Cit- izen," it said. "Mucho thanks." He opened a top hatch, took out a small package, and stowed it behind his left paliette- Then he shut down the computer and headed back to the door. "That's thai, lovie. Come along. Some other day I might let you have a little shopping excursion." "In time for the war?" she inquired sadly. "1 won't be the one to start it." "The Firvulag may try to assassinate you at the Loving. Inviting them was very rash. Their Great Ones are now capable of meshing minds even more effectively than the Host of Non- tusvel once could." He came close to her, the armor's sharp glass plates pressing through the thin voile of her gown. He still held the helmet in one arm. The other encircled her waist. "Having the Little People here as our guests shows strength. Lady Wildfire, and that's the lactic called for right now. Both the Firvulag and the Tanu are primitives. Sham and Ayfa. The vacillating city-lords and shifty old Celo. Even crazy Felice is a primitive! Strength is all that barbarians understand. As for the danger of assas- sination. . .I'm a match for any Tanu or Firvulag while I'm awake. And when I sleep—well, that's why I came down here tonight- To get me a stem-shield generator. God knows what paranoid time-traveler thought he might need it to guard his mind in the Pliocene. But the gadget is made to order for me, since I'm not ali that good at self-redaction." Her sea-colored eyes held admiration, and something else. "Ah, they've underestimated you until it's too late. All of them. I think you'll conquer them all with your tricks and glib tongue. But there'll be a price. I wonder if you'll pay it? Or will I?" His gem-hard hand was behind her head, drawing her down THE GRAND LOVINO 195 until their lips met, electric and searing- He saw into her and laughed. "So it's mortal fear that's your aphrodisiac. Lady Wildfire?" "As yours, Amadan-na-Briona." "That's not a Tanu name. What does it mean? Stay open to me—" But her deep levels were walled off, and the passion was palpable and growing- "Amadan was a figure from the old Celtic folklore. Ajester. A Fata! Fool whose touch was death." Her laugh was reckless. "Let us go up, my Amadan! Out of this place. I've changed my mind about waiting, and you shall find your peace in my welcome home." The April sky flared with auroras on that night of their first true coupling. And at the height of it, the castle of Goriah rang like a great glass bell. 10 VAUGHN JARROW, HANGING PRECARIOUSLY FROM THE PULPIT in the bow of the ketch, sent out the seductive telepathic call again. "Give up on it," Elaby Gathen said, not bothering to mask his distaste. "You just drive the boat and mind your own business." The eene trill rang out once more on an inhuman farspeech mode- From the sparkling wavelets ahead came a faint, answering cry. 'Tally hoo'" Vaughn yodeled He raised the Matsushita RL9 carbine. "You know what Owen told us—" Elaby began to say But at that instant the porpoise broke the surface in a joyous leap of welcome, and Vaughn fired, the red beam piercing the sea mammal's body just below the dorsal fin. It gave a dreadful tetepathic scream that mingled betrayal and anguish. Vaughn chuckled and fired again at the flailing shape with his zapper dialed to blade-ray The farspoken screaming choked off and the porpoise sank amid a spreading patch of maroon. '^You trigger-happy young cretin!" Owen Blanchard came raging topside and stood in the cockpit, swaying unsteadily. Elaby had been standing on the coaming, clinging to a shroud and steering the ketch with one foot on the wheel. Now he flicked on the auto and leaped to assist the older man, whose 196 THE GRAND LOVING 197 chronic seasickness seemed ready to yield to apoplexy. "I told you to leave the porpoises alone' I ordered you!" Vaughn lounged against the pulpit rail, the carbine tilted over one bare shoulder He was naked except for a brief bathing slip and his overfed body gleamed with suntan emollients "I get bored on watch. I have to do something besides scan the bottom of the friggerty estuary." "Zap sharks or manias!" Vaughn shrugged "They won't come when I call " "The porpoises are sentient, dammit'" Vaughn diddled with the Matsu's beam selector- He grinned slyly, not catching Owen's eye. "So were the four billion non- coadunates you helped to kill in the Rebellion. Don't come over righteous with me, pops." Elaby's coercion reached out to throttle his contemporary. "That's enough, Vaughn. Don't pretend to be any dumber than you really are Owen warned you that the porpoises might be able to communicate with Felice. She likes animals. They're her friends." "Bullshit. Porpoise farspeech isn't loud enough to carry farther than a klom or two " "We don't dare nsk it." said Owen- "And besides. Felice is nowhere near here." "We're not sure of that," Owen snarled, "and until we are, you leave the porpoises alone!" Vaughn's gnn widened. He was slitty-eyed in the dazzle. "Okay, pops. I'll find me some new targets. Gotta keep sharp." Owen dropped onto one of the cockpit seats His face was deeply flushed and the pouches beneath his watering eyes were more prominent than ever. He said to Elaby, "I've managed to complete the modification on the headset. The docilization gear is as ready as it'll ever be. But she'll have to be pretty naive to fall into our trap." "And the lullaby-gun?" Elaby took the wheel again. "Dead as mutton." Owen produced a handkerchief, knotted the four comers, and set the improvised cap on his sandy crew cut. "After twenty-seven years on the shelf in a tropical cli- THE NONBORN KING 198 mate.. - you'd have more luck putting Felice to sleep with a mug of hot milk than with that thing." Elaby cursed. The 60,000-watt hypnagogic projector, the- oretically capable of dropping a rioting mob in its tracks at 500 meters, wouid have rendered their conquest of Felice almost easy. "It'll be up to you and me and Cloud, then. We'll have to lake on the monster harebrained, [f only Cloud and I hadn't worn ourselves out pushing the boat..." It was April 27. The transatlantic passage had taken nearly a week longer than anticipated when the westerlies failed them just beyond the Azores. Only Elaby, Cloud, and the ketch's skipper, Julian Morgenthaier, possessed the psychokinetic tal- ent to generate useful winds, and they had not fully recovered from their labors in the doldrums when they were called upon again. The boat finally broke out of the stagnant air 900 kilo- meters off Spain; but the overworked trio still felt mentally below par, and Owen's crippling mal de mer had returned when the wind freshened- Owen and Vaughn, the top farspeakers in the expedition, had attempted to notify Felice of the delay. But there had been no response. After the ketch entered the Gulf of Guadalquivir, Owen and Vaughn had undertaken a painstaking overview of southern Spain. They had not found Felice, even though her deserted eyrie was easy enough to locate. For some reason of her own, the madwoman was deliberately shielding her mind from metapsychic observation. "We'll just have to live cool and let her come to us when she's ready." Elaby had said. The others could find no fault with this conservative proposal. Now the yacht cruised up the narrowing gulf in a leisurely fashion, hugging the southern shore, making for the Rio Genii, which flowed down from Mulhacen. Pink sand beaches fringed with fruiting palms were separated by low headlands that led back into lushly forested foothills. On the southern horizon, poking through a layer of haze. were the Betics—Mulhacen, at 4233 meters, tipped with white in disdain of the tropical climate. A farspoken signal came from Cloud in the galley Mess call in ten! THE GRAND LOVING 199 Right! "How's that cove look below, Vaughn? Any reefs?" Elaby altered course to starboard. The farsensor exerted himself minimally. "Seems clear. Drive right in." The chop smoothed as they came into the lee of a small promontory and glided toward the anchorage- Elaby used his PK to roll the mainsail and mizzen. He kept the jib neatly filled with his own light air. "Coming up on fifteen meters," Vaughn said. "Let go the lunch hook." The ketch drifted broadside to, then swung her head into Elaby's zephyr as the small anchor bit and held. When Vaughn had them snubbed down. Cloud and Jillian, duty cooks of the day, appeared carrying platters of grilled pompano, palm-heart salad with sweet-and-sour dressing, and rice popovers. To drink there was watermelon cooler. "But without the rum." Cloud stared pointedly at Vaughn. "Someone has been swilling more than his share, and we're running tow." "What d'you expect when neither of you broads will have me?" Vaughn's mental tone was martyred. "Grog is my only friend. And food. Pass my plate." The cove was a tranquil and inviting spot, sheltered and deep. A stream came splashing down a notch in the rocks at the base of the headland and flowed a short distance into roseate sand before disappearing. In the transparent waters, shoals of sizable fish came to inspect the intruding boat- "There are worse places we could stay in," Elaby remarked. Jillian nodded. "Vaughn and 1 could take care of maintenance and foraging while you three rested up for the hunting of the snark." "Hey! I'm ready for a hunt right now!" Vaughn had engulfed his lunch in three minutes flat. Now he came clambering into the cockpit. "Just let me throw a few clothes on. Do a job on the dinghy for me, will you, Jill love?" "Anything rather than you," she told him as he disappeared below. She went lo the stern and began to ready the inflatable tender. 200 THE NONBORN KING "I heard the porpoise," Cloud said to Owen quietly "Its cry went though my brain like a knife Do you really think it might have identified us to Felice9" "I don't know," the old rebel said "They're sentient, and they communicate telepathically with each other That's the factor that worries me—nol the death cnes of the individuals Vaughn potted three yesterday and seven the day before Today there was only one—and it was adolescent Inexperienced " "You think the word's gone out9" Elaby asked "Who can say7" Owen set his nearly untouched plate aside "Why the devil you brought that blockhead on this expedition escapes me " "He's one of the original group who planned this." Elaby said, "and the best farsensor of all of us He may be a bit thick, but we never would have known about Felice in the First place if he hadn't been farsensmg Europe just for the hell of it last fall" Look All of you Quickly Jillian's thought drew them to the stem, which had swung about to face the beach At the edge of the jungle stood four little figures, the two largest about the size of six-year-old children and the others shorter Their bodies, except for the faces, were clothed in smooth, tawny hair "Aren't they adorable9" Cloud breathed "Are they mon- keys^" "Apes," Elaby decided "Dr Warshaw said we'd probably run across them in Europe These could be Dryopithecus, an- cestors to the chimps of our era But they're so small and upright 1 think they must be Ramapithecus The ancestors of humanity " "I get images from them," Owen marveled "Crude self awareness and innocent curiosity Like a baby two, three years old A lot different from the inhuman sentience of the porpoises It reminds me of the indigenes on a planet where—" A scarlet beam of coherent light blasted from the boat's cockpit behind them The tallest of the creatures toppled, zapped through the head Jillian cned out Cloud leaped at Vaughn "You rotten shithead^' THE GRAND LOVING 201 Tears streaming down her cheeks, she hauled him up. laser carbine and all, and threw him overboard On the beach, the surviving ramas were frozen, gazing down at their dead com- panion and then at the boat A split second later, only the single huddled shape could be seen Vaughn came paddling around toward the stem step, cough- ing and swearing Elaby ignored him and went to soothe Cloud Jilhan plucked the marksman and his weapon from the water with a rough PK hoist "That was nice going. Ace Even for you " "So what's the flap9 We need provisions, nght9 You gonna be squeamish about monkey stew9" Vaughn inspected the zap- per. muttering, "Damn You probably shorted it out Now I'll have to spend the afternoon taking it down " The boat was turning idly on its anchor cable in a vagrant breeze Vaughn remained at the stem while the others came together in the cockpit, shutting him out of their telepathic colloquy But suddenly the Coventry screening fragmented and the four broadcast stunned incredulity They were looking once again toward the shore Vaughn turned to see what had caught their attention "Hey—wiH you took at that sucker'" A gigantic bird was descending on outspread wings toward the corpse At first Vaughn thought it was a condor, because of its size, but his farsight identified it as a jet-black corvid, a huge raven Lightly, the bird settled, cocked its head, and gave a discordant cry Vaughn raised his Matsu "Maybe there's some juice left—" He disintegrated The sleek skin tightened and burst, blood boiled, muscles npped into expanding shreds The bones shattered in the midst of scarlet vapor, the skull last of all. with its jaws agape and grayish fog wreathing it at eye-level The weapon clattered to the deck The gory cloud seemed to spin like an obscene wa- terspout. moving out over the cove Cleaner waters arose and merged with it, roanng, and then the entire manifestation dwin- dled away, leaving only pink patches of foam 202 THE NONBORN KING The black bird vanished Felice stood in the stem near the inflated dinghy, which had not been launched. She was a pallid wraith, except for her huge brown eyes. Her platinum hair was as buoyant as a great dan- delion clock- She wore a vest and short kilt of snow-while chamois and there were white buskins on her tiny feet. The dark eyes looked down al the fallen weapon and then at the four adventurers, who saw impending death. "We didn't mean—" Jillian began. The thirteen-meter ketch heeled to starboard with unbeliev- able violence, throwing the people in the cockpit into a shriek- ing heap. All around, the cove waters erupted. The keel smashed against the suddenly uncovered bottom and its stabilizers splin- tered The water rushed back and the yacht was flung upward, gyrating wildly. Fehce stood as though nailed to the deck. Eventually, the tossing calmed. The small anchor had mirac- ulously held. Cloud and Elaby bent over Jillian, who lay unconscious with blood leaking from her left temple. Owen scrambled to his feet, clinging to the instrument housing on the pedestal. "It was wrong of you to kill my porpoises," Felice said "They're much nicer than humans or exotics. Always kind." Owen Blanchard let his mind open slowly: See, I am elderly. See, I wish you no harm. See, I mourn with you the loss of your precious animal friends. See, I repudiate the cruel one and rejoice that you have destroyed him. You were right to do so This is your world You rule it. Lady of Animals. Goddess of the Forests, Moon-Virgin. Avenging Huntress "Yes," said Felice. May I address you. Great One? "You are all devils." We have come at your invitation. The ivory brow creased. "I don't remember." From North America. We are your friends. The friends who helped you open Gibraltar Who come now to serve you "But you were young when I spoke to you and invited you Why are you old?" To give you the help you require takes wisdom. I am wise. THE GRAND LOVING 203 These others—and the woman you struck down—are here to work with me. For you Felice gave Jillian a contemptuous glance "She may die Her skull is fractured." We are healers. All three of us who stand here humbly before you. We will make our companion well again "Really7" Felice's deeper mind-levels revealed themselves. chaotic, a morass of raw colors, inarticulate shouts, and rav- enous, hurtful need (Link with me' Owen told Elaby and Cloud on their intimate modes Be prepared to follow and bolster me ) "There are times," Felice said, "when I feel in need of healing, myself ! have nightmares. Sometimes the bad dreams come when I'm awake now " The threatening masses. The filth (Now! But cautiously ) Is it here that you suffer. Great One? Here? Or here? "Oh, yes! How did you do that? It felt—good." We can do even better than that. Help you still more if you only open— NO!' (Good God, Owen! She nearly snuffed the lot of us') (Easy, kids. Stick close to me.) "1 won't open to you," Felice said peevishly "I've never let anyone redact me Not here, and not m the Milieu. They wanted to, you know. Wanted to change me. But that would be wrong If I changed, I wouldn't be myself! I'd be lost. That's what the mind-benders do to you. Take away your self and make you over like them Blah self-satisfied little worms " Great One, we are very subtle healers. The most stdllrul redactors do not alter personality. They only erase hurts. Re- move pain. "Some pain . I like." That is part of your dysfunction. "My Beloved and I share that. you know. He's a very powerful redactor, for an exotic Second only to thai coward. Dionket " Her attention was beginning to drift Images formed 204 THE NONBORN KING in the maelstrom A beautiful male face with sapphire eyes dnd hair like a torch A nonhuman mental signature Is this your Beloved, Great One7 The Cultuket you wish us to bring to you7 "I love him more than life or death He can't be dead'" A wave of panic ignited her "There's been no trace of him since the Flood' If he's died without me—if he's dared to—then it's all wasted' But he could be hiding My farsense and red- action are really much weaker than my other faculties " Abruptly, she shot a bald query "Are you a Grand Master redactor, deviP" (Look out, Owen ) Of course Shall I show you the affirmation of the Conci- lium'7 [Image ] There Not only am 1 a Grand Master, but I have these two young assistants who are also powerful healers (That was very clever of you, Owen You could have fooled us') (Felice is a child What does she know of such matters7 Besides, the line between coercer and redactor is rather easily fudged ) "But if you're a Grand Master," Felice was saying, "you could lie to me without my knowing " (Oh, oh ) "Open your minds to me, devils' Let me probe you^' Great Felice—if you damage our minds, we won't be able to help you in any way And you lack the skill for a benign probe Forgive my saying so, but if you harm us, you may never find your Culluket Or become Queen of the