"Foster, Alan Dean - Flinx 01 - For Love Of Mother Not - v1.1" - читать интересную книгу автора (Foster Alan Dean)******************************************************* Author: Alan
Dean Foster Title: For
Love Of Mother-Not Original copyright: 1983 Genre: Science
Fiction Version: 1.1 Original date of e-text: 11/28/00 e-text last updated
: 12/14/00 Source: Prepared by: Comments: Download both lit and
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correct any errors you find in this e-text, update
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Alan Dean Foster : Published by
Ballantine Books: The Icenggger Trilogy ICERIGGER MISSION TO MOULOKIN THE DELUGE DRIVERS The Adventures of Flinx of the Commonwealth FOR LOVE OF MOTHER‑NOT THE TAR‑AIYM KRANG ORPHAN STAR THE END OF THE MATTER FLINX IN FLUX MID‑FLINX BLOODHYPE THE HOWLING STONES The Damned Book One: A CALL TO ARMS Book Two: THE FALSE MIRROR Book Three: THE SPOILS OF WAR THE BLACK HOLE CACHALOT DARK STAR THE
METROGNOME and Other Stories MIDWORLD NOR
CRYSTALTEARS SENTENCED TO PRISM SPLINTER
OF THE MIND'S EYE STAR TREK@ LOGS ONE‑TEN VOYAGE TO THE CITY OF THE DEAD WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE . . . ... WHO NEEDS ENEMIES? MAD AMOS PARALLELITIES* 'forthcoming Books
published by The Ballantine Publishing Group are available at quantity
discounts on bulk purchases for premium, educational, fund‑raising, and
special sales use. For details, please call 1‑500‑733‑3000. ******************************************************* A Del Rey Book Published by Ballantine Books Copyright Q 1983 by Alan Dean Foster All
rights reserved under International and Pan‑American Copyright
Conventions. Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of
Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of
Canada Limited, Toronto. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 82‑90867 ISBN 0‑345‑30511‑6 Manufactured in the United States of America First Edition: March 1983 Fourth Printing: June 1983 Cover art by Michael Whelan ******************************************************* For Michael and
Audrey and Alexa Whelan; Good neighbors… ******************************************************* Chapter One
“Now there’s a scrawny, worthless-looking little runt.”
Mother Mastiff thought. She cuddled the bag of woodcarvings a little closer to
her waist, mating certain it was protected from the rain by a flap of her
slickertic. The steady drizzle that characterized Drallar’s autumn weather fled
from the water-resistant material. Offworlders were hard pressed to distinguish any
difference in the city’s seasons. In the summer, the rain was warm; in autumn
and winter, it was cooler. Springtime saw it give way to a steady, cloying fog.
So rare was the appearance of the sun through the near-perpetual cloud cover
that when it did peep through, the authorities were wont to call a public
holiday. It was not really a slave market Mother Mastiff was
trudging past. That was an archaic term, employed only by cynics. It was merely
the place where labor-income adjustments were formalized. Drallar was the largest city on the world of Moth,
its only true metropolis, and it was not a particularly wealthy one. By keeping
taxes low, it had attracted a good number of offworld businesses and trading
concerns to a well-situated b at mostly inhospitable planet. It compensated by
largely doing away with such annoying commercial aggravations as tariffs and
regulations. While this resulted in considerable prosperity for some, it left
the city government at a loss for general revenue. Among the numerous areas that were rarely
self-appointing was that involving care of the impoverished. In cases In which
indigence was total and an individual was isolated by circumstance,
it was deemed reasonable to allow a wealthier citizen to take over
responsibility from the government. This thinned the welfare rolls and kept the
bureaucracy content, while providing better care for the individual involved-or
so the officials insisted-than he or she could receive from under funded and
impersonal government agencies. The United Church, spiritual arm of the Commonwealth
frowned on such one-sided economic policies. But The Commonwealth did not like
to interfere with domestic policies, and Drallarian officials hastened to
assure the occasional visiting padre or counselor that legal safeguards
prevented abuse, of “adopted” individuals. So it was that Mother Mastiff found
herself leaning on tier cane, clutching the bag of artwork, and staring at the
covered dispersement platform while she tried to catch her breath. One curious
attendee moved too close, crowding her. He glowered when she jabbed him in the toot with her cane but moved aside, not
daring to confront her. Standing motionless on the platform within the Circle
of Compensation was a thin, solemn boy of eight or nine years. His red hair was
kicked down from the rain and contrasted sharply with his dark skin. Wide,
innocent eyes, so big they seemed to wrap around the sides of his face, stared
out across the rain-dampened assembly. He kept his hands clasped behind his
back. Only those eyes moved, their gaze flicking like an insect over the
upturned faces of the crowd. The majority of the milling, would-be purchasers
were indifferent to his presence. To the boy’s right stood a tall, slim representative
of the government who ran the official sale-an assignment of responsibility,
they called it-for the welfare bureau. Across from her a large readout listed
the boy’s vital statistics, which Mother Mastiff eyed casually. Height and weight matched what she could see. Color
of hair, eyes, and skin she had already noted. Living relative, assigned or
otherwise-a blank there. Personal history-another blank. A child of accident
and calamity, she thought, thrown like so many others on the untender mercies
of government care. Yes, he certainly would be better off under the wing of a
private individual, by the looks of him. He might at least receive some decent
food. And yet there was something more to him, something
that set him apart from the listless
precision of orphans who paraded across that rain-swept platform, season after
season. Mother Mastiff sensed something lurking behind those wide, mournful
eyes-a maturity well beyond his years, a greater intensity to his stare than was
to be expected from a child in his position. That stare continued to rove over
the crowd, probing, searching. There was more of the hunter about the boy than
the bunted. The rain continued to fall. What activity there was
among the watchers was concentrated on the back right comer of the platform,
where a modestly attractive girl of about sixteen was next in line for
consignment. Mother Mastiff let out a derisive snort. Government assurances or
not, yea couldn’t tell her that those
pushing, shoving snots in the front row didn’t have something on their minds
be-yond an innocently altruistic concern for the girl’s future. 0h,no! The ever-shifting cluster of potential benefactors
formed an island around which eddied the greater population of the marketplace.
The marketplace itself was concentrated into a ring of stalls and shops and
restaurants and dives that encircled the city center. The result was just modem
enough to function and sufficiently unsophisticated to at’ tract those
intrigued by the mysterious. It held no mysteries for Mother Mastiff. The
marketplace of Drallar was her home. Ninety years she had spent battling that
endless river of humanity and aliens, some-times being sucked down, sometimes
rising above the flow, but never in danger of drowning. Now she had a
shop-small, but her own. She bargained for objects d’art, traded knicknacks,
electronics, and handicrafts, and managed to make just enough to keep herself
clear of such places as the platform on which the boy was standing. She put
herself in his place and shuddered. A ninety-year-old woman would not bring
much of a price. There was an awkwardly patched rip at the neck of
her slickertic, and rain was beginning to find its way through the widening
gap. The pouch of salables she clutched to her thin waist wasn’t growing any
lighter. Mother Mastiff had other business to transact, and she wanted to be
back home before dark. As the sun of Moth set, the murky daylight of Drallar
would fade to a slimy darkness, and things less than courteous would emerge
from the slums that impinged on the marketplace. Only the careless and the
cocky wandered abroad at such times, and Mother Mastiff was neither. As the boy’s eyes roved over the audience, they
eventually reached her own-and stopped.
Suddenly, Mother Mastiff felt queasy, unsteady. Her hand went to her
stomach. Too much grease in the morning’s breakfast, she thought. The eyes had
already moved on. Since she had turned eighty-five, she had had to watch her
diet. But, as she had told a friend, “I’d rather die of indigestion and on a
full stomach than waste away eating pills and concentrates.” “One side there,” she abruptly found herself saying,
not sure what she was doing or why. “One side.” She broke a path through the
crowd, poking one observer in the ribs with her cane, disturbing an
ornithorpe’s ornate arrangement of tail feathers, and generating a chirp of
indignation from an overweight matron. She worked her way down to the open area
directly in front of the platform. The boy took no notice of her; his eyes
continued to scan the uncaring crowd. “Please, ladies and gentle beings,” the official on
the platform pleaded, “won’t one of you give this healthy, honest boy a home?
Your government requests it of you; civilization demands it of you. You have a
chance today to do two good turns at once; one for your king and the other for
this unfortunate youth.” “Id like to
give the king a good turn, all right,” said a voice from the milling crowd,
“right where it would do him the most good.” The official shot the heckler an angry glare but
said nothing. “What’s the minimum asking?” Be that my voice? Mother Mastiff thought in
wonderment. “A mere fifty credits, madam, to satisfy department
obligations and the boy is yours. To watch over and care for.” She hesitated,
then added, “If you think you can handle as active a youngster as this one.” “I’ve handled plenty of youngsters in my time,”
Mother Mastiff returned curtly. Knowing hoots sounded from the amused assembly.
She studied the boy, who was looking down at her again. The queasiness that had
roiled in her stomach the first time their eyes had met did not reoccur.
Grease, she mused, have to cut down on the cooking grease. “Fifty credits, then,” she said. “Sixty.” The deep voice that boomed from somewhere
to the rear of the crowd came as an unexpected interruption to her thoughts. “Seventy,” Mother Mastiff automatically responded.
The official on the platform quickly gazed back into the crowd. “Eighty,” the unseen competitor sounded. She hadn’t counted
on competition. It was one thing to do a child a good turn at reasonable cost
to herself, quite another to saddle herself with an unconscionable expense. “Ninety-curse you,” she said. She turned and tried
to locate her opponent but could not see over the heads of the crowd. The voice
bidding against her was male, powerful, piercing. What the devil would the
owner of such a voice want with a child like this? she thought. “Ninety-five,” it countered. “Thank you, thank you. To you both, the government says.”
The official’s tone and expression had brightened perceptibly. The lively and
utterly unexpected bidding for the redheaded brat had alleviated her boredom as
well as her concern. She would be able to show her boss a better than usual
daily account sheet. “The bid is against you, madam.” “Damn the bid,” Mother Mastiff muttered. She started
to turn away, but something held her back. She was as good a judge of people as
she was of the stock she sold to them, and there was something particular about
this boy-though she couldn’t say precisely what, which struck her as unusual.
There was always profit in the unusual. Besides, that mournful stare was
preying unashamedly on a part of her she usually kept buried. “Oh, hell, one hundred, then, and be damned with
it!” She barely managed to squeeze the figure out. Her mind was in a whirl.
What was she doing there, neglecting her regular business, getting thoroughly
soaked and bidding for an orphaned child? Surely at ninety her maternal
instinct wasn’t being aroused. She had never felt the least maternal instinct
in her life, thank goodness. She waited for the expected nimble of “one hundred
and five,” but instead heard a commotion toward the back of the crowd. She
craned her neck, trying to see, cursing the genes that had left her so short.
There were shouts, then yells of outrage and loud cursing from a dozen
different throats. To the left, past the shielding bulk of the ornithorpe
behind her, she could just make out the bright purple flash of uniformed
gendarmes, their slickertics glaring in the dim light. This group seemed to be
moving with more than usual energy. She turned and fought her way forward and to the
right, where a series of steps led to the platform. Halfway up the stairs, she
squinted back into the crowd. The purple ‘tics were just merging into the first
wall of office and shop complexes. Ahead of them a massive human shape bobbed
and dipped as it retreated from the pursuing police. Mother Mastiff permitted herself a knowing nod.
There were those who might want a young boy for other than humanitarian
purposes. Some of them had criminal dossiers on file that stretched as far back
as her lifeline. Obviously someone in the crowd, a salaried informer, perhaps,
had recognized the individual bidding against her and had notified the
authorities, who had responded with commendable speed. “One hundred credits, then,” the disappointed
official announced from the platform. “Do I hear any more?” Naturally, she
would not, but she played out the game for appearance’s sake. A moment passed
in silence. She shrugged, glanced over
to where Mother Mastiff still stood on the stairway. “He’s yours, old woman.”
Not “madam” any longer, Mother Mastiff thought sardonically. “Pay up, and mind
the regulations, now.” “I’ve been dealing with the regulations of this
government since long before ye were born, woman.” She mounted the last few
steps and, ignoring the official and the boy, strode back toward the Processing
Office. Inside, a bored clerk glanced up at her, noted the transaction-complete
record as it was passed to his desktop computer terminal, and asked
matter-of-factly, “Name?” “Mastiff,” the visitor replied, leaning on her cane. “That the last name?” “First and last.” “Mastiff Mastiff?” The clerk gave her a sour look. “Just Mastiff,”
the old woman said. “The government prefers multiple names.” “Ye know what the government can do with its
preferences.” The clerk sighed. He tapped the terminal’s keys.
“Age?” “None of your business.” She gave it a moment’s
thought and added, “Put down old.” The clerk did so, shaking his head dolefully.
“Income?” “Sufficient.” “Now look here, you,” the clerk began exasperated,
“in such matters as the acquisition of responsibility for welfared individuals,
the city government requires certain specifics.” “The city government can shove its specifics in
after its preferences.” Mother Mastiff gestured toward the platform with her
cane, a wide, sweeping gesture that the clerk had the presence of mind to duck.
“The bidding is over. The other bidder has taken his leave. Hastily. Now I can
take my money and go home, or I can contribute to the government’s balance of
payments and to your salary. Which is it to be?” “Oh, all right,” the clerk agreed petulantly. He
completed his entries and punched a key. A seemingly endless form spat from the
printout slot. Folded, it was about half a centimeter thick. “Read these.” Mother Mastiff hefted the sheaf of forms. “What are
they?” “Regulations regarding your new charge. The boy is
yours to raise, not to mistreat. Should you ever be detected in violation of
the instructions and laws therein stated”-he gestured at the wad-“he can be
recovered from you with forfeiture of the acquisition fee. In addition, you
must familiarize yourself with-“ He broke off the lecture as the boy in
question was escorted into the room by another official. The youngster glanced at the clerk, then up at
Mother Mastiff. Then, as if he’d performed similar rituals on previous
occasions, he walked quietly up to her, took her left hand, and put his right
hand in it. The wide, seemingly guileless eyes of a child gazed up at her face.
They were bright green, she noted absently. “The clerk was about to continue, then found something
unexpected lodged in his throat and turned his attention instead back to his
desk top. “That’s all. The two of you can go.” Mother Mastiff harrumphed as if she had won a
victory and led the boy out onto the streets of Drallar. They had supplied him
with that one vital piece of clothing, a small blue slickertic of his own. He
pulled the cheap plastic tighter over his head as they reached the first
intersection. “Well, boy, ‘tis done. Devil come take me and tell
me if I know why I did it, but I expect that I’m stuck with ye now. And ye,
with me, of course. Do you have anything at the dorm we should go to recover?” He shook his head slowly. Quiet sort, she thought.
That was all to the good. Maybe he wouldn’t be a quick squaller. She still
wondered what had prompted her sudden and uncharacteristic outburst of
generosity. The boy’s hand was warm in her gnarled old palm. That palm usually
enfolded a credcard for processing other people’s money or artwork to be
studied with an eye toward purchase and even, on occasion, a knife employed for
something more radical than the preparation of food, but never before the hand
of a small child. It was a peculiar sensation. They worked their way through crowds hurrying to
beat the onset of night, avoiding the drainage channels that ran down the
center of each street. Thick aromas drifted from the dozens of food stalls and
restaurants that fringed the avenue they were walking. Still the boy said not a
word. Finally, tired of the way his face would turn toward any place from which
steam and smells rose, Mother Mastiff halted before one establishment with
which she was familiar. They were nearly home, anyway. “You hungry, boy?” He nodded slowly, just once. “Stupid of me. I can go all day without food and not
give it a second thought. I forget sometimes that others have not that
tolerance in their bellies.” She nodded toward the doorway. “Well, what are ye
waiting for?” She followed him into the restaurant, then led the
way to a quiet booth set against the wall. A circular console rose from the
center of the table. She studied the menu imprinted on its flank, compared it
with the stature of the child seated expectantly next to her, then punched
several buttons set alongside the menu. Before too long, the console sank into the table,
then reappeared a moment later stacked with food; a thick, pungent stew dimpled
with vegetables, long stalks of some beige tuber, and a mass of multistriped
bread. “Go ahead,” she said when the boy hesitated,
admiring his reserve and table manners. “I’m not too hungry, and I never eat
very much.” She watched him while he devoured the food,
sometimes picking at the colorful bread to assuage what little hunger she felt
herself, barely acknowledging the occasional greeting from a passing
acquaintance or friend. When the bottom of the stew bowl had been licked to a
fine polish and the last scrap of bread had vanished, she asked, “Still
hungry?” He hesitated, measuring her, then gave her a half
nod. “I’m not surprised,” she replied, “but I don’t want ye to have any more
tonight. You’ve just downed enough to fill a grown man. Any more on top of what
you’ve already had and you’d end up wasting it all. Tomorrow morning, okay?” He
nodded slowly, understanding. “And one more thing, boy. Can ye talk?” “Yes.” His voice was lower than anticipated,
unafraid and, she thought, tinged with thankfulness. “I can talk pretty good,” he added without further
prompting, surprising her. “I’ve been told that for my age I’m a very good
talker.” “That’s
nice. I was starting to worry.” She slid from her seat, using her cane to help
her stand, and took his hand once again. “It’s not too far now.” “Not too far to where?” “To where I live. To where ye will live from now
on.” They exited the restaurant and were enveloped by the wet night. “What’s your name?” He spoke without looking up at
her, preferring instead to study the dim storefronts and isolated, illuminated
shops. The intensity of his inspection seemed unnatural. “Mastiff,” she told him, then grinned. “ Tis not my
real name, boy, but one that someone laid upon me many years ago. For better or
worse, it’s stuck longer with me than any man. ‘Tis the name of a dog of
exceptional ferocity and ugliness.” “I don’t think you’re ugly,” the boy replied. “I
think you’re beautiful.” She studied his open, little-boy expression.
Dim-witted, dim-sighted, or maybe just very smart, she thought. “Can I call you Mother?” he asked hopefully, further
confusing her. “You are my mother now, aren’t you?” “Sort of, I expect. Don’t ask me why.” “I won’t cause you any trouble.” His voice was
suddenly concerned, almost frightened. “I’ve never caused anyone any trouble,
honest. I just want to be left alone.” Now what would prompt a desperate confession like
that? she wondered. She decided not to pursue the matter. “I’ve no demands to
make on ye,” she assured him. “I’m a simple old woman, and I live a simple
life. It pleases me. It had best please ye as well.” “It sounds
nice,” he admitted agreeably. “I’ll do my best to help you any way I can.” “Devil knows there’s plenty to do in the shop. I’m
not quite as flexible as I used to be.” She chuckled aloud. “Get tired before
midnight now. You know, I actually need a full four hours’ sleep? Yes, I think
ye can be of service. You’d best be. Ye cost enough.” “I’m sorry,” he said, abruptly downcast. “Stop that. I’ll have none of that in my home.” “I mean, I’m sorry that I upset you.” She let out a wheeze of frustration, knelt and
supported herself with both hands locked to the shaft of the cane. It brought
her down to his eye level. He stood there and gazed solemnly back at her. “Now ye listen to me, boy. I’m no government agent.
I don’t have the vaguest notion what possessed me to take charge of ye, but
‘tis done. I will not beat you unless you deserve it. I’ll see to it that
you’re well fed and reasonably warm. In return, I demand that ye don’t go about
braying stupid things like I’m sorry.’ Be that a deal?” He didn’t have to think it over very long. “It’s a
deal-Mother.” “That’s settled, then.” She shook his hand. The
gesture brought forth a new phenomenon: his first smile. It made his tiny,
lightly freckled face seem to glow, and suddenly the night seemed less chilly. “Let’s hurry,” she said, struggling erect again. “I
don’t like being out this late, and you’re not much the body-guard. Never will
be, by the looks of ye, though that’s no fault of yours.” “Why is it so important to be home when it’s dark?”
he asked, and then added uncertainly, “Is that a stupid question?” “No, boy.” She smiled down at him as she hobbled up
the street. “That’s a smart question. It’s important to be safe at home after
dark because the dead tend to multiply in direct ratio to the absence of light.
Though if you’re cautious and never grow overconfident and learn the ways of
it, you’ll find that the darkness can be your friend as well as your enemy.” “I thought
so,” he said firmly. “I’ve thought so for”-his face screwed up as he
concentrated hard on something-“for as long as I can remember.” “Oh?” She was still smiling at him. “And what makes
you think that it’s so besides the fact I just told it to ye?” “Because,” he replied, “most of the times I can ever
remember being happy were in the dark.” She pondered that as they turned the comer. The rain
had lessened considerably, giving way to the mist that passed for normal air in
the city. It didn’t trouble her lungs, but she worried about the boy. The one
thing she didn’t need was a sick child. He had cost her enough already. Her stall-home was one of many scattered through the
seemingly endless marketplace. Stout shutters protected the nondescript facade,
which occupied ten meters at the far end of a side street. She pressed her palm
to the door lock. The sensitized plastic glowed brightly for an instant, beeped
twice, and then the door opened for them. Once inside, she shoved the door shut behind them,
then automatically turned to inspect her stock to make certain nothing had
disappeared in her absence. “There were racks of copper and silver wares, rare
carved hardwoods for which Moth was justly renowned, well-crafted eating and
drinking utensils, including many clearly designed for non-humans, cheap models
of Moth itself with interrupted rings of flashy floatglitter, and various items
of uncertain purpose. Through this farrago of color and shape, the boy
wandered. His eyes drank in everything, but he asked no questions, which she
thought unusual. It was in the nature of children to inquire about
everything. But then, this was no ordinary child. Toward the rear of the shop front a silver box stood
on a dais. Its touch-sensitive controls
connected the shop directly to the central bank of Drallar and enabled Mother
Mastiff to process financial transactions for all customers, whether they came
from up the street or halfway across the Commonwealth. A universal credcard
allowed access to its owner’s total wealth. Banks stored information; all hard
currency was in general circulation. Past the dais and the door it fronted were four
rooms: a small storage chamber, a bathroom, a kitchen-dining area, and a
bedroom. Mother Mastiff studied the arrangement for several minutes, then set
about clearing the storage room. Ancient and long-unsold items were shoveled
out onto the floor, together with cleaning equipment, clothing, canned goods,
and other items. Somehow she would find room for them elsewhere. Propped up against the far wall was a sturdy old
cot. She touched a button on its side,
and the device sprang to life, skittering about as it arranged itself on
springy legs. Further excavation
revealed a bag of support oil, which she plugged into the mattress. It was full
and warm in minutes. Finally, she covered the cot with a thin thermosensitive
blanket. “This’ll be your room,” she told him. “ Tis no
palace, but ‘tis yours. I know the importance of having something ye can call
your own. Ye can fix up this bower however ye like.” The boy eyed her as if she had just bestowed all the
treasures of Terra on him. “Thank you. Mother,” he said softly. “It’s
wonderful.” “I sell things,” she said, turning away from that
radiant face. She gestured toward the storeroom out front. “The things ye saw on our way in.” “I guessed that. Do you make much money?” “Now ye
sound like the government agent back there at the platform.” She smiled to show
him she was teasing. “I get by. I’d much like to have a larger place than this,
but at this point in my life”—she leaned her cane up against her bed as she
strolled into the larger room-“it seems not likely I ever will. It does not
bother me. I’ve had a good, full life and am content. You’ll soon discover that
my growls and barks are mostly show. Though not always.” She patted him on the
head and pointed toward the com-pact kitchen. “Would ye like something hot to drink before we
re-tire?” “Yes, very much.” Carefully, he took off his
slickertic, which was dry by then. He hung it on a wall hook in his bedroom. “We’ll have to get ye some new clothes,” she
comment-ed, watching him from the kitchen. “These are okay.” “Maybe they are for ye, hut they’re not for me.” She
pinched her nose by way of explanation. “Oh. I understand.” “Now what would ye like to drink?” His face brightened once again. “Tea. What kinds of
tea do you have?” “What kinds of tea do ye like?” “All kinds.” “Then I’ll choose ye one.” She found the cylinder
and depressed the main switch ‘on its side as she filled it with water from the
tap. Then she searched her store of food-stuffs. “This is Anar Black,” she told him, “all the way
from Rhyinpine. Quite a journey for dead leaves to make. I think ‘tis milder
than Anar White, which comes from the same world but grows further down the
mountain sides. I have some local honey if ye like your drink sweet. Expensive,
it is. Moth’s flowers are scarce save where they’re grown in hothouses. This
world belongs to the fungi and the trees; the bees, poor things, have a hard
time of it, even those who’ve grown woolly coats thick enough to keep the damp
and cold out. If honey’s too thick for ye, I’ve other sweeteners.” Hearing no reply, she turned to find him lying still
on the floor, a tawny, curled-up smudge of red hair and dirty old clothes. His
hands were bunched beneath his cheek, cushioning his head. She shook her head and pushed the cylinder’s off but-ton. The pot sighed and ceased
boiling. Bending, she got her wiry ‘arms beneath him and lifted. Somehow she
wrestled him onto the cot without waking him. Her hands pulled the thermal
blanket up to his chin. It was programmed and would warm him quickly. She stood there awhile, amazed at how much pleasure
could be gained from so simple an activity as watching a child sleep. Then,
still wondering what had come over her, she left him and made her way across to
her own room, slowly removing her clothes as she walked. Before long, the last
light in the rear of the little shop winked out, joining its neighbors in
nightfall. Then there was only the light wind and the hiss of moisture
evaporating from warm walls to break the silence of the mist-shrouded dark. Chapter Two
The boy ate as if the previous night’s dinner had
been no more substantial than a distant dream. She cooked him two full
breakfasts and watched as he finished every bite. When the last pachnack was gone, and the final piece of bread
wolfed down, she took him into the shop. He watched intently as she entered the combination
to the metal shutters. As they rose, they admitted a world entirely different
from the empty night. One moment he was staring at the dully reflective line of
metal strips. “The next brought home to him all the noise, the confusion, and
bustle and sights and smells of the great Drallarian marketplace; they flooded
the stall, overwhelming him with their diversity and brilliance. Mother Mastiff
was not a late sleeper-which was good, for the crowd would rise in tandem with
the hidden sun. Not that the marketplace was ever completely deserted. There
were always a few merchants whose wares benefited from the mask of night. The boy could tell it was daytime because it had
grown less dark. But the sun did not shine; it illuminated the raindrops. The
morning had dawned warm, a good sign, and the moisture was still more mist than
rain. A good day for business. Mother Mastiff showed the boy around the shop,
describing various items and reciting their prices and the reasons behind such
pricing. She hoped to someday entrust the operation of the business to him.
That would be better than having to close up every time she needed to rest or
travel elsewhere. The sooner he learned, the better, especially considering the
way he ate. “I’ll do everything I can, Mother,” he assured her
when she had concluded the brief tour. “I know ye will, boy.” She plopped down into her
favorite chair, an over upholstered monstrosity covered with gemmae fur. The
skins were worn down next to nothing, and the chair retained little value, but
it was too comfort-able for her to part with. She watched as the boy turned to
stare at the passing crowd. How quiet
he is, she thought. Quiet and intense. She let him study the passers-by for a
while before beckoning him closer. “We’ve overlooked several things in the rush of the
night, boy. One in particular.” “What’s that?” he asked. “I can’t keep calling ye ‘boy’. Have ye a name?” “They call me Flinx.” “Be that your last name or your first?” He shook his head slowly, his expression unhappy.
“Mother, I don’t know. It’s what they called me.” “What ‘they’ called ye. Who be ‘they’? Your”-she
hesitated-“mother? Your father?’” Again, the slow sad shake of the head, red curls
dancing. “I don’t have a mother or a father. It’s what the people called me.” “What people?” “The people who watched over me and the other
children.” Now that was strange. She frowned. “Other children?
Ye have brothers and sisters, then?” “I don’t”-he strained to remember-“I don’t think so. Maybe they were. I don’t know. They were just the other children.
I remember them from the early time. It was a strange time.” “What was so
strange about it?” “I was happy.” She nodded once, as though she understood. “So. Ye
remember an early time when you were happy and there were lots of other
children living with you.” He nodded vigorously. “Boys and girls both. And we
had everything we could want, everything we asked for. All kinds of good food and toys to play with
and . . .” A wealthy family brought to ruin, perhaps. She let
him ramble on about the early time, the happy time, a while longer. What
catastrophe had overtaken the boy in infancy? “How big was this family?” she asked. “We’ll call it
your family for now. How many other boys and girls were there?” “I don’t remember exactly. Lots.” “Can you count?” “Oh, sure,” he said proudly. “Two, three, four,
five, and lots more than that.” Sounded like more than just a family, though an
extend-ed family could not be ruled out, she knew. “Do ye remember what
happened to them, and to you? Ye were all happy, and ye had lots of friends,
and then something happened.” “The bad people came,” he whispered, his expression
turning down. “Very bad people. They broke into where we lived. The people who
watched us and fed us and gave us toys fought the bad people. There was lots of
noise and guns going off and-and people fell down all around me. Good people and bad people both. I stood and
cried until somebody picked me up and carried me away. They carried me down
lots of halls and dark places, and I remember getting into some kind of a-car?” She nodded approvingly. “Probably. Go on, boy.” “I was moved around a lot. That was the end of the
happy time.” “What happened after that?” she prompted him. “I’m not sure,” he said slowly. “It’s so hard to
remember.” “I know ‘tis painful for ye, Flinx. I need to know
all about ye that I can, so I can help ye as best as I’m able.” “If I tell you,” he asked uncertainly, “you won’t
let the bad people come and take me away?” “No,” she said, her voice suddenly soft. “No, I won’t
let them come and take ye away, Flinx. I won’t let anyone come and take ye away. Ever. I promise ye that.” He moved a little nearer and sat down on the
extended leg support of the big chair. He had his eyes closed as he
concentrated. “I remember never staying in one place for very long
at a time. The people, the good people who took care of me and fed me, they
kept the bad people away. They were al-ways upset about something, and they
yelled at me a lot more than before.” “Were they mad at ye?” “I don’t think so. Not really.” He licked his lips.
