ARAMINTA STATION by Jack Vance "In Vance's hands, no plot can ever divert the reader for long from delighted contemplation of his topiary ingenuity in the creating of florid and odorous new planets hospitable to man' The Observer "Jack Vance is one of the greatest image makers of English Letters' Frank Herbert Araminta Station The Cadwal Chronicles Book One Araminta station, the cadwal chronicles book 1 Jack Vance NEW ENGLISH LIBRARY Hodder and Stoughton Araminta Station Oddments and Notes, to be Read if One is so Inclined These are excerpts from the Introduction to The Worlds of Man, by Fellows of the Fidelius Institute, and will assist in bridging the gap between now and then, here and there: In this work, now thirty years in preparation, we attempt neither exhaustive detail nor analytical profundity, but, rather, a pastiche of a million parts, which, so it is hoped, will coalesce into a focused picture.. Order, logic, symmetry: these are fine words but any pretense that we have crammed our material into molds so strict would be obvious sham. Each settled world is sui generis, presenting to the inquiring cosmologist a unique quantum of information. All these quanta are mutually immiscible, so that efforts to generalize become a muddle. We are yielded a single certainty: no event has occurred twice; every case is unique. In our journeys from one end of the Gaean Reach to the other and, on occasion. Beyond, we discover nothing to indicate that the human race is everywhere and inevitably becoming more generous, tolerant, kindly and enlightened. Nothing whatever. On the other hand, and this is the good news, it doesn't seem to be getting any worse.. Parochialism derives, apparently, from an innocent egotism, which, if verbalized, would express itself thus: "Since I choose to live in this place, it therefore and perforce must be excellent in all its aspects." Still and yet, the preferred destination of first-time travelers is almost always Old Earth. Latent in all exiles, so it would seem, is the yearning to breathe the native air, to taste the water, to work the mother soil through the fingers. Further, spaceships arriving at the ports of Earth each day discharge two or three hundred coffins of those who, with their last breaths, chose to return their substance to the dank brown mold of Earth. ... When men arrive on a new world the process of interaction begins. The men attempt to alter the world to suit their needs; at the same time the world, far more subtly, works to alter the men. Thus the battle is joined, of man versus environment. Sometimes the men overcome the resistance of the planet. Terrestrial or otherwise alien flora is introduced and adapted to the chemical and ecological environment; noxious indi genes are repelled, destroyed or circum vented, and the world slowly takes on the semblance of Old Earth. But sometimes the planet is strong, and forces adaptation upon the intruders. At first from expedience, then from custom and finally from innate tendency, the colonists obey the dictates of the environment and in the end become almost indistinguishable from true indi genes CHAPTER B PRELIMINARY 1 The Purple Rose System of Mircea's Wisp (Excerpted from The Worlds of Man, by Fellows of the Fidelius Institute.) Halfway along the Perseid Arm a capricious swirl of galactic gravitation has caught up ten thousand stars and sent them streaming away at an angle, with a curl and a flourish at the end. This is Mircea's Wisp. To the side of the curl, at seeming risk of wandering away into the void, is the Purple Rose System, comprising three stars: Lorca, Smg and Syrene. Lorca, a white dwarf, and Sing, a red giant, swing close together around their mutual center of gravity: a portly pink-faced old gentleman waltzing with a dainty little maiden dressed in white. Syrene, a yellow-white star of ordinary size and luminosity, orbits the gallivanting pair at a discreet distance. Syrene controls three planets, including Cadwal, the single inhabited world of the system. Cadwal is an Earth-like planet seven thousand miles in diameter, with close to Earth-normal gravity. (A list and analysis of physical indices is here omitted.) 2 The World Cadwal Cadwal was first explored by the locator Rudel Neirmann, a member of the Naturalist Society of Earth. His report prompted the dispatch of an expedition which, upon its return to Earth, recommended that Cadwal be protected forever as a natural preserve, secure from human exploitation. To this end, the Society asserted formal possession of Cadwal, and issued a decree of Conservancy: the Charter. The three continents of Cadwal were named Ecce, Deucas and Throy," each differing markedly from the other two. Ecce, straddling the equator, palpitated with heat, stench, color and ravenous vitality. Even the vegetation of Ecce used techniques of combat in the effort to survive. Three volcanoes, two active, the third dormant, were the only protrusions above a flat terrain of jungle, swamp and morass. Sluggish rivers coiled across the landscape, eventually emptying into the sea. The air reeked with a thousand odd fetors; ferocious creatures hunted each other, bellowing in triumph or screaming in mortal fright, as dictated | by their roles in the event. The early explorers gave Ecce only cursory attention, and across the years others generally followed their example. Deucas, on the opposite side of the world and four times as large as Ecce, sprawled across the north temperate zone. The fauna, at times both savage and formidable, included several semi-intelligent species; the flora in many cases resembled that of Earth--so closely that the early agronomists were able to introduce useful terrestrial species, such I as bamboo, coconut palms, wine grapes and fruit trees, without fear of an ecological disaster. 2 Throy, to the south of Deucas, extended from under the polar ice well into the south temperate zone. Throy was a land of dramatic topography. Crags leaned over chasms; the sea dashed against cliffs; forests roared in the wind. Elsewhere were oceans; great empty expanses of deep water barren of islands save for a few trifling exceptions: Lutwen Atoll, Thurben Island and Ocean Island off the east coast of Deucas, a few rocky islets off Cape Journal in the far south. 3 Araminta Station At Araminta Station, an enclave of a hundred square miles on the east coast of Deucas, the Society established an administrative agency to enforce the terms of the Charter. Six bureaus were organized to perform the necessary Work: Bureau A: Records and statistics B: Patrols and surveys: police and security services C: Taxonomy, cartography, natural sciences D: Domestic services E: Fiscal affairs: exports and imports F: Visitors' accommodations The first three cardinal numbers in the language of Ancient Etruria. 2 The biological techniques for introducing new species into alien surroundings without danger to the host environment had long been perfected. The original superintendents were Deamus Wook, Shirry Clattuc, Saul Diffin, Claude Offaw, Marvell Veder and Condit Laverty. Each was allowed a staff of forty persons. A tendency to recruit this staff from family and guild kinships brought to the early administration a cohesion which otherwise might have been lacking. Six temporary dormitories, each associated with one of the bureaus, housed the agency personnel. As soon as funds became available, six fine residences were constructed, each outdoing the others in grandeur and richness of appointment; these became known as Wook House, Clattuc House, Veder House, Diffin House, Laverty House and Offaw House. Centuries passed; work never ended at any of the six houses. Each was continually enlarged, remodeled and refined in its details with carved and polished wood, tiles and panels of local semiprecious stone, and furnishings imported from Earth or Alphanor or Mossambey. The grandes dames of each house were determined that their own house excel all the others in style and palatial luxury. Each house developed its own distinctive personality, which its residents shared, so that the wise Wooks differed from the flippant Diffins, as did the cautious Offaws from the reckless Clattucs. Likewise, the imperturbable Veders disdained the emotional excesses of the Lavertys. At Riverview House on the Leur River, a mile south of the agency, lived the Conservator, the Head Superintendent of Araminta Station. By order of the Charter he was an active member of the Naturalist Society, a native of Stroma, the small Naturalist settlement on Throy. Araminta Station early acquired a hotel to house its visitors, an airport, a hospital, schools and a theater: the Orpheum. In order to earn foreign exchange, vineyards began to produce fine wines for export, and tourists were encouraged to visit any or all of a dozen wilderness lodges, established at special sites and carefully managed to avoid interference with the environment. With the new amenities came problems of principle. How could so many enterprises be staffed by a complement of only two hundred and forty persons? Elasticity of some sort was necessary, and "collaterals," in the guise of "temporary labor," began to serve in many managerial capacities. The collaterals were a class which almost imperceptibly had come into being. A person born into one of the houses, but denied" full "Agency status" by reason of the numerical limit, became a collateral, with diminished status. Many collaterals emigrated; others found more or less congenial employment at the station. The Charter exempted children, retired persons, domestic servants and "temporary labor not in permanent residence" from the count. The term "temporary labor" was extended to include farm labor, hotel staff, airport mechanics--indeed, labor of every description--and the Conservator looked the other way so long as this work force was allowed no permanent residence. A source of cheap, plentiful and docile labor, conveniently close at hand, was needed. What could be more convenient than the population of Lutwen Atoll, three hundred miles northeast of Araminta Station? These were the Yips, descendants of runaway servants, illegal immigrants and others. In such a manner the Yips became pan of the scene at Araminta Station. They lived in dormitories near the airport and were allowed work permits of only six months' duration. Thus far strict Conservationists were willing to bend, but no farther; any new concessions, they argued, would formalize the Yip presence, and gradually lead to Yip settlements on Deucas continent, which could not be tolerated. As time passed, the population of Lutwen Atoll increased to an unreasonable figure. The Conservator notified the headquarters of the Naturalist Society on Earth, and urged that drastic steps be taken, but the Society had fallen on hard times and offered no help. Yipton became a tourist attraction in its own right. Ferries from Araminta Station conveyed tourists to the Arkady Inn at Yipton: a structure built entirely of bamboo poles and palm fronds. On the terrace beautiful Yip girls served rum punches, gin slings, sun downers Trelawny sloshes, malt beer and coconut toddy, all mixed liquors brewed or distilled at Yipton. Other more intimate services were readily available at Pussycat Palace, famous up and down Mircea's Wisp and beyond for the affable versatility of the attendants--though nothing was free. At Yipton, if one requested an after-lunch toothpick, he found the reckoning on his bill. The tourist traffic increased even further when the Oomphaw (the title of the Yip ruler) introduced a startling new set of entertainments. 4 Stroma Another problem involving the Charter had been settled to a more definite effect. During the first few years, Society members, when they visited Cadwal, were lodged at Riverview House. The Conservator finally rebelled and refused to cope any further with the constant comings and goings. He proposed that a second small enclave be established thirty miles to the south, with guest houses reserved for the use of visiting Naturalists. The plan, when presented at the Society's annual conclave (held on Earth), found a mixed reception. Strict Conservarionists complained that the Charter was being gnawed to shreds by first one trick, then another. Others replied: "Well and good, but when we go to Cadwal, either to undertake research or to take pleasure in the surroundings, are we to live in a tent?" The conclave adopted a compromise plan, which pleased no one. A new settlement was authorized, but only on the condition that it be built at a specific location overlooking Stroma Fjord on Throy. This was a site almost comically unsuitable, and obviously intended as a ploy to discourage proponents of the plan from taking action. The challenge, however, was accepted. Stroma came into being: a town of tall narrow houses, crabbed and quaint, black or dark umber, with doors and window trim painted white, blue and red. The houses were built on eight levels with majestic views down Stroma Fjord. On Earth the Naturalist Society fell prey to weak leadership and a general lack of purpose. At a final conclave, the records and documents were assigned to the Library of Archives, and the presiding officer struck the gong of adjournment for the last time. On Cadwal the folk of Stroma took no official notice of the event, though now the sole income of Stroma was the yield from their private off-world investment, which had more or less been the case for many years. Young folk ever more frequently departed to seek their fortunes. Some were seen no more; others succeeded and returned with influxes of new income. By one means or another Stroma survived and even enjoyed a modest prosperity. 5 Glawen Clattuc Something over nine hundred years had passed since Rudel Neirmann's first landing on Cadwal. At Araminta Station summer was verging into autumn, and Glawen Clattuc's sixteenth birthday, formalizing his transition from "childhood" to "provisional staff," was upon him. On this occasion he learned his official "Status Index," or SI: a number calculated by a computer, after it digested masses of genealogical data. The number seldom surprised anyone, least of all the person most directly concerned; he would long have been counting on his fingers and casting projections. Since the habitancy of each house was established at forty persons, half male, half female, any SI of 20 or under was excellent, from 21 to 22 good, 23 or 24 fair; anything over was ambiguous, depending upon conditions within the House. A number beyond 26 was discouraging and prompted mournful speculations in regard to the future. Glawen's place on the genealogical chart was not exalted. His mother, now dead, had been born off-world; his father, Scharde, an official at Bureau B, was the third son of a second son. Glawen, a sober and realistic youth, hoped for a 24, which would still allow him a chance at Agency status. 6 Days of the Week A final note concerning days of the week. On Cadwal, and generally around the Gaean Reach, the traditional seven-day week remained the norm. Using a nomenclature based on the so-called Metallic Schedule avoids the ear-grinding incongruity of contemporary equivalents (i.e." "Monday," "Tuesday," etcetera). Linguistic notes: Originally, each term was preceded by the denominator Am (literally: "This day of"), so that the first workday of the week was "Ain-Ort," or "this day of iron." As the root language became archaic and was superseded, the Am was lost and the days were designated simply by the metal names alone. The days of the week: (Am)On ..................................... iron Tzein zinc Ing lead Glilnniet tin Verd copper Milden silver Smollen gold Glawen Clattuc's sixteenth birthday was the occasion for a modest celebration which would culminate in Housemaster Fratano's formal salute and his announcement of Glawen'sSI or Status Index--a number which in large measure would determine the direction of Glawen's future. For the sake of both convenience and economy, the celebration would be superimposed upon the weekly "House Supper," which all in-House Clattucs must attend, with neither age nor indisposition serving as an excuse for truancy. The morning of the celebration went quietly. Glawen's father, Scharde, gave him a pair of silver and turquoise epaulettes, as worn by gentlemen at the most exclusive resorts of the Gaean Reach, if the fashion journals were to be believed. Scharde and Glawen took breakfast in their chambers, as usual. They lived alone; Glawen's mother, Marya, had died in an accident three years after his birth. Glawen dimly remembered a loving presence, and sensed latent mystery, though Scharde would never discuss the subject. The bare facts were simple. Scharde had met Marya when she visited Araminta Station with her parents. Scharde escorted the group around the circuit of wilderness lodges and later visited Marya at Sarsenopolis on Alphecca Nine. Here the two had married, and shortly after returned to Araminta Station. The off-world marriage took Clattuc House by surprise, and provoked an unexpected furor, instigated by a certain Spanchetta, grand- niece to Housemaster Fratano. Spanchetta was already married to the mild and uncomplaining Miliis and had produced a son, Aries; nevertheless, she had long, shamelessly and vainly, marked Scharde for her own. Spanchetta at this time was a flashing-eyed young woman, buxom and large, with a tempestuous spirit and a great roiling mass of dark curls which usually lay in a cylindrical heap on top of her head. To justify her fury, Spanchetta seized upon the problems of her sister Simonetta: "Smonny." Like Spanchetta, Smonny was large and burly, with a round face, rounded shoulders and large moist features. Where Spanchetta was dark-haired and dark-eyed, Smonny showed taffy-colored hair and golden-hazel eyes. Often she was jocularly assured that with yellow skin she might have passed for a Yip, which never failed to annoy her.1 To gain her ends Smonny was purposeful but lazy. Where Spanchetta preferred to bluster and