World "Queen9" The pale figure standing in the stem of the ketch brightened physically as well as mentally A peariy halo, visible even in the tropical sunshine, transfigured her into an apotheosis of Diana "You could make me a queen7 Not just of the animals and the forests—but of the people7" Queen of the Many-Colored Land' Everyone would love you Humans and Tanu and Firvulag We will make you queen, then serve you forever All that's needed is your healing When the nightmares and misery are washed away, your true nobility of spmt will manifest itself Your metapsychic powers will THE GRAND LOVING 205 grow even greater You'll be irresistible' You will be the God dess' "The exotics worship the Goddess But they say she never took on a material body Do you think she could have7 Without their knowing9 Without the body knowing7" The apparition was coming closer, gliding over the deck toward the midships cockpit with the deck paint crisping and bubbling beneath her buskmed feet Elaby mustered his cre- ativity into an invisible shield, praying that she wasn't emitting anything hard—and in his momentary disengagement from Owen and Cloud he became aware of the presence of the other Watching He could not give warning, could not interrupt Owen's facile reassurances with their hypnotic, coercive un- dertones A Goddess. Felice You will surely become Goddess when you're healed "Well what would you have to do7 Show me exactly'" We have special equipment with us, Felice Quite different from any of the redactive devices you may have seen when you lived in the Milieu We can forge a menial link between you and us very easily, while you remain in complete control of your faculties at all times Your healing would take only a moment' And then all of the wrongness will vanish, leaving only glory Shall we show you the equipment7 Demonstrate n on one of us7 The girl frowned "Equipment7 I thought—you could heal me working nund to mind " That would take much longer And perhaps not work nearly so well You have a very strong mind, Felice "I know " Her smile was chilling (Elaby Cloud When you get the docilization equipment, be sure the power transmittal is in full phase Watch for the marked headset ) Owen Blanchard indicated fallen Jillian to Felice Aloud, he said, "This unconscious woman is our skipper, the one who built the boat May we take her below and then bring the equipment up to show you7" 206 THE NONBORN KING "I'll carry your skipper," Felice offered, the Goddess con- descending "I'd like to go inside the boat ' "Your aura," Owen cautioned "Oh That " Felice seemed to notice for the first time the damage inflicted by her radiation She gave a mischievous little laugh as the glow about her faded Then she stooped, passed a hand over the scorched surface and restored it Lifting Julian easily in one arm, she followed the others down the compan- lonway into the salon "You can lay Jill on the settee,' Owen said Cloud and Elaby slipped away aft Felice was gentle She touched the head wound with one finger "I'm sony about her It was a mistake I only wanted to scare you " She looked about the salon with interest "This is very nice What a clever way to mount the lamps and table and stove " "On gimbals," Owen said "Then they always stay level, even when the boat doesn't " "And you sailed all the way from North America," Felice mused "I've often thought about Hying there, but I don'l think I could stay aloft thdt long without falling asleep Flying takes great concentration, especially if there are winds Do you devils fly^' "None of us here can A few back in Florida do it Not far" Felice wandered forward, peering into the head and the fo'c'sle She opened a hanging locker, then grimaced over her shoulder at Owen The storage space was packed solidly with cased laser weapons and their recharging units "You won t need these if the Goddess protects you " "Of course not," said Owen heartily "That's all nght, then " She flicked offhandedly at the cases There was a silent flash and the locker held a smtered amor phous mass that steamed a little Owen swallowed with some difficulty "We have the redaction equipment ready," Cloud said, back in the salon "Shall we cany it topside, or would you like to inspect it here7" THE GRAND LOVING 207 "I'd rather go upstairs," Felice said "If I feel like leaving, going through walls and things is so tedious "Please don't go " Elaby Gathen's sincere face, ruggedly boyish and sunburnt, showed worshipful entreaty "I may stay awhile longer," Felice said She smiled at him The docilization equipment was reasonably compact with its power unit left below Cloud carefully paid out the cable as they climbed topside, Felice coming last Elaby set the small console on the forward bench, activated the preliminary eval- uation mode, and donned one of the three monitor-director headsets Another of those headsets, now tossed carelessly on the chart table, was externally distinguishable from its dupli- cates only by the unobtrusive scratch on one of the electrodes Felice was scrutinizing all of the equipment with X-ray inten- sity, but the microscopic fleck-circuitry could be deciphered only by an expert "The machine is ready to conduct a preliminary mind-as- say," Elaby said He lifted a hood of fine golden mesh that glittered in the sun "The analysand wears this tamhelm, and the operators work through headsets like the one I'm wearing Would you like me to analyze you now^" "Lei her be the guinea pig," Felice said, pointing to Cloud Marc Remillard's daughter drew the netted hood over her blonde hair She lay down on the starboard bench, her tanned limbs now showing bruises from the earlier roughhouse She was wearing blue shorts and a matching halter Her breathing was regular, relaxed, and her superficial mental aspect un- daunted She closed her eyes Elaby tapped the activator, simultaneously overriding the deep-probe mode telepathically Another mental impulse readied the shunt of the docilator "Would you like lo listen in to Cloud's evaluation"'" Elaby picked up the modified headset and held it out to Felice She hesitated, then took it, turning it over in her hands The three North American redactors were motionless, their minds opaque Felice lifted the headset— Don'l put il on Felice Startled, the girl dropped the thing Elaby flung up his 208 THE NONBORN KING strongest defensive screen around Cloud, Owen, and himself and braced for Felice's retaliation. The farspoken voice of the other reverberated in all their minds Thai headset has been tampered with, Felice, ft will harm you. not heal. The large brown eyes regarded the cowering devils with reproach. "You lied to me?" They lied. "You didn't come to help me?" They came to use you. They are incompetent to help you. "No one can help me." Tears spilied down the pale cheeks. "I'm loo filthy ever to be clean- Oh, devils I suppose it was all lies. Even about making me queen and bringing Cull." The devils were mute. "Now I'll have to keep on with the nightmares until I drown in the shit Until the last scream." No, child I will help you. Felice looked bleakly into the azure sky, toward the north- east. "You, Elizabeth7" / am a genuine Grand Master redactor, Felice. You know that for the truth. This other forfeited the Unity when he par- ticipated in the Metapsychic Rebellion, and even before that his specialization was coercion, not mental healing. He never intended to help you. He and the young ones came to make you their slave so thai they could take over Europe. "I shall kill them Now!" Stop. "Why?" You must not kill again. It would make your healing that much more difficult by enlarging the burden of guilt Come to me so thai I may drain away the pain and the evil as I promised. You will attain peace I will help you find real love in place of your perversion. "Love9 But she wouldn't have me," said the girl forlornly. "Even though she said she loved me " My poor little one. That was only sex renounced, not love THE GRAND LOVING 209 You have so much to learn! L.et me teach you Only come freely and trust With all of his strength, Owen intruded his thought- She lies! She lies' Don't listen, Felice' What has she ever done for you? Did she help you at Gibraltar7 We did' We're your true friends! The drowning mind and eyes turned to him. "Prove it, devil " Ask Elizabeth if she'll make you queen' Ask her if she'll give you your Beloved! "Elizabeth7" After you are healed, you'II see all things differently, Felice You will know what is sick fancy and what is clean love. You will know wherein true power and completion reside and you will make free choices You will know yourself, love yourself Believe me. Come The slight figure shimmered in opalescence And then it was gone, and there was a raven skimming the water of the cove, soaring high above the eastern headland Elaby let his protective screen dissolve. He removed the headset and dropped il. Cloud came up slowly and pulled off the tarnhelm. Owen slumped on a bench. The back of his neck was scarlet and he trembled slightly "And now?" Elaby's voice was dull. "We get out of here as quickly as possible " Cloud met his gaze calmly "We do what we can for poor Jill, repair the boat, and keep our minds well wrapped After that, let's hope my father has some useful advice for us when he returns from his star-search " n "I KNOW YOU'RE GOING TO LIKE HUNTING," AlKEN INSISTED, "and you've never seen anything like these beasts One of the dragons almost ate me at my Tanu initiation bash " "How fateful for the Many-Colored Land, Battiemaster," King Sham observed, "that you were spared " Queen Ayfa and the other five Firvulag Great Ones chortled, and all of the flying chalikos laid their ears back and rolled their eyes at the sinister sound until Cullukel banished their anxiety The Flying Hunt was the culminating entertainment in the pre-Lovmg houseparty hosted by Alken and Mercy for the Firvulag Gnomish Council Some of the guests had declined to participate, for even though Alken had abolished the older, crueler style of pursuit, bitter memories lingered of the times when Hunt quarry fled on two legs The anti-bloodsport faction had stayed behind in the castle attending a musicale supervised by Mercy, while Atken led a compact aenal safari on a quest for phobosuchme crocodiles in the bayous of the Laar delta His Tanu companions included Culhiket, Alberonn Bleyn, Aluteyn Crartsmaster, Celadeyr of Afaliah, and the formidable Lady Arnuda of Bardelask. widow to Darel and now ruler of the beleaguered Rhone city In addition to the King and Queen, the Firvulag party was composed entirely of battle champions Medor, a Firvulag First Comer and Sharn s deputy, whose 210 THE GRAND LOVING 211 illusory aspect was a spiny black weremsect, the Dreadful Skathe, Ayfa's ogress crony of the snaggleteeth and dripping talons, the novice hero Fafnor Ice-Jaws, who had trounced Culluket in the Encounters at the last Grand Combat, Tetrol Bonecrusher, the feathered serpent, who had been defeated by Alberonn in the same event, and Betularn of the White Hand, another First- Comer champion, who had been the antagonist of the equally venerable Celadeyr for as long as anyone could remember None of the Great Ones among the Little People was capable of personal levitation, much less teleportmg a steed, and so it was up to the Shining One to keep his guests airborne The potential hazard in the arrangement was minimized by the meta- psychic firepower advantage held by the Firvulag At the very start of the visit. Sham had taken pains to demonstrate the progress made by the Little People in offensive metaconcert Whereas in former days each champion had jealously declined to share his powers with another, under Sham's innovative direction they were learning to link minds The cooperation was still rough, and operant only in the creative spectrum, but Culluket had estimated that the combined psychoenergetic wat- tage of the Firvulag royals very likely exceeded Alken's own creative potential, depleted as he was by the strain of the prog- ress And of Alken's allies, only Bleyn, Alberonn, and Culluket himself were familiar enough with his mental pattern to mind- mesh Given the circumstances, Alken set aside any hope of engineering a convenient mass assassination of top-ranking Foe Sham and Ayfa, following their own strategy, exuded goodwill to all and pretended mat they had never violated the Armistice It was full dark when the Hunt amved at the Tainted Swamp south of Gonah A yellow moon, lacking two days to fullness, shone disapprovingly through nsmg mist tike some suspicious demonic concierge "The plesiosaurs—the sea monsters—have to lay their eggs in fresh water," Alken said "They come up the Laar this time of the year and mate in the lagoons Of course, the dragons are lying in ambush for the poor love-sotted brutes " "Passion," Queen Ayfa remarked, "has been known to dis- tract even the bravest of hearts " 212 THE NONBORN KING She was wearing a spectacular nding outfit of pinkish me- tallic cloth with purple boots and a cloak of black brocade Her apricot-colored hair, partly hooded, was crowned with a jew- eted diadem trailing beaded wire streamers That peculiar Fir- vulag adornment that humans called a "face-frame" covered her chin, the sides of her face, her brow, and the bridge of her nose in a kind of open mask, also thick with gems. She looked nearly beautiful, if you were prepared to ignore her bulging shoulder muscles and the bellicose glint in her dark eyes "It would be easy to pick off a plesiosaur as well as a dragon while we're here," young Fafnor suggested. The Tanu contingent radiated disapproval Alken explained: "We consider it unsporting to Hunt sea monsters during their wooing, kid. But the dragons are fair game You get first dibs." "Poor crocodiles," said Lady Annida "No one feels sen- timental about them And yel our sage Seniet tells us that they are as much of an endangered species as the marine plesio- saurs " "Or you Tanu," put in the Dreadful Skathe, with a merry guffaw "Thanks be to the Good Goddess that so many of our people were saved from the Flood," old Betulam crowed. "You survived because we licked you, White-Hand!" Ce- ladeyr shot back. "You couldn't gel your exalted asses off the White Silver Plain fast enough after we whipped you in the Heroic Encounters. Downright disgraceful the way you always skipped out before the post-Game awards. Sore losers!" "But live ones." Betularn was smug. "In this year's Combat, you Tanu'll be lucky to field four companies to our tony'" "This year's Combat will be different," said Aiken. "Shall we tell them, Shamie?" "Why not, Battlemaster? We're only anticipating the official announcement at the Grand Loving by a couple of days " The Hunt slowed and wheeled into a tight circle, coming to a halt in midair There was a mental and vocal clamor from all of the Firvulag vassals, as well as from Celadeyr, the Crafts- master, and Lady Armida, who were not pnvy to Alken's schemes THE GRAND LOVING 213 "It's simple, folks," Aiken said. "Things have changed so much in the Many-Colored Land that the old customs just aren't practical any more. Betulam's right about you Little People outnumbering us ten to one. We couldn't fight the Grand Com- bat in the old way without getting slaughtered. So I proposed a completely different type of setup to King Sham and Queen Ayfa a few weeks ago Not a Grand Combat, but a Grand Tourney—with nonlethai contests and a completely new system of scoring. Hell, the Heroic Encounters of the Combat were already mostly judged on points, not kills, and everybody knows that they were the most exciting pan of the Games. What we're going to do is have a complete program of nigged events and skill events I'm not saying nobody'll get killed. We don't want to turn this into a fewkm' tiddlywinks match, after all! But now the headhunting will become symbolic instead of literal. with the losers paying off the winners in treasure and battle standards." "And a brand new trophy," Sham concluded. "Compliments of us Firvulag. Now that both the Sword and the Spear are gone, we need a new symbol of rivalry. So the best craftsfotk back at High Vrazei are busy making one. A Singing Stone. It's an enormous beryl, tuned to be psychoreactive and carved in the shape of a regal field stool. At the conclusion of the Tourney, it will be programmed to the aura of the winning faction's monarch. Then, for one whole year, the Stone will respond with aethereal music whenever the true High King of the Many-Colored Land is enthroned upon it." "Putting the squash on any pretender tushies once and for all!" Aiken winked at Sham. Everyone knew that the Firvuiag ruler had been using the title illegally ever since the Flood. "No more battles to the death?" exclaimed the dismayed Ceiadeyr. "No more beheading?" echoed Betulam Both veterans were aghast. Aluteyn Craftsmaster vouchsafed his contemporaries a sour smile. "All good things come to an end. Our Exile is entering a new era—whether we like it or not." "But the Gnomish Council hasn't voted on it!" Tetrol 214 THE NONBORN KING Bonecrusher protested. "Old King Yeochee would never have—" Ayfa cut off her liegeman. "Our royal brother Yeochee has passed on to Te's peace. We have decided the matter. You'll also be interested to know that this year's Grand Tourney will be held on our own Field of Gold in Nionel, as will subsequent contests—" "If you win. Queen Ogress!" Armida interjected. Ayfa sailed serenely on. "As will subsequent contests until you Tanu get around to constructing a new tournament ground of your own. Then our two races will take turns hosting the event, no matter who wins." "It makes sense," said the Craftsmaster. "It stinks!" said Celadeyr. "Damn right'." Betularn agreed. "It's settled!" Aiken and Sham shouted together- All of the chalikos reared. From the swamp below came an answering bellow, "You see?" The trickster was grinning. "The dragons know that their favorite tidbit has arrived: Me! Shall we descend? You Firvulag who feel like Hunting get your weapons ready and I'll play bait. If the crocs eat me, all arrangements are off and you can have the fewkin' Nightfall War, for all I care." The chatikos coursed down the wind toward a lagoon bor- dered with tall taxodium cypresses that was separated from the mainstream of the Laar by a meandering channel. Aiken switched off his golden metaluminescence and the other riders followed suit. Sham urged his mount to keep pace with that of the human