“I think they were scared. Mother. I know I was, but I think they were, also.
And then”-a look of confusion stole over his face-“I went to sleep. For a long time. Only, it wasn’t really a
sleep. It was like I was asleep and yet like I wasn’t.” He opened his eyes and
looked up at her. “Do you understand that. Mother? I don’t.” “No, I’m not sure I do, boy.” Her mind worked. Now
who, she wondered, would take the time and trouble to sedate a child for a long
period of time? And why bother? “Then some more bad people suddenly showed up, I
think,” he went on. “I didn’t see them this time. But some of the people who
watched me died or went away. Then there was just me and one man and one lady,
and then they were gone, too.” “Your mother and father?” “No, I don’t think so,” he told her. “Anyway, they
never called themselves that. They were just two of the good people. Then some
other people came and found me. People
I’d never seen before. They took me away with them.” “Were they good people or bad people?” “I don’t think they were either,” the boy replied
care-fully. “I think they were kind of in-between people. I think maybe they
were sorry for me. They tried to be nice, but”-he shrugged-“they were just
in-between people. They moved me around
a lot again, and there were different places and lots of new children I didn’t
know, and then there was yesterday, and you bought me. Right?” She put a hand to her mouth and coughed. “I didn’t
buy ye, actually. I agreed to take responsibility for ye.” “But you paid the government money for me, didn’t
you? I was told that was what was going to happen to me.” “It was only to pay off the debt the government
incurred for taking care of ye,” she explained to him. “I don’t actually own
ye. I would never do that.” “Oh,” he said quietly. “That’s nice. I’m glad.” He
waited a moment, watching her, then added, “That’s everything I can remember.” “Ye did fine.” She leaned forward and pointed to her
right, up the street. The chair groaned. “If ye walk six stalls that way, yell
find a very small shop run by a human. His name be Cheneth. Go up to him and
tell him who ye be and where ye came from. And ye can buy from him”-she thought
a moment, not wishing to overdo things-“a half credit’s worth of whatever ye
see in his shop.” “What kind of shop is it?” he asked excitedly. “Candy,” she said, enjoying the light that came into
his face. “Ye remember what candy is, don’t ye? I can see by the expression on
your face that ye do.” She could also tell by the speed with which he took off
up the street. He was back before long, those deep emerald eyes shining from
his dark face. “Thank you. Mother.” “Go on, go on, move to one side! You’re blocking
my-our-view of the customers. Wander about, learn the ins and outs of where ye
live now.” He vanished like a ray of sunshine, his red hair
disappearing into the crowd. Expensive, she thought to herself. That boy’s going
to be expensive to raise. How by the ringaps did I ever let myself fall into
this? She grumbled silently for another several minutes until a potential
customer appeared. Flinx learned rapidly. He was undemonstrative,
highly adaptable, and so quiet she hardly knew when he was around. Soon he was
amazing her with his knowledge of the layout and workings of the marketplace
and even the greater city beyond. He worked constantly on expanding his store
of information, badgering shopkeepers with persistent questions, refusing to
take “I don’t know” for an answer. Mother Mastiff put no restrictions on him. No one
had ever told her it was improper to give an eight-year-old the run of a city
as wild as Drallar. Never having raised a child before, she could always plead
ignorance, and since he returned dutifully every night, unscathed and unharmed,
she saw no reason to alter the practice despite the clucking disapproval of
some of her neighbors. “That’s no way to handle a boy of an age that
tender,” they admonished her. “If you’re not careful, youll lose him. One
night, he won’t come home from these solo forays.” “A boy he is, tender he’s not,” she would reply.
“Sharp he be, and not just for his age. I don’t worry about him. I haven’t the
time, for one thing. No matter what happens to him, he’s better off than he was
under government care.” “He won’t be better off if he ends up lying dead in
a gutter somewhere,” they warned her. “He won’t,” she would reply confidently. “You’ll be sorry,” they said. “You wait and see.” “I’ve been waiting and seeing going on ninety years”
was her standard reply, “and I haven’t been surprised yet. I don’t expect this boy to break that
record.” But she was wrong. It was midafternoon. The morning mist had developed
into a heavy rain. She was debating whether or not to send the boy out for some
food or to wait. Half a dozen people were wandering through the shop, waiting
for the down-pour to let up-an unusually large number for any day. After a while, Flinx wandered over and tugged shyly
at her billowing skirt. “Mother Mastiff?” “What is it, boy? Don’t bother me now.” She turned
back to the customer who was inspecting antique jewelry that graced a locked
display case near the rear of the stall.
It was rare that she sold a piece of the expensive stuff. When she did,
the profit was considerable. The boy persisted, and she snapped at him. “I told
ye, Flinx, not now!” “It’s very important. Mother.” She let out a sigh of exasperation and looked
apologetically at the outworlder. “Excuse me a moment, good sir. Children, ye
know.” The man smiled absently, thoroughly engrossed in a necklace
that shone with odd pieces of metal and worn wood. “What is it, Flinx?” she demanded, upset with him.
“This better be important. You know how I don’t like to be disturbed when I’m
in the middle of-“ He interrupted her by pointing to the far end of the shop.
“See that man over there?” She looked up, past him. The man in question was
bald and sported a well-trimmed beard and earrings. Instead of the light
slickertic favored by the inhabitants of Moth, he wore a heavy offworld
overcoat of black material. His features were slighter than his height
warranted, and his mouth was almost delicate. Other than the earrings he showed
no jewelry. His boots further marked him as an offworld visitor-they were
relatively clean. “I see him. What about him?” “He’s been stealing jewelry from the end case.” Mother Mastiff frowned. “Are you sure, boy?” Her
tone was anxious. “He’s an offworlder, and by the looks of him, a reasonably
substantial one at that. If we accuse him falsely-“ “I’m positive, mother.” “You saw him steal?” “No, I didn’t exactly see him.” “Then what the devil”-she wondered in a low,
accusatory voice-“are ye talking about?” “Go look at the case,” he urged her. She hesitated, then shrugged mentally. “No harm in
that, I expect.” Now whatever had gotten into the boy? She strolled toward the case, affecting an
air of unconcern. As she drew near, the
outworlder turned and walked away, apparently unperturbed by her approach. He hardly
acted like a nervous thief about to be caught in the act. Then she was bending over the case. Sure enough, the
lock had been professionally picked. At least four rings, among the most
valuable items in her modest stock, were missing. She hesitated only briefly
before glancing down at Flinx. “You’re positive it was him, ye say?” He nodded energetically. Mother Mastiff put two fingers to her lips and let
out a piercing whistle. Almost instantly, a half-dozen neighboring shopkeepers
appeared. Still the bald man showed no hint of panic, simply stared curiously,
along with the others in the store at the abrupt arrivals. The rain continued
to pelt the street. Mother Mastiff raised a hand, pointed directly at the bald
man, and said, “Restrain that thief!” The man’s eyes widened in surprise, but he made no
move toward retreat. Immediately, several angry shopkeepers had him firmly by
the arms. At least two of them were armed. “The bald man stood it for a moment or two, then
angrily shook off his captors. His accent, when he spoke, marked him as a
visitor from one of the softer worlds, like New Riviera or Centaurus B. “Now
just a moment! What is going on here? I warn you, the next person who puts
hands on me will suffer for it!” “Don’t threaten us, citizen,” said Aljean, the
accomplished clothier whose big shop dominated the far corner. “We’ll settle this matter quick, and without
the attention of police. We don’t much like police on this street.” “I sympathize with you there,” the man said,
straightening his overcoat where he had been roughly handled. “I’m not
especially fond of them myself.” After a pause, he added in shock, “Surely that
woman does not mean to imply that I –“ “That’s what she’s implyin’, for sure,” said one of
the men flanking him. “If you’ve nothin’ to fear, then you’ve no reason not to
gift us a moment of your time.” “Certainly not. I don’t see why-“ The outworlder
studied their expressions a moment, then shrugged. “Oh, well, if it will settle
this foolishness.” “It’ll settle it,” another man said from behind a
pistol. “Very well. And I’ll thank you to keep that weapon
pointed away from me, please. Surely you don’t need the succor of technology in
addition to superior numbers?” The shopkeeper hesitated and then turned the muzzle
of his gun downward. But he did not put it away. Mother Mastiff stared at the man for a moment, then
looked expectantly down at Flinx. “Well? Did ye see where he put the rings?” Flinx was gazing steadily at the bald man, those
green eyes unwinking. “No, I didn’t, Mother. But he took them. I’m sure of it.” “Right, then.”
Her attention went back to the offworlder. “Sir, I must ask ye to
consent to a brief body search.” “This is most undignified,” he complained. “I shall
lodge a complaint with my tourist office.” “I’m sorry,” she told him, “but if you’ve nothing to
hide, it’s best that we’re assured of it.” “Oh, very well. Please hurry and get it over with. I
have other places to go today. I’m on holiday, you know.” Acting uncertainly now, two of the men who had
responded to Mother Mastiff’s whistle searched the visitor. They did a thorough
job of it, working him over with the experience of those who had dealt with
thieves before. They searched everything from the lining of his overcoat to the
heels of his boots. When they had finished, they gazed helplessly over at
Mother Mastiff and shook their heads. “Empty he is,” they assured her. “Nothing on him.” “What’s missing. Mother?” Aljean asked gently. “Kill rings,” she explained. “The only four kill
rings in my stock. Took me years to accumulate them, and I wouldn’t know how to
go about replacing them. Search him again.” She nodded at the bald man.
“They’re not very big and would be easy enough to hide.” They complied, paying particular attention this time
to the thick metal belt buckle the man wore. It revealed a bidden compartment
containing the man’s credcard and little else. No rings. When the second search proved equally fruitless,
Mother Mastiff gazed sternly down at her charge. “Well, Flinx, what have ye to
say for yourself?” “He did
take them, he did,” the boy insisted, almost crying. “I know he did.” He was
still staring at the bald man. Suddenly, his eyes widened. “He swallowed them.” “Swallowed-now just a minute,” the visitor
began. “This is getting ugly. Am I to
wait here, accused by a mischievous child?” He shook an angry finger at Flinx,
who did not flinch or break his cold, green stare. “He took them,” the boy repeated, “and swallowed
them.” “Did you see me take these rings?” the bald man
demanded. “No,” Flinx admitted, “I didn’t. But you took them.
You know you did. They’re inside you.” “Charming, the experiences one has on the
slumworlds,” the man said sarcastically. “Really, though, this exercise has
ceased to be entertaining. I must go. My tour allots me only two days in this -wonderful city, and I wouldn’t want to
waste any more time observing quaint local customs. Out of the kindness of my nature, I will not call upon the
gendarmes to arrest you all. One side, please.” He shoved past the uncertain
shopkeepers and walked easily out into the rain. Mother Mastiff eyed the man’s retreating back. Her
friends and fellow merchants watched her expectantly, helplessly. She looked
down at the boy. Flinx had stopped crying. His voice was calm and unemotional
as he gazed back up at her. “He took them, mother, and he’s walking away with
them right now.” She could not explain what motivated her as she
calmly told Aljean, “Call a gendarme, then.” The bald man heard that, stopped, and turned back to
face them through the now gentle rain. “Really, old woman, if you think I’m
going to wait-“ “Aljean,” Mother Mastiff said, “Cheneth?” The two
shopkeepers exchanged a glance, then jogged out to bring the bald man back-if
false restraint charges were filed, they would be against Mother Mastiff and
not them. “I’m sorry, sir,” Cheneth, the candy man, said as he
gestured with his pistol, “but we’re going to have to ask you to wait until the
authorities arrive.” “And then
what? Are they going to haul a free citizen to the magistrate because a child
demands it?” “A simple body scan should be sufficient,” Mother
Mastiff said as the three re-entered the shop. “Surely you’ve no reason to
object to that?” “Of course I’d object to it!” the visitor responded.
“They have no reason or right to-“ “My, but you’re suddenly arguing a lot for someone
with nothing to worry about,” Aljean, the clothier, ob-served. She was
forty-two years old and had run her way through four husbands. She was very
adept at spotting lies, and she was suddenly less convinced of this visitor’s
innocence. “Of course, if perhaps you realize now that you’ve somehow made a
bit of mistake and that we quaint locals aren’t quite the simpletons you
believe us to be, and if you’d rather avoid the inconvenience of a scan, not to
mention official attention, you’ll learn that we’re agreeably forgiving here if
you’ll just return to Mother Mastiff what you’ve taken.” “I haven’t taken a damn-“ the bald man started to
say. “The jails of Drallar are very, very uncomfortable,”
Aljean continued briskly. “Our government resents spending money on public
needs. They especially scrimp when it comes to the comfort of wrongdoers. You
being an offworlder now, I don’t think you’d take well to half a year of
unfiltered underground dampness. Mold will sprout in your lungs, and your
eyelids will mildew.” All of a sudden, the man seemed to slump in on
him-self. He glared down at Flinx, who stared quietly back at him. “I don’t know how the hell you saw me, boy. I swear,
no one saw me! No one!” “I’ll be blessed over,” Cheneth murmured, his jaw drop-ping
as he looked from the thief to the boy who had caught him. “Then you did take
the rings!” “Ay. Call off the authorities,” he said to Aljean
“You’ve said it would be enough if I gave back the rings. I agree.” Mother Mastiff nodded slowly. “I agree, also,
provided that ye promise never to show your reflective crown in this part of
this marketplace ever again.” “My word on it, as a professional,” the man promised
quickly. “I did not lie when I said that I was on holiday.” He gave them a
twisted smile. “I like to make my holidays self-supporting.” Mother Mastiff did not smile back. She held out a
hand. My kill rings, if ye please.” The man’s smile twisted even further. “Soon
enough. But first I will need certain
edibles. There are several fruits which will suffice, or certain standard
medications. I will also need clean cloths and disinfectant. The boy is right,
you see. I did swallow them. Provide what I need and in an hour or so you will
have your cursed rings back.” And forty minutes later she did. After the thief and the little group of admiring
shopkeepers had gone their respective ways. Mother Mastiff took her charge
aside and confronted him with the question no one else had thought to ask. “Now, boy, ye say ye didn’t see him swallow the
rings?” “No, I didn’t, Mother.” Now that the crowd had
dis-persed and he had been vindicated, his shyness returned. “Then how the ringap did ye know?” Flinx hesitated. “Come now, boy, out with it. Ye can tell me,” she
said in a coaxing tone. “I’m your mother now, remember. The only one you’ve
got. I’ve been fair and straightforward with ye. Now ‘tis your turn to do the
same with me.” “You’re sure?” He was fighting with himself, she
saw. “You’re sure you’re not just being nice to me to fool me? You’re not one
of the bad people?” That was a funny thing for him to bring up, she
thought. “Of course I’m not one of them. Do I look like a bad people?” “N-n-no,” he admitted. “But it’s hard to tell,
some-times.” “You’ve lived with me for some time now, boy. Ye
know me better than that.” Her voice became, gentle again. “Come now. Fair is
fair. So stop lying to me by insisting you didn’t see him swallow those rings.” “I didn’t,” he said belligerently, “and I’m not
lying. The man was-he was starting to walk away from the case, and he was
uncomfortable. He was, he felt-what’s the word? He felt guilty.” “Now how do ye know that?” “Because,” he murmured, not looking at her but
staring out at the street where strange people scurried back and forth in the
returning mist, “because I felt it.” He put his small hand to his forehead and
rubbed gently. “Here.” Great Ganwrath of the Flood, Mother Mastiff thought
sharply. The boy’s a Talent. “You mean,” she asked again, “you read his mind?” “No,” he corrected her. “It’s not like that. It’s
just-it’s a feeling I get sometimes.” “Do ye get this feeling whenever ye look at someone
who’s been guilty?” “It’s not only guilty,” he explained, “it’s all
kinds of feelings. People-it’s like a fire. You can feel heat from a fire.” She
nodded slowly. “Well, I can feel certain things from people’s heads. Happiness
or fear or hate and lots of other things I’m not sure about. Like when a man
and a woman are together.” “Can ye do this whenever ye wish?” she asked. “No. Hardly ever. Lots of times I can’t feel a thing.
It’s clean then and doesn’t jump in on me, and I can relax. Then there’s other times when the feeling
will just be there-in here,” he added, tapping his forehead again. “I was
looking toward that man, and the guilt and worry poured out of him like a fire,
especially whenever he looked at the jewel case. He was worried, too, about
being discovered somehow and being caught, and a lot of other things, too. He
was thinking, was throwing out thoughts of lots of quick money. Money he was
going to get unfairly.” “Emotions,” she mused aloud, “all emotions.” She
began to chuckle softly. She had heard of such things before. The boy was an empathic telepath, though a
crude one. He could read other people’s
emotions, though not their actual thoughts. “It’s all right, Flinx,” she assured him. She put
out a hand and gave his hair a playful tousle. “Ye did right well. Ye saved me,
saved us both, a lot of money.” She looked over at the small leatherine purse
that now held the four recovered and cleansed rings. They still smelled of
disinfectant. “No wonder that thief couldn’t figure out how you’d
spotted him. Ye really didn’t see him take the rings.” “No, mother. I wasn’t even sure what he’d taken.” “Ye just felt the reaction in. his mind?” “I guess,” he said. “I-1 don’t know how it happens,
but I know that most people can’t do it, can they?” “No,” she said gently, “most other people can’t. And
sometimes they become very upset if they think there’s someone around like ye
who can.” Flinx nodded solemnly. “Like the bad people?” “Maybe,” she said, considering that possibility.
“Maybe like the bad people, yes. Ye can’t control the power, you’re sure?” “I’m sure. I’ve tried. Sometimes it’s just there, a
burning inside my head. But most of the time it’s not.” She nodded. “That’s too bad, too bad. Ye have what’s
called a Talent, Flinx.” “A Talent.” He considered that a moment, then asked
uncertainly, “Is it a good thing?” “It can be. It can also be a dangerous thing, Flinx.
We must make a secret of it, your secret and mine. Don’t ever tell anyone else
about it.” “I won’t,” he murmured, then added energetically, “I
promise. Then you’re not mad at me?” “Mad?” She let out a long, rolling cackle. “Now how
could I be mad with ye, boy? I’ve regained my jewelry, and you’ve gained quite
a bit of respect among our neighbors. In the marketplace, that can be a
tradable commodity, as ye may discover someday. They think you’ve a sharp eye and a sharper tongue. The reality
be something more, though I wouldn’t argue ye can cut words with the best of
them. Keep your Talent to yourself. Remember, our secret.” “Our secret,” he repeated solemnly. “Can ye do anything else?” she asked him, trying not
to sound eager. “Anything besides feeling what others be feeling?” “I don’t think so. Though sometimes it feels like-I
don’t know. It burns, and it makes me afraid. I don’t know how it happens to
me, or why.” “Don’t trouble yourself about it, boy.” She didn’t
press the matter when she saw how it upset him. “There’s nothing to be afraid
of.” She drew him close, held him next to her thin, warm frame. “Ye utilize your mind and everything else ye
own. That’s what it all’s been given to
ye for. A Talent be no different from any other ability. If there be anything
else ye want to try with yourself, ye go ahead and try it. Tis your body and
brain and none other’s.” Chapter Three
The couple came from Burley. Mother Mastiff could
tell that by their rough accents and by the inordinate amount of gleaming metal
jewelry they wore. They were handicraft hunting. The intricately worked burl of
black caulderwood in Mother Mastiff’s shop caught their attention immediately.
It had been finely carved to show a panoramic view of a thoruped colony, one of
many that infested Moth’s northern-hemisphere continents. The carving ran the
entire width of ‘the burl, nearly two meters from end to end. It was a half
meter thick and had been polished to a fine ebony glow. It was a spectacular piece of work. Ordinarily,
Mother Mastiff would not have considered parting with it, for it was the kind
of showpiece that brought passers-by into the stall. But this couple wanted it
desperately, and only the impossibly high price seemed to be holding them back. Flinx wandered in off the street, picked at a pile
of small bracelets, and watched while the man and woman argued. Quite suddenly,
they reached a decision: they had to have the piece. It would complete their
recreation room, and they would be the envy of all their friends. Hang the
shipping cost, the insurance, and the price’ They’d take it. And they did, though the amount on their
credcard barely covered it. Two men came later that afternoon to pick up the
object and deliver it to the hotel where the visitors were staying. Later that night, after the shop had closed, after
supper, Mother Mastiff said casually, “You know, boy, that couple who bought
the caulderwood carving today?” “Yes, Mother?” “They must have been in and out of the shop half a
dozen times before they made up their minds.” “That’s interesting,” Flinx said absently. He was
seated in a corner studying a chip on his portable viewer. He was very diligent
about that. She never thought of sending him to a formal school-rental chips
had been good enough for her as a child, and they’d damn well be good enough
for him. “Yes,” she continued. “They barely had the money for
it. I pressed them, I backed off, I did everything I could think of to
convince them of its worth once I saw that they were really serious about
buying the thing. Every time, no matter what I said, they left the shop and
went off arguing between themselves. “Then ye put in an appearance and stood there and
watched them, and lo-de-do-de, sudden-like, their sales resistance just
crumpled up and went aflight. Be that not interesting?” “Not really,” he replied. “Doesn’t that happen lots
of times?” “Not with an item as expensive as the caulderwood,
it doesn’t. It hardly ever happens that way. Now I don’t sup-pose ye had
anything to do with the sudden change of heart on the part of those two? ‘Tis
not likely ye sensed their hesitation and maybe did something to help them
along?” “Of course not. Mother.” He looked away from his
viewer in surprise. “I can’t do anything like that.” “Oh,” she murmured, disappointed. “Ye wouldn’t be
lying to me now, would ye, boy?” He shook his head violently. “Why would I do a thing
like that? I’m just happy you made so much money on the sale. I’m always glad
when you make money.” “Well, that be one thing we have in common, anyway,”
she said gruffly. “That’s enough viewing for one night. You’ll strain your young eyes. Be to bed,
Flinx.” “All right, Mother.” He walked over and bestowed the
obligatory peck on her cheek before scurrying off to his own room. “G’night.” “Good night, boy.” She stayed awake in her own bedroom for a while,
watching one of the rented entertainment chips on her own viewer. The show had
been recorded on Evoria and benefited from the exotic location and the presence
of thranx performers. It was late when she finally shut it off and readied
herself for ‘sleep. A quick shower, half an hour brushing out her hair, and she
was able to slide with a sigh beneath the thermal blanket. As she lay in the dark, waiting for sleep, a sudden
disquieting thought stole into her mind. Why would the boy lie to her about such a possible ability? He might do it, she thought, because if he could
convince one couple to make an unwanted purchase, he probably could do it to
others. And if he could do it to others, what about this past autumn when she had
been hurrying past the government auction platform on her way across town, and
something had brought her to a puzzling halt.
Wasn’t it possible that the purchase she had made then—the unwanted,
inexplicable-to-this-day purchase that she had never looked at too closely-had
been helped along its way by the mental nudging of the purchased? Why had she
bought him? None of her friends could quite under-stand it either. Disturbed, she slipped out of the bed and walked
across the resting and eating space to the boy’s room. A glance inside revealed
him sleeping soundly beneath his cover, as innocent-looking a child as one
could hope to set eyes upon. But now something else was there, too, something
unseen and unpredictable that she could never be certain about. Never again
would she be able to relax completely in the boy’s presence. Already she had forgotten her initial regrets and
had begun to extend to him the love she had never before been able to give to
his like. He was an endearing little twit and had been more than helpful around
the shop. It was good to have such company in her old age. But for a while now,
just for a while, she would pat and reassure him with one hand and keep the
other close by a weapon. At least until she could be sure in her own mind that
it still was her own mind she could be sure of. Silly old fool, she thought as she turned back
toward her own room. You’ve praised him for having a Talent, and now you’re
worried about it. You can’t have it both ways. Besides, what need to fear a
Talent its owner could not control? That confession of the boy’s seemed
truthful enough, to judge by his distress and bewilderment. She was feeling easier by the time she slipped into
her bed the second time. No, there was no reason to worry. It was interesting,
his Talent, but if he couldn’t control it, well, no need to be concerned. Clearly, anyone unable to master such an ability
would never amount to much, anyway. “Haithness, Cruachan, come here!” The woman seated before the computer screen had
spent still another morning poring through reams of abstract data. She was
trying to put together a chemical puzzle of considerable complexity. But that
morning, as happens on rare occasions, an especially vital piece of the puzzle
had unexpectedly fallen into place. Instead of a morass of figures and
undisciplined graphics, the screen now beamed out an image of perfect symmetry. The man who hurried over from the center of the room
to glance over her shoulder was tall, the lines striping his face impressive.
The dark-haired woman who joined him in staring at the screen was equally
imposing. The chamber in which the three of them worked was
situated in a small, nondescript office building located in an unimportant city
on a backwater world. For all that the equipment they hovered over had a
cobbled-together appearance, most of it was still of a type requiring enormous
expertise to operate and great expense to fund. Both the knowledge and the money came from
scattered, seemingly unrelated locations throughout the Commonwealth. To the
men and women who practically lived in the room, isolation was their honored
burden, obscurity their most potent weapon. For they were members of a uniquely
despised and persecuted minority, at war with the tenets of civilized society.
Truly were their hearts pure and their purposes of noble mien- it was just
their methodology that the rest of civilization questioned. The three staring intently at the computer screen
certainly did not look like candidates for such special attention. The tall man,
Cruachan, had the look of a kindly grandfather; the oriental lady seated before
the console would have seemed more at home in an ancient era, clad in flowing
silks and wooden shoes. Only the tall black woman standing opposite Cruachan
showed some of her inner hardness in her face. That hardness and cold. resolve lived in each of
them, however, fostered and intensified by two decades of persecution. They saw
themselves as men and women apart from the common herd. Their aim was nothing
less than the improvement of mankind in spite of itself. That their methods
might result in damage to the innocent was some-thing they had known from the
beginning. They had put that and other conventionally moral beliefs aside,
believing that such sacrifices were necessary that the majority might benefit.
They called their group the Meliorare Society, an innocent-sounding name drawn
to mask the intention of improving humanity via the artificial manipulation of
genetic material. Their troubles began when several of their less successful
experiments came to light, whereupon the outcry over the revelations had been
enormous. Now they were compelled to work in scattered outposts instead of in a
single research installation, always barely a jump ahead of pursuing government
authorities. They were looked down upon and viewed with horror by the general
populace. Many of their associates had already vanished,
having been discovered and taken into custody by the relentless minions of an
ignorant officialdom: martyrs to science, the survivors knew-inhuman monsters,
according to the media reports. Of course,
the aims of the Meliorare Society were dangerous! Improvement-change-was always viewed as dangerous by the shortsighted.
The members had steeled themselves to that way of thinking, and it no longer
affected them. What mattered were results, not the opinions of the ignorant
masses. So they did not fear dying, did not fear the even
more horrible punishment of selective mindwipe, because they believed in the
rightness of their cause. If only one of their experiments turned out
successfully, it would vindicate the work propounded on Terra some forty years
earlier by the Society’s founder. Then they would be able to re-emerge into the
scientific community that had disowned them. They would be able to point with
pride to a mature, noticeably improved human being. The air of excitement that pervaded the room was
re-strained but clearly felt as they gathered around the computer screen. “This had better live up to its readout,
Nyassa-lee,” Cruachan warned. “I have half a volume of information to process
from the Cannachanna system, and as you know, we’re likely going to have to
abandon this place and move on within the month. That means reset, breakdown of
equipment, and all the difficulties moving entails.” “You know me better than that, Cruachan,” said the
woman seated in the chair. “There was no feeling of triumph in what she had
just done; they had progressed beyond such trivialities. “I’ve been feeding and
cross-correlating records on dispersal and individual subject characteristics
for months now. It’s finally paid off. I’ve located Number Twelve.” The tall black woman leaned closer to the
screen. “Number Twelve-that sticks in
the mind. Male, wasn’t it?” Nyassa-lee nodded and indicated the screen. “Here,
I’II run the relevants back for you.” They refamiliarized themselves with the details of
the case in question. It had been eight years since case interdiction. In the eight
years since, they had encountered a number of other subjects. Most of them had
grown into normal childhood. A few had even displayed tiny flashes of promise,
but nothing worth a full-scale follow-up. Then there had been those whose minds and bodies had
been horribly distorted and twisted by the original surgical manipulations, for
which they each shared the blame. Un-fortunate failures such as those had been
made public by the government and had raised such an emotional outcry among the
scientifically unsophisticated public that the government had been able to
legalize its witch hunt against the Society. Most of the subject children had been recovered by
the government, raised in special homes, and restored to normality. Where
possible, the genetic alterations performed by the Society’s surgeons had been
corrected to enable all the children to live a normal life. If we cannot improve upon the normal, thought
Haithness, then we do not deserve to explore and master the universe. Nature
helps those who help themselves. Why should we not employ our learning and
knowledge to give evolution a boost? From the far corner of the darkened room, a man
called out. “Brora reports that a government shuttle has landed at Calaroom
shuttleport.” “Could be the usual load of agricultural
specialists,” Cruachan said thoughtfully. “Possible,” agreed the individual manning the
communications console, “but can we afford that risk?” “I hate to order evacuation on such slim evidence.