domineer, Smonny used a wheedling or peevish persistence which rasped away at her adversary's patience, and eventually reduced it to shreds. Through indolence she failed her courses at the lyceum, and was denied Agency status. Spanchetta at once placed the blame upon Scharde, for introducing Marya into the house, thereby "rolling" Smonny out. ' Couplings between Yips and ordinary Gaeans yielded no progeny; Yips apparently were a subspecies of man in the process of differentiation: at least such was the speculation. Yips, both men and women, were physically attractive; indeed, the beauty of Yip girls was proverbial. "That is absurd and illogical," she was told, by no less than Fratano the Housemaster. "Not at all!" declared Spanchetta, eyes glittering and bosom heaving. She took a step forward and Fratano drew back a step. "The worry absolutely destroyed Smonny's concentration! She made herself sick!" "Still, that's not Scharde's fault. You did the same thing when you married Minis. He's out-House too, a Laverty collateral, as I recall." Spanchetta could only grumble. "That's different. Minis is our own sort, not just some little interloper from God-help-us!" Fratano turned away. "I can't waste any more of my time with such nonsense." Spanchetta gave an acrid chuckle. "It's not your sister who is being victimized; it's mine! Why should you care? Your position is secure! As for wasting your time, you are anxious only to get to your afternoon nap. But there will be no nap for you today. Smonny is coming to talk with you." Fratano, not the most obdurate of men, heaved a deep sigh. "I can't talk to Smonny right now. I'll make a special exception. She can have a month for study and another examination; I can't do any better. If she fails, she is out!" The concession pleased Smonny not at all. She set up a howl of complaint: "How can I cover five years of material in a month?" "You must do your best," snapped Spanchetta. "I suspect that the examination will only be a formality; Fratano hinted as much. Still, you can't get by with nothing! So, you must start studying immediately." Smonny made only a perfunctory attempt to encompass the material she had so long ignored. To her consternation, the examination was of the usual sort, and not just a pretext for granting her a passing grade. Her score was even worse than before, and now there was no help for it: Smonny was out. Her eviction from Clattuc House was a long and contentious process, which climaxed at the House Supper, when Smonny delivered her farewell remarks, which escalated from sarcastic jibes, through a revelation of disgraceful secrets, into a shrieking hysterical fit. Fratano at last ordered the footmen to remove her by force; Smonny jumped up on the table and ran back and forth, followed by four bemused footmen, who finally seized her and dragged her away. Smonny took herself off-world to Soum, where she worked briefly in a pilchard cannery; then, according to Spanchetta, joined an ascetic religious group, and subsequently vanished no one knows where. In due course Marya gave birth to Glawen. Three years later, Marya drowned in the lagoon, while two Yips stood on the shore it no great distance. When asked why they had not gone to her rescue one said: "We were not watching." The other said: "It was none of oar affair." Both, puzzled and uncomprehending, were immediately sent back to Yipton. Scharde never spoke of the event and Glawen never asked questions. Scharde showed no inclination to remarry, even though the ladies considered him eminently personable. He was quiet and soft-spoken, of medium stature, spare and strong, with coarse short prematurely gray hair and narrow sky-blue eyes gleaming from a bony weathered face. On the morning of Glawen's birthday, the two had barely finished breakfast before Scharde was called away to Bureau B on special business. Glawen, with nothing better to do, lingered at the table, while the two Yip footmen who had served the breakfast now cleared away the dishes and set the room to rights. Glawen watched them, wondering what went on behind the half-smiling faces. The quick sidelong glances: what did they signify? Mockery and contempt? Simple placid curiosity? Or nothing whatever? Glawen could not decide, and Yip behaviour gave no clue. It would be interesting, thought Glawen, to understand the quick sibilant Yip idiom. Glawen finally rose from the table. He departed Clattuc House and wandered down to the lagoon: a series of brimming ponds fed by the River Wan, with trees along the shore both native and imported: black bamboo, weeping willow, poplar, purple-green verges." The morning was fresh and sunny; autumn was in the air; in a few weeks Glawen would be entering the lyceum. Glawen came to the Clattuc boathouse: a rectangular structure with an arched roof of green and blue glass supported on pillars of black iron, built to outdo in elegance the other five boat houses The Clattucs of this particular time, save perhaps for Scharde and Glawen, were not keen yachtsmen. The boathouse sheltered only a pair of punts, a beamy little sloop twenty-five feet long and a fifty-foot ketch for more extended blue-water cruising.2 ' A large number of Earth-native plants and trees had been introduced to enhance the already rich flora ofCadwal. In every instance the biologists had adapted die plant to the environment, imposing ingenious genetic safeguards to prevail ecological disaster. The boathouse was one of Glawen's favorite resorts, where he could almost always find solitude, which today he wanted above all else so that he might compose himself for the ordeal of the House Supper and his birthday celebration. Such affairs were little more than formalities, so Scharde had assured him. Giawen would not be required to deliver a speech or embarrass himself in any other manner. "You are merely going to dine with your kin. For the most part they are a tiresome group, as you are well aware. After a moment or two they will ignore you, and become busy with their gossip and little intrigues. At the end Fratano will declare you a provisional, and announce your SI, which I should guess to be a fairly safe 24, or at worst a 25, which is still not too bad, considering the creaking joints and gray hairs around the table." "And that is all?" "More or less. If someone troubles to talk to you, answer politely, but otherwise you can dine in silence and no one will be the wiser." Giawen sat on a bench where he could look across the lagoon and watch the play of sunlight and shadow on the water. He told himself: "Perhaps it will not go so badly, after all. Still, I'd be relieved ;c my SI turned out to be a point or two lower than what I fear it will be." The scrape of footsteps broke into his thoughts. A bulky shape appeared at the end of the dock. Giawen sighed. Here vas the person he least wanted to see: Aries, two years older than himself, taller by a head and heavier by fifty pounds. His face was large and flat, with a snub nose and a ripe heavy mouth. A smart cap with a stylish slantwise visor today confined his black curls. At the age of eighteen and anSI of 16, by reason of his direct lineage, through Spanchetta and Valart, her father, to Past Master Damian, who was father to the current Master, Fratano,1 only serious malfeasance or failure at the lyceum could cause Aries difficulties. Coming into the cool dimness from the sunlight, Aries stood blinking. Giawen quickly picked up an abrasive block and, jumping aboard the sloop, busied himself at the tai frail He crouched low; perhaps Aries would not see him. Aries strolled slowly along the dock, hands in pockets, peering right and left. At last he took note of Giawen. He stopped and stared, puzzled by Glawen's activity. He sauntered close. "What are you up to?" ' Genealogical details and SIs need not be remembered. They will be cited as sparingly as possible. Glawen said evenly: "I am sanding the boat, to prepare it for varnish." "That's what I thought you were doing," said Aries coldly. "After all, my eyes are in very good condition." "Don't just stand there; get busy. You'll find another sanding block in the locker." Aries gave a snort of derisive laughter. "Are you serious? That's work for the Yips!" "Why haven't they done it, then?" Aries shrugged. "Complain to Namour; he'll put them right. But don't involve me; I have better things to do." Glawen continued to work, with a sober concentration that at last caused Aries exasperation. "Sometimes, Glawen, I find you absolutely unpredictable. Haven't you forgotten something?" Glawen paused and gazed dreamily out over the water. "I can't think of anything. Of course, if I'd forgotten it, that's what one would expect." "Bah! More of your larky talk! Today is your birthday! You should be up in your chambers, making preparations--that is, if you want to cut any kind of a figure. Do you have white shoes? If not, you should get some in double-quick time! I tell you this out of kindness; no more." Glawen darted a side glance at Aries, then continued his work. "If I came to supper barefoot, no one would notice." "Hah! That's where you're wrong! Never underestimate fine shoes! It's the first thing the girls look for!" "Hm ... That's something I didn't know." "You'll find that I'm right. Girls are clever little creatures; they can size up a fellow in no time at all! If your nose is dripping or your fly is open or if your shoes aren't truly sporting, they'll tell each other: "Don't give that turnip-head the time of day!"" "Those are valuable tips," said Glawen. "I'll keep them in mind!" Aries frowned. One could never be sure how to take Glawen's remarks; often they verged upon the caustic. At the moment Glawen seemed sober and respectful, which was as it should be. Reassured, Aries continued, even more grandly than before. "Perhaps I shouldn't mention this, but I have taken the trouble to work out a manual of foolproof methods for getting along with the girls, if you know what I mean." Aries gave Glawen a lewd wink. "It's based on female psychology and it operates like magic, every time!" "Amazing! How does it work?" "The details are secret. In practice, one needs only to identify signals which instinct enforces on the little darlings, and then make the response recommended in my manual, and so forth." "Is this manual generally available?" "Emphatically not! It's top-secret, for the use of Bold Lions only." The Bold Lions included six of the most raffish young scapegraces of Araminta Station. "If the girls got hold of a copy, they'd know exactly what was going on." "They already know what's going on; they don't need your book." Aries blew out his cheeks. "That is often true, in which case the manual recommends strategies of surprise." Glawen rose to his feet. "I guess I'll have to work out my own methods although I doubt if I'll need them at the House Supper. In the first place, there won't be any girls on hand." "You're joking! What of Fram and Pally?" "They are too old for me." "But not for me! I take them as I find them, young or old! You should get involved with the Mummers! There are some real sizzlers in the troupe this year: Sessily Veder, for one." "I don't have any talents along those lines." "There's nothing to it! Master Floreste uses you to your best advantage; Kirdy Wook has no trace of talent; in fact, he's a bit of a lummox. Goody-goody, so to speak. In Evolution of the Gods he and I are primordial beasts. In First-Fire I am a being of clay and water, and I get struck by lightning. I change costumes and once again Kirdy and I are hairy beasts groaning for enlightenment. But the flame is stolen by Ling Diffin, who plays Prometheus. Sessily Veder is "Bird of Inspiration," and she inspired me to write my manual. Even that stick Kirdy drools to see her." Glawen turned his back on the taffrail. Sessily Veder, whom he knew only from a distance, was a girl of charm and vitality. "Have you tried the manual on Sessily?" "She hasn't given me the opportunity. That's the one flaw of my system." "A pity ... Well, I must get on with the sanding." Aries settled himself upon a bench to watch. After a moment he said: "I suppose that you find this a good way to relax your nerves." "Why should I be nervous? I've got to eat somewhere." Aries grinned. "You don't improve matters lurking and glooming down here at the boathouse. Your SI is already calculated and there is nothing you can do about it." Glawen only laughed. "If there were, I'd be doing it." Aries' grin faded. Was there nothing sharp enough to puncture Glawen's self-possession? Even his mother, Spanchetta, had termed Glawen the most detestable child of her experience. Aries spoke in an important voice: "Perhaps you're wise! Enjoy your peace of mind while you can, because after today, you'll be a provisional, with the five-year worries on your neck." Glawen gave Aries one of the sardonic side glances which Aries found so annoying. "And these worries trouble you?" "Not me! I'm a 16.1 can afford to relax." "So did your Aunt Smonny. How are your grades at the lyceum?" Aries scowled. "Let's just leave me out of the conversation, shall we? Anytime my grades need attention, I can easily take care of them." "If you say so." "I say very much so. As for the matter under discussion--and'I don't mean my grades--I know a great deal more than you might expect." Aries gazed up toward the blue and green glass dome. "In fact--I shouldn't tell you this---I've been privately notified of your SI. I'm sorry to say that it is not encouraging. I tell you only so that you won't be taken by surprise at the supper." Glawen turned Aries another quick side glance. "No one knows my SI but Fratano, and he would not tell you." Aries gave a knowing laugh. "Mark my words! Your number is close to the 30s. I won't tell you exactly, but shall we hint at somewhere between 29 and 31?" At last Glawen's composure was breached. "I don't believe it!" He jumped to the dock. "Where did you hear such nonsense? From your mother?" Aries suddenly sensed that he had spoken far too loosely. He tried to bluster. "Are you suggesting that my mother talks nonsense?" "Neither you nor your mother are supposed to know anything about my SI." "Why should we not? We can count and the lineage is a matter of record--or, more accurately, is not a matter of record." An odd remark, thought Glawen. "What do you mean by that?" Aries saw that once again he had spoken indiscreetly. "Nothing much. Nothing, really, at all." "You seem oddly full of information." "The Bold Lions know everything that's worth knowing. I'm familiar with scandals you can't even imagine! For instance, what old lady tried to pull Vogel Laverty into bed last week, almost by sheer force?" "I have no idea. How far did he let himself get pulled?" "Not at all! He's not even my age! Another situation: I could point out right now someone who will shortly have a baby and the father is very much in doubt." Glawen turned away. "I had nothing to do with it, if that is what you came to find out." Aries gave a hoot of laughter. "That is a fine joke! Quite the wittiest remark you have made today." He rose to his feet. "Time is getting on. Instead of varnishing the boat, you should be up in your chambers, cleaning your fingernails and rehearsing your deportment." Glawen looked at Aries' plump white hands. "My fingernails are cleaner than yours are right now." Aries scowled and thrust his hands in his pocket. "Conditions are different; keep that in mind! If I should speak to you, answer: "Yes, sir' or "No, sir." That's proper conduct. If you have doubts about your table manners, just watch me." "Thank you, but I will probably be able to muddle through the meal." "As you wish." Aries turned on his heel and stalked from the dock. Glawen stood looking after him, seething with irritation. Aries passed between the pair of heroic statues which flanked the entrance to the Clattuc formal garden, and was lost to view. Glawen pondered. Between 29 and 31? After five years as a provisional, his SI might have declined to 25. That meant collateral status and out of Clattuc House: away from his father, away from all the niceties of life, away from the prestige and perquisites of full Agency! Glawen looked off across the water. Just such a grim event had altered the lives of thousands before him, but the full tragedy of the situation had never touched him before. And what of the girls, whose good opinion he valued? There was Eriin Offaw, already embarked on what promised to be a long career of breaking hearts, and Ticia Wook, blond, fragile, fragrant and graceful as a gillyflower, but, like all Wooks, remote and proud." Then there was Sessily Veder, who had been conspicuously amiable the last few times he had encountered her. If he were ranked with anSI of 30, his future was blasted and none of them would look twice at him ' Had each house rated the other five in order of perceived prestige, and had the six estimates been combined, the consensus would have placed the Wooks and the Offaws at the top of the list, with the Veders and the Clattucs just below, then the Diffins and the Lavertys, though even in the most unkind estimation, the difference between top and bottom was not great. Glawen left the boathouse and followed Aries back up the slope to Clattuc House: a thin, somber dark-haired figure inconsequential in the scope of the landscape, though highly important to himself and to his father, Scharde. Entering the house, Glawen went up to his chambers at the eastern end of the second-floor gallery. To his great relief, he found Scharde at home. Scharde instantly sensed Glawen's perturbation. "You're getting the shakes early." Glawen said: "Aries told me that he knew my SI, that it was between 29 and 31." Scharde raised his eyebrows. "31? Even 29? How is that possible? You'd be out with the collaterals before you even started!" "I know." "I'd pay no heed to Aries. He just hoped to put you in a turmoil, and he seems to have succeeded." "He says he heard it from Spanchetta! And he said something about my not having any