usurper. Unlike the Queen, Sham was dressed not in a riding suit but in ornate obsidian armor. In place of the heavy battle- helm he wore a light visorless sallet surmounted by three horns. His long dark hair streamed from openings in the skullpiece like smoky plumes. He bore a sword with a clear crystal blade nearly as long as Aiken's body. "You have no weapon of your own, Battlemaster." the Fir- vulag King remarked to the little man. "I'll have enough to do on this Hunt, holding you up. In THE GRAND LOVING 215 return, you gotta keep the beasts from making a midnight munchy out of Me!" Now came the telepathic warning of Culluket, who pos- sessed the strongest farsensing ability in the party: Silence all. Something comes channel! Not dragon. Plesio- saur! Aaah! exclaimed the Firvulag- The train froze in midair, eerily backlighted by the moon. Down in the bayou, something broke water and rose up. up—until it seemed that a sea serpent was cruising swiftly through the inky slot. a V-shaped wake trailing after. And then the back of the plesiosaur became visible in addition to its five- meter neck. It opened its jaws wide to the moon and uttered a plaintive two-note hoot: Ooo-awww. in the lagoon ahead, another snakelike neck burst from the depths, throwing sparkling drops of water. It hooted in higher tones and the approaching creature answered and put on speed. Back and forth the monsters called until they finally met. The gleaming necks entwined and the hooting became an earsplit- ting duet; and then both animals sounded, leaving a mass of oily bubbles and dwindling echoes. The farsighted among the observers saw the gargantuan consummation deep in the water, after which the male floated up to lie on the surface, paddling gently, while the female swam toward a portion of the shore where the cypresses grew wide apart in a semiliquid mass of saturated soil and organic detritus'. She hauled her massive body onto the land and wriggled ponderously along, gasping, until she had traveled five or six lengths—perhaps 80 meters. Then she seemed to explode in frenzy, digging with flippers and head and flailing body until she had hollowed out a muddy bowl that gleamed darkly wet from seeping groundwater. The eggs! The eggs! The exclamations of Queen Ayfa were picked up by the other Firvulag. For the sake of the weaker farsighted, Culluket amplified his own vision until they all saw the great pearly spheroids, twice the size of a human head, being deposited one by one into the warm muck. The female rested for a few moments after the last egg was laid, then began gentle swim- THE NONBORN KING 216 ming motions that served to tumble the sides of the bowl and bury the clutch securely, Out on the water, the male plesiosaur was slowly sinking from view. It uttered one last prolonged hoot and vanished. The female now lay motionless, only her muddy sides heaving. Cullukel said: Look on the right! Aiken said: Two bigbastards' Yoicks! He thumped his glass-spurred heels on the shoulders of his chaliko- Golden knight and mount slid down the air and landed with a resounding squelch. The chaliko sank up to its shaggy fetlocks in mud but remained composed. Aiken leaped from its back and burst into halide-bright effulgence. The area be- neath the mossy cypresses was lit like midsummer noontide. Creeping through the thin underbrush toward the exhausted female plesiosaur were two enormous crocodilians- Their eyes blazed red and their mouths were slightly open, showing tusks like peeled and sharpened bananas. The head of the larger reptile was more than two meters long. Aiken came capering over the surface of the mire like a demented will-o' -the- wisp, emitting vulgar noises. The lead phobosuchus veered toward him while the other halted, non- plussed. "What are you spooks waiting for?" Aiken taunted the Fir" vulag. "Charge, dammit!" "May I, High King?" begged Fafnor, couching his lance. Sham nodded. "And you, Medor. Stand by ... and be alert." With valiant yells the two spurred their chalikos toward the dancing bright manikin. It seemed they would ride him down, but he leaped and whirled like a burning leaf, dodging easily out of harm's way. Fafnor spitted the nearest crocodile through the middle of its body- It roared and contorted and its powerful tail whipped toward the chaliko, which was saved only when it abruptly rose four meters into the air. Fafnor's lance was left behind in the madly twisting body- The young hero drew his longsword and darted back after the prey, now having to avoid not only the beast's jaws and tail, but also his own lance, which seemed to have an enmity all its own. Several times it came perilously close to smashing him from the saddle- Medor stood THE GRAND LOVING 217 back, helpless. Metapsychic intervention would be an unsport- ing gaucherie, and Hunt conventions allowed a companion to participate only when the principal was unmounted or dis- armed. "Don't hack at its tail, dummy'" Aiken cried- "You think you're carving a joint at a banquet? Get its brain' Behind the eye!" Fafnor rallied and finally located the critical spot, stabbing his sword down with a mighty two-handed blow. He backed off to safety while the reptile thrashed in mortal agony. Dark blood gushed at last from its jaws and it lay still. The entire Hunt sprang brilliantly to life. A rainbow radiance lit the lagoon and both Tanu and Firvulag cheered. Aiken strolled to the dead monster, zapped off one of the projecting tusks by means of his psychoenergy, and handed the trophy to Fafnor. "Nice going, kid." By now, the second crocodile had disappeared. But the sporting blood of the Little People had been stimulated at last, and they demanded that Aiken produce fresh quarry. "Why not? The night's young!" A smile of studied casual- ness played about the jester's lips. "Of course, anyone can fight a beasi on land. But the real thrill comes when you manage to take one from the air, out over the sea. If you Firvulag were game for a real challenge, we could fly on back to the Strait of Redon and find us a bull-plesiosaur. Nonmating ones are always in season. But the usual restriction prevails: no fair using metapsychic force—just your regular weapons. And one further catch! No sloppiness, leaving a wounded beast to swim off and die. If you don't make a clean kill at first cut, you have to go into the water to finish him off." There was abrupt stillness. Aiken's satirical eye roved over the faces of his ogrish guests. "What? No volunteers? You Firvutag are supposed to be a lot braver in the water than Tanu. It should be easy for you to polish off a sea monster in its own element. They aren't all that hard to nail. All it takes is a good eye—and nerve." "I'm game, if no Foeman dares risk." Old Celadeyr of Afaliah had an unaccustomed gaiety about him. THE NONBORN KING 218 "Let me do it. High King'" Betulam begged his sovereign The other ogres hastily chimed in "No," said Sham 'The honor will be mine alone, lest our saucy host think us deficient in that quality so prized by Low- lives—nerve " "I need to be taught a good lesson," Alken said "Let's go'" The Flying Hunt soared aloft and westward, toward the strait The moon was halfway to the zenith Alken earned the nders to a considerable altitude, so that they could see the black stretch of the coast and the gleaming water, the lights ofGonah on the horizon, and even the twinkling fires marking the Fir vulag encampment far up the curving Laar, adjacent to the Grove of May "Plesiosaurs that stay out to sea on nights like this are apt to be very young or very old," the shmmg youth explained "Now, these big old bulls may be past it, but they still know how to fight—believe me' We'll cruise around until Cull spots a really choice specimen for you, Shamie, and then you can show us a sample of the real Firvulag jisum*" Idwi, Ayfa told her husband on the intimate mode He tncked me Of course he did Was I supposed to let myself be upstaged by a pair of creaking dotards^ I'm the King and Battlemaster' A very paragon of nerve and jisum men' Plesiosaurs don't look to be as dangerous as the crocodiles I could have taken that one back there in the swamp with a dull tableknife Well, you're for it now And I have uncomfortable pre- monitions that Alken Drum planned it this way' Any treachery would be certain to take place while 1 was distracted by the beast You and Medor must monitor the little gold bastard's PK output every second At the least diminu- tion—the least hint that he might drop me in the water—all of you combme to blast him out of the sky Even if we all lose our lives in the fracas to follow, we'll die with our racial honor intact Te save you, dear fool' You know what I think of this honor' THE GRAND LOVING 219 Yes But you'll do as ! say nevertheless Now be silent "I have discovered a suitable sea monster, Battlemaster," said Culluket to Alken "We're off" cned the Shining One The cavalcade, like a pyrotechnic arrow, plunged toward the moonlit sea "Is he on the surface, CulP" "Basking," the Interrogator confirmed, "but alert We'd bet- ter go invisible—save for the royal antagonist " Thirteen members of the Hunt vanished, leaving only Sham and his mount plummeting like a dark meteor, sustained in flight by the psychokinesis of Alken Drum The farspoken thought of the trickster came to the mind of the Firvulag King We standby above' Gogethim' Neckchop besthope Slon- shal BigBoy' Sham drew his sword He reined in his mount to come nearly to a halt JUS! above the water, and drifted toward an indistinct gleaming mass that lounged amid waves that were thinly crested with white The neck of the plesiosaur was down, extended in graceful S-curves, and its slender tail was undu- lating It was a gigantic thing, nearly the length of the sperm whales of the Anversian Sea, at least half again as large as the mating pair they had seen back in the swamp Sham approached the creature almost at wavetop, from di- rectly behind the head He prayed that its peripheral vision was poor, that its rubbery skin was insensitive to aenal vibrations, and that the wind would not shift, carrying his scent The plesiosaur began to scull with its paddles as well as its slow-moving tail Sham followed, a bejeweled ogre with an upraised crystal sword, biding his lime until the beast should be directly upwind of him and the neck in a favorable posture The wind shifted The monster caught his scent Sham's heels drove into the ban-el of the chaliko and it hurtled forward An incredible neck curled up, flinging sheets of water It snapped back like a whip and the jaws opened Sham gave the chaliko a violent crossrem and it heeled over at a full gallop, not a meter above the tossing waves, with the monstrous head snak- ing after it 220 THE NONBORN KINO In a sudden convulsion of terror, Sham felt something gnp his armored left calf. The chaliko was wrenched to a halt and both nder and mount cried out. But even in his extremity, the King felt constrained by the rules of the Hunt. Instead of blast- ing the creature, he stabbed at it awkwardly with his sword The jaws let go, the chaliko gave an explosive gruni as the hold on its nder eased, and Hunter and prey were flung wide apart. Sham urged the chaliko aloft and it responded as it had been trained to do, racing through air as easily as it might have pounded across the steppes Sham turned it and sent it speeding back down. Fury had raised a high-pitched singing sound in his brain. The Lowlife usurper had planned this' He and the Torturer knew this plesiosaur's wiliness and savage courage of old, and they had led the Hunt directly to its territory And now wailed for it to kill him. The monster darted up from the water in lightning lunges, champing and foaming, writhing like a nightmare python. The head was not large but the teeth were recurved and razor sharp— and at least one had already penetrated a chink in his hinder jambeau, for there was a trickling at the back of his leg, al- though he felt no pain. Oh, you would, would you? As he dived at it he shouted the ancient battle-curse of the Little People, the one passed down from his grandsire's grand- sire, who had contended with Bright Lugonn at the Ship's Grave and wielded the immortal Sword. "Ylahayir" roared King Sham-Mes. "Ylahayll Tanu' Yla- hayll Aiken Drum!" The coiling neck shot at him, jaws wide, on a perfect tra- jectory to catch him if he missed. He cried again, "Ylahayll!" And struck- The head of the monster tumbled into the sea. Up above, the members of the Hunt flared in multicolored light, circling like angels on a merry-go-round. Sham retrieved the floating head and flung it aloft with ail of his titanic strength THE GRAND LOVING 221 straight at Aiken Drum The head blazed green and the teeth in ihe open jaws were wickedly aglitter "This time," Sham called out to his host, "the trophy is for you " 1Z AT DAWN ON THE LAST DAY OF APRIL THE GRAND LOVING OF Firvulag commenced its preliminary events From their encampment on the Field of Gold streamed thou- sands upon thousands of Little People, all dressed m their finest clothes The boys and girls of marriageable age earned be- nbboned wreaths of vervain and St John's-wort, species deemed to resemble most closely certain fertility herbs native to lost Dual The matrons were burdened with armloads of precious gifts wrapped in embroidered linen, and their menfolk toted trumpets, shawms, fifes, cymbals, tam-tams, and sixteen va- rieties of drum Trailing after came a great herd of little children wearing surcoats and caps of green leaves, carrying baskets of colored eggs and waving noisemaker rattles Making a musical dm, the throng marched to the ramp of the Nionel suspension bridge, where it was met by a mounted delegation from the city, headed by Sugoll The Lord of the Howlers, ail in white and adorned with a magnificent illusory body, bade his kinfolk follow him a Maying, and led them over the bridge The suspension cables fluttered with rainbow- colored banners, and garlands of greenery decorated the rails On the opposite shore of the nver. reborn Nionel waited with its gates wide open The industrious goblin citizenry had burnished forty years of verdigris from its toadstool-domes and bulbous cupolas, and now they shone like gold m the sunnse 222 THE GRAND LOVING 223 Golden, too, were the freshly plastered walls of the houses, the sanded streets, and the sweeping expanse of the grand plaza where the celebration was to take place Nionel's fountains and lamp-standards and sidewalk furniture had all been brightly gilded And the new Pavilion of the Great Ones had pillars of green serpentine twined with yellow roses, and a cloth-of gold awning All around the plaza's perimeter was a greenbelt of lawns and blooming trees The surrounding buildings were hung with effigy pennons and swags of brilliant flowers The Howlers of Nionel, dressed even more sumptuously than their nonmutant cousins, crowded balconies and windows, thronged dozens-deep in the peripheral arcades, and overflowed into the side streets, cheenng as the benevolent invasion poured into the square to the accompaniment of the Grand Loving Mddngal Come unto these yellow sands All those who seek a lover Dance ten times around the flowering tree, Choose your sweetheart and pay the price But beware of love-thieves' And beware the disguised Foe' Shun mama's-boys and shrewish maids And potential in-laws with empty pokes' 0 King and Queen of May, reign generously Kind Goddess, bless this time ofjoy and wooing Let the two tali fires be kindled at midnight, And grant to those who pass between eternal love Sugoll and his party came to the Pavilion of the Great Ones, where the Howler lord dismounted and ascended to his throne Kathnei, who would play Queen of the May to Sugoll's King, waited with the gorgeous crowd of Firvulag nobility, headed by the Great Captain Galbor Redcap and his wife Habetrot, and the legendary artisan-mates Fmoderee and Mabino Dream- spinner King Sham and Queen Ayfa and most of the Gnomish Council were away m Gonah at the Tanu festivity But they 224 THE NONBORN KING were hardly missed, so great was the excitement among the Little People at having the Loving in Nionel again. Two full generations had passed since the last Maying in the city. During the time of the Tanu ascendancy, the Firvulag, for sorrow and hurt pnde, had let their Grand Loving degenerate into scattered local observances. Nionel had been a site to shun rather than cherish when it seemed that the Field of Gold would never again host the Games But now all that was changed. As the new arrivals took their places, they were buzzing about the splendid renovation job the mutants had done. (Truth to tell, the dear old town had never looked better.) What with Brede's successor having solved the sticky problem of the Loathly Bndes—why, it seemed that this would truly be a May Day to remember "Next, they'll crown Sugoll and Katy with flowers," Crazy Greggy said to Chief Burke "And then they'll issue their first official command and the not will start!" He tittered with antic glee. "Surely not a literal not," said Sister Amene Roccaro, set- ting down her cup of coffee- They were all securely ensconced in a side wing of the pavilion—the thirty-three sidetracked adventurers bound for Hidden Springs and their impromptu festival guide, Greg-Donnel Genetics Master The mob of nearly a thousand bareneck refugees that they had shepherded to Ni- onel from the Lac de Bresse was dispersed among the local populace for the holiday. Dressed in borrowed Howler finery, the human emigres were virtually indistinguishable from me- dium-sized members of the Firvulag race Greggy said, "You just keep a sharp eye out. Sister. Sugoll bnefed me on what happens next- See? Here comes the Little Green Army now'" The flock of children dressed in leaves approached the thrones of Sugoll and Katlmel. The King of the May lifted his flowery sceptre "0 valiant Greenfolk, defend our sacred festival from the Foe! Search every hiding place, every mousehole and secret THE GRAND LOVING 225 cranny, lest foul interlopers invade our Grand Loving and steal away the precious bndes and grooms." A piercing shriek went up from the elfin host They scattered pell-mell into the crowd ofaduits, impudently lifting petticoats and rooting through bundles The adults responded with yells and swats and used their musical instruments to set up a deaf- ening clamor. The urchins were not at all discouraged They ranged out among the