Any word on how many passengers?” “Hard to say,” the man ventured, listening intently
to his receiver. “Brora says at least a dozen he doesn’t recognize.” “That’s a lot of agricultural specialists,
Cruachan,” Haithness pointed out. “It is.” He called across to the communications
specialist. “Tell Brora to pull back and prepare for departure. We can’t take chances. Push evac time from a
month to tonight.” ‘Tonight?” The voice of the communicator had a
dubious ring. “I won’t have half the equipment broken down by then.” “New communications equipment we can buy,” Cruachan
reminded him. “Replacements for ourselves are not available.” The man at the corn console nodded and turned back
to his station, speaking softly and hurriedly into the pickup. Cruachan returned his attention to the
computer screen. Information emerged. NUMBER TWELVE. MALE. PHYSICALLY
UNDISTINGUISED AS A CHILD. Next were descriptions of cerebral index and figures
for cortical energy displacement. Oh, yes; Cruachan remembered now. Unpredictable,
that Number Twelve. Patterns in brain activity suggesting paranormal activity
but nothing concrete. Particularly fascinating had been the amount of activity
emerging from the left side of the cerebrum, usually detected only in females.
That by itself was not reason enough for excitement, but there was also
continuous signs of functioning in at least two sections of brain that were not
normally active, the “dead” areas of the mind. That activity, like the child
himself, had also been unpredictable. And yet, despite such encouraging evidence, the case
history of Number Twelve was devoid of the usual promising developments. No
hint of telepathy, psycho-kinesis, pyrokinesis, dual displacement, or any of
the other multitude of abilities the Society had hoped to bring to full flower
in its experimental children. Still, Number Twelve at least exhibited a possible
some-thing. “Well, this one certainly shows more promise than
the last dozen or so,” Haithness had to admit. “It’s been so long since we had
contact with him. I’d nearly forgotten those activity readings. We need to get
to this one as quickly as possible. Where’s he situated?” Nyassa-lee tapped keys below the readout, bringing
forth answers. “Where in the Commonwealth is that?” Haithness grumbled. “Trading world,” Cruachan put in, thinking hard.
“Centrally located but unimportant in and of itself. A stopover world, low in
native population.” “You won’t mind going there once you’ve seen this,”
Nyassa-lee assured them both. Her fingers moved delicately over the keyboard a
second time, and fresh in-formation glowed on screen. “This is recent, from the
local operative who relocated the subject. It appears that the child has
definitely displayed one Talent, possibly two.
Furthermore, he has done so in public and apparently without any
specialized training.” “Without training,” Cruachan whispered. “Remarkable,
if true.” Nyassa-lee tapped the screen. “This operative has
been reliable in the past and particularly noteworthy for the ac-curacy of his observations.
The Talent in question is a telepathic variant of some sort. The operative is
not a scientifically trained observer, of course, and he is even less certain
of the second one, though its potential value may be even greater.” “What is it?” Haithness asked. “I’ve been hard put to find a name for it.
Basically, it seems that the child may be an emolterator.” The other woman looked confused. “I don’t remember
that on the list of possible Talents.” “It wasn’t there. It’s an original. Original with this
child, it seems,” Cruachan said. Nyassa-lee nodded. “It means that he may be
able to influence the actions of others. Not mind control, nothing as strong as
that. It would be more subtle. One possessing such an ability would have to
utilize it Very carefully. If this report is true . . .” His voice and thoughts
drifted for a moment as he studied the readout. “It seems the child’s Talents have gone unnoticed by
the authorities and that he has developed naturally. All without even the most
rudimentary training. The signs certainly point to powerful potentials waiting
to be unlocked.” “Either the child has grown up unaware of these
Talents,” Nyassa-lee said, studying new information as it appeared on the
screen, “or else he is precociously clever.” “It may be just natural caution,” Haithness put in.
“It will be interesting to find out which is the case.” “Which we will do,” Cruachan said firmly. “It’s been
a long time since we’ve had a subject as promising as this one come back to us.
He could be the one we’ve searched for all these years.” “It had better not be a repeat of the last time we
located a subject with these figures,” Haithness cautioned, then indicated the
new figures materializing on the screen.
“Look at those neurological potentials. Remember the only other child
who showed numbers like that?” “Of course, I remember,” Cruachan said irritably.
“We won’t lose this one the way we lost that girl-what the devil was the little
monster’s name?” “Mahnahmi,” Nyassa-lee reminded him. “Yes, if this
boy’s anything like that one, we’re going to have to be extremely careful. I
couldn’t take a repeat of that experience.” “Neither could I, frankly,” Cruachan admitted. “Our
mistake was in trying to regain control over her directly. End result: the girl vanishes again, and two
more of the society go to a premature end. And we’re still not sure how she
accomplished it.” “We’ll run across her again someday, when our
methods are improved,” Haithness said coolly. “Then we’ll deal with her
properly.” “I’m not sure I’d want to chance it.” Nyassa-lee
looked back at the screen. “Meanwhile, it would be good to keep in mind the
fact that the potential of this Number Twelve theoretically exceeds even that
of the girl.” “True,” Cruachan admitted, studying the figures,
“but it’s clear that his development has been much slower. We should have
plenty of time to cope with any maturing Talent and make certain it is safely
contained, for the child’s benefit as well as our own, of course.” “Of course,” Haithness agreed calmly. “I am curious
to know how you propose to accomplish that. You know how volatile a Talent can
become if stressed.” “Yes, the girl gave us an impressive demonstration
of that, didn’t she?” Nyassa-lee’s fingers brought forth fresh information from
the console. Another call sounded from across the room. “Brora
says he’s now convinced that the new arrivals at the port have nothing to do
with the agricultural station. They have not stopped by the Agri section of
government house; they are gathering instead in the subterranean quarter.” “Tell Brora to speed things up,” Cmachan replied. “I
definitely want the installation broken down by midnight.” “Yes, sir,” the communicator responded briskly. “You didn’t answer my question,” Haithness reminded
the tail man. “How are we going to handle this one? If we try direct control as
we did with the girl, we risk the same consequences. There is no way of
predicting how a subject may react.” “Remember that the girl was still in infancy when we
encountered her. We wrongly mistook her age for harmlessness. There was no
reason to appeal to in her case-she was too young. I never expected that to
work against us.” “It doesn’t matter. The important thing is that he
is still unskilled in the use of his Talent. That is also what makes him dangerous.”
Haithness indicated the figures on the screen. “Look at those. Undisciplined or
not, we must handle this Number Twelve with extreme caution. We need a check of
some kind, something strong enough to mute any juvenile emotional reactions.” Nyassa-lee glanced back and up at her colleague.
“But we cannot wait.” “I agree with you there. This may be our last chance
to gain control and direction over a subject with such potential. We don’t want
to waste our chance.” “I am aware of the considerations and risks,”
Cruachan assured them both. “I do not intend that we should try, as we did with
the girl, to gain control directly. Instead, we will try to obtain control over
someone who exercises control over the subject. Is there anyone who fits the
requisite pattern?” Nyassa-lee turned back to her keyboard. There was a
pause before she replied, “One. It appears that the subject was purchased from
government control by an elderly woman. She has raised the boy as her own.” “Surrogate mother,” Haithness murmured. “That’s
good. It is virtually made to order. We
could not hope for a stronger emotional bond.” There was no warmth in the voice of Haithness. Only
one thing mattered to her: the success of the experiment. Time was running out for the Society, she knew; they
had no way of knowing when the authorities might close in on them forever. They
needed a success now, and this boy
might be their last chance. “I see one possible drawback,” Cruachan said while
pondering the information glowing on the screen. “The woman in question, the
surrogate mother, is of an advanced age, though apparently healthy.” He nudged
Nyassa-lee, who obediently made room for him on the edge of the chair. Cruachan fingered controls and frowned when the in-formation
he sought did not appear on the screen. “No detailed medical information on
her. It could be difficult.” Haithness shrugged indifferently. “It does not
matter what her condition is. We have to proceed regardless.” “I know, I know,” Cruachan replied impatiently. “Our
course is set, then. We will not go from here to Loser’s World in hopes of
relocating subject Number Fifty-six. Instead, we will establish standard mobile
operations aboard the ship. Once we are certain we have escaped pursuit, we will
plot course for this Moth. Then we should have enough time to proceed as
planned.” “It will be necessary to isolate the subject from
the mother.” Haithness was thinking out loud. “Given the nature of the
subject’s observed Talents, if our information is accurate, it may be that
within a limited geographical area he might be able to trace our activities. We
will naturally need an uninterrupted period with the surrogate,” she hesitated
only briefly, “to persuade her to co-operate with us.” A thin smile did little
to alter her expression. Cruachan nodded. “That should not be difficult to
arrange. Fortunately for us, Moth is lightly populated. Technology is not
unknown, but the level varies widely according to location. We should be able
to establish our-selves and the necessary equipment at a sufficient distance
from the metropolis where the subject and his parent are living to ensure our
privacy and standard security.” The communicator turned from his instrumentation and
interrupted them without hesitation. “Brora reports that at least half of the
newly arrived agricultural experts are armed.” “That’s that, then,” Cruachan murmured with a
resigned sigh. Another hurried move, another dash to still another strange
world. “Nyassa-lee, make certain that this information is
transferred to ship storage. Haithness, you-“ “I know what needs to be done, Cruachan.” She turned
from him and calmly began transferring data from main storage to a portacube. The communicator leaned back in his chair and
frowned at his instruments. “I won’t have time to break down much and move it
out to the shuttle.” “It doesn’t matter, Osteen,” Cruachan assured him.
“We have some duplicate equipment already aboard. I don’t like abandoning more
than we have to any more than you do.” He indicated the expensive electronics
with which the room had been paneled. “But we don’t have a choice now. Regardless, something promising, truly
promising, has come to our notice. After all these years, it appears that we
have relocated one of the most promising of all the subject children.” “That’s good news indeed, sir.” Osteen was one of
the few young men in the Meliorare Society. Cruachan would have prefered a man
with more vision as prime communicator, but such individuals were scarce.
Osteen at least was loyal and efficient. It was not his fault that he was
intellectually inferior to the Society’s original membership. But then, such a
collection of visionary minds was not likely to join together again in
Cruachan’s lifetime, he knew. Unless ... unless the Society could put forth a
shining testament to their noble ideals in the person of a single successful
subject. This boy, perhaps, might be their vindication. They had to get to him
quickly. During the past several years, they had had less and less time in
which to work as the Commonwealth closed in on the remnants of the Society.
Their survival rate did not bode well for the future: natural attrition was
beginning to damage the cause as much as government interference. The three of them, along with the sharp-eyed Brora,
who had sounded the latest warning, represented the largest surviving group
from the original membership. The trust of all who had perished devolved upon
them, Cruachan thought. They must not fail with this boy. And he must not fail them. Chapter Four
Loneliness had never bothered Flinx before. He knew
what it was, of course-the condition had been with him all his short life. In
the past, he’d always been able to distance himself from its pain, but this
feeling-this empty aloneness-was different from any loneliness he’d ever
experienced before. It was a physical reality, stabbing at him, creating an
ache in a mysterious, new part of his brain. It was different not only from his
own loneliness but from the aloneness he’d occasionally sensed in others via
his unpredictable Talent. In fact, the experience was so radically new that he
had nothing to compare it with. Yet it was
loneliness; of that he was certain. Loneliness and something else equally
intense and recognizable: hunger. A gnawing, persistent desire for food. The feelings were so bright and uncomplicated that
Flinx couldn’t help but wonder at their source. They beat insistently on his
mind, refusing to fade away. Never before had such emotions been so open to
him, so clear and strong. Normally, they would begin to fade, but these grew
not weaker but stronger-and he did not have to strain to hold them at bay. They
kept hammering at him until his mind finally gave in and woke him up. Flinx rubbed at his eyes. It was pouring outside the
shop, and the narrow window over the bed admitted the dim light of Moth’s
multiple moons, which somehow seeped through the nearly unbroken cloud cover.
Flinx had rarely seen the bright rust-red moon called Flame or its smaller
companions, but he’d spent his years of study well, and he knew where the light
came from. Slipping silently from the bed, he stood up and
pulled on pants and shirt. A glow light bathed the kitchen and dining area in
soft yellow. Across the way, ragged snores came from the vicinity of Mother
Mastiff’s bedroom. The loneliness he sensed was not hers. The feeling persisted into wakefulness. Not a dream,
then, which had been his first thought. The back of his head hurt with the
strength of it, but though the actual pain was beginning to fade, the emotion
was still as strong as it had been in sleep. He did not wake Mother Mastiff as he inspected the
rest of the kitchen area, the bathroom, and the single narrow closet. Quietly,
he opened the front door and slipped out into the stall. The shutters were
locked tight, keeping out weather and intruders alike. The familiar snoring
provided a comforting background to his prowling. Flinx had grown into a lithe young man of slightly
less than average height and mildly attractive appearance. His hair was red as ever, but his dark skill
now hid any suggestion of freckles. He moved with a gracefulness and silence
that many of the older, more experienced marketplace thieves might have envied.
Indeed, he could walk across a room paved with broken glass and metal without
making a sound. It was a technique he had picked up from some of Drallar’s less
reputable citizens, much to Mother Mastiff’s chagrin. All a part of his
education, he had assured her. The thieves had a word for it: “skeoding,” meaning
to walk like a shadow. Only Flinx’s brighter than normal hair made the
professional purloiners cluck their tongues in disapproval. They would have
welcomed him into their company, had he been of a mind to make thievery his
profession. But Flinx would steal only if absolutely necessary, and then only
from those who could afford it. “I only want to use my ability to supplement my
in-come,” he had told the old master who had inquired about his future
intentions, “and Mother Mastiff’s, of course.” The master had laughed, showing broken teeth. “I
understand, boy. I’ve been supplementin’ my income in that manner goin’ on
fifty years now.” He and his colleagues could not believe that one who showed
such skill at relieving others of their possessions would not desire to make a
career of it, especially since the youth’s other prospects appeared dim. “Yer goin’ into the Church, I suppose?” one of the
other thieves had taunted him, “t’become a Counselor First?” “I don’t think the spiritual life is for me,” Flinx
had replied. They all had a good laugh at that. As he quietly opened the lock on the outside door,
he thought back to what he had learned those past few years. A wise man did not move around Drallar late
at night, particularly on so wet and dark a one. But he couldn’t go back to
sleep without locating the source of the feelings that battered at him.
Loneliness and hunger, hunger and loneliness, filled his mind with
restlessness. Who could possibly be broadcasting twin deprivations of such
power? The open doorway revealed a wall of rain. The angled
street carried the water away to Drallar’s efficient under-ground drainage
system. Flinx stood in the gap for a long moment, watching. Suddenly an intense
burst of emptiness made him wince. That decided him. He could no more ignore
that hot pleading than he could leave an unstamped credcard lying orphaned in
the street. “That curiosity of yours will get ye into real
trouble Someday, boy,” Mother Mastiff had told him on more than one occasion.
“Mark me word.” Well, he had marked her word. Marked it and filed
it. He turned away from the door and skeoded back to his little room. It was
early summer, and the rain outside was relatively warm. Disdaining an
underjacket, he took a slickertic from its wall hook and donned it; thus
suitably shielded from the rain, he made his way back to the stall, out into
the street, and closed the main door softly behind him. A few lights like hibernating will-o’-the-wisps
glowed faintly from behind unshuttered shop fronts on the main avenue where the
idling wealthy night-cavorted in relative safety. On the side street where
Mother Mastiff plied her trade, only a rare flicker of illumination emerged
from be-hind locked shutters and windows. As water cascaded off his shoulders, Flinx stood
there and searched his mind. Something sent him off to his right. There was a narrow gap between Mother
Mastiff’s shop and that of old lady Marquin, who was on vacation in the south,
and by turning sideways, he could just squeeze through. Then he was standing in the service alleyway that
ran behind the shops and a large office building. His eyes roved over a lunar
landscape of uncollected garbage and refuse: old plastic packing crates, metal
storage barrels, honeycomb containers for breakables, and other indifferently
disposed of detritus. A couple of fleurms scurried away from his boots. Flinx
watched them warily. He was not squeamish where the omnipresent fleurms were
concerned, but he had a healthy respect for them. The critters were covered in
a thick, silvery fur, and their little mouths were full of fine teeth. Each
animal was as big around as Flinx’s thumb and as long as his forearm. They were
not really worms but legless mammals that did very well in the refuse piles and
composting garbage that filled the alleys of Drallar to overflowing. He had
heard horror stories of old men and women who had fallen into a drunken stupor
in such places-only their exposed bones remained for the finding. Flinx, however, was not drunk. The fleurms could
inflict nasty bites, but they were shy creatures, nearly blind, and greatly
preferred to relinquish the right of way when given the choice. If it was dark on the street in front of the shop,
it was positively stygian in the alley. To the east, far up the straightaway,
he could make out a light and hear intermittent laughter. An odd night for a
party. But the glow gave him a reference point, even if it was too far off to
shed any light on his search. The continuing surge of loneliness that he felt did
not come from that distant celebration, nor did it rise from the heavily
shuttered and barred doorways that opened onto the alley. The emotions Flinx
was absorbing came from somewhere very near. He moved forward, picking his way between the piles
of debris, talking his time so as to give the fleurms and the red-blue carrion
bugs time to scurry from his path. All at once something struck with unexpected force
at his receptive mind. The mental blow sent him to his knees. Somewhere a man was beating his wife. No
unique circumstance, that, but Flinx felt it from the other side of the city.
The woman was frightened and angry. She
was reaching for the tiny dart gun she kept hidden in her bedroom dresser and
was pointing its minuscule barrel at the man. Then it was the husband’s turn to
be frightened. He was pleading with her, not in words that Flinx could hear but
via an emotional avalanche that ended in an abrupt, nonverbal scream of shock.
Then came the emptiness that Flinx had grown to recognize as death. He heard laughter, not from the party up the alley
but from one of the lofty crystal towers that reared above the wealthy inurbs
where the traders and transspatial merhants made their homes. And there was
plotting afoot; someone was going to be cheated. Far beyond the city boundaries in the forest to the
west: happiness and rejoicing, accompanied by a new liquid sensation of
emergence. A baby was born. Very near, perhaps in one of the shops on Mother
Mastiff’s own street, an argument was raging. It involved accounts and
falsification, waves of acrimonious resentment passing between short-term
partners. Then the private grumblings of someone unknown and far away across
the city center, someone plotting to kill, and kill more than one time, but
plotting only-the kind of fantasizing that fills spare moments of every human
brain, be it healthy or sick. Then all the sensations were gone, all of them, the
joyful and the doomed, the debaters and lovers and ineffectual dreamers. There
was only the rain. Blinkmg, he staggered to his feet and stood swaying
un-steadily on the slope of the alley. Rain spattered off his slickertic, wove
its way down the walls of the shops and the office building, to gurgle down the
central drains. Flinx found himself staring blankly up the alley toward the
distant point of light that marked the location of the party. Abruptly, the emotions of everyone at the
party were sharp in his mind; only now he felt no pain. There was only a calm
clarity and assurance. He could see this woman anxiously yet uncertainly
trying to tempt that man, see another criticizing the furniture, still another
wondering how he could possibly live through the next day, feel laughter, fear,
pleasure, lust, admiration, envy: the whole gamut of human emotions. They began to surge toward him like the
storm he had just weathered, threatening the pain again, threatening to
over-whelm him-STOP IT, he ordered himself. Stop it-easy. By careful manipulation of a piece of his mind he
hadn’t even been aware existed before, he discovered he was able to control the
intensity of the emotions that threatened to drown him-not all of which had
been hu-man, either. He had felt at least two that were bizarre, yet
recognizable enough for him to identify. They were the feelings of a mated pair
of ornithorpes. It was the first time he had sensed anything from a nonhuman. Slowly, he found he was able to regulate the
assault, to damp it down to where he could manage it, sort out the individual
feelings, choose, analyze-and then they were gone as suddenly as they had struck,
along with all the rest of the blaze of emotion he had sucked in from around
the city. Hesitantly, he tried to focus his mind and bring
back the sensations. It was as before. Try as he might, his mind stayed empty
of any feelings save his own. His own- and one other. The loneliness was still
there, nagging at him. The feeling was
less demanding now, almost hesitant. The hunger was there, too. Flinx took a step forward, another, a third-and
something alive quickly scuttled out of his path, shoving aside empty
containers and cans, plastic and metal clinking in the damp alley. He strained
to see through the dimness, wishing now that he had had the presence of mind to
bring a portable light from the shop. He took a cautious step toward the pile,
ready to jump up and clear should the fleurms or whatever prove unexpectedly
aggressive. It was not a fleurm. For one thing, it was too long:
nearly a meter. It was thicker, too, though not by much. He thought of the snakelike creatures that
roamed the temperate forests to the south of Drallar. Some of them were
poisonous. Occasionally, they and other forest predators made their way into
the city under cover of rain and darkness to hunt out the small creatures that
infested the urban trash heaps. It was rare, but not unheard of, that a citizen
encountered such an intruder. Flinx leaned close to the pile, and as he did so the
hunger faded. Simultaneously, the feeling of loneliness intensi-fied; the strength
of it almost sent him reeling back against the shop wall. He was certain it
came from the snakelike unknown. The bump of curiosity-which Mother Mastiff was at
such pains to warn him about-quickly overcame his natural caution. All be felt
was amazement that such powerful mental projections could arise from so lowly a
creature. Furthermore, there was no anger in the animal, no rudimentary danger
signals. Only that persistent loneliness and the fleeting sense of hunger. The creature moved again. He could see the bright,
flashing red eyes even in the alley’s faint light. Not a true reptile, he was
sure. A cold-blooded creature would have been reduced to lethargy by the cool
night air. This thing moved too rapidly. Flinx took a step back, away from the pile. The
creature was emerging. It slithered onto the wet pavement and then did
something he did not expect. Snakes were not supposed to fly. The pleated wings were blue and pink, bright enough
for him to identify even in the darkness. No, the snake-thing certainly was not
lethargic, for its wings moved in a blur, giving the creature the sound and
appearance of a gigantic bee. It found a place on his shoulder in a single,
darting movement. Flinx felt thin, muscular coils settle al-most familiarly
around his shoulder. The whole thing had happened too fast for him to dodge. But the creature’s intent was not to harm. It simply
sat, resting against his warmth, and made no move to attack. The speed of the approach had paralyzed
Flinx, but only for a moment. For as soon as it bad settled against him, all
that vast loneliness, every iota of that burning need had fled from the snake.
At the same time, Flinx experienced a clarity within his own mind that he had
never felt before. Whatever the
creature was, wherever it had come from, it not only had the ability to make
itself at home, it seemed to make its new host feel comfortable as well. A new sensation entered Flinx’s mind, rising from
the snake. It was the first time he had ever experienced a mental purr. He sensed
no intelligence in the creature, but there was something else. In its
own way, the empathic communication was as clear as speech, the emotional
equivalent of an ancient Chinese ideograph-a whole series of complex thoughts
expressed as a single projection.
Simple, yet efficient. The small arrowhead-shaped head lifted from Flinx’s
shoulder, its bright little eyes regarding him intently. The pleated wings were
folded flat against the side of the body, giving the creature a normal
snakelike appearance. Flinx stared back, letting his own feelings pour from
him. Slowly, the creature relaxed. “The single long
coiled muscle of itself, which had been squeezing Flinx’s shoulder with
instinctive strength, relaxed, too, until it was only maintaining a gentle
grip, just enough to hold its position.
Pins and needles started to run down Flinx’s arm. He ignored them. The
animal’s head lowered until it moved up against Flinx’s neck. The snake was sound asleep. Flinx stood there for what felt like an eternity,
though surely it was not even half that long. The strange apparition that the
night had brought slept on his shoulder, its small head nestled in the hollow
of shoulder bone and neck tendon. The animal shivered once. Flinx knew it could
not be drawing full warmth from his body because the slictertic formed a layer
between them. Better to get the poor thing inside, he thought, suddenly aware
of how long he had been standing there in the rain. His new companion needed
rest as well as warmth. How he knew that, he could not have explained; but he
knew it as clearly as he recognized his own exhaustion. Flinx did not for a moment debate the snake’s
future. Its presence on his shoulder as
well as in his mind was too natural for him to consider parting with it-unless,
of course, some owner appeared to claim it. Clearly, this was no wild animal.
Also, Flinx was well-read, and if this creature was native to the Drallarian
vicinity, it was news to him. He had never seen or heard of such an animal
be-fore. If it was some kind of valuable pet, its owner would surely come
looking for it, and soon. For now, though, the snake was clearly as much an
orphan as Flinx himself had once been. Flinx had experienced too much suffering
in his own life to ignore it in anything else, even in a lowly snake. For a
while, it was his charge, much as he was Mother Mastiff’s. She had wanted to know his name on that first day
long ago. “What do I call you?” he wondered aloud. The sleeping snake did not
respond. There were thousands of books available to Flinx via
the library chips he rented from Central Education. He had only read a
comparative few, but among them was one with which he had particularly
identified. It was pre-Commonwealth- precivilization, really-but that hadn’t
mitigated its impact on him. Those characters with the funny names; one of them
was called-what? Pip, he ,remembered. He glanced back down at the sleeping
snake. That’ll be your name unless we
learn otherwise one day. As he started back for the shop, he tried to tell
himself that he would worry about that proverbial “one day” if and when it
presented itself, but he could not. He was already worried about it, because
although he had only had contact with the creature for less than an hour, it
seemed a part of him. “The thought of returning the snake to some indifferent,
offworld owner was suddenly more than he could bear. Since he had been an
infant, he couldn’t recall becoming so deeply attached to another living
creature. Not even Mother Mastiff had such a lock on his feelings. Feelings. This creature, this snake-thing, it understood
what he was feeling, understood what it meant to have the emotions of strangers
flood unbidden into one’s mind, interrupting one’s life and making every waking
moment a potential abnormality. That was what made it special. He knew it, and
the snake knew it, too. No longer were they individuals; they had become two
components of a larger whole. I will not give you up, he decided then and there in
the cold morning rain. Not even if some wealthy, fatuous offworlder appears to
lay claim to you. You belong with me. The snake dozed on, seemingly oblivious
to any decisions the human might make. The street fronting the shop was still deserted. The
lock yielded to his palm, and he slipped inside, glad to be out of the weather.
Carefully, he relocked the door. Then he was back in the dining area where the
glow light still shone softly. Using both hands, he unraveled the snake. It did
not resist as he slid the coils from his shoulder. From the bedroom to his
right came Mother Mastiff’s steady snores, a drone that matched the patter of
rain on the roof. Gently, he set the snake down on the single table.
In the glow lamp’s brighter light h& could see its true colors for the
first time. A bright pink and blue diamondback pattern ran the length of the
snake’s body, matching the pleated wings. The belly was a dull golden, hue and
the head emerald green. “Exquisite,” he murmured to the snake. “You’re
exquisite.” The creature’s eyes-no, he corrected himself, Pip’s
eyes-opened in lazy half sleep. It seemed to smile at him. Mental projection, Flinx thought as he
slipped out of the slickertic and hung it on its hook. “Now where can I keep you?” he whispered to himself
as he glanced around the small living area. The stall out front was out of the
question. Mother Mastiff surely had customers suffering from snake phobias, and
they might not take kindly to Pip’s presence-besides, the stall was unheated.