lineage!" "Oh?" Scharde considered. "Did he, now? What did he mean by that?" "I don't know. I told him that he could not possibly know my SI, and he said: why not; that my lineage was a matter of record, or-more accurately--my lack of lineage." "Ha," muttered Scharde. "Now I begin to see. I just wonder . " His voice dwindled away. He went to stare out the window. "There is indeed the flavor of Spanchetta in this business." "Could she change my number?" "That's an interesting question. She works at Bureau A and has access to the computer. Still, she'd never dare fiddle with the machinery; that's a capital crime. Whatever she has done, if anything, is bound to be legal." Glawen shook his head in puzzlement. "Why should she want to do such a thing? What difference does my number make to her?" "We don't know yet whether or not anything has been done. If so, Spanchetta may or may not be responsible. If so again, the answer is simple. She forgets and forgives nothing. I'll tell you a story you've probably never heard before. "Long ago she made up her mind to marry me, and she actually schemed with the House Mistress and Dame Lilian the Chatelaine so that they all began to take the match seriously, even without so much as consulting me. One evening, we were playing epaing. Spanchetta was on the court, shouting and cursing and making flamboyant signals, and calling fouls where none existed and gray balls when they were pink, and yelling in outrage when someone dropped in a lob. Wilmor Veder called over to me: "Well, then, Scharde, looks like your marriage will be quite an adventure." "I said: "I'm not getting married; where did you hear that?" ""It's all over! Everybody is talking about it." ""I wish someone would let me in on the secret. Who is the lucky| woman?" | ""Spanchetta, of course! I heard it from Carlotte." ;. ""Carlotte is talking doodle. I'm not marrying Spanchetta! No^g today, not tomorrow, not last year, not at the second coming of Puliusl Feistersnap. In short, never, and not even then! Does that set matters| straight?" " "It sounds definite to me. Now you need only convince Spanchetta," who is standing right behind you." | "I looked around and there stood Spanchetta breathing flame.: Everybody laughed and Spanchetta tried to murder me with her epaing bat, which made everyone laugh even more. "So then, just for spite, she married poor Minis, and also took up; with Namour. But she never forgave me. "About a year later, I married your mother at Sarsenopolis on .Alphecca Nine. When we returned to Araminta Station, there were unpleasant incidents, many of them. Marya ignored them; so did I. Then you were born, and Spanchetta dislikes you in triplicate: because of me and your mother and because you are everything Aries is not. And now it just might be that she has found an opportunity to express herself." "It's hard to believe." "Spanchetta is a strange woman. You wait here; I want to make some inquiries." Scharde went directly to the Bureau A offices in the New Agency, where, in his capacity as Commander of Police, he was able to make his investigation without hindrance. Time was short; in two hours the House Supper, as inexorable in its regularity as the motion of Lorca around Sing, would begin. Scharde returned to Clattuc House and took himself to the pleasant high-ceilinged apartments occupied by Housemaster Fratano. As Scharde entered the reception hall, he met Spanchetta coming from the inner parlor. Both stopped short, each thinking that here was the person he least wanted to see. Spanchetta spoke sharply: "What are you doing here?" "I could ask the same of you," said Scharde. "But, as a matter of fact, I have Agency business to take up with Fratano." "The time is late. Fratano is dressing." Spanchetta looked Scharde up and down. "Are you coming to the Supper in that outfit? But why should I ask? You are notoriously lax where propriety is concerned." Scharde gave a rueful laugh. "I neither admit nor deny, but never fear! I'll be on hand when the soup is served! Now I have business with Fratano; please excuse me." Spanchetta grudgingly moved aside. "Fratano is occupied with his own dressing and won't wish to be bothered. I'" take in your message, if you like." "I must see to this matter myself." Scharde stepped in front of Spanchetta, holding his breath against the warm and heavy scent, half perfume, half female fecundity, which she exuded. He entered Fratano's private parlor and carefully closed the door, almost in Spanchetta's face. Fratano, wearing a loose lounge-robe, sat in an easy chair with one long pallid foot propped on a cushioned stool, while a Yip maidservant massaged his lower leg. He looked up with a questioning frown. "Well, then, Scharde, what is it now? Can't you come at a more convenient time?" "The time will never be more convenient, as you will learn. Send the girl away; our conversation must be private." Fratano made a peevish clicking sound with his tongue. "Is it so vital as all that? Paz is not interested in our talk." "Possibly not, but I have noticed that Namour knows everything about everybody. Need I say more? Girl, take yourself from the room, and close the door as you leave." After a glance at Fratano, the maid rose. She took up her pot of ointment and with a cool half-smile for Scharde, left the room. "So, now!" growled Fratano. "What is of such importance that it interferes with my massage?" "Today is Glawen's sixteenth birthday, and he becomes a provisional." Fratano blinked, suddenly thoughtful. "What of it?" "Have you been notified of his official SI?" "Yes, so I have." Fratano coughed and cleared his throat. "Again-what of that?" "Spanchetta brought it to you?" "That is inconsequential, one way or the other. It has to arrive from Bureau A by some means. Usually Dame Leuta brings it over. Today it was Spanchetta. The SI is the same." "Has Spanchetta ever handed it in before?" "No. Now tell me, once and for all, what are you up to?" "I think you know. You've looked at the number?" "Of course! Why not?" "And what is the number?" Fratano tried to draw himself up. "I can't tell you that! The SIs are fl confidential!" "Not if Bureau B decides to concern itself." Fratano pulled himself up in his chair. "Why should Bureau interfere in House business? I insist on knowing what you are getting,!! at!" "I am investigating what may be a criminal conspiracy." "I don't know what you are talking about." "When Spanchetta claims to know Glawen'sSI and tells ArlesJB who crows about his knowledge to Glawen, that is already wrongdoing.! If the Housemaster is involved, the question of criminal conspiracy! arises." S Fratano gave a poignant cry. "What are you saying! I am guilty of I nothing!" "Where is the SI?" Fratano pointed to a square of yellow paper on the side table. "The number is there. It is the official computer printout." Scharde looked at the paper. "30? You saw this number?" "Yes, naturally." "And you were going to read it off at the House Supper?" Fratano's loose-jowled face sagged even lower. "As a matter of fact, I thought the number rather high." Scharde gave a scornful laugh. "High, you say? What, at a guess, should be Glawen'sSI "Well, I would have guessed 24 or thereabouts. Still " Fratano pointed to the yellow paper. "It is not my place to argue with the computer." Scharde grinned: a crooked sinister grimace which for an instant showed the tips of his teeth. "Fratano, I have just come up from Bureau A. The computer is functioning with its usual accuracy. But it must depend upon the information fed into it. Do you agree?" "That is so; yes." "This morning, as is my right, I examined the input to the computer the information upon which it had based its judgment and do you know, someone had altered the records? To such an effect that Glawen was declared illegitimate--a bastard." Once more Fratano cleared his throat. "If the truth be known, rumors have been circulating to this effect for some time." "I have heard none of them." "It is said that your marriage to Marya was illegal and void, with the result that all issue was illegitimate." "How could my marriage be illegal? I can show you the marriage certificate at any time. Now if you like." "The marriage was void because Marya was already married, and had neglected to certify a legal divorce. Naturally, I paid no heed to such meretricious chatter. Still, if unfortunately it were true--" "Spanchetta told you all this? She is the source of the so-called rumor?" "The subject indeed came up in our conversation." "And you accepted her statement, without so much as referring it to me?" "The facts speak for themselves!" bleated Fratano. "On her tourist entry she signs herself as "Madame' Marya Chiasalvo." Scharde nodded. "Bureau B can construct against you a clear case of either 'criminal conspiracy' or 'felonious default of duty."" Fratano's jowl quivered and his eyes became large and moist. "My dear Scharde! You know me better than that!" "Then why did you accept, without protest, such an outrageous printout from Spanchetta? I admit to a sense of sheer outrage! You know Spanchetta and her spite! You have let yourself become her tool! So you must bear the consequences!" Fratano said miserably: "Spanchetta can be very convincing at times." "Here are the facts, which you could have learned from me over the telephone. Marya's family subscribed to a popular religion of Alphecca Nine known as the Quadriplar Revelation. Children enter the religion at the age of ten by dedicating themselves in a mock-marriage with their patron saint. Marya's patron saint was Chiasalvo, the Jewel of Kind Being. The marriage is a religious formality, which the patron saint renounces as part of the marriage ceremony. It is so certified on the marriage certificate, which you could have seen at any time the question arose. The marriage, despite Spanchetta's vicious assertions, is as legal as your own. How she could dare introduce this distortion into the genealogical record is beyond my understanding." "Bah!" muttered Fratano in a subdued voice. "Spanchetta and her intrigues will someday drive me crazy! Luckily, you were in time to catch out the mistake." "Don't use the word 'mistake." There is malice at work here!" "Ah well, Spanchetta is a sensitive woman. At one time she had reason to believe ... But no matter. This is a sorry mess. What shall we do?" "You can count and I can count. Here is the Clattuc roster. Glawen clearly should rank after Dexter and before Trine. That gives him anSI of 24. I suggest that you formalize this number by executive flat, as is your privilege, and, in this case, your duty." Fratano studied the roster. He counted with his long white finger. "Just possibly Trine might pick up a point or two by virtue of his mother's aunt's altitude among the Veders." "The same applies to Glawen. Elsabetta, his grandmother's older sister, is a high Wook, and he can also show Dame Waltrop of Diffin as input. And don't forget. Trine is eight years younger than Glawen! He doesn't need a 24 at his age." "True enough." Fratano turned a cautious side glance toward Scharde. "And there will be no more talk of criminal conspiracy-which of course is only a bad joke in the first place?" Scharde gave a grim nod. "So be it." "Very well. Common sense says 24 and we will assume that the computer meant to give us a 24." Fratano took the yellow sheet and with a stylus marked through the '30' and wrote '24' in its place. "Now all is well and I must dress." At the door Scharde turned to speak over his shoulder. "I suggest that you lock the outer door after me. Otherwise you might have Spanchetta on your hands again." Fratano gave a sour nod. "I can manage the affairs of my own department. Gunter? Gunter! Where the devil are you?" A footman entered the room. "Sir?" "Lock the door with double bolts after Sir Scharde departs. Admit no one, and bring me no messages; is this clear?" "Yes indeed, sir." As they stood ready to leave their chambers, Scharde subjected Glawen to a last inspection. His curt nod concealed far more pride than he cared to put into words. "For certain, no one will find fault with your appearance; you may rest easy on that account." "Hmmf. Aries will disapprove of my shoes, at the very least." Scharde chuckled. "Only Aries. No one else will look twice in your direction--unless you commit some awful vulgarity." Glawen said with dignity: "I am not planning any vulgarity whatever. That is not my idea of a birthday celebration." "Sound thinking! I suggest also that you say nothing unless you are directly addressed, and then reply with a platitude. Before long everyone will think you a brilliant conversationalist." "More likely, they'll think me a surly brute," growled Glawen. "Still, I will guard my tongue." Once again Scharde showed his crooked half-smile. "Come; it is time we started down." The two descended the staircase to the first floor and passed through the reception hall into the main gallery: a pair of erect figures, with similar austere features and mannerisms which suggested innate grace and strength under careful control. Scharde stood a head taller; his hair had become a coarse nondescript gray; wind and weather had darkened his skin to the color of old oak. Glawen was somewhat more fair, and more compact at chest and shoulder. Scharde's mouth was taut and ironic; Glawen's mouth, when he was relaxed or moody, took on a pensive droop at the corners, as if his mind were off among the clouds. Girls, when they looked at Glawen, as often they did, found that this droop, with its suggestion of sweet flights of fancy, tended to play strange tricks upon their hearts. The two proceeded to the dining room. At the portal they halted, and took stock of those already at their places. Most of the in-House Clattucs had arrived, and now lounged at their ease in the stiff-backed chairs, gossiping, laughing and sipping lively Bagnold from the Laverty winery, or, as often, the heavier and sweeter Pink Indescense, as formulated by the Wook oenologists. At stations around the walls stood Yip footmen, resplendent in the gray and orange Clattuc livery, their faces powdered white and their hair concealed by wigs of combed silver floss. Scharde pointed across the table. "You will sit there, next to your Great-aunt Clotilde. I will be at your other side. Lead the way." Glawen set his coat, squared his shoulders and advanced into the dining room. The company on hand stilled its talk; flippant remarks hung in the air; chuckles and titters dwindled into silence; all heads turned to stare at the new arrivals. Looking neither right nor left, Glawen marched around the table, with Scharde coming behind. There were mutters and whispers; clearly rumors regarding Glawen'sSI and his imminent shock had already seeped around the table. Such an hem of news, with its implications and scope for tragic drama, was too choice to be contained. All now awaited the moment when Fratano's announcement would blast Glawen's life and everyone covertly studied the victim-to-be. Schardc smiled his faint smile. Glawen arrived at his place, with Scharde close behind. A pair of footmen pulled back their chairs and slid them forward after GlaweB and Scharde had seated themselves. The company resumed its previous occupation; all was as before, and Glawen was ignored: an almost insulting indifference, in Glawen's view. The dinner, after all, was in celebration of his personal birthday. He turned a haughty glance around the table, but no one noticed. Perhaps some grotesque and splendid vulgarity might be in order, after all. Glawen put the idea asade; it had no real temptation for him, and his father would be embarrassed. He studied the company: his uncles: aunts and cousins of high and low degree, together with a single great-grandparent. All were arrayed in fine garments and stylish ornaments, and seemed to take pleasure in the act. The ladies wore gowns of rich fabric and feather-weave, and many displayed their jewels; alexandrites, emeralds, rubies, and carbuncles, topaz and purple tourmaline from sites about Deucas;' sphanctonites from dead stars, and Maidhouse crystals, found at a single sate in all the expanse of th Gaean Reach. The gentlemen wore coats and tight trousers of soft twill in contrasting colors: often dark buff and blue, or maroon and cedar green: or black and deep mustard ocher. Among the young gallants, white shoes were all the rage, and the more dashing clasped the left sidi of their scalps with silver mesh from which lifted clusters of silva prongs, to striking effect. Among this latter group was Aries, who sat six places around the table from Glawen, with Spanchetta beside him. There could be no question as to Spanchetta's intense and pungent vitality. Not the least of her attributes was the remarkable mass of raven-black curls, barely disciplined, which surmounted her head and swayed perilously as she looked this way and that. The placement of her glittering black eyes, close by the bridge of her nose, accentuated the expanse of her marmoreal cheeks. Today she wore a mageoti gown, cut low to display the white pillar of her neck and a good deal of what depended below. Spanchetta had darted a single glance toward The Conservator ignored the almost universal passion for gem collecting, so lonj as no significant mining operations were attempted. Glawen which assimilated every detail of his appearance; then, with a faint sniff, she looked away and paid him no further heed. Next beside Spanchetta Sat Minis, her mild and diffident husband, distinguished principally by his drooping ash-blond mustache. He was now concerned with the problem of drinking wine without wetting his mustache. Fratano stood at the side table reserved to retired Clattucs, making polite conversation with his father, Damian, a long-retired Past Master, now well over ninety years old. Resemblance between the two was striking; both were gaunt, pallid, high of forehead, long of nose, upper lip and chin. The table was almost full. Only Garsten and Jalulia, Glawen's grandparents, were not yet present. The footmen