Howler celebrants, concentrating on the east side of the square where the eating establishments were situated, clambering over tables, upsetting the sunshades, and stealing whatever food was insufficiently defended. "No Tanu ever show up as clandestine participants, of course," Greggy said. "I'm afraid that the Little People have rather an inflated opinion of their own desirability! But just to keep the fun going, a few adolescents from Nionel are tncked out in fake giass armor to play boogieman. And—whoops' Here they come!" A squad of mock invaders, armed with big soft balloon- cudgels, dashed into the plaza from a side street. Squealing, the Little Green Army converged and produced its own weap- onry In a moment the air was filled with flying colored eggs. Some were stuffed with confetti and some contained heavily perfumed dye-water. There were eggs stuffed with sneezy fun- gus spores, with feathers, and with honey. A few were unblown and fresh from the nest, and the less principled among the children flung missiles that were hard-boiled or even addled- When the "Tanu" were struck, they retaliated with ferocious wallops from their balloons and momentary glimpses of some hideous phantom aspect, The leaf-clad imps were unfazed. Scores of them leaped at the faltering, besmutched Foemen and pulled them down to the yellow sand. The enemy expired to the tune of lugubrious groans, exploding balloons, and the crackle and crunch of a few leftover eggs. Then ropes were brought and lashed to the glass-armored ankles, and the vic- torious Greenfolk hauled their captives away while the adults laughed uproariously. relaxed, and settled down to enjoy a long picnic breakfast. "The little nippers have a beanfeast of their own in another 226 THE NONBORN KING part of town after they pee! off their leaves and wash up," Greggy said "For the rest of the festival, they'll have their own separate entertainment Puppet shows, games, and the like That way the grownups won't be inhibited in their own merrymaking " "The leaf-clad army was weirdly evocative of parts of Fra- zer's Golden Bough," remarked Basil Wimbome "The ban- ishing of malevolent influences before the start of the fertility rites' One wonders what the original, more violent aspect of the ntua! might have been in pnmttive days on their home planet'7" "Please, colleague," Greggy protested "I'meating "Helicked strawberry jam from his fingers and went back to the lavish buffet, where the privileged human guests mingled with exotic nobility, gorging themselves on pastries, tongue toast, scram bled eggs with morels, gnlled antelope sausages, barbecued kid, and fresh fruit-cup spumanti slathered with honeyed whipped cream "However, if you fancy a really First-rate piece of eu hemenstic speculation, consider the ceremony involving our innocent King and Queen of May and the maypole—" "Putting your naughty interpretations on our folklore again, Greggy7" Sugoll was standing there, tall and splendid, crowned with red and white lilies The Genetics Master had the grace to look sheepish Sugoll turned to Basil and Chief Burke "And your companions Are they enjoying the spectacle thus far9" "It's a welcome diversion, Lord Sugoll," Burke said "We've had a long, hard winter And then to be saddled with that crowd of poor starving wretches when we thought we were safely on the way to Hidden Springs " The last of the Wallawallas shook his iron-gray head "Are you sure you can assimilate them7" the nun asked anxiously "We still don't understand why Elizabeth told us to bring them to you Some of them are quite hard-bitten, you know They're mostly from the lowest bareneck stratum of Burask—or else Lowhfe outlaws driven from their remote little settlements by your own Howler migration Frankly, we've never come across such a wild and cranky bunch of humans before Not during the Finiah war and not even during the THE GRAND LOVING 227 evacuation from Munah We nearly went crazy nding herd on them Gideon got a broken hand refereemg one fight, and some raggedyas". brutes ambushed Ookpik and Nazir in retaliation for a punishment detail and roughed them up quite badly " She poured herself more coffee "It was also rather tedious for Wang and Mr Betsy and the Baroness and me, always having to fend off the odd slavering rapist " Sugofl's smile blended humor and compassion "Now I'm more than ever certain that Elizabeth did the right thing, sending these desperados to us You'll see'" He lowered his voice "We have a little time before the skill-contests and other entertain- ments begin Sister, if you will excuse us, I'll take Basil and Chief Burke away to settle a matter relating to the Ship's Grave expedition " Amene nodded and went off to join Greggy. who was ar- guing mulagemcs with Magnus and Thongsa, the expedition medics "This way," the Howler lord directed He led Burke and Basil to a draped alcove where a well-dressed dwarf was wait- ing "This is Kahpm, who has volunteered to be your guide into the eastern wilderness " The little exotic shook hands But even as Burke was uttering conventional pleasantries, the dwarf underwent a metamor- phosis that froze the words in the big Native American jurist's throat Kahpin's body shrank His torso became rounded and his limbs spindly The grinning face compressed and sharpened until it was nearly birdlike, except for the flapping ears with their droopy upper margins The eyes turned black and sank into grotesque pouches The exotic's skin became greasy and his hair, falling in strands from beneath a smart green cap with a jeweled buckle, resembled a dirty mop "Well7" The bogie shifted his glance from one human to the other "Still want to nsk traveling to the Ship's Grave with me7" "We know about the genetic misfortune of the Howler na- tion, old chap," said Basil gently "We can't pretend that your— differences—don't exist But I can't help wondering whether 228 THE NONBORN KING we humans don't look JUSI as odd to you Perhaps we can all agree to ignore one another's peculiarities and simply get on with the job at hand It's formidable enough " "We must travel more than six hundred of your kilometers," Kahpm said "Dunng the first part of the journey, we may be in danger from the Firvulag if they suspect the purpose of the expedition Sham and Ayfa aren't fools We d do well to get beyond the Rhine before they return to High Vrazel " "We have chalikos," Burke said "Can you nde9" The bogle grimaced "Not those bloody great monsters' I can manage a hippanon But mounts won't do you any good beyond the Rhine You'll have to walk until we reach the Ystroll's source under the Feldberg I hope your people are all in good shape The Black Forest trek is going to be rugged " Kahpm glared at the Native American "I noticed that you limp " "That I do," Burke sighed "But it's pretty well decided that I'll stay behind at Hidden Springs while Basil takes charge of our tnbe of daredevils Elizabeth expects trouble around the iron mines this summer " "Blood metal'" Kalipin shuddered He shot a reproachful look at Sugoll "Sometimes, Master, we simple ones despair of understanding why you insist that we ally ourselves with the Lowlives'" "It is our only hope," said the ruler of the Howlers "Some day you'll understand Until then, obey me'" For the briefest fraction of a second, the handsome figure in the white robe seemed overshadowed by another shape, hideous beyond belief Burke and Basil gave involuntary gasps Sugoll's smile was melancholy "You didn't know9 But I am the greatest among my people in all things—even in phys- ical abomination As my guests, it was simple courtesy to spare you " He addressed the goblin guide "And you, Kahpm Use your goodly form when you are in the company of humans We must not distress our friends unnecessarily " The creature obediently transformed himself into a normal dwarf "But all of us go back to our regular shapes when we're asleep," he told the men with wry satisfaction "You'll just THE GRAND LOVING 229 have to be brave at bedtime on the trail' Unless my Master orders me to sleep in a sack " Sugoll laughed 'Impudent scoundrel Just fulfill your mis- sion faithfully And now you are dismissed Back to breakfast with you'" When the bogle was gone, Sugoll indicated a sizable carved chest that stood in the shadows "There is one more way I am able to ass'-st you in your expedition Open that, please ' Basil knelt When the lid lifted he cned, "Great Scott' Where did you gel these9" "The stun-guns were a gift from Sham and Ayfa "Oh, shit,' said Chief Burke "I can only presume they were a delicate hint Sham may already suspect that my loyalty to the Firvulag throne is less than wholehearted And if there is war with Alken Drum Well, it takes no grand strategist to note Nionet's position between Gonah and High Vrazel " "If we're successful in procuring the aircraft," Basil said, "neither Alken nor Sham will dare harm you " He ran his weather-beaten hands over the weapons, mutely pointed out the recharging unit to Burke, then closed the lid "These could be very useful to us We thank you, Lord SugotI Even with our thirty technicians and experienced wilderness hands, it will be a dangerous trip—and it's questionable just how many of the flyers can be made operational The Chief and our people at Hidden Springs will prepare a hiding place for at least two " "How would they be useful in a war9" Sugoll asked "You must forgive my ignorance, but flying machines would seem to be quite useless against ground forces such as the Firvulag would mount You no longer have the Spear of Lugonn, which was used against Fmiah " "True," said Burke "But in their haste to get a single flyer airborne, Madame's party may have overlooked another set of potential weapons This was pointed out to us by one of our new companions, a former spacecraft design engineer named Dmitnos Anastos " Basil said, "You see, the ancient devices at the Ship s Grave are actually sophisticated gravomagnetic craft with planet or- 230 THE NONBORN KING biter capability—quite similar to machines we had back in the Galactic Milieu In our era, such orbiters were always equipped with tractor and pressor beams to assist in docking and nudspace transfer when the rho-field was off These force-beams were also used for meteor deflections Sometimes, our ships even had small lasers for zapping away space debris If our tech- nicians can find similar systems on the ancient flyers, they might very possibly modify them for offense If this isn't fea- sible—there's always the iron And the hope of finding and raiding Sham's cache of twenty-second-century armaments " The Howler Lord had been looking more and more puzzled Now he threw up his hands in resignation "Teah grant that the mere possession of flying machines by our fnends will deter aggression'" "Amen," said Basil He added, dniy, "Nevertheless, let's not count too heavily on divine intervention, shall we7 Not with the Firvulag on one side of us, and Alken Drum on the other " "Look at those little beauties' Just look at them'" Tony Wayland clutched Dougal's mailed arm and dragged him toward the front row of the exotic throng The gnomes and ogres were good-humored enough about the shoving, al- though one fighting-drunk human in Firvulag costume threat- ened to upend his seidel of beer on Tony if he didn't mind his manners "You're not the only eager one, cockle," the suds- buster declared "Simmer down, and you'll get plenty before this night's over " It was nearly midnight The carousing and dancing of the married folk had come to an end and a great space around the maypole was cleared for the Dance of the Bndes The im- promptu orchestra played a slow, demure melody and the maid- ens emerged in solemn procession All of them wore gowns and headdresses of fantastic richness, with a color scheme of either red or green The girls in scarlet were the most sinking, with their gorgeous coats, tight jeweled cuffs, and tantalizing body suits with red boots Perched on flowing locks of brown or dark red were tall starburst headpieces encrusted with rubies THE GRAND LOVING 231 and some fiery gemstone resembling opal The piquant faces beneath the towenng constructions were enhanced by jeweled frames "Pocket Venuses, every one of them'" Tony rhapsodized The knight's expression was unreadable "They're exotics Km to the soul-devouring Tanu " Tony ignored that "And willing, just for tonight' God, Dougie—it's been so long'" "Too long for all of us," growled the beer drinker "Jesus, look at the jewels on 'em'" "Jewels, hell," said another Lowlife feelingly "I wouldn't care if they was weann' gunny sacks Real live women at last'" "Inhuman women Faene women'" Dougal's voice rose Tony said, "Who gives a damn^ Just on this one night in the year, they'll go with anybody' All you have to do is grab the flower ring they hold out in the dance " "I want me a red one'" somebody yelled "A gal in little red boots'" "Keep your breeks on, amigo' It won't be long now'" The gnomish musicians struck up a more lively air and the damsels began to circle the maypole The male exotics all bawled out a phrase in their own tongue and the girls responded Back and forth the two sexes called, teasing each other, while the veils on the starry headdresses streamed behind the accel- erating dancers in a blurred conflagration Finally, after a great shout, the circling girls extended their arms and rushed toward the central maypole with its braided ribbons and heaped flower garlands at the base The maidens vanished In their place rose a myriad of small, rambow-hued lights, like tropical fireflies In some magical fashion, each ignis fatuus attached itself to the end of a gleam- ing nbbon, and the entire swarm resumed dancing at a more languid, sensual pace The nbbons twined and untwined, the wispy lights soared and fell, undulated and whirled The in vitdtional song was almost a hum, lower-pitched and alluring Swaying helplessly, the ensorceled males sang along Abruptly, the music changed again to the faster beat The costumed maids were back on the yellow sand and each one 232 THE NONBORN KING had a wreath in her hands. They danced out to where the swains waited, and as the teasing phrases were exchanged, the pairing- off began One man after another gripped the wreath of his chosen red or green sweetheart and let her draw him by it onto the dancing ground- It was all irresistible, the spinning colors, the intoxicating scent of the flowers, the music with its thump- ing sexuai beat. One of the diminutive beauties stood before Tony Wayland. Black eyes sparkled beneath the jeweled face-frame. The fra- grant May wind blew aside red and gold draperies to show a delicate body. curved, enticing, and perfectly human in its contours. "Come, come." sang the nymph. "No, my Lord!" Dougal cned, trying to haul Tony back. The metallurgist shook free "Come, come!" Tony clutched the wreath She pulled him out among the other couples. The girls in red, he noted, had mostly chosen Lowlife lovers. How fastidious of them, since they were by far the loveliest of the lot! "Don't go!" Dougal pleaded. "You're bewitched." He was indeed, and gladly. The darling exotic wench hung the hoop of flowers around his neck as they danced- She kissed the fingers of one hand, then pressed his tips. Tony's blood sang The warning shout from Dougal was swallowed as the music became a sonorous paean of love triumphant. Two by two, the couples circled the maypole. On the side of the square nearest the city gate, the mob of spectators was suddenly cleft, opening a clear path. Two huge bonfires sprang to life, their flames topping the seven-meter walls. The couples marched safely between the twin fires, through me gate, and into moon-drenched meadows. The music back inside Nionel floated to them on the warm breeze "I am Rowane," the nymph in red said. "I love you." "I'm Tony, and I love you, too'" Giddy from the insidious flowers hung round his neck, he let her draw him on until they were far away from the other couples. They came to a rustic bower formed of bushes and THE GRAND LOVING 233 entered, and he lifted the starburst headdress and the face-frame away and bent to kiss her They shed their clothes and made love—not once, but four limes She howled in ecstasy and he was devastated by bliss, and wept at the end of H and she comforted him "Now we'll sleep," she said. "My dearest Tonee." He fell a silken cloth pressed over his eyes, wrapped around his head and softly tied. "Rowane? What are you doing9" "Shhh You must never see me when we sleep It would be tembly bad luck Promise that you'll never try." Her warm lips met his, and she kissed his eyelids through the silk "My tittle Mayflower My exotic darling If it'll make you happy " He was sinking toward sweet unconsciousness Her voice faded, and the memory of her exultant cnes, but not his pride in his own manhood that she had so marvelousiy reaf- firmed "For your sake 1 won't look Strange little one "It's not for my sake, dear Tonee. It's for yours " She laughed fondly, and then he was asleep, and he had the most singular dream. When he woke up and absent-mindedly tore off the blind- fold, he discovered that the dream had come true "Oh. my God\" he croaked She opened her eye and was instantly her old self Petite Lovely. Putting on her clothes and lifting the withered remnants of the wreath from his neck "Rowane!" His voice was anguished. "What have they done to you? And to meT Her smile was pert and very wise- "The ordinary Firvulag are able 10 see through our guises They never would choose the bndes m red, you see. And you poor human males we know how few of your own women came through the time- gate, and those still mostly enslaved by the Tanu What could be more right than this?" She reached up and kissed him pas- sionately He felt himself respond in spite of the knowledge "Dear Lord Greg-Donnet says the first cross will produce a normal-appearing hybrid. After that, there can be genetic en- gineering to modify the mutant strain " 234 THE NONBORN KING "The—first—cross?" He felt the world lurch. The meadow was full of golden flowers and nsing larks "And our child will be immune to the blood metal, just as you humans are. Isn't that a nice bonus7" "Uh," he said. She was pulling him to his feet "And now everyone's hur- rying back to Nionel for the May Morning feast We don't want to be iate, do we!" "No. ." "You'll love Mummy and Daddy," she added. "And you're going to love Nionel. too Let's run?" They went racing over the