By the same token, he didn’t think Mother Mastiff would react with understanding
if the snake playfully sprang out at her from one of the kitchen storage
cabinets while .she was trying to prepare a meal. His own room was Spartan: There was only the small
computer terminal and chip readout, the single clothes closet he had rigged
himself, and the bed. The closet would have to do. Carrying the snake into his
room, Flinx set it down on the foot of the bed. Then he made a pile of some
dirty clothes on the closet floor. Pip looked clean enough; most scaled
creatures were dirt-shedders, not collectors. He lifted the snake and set it
down gently in the clothes, careful not to bruise the delicate wings. It
recoiled itself there, seemingly content. Flinx smiled at it. He didn’t smile
often. “Now you stay there. Pip,” he whispered, “and in the
morning we’ll see about scrounging something for you to eat.” He watched the
snake for several minutes before fatigue returned with a rush. Yawning, he
pushed his own clothes off the bed, set his boots on the drypad, and climbed
back into bed. A few droplets of water had crawled under the edge of the
slickertic. He brushed them from his hair, sighed deeply, and lapsed into a
rich, undisturbed sleep. Once the flow of mental energy from the human in the
bed had smoothed out and the snake was certain its new symbiote was not about
to enter a disturbing REM period, it quietly uncoiled itself and slithered out of the
closet. Silently, it worked its
way up one of the bed legs, emerging next to the single battered pillow. The animal rested there for a long moment, gazing
through double lidded eyes at the unconscious biped. In-side itself, the snake
was warm and comfortable. The hunger was still there, but it had received an
indication of sorts that it would soon be fed. “The bed was very warm, both the thermal blanket and
the symbiote’s mass exuding comfortable, dry heat. The snake slithered across
the pillow until it was resting against the back of the human’s head. It
stretched itself once, the wings flexing and retracting. Then it coiled itself
tightly into the convenient pocket formed by the symbiote’s neck and shoulder.
Soon its own brain waves matched those of the human as it drifted into its own
variety of sleep. Chapter Five Mother Mastiff was careful not to wake the boy as she
slowly began backing out of his room. Her eyes, alert and fearful, remained
fixed on the alien thing curled up against his head. There was no telling what
it might do if startled into wakefulness. How the invader had penetrated her tight little
home, she had no idea. No time to worry about that now. Her thoughts went to
the little gun, the delicate, ladylike needier she kept under her pillow. No,
too chancy—the snake was much too close to the boy’s head, and she was not as
good a shot as she had been twenty years ago. There was also the possibility the invader might not
even be dangerous. She certainly did not recognize it. In the ninety plus years
she had spent on Moth, she had seen nothing like it. For one thing, there was
no hint of fur any-where on its body. Only scales. That immediately identified
it as a non-native. Well, maybe. Moth was home to a few creatures—deep-digging
burrowers—that did not sport fur. This didn’t look like a burrower to her, but
she was no zoologist, nor had she ever traveled far outside the city limits. Yet she felt certain it came from offworld.
Something she couldn’t put a mental finger on marked the beast as alien, but
that didn’t matter. What did was that it had somehow penetrated to the boy’s
room, and she had better do something about it before it woke up and decided
the matter for her. Get it away from him, she told herself. Away from
his head, at least. Get it away, keep it occupied, then wake the boy and have
him make a run for the gun under her pillow. The broom she hefted had a light metal handle and
wire bristles. Taking it out of storage, she re-entered Flinx’s room and
reached past his head with the broom’s business end. The metal bristles prodded
the invader. The snake stirred at the touch, opened its eyes, and
stared at her. She jabbed at it again, harder this time, trying to work the
bristles between the snake’s head and the boy’s exposed neck. It opened its
mouth, and she instinctively Jerked back, but it was only a yawn. Still sleepy,
then, she thought. Good, its reactions would be slowed. Leaning forward again,
she reached down and shoved hard on the broom. Several of the snake’s coils
went rolling over to the side of the bed, and for the first time she had a
glimpse of its brilliant coloring. Again, she shoved with the broom, but the snake was
no longer on the bed. It hovered in midair, its wings moving so rapidly they
were no more than a blue-pink blur. They generated a rich, vibrant humming
sound in the small room. Aghast and uncertain how to attack this new threat,
Mother Mastiff backed away, holding the broom defensively in front of her.
Awakened by the last shove of the broom, the boy blinked sleepily at her.
“Mother? What is it?” “Hush, be
quiet!” she warned him. “I don’t know how this thing got into your room, but—“ Flinx sat up quickly. He glanced up at the hovering
snake, admiring it for the first time in daylight, and bestowed a reassuring
grin on Mother Mastiff. “Oh, that. That’s just Pip.” The broom dipped slightly, and she stared narrowly
at her charge. “Ye mean, ye know what it be?” “Sure,” he
said cheerfully. “I, uh, heard something; last night, so I went outside to
investigate.” He gestured with a thumb at the snake. “It was back in the
garbage, cold and hungry. Hey, I bet he’s still hungry, and— “I’ll bet it is, too,” she snapped, “and III not
have some scaly, gluttonous carrion eater crawling about my house. Get out!” she yelled at it. “Shoo!” She
swung the broom at the snake once, twice, a third time, forcing Flinx to duck
the flying bristles. Each time, the snake dodged nimbly in the air, displaying
unexpected aerial agility. Once it darted straight to its left, then backward,
then toward the ceiling. “Don’t!” Flinx shouted, suddenly alarmed. “It might
think you’re trying to hurt me.” “A guardian angel with beady eyes and scales?
Mockmush, boy, it knows well what I’m swinging at!” In fact, the snake was well aware the new human had
no intention of banning its symbiote, for it could feel the honest affection
and warmth flowing between them. It did not worry on that score. Conversely, no
love flowed toward it from the new person, and the shiny thing that was being
thrust at it was hard to avoid in the small, enclosed space. “Please, Mother,” Flinx pleaded anxiously,
scrambling out of bed and dragging the blanket with him, “stop it. I don’t know
how it’ll react.” “We’re going to find out, boy,” she told him grimly.
The broom struck, missed, bounced off the far wall. She cocked her arms for
another swing. The snake bad been patient, very patient. It
understood the bond between the two humans. But the broom had backed it into a
comer, and the hard bristles promised danger if they connected solidly with the
snake’s wings. It opened its mouth. There was a barely perceptible squirting
sound. A thin, tight stream of clear liquid shot forward. It sparkled in the
light and impacted on the broom as it was swinging forward. As Mother Mastiff
recovered and brought the broom back for yet another strike, she heard a faint
but definite hissing that did not come from the snake.She hesitated, frowning,
then realized the noise was coming from the broom. A glance showed that
approximately half of the metal bristles had melted away. Something was foaming
and sizzling as it methodically ate its way down the broom. She dropped the weapon as if the metal handle had
abruptly become red hot, her expression fearful. The liquid continued to
sputter and hiss as it ate away the metal.
Soon it had worked its way through the last stubble and was beginning to
eat holes in the metal handle itself. “Boy, get out of the room while ye have the chance,”
she called huskily, staring wide-eyed at the snake while continuing to back
toward her own bedroom. “If it can do that to metal, there’s no telling what—“ Flinx laughed, then hurriedly put a hand to his
mouth and forced himself to be understanding. “I’m sorry, Mother,” he said
apologetically. “It’s just that Pip would never hurt me. And he’s just proved
that he wouldn’t hurt anyone close to me, either.” “How do ye know that?” she sputtered. “You know,” he replied, sounding puzzled, “I
don’t know how I know it. But it’s true. Here, see?” He extended his left arm. Still keeping a wary eye on the woman, who continued
to block the exit, the snake zipped down to land on the proffered perch. In an instant, it had multiple coils wrapped
around the human’s shoulder. Then the snake relaxed, the pleated wings folding
up to lie flat against the gleaming body. “See?” Flinx lowered his arm and gently rubbed the
back of the snake’s head. “He’s just naturally friendly.” “Naturally ugly, ye mean,” Mother Mastiff
snorted. Bending, she picked up the
remnant of the broom and inspected it. All the bristles were gone, along with
several centimeters of handle. A weak crackling still came from the raw edges of
the tube where the metal had dissolved, though the extraordinarily corrosive
liquid seemed to have largely spent itself. She showed the remains of the broom to Flinx, still
nervous about getting too near the thing wrapped around his shoulder. “See that?
Imagine what it. would do to your skin.” “Oh, Mother,
can’t you see?” Flinx spoke with all the exasperation of the young for the
aged. “He was protecting himself, but because he senses that you’re important
to me, he was careful not to spit any of it on you.” “Lucky thing for it,” she said, some of her normal
bravado returning. “Well, it can’t stay here.” “Yes, it can,” Flinx argued. “No, it can’t. I can’t have some lethal varmint like
that fluttering and crawling all over the place, frightening off the
customers.” “He’ll stay with me all the time,” Flinx assured her
soothingly. His hand continued to caress the snake’s head. Its eyes closed contentedly. “See? He’s Just
like any other house pet. He responds to warmth and affection.” Flinx brought
forth his most mournful, pleading expression. It had the intended affect. “Well, it won’t get any warmth or affection from
me,” Mother Mastiff grumbled, “but if you’re determined to keep it . . .” “I think,” Flinx added, throwing fuel on the fire,
“he would become very upset if someone tried to separate us.” Mother Mastiff threw up her hands, simultaneously
signifying acquiescence and acceptance. “Oh, Deity, why couldn’t ye stumble
over a normal pet, like a cat or a saniff? What does the little monster eat,
anyways?” “I don’t know,” Flinx admitted, remembering the
hunger he had sensed the night before and resolving to do something about it
soon. He had been hungry himself and knew more of the meaning of that word than
most people. “Aren’t most snakes
carnivorous?” “This one certainly looks like it,” she said. Reaching down, Flinx gently ran a forefinger along
the edge of the snake’s mouth until he could pry it open. The snake opened one
eye and looked at him curiously but did not raise any objection to the intrusion.
Mother Mastiff held her breath. Flinx leaned close, inspecting. “The teeth are so
small I can’t tell for sure.” “Probably swallows its food whole,” Mother Mastiff
told him. “I hear that’s the wav of it with snakes, through this be no
normal snake and I wouldn’t care to make no predictions about it, much less
about its diet.” “I’ll find out,” Flinx assured her. “If you don’t
need me to help in the shop today—“ “Help, hahl No, go where ye will. Just make sure
that creature goes with ye.” “I’m going to take him around the marketplace,”
Flinx said excitedly, “and see if anyone recognizes him. There’s sure to be
someone who will.” “Don’t bet your blood on it, boy,” she warned him.
“It’s likely an offworld visitor.” “I thought so, too,” he told her. “Wouldn’t that be
interesting? I wonder how it got here?” “Someone with a grudge against me brought it,
probably,” she muttered softly. Then, louder, she said, “There be no telling.
If ‘tis an escaped pet and a rare one, ye can be sure its owner will be
stumbling about here soonest in search of it.” “We’ll see.” Flinx knew the snake belonged right
where it was, riding his shoulder. It felt right. He could all but feel the
wave of contentment it was generating. “And while I’m finding out what he is,” he added
briskly, “I’ll find out what he eats, too.” “Ye do that,” she told him. “Fact be, why not spend
the night at it? I’ve some important buyers coming around suppertime. They were referred to me through the
Shopkeeper’s Association and seem especial interested in some of the larger
items we have, like the muriwood table.
So ye take that awful whatever-it-be,” and she threw a shaky finger in
the direction of the snake, “and stay ye out ‘til well after tenth hour. Then
I’ll think about letting the both of ye back into my house.” “Yes, Mother, thank you,” He ran up to give her a
kiss. She backed off. “Don’t come near me, boy. Not with that monster
sleeping on your arm.” “He wouldn’t hurt you. Mother. Really.” “I’d feel more confident if I had the snake’s word
on it as well as yours, boy. Now go on, get out, be off with the both of ye. If
we’re fortunate, perhaps it will have some homing instinct and fly off when you’re not
looking.” But Pip did not fly off. It gave no sign of wishing
to be anywhere in the Commonwealth save on the shoulder of a certain redheaded
young man. As Flinx strolled through the marketplace, he was
startled to discover that his ability to receive the emotions and feelings of
others had intensified, though none of the isolated bursts of reception matched
in fury that first over-powering deluge of the night before. His receptivity
bad increased in frequency and lucidity, though it still seemed as
unpredictable as ever. Flinx suspected that his new pet might have something to
do with his intensified abilities, but he had no idea how that worked, anymore
than he knew how his Talent operated at the best of times. If only he could find someone to identify the snake!
He could always work through his terminal back home, but requests for information
were automatically monitored at Central, and he was afraid that a query for
information on so rare a creature might trigger alarm on the part of curious
authorities. Flinx preferred not to go through official channels. He had
acquired Mother Mastiff’s opinion of governmental bueaucracy, which placed it
somewhere between slime mold .and the fleurms that infested the alleys. By now, he knew a great many inhabitants of the
marketplace. Wherever he stopped, he inquired about the identity and origin of
his pet. Some regarded the snake with curiosity, some with fear, a few with
indifference. But none recognized it. “Why don’t you ask Makepeace?” one of the vendors
eventually suggested. “He’s traveled offworld. Maybe he’d know.” Flinx found the old soldier sitting on a street
corner with several equally ancient cronies. All of them were pensioneers. Most
were immigrants who had chosen Moth for their final resting place out of love
for its moist climate and because it was a comparatively cheap world to live
on, not to mention the laxity of its police force. On Moth, no one was likely
to question the source of one’s pension money. For several of Makepeace’s
comrades, this was the prime consideration. The other aged men and women studied the snake with
nothing more than casual interest, but Makepeace reacted far more
enthusiastically. “Bless my remaining soul,” he muttered as he leaned close—but
not too close, Flinx noted—for a better look. Pip raised his head curiously, as
if sensing something beyond the norm in
this withered biped. “You know what he is?” Flinx asked hopefully. “Aye, boy. Those are wings bulging its flanks, are
they not?” Flinx nodded. “Then it’s surely an Alaspinian miniature dragon.” Flinx grinned at the old man, then down at Pip. “So
that’s what you are.” The snake looked up at him as if to say. I’m well aware
of what I am, and do you always find the obvious so remarkable? “I thought dragons were mythical creatures,” he said
to Makepeace. “So they are. It’s only a name given from resemblance,
Flinx.” “I suppose you know,” Flinx went on, “that he spits
out a corrosive fluid.” “Corrosive!” The old man leaned back and roared with
laughter, slapping his legs and glancing knowingly at his attentive cronies.
“Corrosive, he says!” He looked back at Flinx. “The minidrag’s toxin is, my boy, a venomous acid
known by a long string of chemical syllables which this old head can’t
remember. I was a soldier-engineer. Biochemistry was never one of my favorite
subjects. I’m more comfortable with mathematical terms than biological
ones. But I can tell you this much,
though I never visited Alas-pin myself.” He pointed at the snake, which drew
its head back uncertainly. “If that there thing was to spit in your eye, you’d
be a kicking, quivering mess on the ground inside a minute—and dead in not much
more than that. I also remember that there’s no known antidote for
several of the Alaspinian toxins, of which that minidrag of yours wields the
most potent. A corrosive, neurological poison—aye, who wouldn’t remember
hearing about that? You say you know
it’s corrosive?” Flinx had an image of the dissolved end of the
broomstick, the metal melted away ike cheese before a hot blade. He nodded. “Just make sure you never get to know of it
personally, lad. I’ve heard tell of such creatures being kept as pets, but it’s
a rare thing. See, the associational decision’s all made by the snake. The
would-be owner has no choice in the matter. You can’t tame ‘em. They pick and
choose for themselves.” He gestured toward Flinx’s shoulder. “Looks like that
one’s sure settled on you.” “He’s more than welcome,” Flinx said affectionately.
“He feels natural there.” “Each to his own,” an elderly woman observed with a
slight shudder. Affirmative nods came from others in the group. “And there’s something else, too.” The old soldier
was frowning, struggling to remember long-dormant knowledge.“What you just said
about it feeling ‘natural’ there reminded me. They say those flying snakes have
funny mental quirks all their own. Now me, I wouldn’t be able to say for
certain if that’s so—I’m only relating hearsay, didn’t read it off no chip. But
the stories persist.” “What kind of stories?” Flinx asked, trying not to
appear overanxious. “Oh, that the snakes are empathic. You know,
telepathic on the emotional level.” He scratched his head. “There’s more to it
than that, but I’m damned if I can remember the rest of it.” “That’s certainly interesting,” Flinx said evenly,
“but pretty unlikely.” “Yeah, I always thought so myself,” Makepeace
agreed.“You wouldn’t have noticed anything like that since being around this
one, of course.” “Not a thing.” Flinx was an expert at projecting an
aura of innocence; in this case, it glowed from his face, not his mind. “Thanks
a lot for your time, Mr. Makepeace, sir.” “You’re more than welcome to it, boy. Old knowledge
dies unless somebody makes use of it. You watch yourself around that thing.
It’s no saniff, and it might could turn on you.” “I’ll be careful,” Flinx assured him brightly. He
turned and hurried away from the gaggle of attentive oldsters.Makepeace was
rubbing his chin and staring after the youngster as he vanished into the
swirling crowd. “Funny. Wonder where
the little flying devil came from? This is one hell of a long way from Alaspin.
That reminds me of the time ...” Flinx glanced down at his shoulder. “So you’re
poisonous, hub? Well, anyone could have guessed that from the little
demonstration you gave with Mother’s broom this morning. If you spit in my eye,
I’ll spit in yours.” The snake did not take him up on the offer. It
stared at him a moment, then turned its head away and studied the street ahead,
evidently more interested in its surroundings than in its master’s
indecipherable words. Maybe miniature dragons don’t have much of a sense
of humor, Flinx mused. Probably he would have ample opportunity to find out.
But at least he knew what his pet was. Glancing up beyond the fringe of the
slickertic hood, he wondered where the snake’s home world lay. Alaspin, old
Makepeace had called it, and said it was far away. The morning mist moistened his upturned face. The
cloud cover seemed lighter than usual. If he was lucky, the gloom would part
sometime that night and he would have a view of Moth’s fragmented ice rings, of
the moon Flame, and beyond that, of the stars. Someday, he thought, someday I’ll travel to far
places as Makepeace and the others have. Someday I’ll get off this minor wet
world and go vagabonding. I’ll be a free adult, with nothing to tie me down and
no responsibilities. I’ll lead a relaxed, uncomplicated life of simple
pleasures. He glanced down at his new-found companion. Maybe someday they would
even travel to the snake’s home world of Alaspin, wherever it might be. Sure you will, he thought bitterly. Better be
realistic, like Mother Mastiff says.
You’re stuck here forever.
Moth’s your home, and Moth’s where you’ll spend the rest of your days.
Count yourself fortunate. You’ve a concerned mother, a warm home, food .... Food. Surely the flying snake was hungrier than
ever. “We’d better get you something to
eat,” he told Pip, who gazed up at him with fresh interest. He checked his credcard. Not much money there. Not
that there ever was. Well, he could manage. Trouble was, he had no idea what
Alaspinian minidrags liked to eat. “I wonder what you’d settle for,” he
murmured. The snake did not respond. “If it’s live food only, then I don’t
think there’s much I can do to help you. Not on a regular basis, anyway. Let’s
try here, first.” They entered a stall well known to Flinx. Most of
the booths and tables were unoccupied, since it was between mealtimes. As it
developed, finding suitable food for the minidrag turned out to be less of a
problem than he had feared. Much to Flinx’s surprise, the flying snake was
omnivorous. It would eat almost anything he set in front of it, but raw meat
seemed to be a special favorite. Flinx cut the meat into small chunks, which
the snake gulped down whole. Flinx helped himself to an occasional bite. When
times were bad, he and Mother Mastiff had existed on far less savory items. Pip was fond of any kind of fruit or berry, though
it shied away from vegetables. Something else they had in, common. Flinx
thought. Oddly enough, the snake would even lap up milk. Flinx was sure he could
supply enough variety to keep his pet both happy and alive. Maybe it would even
eat table scraps. Perhaps that would weaken Mother Mastiff’s antagonism. As be
experimented further, he discovered that the snake was particularly fond of
anything with a high iron content, such as raisins or flakes of guarfish. Had
he been a biochemist equipped with a field laboratory, he might have learned
that the minidrag’s blood contained an extraordinary amount of hemoglobin,
vital to transport the oxygen necessary
to sustain the snake’s hummingbirdlike flight. When Pip had swollen to twice his normal diameter,
Flinx stopped trying new foods on his pet. He relaxed in the booth, sipping
mulled wine and watching the lights of the city wink to life. It wouldn’t be
too bad to live out his life on Moth, he admitted to himself. Drallar was never
dull, and now he had a special companion with whom to share its excitement. Yes, the flying snake had filled a definite void in
his life as well as in some mysterious, deeper part of himself. But he still
longed for the stars and the magical, unvisited worlds that circled them. Be realistic, he ordered himself. He waved to some acquaintances as they strolled past
the restaurant. Older men and women. Sometimes Mother Mastiff worried that he
preferred the company of adults to youngsters his own age. He couldn’t help it.
It wasn’t that he was antisocial, merely that he chose his friends carefully.
It was the immaturity of those his own age that drove him into the company of
adults. A fleeting emotion from one of those to whom he had
waved reached back to him as the group rounded a corner, laughing and joking in
easy camaraderie. Flinx snatched at it,
but it was gone. He sat back in his booth, the wine making him moody. Better to
have no Talent at all, he thought,
than an unmanageable one that only teases. He paid the modest bill, slipping his card into the
table’s central pylon. Outside, the evening rain had begun. Pip rode
comfortably on his shoulder beneath the slickertic, only its head exposed. It
was sated, content. Ought to be after all you ate, Flinx thought as he gazed
fondly down at his pet. Rain transformed the brilliant scales of the snake’s
head into tiny jewels. The moisture did not seem to bother the snake. I wonder,
Flinx thought. Is Alaspin a wet world, also? I should have asked old Makepeace.
He’d probably have known. People lucky enough to travel learn every-thing
sooner or later. Suddenly a stinging, serrated burst of
emotion—hammer blow, unexpected, raw—doubled him over with its force. It was
like a soundless screaming inside his head. Flinx was feeling the naked emotion
behind a scream instead of hearing the scream itself. He had never experienced
anything like it before, and despite that, it felt sickeningly familiar. A bundled-up passer-by halted and bent solicitously
over the crumpled youngster. “Are you all right, son? You—“ He noticed something and quickly backed off. “I—I’m okay, I think,” Flinx managed to gasp. He saw
what had made the man flinch. Pip had been all but asleep on his master’s
shoulder only a moment before. Now the snake was wide awake, head and neck
protruding like a scaly periscope as it seemed to search the night air for
something unseen. Then the last vestiges of that desperate, wailing
cry vanished, leaving Flinx’s head xxxaching and infuriatingly empty.Yet it had
lingered long enough for him to sort it out, to identify it. “Listen, son, if you need help, I can—“ the stranger
started to say, but Flinx did not wait to listen to the kind offer. He was
already halfway down the street, running at full speed over the pavement. His
slickertic fanned out like a cape behind him, and his boots sent water flying
over shop fronts and pedestrians alike. He did not pause to apologize, the
curses sliding off him as unnoticed as the rain. Then he was skidding into a familiar side street.
His heart pounded, and his lungs heaved. The street appeared untouched,
unaltered, yet something here had been violated, and the moment of it had
touched Flinx’s mind.Most of the shops were already shuttered against the
night.There was no sign of human beings in that damp stone canyon. “Mother!” he shouted. “Mother Mastiff!” He pounded
on the lock plate with his palm. The door hummed but did not open—it was locked
from inside. “Mother Mastiff, open up. It’s me, Flinx!” No reply
from the other side. Pip danced on his shoulder, half airborne and half
coiled tight to its master. Flinx moved a dozen steps away from the door, then
charged it, throwing himself into the air sideways and kicking with one leg as
Makepeace had once shown him. The door gave, flying inward. It had only been
bolted, not locksealed. He crouched there, his eyes darting quickly around
the stall. Pip settled back onto his shoulder, but its head moved agitatedly from
side to side, as if it shared its master’s nervousness and concern. The stall looked undisturbed. Flinx moved forward
and tried the inner door. It opened at a touch. The interior of the living area
was a shambles. Pots and pans and food had been overturned in the kitchen.
Clothing and other personal articles lay strewn across floor and furniture. He
moved from the kitchen-dining area to his own room, last-ly to Mother
Mastiff’s, knowing but dreading what he would find. The destruction was worse in her room. The bed
looked as if it had been the scene of attempted murder or an uncontrolled orgy.
Across the bed, hidden from casual view, a small curved door blended neatly
into the wall paneling. Few visitors would be sharp-eyed enough to notice it. It was just wide enough for a man to crawl
through. It stood ajar. A cold breeze drifted in from
outside. Flinx dropped to his knees and started through, not
car ing what he might encounter on the other side. He emerged from the
slip-me-out into the alley and climbed to his feet. The rain had turned to
mist. There was no hint that anything unusual had occurred here. All the chaos
was behind him, inside. Turning, he ran two or three steps to the north,
then stopped himself. He stood there, panting. He had run long and hard from
the street where the scream had struck him, but he was too late. There was no
sign that anyone had even been in the alley. Slowly, dejectedly, he returned to the shop. Why? he
cried to himself. Why has this happened to me? Who would want to kidnap a
harmless old woman like Mother Mastiff? The longer he thought about it, the
less sense it made. He forced himself to take an inventory out front.
There was no sign of anything missing. The shop’s stock seemed to be intact.
Not thieves, then, surprised in the act of burglary. Then what? If not for the
ample evidence that there had been a struggle, he would not even have suspected
that anything was amiss. No, he reminded himself, not quite true. The
lockseal on the front door was dead. It would have taken half the thieves in
Drallar to drag Mother Mastiff from her shop while it stood unsealed. He
thought of thieves a second time, knowing he would not be staying here long.
His mind full of dark and conflicting thoughts, he set about repairing the
lock. Chapter Six
"Pssst! Boy! Flinx-boy!” Flinx moved the door aside slightly and gazed out
into the darkness. The man speaking from the shadows operated a little shop two
stalls up the side street from Mother Mastiff’s, where he made household items
from the hard-woods that Moth grew in abundance. Flinx knew him well, and
stepped out to confront him. “Hello, Arrapkha.” He tried to search the man’s
face, but it was mostly hidden by the overhanging rim of his slickertic. He
could feel nothing from the other man’s mind. A fine and wondrous Talent, he
thought sarcastically to himself. “What happened here? Did you see anything?” “I shouldn’t be out like this.” Arrapkha turned to
glance worriedly up the street to where it intersected the busy main avenue.
“You know what people say in Drallar, Flinx-boy. The best business is minding
one’s own.” “No homilies now, friend,” Flinx said
impatiently. “You’ve been neighbor to
my mother for many years, and you’ve watched me grow up. Where is she?” “I don’t know.” Arrapkha paused to gather his
thoughts.Flinx held back his anxiety and tried to be patient with the
man—Arrapkha was a little slow upstairs but a good soul. “I was working at my lathe, feeling good with
myself. I’d only just sold a pair of
stools to a programmer from the Welter Inurb and was counting my good fortune
when I thought I heard noises from your house.” He smiled faintly. “At first, I
thought nothing of it. You know your mother. She can fly into a rage at anytime
over nothing in particular and make enough noise to bring complaints from the
avenue stores. “Anyhow, I finished turning a broya post—it will be
a fine one, Flinx-boy, fashioned of number-six harpberry wood—“ “Yes, I’m sure,” Flinx said impatiently. “I’m sure
it will be a fine display stand, as all your work is, but what about Mother
Mastiff?” “I’m getting to that, Flinx-boy,” Arrapkha said
petulantly. “As I said, I finished the post, and since the noise continued, I
grew curious. It seamed to be going on a long time even for your mother. So I
put down my work for a moment and thought to come see what was going on. I
mediate for your mother sometimes. “When I was about halfway from my shop to yours, the
noise stopped almost entirely. I was about to return home when I saw something.
At least, I think I did.” He gestured toward the narrow gap that separated
Mother Mastiff’s shop from the vacant shop adjoining hers. “Through there I thought I saw figures moving
quickly up the alley behind your home. I couldn’t be certain. The opening is
small, it was raining at the time, and it’s dark back there. But I’m pretty
sure I saw several figures.” “How many?” Flinx demanded. “Two, three?” “For sure, I couldn’t say,” Arrapkha confessed
sadly. “I couldn’t even for certain tell if they were human or not.More than
two, surely. Yet not a great number, though I could have missed seeing them
all. “Well, I came up to the door quickly then and
buzzed. There was no answer, and it was quiet inside, and the door was locked,
so I thought little more of it. There was no reason to connect shapes in the
alleyway with your mother’s arguing. Remember, I only heard noise from the
shop. “As it grew dark I started to worry, and still the
shop stayed closed. It’s not like Mother Mastiff to stay closed up all day.
Still, her digestion is not what it used to be, and sometimes her liver gives
her trouble. Too much bile.She could have been cursing her own insides.” “I know,” Flinx said. “I’ve had to listen to her
complaints lots of times.” “So I thought best not to interfere. But I have
known both of you for a long time, Flinx-boy, just as you say, so I thought,
when I saw you moving about, that I ought to come and tell you what I’d seen.
It’s clear to me now that I should have probed deeper.” He struck his own
head.“I’m sorry. You know that Frn not the cleverest man in the marketplace.” “It’s all right, Arrapkha. There’s no blame for you
in this matter.” Flinx stood there in the mist for a long moment, silent and
thinking hard. Arrapkha hesitantly broke in on his contemplation.