poured wine for Glawen and Scharde, Green Zoquel and Rimbaudia, both Clattuc wines, and prizewinners at last year's Parilia. Glawen essayed a goodly gulp of the Zoquel, which caused Seharde surprise and mild alarm. "The wine is strong! Much more and you'll be snoring on the table with your hair in the soup!" "I'll be careful." Glawen shifted his position and tugged at his new coat, which felt stiff and tight, while the new trousers not only constricted his shanks, but rode high in the crotch, causing him acute discomfort. Such, he told himself, was the price one paid for the enjoyment of high style, and little could be done about it. He forced himself to sit quietly, hands in his lap. Aries bent down his head and turned him a pursy grin. No matter if Housemaster Fratano fixed hi sSI at 50. Glawen swore that he would betray emotion by not so much as a twitch. Minutes went by at a slow march. Fratano continued to chat with Damian. Garsten and Jalulia still had not arrived. Glawen sighed. Would dinner never be served? He looked around the table. Never had his senses seemed so alert, nor his perceptions so keen! He studied the faces of his kin. All were strangers. Remarkable! It was as if a curtain had slipped, revealing, if only for an instant, truth not intended for his knowing Glawen sighed and raised his eyes to the ceiling. An odd but useless notion. Foolishness, of course. He essayed another sip of wine. Scharde made no comment. Voices rose and fell, or lapsed momentarily into silence, as if everyone had decided to use the same instant to formulate his next words. The time was middle afternoon; light from Syrene slanted through tall windows, reflecting from high ceilings and white walls, playing across the tablecloth, glinting on the glass and silver. At last Garsten and Jalulia entered the room. They paused behind Glawen, and Garsten touched his shoulder. "Today: the great occasion,! eh? I remember my own sixteenth; how long ago it seems now! But Pi still remember the tension! Even though I was born A-be, I was stilll in dread of being sent off across the Reach, into some dark cold I hinterland. But the Mad Dog' coughed up a 19, and I was in, and! lucky for you, eh? Otherwise you'd be hunkered down over a plate off beans on some cold far world while the leeches hopped around' the mud and the natives howled, and gargoyle hawks ravaged your flocks." Jalulia chided him: "What nonsense you talk! If you had actually' failed and had been turned out, we would never have met and Glawen would not be here now." "All to the same effect! Well, we can only hope that the Mad Dog plays you fair." "I hope so too," said Glawen. Garsten and Jalulia went to their places; Fratano stepped down to his own chair. He looked at a slip of paper beside his service plate, read, then turned to inspect the faces around the table. "Ah, Glawen, there you are. Today you come into the proud estate of provisional! The opportunities of life are now open to you! I am sure that through diligence and duty you will, at the very least, arrive at the condition' of noble and self-reliant manhood, no matter whether your life is to; be lived here, as an agent of the Conservancy, or elsewhere, in what; might prove an equally rewarding career!" Glawen listened, feeling the attention of all eyes. Fratano proceeded. "I will today utter no lengthy peroration; should you feel the need of instruction or wise counsel, you need only apply to me, and it shall be forthcoming. Such is my obligation to every- Clattuc of the House, from low to high. "Now, then: to definite matters. I see no reason to prolong the suspense. I have here the official statement of your SI." Fratano lifted the paper, threw back his head and looked down his nose at the inscription. "Here, as yielded by impersonal and accurate processes of calculation, is your SI. I announce the number to be--" he raised his head and gazed around the attentive faces-- "24." Eyes blinked, then swung to fix upon Glawen. From Spanchetta came a startled cry, which she quickly stifled. Aries stared first at Glawen, then turned to gaze numbly at his mother, who sat hunched forward, scowling down into her wine. Glawen was now expected to utter a few remarks. He rose to his. ' Mad Dog: colloquial term for the Bureau A computer. 34 feet and bowed politely toward Fratano. His voice quavered so slightly that no one noticed but Scharde. "Thank you, sir, for your good wishes. I will truly do my best to become both a good agent of the Conservator and a credit to Clattuc House." Fratano asked: "And where will you work, or have you chosen?" "I have already been accepted into Bureau B." "A sound choice! We need careful and vigilant patrols if we are to keep Marmion Land' clear of the Yips." The Yip footmen smiled somewhat self-consciously at Fratano's remarks, but otherwise showed no reaction. Glawen sat down to a spatter of applause, and footmen began to serve the supper. Conversation once more became general, and all declared that never for an instant had they believed the wild rumor in regard to Glawen, which was on the face of it absurd. Furtive glances were turned toward Spanchetta, who sat like a stone, until suddenly, as if at a signal, she became animated, even ebullient, and conducted four conversations at once. Now that Glawen was no longer to be considered a pariah, his Great-aunt Clotilde, a tall breezy woman of middle age, condescended to speak with him. She keenly enjoyed the game of epaing, and considered herself knowledgeable in regard to the game's tactical intricacies; she now conveyed to Glawen a number of her opinions. With Scharde's advice in mind, Glawen carefully suppressed all evidence of independent thought, and later Clotilde remarked upon Glawen's intelligence to her cronies. The Supper culminated with a festive pudding of iced custard and fruit. The company drank a ritual, if rather perfunctory, toast to Glawen, then Fratano rose to his feet, and the Supper was at an end. A number of folk, as they left the room, paused to wish Glawen good luck. Aries sauntered across the room. "A good number!" he stated. "A very fan- number, considering everything. I'd placed it a bit higher, as you know, but I'm glad to see that all turned out favorably. Although you don't want to be overconfident! 24 is by no means a free pass." "I know." Scharde took Glawen's arm and the two returned to their chambers, ' Deucas was divided into sixty districts, or "lands." Marmion Land was that strip of pleasant savanna along the northeast coast directly opposite Lutwen Atoll. Already Yips were crossing over to set up camps and remain until apprehended and ejected by Bureau B patrols. where Glawen instantly rushed into his bedroom and changed into| ordinary clothes. He returned to the parlor to find Scharde at the window, brooding across the landscape. Scharde turned and pointed to a chair. "Sit. We have important matters to discuss." Glawen slowly seated himself, wondering what was afoot. Scharde| brought out a bottle of the light fresh wine known as Quiritavo andJi poured a pair of goblets half full. He noticed Glawen's expression andl grinned. "Relax! There are no dreadful secrets to be shared with you on your sixteenth birthday just some precautions: practical planning,; so to speak." ; "In regard to Spanchetta?" "Quite right. She has been humiliated and everyone is laughing at her. She is seething with fury and padding back and forth like some awful beast in a cage." Glawen said thoughtfully: "If Aries is wise, he will slip down to the Lions' Lair and hide under the table." "And if he is very wise indeed, he will never mention that due to his loose tongue we were able to catch her out in her tricks." "Isn't what she did illegal?" "In principle: yes. But if we brought charges, she would simply assert that she had made a mistake, and it would be hard to prove otherwise. To Spanchetta, it's already water under the bridge, and unless I miss my guess, she'll be scheming and plotting in new directions." "That is insanity!" "Insanity or not, be warned and be careful, but don't let her become s an obsession. The world can't stop because of Spanchetta. You've now got lyceum to think about, which will be more than enough to keep you busy, especially with Bureau B's supplementary work." "When will I start going out on patrols?" "That's a long way off. First there's the matter of your flying permit, then your special training. Of course, if some emergency comes upj anything can happen." "By emergency, you mean the Yips." "I don't see how to avoid it. Every day there are more Yips with no place to go but Yipton." : "Then you really think there will be trouble." j Scharde considered before responding. "It's not inevitable, if proper decisions are made and made soon. Already the Yip Oomphaw is starting to act oddly, as if he knows something we don't." "Is that possible? What could he know?" "Probably nothing, unless he's been talking with the Fairness and Peace people at Stroma." "I've never heard of them." "They are a political faction among the Naturalists. We have, essentially, two options: to capitulate and abandon the Conserve, or to maintain order by whatever means is necessary." "That doesn't seem a hard choice to make." "Not at Bureau B. We believe that sooner or later the Yips must be vacated from Lutwen Atoll and be resettled off-world. In terms of the Charter, no other solution is possible." Scharde gave his head a gloomy shake. "The hard facts are that our opinions have little force. We are agents of the Society at Stroma. It's the Society's problem and they must make the decisions." "Then they should do so, or so it seems to me." "Ah, but it's not so simple. Nothing ever is. At Stroma the Society is split down the middle. One faction supports the Charter, while the opposition rejects any actions which might lead to bloodshed. The present Conservator identifies with the second group: the Party of Fairness and Peace, they call themselves. But he is retiring and a new Conservator is moving into Riverview House." "And what party is he?" "I don't know," said Scharde. "He'll be here for Parilia, and then we'll know more about him." Parilia, a three-day festival in praise of the wines of Araminta, was celebrated each autumn and considered the high point of the year. Glawen said: "It would seem that the Yips would want to be resettled, rather than living in what amounts to a warren at Yipton." "Naturally! But they want to settle Marmion Province." Glawen made a disconsolate sound. "Everyone at Stroma must know that if the Yips were allowed into the Marmion littoral, they'd swarm over all of Deucas." "Tell that to the Fairness and Peace people at Stroma, not me. I already believe you." The long summer came to an end. Master Floreste's troupe of Mummers returned from a successful off-world tour, the profits of which would help fulfill Floreste's great dream: a magnificent new Orpheum for the glorification of the performing arts. Glawen celebrated his sixteenth birthday and immediately started flight training under the supervision of the airport manager: one Eustace Chiike, a native of Old Earth, i The lessons, the flyers and Eustace Chiike himself, with his tales ofj odd folk in remote places, for a time dominated Glawen's life. Chiike," while barely past the first flush of youth, was already the veteran ofai hundred picaresque adventures. He had traveled the Gaean Reach far and wide, at every level of the economic ladder: all of which had yielded him a working philosophy which he often shared with Glawen." "Poverty is acceptable because then there is no way but up. Rich people worry about losing their wealth, but I like this worry far more than the worry of scratching the wealth together in the first place. Also, people are nicer to you when they think you are rich although-: they'll often hit you over the head to find out where you hide your! money." '} Chilke's appearance, while not at all remarkable, combined an unobtrusive flamboyance with a droll corded face. His features wercj weather-beaten and somewhat irregular, under a coarse and tattered^ crop of short dust-colored hair. He stood at average stature, with a: short neck and heavy shoulders which caused him to hunch slightly; forward. Chiike described himself as a farm boy from the Big Prairie. He spoke so feelingly of his old home, the neat little prairie towns and the wide windy landscapes that Glawen inquired if he ever planned to" return. "Indeed I do," said Chiike. "But only after I've amassed a fortune. When I left they called me a vagabond and threw rocks after the car. I want to return in style, with a band playing and girls dancing ahead of me throwing rose petals in the street." Chiike thought back over' the years. "All taken with all, I suspect that the consensus was correct. Not that I vas mean and vicious; I just took after Grandpa Swaner, on my mother's side. The Chilkes never thought highly of the Swaners, who were felt to be society folk from the city and hence worthless. Grandpa Swaner was also considered a vagabond. He liked to deal in junk: purple bric-a-brac, stuffed animals, old books and documents, petrified dinosaur droppings. He had a collection of glass eyes of which he was very proud. The Chilkes laughed and jeered, sometimes behind his back, sometimes not. He wasn't troubled in the least, especially after he sold the glass eyes to a fervent collector for a princely sum. The Chilkes stopped laughing and began looking around for glass eyes of their own. "Grandpa Swaner was a canny old bird, no question about it, and' always turned a handsome profit on his deals. The Chilkes finally had to stop calling him names out of embarrassment. I was his favorite. He gave me a beautiful Atlas of the Gaean Worlds for my birthday. It was an enormous book, two feet high by three feet wide and six inches thick, with Mercator maps of all the settled worlds. Whenever Grandpa Swaner came upon an item of interesting information regarding one of these worlds he'd paste it to the back of the map. When I was sixteen he took me to Tamar, Capella Nine, aboard a Gateway Line packet. It was the first time I'd been off-world and I was never the same again. "Grandpa Swaner belonged to a dozen professional societies, including the Naturalist Society. I vaguely remember him telling me of a world at the end of Mircea's Wisp which the Naturalists kept as a preserve for wild animals. I wondered if the animals appreciated what was being done for them, so that they would abstain from eating people like Grandpa Swaner. I was just an innocent kindly child. Strange to say, here I am now, still innocent and kindly, at Araminta Station." "How did you happen to come here?" "That's a peculiar story, and I haven't sorted it out yet. There are two or three puzzling coincidences which are very hard to explain." "How so? I'm something of a vagabond myself, and I'm interested." Chiike was amused by the remark. "The story starts off sedately enough. I was working as a tour-bus operator out of Seven Cities, on John Preston's World." Chiike told how he became aware of "a big white-skinned lady wearing a tall black hat" who joined Chilke's morning tour four days in succession. At last she engaged him in conversation, commenting favorably upon his amiable manner and sympathetic conduct. "It's nothing special: just my stock-in-trade," said Chiike modestly. The lady introduced herself as Madame Zigonie, a widow from Rosalia, a world to the back of the Pegasus Rectangle. After a few minutes of conversation she suggested that Chiike join her for lunch: an invitation which Chiike saw no reason to refuse. Madame Zigonie selected a fine restaurant where they were served an excellent lunch. During the meal she encouraged Chiike to talk of his early years on the Big Prairie and the general facts of his family background. Presently the focus of the conversation in.shifted and touched upon a number of various subjects. As if on sudden impulse, Madame Zigonie revealed to Chiike that she was conscious within herself of strong clairvoyant powers which she ignored only at grave risk to herself and her fortunes. "Perhaps you have wondered at my manifest interest in you," she told Chilke. "The fact is that I must hire an overseer for my ranch, and this mysterious inner voice insisted that you were the right and proper person for the position." "Interesting!" said Chilke. "I'm an old farm boy, no question as to that. I hope that your inner voice recommends a high salary." "Adequately high," said Madame Zigonie. "Shadow Valley Ranch comprises twenty-two thousand square miles with a hundred or more employees. It is a responsible post. I can offer a salary often thousand sols per year, along with travel and living expenses." "Hm," said Chilke. "It sounds like an important job. The proper salary would seem to be twenty thousand sols: less than a sol per square mile, which I consider a bargain." Madame Zigonie said decisively: "The salary is not reckoned on that basis, since not every square mile needs careful supervision. Ten thousand sols is quite adequate. You will reside in a private bungalow, with ample room for all your belongings. It is important to be surrounded by one's little treasures; don't you think?" "Absolutely." "You will find conditions quite congenial," said Madame Zigonie. "I shall see to it personally." Chilke spoke with great earnestness: "I want to reassure you in regard to a rather delicate matter. Never fear that I might become overfamiliar! Never, never, never!" "You are remarkably emphatic!" said Madame Zigonie coldly. "The possibility had never occurred to me." "It is wise to be clear on these things, if only for your peace of mind. You need expect nothing from me except dignified and formal conduct. The fact is, I am sworn to celibacy, and I am already married, to boot. Also, if the truth be known, I am somewhat underpowered, shall we say, which makes me nervous and flighty when ladies get too friendly. Hence, you may rest easy in this regard." Madame Zigonie gave her head a toss which