soft grass, hand in hand. Tony thought: What am I going to tell poor old Dougal? But then he saw other lovers converging on the city gates, and among them was a great ginger-bearded man wearing a surtout with a golden lion's head. being led along by another lovely little woman in red. And Tony knew that his question was superfluous 13 "WE'VE TRIED FOR THE PAST THREE NIGHTS TO BLAST THE little gold devil while he was asleep and drawn zilch," Medor grumbled. "I don't see why tonight should be any different. He's using some kind of mechanical brain-shield. Pass the rabbit mousse." King Sham shoved a platter toward his first deputy, who scraped a great quivering wedge onto his plate and slurped it with gusto. "Tonight, AAen won't sleep in the castle," the King explained. "HeTl be out here in the Grove with everyone else, and using the gadget would cramp his style " "How so?" inquired Mimee of Famorel, who was viceroy of the Helvetide Uttle People. "Our ingenious hostess has scheduled another crazy inno- vation. Something called the Night of Secret Love. After the feast, we're ail supposed to go to those robing tents on the other side of the amphitheatre and pick up a masquerade cos- tume. No illusion making allowed At midnight, a masked ball begins, followed by hanky-panky in the Tryshng Grounds until dawn. Kind of a glorified bachelor party before all the weddings tomorrow Except, being Tanu, the damn bndes'U probably be off in the bushes rutting away with the rest of the Foe." "Decadent bitches," growled Mimee. "And to think that our own folk are beginning the sacred Dance of the Bndes almost at this very moment up in Nionet " He cast a wistful look at 235 236 THE NONBORN K-ING the high-nding full moon, whose light was drowned by the gem-lamps that illuminated the feasting boards. The Firvutag had insisted on segregated dining facilities They were willing to wolf down Tanu food, but disdained Tanu wines and high- proof brandies in favor of good old beer, mead, and cyser "You know what you're getting when you wed a Firvulag bnde " Medor heaved a maudlin sigh. "Virgins' Every last toothsome morsel! And faithful to you forever, once they finally open thai adorable vagina denlata. If only my little Andamathe was here . You brought your wife, Sham. It was damned unfair of you to make the rest of us leave our mates behind' Spoils the whole Loving! Pass the sweetbreads grand due." "I'm the Queen," Ayfa said. "I had to come And the rest of you are supposed to keep your wits about you This is a mission into the Foe's territory—deadly serious business You can exercise your damn gonads on your own time " "So we're to try for Alken Drum again tonight, then," said young Fafnor Ice-Jaws "I presume that -we put on costumes and mingle." "Not too enthusiastically,"warned the Queen, her dark eyes twinkling. "The Tanu ladies have no teeth where it counts, but rumor has it that when they've finished with a man, his filberts are nothing but rattling husks Don't be tempted, lad." "The Goddess forbid!" said the young ogre, all in a huff "We must track Alken wherever he goes and make our strike right at the magic moment," Sham said- "Alt twelve of us " "He'll be after that young coercer wench, Olone," Medor said shrewdly "Her shameless flaunting of herself before the King of the May is the talk of all the Tanu gossips. Pass the ortolans en brochette." The King seized the silver dish and slammed it down out of Medor's reach- "Dammit—will you think of something be- sides food? No wonder we haven't been able to work up a decent mind-meld' All the blood deserted our brains for our digestive tracts from the moment we set foot in Goriah!" "Medor's in need of distraction " Old Betulam had a wicked smirk. "And notjust because his wife's in Nionel Guess who we saw at a special table off in a quiet comer of the feast- THE GRAND LOVING 237 garden, dining on invalid's slop with his blood-brother, the Interrogator? None other than Medor's Grand Combat antag- onist, Kuhal Earthshaker' The one we thought was surely dead." 'Te's toenails'" exclaimed the King. "That's bad news Kuhal tied you in the Heroic Encounters, Medor, and his PK talent is—" "Nil," the ognsh champion said, grinning around a half- masticated songbird. "His twin, Fian, died and Kuhal is a basket case- He still spends most of the day in Skin I guess Aiken forced the Afaliah contingent to tote him up here to participate in the rump coronation on the third day of the Loving Kuhal is a High Tabler, you know But about as much threat to us as a newbom dik-dik. Pass the poached marrow and the salmon mayonnaise " Mimee of Famorel made a face "Your liver wilt take a month to recuperate." "So what?" Medor said "The war's not scheduled to start until fail." "Silence'" hissed Sham His demonic aspect came upon him, the guise of a three-meter albino scorpion with glowing internal organs. His mind dealt a savage correction to the im- prudent Medor, who tumbled from his seal onto the grass, pained and shocked and splattered with mayonnaise. Sham's body returned to normal He regarded the Gnomish Council with a bleak expression. "No one knows the day the Nightfall War begins. Not I. Not you. You will never speak of it among yourselves. Never think of it! Do you understand^" "Yes, High King," said the others Over by the table of the King and Queen of May, a kind of fireworks display of foun- taining Roman-candle lights had started. It signaled the end of the Moonlight Feast and the imminent beginning of the Night of Secret Love. "Now get your fancy-dress outfits and sober up." said Sham "Ayfa and I will meet you at the base of the maypole in an hour " "You look ... ridiculous," said Kuhal "But in character " Culiuket shrugged. "I judged it a droll choice of disguise " 238 THE NONBORN KING His expression behind the death's-head mask was perfectly clear to his brother In light of the idiotic charade taking place out on ihe dancing ground. Cull's mocking smile was under- standable; but excitement "You do surprise me. Interrogator. I had thought you well beyond the simpler styles of concupiscence " "Even so. But tonight is a special occasion." Death folded his black-clad arms with their painted bones and surveyed the scene The ball music was becoming more frenzied in its eroticism and the dancers more madcap and abandoned The young, who scarcely needed the artificial stim- ulus anyway, were already pairing off and slipping away through the trees in the direction of the Trysting Grounds Even those traditional Tanu who had entered reluctantly into the mas- querade seemed about to surrender to the Dionysian atmo- sphere. Surely that capering wanton disguised as a purple moth was none other than the venerable Moma-la. And the stout, cloaked figure sporting a panther's head, shamelessly cavorting with a willowy charmer on each arm, bore a suspicious likeness to the Craftsmaster Aiken Drum was out in the middle of things, of course, dressed inevitably in the particolored outfit of a medieval Jester He wore a mask with an obscenely long nose, which seemed to have a libido all its own. "And on the day after tomorrow," Kuhal observed, "we will acclaim him King! Goddess forgive us. And you have been among his chief supporters, Redactive Brother. You, an elder of the Host' 1 have the excuse of brain-wreck, at least. But you, for all your quirks of temperament, are a paragon of glacial rationality Yet you calmly accept this human mountebank— even serve him! It was well known that you and Nodonn were estranged; but that you should pledge fealty to a Lowlife it negates all that the Host of Nontusvel stood for " Death laughed. "Who remains of our vaunted Host? Fifteen meager-powered brothers and sisters under Celo's protection, most of whom survived because they were wounded in the Combat and shipped off to Redactor House to gel them out of the way. I myself And you." Kuhai turned away. His gaunt features tightened An un- THE GRAND LOVING 239 bidden image rose in his memory, easily perceptible to the Interrogator "And me Half a mind Half a man Widowed and crippled in the same bereavement Depnved of a love no singleton could ever understand'" The vehemence of his bit- terness made him falter, grown suddenly gray-faced- Cutlukel took his brother by the arm and led him back to his cushioned seat near the clipped hedge, beyond the sight of the revelers Kuhal sank down, accepted a small tumbler with some medic- inal tisane, and sipped at it until the strong herbs took ettect. He ventured a wan smile "I almost envy your poor sweethearts their embrace with Death, Brother! Be sure to choose young ones, if you can lure them away from that pnapic jackanapes The young are less likely to know the melancholy history of your nine wives and thirty luckless mistresses." "I have my lover already selected," Culluket said. "And she knows " "Go away, then," said Kuhal Earthshaker. "I can rest here as well as anyplace. In the morning, Boduragol and the other Afatiah redactors will tend to me. Enjoy your Night of Secret Love, Brother'" Death nodded, raised one skeletal hand, and slipped away to the masquerade Sullivan-Tonn danced with his betrothed, the beautiful young coercer Olone, knowing with sick certainty what black impulse from his own subconscious had made him choose the antelope mask with the spiral homs "You can't go with him! I forbid it Your father gave me his most solemn promise'" Olone was a vision m a cloak of floating white petals and a tall flowered headdress. Her tiny half-mask was gold, the top margin all decorated with jeweled stamens. She looked down at her elderly fiance with a smite that blended amusement and contempt. "Father is dead. And anyway, a King's wishes overrule those of a city-lord." "Olone! My darling child My untouched flower! I'll spirit you away—" 240 THE NONBORN KING She felt the lightening embrace of his great psychokinesis But all that was needed was a single coercive thrust, and he was crushed and weeping behind his silly antelope head, and they whirled over the soft grass and the music throbbed "Father pledged me to you without my consent when I was nothing but a child You should be grateful that I still agreed to accept a human " 'No psychokinetic can match my powers'" Sullivan-Tonn blustered "Except him And you're not such a prize You're much too dumpy, and you're terribly old for one who's only ninety- six, and I think it was craven of you not to fight at Fimah " "Don t talk like that' I love you so much'" "Oh, twaddle " She was guiding the two of them closer and closer to the center of the dancing-ground, where the Fool and his Lady were spinning and soaring "I know why you want a virgin Don't think I can't read those temble books you were showing the Interrogatorjusl because the words aren't Standard English' Do you think we Tanu are incapable of using a Sony Translator9 La nouvelle Justme, indeed' You try just one of those Lowlife tncks on me after we're married, and I'll coerce you to jelly'" "My darling, I'd never—" "Oh, be quiet'" Most of those couples still on the dancing-ground now gath- ered about Alken and Mercy The Lady of Gonah was scarcely disguised at all. wearing a simple black domino and the Celtic costume that had been her choice for passing through the time- gate The music had slowed to a languid three-quarter time The jester and the Insh pnncess danced at arm's length His face was hidden not only by the ludicrous long-nosed mask, but also by a mental curtain Her lips were colorless, curved in a knowing smile The dance ended and they bowed to one another A new melody began, jagged, eene, impossible to dance to The ball was over and the couples humed toward the shadows Olone slipped out of Sullivan s arms and rushed to Alken "My King'" she said breathlessly, and curtseyed to the ground THE GRAND LOVING 241 The Fool snapped the fingers of both hands and came leaping al her She rose, dissolving in giggles, to be met by the re lentless caress of the nose Helpless, Sullivan saw them run away Mercy was almost alone now in the midst of the great bowl of lawn The musi- cians, all human, had slipped into the climactic bars of "La Valse " Sullivan shivered in premonition A spectral figure that had been waiting under the plane trees came into the moonlight and beckoned Mercy went to him slowly, then rose on tiptoe and kissed Death's fleshless mouth "Everybody ready'7" whispered Sham "Ready," said Ayfa and the ten ogres They meshed minds and flung the bolt Olone's eyes were like stars "Oh, Alken I never knew it would be like thai " The trickster looked slightly puzzled "I think I surpassed myself Maybe there's something to this maypole magic after air" Unlike the Firvulag weddings, those of the Tanu took place in broad daylight, beneath the noon sun of May Day The nuptial pairs, led by Alken-Lugonn and Mercy-Rosmar, circled around the great golden maypole to a stately processional chorus, climaxed by the Song The bndes and grooms wore gowns or robes of their own heraldic colors, and over them mantles of white The bndes had chaplets of white lilies and the grooms wreaths of male fern Mercy's soie innovation in the ancient ceremony had been the inclusion of spngs of rosemary in the nuptial crowns "It's a plant used to bless weddings from time immemorial on Elder Earth," she had explained, "and it's also my own plant rosemary of Rosmar Rosemary for remembrance She remembered another wedding !t had taken place in the middle of last June—not a mass celebration as this was, but a more intimate one, with only the courtiers and the people of Gonah in attendance She had not 242 THE NONBORN KING worn the blue-green of the Creator's Guild (she had not yet been initiated) but the rose and gold of her daemon lover If he had lived, they would have reaffirmed their vow today, leading not the parade of newlyweds but the later procession in the ceremony of renewal Nodonn' she cned on his intimate mode No one heard Not the solemn little man beside her in his gotd-and-black robes. not Eadnar and Alberonn, who walked directly behind them in the place of honor, not any one of the other one hundred and sixty-seven Tanu and gold-tore human couples who followed in measured figures traced around the golden shaft They danced holding the strings of flowers that depended from the maypole's tip, weaving the ribbons ever tighter until the betrothed came all together m a tight circle facing the pole, dropped the stream- ers, and kissed in the final pledge Raising her tear-ghntmg face from Alken's, Mercy-Rosmar Lady Creator held out both hands and exerted her metapsychic powers In a soft miracle, the air filled with a fragrant tempest of tiny white blossoms that swirled about the kissing couples, settled in their hair, spilled from the nuptial cloaks to form perfumed windrows on the emerald dancing ground "SionshaP" cned all the witnesses "Slonshal' Slonshal'" Then, with ntual finally over, the Grove of May swarmed with thousands of rama servitors and human waiters, all wear- ing Alken's gold-and-btack livery The couples and the throng of guests reclined on shaded grass and partook of a picnic feast, this time with dishes and potations selected for their alleged aphrodisiac effect There were strolling entertainers, and as evening descended, a great deal of nbald minstrelsy A gor- geous and sensual ballet served for a final prelude to the love- making (By then the Firvulag had gone back to their own encamp- ment, where Sham and Ayfa and the Gnomish Council gathered around the fire, chaste and furious, and got blind drunk Cul- tuket kept a farseeing eye on the Foe all that night, but the mossy grottos that Mercy had so carefully prepared went com- pletely unused ) When the May moon rode high, the Tanu and human couples THE GRAND LOVING 243 once again paired off—but more decorously than on the pre- vious night They came to their bowers and their couches hidden among the shrubs and found them heaped with fresh flower petals The newlyweds spread their white cloaks, and the old married folk managed in their old familiar way, and e^en the casual and the desperate found sweet solace in the nightingale- haunted forest After everyone else had gone, Alken and Mercy went to the maypole They joined hands around the tapenng column of gold and began to circle "Now you are mine," he told her "But whose are you7" she retorted, breaking into wild laugh- ter as the triumphant gnn faded from his face His only answer was to crush her hands and dance faster The maypole was now free of its flowery cords and jutted like some monstrous pylon toward the starry zenith Its sleek hard- ness separated them as they left the ground and spiraled upward They had lost their bndal crowns, but the white cloaks billowed, seeming to become larger and more enveloping, and then form a rotating fluidity like a nng of rising cloud Mercy tilted her head from side to side as they went faster and faster The night was a spinning blur except for his golliwog face and her laugh- ing one and always the golden shaft between They spun above the apex, wrapped in the moonglow bubble that the capes had become She felt she would die with the fear of him and the desire, and his eyes were two black bores and he was no longer a little man but enormous And there was a great golden maypole that brought a great golden light and warmth beyond measure, beyond the Sun. even beyond Death "But whose are you7" she heard herself repeat, long after And then. "No one's Poor Shining One " But by that time he was gone. and it was dawn. and time to get ready for the coronation Traditionally, the Grand Loving climaxed with the gentle deposition of the erstwhile King and Queen of May, after which 244 THE NONBORN KING the loyal Tanu subjects renewed their oath of fealty to the legitimate sovereign. This year. however, things were going to be different. Everyone knew it; the Many-Colored Land had been alive with the news ever since the successful conclusion of Alken's progress There were those who rejoiced and those who despaired and even a few who trusted that the Goddess would intervene at the last minute to solve what had become a grievously untidy state of affairs. On the morning of May second, Lady Morna-Ia sent out her farspoken summons, and by noon the Conclave of Tanu had assembled in the grassy bowl of the festival ground More than 6000 of them were in attendance, perhaps two-thirds of the total number left alive after the Flood The Rrvulag guests were there, loo, clustered