“So sorry I am, Flinx-boy. If there’s anything I can do to help, if you need a
place to sleep tonight, ay, even with the devil thing on your shoulder, you are
welcome to share my home.” “I’ve spent many a night out on my own, sir,” Flinx
told him, “but the offer’s appreciated. Thank you for your help. At least now I
have a better idea of what happened, though not for the life of me why. Could
you see if Mother Mastiff was among those running down the alley?She’s not
here.” “So I guessed from your look and words. No, I cannot
say she was one of them. I saw only shapes that seemed to be human, or at least
upright. But they seemed to run with difficulty.” “Maybe they were carrying her.” “It may be, Flinx-boy, it may be. Surely she would
not go off on her own with strangers without leaving you so much as a message.” “No, she wouldn’t,” Flinx agreed, “and if she went
with the people you saw, it wasn’t because they were her friends. The inside of
the house is all torn up. She didn’t go with them quietly.” “Then surely for some reason she’s been
kidnaped,”Arrapkha concurred. “Fifty years ago, I might could give a reason for
such a thing. She was a beauty then. Mother Mastiff, though she has not aged
gracefully. Grace was not a part of her, not even then. A hard woman always,
but attractive. But for this to happen now—“ He shook his head. “A true puzzle.
Did she have access to much money?” Flinx shook his head rapidly. “Urn. I thought not. Well, then, did she owe anyone
any dangerous amounts?” “She owed a lot of people, but no great sums,” Flinx
replied. “At least, nothing that she ever spoke to me about and nothing I ever
overheard talk of.” “I do not understand it, then,” Arrapkha said
solemnly. “Nor do I, friend.” “Perhaps,” Arrapkha suggested, “someone wished a
private conversation with her and will bring her back in the morning?” Flinx shook his head a second time. “I think that
since she didn’t go with them voluntarily, she won’t be allowed to come back
voluntarily. Regardless, one thing she always told me was not to sit around and
stare blankly at the inexplicable but always to try and find answers. If she
does come walking freely home tomorrow, then I can at least try to meet her
coming.” “Then you’re determined to go out after her?”
Arrapkha lifted bushy black eyebrows. “What else can I do?” “You could wait. You’re a nice young fellow,
Flinx-boy.” He waved toward the distant avenue. “Most every-one in the
marketplace who knows you thinks so, also. You won’t lack for a place to stay
or food to eat if you decide to wait for her. Your problem is that you’re too
young, and the young are always overanxious.” “Sorry, Arrapkha. I know you mean well for me, but I
just can’t sit around here and wait. I think I’d be wasting my time and, worse,
maybe hers as well. Mother Mastiff doesn’t have much time left to her.” “And what if her time, excuse me, has already fled?”
Arrapkha asked forcefully. Subtlety was not a strong trait of the marketplace’s
inhabitants. “Will you involve your-self then in something dangerous which has
chosen to spare you?” “I have to know. I have to go after her and see if I
can help.” “I don’t understand,” Arrapkha said sadly. “You’re a
smart young man, much smarter than 1. Why risk your-self? She wouldn’t want you
to, you know. She’s not really your mother.” “Mother or mother-not,” Flinx replied, “she’s the
only mother I’ve ever known. There’s more to it than simple biology, Arrapkha.
The years have taught me that much.” The older man nodded. “I thought you might say
something like that, Flinx-boy. Well, I can at least wish you luck. It’s all I
have to give you. Do you have credit?” “A little, on my card.” “If you need more, I can transfer.” Arrapkha started
to pull out his own card. “No, not now, anyway. I may need such help later.”
He broke into a broad smile. “You’re a good friend, Arrapkha. Your friendship
is as solid as your woodwork.” He turned. “Did you see which direction these
figures took?” “That’s little to start on.” He pointed to the
north. “That way, up the alley. They could have turned off any time. And in the
weather”—he indicated the clouds hanging limply overhead—“they’ll have left no
trail for you to follow.” “Perhaps not,” Flinx admitted. “We’ll see.” “I expect you will, Flinx-boy, since you feel so
strongly about this. All I can do, then, is wish luck to you.” He turned and
strode back up the street toward his shop, keeping the slickertic tight around
his head and neck. Flinx waited until the rain had swallowed up the
older man before going back inside and closing the door behind him. He wandered
morosely around the living area, salvaging this or that from the mess and
returning things to their proper places. Before long, he found himself in
Mother Mastiff’s room. He sat down on the bed and stared at the ajar
slip-me-out that led to the alley. “What do you think, Pip? Where did she go, and who
took her, and why? And how am I going to find her? I don’t even know how to
start.” He shut his eyes, strained, tried to sense the kinds
of emotions he knew she must be generating, wherever she had been taken. There
was nothing. Nothing from Mother Mastiff, nothing from anyone else. His Talent mocked
him. He started fixing up the bedroom, hoping that contact with familiar
objects might trigger some kind of reaction in his mind. Something, anything,
that would give him a start on tracking her down. Pip slipped off his shoulder
and slithered across the bed, playing with covers and pillows. There were gaps—missing clothing—in the single
closet, Flinx noted. Whoever had abducted her evidently intended to keep her
for a while. The sight cheered him because they would not have troubled to take
along clothing for someone they intended to kill immediately. Pip had worked its way across the bed to the night
table and was winding its sinuous way among the bottles and containers there.
“Back off that, Pip, before you break something. There’s been enough damage
done here today.” The irritation in his voice arose more out of personal upset
than any real concern. The minidrag had yet to knock over anything. Pip reacted, though not to his master’s admonition.
The snake spread luminous wings and fluttered from the tabletop to the
slip-me-out. It hovered there, watching him. While Flinx gaped at his pet, it
flew back to the night table, hummed over a bottle, then darted back to the
opening. Flinx’s momentary paralysis left him, and he rushed
to the end table. The thin plasticine bottle that had attracted Pip was
uncapped. It normally held a tenth liter of a particularly powerful cheap
perfume of which Mother Mastiff was inordinately fond. Now he saw that the
bottle was empty. If Mother Mastiff had retained enough presence of
mind to remember that the Drallarian gendarmery occasionally employed the
services of tracking animals—for the first time hope crowded despair from
Flinx’s thoughts. Those animals could track odors even through Moth’s perpetual
dampness. If an Alaspinian minidrag possessed the same ability
... Was he completely misinterpreting the flying snake’s actions? “Pip?” The flying snake seemed to accept the mention of its
name as significant, for it promptly spun in midair and darted through the
slip-me-out. Flinx dropped to his hands and knees and crawled after. In
seconds, he was in the alley again. As he climbed to his feet, he searched for
his pet. It was moving eastward, almost out of sight. “Pip, wait!” The snake obediently halted, hovering
in place until its master had caught up. Then it took off up the alley again. Flinx settled into a steady run. He was an excellent
runner and in superb condition, on which he had always prided himself. He
resolved to follow the flying snake until one or the other of them dropped. Any moment he expected the snake to pause outside
one of the innumerable faceless structures that peppered the commercial
sections of Drallar. But while the minidrag twisted and whirled down alleys and
up streets, not once did it hesitate in its steady flight. Soon Flinx found his
wind beginning to fail him. Each time he stopped, the snake would wait
impatiently until its master caught up again. Drallar was the largest city on Moth, but it was a
village compared to the great cities of Terra or the under-ground complexes of
Hivehom and Evoria, so Flinx was not surprised that when Pip finally began to
slow, they had reached the northwestern outskirts of the metropolis. Here the
buildings no longer had to be built close to one another. Small storage
structures were scattered about, and individual homes of blocked wood and
plastic began to blend into the first phalanx of evergreen forest. Pip
hesitated before the trees, zooming in anxious circles, soaring to scan the
treetops. It ignored Flinx’s entreaties and calls until finally satisfied, whereupon
the snake turned and dropped down to settle once again on the familiar perch of
his master’s shoulder. Turning a slow circle, Flinx fought to pick up even
a fragment of lingering emotion. Once again, his efforts met with failure. It
seemed clear that whoever had carried off Mother Mastiff had taken her into the
forest and that the olfactory trail that had led Pip so far had finally
dissipated in the steady onslaught of mist and rain. On a drier world or in one
of Moth’s few deserts, things might have been different, but here Pip had come
to a dead end. After a moment’s thought, Flinx started away from
the trees. In addition to the storage buildings and homes, several small
industrial complexes were visible nearby, including two of the ubiquitous sawmills
that ringed the city and processed Moth’s most prolific crop. Plinx wandered
among them until he located a public corn station on a service street. He
stepped inside and slid the spanda-wood door shut behind him. Even after
curing, spanda retained ‘a significant coefficient of expansion. When he closed
the door, it sealed itself against the elements, and only the ventilation
membranes would keep him from suffocating. He took out his battered credcard
and slid it into the receptacle on the unit, then punched the keyboard. A
pleasant-looking middle-aged woman appeared on the small viewscreen. “Yes, sir.
What can I do for you?” “Is there a Missing Persons Bureau in the Drallar
Municipal Strata?” “Just a moment, please.” There was a pause while she
glanced at something out of range of the pickup. “Human or alien?” “Human, please.” “Native or visitor?” “Native.” “You wish connection?” “Thank you, yes.” The woman continued to stare at
him for a moment, and Flinx decided she was fascinated by the coiled shape riding
his shoulder. The screen finally flashed once and then cleared. This time, the individual staring back at him was
male, bald, and bored. His age was indeterminate, his attitude barely civil.
Flinx had never liked bureaucrats. “Yes, what is it? “Last night,” he declared, “or early this
morning”—in his rush through the city streets he’d completely lost track of the
time—“I—my mother disappeared. A neighbor saw some people running away down an
alley, and our house was all torn apart. I don’t know how to start looking for
her. I think she’s been taken out of the city via the north-west quadrant, but
I can’t be sure.” The man perked up slightly, though his voice sounded
doubtful. “I see. This sounds more like a matter for the police than for
Missing Persons.” “Not necessarily,” Flinx said, “if you follow my
meaning.” “Oh.” The man smiled understandingly. “Just a
moment. I’ll check for you.” He worked a keyboard out of Flinx’s view. “Yes, there was a number of arrests
made last night, several of them including women. How old is your mother?” “Close to a hundred,” Flinx said, “but quite
lively.” “Not lively enough to be in with the group I was
thinking of,” the clerk responded. “Name?” Flinx hesitated. “I always just called her Mother
Mastiff.” The man frowned, then studied his unseen readout.
“Is Mastiff a first name or last name? I’m assuming the ‘Mother’ is an
honorific.” Flinx found himself staring dumbly at the clerk.
Suddenly, he was aware of the enormous gaps that made up much of his life. “I—I
don’t know, for sure.” The bureaucrat’s attitude turned stony. “Is this
some kind of joke, young man?” “No, sir,” Flinx hastened to assure him, “it’s no
joke. I’m telling you the truth when I say that I don’t know.See, she’s not my
natural mother.” “Ah,” the clerk murmured discreetly. “Well, then,
what’s your last name?” “I—“ To his great amazement, Flinx discovered that
he was starting to cry. It was a unique phenomenon that he had avoided for some
time; now, when he least needed it, it afflicted him. The tears did have an effect on the clerk, though.
“Look, young man, I didn’t mean to upset you. All I can tell you is that no
woman of that advanced an age is OQ last night’s arrest recording. For that
matter, no one that old has been reported in custody by any other official
source. Does that help you at all?” Flinx nodded slowly. It helped, but not in the way
he’d hoped. “Th-thank you very much, sir.” “Wait, young man! If you’ll give me your name, maybe
I can have a gendarme sent out with—“ The image died as Flinx flicked the
disconnect button. His credcard popped from its slot. Slowly, wiping at his
eyes, he put it back inside his shirt. Would the clerk bother to trace the
call? Flinx decided not. For an instant, the bureaucrat had thought the call was
from some kid pulling a joke on him.
After a moment’s reflection, he would probably think so again. No one of Mother Mastiff’s age arrested or reported
in. Not at Missing Persons, which was bad, but also not at the morgue, which
was good because that reinforced his first thoughts: Mother Mastiff had been
carried off by unknown persons whose motives remained as mysterious as did
their identity. He gazed out the little booth’s window at the looming, alien
forest into which it seemed she and her captors had vanished, and exhaustion
washed over him. It was toasty warm in the corn booth. The booth’s chair was purposely uncomfortable, but
the floor was heated and no harder. For a change, he relished his modest size
as he worked himself into a halfway comfortable position on the floor. There
was little room for Pip in the cramped space, so the flying snake reluctantly
found itself a perch on the corn unit. Anyone entering the booth to make a call
would be in for a nasty shock. It was well into morning when Flinx finally awoke,
stiff and cramped but mentally rested. Rising and stretching, he pushed aside
the door and left the corn booth. To the north lay the first ranks of the
seemingly endless forest, which ran from Moth’s lower temperate zone to its
arctic.To the south lay the city, friendly, familiar. It would be hard to turn
his back on it. Pip fluttered above him, did a slow circle in the
air, then rose and started northwestward. In minutes, the minidrag was back. In
its wordless way, it was reaffirming its feelings of the night before: Mother
Mastiff had passed that way. Flinx thought a moment. Perhaps her captors, in
order to confuse even the most unlikely pursuit, had carried her out into the
forest, only to circle back into the city again. How was he to know for certain? The government
couldn’t help him further. All right, then. He had always been good at prying
information from strangers. They seemed to trust him instinctively, seeing in
him a physically unimposing, seemingly not-too-bright youngster. He could probe
as facilely here as in the markeplace. Leaving the booth and the sawmill block, he began
his investigation by questioning the occupants of the smaller businesses and
homes. He found most houses deserted, their inhabitants having long since gone
off to work, but the industrial sites and businesses were coming alive as the
city’s commercial bloodstream began to circulate. Flinx confronted the workers
as they entered through doors and gates, as they parked their occasional
individual transports, and as they stepped off public vehicles. Outside the entrance to a small firm that
manufactured wooden fittings for kitchen units, he encountered someone not
going to work but leaving. “Excuse me, sir,” he said for what seemed like the
hundred thousandth time, “did you by any chance see a group of people pass
through this part of town last night? “They would have had an upset old lady
with them, perhaps restrained somehow.” “Now that’s funny of you to mention,” the man said
unexpectedly. “See, I’m the night guard at Koyunlu over there.” He gestured at
the small building that was filling up with workers. “I didn’t see no old
woman, but there was something of a commotion late last night over that way.”
He pointed at the road which came to a dead end against the nearby trees. “There was a lot of shouting and yelling and
cursing. I took a look with my nightsight—that’s my job, you know—and I saw a
bunch of people getting out of a rented city transport. They were switching
over to a mudder.” The watchman appeared sympathetic. “They weren’t
potential thieves or young vandals, so I didn’t watch them for long. I don’t
know if they were the people you’re looking for.” Flinx thought a moment, then asked, “You say that
you heard cursing. Could you tell if any of it was from a woman?” The man grinned. “I see what you thinking, son. No,
they were too far away. But I tell you this: someone in that bunch could swear
like any dozen sewer riders.” Flinx could barely contain his excitement. “That’s
them; that’s her! That’s got to be her!” “In fact,” the watchman continued, “that’s really
what made it stick in me mind. Not that you don’t see people switching
transports at night—you do, even way out here. It’s Just a bad time to go
mudding into the woods, and when it is done, it’s usually done quietly. No need
that I can see for all that yelling and shouting.” “It was them, all right,” Flinx murmured decisively.
“It was her swearing—or her kidnappers swearing at her.” “Kidnap—“ The man seemed to notice Flinx’s youth for
the first time. “Say, soa, maybe you’d better come along with me.” “No, I can’t.” Flinx. started to hack up, smiling
apologetically. “I have to go after them. I have to find her.” “Just hold on a second there, son,” the watchman said.
“Ill give a call to the police. We can use the company corns. You want to do
this right and proper so’s—“ “They won’t do anything,” Flinx said angrily. “I
know them.” On an intimate basis, he could have added, since he’d been arrested
for petty theft on more than one occasion. He was probably on their
question-list right now. They would hold him and keep him from going after
Mother Mastiff. “You wait, son,” the watchman insisted. “I’m not
going to be part of something—“ As he spoke, he reached out a big hand.
Something bright blue-green-pink hissed threateningly. A triangular head darted
menacingly at the clutching hand. The man hastily drew it back. “Damn,” he said, “that’s alive!” “Very alive,” Flinx said, continuing to back away.
“Thanks for your help, sir.” He turned and dashed toward the city. “Boy, just a minute!” The watchman stared after the
retreating figure. Then he shrugged. He was tired. It had been a long, dull
night save for that one noisy bunch he’d seen, and he was anxious to be home
and asleep. He sure as hell didn’t need trouble himself with the antics of some
kid. Pushing the entire incident from his thoughts, he headed toward the
company transport stop. Once he was sure he was out of sight of the
watchman, Flinx paused to catch his breath. At least he knew with some
certainty that Mother Mastiff had been kidnapped and taken out of the city. Why
she had been carried off into the great northern forest he could not imagine. In addition to the hurt at the back of his mind, a
new ache had begun to make itself felt. He had had nothing to eat since the
previous night. He could hardly go charging off into Moth’s vast evergreen
wilderness on an empty stomach. Prepare yourself properly, then proceed. That’s what
Mother Mastiff had always taught him. Ill go home, he told himself. Back to the
shop, back to the marketplace. The kidnapers had switched to a mudder. Such a
vehicle was out of Flinx’s financial reach, but he knew where he could rent a
stupava running bird. That would give him flexibility as well as speed. His legs still throbbed from the seemingly endless
run across the city the previous day,
so he used public transport to return home. Time was more important than
credits. The transport chose a main spoke avenue and in minutes deposited him
in the marketplace. From the drop-off, it was but a short sprint to the
shop. He found himself half expecting to see Mother Mastiff standing in the
entrance, mopping the stoop and waiting to bawl him out for being gone for so
long. But the shop was quiet, the living space still disarranged and forlorn.
None-the less, Flinx checked it carefully.
There were several items whose positions he had memorized before
leaving; they were undisturbed. He began to collect a small pile of things to take
with him. Some hasty trading in the market produced a small backpack and as
much concentrated food as he could cram into it. Despite the speed of his
bargaining, he received full value for those items he traded off from Mother
Mastiff’s stock. With Pip riding his shoulder, few thought to cheat him. When
anyone tried, the minidrag’s reactions instantly alerted its master and Flinx
simply took his trade elsewhere. Flinx switched his city boots for less gaudy but
more durable forest models. His slickertic would serve just as well among the
trees as among the city’s towers. The outright sale of several items gave his
credcard balance a healthy boost. Then it was back to the shop for a last look
around. Empty. So empty without her. He made certain the shutters were locked, then
did the same to the front door. Before leaving, he stopped at a stall up the
street. “You’re out of your mind, Flinx-boy.” Arrapkha said
from the entrance to his stall, shaking his head dolefully. The shop smelled of
wood dust and varnish. “Do you know what the forest is like? It runs from here
to the North Pole. Three thousand, four thousand kilometers as the tarpac flies
and not a decent-sized city to be found. “There’s mud up there so deep it could swallow all
of Drallar, not to mention things that eat and things that poison. Nobody goes
into the north forest except explorers and herders, hunters and sportsmen—crazy
folk from offworld who like that sort of nowhere land. Biologists and
botanists—not normal folk like you and me.” “Normal folk didn’t carry off my mother,” Flinx
replied. Since he couldn’t discourage the youngster, Arrapkha
tried to make light of the situation. “Worse for them that they did. I don’t
think they know what they’ve gotten themselves into.” Flinx smiled politely. “Thanks, Arrapkha. If it
wasn’t for your help, I wouldn’t have known where to begin.” “Almost I wish I’d said nothing last night,” he
muttered sadly. “Well, luck to you, Flinx-boy. I’ll remember you.” “You’ll see me again,” Flinx assured him with more
confidence than he truly felt. “Both of us.” “I hope so. Without your Mother Mastiff, the
marketplace will be a duller place.” “Duller and emptier,” Flinx agreed. “I have to go
after her, friend Arrapkha. I really have no choice.” “If you insist. Go, then.” Flinx favored the woodworker with a last smile, then
spun and marched rapidly toward the main avenue. Arrapkha watched until the
youngster was swallowed up by the crowd, then retreated to his own stall. He
had business to attend to, and that, after all, was the first rule of life in
the marketplace. Flinx hadn’t gone far before the smells of the
market were replaced by the odors, heavy and musky, of locally popular native
transport animals. They were usually slower and less efficient then mechanized
transport, but they had other advantages: they could not be traced via their
emissions, and they were cheap to rent and to use. In a licensed barn, Flinx picked out a
healthy-looking stupava. The tall running bird was a good forager and could
live off the land. It stood two and a half meters at its bright orange crest
and closely resembled its far more intelligent cousins, the omithorpes, who did
not object to the use of ignorant relatives as beasts of burden. Flinx haggled
with the barn manager for a while, finally settling on a fair price. The woman
brought the bird out of its stall and saddled it for the youngster. “You’re not
going to do anything funny with this bird, now?” “Just going for a little vacation,” Flinx answered
her blithely. “I’ve finished my studies for the year and owe myself the time
off.” “Well, Garuyie here will take you anywhere you might
want to go. He’s a fine, strong bird.” She stroked the tall bird’s feathers. “I know.” Flinx put his right foot in the first
stirrup, his left in the second, and threw his body into the saddle. “I can see
that from his legs.” The woman nodded, feeling a little more relaxed.
Evidently, her youthful customer knew what he was doing. She handed him the reins. “All right, then. Have a -pleasant journey.” Flinx had indeed ridden such birds before, but only
within the city limits and not for any length of time. He snapped the reins,
then gave the bird a serious whistle. It booted back and started off, its long
legs moving easily. Guiding it with gentle tugs of the reins and sharp
whistles, Flinx soon had the stupava moving at a respectable rate up the first
spoke avenue, jostling aside irritated pedestrians and avoiding faster public
vehicles. The stupava seemed undisturbed by Pip’s presence, a good sign. It would
not do to bead into the great forest on an easily spooked mount. In a gratifyingly short time, Flinx found they had
retraced his frenzied marathon of the night before. A sawmill passed by on his
left, the corn booth that had sheltered him somewhere behind it. Then only the
forest loomed ahead. Trees, a hundred meters tall and higher soared above
scattered smaller trees and bushes. Where the pavement vanished there was only
a muddy trail. The stupava wouldn’t mind that—its splayed, partially webbed feet
would carry them over the bogs and sumps with ease. “Heigh there!” he shouted softly at the bird,
following the command with a crisp whistle. The stupava cawed once, jerked its
head sharply against the bridle, and dashed off into the woods. The regular flap-flap
from beneath its feet gave away to an irregular whacking sound broken by
occasional splashes as it spanned a deeper puddle. Sometimes they touched thick
moss or fungi and there was no sound at all. In no time, the immense trees
formed a solid wall of bark and green behind Flinx, and the city that was his
home was for the first time completely out of his sight. Chapter Seven
Joppe the Thief thought sure he had found himself a
couple of fleurms. The man and woman he was stalking so intently looked to be
in their midthirties. Their dress was casual, so casual that one not interested
in it might not have identified them as offworlders. Their presence in that
part of Drallar’s marketplace late at night proved one of two things to Joppe:
either they had a great deal of confidence in their ability to pass unnoticed,
or they were simply ignorant. Joppe guessed they were searching for a little
excitement. That was fine with Toppe. He would happily provide
them with some excitement, something really memorable to relate to the
neighbors back home on some softer world like Terra or New Riviera. They did
not look like the kind who would be awkward about it. If they were, then they
might have more than merely an interesting encounter to talk about. Joppe was hungry. He had not made a strike in over a
week. He regarded the strolling, chatting couple with the eye of a covetous
farmer examining a pair of his prize meat animals. As it was still comparatively early, not: all the
lights had been extinguished in that part of the marketplace, but enough of the
shops had closed to give Joppe hope. The nature of his work required privacy.
He did not rush himself. Joppe had an instinctive feel for his work. He had to
balance waiting for more shopkeepers to retire against the possibility of the
couple’s realizing their error and turning back toward the more brightly lit
sections of the market. The couple did not seem inclined to do that. Joppe’s
hopes continued to rise. He could hear them clearly, talking about some sight
seen earlier in the day. Joppe’s hand closed around the handle of the little
needier in his pocket, and he started forward, closing the distance between
himself and his prey. By now the couple had reached the end of the cul-de-sac
and had stopped in front of the last shop, which was shuttered and dark. They
seemed to be debating something. Then the man bent to the shop’s door and took
several objects from his pockets. He started manipulating something out of
Joppe’s view. The thief slowed, the needier only halfway out of
his holster pocket, and stared in confusion. What were they up to? He moved a
little nearer, still clinging to the shadows. He was close enough to see that
the door was sealed with a palm lock, which required the imprint of all five of
the shop owner’s fingers, in proper sequence, to release. The little black disk
that the tourist had attached to the palm lock was a very expensive,
sophisticated device for decoding and solving such locks. The man’s fingers
roved over the keys, and he examined the readout with the attitude of someone
who not only knew exactly what he was doing but who had done it frequently. While the man worked at the door, his companion
stood watching him, hands on hips, obviously intent on what he was doing.
Abruptly, she glanced away from her husband, and Joppe found himself staring
straight at her. The matronly giggle she had affected all evening was
abruptly gone from her voice. Suddenly, nothing about her seemed soft. The
unexpected transformation, accomplished solely by a change in posture and tone,
was shocking. “I’m sorry we had to waste your evening, friend, but we needed a
good screen to keep away the rest of the rabble. Thanks for that. Now turn
around, call it a bad day, and look elsewhere. We don’t have time for you right
now. Oh, and leave that gun where it won’t do you or anyone else any harm,
okay?” Then she smiled pleasantly. Too startled to react, Joppe just stood there, his
hand still clutching the
needier. He could take this one,
he thought momentarily. However, something in her stance held him back. The
proximity of a weapon was clearly implied, as was the intent to use it. Her
companion had paused in his work and crouched before the doorway in a waiting
position. This was all very wrong, Joppe thought. He was not
an especially imaginative individual, but he was an intent observer, and he was
good at putting things together. Here stood an offworld couple dressed for an evening
out, calmly working a lock decoder on an unprepossessing stall doorway at the
end of a side street on a dark and damp night. That, plus the way the woman had
spoken to him, did not add up Joppe let go the needier and took his hand from his
pocket. Slowly, his fingers spread so that they could see he held nothing in
them. He nodded once, smiled a twisted, fleeting smile at the woman, and backed away. She
returned his smile. He backed away until the shadows engulfed him once again
and he stood behind a protective stone wall. He sucked in a deep breath and let
it out. His pulse was racing. Unable to restrain his curiosity, he turned and
just peeked around the edge of the wall. The woman had not budged, and was
still staring after him. The man had returned to his work. Joppe was well out of his depth, and he knew it.
Without another backward glance, he turned and jogged off toward the main
avenue, disappointed with his luck and still hungry for a strike. As to the
purpose of the peculiar couple, he gave it not another thought. Such folk
operated on a level far above that of Joppe and his ilk and were better
forgotten. “Sensible, that one,” the woman said thoughtfully.
She turned her attention from the distant street to her companion’s work. “I
thought he might give us trouble.” “Better that he didn’t,” her companion agreed. “We
don’t need to fool with such silliness. Not now.” His fingertips danced lightly
over the keys set into the black disk. “How you coming?” the woman asked, peering over his
shoulder. “How does it look like I’m coming?” “No need to be sarcastic,” she said easily. “It’s an updated twenty-six,” he informed her. “I
didn’t expect anyone in this slum would take the trouble and expense to keep
updating something like this. Someone sure likes his privacy.” “Don’t you?” “Very funny.” Suddenly, the disk emitted a soft beep,
and the numbers on the readout froze. “That’s got it.” The man’s tone was
relaxed, methodical. There was no pleasure in his announcement, only a cool,
professional satisfaction. He touched buttons set at five points spaced evenly
around the black disk. It beeped again, twice. The illuminated numbers vanished
from the readout. Unsealing the disk, he slid it back inside his coat. There
were a number of pockets inside that coat, all filled with the kinds of things
that would raise the hackles of any police chief. The man put a hand on the
door and pushed. It moved aside easily. After a last, cursory glance up the
narrow street, the two of them stepped inside. The center section of the man’s ornate belt buckle
promptly came to life, throwing a narrow but powerful beam of light. It was
matched a moment later by a similar beam projected from his companion’s brooch.
They wandered around the stall, noting the goods on display and occasionally
sniffing disdainfully at various overpriced items. Inspection led them to an
inner door and its simpler locking mechanism. Both stood just inside the second doorway and gazed
around the living area. “Someone put up a hell of fight,” the man commented
softly. “The boy—or his adoptive mother, do you think?” “The
woman moved in, stooping to examine an overturned end table and the little
silver vase that had tumbled from it. The vase was empty. She carefully
replaced it where it had fallen. “Maybe both of them.” Her companion was already
inspecting the larger of the two bedrooms. They went through the area
methodically: kitchen, bedrooms, even the hygiene facilities. When they had finished—and it did not take them very
long—and when fingerprinted samples of air and dust and tiny bits of hopefully
significant detritus had been relegated to the safety of tiny storage vials,
the man asked his companion, “What do you think? Wait for them here?” The woman shook her head as she glanced around the
kitchen-dining area. “They obviously left under duress—and you know what that
suggests.” “Sure, that’s occurred to me. No way it couldn’t.