almost dislodged her tall black hat. She noticed Chilke staring at her forehead, and quickly rearranged the russet curls which fringed her face. "That is only a birthmark you see; pay it no heed." "Just so. It is rather like a tattoo." "No matter." Madame Zigonie carefully adjusted her hat. "I take it that you will accept the post?" "Regarding the salary, fifteen thousand sols would seem a nice compromise." "It would also seem an inordinate sum for a person of your inexperi'Oh?" Chiike raised his eyebrows. "What does your clairvoyant power tell you in this regard?" "It inclines to the same opinion." "In that case, let us abandon the entire idea." Chiike rose to his feet. "I thank you for the lunch and for an interesting conversation. Now, if you will excuse me--" "Not so fast," snapped Madame Zigonie. "Perhaps something can be arranged. Where are your belongings?" "They're more or less the clothes on my back and a change of underwear," said Chiike. "I tend to travel light, in case I want to make a hasty move somewhere." "Still, you must have the goods you inherited from your grandfather. We shall ship everything to Rosalia and you will feel comfortably at home." "Not necessarily," said Chiike. "There's a stuffed moose in the barn, but I don't want it in the front room of my bungalow." "I'm interested in such things," said Madame Zigonie. "Perhaps we should go to Big Prairie and make an inventory, or I could go by myself." "The family wouldn't like it," said Chiike. "Still, we must do our best to bring you your things." "It's not all that necessary." "We shall see." In due course Chiike arrived at Rosalia, a rough-and-ready little world at the back of the Pegasus Rectangle. Lipwillow on the banks of the Big Muddy River was the principal town and spaceport. Chiike spent a night at the Big Muddy Hotel and in the morning was conveyed to Shadow Valley Ranch. Madame Zigonie housed him in a small bungalow under a pair of blue-pepper trees, and put him in charge of a hundred indentured workers of an unfamiliar race: handsome golden-skinned young men known as Yips. "The Yips were a source of total frustration; I could never entice them to work. I tried to be nice and I tried to be cruel. I begged, I threatened, I reasoned, I intimidated. They just smiled at me. They were quite willing to talk about work, but they always had some more or less sane reason why a certain job could not or should not be done. "Madame Zigonie watched for a while, laughing to herself. Finally she explained how to handle the Yips. They are sociable creatures, and detest solitude. Take one of them to a job, tell him that's where he stays, alone, until the job is done. He'll howl and cry, and explain that he needs help, but the more he complains, the faster he'll work, and if it isn't done right, he must stay and do it all over. You'll find that they'll work briskly enough once they get the idea." "I don't know why she waited so long to tell me. She was an odd 5 the, no question as to that. She was not often in residence at the ranch. | Every time she showed up I asked for my salary, and she said: "Yes, | of course; it slipped my mind. I'll see to it directly." But the next thing ^ I knew she was gone again and I was still penniless. Finally I was' reduced to gambling with the Yips and taking what little money they had. When I think back and remember their sad faces I feel just a bit ashamed. " "On one occasion Madame Zigonie was gone several months. She came back in a tense mood. I had lunch with her at the big house and J Ut of a blue sky she said that after careful thought she had decided I to marry me. We were to join our lives, mingle our hopes and dreams, share our possessions and live in connubial bliss. I sat stunned, with 1:ay mouth hanging open. I have mentioned my first impression of Madame Zigonie at Seven Cities. She had not become more appealing in the meantime. She was still tall and portly; her face was round with '"Qund cheeks, and her skin was still the color of lard. "I said in a polite way that the idea did not fit in with my plans, but, just out of curiosity, what was the sum total of her wealth, and Auld it be signed over to me at once, or only upon her demise? "At this she became a bit haughty and asked what I proposed to;; son tribute to the union. I frankly admitted that I had nothing but a | barnful of purple bric-a-brac and a hundred stuffed animals. She didn't < like it, but said it would have to do. I said no, not really. It wasn't fair: to her, what with all my peculiar hang-ups in regard to ladies; also we i mustn't forget that I was already married to a lady in Winnipeg, which; made another marriage not only redundant but also unthinkable to a? msa of honor. Madame Zigonie became angry and discharged me on the instant, without paying my salary. " "I made my way into town and went to Poolie's Place, at the end f a pier reaching fifty yards out into Big Muddy. I sat down with a cold lager and tried to decide what to do. Who should I meet there but Namour, fresh from delivering a gang of indentured Yips to one fthe outback ranches. This was a private side enterprise to his regular: work, so he told me. I asked how he was able to recruit the Yips; he said it was no problem and actually a fine opportunity for any who showed diligence, since, after working out their indenture, the Yips Auld take up land and become ranchers themselves. I told him that in my opinion the Yips were next to worthless as workers. He just laughed and told me I didn't know how to handle them. He used the telephone, then notified me that he had spoken to Madame Zi^onie, who said I could have my old job back if I wanted it. Namour thought it was a good idea, and that I'd been far too hasty in leaving for town. I told him: "You marry the lady, so she's comfortably taken care of, then come talk to me." He said: "Not bloody likely," but there was another possibility: how would I like managing the airport at Araminta Station? I said: "Yes indeed, I surely would." He said he could guarantee nothing, but the position was open and he thought he could push the job my way. "But don't forget," he said, 'first and foremost I'm a businessman and I'll take something in return." I told him. he could have his choice of a purple vase with two handles or a stuffed mink earing a stuffed mouse. Namour finally said he'd help me with the job anyway, and if he ever got to Earth he might go pick out something he liked. I said that could be arranged, if a few loose ends were tied up, such as my getting the job. He said not to worry; the details would sort themselves out." Upon Chilke's arrival at Araminta Station, Namour introduced him to the Bureau D authorities, who put Chiike through an intensive grilling. Chiike declared himself supremely qualified for the position, and in the end no one could prove otherwise and he was hired on a probationary basis. It soon became evident that, if anything, Chiike had understated his capabilities and the appointment was made permanent. Chiike at once instituted a general shake-up which in due course ran him afoul of Namour. At issue were the Yips assigned to the airport staff, where they performed such tasks as keeping the field in order, washing and cleaning the aircraft, checking spare parts in and out of the warehouse, and a few simple tasks of routine maintenance, or even mechanical work, under Chilke's supervision. Up to this time Chiike had not yet been assigned an assistant manager. To lighten his own work load, he trained his four Yips with care, and finally brought them to a level where they actually seemed interested in what they were doing. Nevertheless, at the end of their six-month stint, Namour sent them back to Yipton and assigned Chiike four fresh Yips. Chiike protested with fervor: "What the bloody hell is going on? Do you think I'm running a ruddy educational institution here? Not on your life!" Namour said coldly: "These people are here on six-month permits. That is the rule. I did not make this rule, but I am required to enforce it." "And sometimes you do," said Chiike. "Sometimes you are busy elsewhere. At the hospital Yip orderlies get new cards every six months and nothing is said; also in the tailor shop and much of the domestic help. I'm not complaining; it only makes sense. Why train these geezers if you intend to send them back to Yipton? There's no flyers at Yipton, so far as I know. If you want trained Yips for Yipton, you train them yourself." "You're talking nonsense, Chiike!" With amiable pertinacity Chiike continued. "If I can't keep the ones I have now, don't send any at all. I'll bring in my own help." Namour drew himself up to his full height. Slowly turning his head, he brought a glacial stare to bear on Chiike. He said: "Listen well, Chiike, so that there will be no misunderstanding. Your orders come from me and you will do exactly as you are told. Otherwise, two roads lead into the future. The first is uneventful: you resign with your health and leave Araminta Station by the fast ship." Chilke's ropy grin grew even broader. He put his hand upon Namour's face and pushed with great force, to send Namour reeling back against the wall. Chiike said: "That kind of talk makes me nervous. If we're going to stay friends, you'll beg my pardon with full sincerity and leave, smiling and closing the door quietly on your way out. Otherwise I'm going to tousle you around a bit." Namour, a Clattuc and no coward, was nonetheless a trifle daunted. At last he said: "Come on, then; we'll see who gets tousled." The two men were much of a weight. Namour, with a good physique, stood taller by two inches. Chiike was more compact, burly at the ; chest and shoulders, with long arms and heavy fists. As the Yips and some boys from the lyceum watched, the two fought an epic battle, and in the end Chiike stood grinning his twisted grin down at Namour, [ half propped against the wall. "Now, then," said Chiike. "Let's face the facts. Why you brought me here I don't know. You weren't concerned for my welfare, and I don't think you're avid for the stuffed owl I owe you." Namour started to speak, then checked himself and painfully rubbed the side of his face. Chiike went on. "Whatever the reason, I'm here. So long as I stay and keep your scheme going, I'm paying you all I owe you. Otherwise, and except for the owl, we're even. You keep to your line of work and I'll keep to mine. Now back to the help. I'll take your six-month Yips, if you insist! But I'll use them for dog work only and fill out with my own staff, which is the way I want it anyway." Namour pulled himself to his feet. "For your information, the Conservator won't allow any more Yip extensions. If you don't like it, go down to Riverview House and tousle him around like you did me." Chiike laughed. "I may be wild but I'm not reckless. I'll have to puzzle this one out." Namour departed without further words. Relations thereafter between the two were polite but not overly cordial. Namour gave no more orders to Chiike, while Chiike made no further complaints in regard to the six-month Yips. Bureau D allowed him the services of Porric co-Diffin, to be trained as an assistant manager, while the Yips were employed only at "dog work." With the onset of autumn anticipation of the wine festival, Parilia, with its banquets, masques and revels began to color the thoughts of everyone. At Parilia almost any kind of eccentric behavior was not only condoned but encouraged, so long as a costume purported to conceal identities. Araminta Hotel had long been booked and over booked so that, during the week of Parilia, all manner of desperate expedients would become necessary. In the end, no one would suffer disappointment; if necessary, the six great houses would throw open their guest chambers and feed the visitors in the formal dining halls, and no one so lodged had ever been known to complain. Glawen had undertaken no special role at Parilia. He lacked proficiency with musical instruments, and the antics of Floreste's Mummers interested him not at all. His studies at the lyceum had given him no difficulty, even though he had continued flight training, and at the end of the first quarter-term he was awarded a Certificate of Excellence. Aries received an Urgent Notice of Unsatisfactory Achievement. Giawen's methods were disarmingly simple: he did his work methodically, promptly and thoroughly. Aries used a different philosophy. From the beginning his work was meager, late and incomplete. He was nevertheless confident that through clever manipulation, bluff and sheer elan he could avoid tedious drudgery and drill and yet promote good grades for himself. Upon receiving the Urgent Notice, Aries was both impatient and exasperated. In a single decisive gesture he crumpled the message and flung it aside; such was his opinion of all pedagogues! Why did they bother him with such priggish little messages? What did they hope to achieve? The notice told him nothing he wanted to hear; the pedants lacked all largeness of perception! Surely it was obvious that he could not cram his large and sweeping talents into the petty little pigeonholes which they had designated, and which were all they knew! Ah well, he must ignore, or by some means slide around, all this pettifoggery. One way or another things would sort themselves out and he would be graduated into full Agency. Any other possibility was unthinkable! If worse came to worst, he might even be forced to study! Or his mother, Spanchetta, would set matters right with a few well-chosen words, although involving Spanchetta was a risky business. Far better, if at all possible, to let sleeping dogs lie. At the end of Aries' second term this would be at the beginning of summer, before Glawen's sixteenth birthday Aries had failed promotion into the third-year class. It was a serious situation which Aries could remedy only by attending summer school and passing an examination. Unfortunately, Aries had made other plans involving Master Floreste and the Mummers, which he did not wish to alter. The Honorable Sonorius Offaw, superintendent of the lyceum, called Aries to his office and made the situation clear: if Aries failed to meet the lyceum's minimum requirements before his twenty-first birthday, his Agency status would be canceled and he would become a collateral without option, which meant that under no circumstances could he regain Agency status, unlike collaterals who had met the educational qualifications. Once or twice Aries tried to interrupt, in order to express his own views, but the superintendent made Aries listen to the very end, so that Aries became more annoyed and edgy than ever. At last Aries said: "Sir, I understand that my grades should be better, but, as I tried to explain, I was ill during both of the midterm examinations, and did poorly. The instructors in each class refused to make allowances." "Rightly so. The examinations measure your scholastic achievements not the state of your health." He looked at Aries' card. "I see you have opted into Bureau D." "I intend to be an oenologist," said Aries sullenly. "In that case, I advise that you attend summer school and make up your failed work; otherwise you will be cultivating your grapes in very far vineyards." Aries scowled. "I'm already committed to Master Floreste for the summer. I am a member of the Mummers Troupe, as you probably know." "That is irrelevant. I can hardly express myself more succinctly but I will try. Either do your schoolwork or fail to graduate." Aries cried out in pain: "But we will be making an off-world tour to Soum and Dauncy's World, which I don't want to miss!" Sonorius Offaw rubbed his forehead with the tips of his fingers. "You may go. I will communicate with your parents and inform them of your problem." Aries departed the office, and a day later intercepted the official note before it reached Spanchetta: an act of subtle ingenuity, Aries told himself with a grin. If his mother had read the note, she might well have kept him home all summer, with his nose pressed to the scholastic grindstone. What a bore! He desperately wanted to make this particular tour, if only to prevent Kirdy Wook from having a free hand with the girls. Not that Kirdy, a large earnest fresh-faced youth, was all that much of a threat. So Aries avoided summer school, and toured off-world with the Mummers, returning to Araminta Station a few days before Glawen's birthday, much too late for summer session. When lyceum started, Aries found himself enrolled at the second-year level. How should he best explain the matter to his mother? By not explaining at all: that was the answer. The matter would probably evade her notice; then, by one means or another, he would repair the difficulty. The final day of the quarter-term was a half day, and the students were allowed a free afternoon. Glawen, Aries and four others took themselves to the dock beside the airport, to oversee the arrival of the ferry from Yipton with a contingent of workers for the grape harvest. The group consisted of Glawen, Aries, Kirdy Wook, Uther Offaw, Kiper Laverty and Cloyd Diffin. Kirdy, the oldest and, like Aries, a Mummer, was a large careful young man, somber of manner, with round blue eyes; large features, and a fair, almost pinkish complexion. He used a terse mode of speaking, perhaps to disguise his shyness. In general the girls thought Kirdy dull and a trifle self-righteous. Sessily Veder, whose pretty face and irrepressible personality charmed all who saw her, referred to Kirdy as a "fussy old pussycat." If he heard her, he gave no sign, but a week later, to the surprise of everyone, he joined the Bold Lions, as if to demonstrate that he wasn't such a dullard after all. Kiper Laverty, who was Glawen's age, contrasted in every way with Kirdy, in that he was brash, noisy, active, not at all shy, and ready for any and all mischief. Uther Offaw, a complicated individual almost as old as Kirdy, performed meticulous work at the lyceum, but in private demonstrated a wry mentality which spun off ideas wild, quaint and