in a sullen knot, all weanng their obsidian armor and deeply hung-over At the fringes of the exotic gathering was a mighty mob of humans that spread out into the parkland surrounding the amphitheatre—perhaps 15,000 silver-tores, grays, and barenecks who had come not only from Goriah and its satellite plantations and mining villages, but also from as far away as Rocilan and Sasaran, expressly invited by the usurper to witness his hour of glory. The dais had been cleared of its Maytide decorations. The flower-decked thrones were gone and in their place stood two unfamiliar chairs of unadorned black marble. A single note sounded from a glass carnyx The crowd fell silent, watching the dais, and abruptly Elizabeth was there. The minds and voices gave an involuntary cry of astonishment. Elizabeth wore Brede's great black-and-red headdress and cos- tume, and held the glass chain of silence high in her hands. A wave of thought rolled out from her, calming the anxious Tanu minds, reminding them who had given her this role- And then Alken was there beside her, wearing his gold- lustre armor His head was bare. "Choose freely," said Elizabeth. "Will you have him as your king?" The reply was quiet, numb. inevitable. "We will " "The Tanu kings have no tradition of coronation." said the Shipspouse's successor, "just as they have no tradition of THE GRAND LOVING 245 peaceful accession to the throne. For your race, a monarch has always been a battie-champion, his only crown a warrior's helmet But this king has asked for a new symbol, and so I give it to him " Elizabeth handed Alken a simple circlet of black glass He nodded to her and set it himself upon his spnngy dark-red hair Another sound swelled from the crowd, perhaps an indrawn breath, or one let out, or a sigh of relief, or a sob suppressed Elizabeth bent over Alken, speaking to his mind alone. Again he nodded, and Elizabeth disappeared Where she had stood were now sixteen Tanu—and Mercy "1 present to you your new High Table," Alken said His physical voice was quiet, but even the most distant bareneck heard his words. "First, my Queen and Lady Creator, co-ruler of my city of Gonah: Mercy-Rosmar " She knelt before Alken and received from him a green circlet. He took her hand and led her to the two marble thrones They ascended One by one, the High Table candidates approached, touching their tores as their minds pledged silent fealty "The President of the Guild of Farsensors, the Venerable Lady Moma-Ia Kingmaker. the President of the Guild of Redactors, Culluket the Interrogator the Deputy Lord Psy- chokmetic, Bleyn the Champion, the Second Lord Psycho- kinetic , Kuhal Earthshaker . the Second Lord Creator and Lord of Calamosk, Aluteyn Craftsmaster the Second Lady Far- sensor, Sibel Longtress the Second Lord Coercer and Lord of Amalizan, Artigonn the Lord and Lady of Rocilan, Al- beronn Mmdeater and Eadnar the Lord of Afaliah, Cela- deyr . the Lady of Bardelask, Armida the Formidable the Lord of Sasaran, Neyal the Younger - - the Lord of Tarasiah, Thufan Thunderhead the Lord ofGeroniah, Diarmet the Lord of Sayzorask, Lomnovel Bramburner. the Lord of Ron- iah, Condateyr the Fulmmator." Alken surveyed the newly accoladed Great Ones. "I myself assume the presidency of the Guild of Coercers and the Guild of Psychokmetics. The post of Second Redactor is left tem- porarily vacant. Since neither Lady Estella-Sirone of Darask 246 THE NONBORN KING nor Moreyn Glasscrafter, city-lord of Var Mesk, are here at this conclave, I withhold naming them to the High Table until they personally offer oaths of fealty " He rose from his throne and stood silently for a moment look-ing over the throng of exotics and humans and hybrids His solemn manner softened and the old jesting smile appeared as he tapped the blazon on his glass breastplate It was so stylized and encrusted with yellow gemstones that the digitus impudicus was hardly recognizable "And what about the rest of you7 Do you accept me whole- heartedly as King of this Many-Colored Land^' "Slonshal1" thundered the minds and voices of his subjects "Slonshal King Alken-Lugonn' SLONSHAL'" The Firvuiag said nothing By the lime anybody thought lo look for them, they had ndden away on the trail to Nionel THE END OF PART TWO -D3£ flGe™} JWmJ. 1 IN HIS SLEEP HE CALLED OUT TO HER. MERCY' ONLY TO AWAKE again lo the grotto of living rock surrounding him, impervious to any telepathic impulse Mercy! his mind screamed, but the sound that emerged from his lips was barely audible. As always, he tried to nse. As always, he could move only the muscles of his face and neck. A warm wind, laden with the scent of the blooming maquis, stole along the cavern wall- He was very thirsty Turning his head, he concentrated his will on the good arm, commanding it to move, to reach out to the nearby flask of water. The arm remained limp. He was helpless. Goddess, let me die, he pleaded. Let me die before Isak Henning and Huldah come back. A fly settled on his face, crept maddeningly about his cracked lips. He called down vain anathemas upon the miserable crea- ture. The hot wind skipped about, lifting dust and dropping it onto him. His skin was now exquisitely sensitive. He could feel every irregularity in the cave floor beneath his fur mattress, the damp hairs of the furs themselves. As the sun sank, ils strong beams shone directly upon him for a brief time, making him break out in sweat. The thirst was appalling. The fly on his mouth flew away. But then came his most dangerous insect enemy, a kind of large black-and-white warble fly that pierced the skin with a needlelike ovipositor and laid 249 250 THE NONBORN KING its egg in living flesh Terror and loathing welled up in him at the sight of it He flung his coercion at the filthy thing, strove to push it away with his PK It settled onto his belly He uttered a strangled shnek A long shadow thrust down the cave's length and the wind brought a familiar smell of musk He grunled with desperate urgency and she came run- ning, dashing the warble fly off him with her bare hand JUSI as il began to pnck "There'" she cned, stamping it into the dust with her homy feet "There, it's dead. the devilish thing'" She bathed the defiled spot in cool water and gave him to dnnk, then cradled his head against her breasts, crooning Grandpa came in with rabbits from the snare and gave them a densive look Huldah paid no attention "Are you all nght now9" she asked "Yes " "No other bites9 No pebbles hurting you9" "No Just give water " She let him dnnk again, then brought the ceramic bedpan While she cleaned him up, Isak skinned the rabbits and spitted them The smetl of roasting meat was mouth-watenng He could chew and swallow with ease now Huldah had been very hurt when he adamantly refused the lip-to-lip feeding, but now he was able to close his jaw tightly against her, and so she no longer importuned him "There's going to be a lovely moon tonight," she announced "Nice and full Would you like to go outside9 You and I could sleep on the grass and Grandpa in the cave " "No," he said flatly "Stay here " "All nght But tonight is special Grandpa says so " Her eyes were shining and she tossed her stnngy flaxen hair "After supper, there'll be a surpnse'" His heart went cold A full moon in spnng warmth9 "What month9" he asked She bent over him, listening, and he repeated, "What month is this9" The evil old man heard and came back to stand over him THE GIGANTOMACHY 251 "We call it May, Lord God' You call it the time of Grand Loving Loving' And didn't you used to have d fine time— you Tanu and your bloody fertility ntes9 But no more' Your people are gone. Lord God All washed away in the avenging Flood The Flying Hunt hasn't come from Munah since 'way last fall It'll never come to Kersic again " "I told you that. Grandpa," said Huldah placidly "But you wouldn't believe me " "Just because you're nothing but a half-witted slut," Isak Henning muttered "But you were nght about that " "And 1 was nght about my God waking " She stared at her grandfather with peculiar intensity "Someday soon, he'll be all well " The shabby ancient skipped over to the cooking fire "When he is. he can use his PK to move his wooden hand'" The old man chuckled maliciously "And scratch his own lice, and wipe his own ass Hee hee hee'" "Stop it. Grandpa'" The old man scowled at her, defiant and half-fearful "Just a joke Damn cow, no sense of humor " They ate The dusk was long in coming Outside, the birds began to sing and Huldah announced she was going to the waterfall to bathe "And when I come back, 1 don't want to find you here, Grandpa Take your things to the cork-oak grove It'll be nice there If you try to spy tonight, you'll be sorry " Isak watched her go, mouthing impotent curses He gathered up his sleeping robe and tossed into it fire-making tools, a water bottle, a broken chunk of ash-bread, and his set of three vitredur woodcarving knives Then he shuffled to the rear of the cave, bundle over his shoulder, and stood over the supine invalid "You're in for it tonight. Lord God The May madness has our Huldah in thrall'" He laughed until he fell into a fit of coughing, hawked, and spat The foul gobbet landed only a few centimeters from the God's beautiful face With great effort, he spoke "Who is Huldah9 What is she9" "Aha' Ha ha ha'" the old man exulted "Want to know what THE NONBORN KING 252 ground your by-blow's sprouted in. do you? Well, Lord God, her grandmother was one of you\ Almost. When 1 was a new- transported bareneck slavey in the plantations of the Dragon Range on Aven, they sent me to thin the antelope herds. 1 found a baby exposed there on the mountainside. I didn't know it, but it was a changeling. A Firvulag half-blood that some poor human trull of yours had given birth to, the way it happens sometimes. In more civilized parts, I understand the Firvulag babies are turned over to the Little Folks. But on Aven, where no Firvulag live .. .Well, 1 found the mite and look her to my hut. I had a pet antelope with a kid, so there was milk. in the beginning I was just experimenting, you see. The changeling could shift shapes even when it was tiny, and sort of read my mind as well. It knew I was lonesome, and it found I liked its human-looking body best. It grew up fast, anxious to please." Isak hunkered down beside the motionless figure. The God said. "Huldah?" "No, no, not yet. What happened, this changeling was a kind of a pet at first, and then a friend and servant, and then.. -well, the way you Tanu bastards don't give us bareneck men hardly any women, when the changeling was big enough to screw, I screwed it. It liked me. I named it Borghild after a girl I knew back in the Milieu. We were happy out there in the mountains, me doing my stupid herding job and the change- ling doing her best to look pretty, just like the other Borghild. Then one day, another guy found out about her and wanted his share. When I beat him up, he told the overseer. But by the time the gray-tore troopers came, me and Borghild were way to hell and gone over the Dragon Range, and we made a skin boat with a little sail and came to Kersic. And then she had a baby, and then she died." "Baby Huldah?" "Not yet, dammit. I named the baby Karin. She grew up fast, too, and we lived in a Lowlife settlement we found here on the island. Karin was enough of a Firvulag to scare off the other guys in the village. They were afraid of her and afraid of me. We did pretty good in those days. And then Karin had a baby, and this time it was Huldah. One night a Flying Hunt THE GiGANTOMACHY 253 came from Muriah. They used Kersic now and then when the outlaw human population built up. Everybody in the village was slaughtered except me and little Huldah, We got away and found this place. It was a long time ago." The God's slow voice said, "And when Huldah grew, you took her." Isak started back as if struck tripping over his bundle and falling to the cave floor. "I didn't' 1 didn't!" Breathing thickly, he groped in the tangled furs. A sapphire blade gleamed in the meager firelight and approached the God's neck, trembling above the ornate knobbed catch of his golden tore. "Alien bastard," the old man hissed. "For years I've dreamed of doing this." "Do it," said the God. Isak Henning grasped the handle of the knife in both scrawny hands and raised it high. "Hale you, hate you! You wrecked it, our chance for a new world! Now you're finished, too! We're all—" The aged body shook uncontrollably, arched in sudden spasm. Isak dropped the glass knife, covered his face with his hands, and began to sob. Huldah came—tall, shining clean, naked, and wreathed with wild orange blossoms. "Silly Grandpa. 1 told you to go." She smiled at her God. "Grandpa tried to hurt me only once, when I was a little girl. I taught him better. Show the God. Grandpa." The old man. still weeping, pulled aside his loincloth to show what an unwilling girl with Firvutag genes could do to one who tried to force her. "Now go away. Leave us alone. Grandpa." The old man crept off and Huldah went briefly to the back of the cave, then relumed to begin dressing her God. She handled him as easily as a doll. Lost in horror, he paid little attention. Firvulag! She was Firvulag. He who had aspired so high had violated the greatest taboo between the two races. Firvulag! It explained her great stature and strength, her coarse vitality. And once, that mutilated wreck of a father-grandfather had been a brawny human male. 254 THE NONBORN KING "Tonight will be the best full moon of all. since you're finally awake," she said. And after a little while, "You'll kill him for me, won't you? As soon as you're able?" He could not reply. He realized now what garments she had put upon him—gambeson and trews of membranous bubbles caught in a mesh web, the padding for his glass armor And now the pieces themselves being strapped on, encasing legs and arms (except for the missing right gauntlet), thighs and shoulders She held up the breast-plate with its sun-face blazon all embossed in gold and rose-colored stones, then eased it on Last came the helmet, with its fierce glittering spikes and he- raldic crest of a crouching, unearthly sun-bird. She left the visor open. and tucked wads of fur here and there beneath his head so that the awkward weight would not turn him awry. He was in an agony of discomfort in spite of the padding The harness pressed into his supersensitive body like some fitted bed of nails. Humiliation, guilt, and hatred for her rose in him like a surge of magma- The armor began to glow. "Oh, wonderful!" she cried. "My wonderful God' God of Light and Beauty and Joy!" She knelt, drawing aside the skirt of tassets, and began the act of worship. Her body was a soft mass of peach-colored luminosity and ebony shadows, and in spite of himself, he was coming alive to her. "No!" For the first time, he heard his voice echo in the cavern's vault. He strained to lift his arms, to thrust away that adoring face His muscles were lead. The radiance grew. "God of the Sun'"she sang. "0 my own God!" She mounted him, easily straddling the armor, a huge compelling softness devouring him. He was lost. and she was crying out in the sweet avalanche of blinding light, quenching the sun, blotting him out. She fell away, senseless, and he hung in a scarlet void. I am dead, he thought, and damned. He opened his eyes. The blood-colored glow dazzled him- It was coming from his own body. The glass armor flamed with it. An infinitude of tiny pain-impulses assaulted his skin THE GiGANTOMACHY 255 and became a tingling that pulsed in rhythm to his thudding heart. His left hand was on his breast. He raised it, And then the nght, with even the wood suffused with brilliance and the crudely carved fingers flexing- He rolled away from the body of the woman, braced himself against the cave wall, and rose. The storm-sunrise light of him poured into every cranny of the cave. He saw a slight movement near the dark entrance and strode up to it. It was the old man. cowenng behind a rock. He had come back to spy after all. Nodonn plucked Isak Henning up by the scruff and held him dangling. The laughter of triumphant Apollo was like the hurricane's roar. And then the gaunt shape was flung toward the rear of the cavern and crashed to the rock floor beside Huldah- The old bones snapped and there were piteous screams. The woman stirred, lifted her head. looked with stupid aston- ishment at the broken huddle—and then at him. She raised an arm to shield her eyes from his aura. Nodonn came back to the two of them, his. armor chiming with every step. He picked up Isak in his gauntleted left hand and poised the glaring wooden one, tike a flaming claw. before me contorted old face. "Now you will die," said the Battlemaster. "Both of you." The old man began to laugh. The claw affixed itself to the dome of his bald skull and began to twist. The laughter ascended to a shriek. "Kill her! Kill her! But before you do, took inside! Look..." The high-pitched croak merged with other sounds. Nodonn wrung the head from its body and tossed both aside. Wide- eyed, Huldah watched. There was no fear in her. Look inside? She sprawled in gory dust, a few smashed orange blossoms tangled in her hair. Nodonn exerted his deep farsense Hidden within that capacious Firvulag abdomen was a twelve-week fetus, half the length of his little finger. Perfect and strong A male. "A son," he breathed. "At last." 256 THE NONBORN KING But how9 How. beneath this pitiless star's sublethal radia- tion that had mocked him for eight hundred years9 He was the almighty Battlemasler. and yet he had begotten only poor weak things, of which only a few languid daughters still survived He looked up at the shielding rock He looked down to the placid woman with her forbidden genes His race had resisted this mating to the brink of the Nightfall War in the remote Dual Galaxy But Gomnol, promoting his eugenic schemes, had atso urged miscegenation as a short-cut to operancy Could it be9 His redacuve faculty reached gingerly into the tiny brain But the fetus was too unformed, and he too clumsy He would have to wait "You will stay here." he told the woman, "and when my son is bom, rear him with the utmost care until I come for him " "You will go away now9" Huldah whispered, stricken "Yes " Tears sprang from her eyes She slumped, shivering No- donn picked up the rumpled fur coverlet and laid it over her shoulders She touched the hard, smooth glass of his gauntlet "In the back of the cave." she said dully "Your weapon " His cry was jubilant It was the Sword and its pack' In- operable, he discovered by flicking a stud, but he would find a way to repair it He fastened its harness "And now farewell," he said to the woman "The child's name will be Thagdal Remember that " "Dagdal," she said. weeping "Little Dag 0 God " He emerged from the cave and exerted his farsight It was ominously dim, but he discerned a high promontory on the western shore that would suit his purpose, and he set out briskly Before he had gone more than a kilometer or two he slowed, then found himself staggering His convalescent mind and body were weakening rapidly from the tremendous earlier effort It was to be expected He would have to be prudent His creativity, which in former days had called down light- ning and moved mountains, now barely sufficed to cut a stout THE GIGANTOMACHY 257 wooden staff for him to lean upon The mighty PK faculty that once levitated Fifty knights and their battle-chargers strained to augment his faltering leg muscles as he climbed the cliff The sun cleared the ndge behind him and seemed to smite him between the shoulder blades Out of breath, feverish, he thrust the staff into the earth of the steep trail again and again and hauled himself along Dust from his shuffling feel hung about him in the still air The shrubs were pungent with resin Insects buzzed and the plates of his armor rang discordantly with the clumsy motions of the staff Where am I going7 Why am I here9 Yes To call To send a telepathic message, telling the others that I live Climb high, above the thought-obstructing rock Otherwise the di- minished farspeech would have no range He gained the height at last, still m the midst of a dense thicket of maquis and twisted jumper It was easier to walk now, though, and there was a slight breeze Call to them the survivors of the Host, his blood brothers and sisters Call and wait for rescue He came to the promontory's tip, to the open spot where the umbrella pines grew and ashes and charcoal from Huldah's last bonfire (the one celebrating his awakening) lay strewn on a burnt circle of soil And there he had his first view of the New Sea thdt had drowned his world—vast and blue, not milk- white, as the shallow lagoon had been—extending to a misty termination on the far horizon and north and south to the limit of his mind's feeble eye Nodonn clutched the staff with both the gauntleted hand and the wooden one as he began to fail On his knees, still transfixed by the scene, he groaned aloud The memory came back the gigantic wave overwhelming them, the ones of the drowning ones And echoing over chaos, laughter as harsh as a raven's croak He rested under one of the scraggly pines and managed to remove his armor Almost miraculously, he found tiny straw bemes on plants creeping among the rocks and gathered enough to assuage both thirst and hunger Then he crept to the brink of the headland and summoned his farsight again 258 THE NONBORN KING North: Formerly, Kersic had had salt flats stretching from its northernmost rocks to the continental scarp east of Var- Mesk, a small city whose proximity to soda-ash beds made it a center of glass production- Now all the flats were inundated and Kersic was a true island. South: More salt water, all the way to Africa, In that di- rection had been one of the deepest parts of the old lagoon. East: The interior of Kersic, rugged and forested. West: Aven ... Oh, Goddess, yes. There it lay, dimly perceived. The pen- insula shrunken, salt water creeping far up the valleys, and Muriah broken and silent and overgrown with jungle, while waves lapped at the cracked steps of the Thagdal's palace. The plantations deserted, the antelopes unharvesled, the chalikos and hellads reverted to the wild, and a timorous remnant of domesticated ramas scuttling about the ruins, waiting in vain for their overlords' commands to reanimate their cold little tores - What was left? Who was left? What should he do? The questions floated in his brain as crazily as the specks of goldleaf in a stirred goblet of starwater liqueur. A roaring of blood filled his ears and pulsating colored masses swam across his blurred vision. Call for help. No! Why did the precognitive flare of warning admonish him? Why did every instinct shriek thai he should take care, make no overt sign until he had recovered more fully—until he learned what had taken place during the six lost months he lay unconscious in the Kersican cave? What was there to hide from? Who? He slipped into unconsciousness. When his eyes opened again he knew that he must not call to his brothers and sisters, nor to the faint telepathic focuses that marked the mainland cities. There was only one person he dared reveal himself to, one who could be trusted to tell him the truth about the post- diluvian Many-Colored Land, Weak as he was, he could still direct his thought on the intimate mode and eventually reach THE GIGANTOMACHY 259 her. She would have known that he lived- She would still listen for his call, even though logic insisted he was dead. If anyone could come to him, she would. Summoning his remaining strength, he fashioned a small bright needle of thought, a farspoken call that arrowed over the New Sea and spanned Europe, to be perceived by one mind alone: Mercy. z THE STAR WAS K 1-226 IN HIS CATALOG, BUT AS SOON AS HE focused on that oddball three-planet system he knew it had to be Ehnon And second from the sun, six million years younger and in the midst of one of its miniature Ice Ages, was Poltroy The inhabitants, who would in the Milieu be admired for their urbanity and diplomatic equipoise, were roughly at the pithe- canthropine level of mental development Pudgy little cannibals swathed to their ruby eyes m fish-fur romped over glaciers with nothing on their precoadunate minds but the ambush of their neighbors and the subsequent breaking of their skulls for a euchanstic brain-feast Ehnon was the last star in Marc Ren-ullard's search- sequence and clearly useless for his purposes, nevertheless he lingered more than two hours past the allotted scrutiny time, fascinated by the primitive Pottroyans He told himself that it was intellectual cunosity about this familiar world and its one- day-to-be-famous people His superego sneered and suggested that he would use any excuse to delay homecoming and the nasty surpnse thai very likely awaited him The paleolithic Pottroyans hipped and hopped and bipped and bopped, and genuflected politely to their dead victims before starting the ntual trepannmg operations The blood- thirsty chieftain of one little clan was a doppelganger for Om- inen-Limpirotin, Fourth Interlocutor of the Concilium 260 THE GIGANTOMACHY 261 Marc withdrew his farsight at last He told the search- director EXPLICIT Immediately he was back in his own body, enclosed in the opaque armor that sustained his life during the period of hundredfold cortical overload He could see someone waiting in the observatory anteroom and for one hopeful instant his heart lifted and he thought the premonition false But it was not Hagen out there Patricia Castellane had come, fully mind- blocked, and the intimation of disaster was confirmed DISENGAGE AUXILIARY CEREBROENERGETTCS His brain be- gan to cool There was a nauseating implosion of pseudosen- sation somewhere behind his eyeballs REESTABLISH NORMAL METABOLIC FUNCTION An interval of suspensory coolness, quiet marble solidity after cometary flight SEVER DRIVE LINKAGE, ACTIVATE CARRIAGE DESCENT KILL FENSIVE X-LASER ARRAYS REPORT BODY FUNCTION "Normal parameters all operator body functions," the scan- ner reassured him At this point, Hagen should have taken over, supervising removal of the brain-probes and freeing his father from the armor after double-checking his vital signs No help came There would never be any now Aloud and lelepathically, he gave his own divestment com- mands WITHDRAW CEREBRAL ELECTRODES WITHDRAW CEREBEL- LUM AND STEM CONTACTS REMOVE GODDAM FUCKING HELMET Imperturbable, the computer transmitted his orders Helmet dogs clicked open, clamps latched on, the heavy cerameldl casque rotated a quarter turn, and the hoist's vibration reached him through the attached cables. There was warm humid air, indirect light, and the familiar digital chronograph reminding him that this was Pliocene Earth 230733 16 5 +27 The body armor fell apart in two halves and the carnage tilted to allow him egress He did a few isometrics in place, absently touched one of the tiny wounds on his forehead left by the psychoelectromc crown of thorns, and noted that the blood had already clotted Below the neck he was clad in a black, skintight pressure-envelope coverall, studded with re- 262 THE NONBORN KING ceptacles for the circulatory shunts. The coverall was sopping wet and stinking of the dermal lavage he had floated in for the past twenty days. He told himself that he really ought to re- formulate the gunk with a more pleasing scent. Marc. May I come in? The gut-clutch that had been only temporarily sidetracked by the divestment routine got in its licks- Time for the reaily bad news. He climbed out of the armor and sent it off to the equipment bay. The dome-room door opened and there was Patricia, car- rying two tall iced drinks garnished with lime. She wore a backless formal dress of pale blue shot with golden threads. She looked much younger and her hair, unbound, had become the color of the maple-sugar candy Marc remembered from his New Hampshire youth. He accepted her kiss, as briefly melting as a snowflake's touch, then took the drink and let the alcohol-laced citrus soothe his throat. He asked, "How many others went with Hagen?" "Twenty-eight. All of the children and the five grandbabies as well. They took all of the ATVs and smashed every boat on the island over six meters length overall." "Equipment?" "Five tons of assorted weaponry, the portable sigma gen- erator, all of the mechanical mind-screens, a very odd selection of manufacturing and processing units, miscellaneous supplies. They left four days ago. We went after them in the small boats, but Hagen and Phil Overton and young Keogh generated a squall that nearly wiped us out. And without you, our attempt at long-range coercive synthesis failed." "Four days." The dark-circled eyes were more haunted than ever. "They planned it well- By now, they're out of my coercive range." "But not beyond a massed creative thrust, if you furnish primary impetus. There's no place on Earth they can escape a psychozap... if you choose to use it. They're gambling that you won't, of course." Patricia's mental aspect was neutral. But then, she had no offspring among the fugitives. "I've got to think." Marc ran a hand through his damp wiry THE GiGANTOMACHY 263 curls. The chemical smell of the coverall seemed irrationally offensive to him; and as always after a star-search, he was famished. "I'm going to shower and change. Have you had supper?" "I waited for you. You're late." The characteristic one-sided smile flashed as they came into the dressing room. "I dawdled over the last star system, post- poning the inevitable." "You expected this?" Her expression showed the dismay that her mind-shield had kept hidden from him. "I'm beginning to think that I deliberately provoked it." He stripped off the coverall and entered the old-fashioned shower cubicle, luxuriating in its preprogrammed small com- forts: pulsing needlejets of warm fresh water and liquid Canoe soap, salt spray, and the final icy deluge. As she handed him the toga-towel, Patricia let her eyes roam over his body in a frank appraisal that was only half jesting. "What a pity the star-search makes you lose your tan. Other- wise ... the same old frosty-haired Adonis with the Mephisto eyebrows. God, how I hate a self-rejuvenating man." And covet your membrum virile! "Sorry, luv. Another casualty of the search. For now, at any rate." Until I get mad enough to start the life-juices flowing again- She sighed- "Two wasted weeks in the regen tank to perk up my faded allure. Why do I bother?" "You're magnificent. I like the new hair. Just have pa- tience." And she would—ever considerate, ever faithful, and never ruining it by loving him. Patricia Castellane, who had directed the obliteration of her own home-planet in support of his Rebellion, was the only woman to share his bed since the death of Cyndia, back in the apocalypse on Eider Earth. "Shall I summon the others?" she asked. He pulled on a ruffled shirt. "We might as well get on with it. Call Steinbrenner, Kramer, Dalembert, Ragnar Gathen, Warshaw. Van Wyk if he's sober. Strangford whether she is or not. And the Keoghs." He wound a scarlet cummerbund around his waist. THE NONBORN KING 264 "Alexis Mamon9" "To hell with him I'm surprised he didn't take off with the kids' Encouraging that damn Felice scheme—" He broke off The interrogatory thought flared One part of Patricia's mind responded to Marc as another sent out the telepathic summons "Felice killed Vaughn Jarrow in their first encounter with her Cloud and Elaby and Owen are all right, but the mission is in disarray " A repnse of Owen's reports from Spam passed instantly from Patricia's memory to Marc's own He knew about Felice and Elizabeth, and about the coronation and mamage of Alken Drum "With Felice out of the picture for the moment," Patricia concluded, "Elaby and Cloud are concentrating on saving Jill They still profess loyalty to you in spite of the defection of the other children, and say that they expect to follow your directives " Marc allowed himself a bark of cynical laughter He ran a comb through his hair, then offered Patricia his arm They left the observatory and walked along the shore of Lake Serene toward his house The young moon had gone down and the semitropical sky blazed with diamond stars None of the con- stellations had the twenty-second-century pattern, of course, but the exiled rebels had named new ones Mars hung low in the west, a baleful cockade on Napoleon's Hat "Elaby and Cloud will have given up on Felice, now that she's gone to Elizabeth," Marc observed "I think we're safe in assuming that the new target will be Alken Drum " "A direct assault on him when the other children reach Europe?" "Not unless Elaby and Cloud have lost their minds " "A proposal to join forces, then9" Marc paused, looking over the lake There were boats on the glimmering water carrying his old co-conspirators toward his dock, the men and women who had been magnates of the Concilium until they linked their fates with his dream of human ascendancy in the Galactic Milieu Debarring Manion, there were only eleven principals left alive—counting Patricia and Owen—and thirty-one subordinates He said, "The most likely course for the children to follow THE GIGANTOMACHY 265 would be some kmd of peaceful overture to Alken Drum We still don't have any clear idea of his full potential or his vul- nerabilities Given the children's lack of experience, their judg- ment of King Alken-Lugonn is going to be even more flawed than our own " "The Firvulag royalty tried d crudely concerted attack on him during the Grand Loving festivities They failed We weren't able to analyze the reason for the failure because of the distance, but Jeff Stembrenner thinks Alken might have been wearing a stem-shield generator " "Perhaps On the other hand, this nonbom kinghng may simply have grown in power He's capable of it A most in- teresting young man' His metapsychic faculties are only part of his arsenai, you know He seems to be an instinctive poli- tician as well " There was fear close below the surface of Patricia's mind "If Alken Drum should respond favorably to the plan to reopen the timegate—" She left the rest unsaid With a two-way pas- sage between the Pliocene and the Milieu, agents of the Mag- istratum would see that justice was visited upon the surviving rebels, even after twenty-seven years Mare looked up at the countless stars and was silent for several minutes Then he said, "Just a single world with a coadunate racial mind That's all I need to find, Pat The altruism of the Unity would compel them to come for us if we asked for refuge and they wouldn't comprehend the truth about poor flawed humanity until it was too late We'd have a fresh start, but this time there would be no mistakes We'd spin our takeover bid across decades Infiltrate while we en- gender an enormous new generation artificially We could do it—even the handful of us who remain If I could only find the star "Marc. what are we to do now^ she ined He took her hand and placed it on his arm again They resumed their walk to the house, where the dock lights had come on and at least six boats had already arrived "Come along and share my supper." he told her, "and then we'll talk about it with the others " His redaction pressed gently THE NONBORN KING 266 against her still-firm mental screen. "Don't be afraid to open to me. Pat. I've known for a long time that you and the others feel that my star-search is futile. Perhaps my own subconscious does, too. If that's the case—and I'll know the truth before we Finish tonight—I may decide that it's time for a completely new plan of action." "I'm not afraid to say it, if the rest of you are!" Gerrit Van Wyk's eyes were bulging and bright. With his wide mouth slightly open, scalp shining in the verandah lamp- light, and trembling little hands clutching a drained glass with rattling ice cubes, he looked more than ever like a truculent frog. He took a deep breath. "We've had plenty of hints that something like this might happen. The Felice affair was a clear indication of the way the children's minds were working. And can we blame them? Face it. Marc! Your notion of finding another coadunate world is a long shot at best, and you've had twenty-five years to bring it home. More than thirty-six thousand systems scanned, and only twelve with rational beings—none even approaching coad- unation of the racial Mind." Marc still sat with Patricia at the small dining table while the nine others stood about awkwardly or occupied the scattered wicker furniture. Patricia opened the waiter and removed two plates with mangos for dessert. Marc skewered his and began to peel it with a silver knife, catching the drippings by psy- chokinesis. "This time out," he said, "I found Poltroy." Eight of the nine gave vent to excited mental and vocal comments. But Cordelia Warshaw, the cultural anthropologist and