But there’s no guarantee.” She laughed, once. “Yeah, there’s no guarantee, but
what do you think?’ “The same as you. I’m just saying we shouldn’t jump
to conclusions.” “I know, I know. Isn’t it odd, though, that both of
them are missing? That surely suggests something other than a common break-in.” “I said I concurred.” The man’s tone was a mite
testy. “What now?” “The shopkeeper up the street who watched us break
in,” she said. He nodded agreement. They retraced their steps, leaving nothing disturbed
save the air and the dust. The palm lock snapped tight behind them as they
stepped back out into the street, giving no hint that it had been foiled. The
couple strolled back up the little side street until they stood before
Arrapkha’s doorway. They thumbed the buzzer several times. After the third try, the man leaned close to the
little speaker set above the buzzer. “It’s been a long, hard day for us, sir,
and we’re both very tired. We mean you no harm, but we are empowered to take
whatever steps we think advisable to carry out our assignment. Those steps will
include making our own entrance if you don’t let us in. “We saw you watching us as we let ourselves into the
old woman’s shop. I promise you we can let ourselves into your place just as
easily. You might also like to know that we have an automon trained on the
alley behind your shop. If you have a slip-me-out in your back wall, it won’t
do you a bit of good. So why not be pleasant about this”—he smiled in case the
shopkeeper had a video pickup hidden somewhere—“and come on out? If you prefer,
we can chat here on the street, in full view of your other neighbors.” They waited a suitable time. The woman looked at her
companion, shrugged, and withdrew a small, thimble-shaped object from an inside
breast pocket. The door opened immediately. The man nodded, then smiled. The
woman put the thimble-thing away and moved back. Arrapkha stepped outside, closing the door behind
him, and looked hesitantly from one visitor to the other. “What can I do for
you, lady and sir, this night? Your insistence moved me to concern despite the
fact that I am closed now for more than—“ “Skip the banter,” the man said crisply. “We know
you were watching us. You know that we’re not here to buy”—he glanced at the
sign above the doorway—“wood-work. Or do you deny having watched us?” “Well, no,” Arrapkha began, “but I—“ “And you didn’t call the police,” the man continued
easily, “because the police often ask questions you’d rather not answer, right?” “Sir, I assure you that I—“ “We’re looking for the old woman and the boy who
live in that shop.” The man glanced briefly back toward Mother Mastiffs stall.
“You wouldn’t happen to know where they are, would you?” Arrapkha shook his head, his expression blank. “No,
sir, I would not.” “There are signs of a struggle inside. This is a
small street. You didn’t hear anything, see anything?” “A struggle? Dear me,” Arrapbka muttered, showing
signs of distress. “Well, you know, even though this is a small street, it can
still be very noisy here, even at night. We don’t always pay close attention.” “I’ll bet,” the woman muttered. “Just like you
didn’t pay attention to all the noise we weren’t making while we were letting
ourselves into your neighbor’s shop?” Arrapkha favored her with a wan smile. “We haven’t time for these games,” the man said
impatiently, reaching into his pants pocket. “Please, sir and lady.” A look of genuine concern
came over Arrapkha’s face. “You said that you wouldn’t do anything—“ “We won’t.” The man’s hand paused a moment as he saw
the shopkeeper’s nervous stare. “Even if we have to, we probably won’t.” He
slowly withdrew his hand to bring out a small folder. Arrapkha let out a
relieved sigh, and studied the contents of the folder. His eyes widened. The visitor slipped the little case back into his
pocket. “Now, then,” he said pleasantly, “I tell you again that we mean you no
harm, nor have we any intention of banning the old woman and her boy. Quite the
contrary. If they’ve been the victims of violence, as seems probable, we need
to know everything you know, so that if they’re still alive, we can help them.
Regardless of what you may think of us personally and what we stand for, you
must realize that if they’ve met with ill fortune, they’re bound to be better
off in our care than in the hands of whoever carried them away. You can see
that, surely.” “Besides,” his companion added matter-of-factly, “if
you don’t tell us what you know, we’ll escort you to a place in city center
where you’ll be strapped into a machine, and you’ll end up telling us, anyway.
It won’t hurt you, but it will waste our time. I don’t like wasted time.” She
stared into his eyes. “Understand?” Arrapkha nodded slowly. “The old woman you seek—Mother Mastiff?” The man
nodded encouragingly. “I think I saw her carried off by several figures. I
couldn’t even tell you if they were human or alien. It was dark and misty.” “Isn’t it always here?” the man muttered. “Go on.” “That’s all I know, all I saw.” Arrapkha shrugged. “Truly.”
He pointed down the street toward the gap that separated Mother Mastiff’s shop
from the one next to hers. “Through there I saw struggling shapes in the alley.
It still confuses me. She is a very old woman, quite harmless.” “How long ago was this?” the man asked him. Arrapkha
told him. “And the boy? What of the boy?” “He returned home that same night. He often goes off
by himself until quite late. At least he’s been doing so for as long as I’ve
known him, which is most of his life.” “Long solo walks through this city? At his age?” the
woman asked. Arrapkha tried not to show his surprise at the woman’s seemingly
casual remark. These people knew a great deal in spite of how far they had come
from. “He’s not your average youth,” Arrapkha informed
them, seeing no harm in doing so. “He’s grown up largely on his own here.” He
waved toward the brighter lights and the noise that drifted in from the main
avenue. “If you let it, Drallar will mature you quickly.” “I’m sure.” The man nodded. “You were saying about
the boy?” “He came back that night, saw what had happened, and
was very upset. He’s an emotional type, though he fights not to show it, I
think. Mother Mastiff is all he has.” Still the couple did not respond, remaining
maddeningly uninformative. Arrapkha went on. “He vowed to find her. I don’t think he has much chance.” “He went after her, then?” the woman asked eagerly.
“How long ago?” Arrapkha told her. She muttered in some language
that Arrapkha did not recognize, then added in the more familiar Commonwealth
lingua franca to her companion, “Only a couple of days. We missed them by a
lousy couple of days.” “It’s happened before,” the man reminded her,
seeming unperturbed. His attention returned to Arrapkha. “Which way did the boy
intend to go?” “I have no idea,” the shopkeeper said. “You know,” the man said pleasantly, “maybe we just
ought to all take that little jaunt downtown and visit the machine.” “Please, sir, I tell you truly everything. You have
believed my words until now. Why should it be different because the facts no
longer please you? That is not my fault. What reason would I have for suddenly
lying to you?” “I don’t know,” the man said in a more
conversational tone. “What reason would you?” “No reason.” Arrapkha felt his few wits deserting
him, “Please, I don’t understand what’s happening here. It’s all very confusing
to me. What is all this interest suddenly in poor old Mother Mastiff and this
Flinx-boy?” “We’d only confuse you further by telling you,
wouldn’t we?” the man said. “So you have no idea how the boy intended to begin
his search?” “None at all because that is all that he told me,”
Arrapkha confessed. “He said only that he was determined to find her. Then he
left.” “Well, that’s wonderful. That’s just wonderful,” the
man declared sardonically. “All that work, all that research, and we get them
narrowed down to one modest-size city. Now we get to start all over again with
a whole damn world to cover.” “It’s not that bad,” the woman soothed. “The native
population is thin outside the city.” “It’s not that which worries me.” The man sounded
tired. “It’s our happy competitors.” “I think we’ll run into them simultaneously.” The
woman gestured at Arrapkha as if he weren’t there. “We’ve learned all we can
from this one.” “Yes. One more thing, though.” He turned to Arrapkha
and handed him a small blue metal box. A single button marred its otherwise
smooth, vitreous surface. “This is a sealed-beam, high-intensity, low-power
transmitter,” he explained to the shopkeeper. “If either the woman or the boy
should return here, all you have to do is push that button once. That will
summon help, both for them and for you. Do you understand?” “Yes,” Arrapkha said slowly. He accepted the metal
box, then turned it over in his hand and inspected it. “There is a reward—a considerable reward,” the woman
added, “for anyone who assists us in bringing this matter to a speedy and
successful resolution.” She looked past him, into the little woodworking shop.
“I don’t know what kind of a life you make for yourself here, but it can’t be
much. This isn’t exactly the high-rent district. The reward would amount to
more, much more, than you’re likely to clear in an entire year.” “It sounds nice,” Arrapkha admitted slowly. “It
would be very nice to make a lot of money.” “All right, then,” the man said. “Remember, the
people who’ll show up here in response to a signal from the cube won’t
necessarily include us, but they’ll be people familiar with our mission. We’ll
follow as quickly as we’re able. You’re certain you understand all this, now?” “I understand.” “Fine.” The man did not offer to shake Arrapkha’s
hand. “Your help is appreciated, and I’m sorry if we upset you.” Arrapkha shrugged. “Life is full of tiny upsets.” “So it is,” the man agreed. He turned to his
companion. “Let’s go.” They ran back toward the main avenue, leaving Arrapkha
standing in front of his shop. After several hours, Arrapkha put away his
woodworking tools, cleaned himself, and prepared to retire. The blue metal cube
sat on the stand next to his bed. Arrapkha studied it for a moment. Then he
picked it up and walked into the bathroom. Without ceremony or hesitation, he
dropped it into the waste-disposal unit and thumbed the “flush” control. He
wondered how it would affect the cube, if it would send any kind of signal, and
if those on the receiving end of such a signal would interpret it properly. Feeling much better, he slipped into bed and went to
sleep. Chapter Eight
The forest was full of revelations for the
thoroughly urbanized Flinx. The first few nights were hard. The silence hit him
with unexpected force, and he found sleeping difficult. Pip spent those nights
in uneasy rest, sensing its master’s discomfort. Only the stupava, its head
bobbing methodically with its soft snores, was content. By the fourth night, Flinx slept soundly, and by the
fifth, he was actually enjoying the silence. I’ve been deceived by
circumstances and fate, he thought. This is much better than city life. True,
he missed the color, the excitement, the ever-shifting landscape of beings from
dozens of worlds parading through the marketplace and the wealthy inurbs, the
smells of different foods and the sounds of sinister bargains being
consummated. Nor did the forest offer him any opportunity to practice his skills:
there wasn’t anything to steal. The woods gave freely of their bounty. It was
all too easy, somehow. He had almost relaxed when the squook surprised him.
It shot out of its hole in the ground, startling the stupava and nearly causing
it to buck Flinx off. The squook was, like its near-relative the canish, a
hyperactive ground dwelling carnivore. It was somewhat larger, boasting claws the length of
Flinx's own fingers. The slim, brown-and-black-striped body was built low to
the ground. It spent the majority of its life burrowing, searching out other,
herbivorous burrowers, but it occasionally would erupt from its hole in an
attempt to snag and drag down some larger prey. The critter had evidently mistaken the comparatively
light footsteps of the stupava for those of a much smaller animal. The bird
squawked and wrenched at its reins while Flinx fought to bring it under
control. At its master's surge of alarm. Pip had instantly leaped clear and now hovered
menacingly over the occupied burrow. The squook favored the minidrag with an impressive
snarl but could only glare at its airborne nemesis. Though the riding bird was
clearly afraid of it, the squook still had a healthy respect for the bird's
long, powerfully muscled legs. Still, if it could just get its teeth around one
of those legs, it could bring the large meal to the ground. But it wasn't so sure about the human perched on the
bird's back. Though uncommon thereabouts, humans were not unknown to the
inhabitants of that part of the great forest. A squook could kill a human, but
the reverse was also true. And then there was that peculiar and utterly
unfamiliar humming thing that darted through the air overhead. That made three opponents, one alien and
unpredictable, the other two potentially dangerous. Letting out a last,
disgruntled snarl, the squook backed into its burrow and expanded to fill the
opening. With only its muzzle showing, it sat there and set up a steady warning
bark. Flinx finally got the stupava back under control and
urged it forward. The angry calls of the squook receded slowly behind him. There had been no real danger, he thought. On the
other hand, if he had lost his saddle and fallen off—he recalled clearly the
long, toothy snout of the carnivore and watched the forest with more respect. Nothing else emerged to menace them. They
encountered nothing larger than the many soaring rodents which Inhabited that
part of the forest. Pip amused itself by flying circles around them, for they were natural
gliders rather than true fliers. They could do nothing but squeak angrily at
the intruder as it executed intricate aerial maneuvers in their midst. Those
that chattered and complained the loudest, the flying snake selected for lunch. "That's enough. Pip," Flinx called out to
the gallivanting minidrag one day. "Leave them alone and get down
here." Responding to the urgency of its master's mind, the flying snake
stopped tormenting the flying rodents and zipped down to wrap itself gently
around Flinx's neck. The inn they were approaching was one of hundreds
that formed an informal backwoods network in the uninhabited parts of the vast
forests. Such establishments provided temporary home to hardwood merchants and
cutters, sightseers, fishermen and hunters, prospectors, and other nomadic
types. There were more inns than a casual observer might expect to find because
there were more nomads. They liked the endless forest. The trees concealed many
people and a comparable quantity of sin. Flinx tethered the stupava in the animal compound,
next to a pair of muccax. The inn door sensed his presence and slid aside,
admitting him. Smoke rose from a central chimney, but the stone fireplace was
more for atmosphere than for heating. The latter was handled by thermal coils
running beneath the inn floors. Many of the structures dotting the forest were rustic only in
appearance, their innards as modem in design and construction as the
shuttleport outside Drallar. The offworlder tourists who came to Moth to sample
the delights of its wilderness generally liked their rough accommodations the
same as their liquor: neat. "Hello." The innkeeper was only a few years
older than Flinx. "You're out by yourself?" He glanc'ed at Pip.
"That's an interesting pet you have." "Thanks," Flinx said absently, ignoring the
first comment. "What time do you serve midday meal?" He looked
longingly toward the nearby dining room, calculating what remained on his
credcard. At the present rate, he would starve before he could catch up to his
quarry. "You don't want a room, then?" "No, thanks." He would sleep in a tube tent
in the forest, as usual. Exhaustion made him sleep as soundly these days as any
soft bed. "What about your animal?" The innkeeper
gestured toward the animal compound outside. "He'll be all right." The young innkeeper looked indifferent. A pleasant
enough sort, Flinx thought, but sheltered-like so many of his potential friends back in Drallar. "You can get a meal here anytime. We're all
autoserve here. This isn't a fancy place. We can't afford a live kitchen." "The machines will be fine for me," Flinx
told him. He walked through the entry area and on into the dining room. Other
people were already seated about, enjoying their food. There was a young
touring couple and one solitary man far back in a corner. After the usual curious glance
at Pip, they ignored the newcomer. Flinx walked over to the autochef, his mouth
watering. Living off the land was fine for the stupava, but occasionally he
needed something neither stale nor dehydrated. He made his selections from the
extensive list, inserted his card, and waited while it processed the request.
Two minutes later he picked up his meal, chose a table, and dug into the roast,
fried tuber, and crisp green vegetable. Two tall cups of domestic
coffee-substitute washed it down. The innkeeper strolled in. He chatted a moment with
the couple, then sauntered over to Flinx's table. Despite his desire for
solitude, Flinx didn't feel much like arguing, so he said nothing when the
'keeper pulled over a chair and sat down nearby. "Excuse me," the young man said cheerfully.
"I don't see many people my own age here, let alone anyone younger
traveling on his own-certainly never with so interesting a companion." He
pointed to Pip. The flying snake had slithered down from Flinx's neck
and was sprawled across the table, gulping down green seeds. They complemented
a steady diet of arboreal rodents. The seeds really weren't necessary, but the
minidrag was not one to pass up a meal that couldn't fight back. "What are you doing out here all by
yourself?" A real diplomat, this one, Flinx thought to himself.
"I'm looking for a friend," he explained, chewing another chunk of
roast. "No one's left any messages for you here if
that's what you're wondering," the innkeeper said. "The friends I'm looking for don't like to
leave messages," Flinx said between mouthfuls. "Maybe you've seen
them," he asked without much hope. "A very old woman is traveling
with them." "We don't get many very old people out this
way," the innkeeper confessed. "They stay closer to the city. That's
what's so funny." Flinx stopped in midchew. "There was a group in
here just recently that might be the friends you're looking for." Flinx swallowed carefully. "This old woman is
short, a good deal shorter than me. She's close to a hundred." "Except for her mouth, which, is a lot
younger?" "You've seen her!" The meal was suddenly
forgotten. "Five days ago," the innkeeper said.
Flinx's heart sank. The distance between them was increasing, not growing
shorter. "Did you happen to see which way they
went?" "Their mudder took off almost due north. I
thought that was odd, too, because the line of inns most tourists follow runs
pretty much northwest from here, not north. There are a few lodges due north,
of course, up in the Lakes District, but not many. They were a funny bunch, and
not just because the old woman was with them. They didn't look like sightseers
or fishermen." Trying not to show too much anxiety, Flinx forced
himself to finish the rest of his meal. It wasn't that he didn't appreciate the
help, but the talkative youth seemed just the type to blab to anyone who might
be curious about a visiting stranger, including the forest patrol. Flinx did
not want anyone slowing his pursuit with awkward questions-especially since he
intended to increase his speed as soon as feasible and like as not by methods
the police would frown upon. Nor had he forgotten the watchman in Drallar whose
helpfulness had nearly turned to interference. "You've been a big help," he told the
other. "What's all this about?" the innkeeper persisted
as Flinx finished the last of his food and let Pip slide up his proffered arm
and onto his shoulder. "What's going on?" Flinx thought frantically. What could he say to keep
this loudmouthed innocent from calling up the patrol? "They're on vacation-my great-grandmother and
some other relatives. They argue a lot." The innkeeper nodded knowingly.
"I wasn't supposed to be able to go along," Flinx continued with a
wink. "But I slipped away from my studies, and I've sort of been playing
at trailing them. You know. When they get to the lodge where they'll be
spending the rest of the month, I'm going to pop in and surprise them. Once I
land in their laps, they can hardly send me home, can they?" "I get it." The innkeeper smiled. "I
won't tell anyone." "Thanks." Flinx rose. "Food's
good." He gathered up Pip and headed for the door. "Hey," the innkeeper called out at a sudden
thought, "what lodge are your relatives headed for?" But Flinx was
already gone. Outside, he hurriedly mounted his stupava and turned
it into the woods. Five days, he thought worriedly. Two more at this pace and
they would be ten ahead of him. The stupava was doing its best, but that was
not going to be good enough. Somehow he had to increase his speed. He reined in
and let the bird catch its breath as he extracted a ten-centimeter-square sheet
of plastic from his backpack. It was half a centimeter thick and had cost him
plenty back in the marketplace, but he could hardly have risked this journey
without it. A series of contact switches ran down the left side of the plastic.
He touched the uppermost one, and the sheet promptly lit up. Additional
manipulation of the controls produced a map of the forest, and further
adjustments zoomed in on a blowup of his immediate surroundings. He entered the name of the inn where he had had his
hasty meal. Instantly, the map shifted position. It was as if he were flying
above an abstract landscape. When the image settled, he widened the field of
view, expanding the map until it included several other inns and a small town
that he had unknowingly skirted the previous day. He touched controls, and the
map zoomed in on the town. On its fringe was a small wood-processing plant,
several minor commercial structures, a forest service station, and a
communications supply-and-repair terminal. He thought about trying the forest
service station first, then decided that of all the structures it was the one
most likely to be manned around the clock. That left the communications depot.
He turned off the map, replaced it carefully in his pack, and chucked the
reins. The bird whistled and started forward. Night was falling, and soon the sun would have
settled completely behind the shielding clouds. One thing he could count on was
the absence of moon-even Flame's maroon glow could not penetrate the cloud
cover that night. Though he had completely missed the town, it was not
far off. The buildings were scattered across a little knoll the driest land
around-and remained hidden by trees until he was right on top of them. Most of
the homes and apartments were located across the knoll. To his left was a low,
rambling structure in which a few lights shone behind double-glazed windows:
the forest station. The communications depot was 'directly ahead of him. He
slid easily off the back of the stupava, tied it to a nearby log, and waited
for midnight. A single, three-meter-high fence ran around the
depot, enclosing the servicing yard. Flinx could make out the silhouettes of
several large vehicles designed for traveling through the dense forest with a
full complement of crew and equipment. Flinx wasn't interested in them. They
were too big, too awkward for his needs. Surely there had to be something
better suited to his purpose parked inside the machine-shod beyond. There had
better be. He doubted that the sawmill or smaller commercial buildings would
have anything better to offer. He made certain the stupava's bonds were loose. If he
failed, he would need the riding bird in a hurry, and if he succeeded, the
stupava would grow restless before too long and would break free to find its
way back to Drallar and its barn. That was another reason Flinx had chosen the
riding bird over the toadlike muccax: a muccax had no homing instinct With Pip coiled firmly around his left shoulder, he
made his way down through the night mist. The yard was not paved, but the
ground there had been packed to a comparative dryness and he was able to move
silently along the fence. He carefully made a complete circuit of both yard and
buildings. No lights were visible, nor did he see any suggestion of alarm
beams. Though he had circumvented antitheft equipment before, this would be the
first time he had tried to break into a government-owned facility. The fence arched outward at the top, a design that would
make climbing over it difficult, and he could clearly see transmitter points
positioned atop each post, ready to set off the alarm if anything interrupted
their circuit. Flinx lowered his gaze to the back gate. The catch there
appeared to be purely mechanical, almost too simple. He could open it without
any special tools. The catch to the catch was a duplicate of the units that ran
along the crest of the fence. He could not open the latch without interrupting
the beam and setting off the alarm. Cutting through the mesh of the fence itself was out
of the question. The meal was sensitized:
any nonprogrammed disruption of its structure would sound the alarm as
surely as if he had tried to knock a section over with a dozer. Nudging Pip aside, Flinx slipped off his backpack and
hunted through it. In addition to the concentrated foods and basic medical
supplies, he carried equipment that would have shocked the innkeeper who had
chatted with him earlier that day. He didn't need long to find what he was looking
for. From the pack he extracted one of several odd lengths of wire. A single
contact switch was spliced to its center. Making certain the switch was open,
he looped one end of the wire carefully around the tiny transmitter point on
the left side of the gate latch. Gently, he formed the wire into an arch and
brought it across the long latch to loop it over the transmitter on the
opposite side. A minuscule LED on the wire's switch glowed a satisfying green. Then out of the backpack Flinx took a small, oddly
formed piece of dull metal, inserted it into the gate lock, and turned it a
couple of times. In the heat from his hand, the metal softened and flowed
obediently. The latch clicked..
Holding the metal tool with only two fingers, Flinx lowered the heat it was
absorbing until it resolidified, and then turned it. He heard asecond, softer
click from the latch. He pulled it free, put a hand on the gate, and pushed. It
moved two meters inward, swaying slightly on its supports. He hesitated. No
audible alarm ran through the night. He hoped that a rural cummunity would have
no need of silent alarms. Still, he gathered up his tools and backpack and
retreated hastily to the forest. He waited until half an hour had passed without
anyone's appearing to check the gate or the yard, then he crept back to the
fence. The gate still sat ajar. The glass fiber, looped from terminal to
terminal, permitted the alarm beam to flow uninterrupted, but there would be a
problem when he had to open the gate farther than the length of the wire
allowed. He slipped easily into the maintenance yard. Pip flew
over the fence and hovered just above its master's tousled hair. Flinx searched the yard. There was still no hint that
his intrusion had been detected. The machine shed lay directly in front of him,
doorless and open to the night. He used the huge repair vehicles for cover as
he made his way into the shed. Among the equipment and supplies were a pair of
two-passenger mudders. His heart beat a little faster. The compact vehicles bad
flared undersides and enclosed cabs to protect pilot and passenger in
side-by-side comfort. He tried them both. Jumping the simple electric
engines was easy enough. He grew anxious when the fuel gauge on the first
machine didn't react, indicating an empty storage cell, but the second mudder
showed a ninety-five-percent charge. That was better than good; it was
critical, because he doubted he would have access to recharge stations where he
was going. Since the depot remained peaceful, Flinx gambled his
success thus far to resolve one additional difficulty: the mudder's government
marldngs. In a storage cabinet, he found dozens of cans of catalytic bonding
paint. He chose a couple of cans of brown. After a moment's thought, he went
back to the cabinet and selected an additional canister of red. He had never
had a personal transport of his own-as long as he was going to add a little
art, he might as well put some flash into it. Besides, that would be more in
keeping with the character of a sixteen-year old boy. The trees would still
conceal it well. When he had finished spraying the mudder, he climbed
into the pilot's seat. Pip settled into the empty one along-side. The controls
were simple and straightforward, as he'd expected. His right hand went to the
little steering wheel, his left to the jump he had installed beneath the dash.
The engine came to life, its steady hum little louder than Pip's. A nudge on
the accelerator sent the mudder forward. The single, wide-beam searchlight
mounted on its nose remained dark. It would stay that way until he was sure he
was safe. He drove into the yard, and still there was no sign
of concern from the nearby buildings. At the gate, he left the craft on hover
and jumped out. Patching his remaining passfibers onto the first, he was able
to open the gate wide enough for the mudder to pass through. He was so fearful
of being spotted that he nearly forgot to duck as he drove through the gap-the
fibers that served to fool the alarm system almost decapitated him. Then he was out through the gate, on the smooth
surface bordering the depot. In moments, he was concealed by the forest. A
touch on a dash control locked the transparent plastic dome over his head,
shutting out the mist. Another control set the craft's heater to thrumming. For
the first time since he had left Drallar, he was warm. He held the mudder's speed down until he was well
away from the town. Then he felt safe in turning on the searchlight. The
high-power beam pierced the darkness and revealed paths between the trees. Now
he was able to accelerate, and soon the mudder was skipping along over the
moist earth. Too fast, perhaps, for night-driving, but Flinx wanted to make up
time on his quarry. And he was a little drunk with success. It wouldn't have been that easy in Drallar, he told
himself. Out here, where there wasn't much to steal, he had succeeded because
thieves were scarce. The underside of the mudder was coated with a special
hydrophobic polyresin that allowed it to slide across a moist but solid surface
with almost no friction, propelled by the single electric jet located in the
vehicle's stem. It also made very little noise; not that he could detect any
sign of pursuit. The mudder's compass control kept him beaded north. It was midmoming before Flinx finally felt the need
to stop. He used daylight and the canister of red paint to decorate the brown
vehicle, adding decorative stripes to side and front. It took his mind off his
problems for a little while. Then he was traveling again, in a craft no casual
observer would ever have mistaken for a sober government vehicle. The night before there had been a touch of a mental
tingle of almost painful familiarity. As usual, it vanished the instant he
sought to concentrate on it, but he felt sure that that touch had reached out
to him from somewhere to the north. Confident and comfortable, he soared along with the
dome retracted. Suddenly, the air turned gray with thousands of furry bodies no
bigger than his little finger. They swarmed about him on tiny membranous wings,
and he swatted at them with his free hand as he slowed the car to a crawl. They
were so dense he couldn't see clearly. Pip was delighted, both with the opportunities for
play and for dining. Soon the storm of miniature fliers became so thick that
Plinx had to bring the mudder to a complete halt for fear of running into
something ahead. At least now he could use both hands to beat at them. He hesitated to close the protective dome for fear of
panicking the dozens that would inevitably be trapped inside. Besides, except
for blocking his view, they weren't bothering him. Their square little teeth
were designed for cracking the hulls of nuts and seeds, and they showed no
interest in live flesh. They had large bright-yellow eyes, and two thin legs
suitable for grasping branches. Flinx wondered at them, as well as how long it
would be before they moved on and he could resume his journey. Suddenly, the air was full of whooshing
sounds. The earth erupted head-sized round shapes. Flinx saw long thin snouts
full of needlelike teeth and multiple arms projecting from narrow bodies. The whooshing
noise was composed of a long series of explosive popping sounds. He squinted through the mass of fliers and saw one
creature after another emerge from vertical burrows. The poppers were
black-bodied with yellow and orange variolitic colorings. They became airborne
by inflating a pair of sausage-shaped air sacs attached to their spines-by
regulating the amount of air in the sacs, the animals could control not only
their altitude but their direction. They lit into the swarm of fliers,
utilizing long, thin snouts to snatch one after another from the air. Once a
popper had made several catches, it would deflate its air sacs and settle
parachutelike to the ground. They always seemed to land directly above their
respective burrows, down which they would promptly vanish. When neither the cloud of fliers nor attacking
poppers showed any signs of thinning, Flinx made the decision to move forward.