sometimes reckless. His hair, a straw-colored ruff, grew back from a high forehead which seemed to funnel directly into a long nose. Uther was also a Bold Lion. Cloyd Diffin, another Bold Lion, presented a staid imperturbable face to the world. He was strong and stocky, with dark hair, a heavy hooked nose and massive chin. Cloyd formulated few ideas of his own but could be counted upon to follow the lead of others. The six youths strolled up Beach Road to the dock, where the ferry from Lutwen Atoll was about to discharge its cargo of Yips. At the debarkation gate stood Namour, the labor coordinator: a man tall and handsome with a head of glistening white hair. Namour, a Clattuc collateral, had fared far and wide across the Reach; he had known good times and bad; he had engaged in a hundred exploits and adventures, most of which he refused to discuss. He claimed to have seen everything worth seeing and to have done everything worth doing: a cool flat statement which no one had ever challenged. His experiences had left him with a patina of urbane good manners and an understated elegance, which Aries thought to use as a model for his own conduct. The six youths joined Namour, who acknowledged their presence with an austere nod. Aries asked: "How many in today's load?" "According to the roster, one hundred and forty." "Hmmf! That's quite a parcel. Are they all grape workers?" "I expect we'll use some of them at Parilia." Aries inspected the Yips lined up along the ship's rail: young men and women dressed alike in knee-length white kilties. They waited quietly, with mild expressions: by and large a well-favored folk. The young men were of uniformly good physique, if somewhat slender, with bronze skins, ringlets of dusty-blond hair, golden-hazel eyes set faun like widely apart. The faces of the girls were softer and rounder, and their hair showed generally a darker copper-gold color. Their arms and legs were slim and graceful: no question but that the Yip girls were beautiful. Some folk were especially intrigued by what they considered a hint of an alien, or nonhuman, quality, which just as many others failed to perceive. The gates opened; the Yips filed past a desk, announced their names in soft slurred voices and received their work permits. Namour and the six youths stood to the side, watching the process. "Alike as peas in a pod," Kiper reported to Glawen. "That's how they look to me." "It might be that we look exactly alike to them." "I hope not," said Kiper. "I wouldn't want even a Yip to think that I looked like Uther or Aries." Uther laughed, but Aries turned a haughty glance over his shoulder. "I heard that, Kiper. Such remarks are not well advised." "Kiper is very ugly," said Uther. "I endorse his remark." "Well, yes," said Aries. "On those grounds I do too." Uther asked: "Have you noticed the odor, when the breeze blows this way? It's the typical Yip reek, that you notice when you go out on the Concourse at Yipton." He referred to a faint soft scent, like water weeds with a hint of spice and indefinable human exudation. "Some say it's a result of their diet," Namour told the group. "Personally, I suspect that a Yip smells like a Yip, and that is that." "I'm not bothered," said Aries. "Oh, my sacred Clattuc elbow! Look yonder at those three lovely creatures! I'll smell them from morning till night, and ask for more! Namour, you may assign them to me, here and now!" Namour turned him a cool glance. "Certainly, if you're willing to pay." "How much?" "They come high, especially those with the black earrings. That means they're associated with a man. In loose terms: married." "What of the others? Are they virgins?" "How should I know? They still come high." "What a pity!" moaned Aries. "Can't I have just one of them free?" "You'd have a knife in the ribs just as quickly. The men are not meek; don't let those placid faces fool you. They don't like us in the first place, and even less when we start fooling with their girls unless we pay. They'll do anything for money, but never try to cheat them. A few years ago a tourist forced himself on a Yip girl while she picked grapes. Like a fool he refused to pay. Two Yips held him while a third pushed a grape stake down his throat all the way. A nasty business." "What happened to the Yips?" "Nothing. If you play, pay. Better yet, leave the Yip girls alone." Uther Offaw glanced skeptically toward Namour. "Does that apply to you? There always seems to be a pretty Yip girl fluffing out your pillows and another running your bath." Namour allowed a faint smile to appear on his handsome face. "Never mind about me. Over a lifetime I've learned a hundred little tricks which I call lubrications. Most of them I keep to myself, but I'll share one of them with you, free of charge: "Never push too hard at anything; it might start pushing back."" Uther frowned. "Very profound, and I'm grateful, especially since it's free. But what's it got to do with Yip girls?" "Nothing. Or perhaps everything. You puzzle it out." Namour went off to deal with the new contingent of workers. The six youths returned along the Beach Road to the lyceum. In the open-air refectory they discovered a group of girls regaling themselves with fruit ices. Two, Ticia Wook and Lexy Laverty, were legitimate beauties; the other two, Jerdys Diffin and Cloe Offaw, were definitely attractive. All were a year or two older than Glawen and outside his field of interest. Uther Offaw, though a freethinker, could be most courtly and polite when the need arose. He now called out in his best voice: "Girls! Why do you bloom here unseen in the shade of the gadroon tree?" "They're not really blooming," said Kiper. "They are eating right and left like little gluttons." Ticia in a single glance had gauged the quality of the boys. All were either too young or too callow and good for nothing but practice. She looked down at her dish. "A mango smash? That's far from gluttony." "In that case, why bother?" Jerdys said: "If you must know, this is a meeting of the "Medusa Cult', and we are planning our program for next year." Cloe said: "We intend to conquer Araminta Station and enslave all the men." "Hush, Cloe!" exclaimed Jerdys. "You're giving away cult secrets!" "We can make up some more. Secrets are easy. I use up dozens every day." "Ahem!" said Aries. "Have you noticed our presence? Must we stand here like storks, or are we invited to sit at your table?" Ticia shrugged. "Do as you like. But please pay for your own ices." "No fear. Aside from Glawen and Kiper, you are in the company of cultivated gentlemen." The four older boys found chairs and managed to squeeze up to the table. Glawen and Kiper were pushed aside and forced to sit somewhat apart at another table: a situation which they accepted philosophically. Lexy Laverty asked: "Well then, what have you 'cultivated gentle men' been up to?" "Just wandering about, discussing our investments," said Uther. Kiper called across the gap: "Aries is behind in his classwork, so we studied anthropology at the ferry slip." Aries said with dignity: "More to the point, we looked over some space yachts. There's a new Purple Prince which I swear I will buy before ten years is out!" Kiper, who knew no inhibition, called out: "I thought you were saving up for one of the Yip girls." "Aha!" said Ticia. "So that's where you've been! Drooling over the Yip girls like the precocious little lechers you are!" "Not Aries!" said Uther. "All he wanted to do was smell them." Kiper said: "That may or may not be lechery--although it's definitely odd." "I'm inclined to agree," said Uther. "Ticia, what do you think? Has anyone ever wanted to smell you?" "I think that you are both lunatics! That's what I think." Aries said primly: "I know better than to fool with Yip girls. Do you think I want to be strangled and killed and burned alive and then stabbed just for a bit of naughty conduct?" Kiper said: "If your mother caught you at it, you'd fare even worse." Aries' face became a thundercloud. "Let's leave my mother out of it, shall we? She has nothing to do with the case at hand!" "What was the case at hand?" asked Kirdy, speaking for the first time. "I've forgotten what we were talking about." Jerdys said plaintively: "Let's discuss something really wonderful and interesting, like the Medusa Cult." "I'm willing," said Cloyd. "Do you have a gentlemen's auxiliary?" "Not now," said Jerdys. "We used them all for sacrifices." "Ha-hah!" Lexy cried out. "Who is divulging secrets now?" "Those secrets are well used and no good to anyone." Aries said: "Speaking of secrets, I have a splendid idea! Have you noticed that there are four Medusa-type girls here, and also four Bold Lions? Glawen and Kiper don't count; in fact, they were on the point of going home. I suggest that we join forces and go off to somewhere quiet where we can drink wine and sort out all our old secrets, and maybe work up some new ones." "That's one of Aries' rare good ideas," said Cloyd. "I'll vote yes." "And I," said Kirdy, smiling self-consciously. "There's two yes votes. Aries will probably vote yes also, which makes three. Uther?" Uther pursed his lips. "I think that I will reserve my vote until the ladies are heard from. I assume that they will all vote in the affirmative." "Silence means assent," said Aries. "So then--" "To the contrary," said Lexy crisply. "Silence in this case means shock and astonishment." Jerdys asked: "What do you take us for? This is the Medusa Cult: a very select group!" Cloe suggested: "Go try the Nixies or the Girls' Philosophy Club." Ticia rose to her feet. "It's quite time that I was getting home." "I wonder why we waited this long," said Jerdys with a sniff. The girls departed. The Bold Lions looked after them nonplussed. Kiper broke the silence. "How very odd! One mention of the Bold Lions and the girls dash away as if they were running a race." Glawen stated: "Aries has written a book for the use of Bold Lions only. It is called Manual of the Erotic Arts. On the first page he should print a warning: "Never admit to being a Bold Lion! If you do, the warranty on this book becomes void."" Kiper said smugly: "I'm glad that I'm not a Bold Lion. What of you, Glawen?" "I'm quite happy the way I am." Aries declared grimly: "Neither of you will ever be invited into the group; you can be sure of that!" Kiper jumped to his feet. "Come, Glawen! Let's leave before Aries changes his mind!" Glawen and Kiper departed. Uther made a wry comment: "For a fact, our public image seems to be, shall we say, not superb." "Most odd!" said Cloyd. "After all, we're not deep-dyed ruffians." "Not all of us, at any rate," growled Kirdy Wook. Aries demanded sharply: "What do you mean by that?" "Your suggestion to the girls that we go somewhere and cuddle was preposterous, if not vulgar." , "You voted for it!" "I did not want to hurt anyone's feelings," said Kirdy virtuously. "Hmmf! Well, it was an idea. They could have said yes or they could have said no. Who knows? Next time it might be yes. That's the theory behind a whole section in my book, entitled: "Go for it; what can you lose?"" Kirdy rose to his feet. "I've got schoolwork to do. I'm going home." He departed. Aries said thoughtfully: "Kirdy can be just a bit pompous at times. He's not what I would call a typical Bold Lion." Cloyd said: "If just for this reason, he improves our image." Uther sighed. "You may well be right. Except for Kirdy, we're a fairly erratic group, at the fringe of civilization . I'm going home too. I'm a bit behind in mathematics." "I guess I'll do the same," said Aries dubiously. "Old Sonorius hit me with an Urgent Notice that I'm supposed to show my mother." Uther asked in interest: "Are you going to do so?" "Small chance of that!" But when Aries returned to his chambers he found that the lyceum had sent his mother a separate notification. As soon as Aries appeared at Clattuc House, Spanchetta demanded an explanation of the Urgent Notice. "Apparently you are repeating last year's work, a fact which I am now learning for the first time! Why was I not notified at the start of the term?" "Of course you were notified!" declared Aries. "I told you myself, and you said, "You must do better this year," or something like that, and I said I would." "I recall no such occasion." "You might have been thinking about something else." "How is it that you are doing so poorly even on the repeat course? Don't you ever study?" Throwing himself down in a chair, Aries cast about for some plausible excuse. "I'm certainly capable of better work, but it's not all my fault! I blame it mostly on those dreary little bookworms who call themselves instructors. You can't imagine the stupefying boredom to which they put you nowadays I'm not the only one who complains. But I get singled out for criticism and bad grades!" Spanchetta surveyed him with eyes half closed. "Odd. Why should that be?" "I suppose it's because I have an inquiring mind and I can't take everything for granted, just to get a good grade. I consider them a snobbish little clique of pettifoggers, and they know it." Spanchetta nodded with ominous deliberation. "Hmm. Why do other students manage so well? Glav/en has won a certificate." "Don't talk to me of Glawen! He uses every smarmy little trick imaginable to ingratiate himself! Everyone knows it and everyone but Glawen feels as I do! We all want reasonable teachers, who play no favorites!" "I'll have to look into this," said Spanchetta. In sudden alarm Aries asked: "What are you going to do?" "I am going to get to the bottom of the situation, and one way or another straighten things out." "Wait!" cried Aries in poignant tones. "I'd prefer that you just give me a letter, stating that I have many responsibilities and don't need such a heavy concentration of mathematics and science! It won't look well if you go down there yourself." Spanchetta gave her head an impatient shake, which caused her great pile of ringlets to sway and lurch, but by some miracle maintain their shape. "When I want something, I get it, no matter how it looks. You must learn to be thick-skinned if you want to get on in life." "Bah," muttered Aries. "I'm doing quite well enough already." ;| "If you lose Agency because of bad grades you will sing a different | song." | The next morning Spanchetta took herself to the lyceum and approached Instructor Arnold Fleck in the hall outside the mathematics | classroom. i| Spanchetta halted. Looking Fleck up and down, she took note of| his slight physique, thin pale face and mild blue eyes. Could this be a the malevolent ogre of the many revenges so feelingly described by " Aries? } Fleck recognized Spanchetta and instantly divined the nature of| her mission. "Good morning, madame. Can I assist you in any way?" I "That remains to be seen. You are Instructor Fleck?" "I am indeed." "I am Spanchetta Clattuc of Clattuc House. My son, Aries, so I believe, is under your supervision?" Fleck considered. "Nominally so, and for a fact I see him from time to time." ; Spanchetta frowned. She wanted a brisk businesslike understanding, i without evasions or glib little ambiguities. This Instructor Fleck had made a bad beginning. "Please, sir, if you will! You are Aries' instructor in mathematics?" "Yes, madame." "Hm. He seems to be having problems and he insists that he is not to blame. He feels that the material is presented incorrectly." Instructor Fleck smiled a cool sad smile. "I will teach him any way he likes, so long as he does the work. He cannot absorb the subject by osmosis; he must do the drills and work out the problems, all of which is admittedly tedious." Spanchetta glanced around at the circle of students who had paused to watch and listen, but was in no wise deterred. She lowered her voice an ominous half octave. "Aries seems to feel that he has been singled out for harassment and criticism." Fleck nodded. "In this case, Aries has reported the facts correctly. He is the only member of the class who takes a surly attitude toward his work. Inevitably, he is the only one criticized." Spanchetta sniffed. "I am thoroughly disconcerted. Clearly, something is amiss." "It is a sad case!" said Fleck. "Would you care to sit down and rest until you feel better?" "I am not ill, but outraged! It is your duty to teach the subject fairly and fully to each member of the class, making every allowance for individual temperament!" "Your remarks are well-taken! I would feel gloom and guilt, but for a single consideration: each of Aries' other instructors finds the same problem: a kind of obstinate laziness which defeats the best of intentions." Fleck looked around the circle of onlookers. "Have you people nothing better to do? This matter is no concern of yours." Then, to Spanchetta: "Step into the classroom, if you will. It is unoccupied at this time and I have something to show you." Spanchetta followed Fleck to his desk, where he handed her several sheets of paper. "Here is a sample of Aries' work. Instead of finishing the problems, he draws grotesque faces and what appear to be dead fish." Spanchetta took a deep breath. "Bring Aries here! We shall hear what he has to say." Fleck spoke into the telephone and presently Aries sidled into the room. Spanchetta shook the papers in his face. "Why do you draw corpuscles and dead fish instead of solving your problems?" Aries cried out indignantly. "Those are an studies: drawings of nude human figures!" "Whatever you call them, why are they here instead of the proper work?" "I was thinking about something else." Fleck looked at Spanchetta. "Is there any other way I can help you, Madame Spanchetta? If not.." Spanchetta jerked her hand at Aries. "Go back to your class!" Aries gratefully departed. Spanchetta turned to Fleck. "I need not emphasize that Aries must receive a passing grade. Otherwise he will lose his Agency status." Fleck shrugged. "He has much work to make up. The sooner he starts and the harder he works, the better his chances of passing." "I will put this to him. Strangely, I dreamt of this entire episode last night. The dream