psychotactician, knew better. "How far up the ladder were they?" "Roughly erectus." Her head bobbed confirmation. "It figures, given their slower evolutionary pace. What a pity you didn't find the Lyimik instead." Marc ate neat slices of the fiendishly juicy fruit while his mind displayed a reprise of the search-sequence, reminding THE GIGANTOMACHY 267 them all that he had begun the hunt by examining the rare star- group containing the Lyimik home-sun- He had found no trace of the galaxy's most ancient rational race. "They're out there somewhere." He touched his lips with a napkin. "But God knows where." "The vague little masterminds did something to their sun," Kramer said bitterly. "Marc and 1 went over the matter years ago. There's no telling what spectroscopic signature it has-here in the Pliocene- Some astrophysicists among the Krondaku speculate that they might have goosed the dying star back onto the main sequence a million years or so before the first coad- unate fusion. If that's true ..." He shrugged. "I can't waste time examining incipient red giants," Marc said. "Our chances are slim enough if I stick with the likely prospects." "Our chances are nil, now that the kids are gone," Van Wyk exclaimed. He struggled out of his chair and reached for the vodka decanter, then lugged frantically at the bottle that seemed welded to its iray- Helayne Strangford's laugh was strident. "If I can't have mine, neither can you, Gerry! Watch the end coming, cold straight sober! Or do we postpone it. Marc? Do we? Are you going to ask us to help you kill them? Our own children? So that we'll be safe?" She had come to the table and stood over Marc with a contorted face and fists pressed into her thighs, taut as an overtuned string in spite of Steinbrenner's heroic redaction job of an hour previous. From his own depths the Angel of the Abyss considered her threat and reacted mercifully. Helayne collapsed into Steinbrenner's wailing arms, overcome by a simple motor paralysis and simultaneous muting of her speech; but her understanding was left intact. The physician lowered her onto a couch. Dalembert and Warshaw propped her up with cushions. "It will be a hard decision for all of us, Helayne," Marc said. "You love Leila and Chris and little Joel, and Ragnar loves Elaby, and the Keoghs love Nial. and Peter and Jordy and Cordelia love their children and grandchildren." THE NONBORN KING 268 And you, the silenced mind accused him. "And me," Marc acknowledged. He pushed back his chair and rose. One of the screened jalousie casements was slightly ajar and moths were coming in and orbiting the lamps- He pulled the latch to, casually exterminated the insects, and stood leaning against a porch pillar with his hands thrust in his pock- ets. "Cloud and Hagen are all that I have left of Cyndia. It was necessary that I bring them here, to share my exile- Wrong, but necessary." His gaze swept the others. "Just as it was wrong, but human and understandable, for the rest of you to reproduce here in the Pliocene. We hoped we could revitalize our dream, transmit it to the young ones. All of us failed in that—and 1 failed doubly, in not finding a world that would come to our rescue." "There is still time," Patricia said. "Centuries, if we choose to use them! If we have the courage." "We took our risk in the Rebellion!" snapped Jordan Kra- mer. "My first family died on Okanagon, in case you've for- gotten, and Datembert's son was in the Twelfth Fleet. Don't lecture us on courage- Castellane. As for love, we all know you're incapable—" "Jordy," said Marc. One winged brow lifted. No mind-thrust was needed to cut off the physicist's tirade. Sick-faced, Kramer turned his back on the rest of them and stared into the night. Ragnar Gathen's slow voice came from a shadowy comer. "The star-search was a wonderful idea, one that gave us hope, made this exile more bearable. But the children ... they never knew you as we do, Marc. So now, when they see a possibility of release from this prison that we chose for them, they must seize it." "When the time-gate reopens," Van Wyk staled, "we die- Or have our personalities obliterated after the humiliation of a public trial." Gathen said, "Elaby promised me that the children would destroy the time-gate after passing through." "Hagen would do otherwise," said Marc. "Not consciously, THE GiGANTOMACHV 269 perhaps. But somehow the gate would remain open, and the agents would come- Sweet-faced little Dr. Warshaw nodded. "Marc's right. And his child isn't the only one harboring retributive sets. The only safe course open to us is killing them all." She stroked one of Helayne's hands. The paralyzed woman's eyes were shut, pour- ing tears. "It does seem to be the logical solution," said Patricia. "If even a few of the children survive to show Aiken Drum that data on reconstructing Guderian's apparatus, sooner or later he'll undertake the job himself—with or without the help of the manufacturing equipment that the children stole. I've an- alyzed the probability." "We endorse Castellane's conclusion," said Diannid Keogh. The mind of his sister Deirdre projected the remorseless image of the concerted psychoenergetic blast they would all have to synthesize to bring the resolution. The leader of the Metapsychic Rebellion was looking blindly toward the wall of the house. Looking eastward. "There is another possibility. A risky one." Wrenching silence. "I see them," Marc said. 'The ATV modular combine is moving very slowly through the region of calms and light winds called the horse latitudes. Their sails are useless, since they've channeled all of their PK into the main impeller. It would be rather easy to blast them out of the water. It would be much more difficult to heat up a large air mass somewhere southeast of their position and maneuver it to blow them back home to us." "Is it possible?" cried Peter Dalembert. his mind a garboil of conflict. "How about it, Jordy?" asked Marc. 'They're pretty far out." Kramer was dubious as he did the calculations. "Damn near two thousand kilometers, thanks to their initial push. And we can't simply heat air from scratch, you know. We have to locate a suitable tropical low that will respond to our hype-up, then move it in. One like this." He THE NONBORN KING 270 showed Marc an image "Anything like thai north of the equa- tor''" "No," Marc said Kramer shrugged "There you are We could wait a week, even two, before one showed up They could be across by then—or into the zone of prevailing westerlies, where we wouldn't have a dimbuck's chance of forcing them back " There's this," said Marc, presenting another meteorological image to the physicist "Off the African coast " "H'mm Not too shabby, if we could boot it back west It also has the potential of pushing them onto the Moroccan shore if we find that we can't raise enough wind to bring them home " "Damnut, Jordy," Steinbrenner growled, "we've got enough watts to divert hurricanes from Ocaia—so why is it so bloody tncky to conjure up a useful wind7" "Diverting an air mass is a whole 'nother thing from hyping one up, Jeff Or moving it counter to the planetary winds that prevail this time of me year We have forty-two minds left to work with, but six or seven are virtually worthless for a PK- creative job Whatever we try. it's going to be hellaceous tough on the operators " "And the children wili fight back, count on it," Diarmid Keogh reminded them Deirdre projected the memory of the vicious squall that the fugitives had engendered on their first day out, and Diarmid appended, "You'll see that it was our own dear Nial leading the push to drown his lovin' da and mumsy—and working mighty handily with Phil Overton and your Hagen, Marc, for all that the lads are noncoadunate Yes, we must assume that every mind among the children will re- sist " "They have photon weapons, too," Van Wyk said tremu- lously "Don't talk like an idiot, Gerry," said Patricia "Marc's here now None of those portable zappers can touch us They'd be inside Marc's coercive range before the zappers had hne-of- sighl on Ocala." "They'll use everything they've got," Van Wyk persisted "Perhaps fight to the death," Warshaw added softly THE GiGANTOMACHY 271 Marc had gone back to contemplation of his earlier farseen vision "We might try to save the children Above all, gain time to increase the number of options Don't forget Cloud and Elaby and Owen in Europe, with Felice temporarily absent from her lair and Alken Drum susceptible to manipulation I must have time to think, to study the situation " "You've had twenty-seven years," muttered Van Wyk reck- lessly But Marc was far away "If we find that we can't turn the children back, we can certainly deflect them away from Europe If they're driven onto the African coast, we'll have a chance to mind-zap the equipment and still spare their lives Neutralize their threat until we can mount our own action Yes He came back to himself, to touch each mind with a split second's coercive force, then the more hypnotic persuasion "The star-search' If it had succeeded, it would have been our salvation an acceptable substitute for our old dream that failed My dream—my failure that drew you along with me You and the other faithful ones chose to follow me here to the Pliocene and try again And again, I've failed Our children cling to their own dream, and I've been forced to consider the implications of their choice 1 have done that for twenty days as I ranged the stars—and here again tonight white we looked for solutions to this dilemma The final decision will be mine But tell me how you would vote Now " "Kill them," said Cordelia Warshaw Patricia agreed "It's the only safe course " There was a moment of hesitation, but only Gemt Van Wyk joined the two women m the death pronouncement The others chose the more dangerous course Marc spread the new construct before them, the revision that might insure their own safety while granting their off spring's wish to return to the Milieu There was an equal prob- ability that the plan would spell the doom of all of them—and the unsuspecting inhabitants of the Many-Colored Land as well "This is what 1 shall do," Marc said "Will you follow me7" In a single telepathic acquiescence, the former members of the Galactic Concilium reaffirmed his leadership 272 THE NONBORN KING "Very well. I'll contact Owen lonight. Tomorrow we begin modification of my star-search equipment and construction of a new vehicle- We will maroon the defecting children in Africa, and see that they remain there until we're ready for them. If no unforeseen screw-ups develop, we should be ready to go to Europe about the end of August." 3 FELICE MOVED RESTLESSLY ABOUT THE BALCONY OF BLACK Crag Lodge, a farouche woodland sprite in a white leather kilt, doe eyes flicking and nervous farsenses sweeping the mountain foresi like a beacon "You're safe here," Elizabeth insisted. She stood in the doorway, dressed in the old red denim jumpsuit that the girl would remember from the auberge: a fnend, an anchor to the past Every day for more than two weeks now the raven had flown up to the chalet, perched on the upper balcony and turned into a frightened young girl. And every day, in spite of Eliz- abeth's expert persuasion, the raven had refused to slay, flying away after an ever-lengthening interval of conversation Today, Felice had dared to remain for more than two hours "There were bad nightmares last night, Elizabeth " "I'm sorry " "I'm going to scream out loud soon If I do that, I'll die I'll drown in gold and shit." "Unless you let me help you," Elizabeth agreed The mad eyes seemed to swell enormously Talons sank into Elizabeth's brain—but before they could do harm the Grand Master redactor slipped an adamant barrier into place. The mind-gnp slipped, clenched impotentiy against unyielding slickness, then withdrew. "I—I didn't mean to do that," said Felice. 273 274 THE NONBORN KING "You did " The redactor's voice was sad "You'd kill any thing that threatened to love you ' "No'" 'Yes Your brain is short-circuited The pleasure-pain path- ways are anomalously fused Shall I show you the difference between your mental structure and one I would call normal7" "All right " The images, of awesome complexity but bristling with labels that even this untaught child could comprehend, formed in the vestibulum of Felice's mind She studied the two brains for nearly fifteen minutes, hiding behind her own screen And then a crack opened and d shy thing peeped out "Elizabeth—^rflhe Many-Colored Land. the first child of the Thagdal and ^Nontusvel. Who engendered you, Lowlife? Sterile dishes in "-^BBBC genetic kitchen? Test tubes mixing frozen sperm and the 'tteggish egg of a dead woman? What a King' What a Battte- ^.inaster!" '^ And the Sword blasted and the monstrous concussions rolled 3^Bfverthe affronted sea, and Aiken's mind-shield flashed deeply _ ^ OCBige while his small armored figure seemed to dull and darken ^ inside its metapsychic halo. "Fight back!" Nodonn raged. "Or do you fight only women? Did her passion frighten you, little one? Did you shrink from "" her warmth like a slug fleeing the sunlight? I am the sun! Eclipse me if you can!" Inside the slowly shrinking mind-screen, the trickster hoisted ; his Spear—and one finger He remained silent, and he did not ^ retaliate. The scarlet-patched sphere of force seemed to drift aimlessly, almost skimming the surface of the black water. "Fight, damn you!" Nodonn thundered. "Or are you seeking death?" His aura streaming like a comet's tail, the Battlemaster , orbited above his rival. "Is that it? By killing her, you hoped to restore your own broken mind. You fed on her creativity to bolster your own! Was it worth it. corruptor? Worth destroying the only thing you loved?" Nodonn thumbed the uppermost of the five power-setting studs on the Sword's hilt, summoning the weapon's full po- tential. The readout on the power supply told him that he would have only two shots of this magnitude before draining the weapon. "Are you tired of being King? Tired of coercing those who hate and fear and despise you? Little man! Trickster' Furtive conniver! Betrayer of honor and nobility and beauty'" A stupendous light-burst engulfed Aiken and his screen and 426 THE NONBORN KING seemed to dig a crater in the flat sea. Then a chaos of luminous vapor whirled and fountained, and deep within it were pulses of golden radiance alternating with sullen glows of deepest car- mine lake. Nodonn waited- At length, a smooth sphere bobbed up from the ferment, its color now as darkly red as coagulating blood. It barely sufficed to enclose the dull-armored little figure clutch- ing its glass lance. "Come then," Apollo invited- The bubble ascended slowly. Aiken's visor was open, his face like a skull wrapped in light scarlet skin and his eyes deep as wells. Nodonn blazed. "Will you go to death silent?" The Sword was ready. "Very well'" In the ultimate stroke, Nodonn called up ali the energies of his brain and flung them simultaneously with the full power of the photonic weapon. The resulting flare was blinding green and white, clothed in a shimmering plasma haze. The doom-clap that accompanied it flogged the atmo- sphere and sent echoes caroming endlessly between the hills of Armorica and the Breton highlands across the wide strait. Aiken was there. Unshielded. Golden. "No," said the Battlemaster. The Shining One was smiling and his mind open wide; and Nodonn in despair knew that it had all been planned and he allowed to do his utmost, so that those watching would receive the final affirmation—either through farsenses or through the evidence of their own eyes. Aiken unfastened the baldric holding the Spear's powerpack and lifted the apparatus off. Held motionless in the strength- ening dawn, Nodonn felt an insidious PK impulse working at his own harness. The straps slipped from his shoulders and the Sword's hill was torn from his nerveless grasp. At the same time the Spear went flying from Aiken and both of the weapons disappeared. Nodonn removed his helmet and stood poised in the air. His shielding nimbus had evaporated in his final effort against the Nonbom King, but his body was sunrise bright. Aiken was a naked star. His mind reached out. "I need yours, too," was ail he said. THE LORD OF MISRULE 427 Apollo flamed and all his power passed, and what was left was only gray ashes and a blackened silver hand falling toward the sea, and a last ironic thought fading. The King of the Many-Colored Land caught the hand. The sun was coming up behind his Castle of Glass, and his people were singing a Song that might be for him. It was good enough, he thought, and headed tor home. THE END OF PART FOUR £D1LQGVJ£ ON OCALA ISLAND IT WAS STILL FAST NIGHT The tree trogs were practicing overtures for the autumn mating season Fireflies blinked in Ihe jacaranda trees next to the porch The moon, bronze and low, seemed to be mirroring Marc Remillard's sardonic, one-sided smile "Was that what you expected9" Patncia Castellane asked He slowly rose from his canvas deck chair and stretched, the perfect metapsychic Wagnente "Just about The mental absorption ploy was—unusual The Poltroyan race were ac- customed to batten on their foes in a similar fashion during their precoadunate days, but I've never heard of a human doing it Rather baroque Interesting, though She stood beside him The lingering memories of the drama just played m Europe flickered in his mind The conscious levels were tranquil again, diamond-hard above the scars "I'm so glad you're better," she said "I was afraid " His laugh was insouciant, rich with the old casual power "You should know by now that Abaddon takes a lot of killing I was taken by surprise It won't happen again " "You're still going^" "If i don't, he'll come to me " "That might be preferable " "I'm considering it " He kissed her, put an arm around her shoulder There was a chill wind off the lake She sighed "Well—it should be a very interesting Grand Tourney " 428 EPILOGUE 429 "Perhaps we should plan to attend," said Marc Renullard Hand in hand, they went into the house With the cooler air came dew The frogs fell silent, the fireflies hid away among the foliage, and Ocala Island slept THE END OF THE NONBORN KING Volume IV of The Saga of Pliocene Exile, titled THE ADVERSARY, tells of the struggle against the fall of Night, of a couple of redemptions and an ambiguity, and of an ultimate recurvature back to the Galactic Milieu where it all began