He traveled slowly, picking his way through the trees. He had traveled nearly a
kilometer before the swarms started to disperse, and eventually he passed into
open forest once again. A backward glance showed a solid wall of gray, black,
and yellow-orange shifting like smoke among the trees. It took a moment before
he realized something was missing from the mudder. "Pip?" The minidrag was not coiled on the
passenger seat, nor was it drifting on the air currents above the mudder. It took Flinx several worried minutes before he
located his pet lying on its belly in the storage compartment behind the seats,
swollen to three times its usual diameter. It had thoroughly gorged itself on
the tasty little gray fliers. Flinx was convinced that his currently immobile
companion did not look at all well. "That'll teach you to make a durq of
yourself," he told his pet. The minidrag moved once, slowly, before giving
up totally on the effort. It would be a while before it flew again, even to its
master's shoulder. Flinx continued northward, hardly pausing to sleep.
Two days had passed since he had appropriated the mudder. Given the likely
laxity of rural bureaucratic types, it might be some time before its absence
was remarked upon. By the time someone figured out that a real theft had been
pulled off, Flinx would be two hundred kilometers away, and the local
authorities would have no way of knowing which direction he had taken. Skimming
along just above the surface, a mudder left no trail. Its simple electric jet
emitted practically no waste heat to be detected from the air. But Flinx did
not expect any kind of elaborate pursuit, not for a single, small,
comparatively inexpensive vehicle. He continued to wonder about all the effort and
expense someone was going through to abduct a harmless old woman. The
implausibility of the whole situation served only to heighten his anxiety and
did nothing to dampen his anger or determination. Several days went by before he detected the change in
the air. It was an alien feeling, something he couldn't place. The omnipresent
dampness remained, but it had become sharper, more direct in his nostrils.
"Now what do you suppose that is, Pip?" he murmured aloud. The flying
snake would not have answered had it been able. All its efforts and energies
were still directed to the task of digesting fur, meat, and bone. The mudder moved up a slight hill. At its crest a gap
in the trees revealed a scene that took Flinx's breath away. At first, he
thought he had somehow stumbled onto the ocean. No, he knew that couldn't be.
No ocean lay –north from Drallar, not until one reached the frozen pole or
unless one traveled east or west for thousands of kilometers. Though the body of water looked like an ocean, he
recognized it for what it was: a lake, one of the hundreds that occupied the
territory from his present position northward to the arctic. No sunlight shone
directly on it, for the clouds were as thick here as they were in distant
Drallar, but enough light filtered through to create a glare-a glare that
exploded off that vast sheet of water to reflect from the cloud cover overhead
and bounced again from the water. The-Blue-That-Blinded, Flinx thought. He knew enough
of Moth's geography to recognize the first of the lakes which bore that
collective description. The lake itself he could not put a name to, not without
his map. It was only one of hundreds of similarly impressive bodies of fresh
water whose names he had had no need to memorize during his readings, for he
had never expected to visit that part of the world. The glare imprisoned between surface and clouds
brought tears to his eyes as he headed the mudder toward the water's edge. The
lake blocked his path northward. He needed to know whether to skirt it to the
east or the west or to attempt a crossing. He had no way of figuring out what
his quarry had done. The weather was calm. Only a modest chop broke the
otherwise smooth expanse before him. A mudder could travel over water as well
as land, provided its charge held out; if not, the vehicle would sink quickly. Flinx decided that the first thing he needed was some
advice. So he turned to his map, which showed a single, isolated lodge just to
the east. He headed for it. The building came into view ten minutes later, a
large rambling structure of native stone and wood. Boats were tied up to the
single pier out back. Several land vehicles were parked near the front. Flinx
tensed momentarily, then relaxed. None of the craft displayed government
markings. Surely his theft had been discovered by now, but it was likely that
the search would tend more in the direction of populated areas to the south
-toward Drallar- rather than into the trackless north. . Nevertheless, he took a moment to inspect the
assembled vehicles carefully. All four were deserted. Two of them were
tracked-strictly land transportation. The others were mudders, larger and
fancier than his own, boasting thickly upholstered lounges and self-darkening
protective domes. Private transport, he knew. More comfortable than his own
craft but certainly no more durable. There was no sign of riding animals.
Probably anyone who could afford to travel this far north could afford
mechanized transportation. Flinx brought the mudder to a stop alongside the
other vehicles and took the precaution of disconnecting the ignition jumper. It
wouldn't do to have a curious passer-by spy the obviously illegal modification. The mudder
settled to the ground, and he stepped out over the mudguard onto the surface. The parking area had not been pounded hard and
smooth, and his boots picked up plenty of muck as he walked up to the wooden
steps leading inside. Suction hoses cleaned off most of the mud. The steps led
onto a covered porch populated by the kind of rustic wooden furniture so
popular with tourists who liked to feel they were roughing it. Beyond was a
narrow hall paneled with peeled, glistening tree trunks, stained dark. Flinx thought the inn a likely place to obtain
information about lake conditions, but before that, something equally important
demanded his attention. Food. He could smell it somewhere close by, and he owed
himself a break from the concentrates that had been fueling him for many days.
His credcard still showed a positive balance, and there was no telling when he
would be fortunate enough to encounter honest cooking again. Nor would he have
to worry about curious stares from other patrons-Pip, still unable to eat,
would not be dining with him this time. He inhaled deeply. It almost smelled as
if the food were being prepared by a live chef instead of a machine. Flinx found his way to the broad, exposed-beam
dining room. The far wall had a fire blazing in a rock fireplace. To the left
lay the source of the wonderful aroma: a real kitchen. A couple of furry shapes
snored peacefully nearby. An older couple sat near the entrance. They were
absorbed in their meal and didn’t even turn to look up at him. Two younger
couples ate and chatted close by the fireplace. In the back comer was a group
of oldsters, all clad in heavy north-country attire. He started down the few steps into the dining room,
intending to question someone in the kitchen about the possibility of a meal.
Suddenly, something hit his mind so hard he had to lean against the nearby wall
for support. Two younger men had entered the dining room from a
far, outside door. They were talking to the group of diners in the far corner.
No one had looked toward Flinx; no one had said a word to him. He tottered away from the wall, caught and balanced
himself at the old couple's table. The man looked up from his plate at the
uninvited visitor and frowned. "You feeling poorly, son?" Flinx didn't answer, but continued to stare across
the room. Faces-he couldn't make out faces beneath all that heavy clothing.
They remained hidden from his sight-but not from something else. He spoke sharply, unthinkingly. "Mother?" Chapter Nine
One of the bundled figures spun in its chair to gape
at him. Her eyes were wide with surprise as well as with a warning Flinx
ignored. She started to rise from her seat. The rest of the group gazed at the young man standing
across the room. One of the younger men put a hand on Mother Mastiff's shoulder
and forced her back into her chair. She promptly bit him. The man's companion
pulled something out of a coat pocket and started toward Flinx. The group's
stunned expressions, brought on by Flinx's unexpected appearance, had turned
grim. Flinx searched the floor and walls nearby, found the
switch he was hunting for, and stabbed at it. The lights in the dining room
went out, leaving only the dim daylight from the far windows to illuminate the
room. What a fantastic Talent he possessed, he thought as
he dove for cover. It had reacted sharply to Mother Mastiff's presence-after he
had all but tripped over her. The room filled with screams from the regular guests,
mixed with the curses of those Flinx had surprised. He did not try to make his
way toward the table where Mother Mastiff was being held; he had been through
too many street fights for that. Keeping the layout of the dining room in his
mind, he retreated and dropped to a crawl, taking the long way around the room
toward the table in an attempt to sneak behind her captors. Three had been
seated at the table with her, plus the two who had arrived later. Five
opponents. "Where is he-somebody get some lights!"
Very helpful of them, Flinx mused, to let him know their location. He would
have to make use of the information quickly, he knew. Soon one of the guests,
or a lodge employee, would have the lights back on, robbing him of his only
advantage. A sharp crackling richocheted around the room,
accompanied by a brief flash of light. One of the other guests screamed a
warning. Flinx smiled to himself. With every-one bugging the floor, that ought
to keep the lights off a little longer. A second bolt split the air at table level, passing
close enough to set his skin twitching. Paralysis beam. Though Flinx took some
comfort from this demonstration of his opponent's intent not to shoot to kill,
he did not stop to think why they might take such care. The kidnappers
continued to fire blindly through the darkness. With those nerve-petrifying
beams filling the room, no employee was likely to take a stab at a light
switch. Grateful once more for his small size, Flinx kept
moving on his belly until he reached the far wall. At the same time, the random
firing ceased. Imagining one of his opponents feeling along the walls in search
of a light switch, Flinx readied himself for a hurried crawl past the glow of
the fireplace. Then someone let out a violent curse, and he heard the sound of
chair and table going over very close by. Flinx's hand went to his boot. He
rose to a crouching position, waiting. Again, he heard the sound of stumbling, louder and
just ahead. He put his hand on a nearby chair and shoved it into the darkness.
A man appeared in the glow from the fireplace, and a flash enveloped the chair.
Flinx darted in behind the man and used the stiletto as old Makepeace had
instructed him. The man was twice Flinx's size, but his flesh was no tougher
than anyone else's. He exhaled once, a sharp wheeze, before collapsing in a heap. Flinx darted forward,
out of the illuminating glare of the fire. "Erin," a voice called uncertainly,
"you okay?" Several new flashes filled the air, striking the stone
around the fireplace where Flinx had stood moments earlier. If the intent of
those shots was to catch Flinx unaware, they failed; on the other hand, they
did force him to hug the floor again. Moments later, the lights winked back on, shockingly
bright. Flinx tensed beneath the table that sheltered him, but he needn't have
worried. The party of travelers had fled, along with the remaining
paralysis-beam wielder and Mother Mastiff. Flinx climbed to his feet. The other guests remained
cowering on the floor. There was no hint of what had brought the lights back to
life, and he had no time to think about it. The door at the far end of the room was ajar. It led
out onto a curving porch. He hurried to it but paused just inside to throw a
chair out ahead of him. When no one fired on it, he took a deep breath and
jumped out, rolling across the porch and springing out of the roll into a
fighting crouch. There was no enemy waiting to confront him-the porch
was deserted. The beach off to the left was not. Two mudders were parked on the
shore. As Flinx watched helplessly, the travelers he had sought for so long
piled into the two crafts. Heedless now of his own safety, he charged down the
steps onto the slight slope leading toward the lake shore. The first mudder was
already cruising across the wave tops. By the time he reached the water's edge and
sank exhausted to his knees, the useless knife held limply in his right hand,
both craft were already well out on the lake surface itself. Fighting for breath, Flinx forced himself erect and
started back up the slope. He would have to go after them quickly. If he lost
sight of them on the vast lake, he would have no way of knowing on which far
shore they would emerge. He staggered around the front of the lodge and grabbed
at the entrance to his mudder. A supine and unsettled shape stared back at him.
Pip looked distinctly unhappy. It flittered once, then collapsed back onto the
seat. "Fine help you were," Flinx snapped at his
pet. The minidrag, if possible, managed to look even more miserable. Clearly, it
had sensed danger to Flinx and had tried to go to his aid, but simply couldn't
manage to get airborne. Flinx started to climb into the cab when a voice and
a hand on his shoulder restrained him. "Just a minute." Flinx tensed,
but a glance at Pip showed that the flying snake was not reacting defensively. "I can't," he started to say as he turned.
When he saw who was confronting him, he found himself able only to stare. She seemed to tower over him, though in reality she
was no more than a couple of centimeters taller. Black hair fell in tight
ringlets to her shoulders. Her bush jacket was tucked into pants that were
tucked into low boots. She was slim but not skinny. The mouth and nose were
child-sized, the cheekbones high beneath huge, owl-like brown eyes. Her skin
was nearly as dark as Flinx's, but it was a product of the glare from the
nearby lake and not heredity. She was the most strikingly beautiful woman he
had ever seen. He tracked down his voice and mumbled, "I have
to go after them." The hand remained on his shoulder. He might have thrown
it off, and might not. "My name's Lauren Walder," she said.
"I'm the general manager at Granite Shallows." Her voice was full of
barely controlled fury as she used her head to gesture toward the lake.
Ringlets flew. "What have you to do with those idiots?" "They've kidnapped my mother, the woman who
adopted me," he explained. "I don't know why, and I don't much care
right now. I just want to get her back." "You're a little out-numbered, aren't you?" "I'm used to that." He pointed toward the
dining-room windows and the still-open porch doorway. "It's not me lying
dead on your floor in there." She frowned at him, drawing her brows together.
"How do you know the man's dead?" "Because I killed him." "I see," she said, studying him in a new
light. "With what?" "My stiletto," he said. "I don't see any stiletto." She looked him
up and down. "You're not supposed to. Look, I've got to go.
If I get too far behind them-" "Take it easy," she said, trying to soothe him.
"I've got something I have to show you." "You don't seem to understand," he said
insistently. "I've no way to track them. I won't know where they touch
land and-" "Don't worry about it. You won't lose
them." "How do you know?" "Because we'll run them down in a little while.
Let them relax and think they've escaped." Her fingers tightened on his shoulder. "I promise you we'll
catch them." "Well ..." He spared another glance for
Pip. Maybe in a little while the flying snake would be ready to take to the
air. That could make a significant difference in any fight to come. "If
you're sure ..." She nodded once, appearing as competent as she was
beautiful. Lodge manager, he thought. She ought to know what she was talking
about. He could trust her for a few minutes, anyway. "What's so important to show me?" he asked. "Come with me." Her tone was still soaked
with anger. She led him back into the lodge, across the porch and back into the
dining room. Several members of her staff were treating one of the women who
had been dining when the lights had gone out and the guns had gone off. Her
husband and companions were hovering anxiously over her; and she was panting
heavily, holding one hand to her chest. "Heart condition," Lauren explained
tersely. Flinx looked around. Tables and chairs were still
overturned, but there was no other indication that a desperate fight had been
fought in the room. Paralysis beams did not damage inanimate objects. The man
he had slain had been moved by lodge personnel. He was glad of that. Lauren led him toward the kitchen. Lying next to the
doorway were the pair of furry shapes he had noticed when he had first entered
the room. Up close, he could see their round faces, twisted in agony. The short
stubby legs were curled tightly beneath the fuzzy bodies. Their fur was a rust
red except for yellow circles around the eyes, which were shut tight.
Permanently. "Sennar and Soba." Lauren spoke while
gazing at the dead animals with a mixture of fury and hurt. "They're
wervils-or were," she added bitterly. "I raised them from kittens.
Found them abandoned in the woods. They liked to sleep here by the kitchen.
Everybody liked to feed them. They must have moved at the wrong time. In the
dark, one of those"-she used a word Flinx didn't recognize, which was
unusual in itself-"must have mistaken them for you. They were firing at
anything that moved, I've been told." She paused a moment, then added,
"You must have the luck of a pregnant Yax'm. They hit just about
everything in the room except you." "I was down on the floor," Flinx explained.
"I only stand up when I have to." "Yes, as that one found out." She jerked a
thumb in the direction of the main hall. Flinx could see attendants wrapping a
body in lodge sheets. He was a little startled to see how big his opponent had
actually been. In the dark, though, it's only the size of your knife that
matters. "They didn't have to do this," the manager
was murmuring, staring at the dead animals. "They didn't have to be so
damned indiscriminate. Four years I've coddled those two. Four years.
"They never showed anything but love to anyone who ever went near
them." Flinx waited quietly. After a while, she gestured for him to follow her.
They walked out into the main hall, down a side corridor, and entered a
storeroom. Lauren unlocked a transparent wall case and removed a large,
complex-looking rifle and a couple of small, wheel-shaped plastic containers.
She snapped one of them into the large slot set in the underside of the rifle.
The weapon seemed too bulky for her, but she swung it easily across her back
and set her right arm through the support strap. She added a pistol to her
service belt, then led him back out into the corridor. "I've never seen a gun like that before."
Flinx indicated the rifle. "What do you hunt with it?" "It's not for hunting," she told him.
"Fishing gear. Each of those clips"-and she gestured at the
wheel-shapes she had handed over to Flinx-"holds about a thousand darts.
Each dart carries a few milliliters of an extremely potent neurotoxm. Prick
your finger on one end ..." She shrugged meaningfully. "The darts are loaded into the clips at the
factory in Drallar, and then the clips are sealed. You can't get a dart out
unless you fire it through this." She patted the butt of the rifle, then
turned a corner. They were back in the main hallway. "You use a gun to kill fish?" She smiled across at him. Not much of a smile but a
first, he thought. "You've never been up to The-Blue-That-Blinded before, have you?" "I've lived my whole life in Drallar," he
said, which for all practical purposes was the truth. "We don't use these to kill the fish," she
explained. "Only to slow them up if they get too close to the boat." Flinx nodded, trying to picture the weapon in use. He
knew that the lakes of The-Blue-That-Blinded were home to some big fish, but
apparently he had never realized just how big. Of course, if the fish were
proportional to the size of the lakes ... "How big is this lake?" "Patra? Barely a couple of hundred kilometers
across. A pond. The really big lakes are further off to the northwest,
like Turquoise and Hanamar. Geographers are always arguing over whether they
should be called lakes or inland seas. Geographers are damn fools." They exited from the lodge. At least it wasn't
raining, Flinx thought. That should make tracking the fleeing mudders a little
easier. Flinx jumped, slightly when something landed heavily
on his shoulder. He stared down at it with a disapproving look. "About
time." The flying snake steadied himself on his master but did not meet
his eyes. "Now that's an interesting pet," Lauren
Walder commented not flinching from the minidrag as most strangers did. Another point in her
favor, Flinx thought. "Where on Moth do you find a creature like
that?" "In a garbage heap," Flinx said, "which
is what he's turned himself into. He overate a few days ago and still hasn't
digested it all." "I was going to say that he looks more agile
than that landing implied." She led him around the side of the main lodge
building. There was a small inlet and a second pier stretching into the lake.
Flinx had not been able to see it from where he had parked his mudder. "I said that we'd catch up to them." She
pointed toward the pier. The boat was a single concave arch, each end of the
arch spreading out to form a supportive hull. The cabin was located atop the
arch and was excavated into it. Vents lined the flanks of the peculiar
catamaran. Flinx wondered at their purpose. Some heavy equipment resembling
construction cranes hung from the rear corners of the aft decking. A similar,
smaller boat bobbed in the water nearby. They mounted a curving ladder and Flinx found himself
watching as Lauren shrugged off the rifle and settled herself into the pilot's
chair. She spoke as she checked
readouts and threw switches. "We'll catch them inside an hour," she
assured Flinx. "A mudder's fast, but not nearly as fast over water as
this." A deep rumble from the boat's stern; air whistled into the multiple
intakes lining the side of the craft, and the rumbling intensified. Lauren touched several additional controls whereupon
the magnetic couplers disengaged from the pier. She then moved the switch set
into the side of the steering wheel. Thunder filled the air, making Pip twitch
slightly. The water astern began to bubble like a geyser as a powerful stream
of water spurted from the subsurface nozzles hidden in the twin hulls. The boat
leaped forward, cleaving the waves. Flinx stood next to the pilot's chair and shouted
over the roar of the wind assailing the open cabin. "How will we know
which way they've gone?" Lauren leaned to her right and flicked a couple of
switches below a circular screen, which promptly came to life. Several bright yellow
dots appeared on the transparency. "This shows the whole lake." She
touched other controls. All but two dots on the screen turned from yellow to
green. "Fishing boats from the other lodges that ring Patra. They have
compatible instrumentation.” She tapped the screen, with a fingernail.
"That pair that's stayed
yellow? Moving, nonorganic,
incompatible transponder. Who do you suppose that might be?" Flinx said nothing, just stared at the tracking
screen. Before long, he found himself staring over the bow that wasn't actually
a bow. The twin hulls of the ]et catamaran knifed through the surface of the
lake as Lauren steadily increased their speed. She glanced occasionally over at the tracker.
"They're moving pretty well-must be pushing their mudders to maximum.
Headed due north, probably looking to deplane at Point Horakov. We have to
catch them before they cross, of course. This is no mudder. Useless off the
water." "Will we?" Flinx asked anxiously.
"Catch them, I mean." His eyes searched the cloud-swept horizon,
looking for the telltale glare of diffused sunlight on metal. "No problem," she assured him. "Not
unless they have some special engines in those mudders. I'd think if they did,
they'd be using 'cm right now." "What happens when we catch them?" "I'll try cutting in front of them," she
said thoughtfully. "If that doesn't make them stop, well-" she
indicated the rifle resting nearby. "We can pick them off one at a time.
That rifle's accurate to a kilometer. The darts are gas-propelled, you see, and
the gun has a telescopic sight that'll let me put a dart in somebody's ear if I
have to." "What if they shoot back?" "Not a paralysis pistol made that can outrange
that rifle, let alone cover any distance with accuracy. The effect is
dispersed. It's only at close range that paralysis is effective on people. Or
lethal to small animals," she added bitterly. "If they'll surrender,
we’ll take them in and turn them over to the game authorities. You can add your
own charges at the same time. Wervils are an endangered species on Moth. Of
course, I'd much prefer that the scum resist so that we can defend
ourselves." Such bloodthirstiness in so attractive a woman was
no surprise to Flinx. He’d encountered it before in the marketplace. It was her
motivation that was new to him. He wondered how old she was. Probably twice his
own age, he thought, though it was difficult to tell for sure. Time spent in
the wilderness had put rough edges on her that even harsh city life would be
hard put to equal. It was a different kind of roughness; Flinx thought it very
becoming. “What .if they choose to give themselves up?” He
knew that was hardly likely, but he was curious to know what her contingency
for such a possibility might be. “Like I said, we take them back with us and turn
them over to the game warden in Kalish.” He made a short, stabbing motion with one hand. “That
could be awkward for me.” “Don’t worry,” she told him. “I’ll see to it that
you’re not involved. It’s not only the game laws they’ve violated. Remember
that injured guest? Ms. Marteenson’s a sick woman. The effect of a paralysis
beam on her could be permanent. So it’s not just the game authorities who’ll be
interested in these people. “As to you and your mother, the two of you can
disappear. Why has she been kidnapped? For ransom?” “She hasn’t any money,” Flinx replied. “Not enough to
bother with, anyway.” “Well, then, why?” Lauren’s eyes stayed on the
tracker, occasionally drifting to scan the sky for signs of rain. The jet boat
had a portable cover that she hoped they wouldn’t have to use. It would make
aiming more difficult. “That’s what I’d like to know,” Flinx told her.
“Maybe we’ll find out when we catch up with them.” “We should,” she agreed, “though that won’t do
Sennar and Soba any good. You’ve probably guessed by now that my opinion of
human beings is pretty low. Present company excepted. I’m very fond of animals.
Much rather associate with them. I never had a wervil betray me, or any other
creature of the woods, for that matter. You know where you stand with an
animal. That’s a major reason why I’ve chosen the kind of life I have.” “I know a few other people who feel the way you do,”
Flinx said. “You don’t have to apologize for it.” “I wasn’t apologizing,” she replied
matter-of-factly. “Yet you manage a hunting lodge.” “Not a hunting lodge,” she corrected him. “Fishing
lodge. Strictly fishing. We don’t accommodate hunters here, but I can’t stop
other lodges from doing so.” “You have no sympathy for the fish, then? It’s a
question of scales versus fur? The AAnn wouldn’t like that.” She smiled. “Who cares what the AAnn think? As for
the rest of your argument, it’s hard to get cozy with a fish. I’ve seen the
fish of this lake gobble up helpless young wervils and other innocents that
make the mistake of straying too far out into the water. Though if it came down
to it”—she adjusted a control on the instrument dash, and the jet boat leaped
to starboard—“I’m not sure I wouldn’t prefer the company of fish to that of
people either.” “It’s simple, then,” Flinx said. “You’re a chronic
antisocial.” She shrugged indifferently. “I’m me. Lauren Walder.
I’m happy with what I am. Are you happy with what you are?” His smile faded. “I don’t know what I am yet.” He
dropped his gaze and brooded at the tracker, his attention focused on the
nearing yellow dot that indicated their quarry. Odd thing for a young man like that to say, she
thought. Most people would’ve said they didn’t know who they were yet.
Slip of the tongue. She let the remark pass. The gap between pursued and pursuer shrank rapidly
on the tracker. It wasn’t long before Flinx was able to gesture excitedly over
the bow and shout, “There they are!” Lauren squinted and saw only water and cloud, then
glanced down at the tracker. “You’ve got mighty sharp eyes, Flinx.” “Prerequisite for survival in Drallar,” he
explained. A moment later she saw the mudders also, skittering
along just above the waves and still headed for the northern shore.
Simultaneously, those in the mudders reacted to the appearance of the boat
behind them. They accelerated and for a moment moved out of sight again. Lauren
increased the power. This time they didn’t pull away from the jet boat. She nodded slightly. “I thought so. Standard mudder
engines, no surprises. I don’t think they’re hiding anything from us.” She
glanced at her companion. “Think you can drive this thing for a little while?” Flinx had spent the past half hour studying the
controls as well as the image on the tracker. The instrumentation was no more
complex than that of his mudder. On the other hand, he was used to driving over
land. “I think so,” he said. This was not the time for excessive caution. “Good.” She slid out of the pilot’s chair and waited
until he slipped in and took control over the wheel. “It’s very responsive,”
she warned him, “and at the speed we’re traveling, even a slight turn of the
wheel will send us shooting off in another direction. So watch it.” “I’ll be okay,” he assured her. He could feel the
vibration of the engine through the wheel. The sensation was exhilarating. A flash of light suddenly marked the fleeing
mudders, but it dissipated well shy of the jet boat’s bow. Flinx maintained the
gap between the three craft. The flash was repeated; it did no more damage to
the boat or its crew than would a flashlight beam. “No long-range weapons,” Lauren murmured. “If they
had ‘em, now’d be the time to use ‘em.” Flinx saw she was hefting the dart
rifle. It was nearly as tall as she was. She settled it onto a vacant bracket
and bent over to peer through the complex telescopic sight. In that position,
it resembled a small cannon more than a rifle. Two more flares of light shot from the mudders,
futile stabs at the pursuing jet boat. “I can see them,” Lauren announced as
she squinted through the sight. “They look confused. That’s sensible. I don’t
see anything but hand weapons. Two of them seem to be arguing. I don’t think
they expected this kind of pursuit.” “They didn’t expect to see me in the dining room,
either,” Flinx said confidentially. “Ill bet they’re confused.” She looked over from the sight. “You’re sure they
weren’t looking for you to follow?” “I doubt it, or I’d never have come this close to
them.” She grunted once and returned her eyes to the sight.
“At this range, I can pick their teeth.” She moved the rifle slightly. “Hold
her steady, please.” She pushed the button which took the place of a regular
trigger. The gun went phut! and something tiny and explosive burst from
the muzzle. “Warning shot,” she explained. “There- someone’s
pulling the dart out. I put it in the back of the pilot’s chair. Now they’re gathering
around and studying it, except the driver, of course. Now they’re looking back
at us. One of them’s keeping two hands on a little old lady. Your mother?” “I’m sure,” Flinx said tightly. “She’s giving the one restraining her fits, trying
to bite him, kicking at him even though it looks like her feet are bound at the
ankles.” “That’s her, all right.” Flinx couldn’t repress a
grin. “What are they doing now?” Lauren frowned. “Uh oh. Putting up some kind of
transparent shield. Now the regular vehicle dome over that. The dome we can
penetrate. I don’t know about the shield-thing. Well, that’s no problem. Go to
port.” “Port?” Flinx repeated. “To your left,” she said. “We’ll cut around in front
of them and block their course. Maybe when they see that we can not only catch
them but run circles around them, they’ll be willing to listen to reason.” Flinx obediently turned the wheel to his left and
felt the catamaran respond instantly. “Okay, now back to star-to your right, not too
sharply.” “The boat split the water as he turned the wheel. Suddenly, everything changed. A new sound, a deep
humming, became audible. “Damn,” Lauren said in frustration, pointing upward. Flinx’s gaze went toward the clouds. The skimmer
that had appeared from out of the northern horizon was of pretty good size. It
was certainly more than big enough to hold its own crew in addition to the
mudders’ occupants. If there was any doubt as to the skimmer’s intent, it was
quickly eliminated as the versatile craft dipped low, circled once, and then
settled toward the first mudder as it strove to match the smaller vehicle’s
speed. “If they get aboard, we’ll lose them permanently,”
said a worried Flinx. “Can you pick them off as they try to transfer?” Already
the skimmer’s crew had matched velocity with the mudder and was dropping a
chute ladder toward the water. Lauren bent over the rifle again. Her finger
hesitated over the button; then she unexpectedly, pulled back and whacked the
butt of the gun angrily. “Lovely people. They’re holding your mother next to
the base of the chute. I can’t get a clear shot.” “What are we going to do? We can’t just keep
circling them like this!” “How the hell should I know?” She abandoned the
rifle and rushed to a storage locker amidships. “Mudders, paralysis pistols,
kidnapping, and now a skimmer sent out from the north. Who are these people,
anyway?” “I don’t know,” Flinx snapped. “I told you before
that I don’t understand any of this.” He hesitated, trying to watch her and
keep the jet boat circling the still-racing mudders and the skimmer hovering
above them. “What are you going to do now?” The device she had extracted from the storage locker
was as long as the dart rifle but much narrower. “When I give the word,” she
said tightly, “I want you to charge them and pull aside at the last moment. I
don’t think they’ll be expecting a rush on our part. They’re much too busy
transferring to the skimmer.” “What are you going to try and do?” he asked
curiously. “Disable the skimmer?” “With a dart gun? Are you kidding?” she snorted.