began in just this fashion; I remember every word!" "Amazing!" said Fleck. "Madame, I wish you good day." Spanchetta paid no heed. "In the dream poor Aries was given a failing grade, which seemed to set in motion a whole string of misfortunes which even involved the instructor. It was a most realistic and rather terrible dream." "I hope it is not precognition," said Fleck. "Probably not. Still who knows? Odd things happen." | Fleck considered a moment. "Your dream is the oddest of them all. | As of this moment Aries is dropped from the class. Superintendent! Sonorius Offaw will henceforth deal with his case. Good day, madame. j There is nothing more to be said." | On Ac following day, Superintendent Sonorius called Aries and| Spanchetta to his office. Spanchetta emerged shaking with rage; Aries, I morose and glum, marched along behind her. Spanchetta had learned| that she must hire a special tutor in mathematics, at her own expense, I and that at the end of each quarter-term Superintendent Sonorius | himself would supervise the examinations. | Aries at last saw that, like it or not, the halcyon times of indolence I and languor had come to an end. Grumbling and cursing, he set | himself to his toil, under the bleak tutelage of an instructor appointed | by Superintendent Sonorius. ; For hours on end, during all his spare time, Aries drilled on fundamentals and all the material that he had scamped before, and: presently, somewhat to his own surprise, he discovered that the subject ? was not as difficult as he had assumed. | To make the situation even more irksome, Sessily Veder now | returned to Araminta Station. Sessily, one of Floreste's Mummers, | had met her mother and her younger sister, Miranda (better known | as Squeaker) at Soumjiana on the world Soum. The three had then| gone on to visit a wealthy Veder connection at his villa on the romantic | Calliope Coast, between Guyol and Sorrentine on the world Cassiopeia | 993'9. I Sessily, a year or so younger than Glawen, was totally charming;! everyone conceded as much. A joyful providence had graced her with;| every natural asset: a cheerful intelligence, a fine sense of humor, a I friendly affectionate disposition; and in addition almost unfairly glowing good health, a beautiful slim body and an impish snub-nosed face under a cap of loose brown curls, f Sessily's only detractors were one or two of the older girls, namely Ticia and Lexy, who seemed pallid and severe when Sessily joined; the company. "Vain little exhibitionist!" they muttered to each; other, but Sessily only laughed when the comments were reported to her. i For Sessily schoolwork came easily. She entered lyceum a year; earlier than ordinary, which placed her in Glawen's class. When she traveled, she took her lesson books with her and on her return to Araminta Station merged effortlessly into the work of her class. Sessily seemed to bring a vital new dimension to the lyceum. She was perhaps not consciously a flirt; still she took an innocent delight in exercising the wonderful new knack she had so recently discovered. Sessily was the main reason why Aries had so reluctantly given up the Mummers, thus abandoning Sessily to the attentions of Kirdy Wook, Banceck Diffin and others, even though Sessiiy had shown no one conspicuous favor. This year Floreste's spectacles at Parilia would be curtailed. Sessily would take part, along with the orchestra and some others, but to Aries' relief, neither Evolution of the Gods nor First-Fire would be presented, thus depriving Aries' rivals of opportunities denied to Aries himself. For her part Sessily felt no partiality for anyone connected with the Mummers. At Soumjiana one or two incidents had taught her something of the almost frightening forces she could generate but not control. She had decided that after Parilia she would retire from the troupe. "I guess things will never be the same," Sessily told herself. "Isn't it odd? The only boy I like hardly looks at me, while the others become familiar if I'm so much as polite!" In this latter category Aries was pre-eminent. He had developed a tactic for intercepting her when she came to the refectory for lunch and taking her willy-nilly to a side table and there devoting the entire hour to a discussion of himself and his plans for the future. "The truth is, Sessily, that I'm one of those fellows who are not satisfied with just the ordinary! I know what is absolutely top quality in this world, and I propose to get it. That means going after it, with no ifs, ands, or buts! I'm not one of this world's losers! That's for sure! I'm telling you this so you'll know the kind of fellow I am! And I'll tell you something else, quite frankly. "Aries reached across the table and took her hand. "I'm interested in you. Very much so! Don't you think that's nice?" Sessily pulled away her hand. "No, not really. You should broaden your interests in case I'm not available." "Not available? Why not? You're alive and I'm alive." "True. But I'm going away on a solitary tour of the universe, or I might become a Trappist monk." "Ha, ha! What a joke! Girls can't be Trappist monks!" "Still, if I did, I'd be very unavailable." Aries said crossly: "Can't you be serious?" "I am very serious ... Excuse me, please. I see Zanny Diffin over yonder and there's something I must tell her." On the following day, despite Sessily's attempt to hide by holding a folder in front other face, Aries found her sitting alone in the shade of the gadroon tree, and sat down at her table. With one plump white finger he pushed down the folder and smiled a wide toothy smile at her over the top. "Peekaboo! It's Aries. And how is the young Trappist monk today?" "I plan to cut off all my hair and paint my face blue, and wear a mustache, so people won't recognize me," said Sessily. "Ha, ha! That's marvelous! Can I do the cutting and the painting? I wonder what Master Floreste would say, especially if I painted myself red, and we showed up hand in hand!" "That act would be called "Nightmare of a Maniac." Floreste will: never see it. I'm quitting the Mummers." "Really? That's good news! I'm out of the Mummers too, until my grades get better. We'll be together all next summer." "I think not. I'm working at Opal Springs Lodge." Aries leaned forward. Today he had primed himself with a strategy from his Manual of the Erotic Arts. "There's something I want to talk to you about. Would you like to own a space yacht?" "What a foolish question. Is there anyone who wouldn't?" Aries said earnestly: "You and I should make plans together, about the kind of yacht we want. For instance, how do you like those new Spang Vandals? Or the Model Fourteen Nasebys with the after-saloon?; They're not so common and maybe not quite so dashing, but the appointments are truly superb! What's your opinion!" "Anything would be nice," said Sessily. "However, there's the; matter of ownership. I'm too much of a coward to steal and too poor to buy." '. "Don't worry there! Just trust me in that department! I'll find the' money, and we'll buy one together, and go roaming! Think of the fun; we could have!" Sessily gave her hand a flippant wave. "My mother has much more money than I do. Why don't you talk it over with her? You could take your mother along too, and you'd all have a wonderful time." Aries stared at her with black eyebrows lofted in displeasure. According to the Manual, girls never responded in this fashion. Was Sessily some kind of a little freak? He asked peevishly: "Wouldn't you like to visit the Glass Towns of Cianctus? And the canals of Old Kharay? And don't forget Xanarre, with the alien ruins and the floating cloud-cities." "Right now I've simply got to visit the girls' room. You sit here and dream away to your heart's content." "Wait one moment! I've decided to escort you to Parilia! What do you say to that?" "I say, make another decision, since I have different plans." "Oh? With whom are you going?" "Tra-la-la! That's my secret! I may even stay home and read a book." "What! During Parilia? Sessily, I insist that you be serious!" "Aries, please excuse me! If I stand here and wet myself I will be very serious indeed!" Sessily departed, leaving Aries glowering after her. Sessily, so he noticed, did not go directly to the girls' room, but stopped to talk to Glawen, where he sat alone. He looked up smiling and pointed to something in the book which lay open on the table. She put a hand on his shoulder and bent over to look; then she said something and went off to the girls' room. When she emerged a few moments later she went directly to join Glawen, without so much as a glance elsewhere. With ostentatious displeasure Aries rose to his feet and left the refectory. Glawen, like many others, had also become captivated by Sessily. He liked her saucy mannerisms, her jaunty style of walking, her trick of glancing sideways with a half-smile hinting of delicious mischief. But whenever Glawen thought to talk with her, it seemed that someone else came bustling up to monopolize her attention. He was therefore pleasantly surprised when she joined him at his table. "Well, Glawen, I'm back, and I've got to ask you a question." "Very well. Ask away." "Someone ^old me that you said, in your opinion, I was a hateful little frump." "Did they; now!" said Glawen, startled. "Do you admit to that, Glawen?" Glawen shook his head. "Somebody else must have said it. Aries, possibly." "And you don't even think that I am?" "Definitely not. I'd like to tell you sometime what I really think, but you're always with half a dozen others, and I can't get a word in." Sessily said thoughtfully: "Aries just asked if he could escort me to Parilia. I said no, because I was going with someone else." "Oh? Who?" "I don't know yet. I suppose someone nice will ask me before too long." Glawen started to speak but the bell rang for classes. Sessily jumped to her feet and was gone. Glawen sat looking after her. Could she possibly have been suggesting something so unexpected and so wonderful as to be almost incredible? Aries tried to walk Sessily home as often as possible, but on this particular afternoon he was delayed in class and Sessily gratefully set off by herself. Glawen, who had been waiting, almost missed her, but ran to catch up. Sessily looked over her shoulder. "For a dreadful moment I thought it was Aries." "No, it's me, and I've been thinking over your problem." "Really, Glawen? How very kind! Has anything occurred to you?" "Yes! I thought that I might ask to be your escort." Sessily stopped short and turned to face him. She smiled up into his face. "Glawen! What a surprise! Are you sure you're not just being kind?" "Quite sure. Very sure indeed!" "And you don't think me a hateful little frump?" "I never did." "In that case yes!" Glawen turned and looked at her in sheer joy and took her hands. "For some reason I feel very strange inside, as if I were full of bubbles." , "I do too. Could it be for the same reason?" "I don't know." ; "Probably not exactly the same. Don't forget, I'm a girl and you're, a boy." "I haven't forgotten for an instant." "We're supposed to have different reasons for doing the same things." At least that's what Floreste says. It's what makes the world go round, according to Floreste." "Sessily, what a wise person you are!" "It's nothing, really." Sessily moved a step forward and kissed him. Then she jerked back as if aghast at her own daring. "I shouldn't have. done that! You'll think me very bold." "Well not too bold." "I've been wanting to kiss you for weeks, and I just couldn't wait any longer." Glawen reached to put his arm around her, but Sessily became perversely coy. "Only I may do the kissing; not you." "That's not fair!" "Perhaps not... Don't delay, then; we don't want to be late getting home from school!" Aries, sauntering along Wansey Way, turned his head and saw Glawen and Sessily where they stood in the shade of a weeping willow. He halted to stare, then gave a hoot of mocking laughter. "Haw, haw! I have interrupted a tender moment! Isn't this a somewhat public place for intimacies? Glawen, I never expected such conduct from you!" Sessily laughed. "Glawen has been kind and that is why I am kissing him. I may well do it again. Are you leaving?" "What's the hurry? I might learn something interesting." "In that case, we'll go." Sessily took Glawen's arm. "Come; the neighborhood has gone to pieces." The two departed with full dignity, and Aries was left standing in the road. Sessily looked anxiously up at GSawen. "I hope you haven't let him annoy you." Glawen gave his head a dour shake. "I feel foolish." Sessily's arm stiffened and Glawen added hastily: "Because I couldn't make up my mind what to do! Should I have punched his face? I stood there like a dummy! And, truly, I'm not afraid of him!" "You did exactly right," said Sessily. "Aries is a lummox! Why trouble yourself and get all sweaty? Especially since you have no real chance of beating him." Glawen blew out his breath. "I suppose you're right. But if it happens again ..." Sessily squeezed his arm. "I don't want you involved in foolish rows on account of me. Are you going to walk me home?" "Of course!" At the portal giving on the avenue to Veder House, Sessily looked up and down the way. "I must be careful; my mother already thinks I'm a hoyden." She tilted her face and kissed Glawen, who tried to catch her in his arms. Sessily laughed and drew back. "I must go." Glawen said huskily: "Will you meet me this evening, after supper?" Sessiiy shook her head. "There's a chart I must draw for school and I must practice the tunes I'm supposed to play at Parilia. After that I am supposed to be in bed Still, now that I think of it, tomorrow night Mother will be at her committee meeting, and I won't be under such strict control--which evidently would seem to be necessary." "Tomorrow night, then. Where?" "Do you know our rose garden, on the east side of the house?" "Where all the statues stand on guard?" Sessily nodded. "I'll come out, if I can, about two hours into the evening. I'll meet you where the steps come down from the upper terrace." "I'll be there." The next day was Milden;' there was no school. For Glawen the day seemed to drag on interminably: minute after minute after minute. An hour after sunset he changed into dark blue trousers and a soft gray shirt. Scharde noticed the preparations. "What's all this afoot? Or is it a secret?" Glawen made a casual gesture. "Nothing of any consequence. Just a social engagement." "Who is the lucky girl?" "Sessily Veder." Scharde chuckled. "Don't let her mother catch you. She's Felice Veder, who was born a Wook, and has never relinquished her virtue." "I'll have to take my chances." "I don't blame you. Sessily is a charmer; no doubt of it! Be off with you, and need I say " "I already know, or at least I think I do." "Just as you like." Glawen paused by the door. "Whatever else, don't tell anyone, especially Aries!" "Naturally not. Do you take me for a fool?" "No. But you've taught me yourself never to take anything for granted." Scharde, laughing, squeezed Glawen's shoulders. "Absolutely right! Just don't get caught!" Glawen laughed nervously and departed the chambers. He descended the staircase and stepped out into the night. On feet charged with energy he half walked, half ran to Veder House; then, making a wide circuit through the meadow, he approached the rose garden. He passed between a pair of great marble urns, pale in the starlight and trailing fronds of dark ivy, and so entered the rose garden. To right and left heroic statues stood in a pair of opposing rows, with beds of white roses between. Beyond loomed the towers and tiers, bays and balconies of Veder House, black except for a few random rectangles of soft yellow glow across the streaming stars of Mircea's Wisp. Glawen walked up the central way to the far steps. He paused to listen, but the garden was silent. The scent of the white roses hung in the air; and forever after, the scent of roses would remind Glawen of this night. ' Originally "Ain-Milden" (literally "this day of silver"), equivalent to contemporary "Saturday." The word Am gradually dropped from usage and only the metal name remained. The days of the week, beginning with Monday: Ort, Tzein, Ing, Glimmet, Verd, Milden and Smollen. Translated: iron, zinc, lead, tin, copper, silver and gold. He was alone in the garden except for the statues. He went quietly to the place of rendezvous. Sessily had not yet arrived. He went to sit on a bench in the shadows and composed himself to wait. Time passed. Glawen looked up at the stars, many of which he could name. He found the constellation known as Endymion's Lute. At the very center, a telescope of sufficient power would discover Old Sol ... He heard a faint sound. A soft voice called: "Glawen? Are you here?" Glawen stepped from the shadows. "I'm here, by the bench." Sessily made a small wordless sound and ran to meet him; they embraced. Intoxication! Overhead: the flow of Mircea's Wisp streaming across the void; in the garden the pale roses and the marble statues silent in the starlight. "Come," said Sessily. "Let's go over to the arbor, where we can sit." She led him to a round open-sided pergola with vines growing up the pillars. The two seated themselves on an upholstered bench which went halfway around the inner circumference. Minutes passed. Sessily stirred and looked up. "You're very quiet." "I was thinking some rather strange thoughts." "What kind of thoughts? Tell me!" "They are hard to describe: more a matter of mood than thoughts." "Try anyway." Glawen spoke haltingly. "I looked up at the sky and the stars, and I felt a sudden openness--as if my mind were aware of the whole galaxy. At the same time I felt all the millions and billions of people who had spread through the stars. Their lives, or the people, seemed to give off a whir or a hum, really a soft slow music. For just an instant I could hear the music and I felt its meaning and then it was gone, and I was looking at the stars and you asked me why I was quiet." After a moment Sessily said: "Thoughts like that make me gloomy. I like to pretend that the world started when I was born and will go on forever, and never change." "That's a very mysterious universe." "Who cares? It works nicely enough, and suits me very well, so I don't worry about the machinery." She sat up and twisted around so as to face Glawen. "I don't want you thinking peculiar thoughts or humming weird music to yourself. It distracts your attention from me. I'm much more fun than the stars--I think." "I'm convinced of it." In the eastern sky a flush of pale vermilion announced the coming of Sing and Lorca, the other two stars of the system. As they watched, first Sing, then Lorca bumped up over the horizon: Sing like a wan orange moon; Lorca, a very bright star flashing prismatic colors. Sessily said: "I can't stay out late. The committee is meeting at our house, and your Great-aunt Spanchetta is on hand. She and Mother always quarrel, and the meeting breaks up early." "What committee is this?" "They're planning the Parilia program. There's to be less entertainment at the Orpheum, and they are dealing with Master Floreste right now, which will be a trial for everyone since Master Floreste can be remarkably single-minded. The dream of his life is a new Orpheum directly across from the lyceum, and every sol from the Mummers' off-world tours goes into his fund." "Have you told him that you are resigning?" "Not yet. He won't care. It's something he expects. He just adapts his material to the talent, which is why he is so successful. At Parilia he'll have three short presentations and I'll be involved in all of them: musical novelties, Verd and Milden evenings and a spectacle Smollen night, when I'm to be a butterfly with four wings. I'd like to make my own costume, out of real butterfly wings." "That sounds complicated." "Not if you help me. Are you allowed to fly?" Glawen nodded. "Chiike signed off my advanced novice rating as of last week. I'm checked out on any of the Mitrix trainers." "Then we can fly down to Maroli Meadow and gather butterfly wings." "I don't see why not if your mother will approve of the idea, which somehow I doubt." "I doubt it too if I asked in advance. So I'll tell her after we get back, if she asks. It's time that I was developing independence, don't you think? But not too much; I'm happy to stay a little girl for a while yet ... I must go in, before Mother comes looking for me. She has her own ideas about independence." "When do you want to go to Maroli Meadow? I should know a day or two in advance." "A week from next Ing is a school holiday. The Calliope Club is planning a swimming party and picnic up at Blue Mountain Lake. Perhaps you and I can go to Maroli Meadow on our own picnic." "Very well. I'll have Chiike reserve a Mitrix for me." Sessily stirred. "I hate to leave but I must! Now, do be careful walking home! Don't fall down and hurt yourself, and don't get carried away by a big night bird or an owl!" "I'll be careful." Chiike had given Glawen his flight training and made no difficulty about providing a Mitrix flyer for what would go on the log as a "cadet day patrol."" On the appointed bright sunny Ing morning, Glawen and Sessily arrived at the airport, Glawen with a pair of mesh baskets and a long-handled net while Sessily carried a picnic hamper. Chiike pointed to a nearby flyer. "There's your Mitrix. But why the baskets and the net?" Sessily said: "We're putting down on Maroli Meadow for butterfly wings. I need them for my Parilia costume. I'm to be a beautiful four-winged butterfly in the spectacle." "You'll be that without a doubt," said Chiike gallantly. Sessily warned him: "Don't tell anyone! It's supposed to be a surprise." "Never fear! I'll hold my tongue." Glawen asked: "What of your own costume?" "Me? Costume? I'm just one of the help." "Come now, Chiike! All of us know better than that! Surely you'll be at the festival!" "Well--maybe so. It's the one affair where I'm allowed, but only because the mask hides my face. I'll be Chitterjay the Clown, which you'll probably consider not much of a disguise. What of you?" "I'm a Black Imp, in a tight black velvet skin, with even my face painted black." "You're not one of the Bold Lions, then." "Not a chance! They'll all be in Lion costume." Glawen pointed to the Mitrix. "Is it ready to go?" "Approximately, considering it's an Araminta flyer. Let's see if you remember the checkout." Chiike watched as Glawen performed the routine inspections. "Fuel: charged," said Glawen. "Emergency power: charged. Navigator: nulls all proper. Time: correct. Circuits: blue light. Radio: blue light. Backup box: blue light. Emergency flares: in case. Pistol: on rack, at ready. Emergency water: full. Emergency gear: in cabinet. Engines: alarms quiet. All systems alert: blue light." Glawen went on to complete the checkout, to Chilke's satisfaction. ' Flights of inspection across the Conservancy, to monitor the movement of animal herds; to search for evidence of plague or blight; to take note of natural cataclysms such as floods, fires, storms and volcanic eruptions, and, most urgently, to discover and check any Yip encroachment into the mainland. Qualified cadets were therefore not discouraged from flying short patrols. "Two things to remember," said Chilke. "At Maroli Meadow, make! sure to land on the pad. If you break open a hummock you'll have bugs everywhere, and curse the day you were born. Second: donS stray off into the forest; tangle-tops have been sighted in the neighbor-3 hood. So keep your eyes open, and stay close to the flyer." 3 "Very well, sir. We'll take care." | Glawen and Sessily stowed their gear, climbed into the flyer, waved| to Chilke, then, to Glawen's touch, were taken aloft. With the autopilot! engaged, they flew south at a conservative altitude of a thousand feet.j The Mitrix drifted at no great speed over plantations and vineyards! across the River Wan and the Big Lagoon, then away from the enclave^ and out over the wilderness: here a placid savanna of low hills grownl over with a carpet of low blue-gray plants and pale green bushes;| marked by dark green dendrons, alone or in copses, and occasionalJ smoke trees, holding puffs of fragile blue foliage three hundred fee(| into the air. To the west the hills rolled higher, one rank behind| another, and at last swelled enormously to become the Muldoon| Mountains, with plain-to-be-seen Flutterby Pass: that notch through the mountains which funneled the migrating butterflies down Marol Valley to their rendezvous with the sea. Ten miles, twenty miles, thirty miles: below was Maroli Meadow a garish sight splotched with a hundred colors. The flyer settled slowl; through a myriad butterflies. Glawen sighted through the optic finder fixed the pale green disk on a pad of concrete established for th convenience of tourists in omnibus flyers. Glawen pushed the landinj toggle, and the Mitrix lowered itself to the pad. For a minute the two sat quietly, looking around the meadow. The: were alone. Except for the butterflies, nothing moved. A hundred yard to the right rose a rim of forest, ominously dense and dark, with simila forest to the left, even closer. Ahead, at a somewhat greater distance, th meadow opened upon the ocean beach, with blue ocean beyond. The two opened the door and stepped down to the pad. The sk: flickered with the wings of a million butterflies arriving from all part of Deucas. The throb of their wings created a low near-inaudible hum the air reeked with a rich sweet stench. In shoals and schools each o distinctive color: scarlet and blue; lambent green; lemon yellow am black; purple, lavender, white and blue; purple and red, they slant en down into the meadow, to swirl and circle, often flying through i swarm of a different sort, producing what seemed previously unknowl colors of amazing pointillist brilliance. | The swarms, after milling and wheeling, at last settled into that trc dedicated to their own sort. At once they nipped off their wings, fi create a rain of colored snow under the tree, and give the meadow a curiously garish aspect. The butterflies, now two-inch grubs, identically pale gray, with six strong legs and horny mandibles, ran down the tree trunk to the ground, and scurried at full speed toward the ocean." Glawen and Sessily took long-handled nets and trays from the flyer and Glawen, mindful ofChilke's remarks, thrust the pistol into his belt. Sessily asked quizzically: "Why the gun? There are plenty of loose wings; you needn't shoot the butterflies." Glawen said: "It's one of the first things my father taught me: never go even three feet into the wilderness without a gun." "The principal danger around here is stepping into something wet and sticky," said Sessily. "Come; let's get our wings and leave; I can barely breathe because of the fearful chi fe "Do you know what colors you want?" "Let's get some blues and greens from that tree yonder, and some reds and yellows, from over there, a few blacks and purples and that should do nicely." ' The life cycle of the butterfly is of considerable interest. After abandoning its wings, it makes for the sea, but not without adventure along the way. First die grubs must pass hummocks of cemented soil four feet high from which issue parties of warrior insects, who seek to capture or kill the grubs and carry them back into the hummocks. The grubs are neither helpless nor overmatched; with jets of ink they first blind their adversaries, then nip off their heads, and proceed. Across Alaroli Meadow ferocious battles rage, while the ex-butterfly hordes march past unheeding. Arriving upon the beach the grubs, having toiled so far, and now but ten yards from their goal, find a new hazard: darting, swooping birds. The survivors of this depredation face one last danger: the yoot, a bulky animal, hybrid of mandoril and rat (mandoril hybrids are widespread across all ofCadwal), lethargic of habit, wandering die beach, sucking up grubs through a long proboscis. A repellent creature, semi aquatic with hide mottled pink and black, the yoot exudes a noxious odor, as do many other creatures ofCadwal. The grubs which have escaped warrior insects, birds and animals still number in the millions. These plunge into the surf, to begin a new phase in their remarkable life cycles. Among the rocks and reefs close to shore the ex-butterflies consume plankton, lose their legs, form a flexible carapace, a fishhke tail, and, indeed, presently become fish six inches long. Reacting to some mysterious signal, they swim to the east and away from Deucas, to begin a migration which will take them hallway around the world. Finally they arrive at a place south of Hcce, where an enormous bank of seaweed is trapped in a curl of the ocean current. Here the ex-butterflies, now foot-long fish, breed and lay eggs in the seaweed. With their destiny fulfilled, they die and float to the surface. The eggs hatch into kril, feed on the carcasses of their parents. Growing and undergoing ten molts to the condition of nymphs, the creatures crawl out on the seaweed and dry their wings. In due course they flutter into the air, and without ceremony depart for the west coast of Deucas. They picked their way carefully across the meadow to the specified trees. With the net Glawen caught the wings as they drifted down from above and turned them over into the baskets: first, emerald green and blue, then pomegranate red and rich yellow, and finally purple, black and white. Sessily stood, hesitant. Glawen asked: "Is this enough?" "I'm sure it is," said Sessily. "I'd like some of those yellow-reds and greens, but it's too far to walk, and this smell is making me sick." "I see another reason," said Glawen in a suddenly flat voice. "Let's get back to the flyer, and fast." Following his gaze, Sessily saw across the meadow a long massive beast, black except for its white oddly human face. It trotted on six taloned legs and clasped a pair of hooked pincers to its chest in the attitude of prayer. This was the semi-intelligent Muldoon tangle-top, so named for the squirming black tendrils at the top of its head. Glawen and Sessily started back toward the flyer, as inconspicuously as possible, but the tangle-top instantly noted the movement. It turned and trotted forward, denying them the refuge of the flyer. The creature halted a hundred feet away to appraise the situation, then uttered a querulous whine, a rumbling rasping groan, and with dire deliberation began to stalk them. , Glawen said between clenched teeth: "My father was right, as' always." He pulled the heavy pistol from his belt and aimed it toward' the tangle-top, which stopped short; from somewhere it had learned that men pointing weapons were even more dangerous than itself. It; gave another querulous whine, then turned and ran on long loping lunges to the beach, where it pounced on one of the yoots. A horrids squealing protest became a mournful sobbing sound, then silence. Glawen and Sessily had long since run to the flyer, where they; packed baskets and net and without delay took the flyer aloft.. Glawen spoke in heartfelt emotion: "Safety! I've never appreciated; it so much!" "It was nice of the beast to go away," said Sessily. "Very nice. It decided to give me another chance. My hands were, shaking so badly I could never have hit it. I wonder if I could have; pulled the trigger ... I'm not pleased with myself." :! Sessily said soothingly, "Of course you would have hit it, no doubt: in some very painful place. The beast realized this. Also, I told it to: go away." "You did what?" Sessily laughed airily. "I used telepathy and told it to run off. It recognized a stronger will than its own and obeyed me." "Hmf," muttered Glawen. "Shall we go back and try again?" "Glawen! It's wicked to tease me so. I was only trying to help." Glawen brooded: "I wonder if we should tell anyone what happened. It may sound too alarming, like a dangerous emergency--which it was." "We'll say nothing about it. Do you feel hungry?" "I still feel nothing but fright." Sessily pointed. "There's a nice hilltop where we can have our lunch." Early in the afternoon Glawen and Sessily returned to Araminta Station. Glawen landed the flyer in the park at the back ofVeder House, where Sessily alighted with her wings, net and picnic hamper. Glawen then flew the Mitrix to the airfield and landed beside the hangar. Chiike came out to greet him. "How went the butterfly hunt?" "Quite well," said Glawen. "Sessily is pleased with her wings." Chiike looked over the Mitrix. "The flyer seems to be in one piece. Why are you so pale?" "I'm not pale," said Glawen. "At least I don't think I am." "I'd call you just a bit spooky." "For a fact, there was something, but I don't particularly want to talk about it." "Come, now! It can't be that bad. Speak!" Glawen's story came out in a rush. "Here is what happened. We had finished netting the wings. Then just as we started back to the flyer, a big black tangle-top came out of the forest. It spotted us right away and began to stalk us, approaching really close. I had the gun ready but I didn't need to shoot, because it turned away and ran down to the shore, where it ate a yoot. Sessily says she chased it away by telepathy; for all I know, she did; I was too scared for anything even that sensible." Glawen took a deep breath. "I had buck fever so bad I could hardly hold the gun." "A very moving tale," said Chiike. "Is there more?" "Just a bit. We left Maroli Meadow at full speed, and glad to get away. About ten miles north we got some of our nerve back and put down on a hilltop for our lunch. I was still annoyed with my seif I thought I'd practice shooting the gun, and getting a feel for it. I aimed at a rock, and pulled the trigger. The gun went click! I examined the chamber and found that there was no ammo in the gun." Chilke's jaw dropped. "Isn't that a situation! You wasted your buck fever on an empty gun!" "I didn't think of it quite that way." For a moment Chiike whistled tunelessly through his teeth. At last he said: "If there's a need for blaming people, we can start with you. Checking ammo in the gun is the operator's responsibility; that's the rule." Glawen hung his head. "I know. I missed it." "Second on the list is me. I stood here and watched you go past the gun. My only excuse is that I charged that gun myself three days ago. We've both learned a lesson, so I hope. And now we'll get down to brass tacks. Why was there no charge of ammo in the gun? Here we must look to that scoundrel Sisco. Ah! It's a great aggravation! I'll beat that Sisco well. First, we've got to find him. It's pure pleasure listening to the Yips lie, especially when they suspect that they're caught dead to rights." Chiike looked into the hangar. "Sisco? Where are you? Asleep? Oh, I see. Not asleep. Just lying down resting. Why are you tired? You haven't done any work. But never mind that. Come out here; I want to talk to you." Sisco emerged from the hangar: a young man with tawny golden skin, hair of almost the same color, a fine physique and features of classic beauty. If his appearance were to be faulted in any wise, it might be said that his eyes were spaced a trifle too widely apart. He looked back and forth between Glawen and Chiike, then, smiling the vague Yip smile, came gingerly forward. Chiike spoke gently. "Sisco, do you know the difference between a Class A beating, a Class B beating and the beating of a lifetime?" Sisco smilingly shook his head. "You talk in riddles. I know nothing of these bad things, which are never nice in the polite conversation." "Do you know the difference between what is yours and what is mine?" Sisco's face clouded over with puzzlement." For my answer to be right you must say what thing of yours and what thing of mine. Or is it another vulgarity, that you are talking, and even in front of this boy?" Chiike gave his head a sad shake. "Sometimes, Sisco, you make me blush for your odd notions." "That is not what I started to do." "No matter. What I want is for you to come with me now, to where