“Just do as I say.” “So long as what you say continues making sense,” he
agreed, a bit put off by her tone. “You’re wasting time. Do it!” He threw the wheel hard over. The catamaran spun on
the surface so sharply that the portside hull lifted clear of the water. A high
rooster tail obscured them from sight for a moment. In seconds, they were on top of the mudder and the
skimmer drifting steadily above it. Activity on both craft intensified as the
jet boat bore down on the mudder. As Lauren suspected, the last thing their
opponents were expecting was a broadside charge. A couple of shots passed
behind the onrushing boat, hastily dispatched and imperfectly aimed. “Hard to port!” Lauren shouted above the roar of the
engine. Those still on board the mudder had hunched down in anticipation of a
collision. Flinx leaned on the wheel. Engine screaming, the catamaran spun to
its left, nearly drowning those starting up the chute ladder toward the
skimmer. Lauren must have fired at least once, Flinx thought
as the jet boat sped away. He turned the wheel, and they started back toward
their quarry in a wide arc. To his surprise, the woman put the peculiar-looking
weapon back in the storage locker and returned to the bracket-held dart rifle.
“Now let’s go back and take our best shots.” “A one-shot gun?” he murmured. “I didn’t even hear
it go off. What was the purpose of that crazy charge?” He wrestled with the
wheel. “That charge was our insurance, Flinx.” She gestured
back toward the storage locker where she had repositioned the narrow gun. “That
gun was a Marker. We use it to help track injured fish that break their lines.”
She nodded toward the skimmer. “I think I hit it twice. The gun fires a capsule
which holds a specially sensitized gel. Epoxied bonder, sticks to anything
on contact, and it’s not water soluble. As long as they don’t think to check
the underside of their skimmer for damage, and there’s no reason for them to do
so since it’s operating perfectly, they’ll never see the gel. It’s transparent,
anyway. Now we can track them.” “Not with this boat, surely.” “No. But there’s a skimmer back at the lodge.
Would’ve taken too long to ready it or we’d be on it now instead of on this
boat. Wish we were. No reason to expect a skimmer to show up suddenly to help them,
though.” She gestured toward the mudder. “As long as they don’t get too far ahead of us,
we’ll beable to follow them-just like we did with this boat. But if we can hurt
them now ...” She looked back through the telescopic sight. “Ah, they’ve taken
your mother up on a hoist. Strapped in. I’m sure she didn’t make it easy for
them.” “She wouldn’t,” Flinx murmured affectionately. “Clear shooting now,” Lauren said delightedly. A
loud beeping sounded from the tracking unit. “What’s that?” Flinx gave the device a puzzled
glance. Lauren uttered a curse and pulled away from the
rifle. A quick glance at the screen and Flinx found himself shoved none too
gently out of the pilot’s chair. He landed on the deck hard. “Hey, what’s-!” Lauren wasn’t listening to him as she wrenched the
wheel hard to starboard. Flinx frantically grabbed for some support as the boat
heeled over. He could just see the port hull rising clear of the water as
something immense and silvery-sided erupted from the lake’s surface. Chapter Ten
Screams and shouts came from the vicinity of the
mudders and the skimmer. A violent reactive wave nearly cap-sized the jet boat;
only Lauren’s skillful and experienced maneuvering kept them afloat. Flinx saw a vast argent spine shot through with
flecks of gold that shone in the diffused sunlight. It looked like a huge pipe
emerging from beneath the waves, and it turned the sunlight to rainbows. Then
it was gone, not endless as he first believed. Another wave shook the catamaran
as the monster submerged once again. Flinx pulled himself up to where he could
peer over the edge of the cabin compartment. The mudders had vanished completely, sucked down in
a single gulp by whatever had materialized from the depths of the lake. The
skimmer itself just missed being dragged down by that great gulf of a mouth. It
hovered above the disturbed section of lake where its companion craft had been
only a moment ago. Then someone on the skimmer apparently made a decision, for
it rose another twenty meters toward the clouds and accelerated rapidly
northward. “They’re
leaving,” Flinx shouted. “We have to get back to the lodge, get the skimmer you
mentioned, and hurry after them before—“ “We have to get out of here alive first.” Lauren
followed her announcement with another curse as her hands tore at the wheel.
The silver mountain lifted from the lake just starboard of the jet boat. Flinx
was gifted with a long, uncomfortable view down a throat wide enough to swallow
several mudders intact. Or a jet boat. The jaws slammed shut, sending a heavy
spray crashing over the gunwales. The monster was so close Flinx could smell
its horrid breath. Then it was sinking back into the waters boiling behind the
catamaran. Something moved on his shoulder, and he reached up
to grasp at the muscular form that was uncoiling. “No, Pipl Easy... this one’s
too big even for you.” The snake struggled for a moment before relaxing. It
bobbed and ducked nervously, however, sensing a threat not only to its master
but to itself. Yet it responded to the pressure of Flinx’s restraining fingers
and held its position. For a third time, the penestral struck, snapping in
frustration at the spot where the jet boat had been only seconds earlier.
Thanks to the tracker, which had first warned Lauren of the nightmare’s approach,
they were able to avoid its upward rush. “This won’t do,” she murmured. “It’ll keep working
us until I make a mistake. Then it’ll take us the way it took the poor souls
still stuck on those mudders.” She studied the tracker intently. “It’s circling
now. Trying to cut us off from shallow water and the shore. We’ll let it think
we’re headed that way. Then we’ll reverse back into deep water.” “Why?” She ignored the question. “You didn’t care for it
when I had to shove you away from the wheel a few minutes ago, did you? Here,
it’s all yours again.” She reached down and half pulled, half guided him back
into the pilot’s chair. “That’s enough.” She threw the wheel over, and the boat
seemed to spin on its axis. Flinx grabbed for the wheel. “It’ll follow us straight now instead of trying to
ambush us from below and will try to hit us from astern. Keep us headed out
into the lake and let me know when it’s tangent to our square.” She indicated
the red dot on the tracking screen that was closing on them from behind. “But shouldn’t we—?” She wasn’t listening to him as she made her way back
to the pair of
gantry-like structures protruding from the rear of the boat. She took a seat
behind one, stretched it out so the arm hung free over the water, then checked
controls. “When I tell you,” she shouted back at him over the
roar of the engine and the spray, “go hard a-port. That’s left.” “I remember,” he snapped back at her. His attention
was locked to the tracker. “It’s getting awfully close.” “Good.” She positioned herself carefully in the
seat, touched a switch. Flexible braces snapped shut across her waist, hips,
shoulders and legs, pinning her to the seat in a striped cocoon. “Awfully close,” Flinx reiterated. “Not ready yet,” she murmured. “A fisherman has to be
patient.” The
water astern began to bubble, a disturbance more widespread than a mere boat
engine could produce. “Now!” she shouted. Flinx wrenched the wheel to his left.
Simultaneously, the surface of the lake exploded behind them. With both hands on
the wheel, there was nothing Flinx could do except cry out as Pip left its
perch and launched itself into the air. A muffled explosion sounded from the
stern, and a moment later its echo reached him as the harpoon struck the
penestral just beneath one of the winglike fins that shielded its gills. The soaring monster displaced the lake where the jet
boat had been before Flinx had sent it screaming into a tight turn. A distant crump
reached the surface as the harpoon’s delayed charge went off inside the guts of
the penestral. Polyline spewed from a drum inside the ship’s hull, a gel
coating eliminating dangerous heat buildup where line rubbed the deck. “Cut the engine,” came the command from astern. “But then we won’t have any—“ he started to protest “Do it,” she ordered.Flinx sighed. He was not a good
swimmer. He flicked he accelerator until their speed dropped to nothing. The jet engine sank
to an idle. Instantly, the catamaran began moving in reverse. The twin hulls
were pointed aft as well as forward, and the boat moved neatly through the
water as it was towed backward. The retreating polyline slowed from a blur to
where Flinx could count space markings as it slid off the boat. Meanwhile,
Lauren had reloaded the harpoon gun and was watching the surface carefully. She called back to him. "Where's the
penestral?" "Still moving ahead of us, but I think it's
slowing.": "That's to be expected. Keep your hands on the
accelerator and the wheel." "It's still slowing," he told her.
"Slowing, slowing—I can't see it anymore. I think it's under the
boat!" "Go!" she yelled, but at that point he
didn't need to be told what to do; he had already jammed the accelerator
control forward. The jet boat roared, shot out across the lake. An instant
later a geyser erupted bebind them as the penestral tried to swallow the sky.
Flinx heard the harpoon gun discharge a second time. This time, the penestral was struck just behind one
crystal-like eye the size of a telescope mirror. It collapsed back into the
water like a tridee scene running in reverse, sending up huge waves over which
the retreating catamaran rode with ease. The waves were matched in frequency if
not intensity by the palpitations of Flinx's stomach. This time, the fish didn't sink back into the depths.
It stayed on the surface, thrashing convulsively. "Bring us back around," Lauren directed
Flinx. She was sweating profusely as she reloaded the harpoon cannon for the
third time. Only the autoloading equipment made it possible for one person to
manipulate the heavy metal shaft and its explosive charge. This harpoon was slightly smaller and thinner than
the two that had preceded it. As the boat swung back toward the penestral,
Flinx heard the gun go off again. Several minutes passed. The penestral stopped
fighting and began to sink. Lauren touched another button. There was a hum as a
compressor located inside the catamaran started up, pumping air through the
plastic line that ran to the hollow shaft of the last harpoon. She unstrapped
herself from the chair and began to oversee the reeling in of the colossal
catch. "Air'11 keep it afloat for days," she said idly, exchanging
seats with Flinx once again. "Too big for darts, this one." "Why bother with it?" Flinx stared as the
silver-sided mountain expanded and drew alongside the catamaran. "You might be right—it's not much of a fish. Bet
it doesn't run more than fifteen meters." Flinx gaped at her. "But
there are hungry people in Kaslin and the other towns south of the lake, and
the penestral's a good food fish—lean and not fatty. They'll make good use of
it. What they don't eat they'll process for resale further south. The credit
will go to the lodge. "Besides, we have guests staying with us who
come up to Patra regularly, twice a year for many years, and who in all that
time have never seen anything bigger than a five-meter minnow. Your first time
and you've participated in a catch. You should feel proud." "I didn't catch it," he corrected her
quickly. "You did." "Sorry, modesty's not permitted on this lake.
Catching even a penestral's a cooperative effort. Dodging is just as important
as firing the gun. Otherwise, we end up on his trophy wall."
She jabbed a thumb in the direction of the inflated bulk now secured to the
side of the catamaran. A weight settled gently onto Flinx's left shoulder.
'I hoped you hadn't gone off to try and attack it," he said to the
minidrag as it slipped multiple coils around his arm. "It's good to know
you have some instinct for self-preservation." The flying snake
stared quizzically back at him, then closed its eyes and relaxed. Flinx inspected what he could see of the penestral
while the jet boat headed back toward the southern shore. "Those people in
the mudders, they didn't stand a chance." "Never knew what hit
them," Lauren agreed. "I'm sure they weren't carrying any kind of
tracking equipment. No reason for it. If our tracker had been out of order,
we'd have joined the mudders in the penestral's belly." A quick death at least, Flinx thought. Death was a
frequent visitor to the unwary in the Drallarian marketplace, so he was
no stranger to it. Thoughts of death reminded him of Mother Mastiff. Would his
persistence result in her captors' deciding she wasn't worth the trouble
anymore? What might they have in mind for her, now that her presence had caused
the death of a number of them? Surely, he decided, they wouldn't kill her out
of hand. They had gone to so much trouble already. But the thought made him worry even more. Exhilarated by the fight, Lauren's voice was slightly
elevated and hurried. She had reason to be short of wind, Flinx thought.
"One of these days, Flinx, after we've finished with this business, you'll
have to come back up here. I'll take you over to Lake Hozingar or Utuhuku. Now
those are respectable-sized lakes and home to some decent-sized fish. Not like
poor little Patra, here. At Hozingar, you can see the real meaning of the name
The-Blue-That-Blinded." Flinx regarded the immense carcass slung alongside
the jet boat in light of her words. "I know there are bigger lakes than
this one, but I didn't know they held bigger penestrals." "Oh, the penestral's a midrange predator,"
she told him conversationally. "On Hozingar you don't go fishing for
penestral. You fish for oboweir." "What," Flinx asked, "is an
oboweir?" "A fish that feeds regularly on
penestrala." "Oh," he said quietly, trying to stretch
his Imagination to handle the picture her words had conjured up. Quite a crowd was waiting to greet them as they tied
up at the lodge pier. Lauren had moored the inflated penestral to a buoy
nearby. The carcass drew too much water to be brought right inshore. Flinx slipped through the oohing and ahhing
guests, leaving Lauren to handle the questions. Several of her employees fought
their way to her and added questions of their own. Eventually, the crowd began
to break up, some to return to their rooms, others to remain to gawk at the
fish bobbing slowly on the surface. Flinx had collapsed gratefully into a chair on the
porch that encircled the main building. "How much do you want for the use
of the skimmer and a tracker?" he asked Lauren when she was able to join
him. "Ill-need you to show me how to use it, of course." She frowned at him. "I'm not sure I follow you,
Flinx." "I told you, I'm going after them. You've made
it possible for me to do that, and I'm very grateful to you." She looked thoughtful. "Management will scream
when they find out I've taken out the skimmer for personal use. They're a lot
more expensive than a jet boat or mudder. We'll have to be careful with it." He still wasn't listening to her, his mind full of
plans for pursuing the Mdnappers. "I don't know how I'll ever repay you
for this, Lauren." "Don't worry about it. The lodge's share of profit
from the disposal of the penestral ought to defray all the operating expenses.
Come on, get yourself and your snake out of that chair. We have to gather
supplies. The skimmer's usually used for making quick runs between here and
Attock. That's where we pick up our guests. We'll need to stock some food, of
course, and I want to make sure the engine is fully charged. And if I don't
take ten minutes to comb my hair out, I'm going to die." She tugged at the
tangles of black ringlets that the action on the lake had produced. "Just a minute." This time it was Flinx who
put out the restraining hand as he bounded out of the chair. "I think I've
misunderstood. You don't mean you're coming with me?" "You don't know how to use the tracking
equipment," she pointed out. "I can figure it out," he assured her
confidently. "It didn't take me long to figure out how to handle the boat,
did it?" "You don't know the country." "I'm not interested in the country," he
responded. "I'm not going on a sightseeing trip. That's what the tracker's
for, isn't it? Just loan the stuff to me. I'll pay you back somehow. Let me
just have the tracker and a charge for my mudder, if you're worried about the
skimmer." "You're forgetting about my wervils. Besides, you can't
track a skimmer with a mudder. What if you hit a can-you?" "Surely you're not giving up your work
here," he said, trying another tack, "just so you can seek revenge
for the deaths of a couple of pets?" "I told you, wervils are an endangered species
on Moth. And I also told you how I feel about animals." "I know," he protested, "but that still
doesn't—" He broke off his protest as she reached out to
ruffle his hair. "You know, you remind me of another wervil I cared for
once, though his fur wasn't quite as bright as yours. Near enough,
though." Then she went on more seriously. "Flinx, I don't like these
people, whoever they are. I don't like them because of what they've done to
you, and I don't like them because of what they've done to me. Because of that,
I'm going to help you as well as myself. Because I'd be going out after them
whether you were hereor not, for the sake of Sennar and Soba. "Don't try to deny that you couldn't use a
little help and don't give me any of that archaic nonsense about your not
wanting me along because I'm a woman." "Oh, don't worry," he told her crisply.
"The last thing I'd try to do would be to inflict any archaic nonsense on
you." That caused her to hesitate momentarily, uncertain
whether he was joking or not. "Anyway," she added, "if I can't
go, not that you can stop me, then you couldn't go, either. Because I'm the
only one who has access to the skimmer." It was not hard for Flinx to give in. "I haven't
got time to argue with you." "And also the sense not to, I suspect. But
you're right about the time. The tracker should pick up the gel underneath
their skimmer right away, but let's not play our luck to the limit. I don't
know what kind of skimmer they were using. I've never seen the like before, so
I've no idea if it's faster than usual. We go together, then?" "Together. On two conditions, Lauren." Again, she found herself frowning at him. Just when
she thought she could predict his actions, he would do something to surprise
her again. "Say them, anyway." "First, that Pip continues to tolerate
you." He rubbed the back of the flying snake's head affectionately. It
rose delightedly against the pressure. "You see, I have certain feelings
toward animals myself." "And the other condition?" she inquired. "If you ever touch my hair like that again,
you'd better be
prepared for me to kick your lovely backside all the way to the Pole. Old
ladies have been doing that to me ever since I can remember, and I've had my
fill of it!" She grinned at him. "It's a deal, then. I'm glad
your snake isn't as touchy as you are. Let's go. I have to leave a message for
my superiors in case they call in and want to know not only where their skimmer
is but their lodge manager as well." When she informed the assistant manager of the lodge,
he was very upset. "But what do I tell Kilkenny if he calls from Attoka?
What if he has guests to send up?" "We're not expecting anyone for another week.
You know that, Sal. Tell him anything you want." She was arranging items
in a small sack as she spoke. "No, tell him I've gone to the aid of a
traveler in distress across the Sake. That's an acceptable excuse in any
circumstance." The assistant looked past her to where Flinx stood
waiting impatiently, chucking Pip under its jaw and staring in the direction of
the lake. "He doesn't look like he's very distressed to
me." "His distress is well hidden," Lauren informed
him, "which is more than I can say for you, Sal. I'm surprised at you.
We'll be back real soon." "Uh-huh. It's just that I'm not a very good
liar, Lauren. You know that." "Do the best you can." She patted his
cheek affectionately.
"And I'm not lying. He really is in trouble." "But the skimmer, Lauren." "You still have the lodge mudders and the boats.
Short of a major catastrophe of some kind, I can see no reason why you'd need
the skimmer. It's really only here to be used in case of emergency. To my mind"—she
gestured toward Flinx—"this is an emergency." The assistant kicked at the dirt. "It's your
neck." "Yes, it's my neck." "Suppose they ask which way you went?" "Tell them I've headed—" A cough
interrupted her. She looked back at Flinx and nodded once. "Just say that
I've had to go across Patra." "But which way across?" "Across the lake. Sal." "Oh. Okay, I understand. You've got your reasons
for doing this, I guess." "I guess I do. And if I'm wrong, well, you
always wanted to be manager here, anyway, Sal." "Now hold on a minute, Lauren. I never
said—" "Do the best you can for me," she gently
admonished him. "This means something to me." "You really expect to be back soon?" "Depends on how things go. See you, Sal." "Take care of yourself, Lauren." He watched
as she turned to rejoin the strange youth, then shrugged and started back up
the steps into the lodge. As Lauren had said, it was her neck. It didn't take long for the skimmer to be checked
out. Flinx climbed aboard and admired the utilitarian vehicle. For almost the
first time since he left Drallar, he would be traveling totally clear of such
persistent obstacles as mist-shrouded boulders and towering trees. The
machine's body was made of black resin. It was large enough to accommodate a
dozen passengers and crew. In addition to the standard emergency stores, Lauren
provisioned it with additional food and medical supplies. They also took along
the dart rifle and several clips and a portable sounding tracker. Flinx studied the tracking screen and the single
moving dot that drifted northwestward across the transparency. A series of
concentric gauging rings filled the circular screen. The dot that represented
their quarry had already reached the outermost ring. "They'll move off the screen in a little while,"
he murmured to Lauren. "Don't worry. I'm sure they're convinced by now
that they've lost us." "They're zigzagging all over the screen,"
he noted. "Taking no chances. Doesn't do any good if
you're showing up on a tracker. But you're right. We'd better get moving." She slid into the pilot's chair and thumbed controls.
The whine of the skimmer's engine drowned out the tracker's gentle hum as the
craft rose several meters. Lauren held it there as she ran a final instrument
check, then pivoted the vehicle on an invisible axis and drove it from the
hangar. A nudge of the altitude switch sent them ten, twenty, thirty meters
into the air above the lodge. A touch on the accelerator and they were rushing
toward the beach. Despite the warmth of the cabin heater, Flinx still
felt cold as he gazed single-mindedly at the screen. "I told you not to worry," Lauren said with
a glance at his expression as they crossed the shoreline. "We'll catch
them." "It's not that." Flinx peered out through
the transparent cabin cover. "I was thinking about what might catch
us." "I've yet to see the penestral that can pick out
and catch an airborne target moving at our speed thirty meters up. An oboweir
might do it, but there aren't any oboweirs in Lake Patra. Leastwise, none that
I've ever heard tell of." Nevertheless, Flinx's attention and thoughts remained
evenly divided between the horizon ahead and the potentially lethal waters
below. "I understand you've had some trouble
here." Sal relaxed in the chair in the dining room and
sipped at a hot cup of toma as he regarded his visitors. They had arrived in
their own mudder, which immediately stamped them as independent as well as
wealthy. If he played this right, he might convince them to spend a few days at
the lodge. They had several expensive suites vacant, and if he could place this
pair in one, it certainly wouldn't do his record any harm. Usually, he could
place an offworlder by accent, but not these two. Their words were clear but
their phonemes amorphous. It puzzled him. Routine had returned as soon as Lauren and her
charity case had departed. No one had called from down south, not the district
manager, not anyone. He was feeling very content. Unless, of course, the
company had decided to send its own investigators instead of simply calling in
a checkup. That thought made him frown at the woman. "Say, are you two Company?" "No," the woman's companion replied,
smiling pleasantly. "Goodness no, nothing like that. We just like a little
excitement, that's all. If something unusual's going on in the area, it kind of
tickles our curiosity, if you know what I mean." "You had a man killed here, didn't you?"
the woman asked. "Well, yes, it did get pretty lively here for a
day." No accounting for taste, Sal mused. "Someone was killed during
a fight. A nonguest," he hastened to add. "Right in here. Quite a
melee." "Can you describe any of those involved?"
she asked him. "Not really. I'm not even positive which guests
were involved and which day visitors. I didn't witness the argument myself, you
see, and by the time I arrived, most of the participants had left." The woman accepted this admission with a disappointed
nod. "Was there a young man involved? Say, of about sixteen?" "Yes, him I did see. Bright-red hair?" "That's the one," she admitted. "Say, is he dangerous or anything?" The
assistant manager leaned forward in his chair, suddenly concerned. "Why do you want to know?" the man asked. "Well, my superior here, the regular
manager—Lauren Walder. She went off with him." "Went off with him?" The pleasant
expression that had dominated the woman's face quickly vanished, to be replaced
by something much harder. "Yes. Three, maybe four days ago now. I'm still
not completely sure why. She only told me that the young man had a problem and
she was going to try to help him out." "Which way did their mudder go?" the man
asked. "North, across Lake Patra," Sal informed
them. "They're not in a mudder, though. She took the
lodge skimmer." "A skimmer!" The woman threw up her hands
in frustration and sat down heavily in a chair opposite the assistant.
"We're losing ground," she told her companion, "instead of
gaining on him. If he catches up with them before we do, we could lose him and
the . . ." Her companion cut the air with the edge of his hand, and her
words trailed away to an indecipherable mumble. The gesture had been quick and
partly concealed, but Sal had noticed it nonetheless. "Now you've really got me worried," he told
the pair. "If Lauren's in some kind of trouble—" "She could be," the man admitted, pleased
that the assistant had changed the subject. Sal thought a moment. "Would she be in danger
from these people who had the fight here, or from the redhead?" "Conceivably from both." The man was only
half lying. "You'd better tell us everything you know." "I already have," Sal replied. "You said they went north, across the lake.
Can't you be any more specific than that?" Sal looked helpless. "Lauren wouldn't be any
more specific than that." "They might not continue heading north." "No, they might not. Do you have a tracker for
following other craft?" Sal asked. The man shook his head. "We didn't think we'd
need one. The last we knew, the young man we'd like to talk With was traveling
on stupava-back." "I think he arrived here in a mudder." The woman looked surprised and grinned ruefully at
her companion. "No wonder we fell behind. Resourceful, isn't he?" "Too resourceful for my liking," the man
murmured, "and maybe for his own good if he backs those you know-whos into
a corner." The women sighed, then rose from her chair.
"Well, we've wasted enough time here. We'll just have to return to
Pranbeth for a skimmer and tracking unit. Unless you think we should try to
catch up to them in the mudder." The man let out a short, humorless laugh,
then turned back
to the assistant manager. "Thanks, son. You've been helpful." "I wish I could be more so," Sal told him
anxiously. "If anything were to happen to Lauren—you'll see that nothing
happens to her, won't you?" "I promise you we'll do our best," the
woman assured him. "We don't want to see innocent bystanders hurt. We
don't even want to see noninnocents hurt." She favored him with a maternal
smile, which for some reason did nothing to make the nervous assistant feel any
better about the situation. Chapter Eleven
The tracker hummed quietly, the single glowing dot
showing clearly on its screen as the skimmer rushed north-ward. It was clipping
the tops of the tallest trees, more than eighty meters above the bogs and muck
that passed for the ground. They had crossed Lake Patra, then an intervening
neck of dry land, then the much larger lake known as Tigranocerta and were once
more cruising over the forest. A cold rain was falling, spattering off the
skimmer's acrylic canopy to form a constantly changing wet topography that
obscured much of the view outside. The skimmer's instruments kept its speed
responsive, maintaining a predetermined distance between it and its quarry to
the north. Awfully quiet, Lauren Walder thought. He's awfully
quiet, and maybe something else. "No, I'm not too young," he said into the
silence that filled the cabin, his tone softly defensive. Lauren's eyebrows lifted. "You can read
minds?" He responded with a shy smile. "No, not
that." Fingers stroked the head of the minidrag sleeping on his shoulder.
"I just feel things at times. Not thoughts, nothing that elaborate. Just the way people are feeling.” He
glanced up at her. “From the way I thought you were feeling just now, I thought
you were going to say something along that line.” “Well, you were right,” she confessed, wondering
what to make of the rest of his declaration. “I’m not, you know.” “How old are you?” she asked. “Sixteen. As best I know. I can’t be certain.” Sixteen going on sixty, she thought sadly. During
her rare visits to Drallar, she had seen his type before. Child of
circumstance, raised in the streets and instructed by wrong example and
accident, though he seemed to have tamed out better than his brethren. His face
held the knowledge withheld from his more fortunate contemporaries, but it
didn’t seem to have made him vicious or bitter. Still she felt there was something else at work
here. “How old do you think I am?” she asked idly. Flinx pursed his lips as he stared at her. “Twenty- three,”
he told her without hesitating. She laughed softly and clapped both hands together
in delight. “So that’s what I’m helping, a sixteen-year-old vengeful diplomat!”
Her laughter faded. The smile remained. “Tell me about yourself, Flinx.” It was a question that no stranger in Drallar would
ever be so brazen as to ask. But this was not Drallar, he re- minded himself.
Besides, he owed this woman. So he told her as much as he knew. When he finished
his narrative, she continued to stare solemnly at him, nod- ding her head as if
his words had done no more than con- firm suspicions already held. She spared a
glance to make sure the tracker was still functioning efficiently, then looked
back at him. “You haven’t exactly had a comfort- able childhood, have you?” “I wouldn’t know,” he replied, “because I only have
hearsay to compare it with.” “Take my word for it, you haven’t. You’ve also man-
aged to get along with the majority of humanity even though they don’t seem to
want to have anything to do 149 with you. Whereas I’ve had to avoid the
majority of people who seem to want to have a lot to do with me.” Impulsively,
she leaned over out of the pilot’s chair and kissed him. At the last instant,
he flinched, nervous at such. unaccustomed proximity to another human
being-especially an attractive member of the opposite sex-and the kiss, which
was meant for his cheek, landed instead on his lips. That made her pull back fast. The smile stayed on
her face, and she only blinked once in surprise. It had been an accident, after
all. “Take my word for something else, Flinx. If you live long enough, life
gets better.” “Is that one of the Church’s homilies?” He wondered
if she wore some caustic substance to protect her lips from burning, because
his own were on fire. “No,” she said. “That’s a Lauren Walder homily.” “Glad to hear it. I’ve never had much use for the
Church.” “Nor have 1. Nor have most people. That’s why it’s
been so successful, I expect.” She turned her gaze to the tracker. “They’re
starting to slow down. We’ll do the same.” “Do you think they’ve seen us?” Suddenly, he didn’t
really care what the people in the skimmer ahead of them decided to do. The
fire spread from his lips to his mouth, ran down his throat, and dispersed
across his whole body. It was a sweet, thick fire. “I doubt it,” she replied. “I’ll bet they’re close
to their destination.” Her hands manipulated controls. “How far ahead of us are they?” He walked forward to
peer over her shoulder at the screen. He could have stood to her left, but he
was suddenly conscious of the warmth of her, the perfume of her hair. He was
very careful not to touch her. She performed some quick calculations, using the
tracker’s predictor. “Day or so. We don’t want to run up their tail. There’s
nothing up in this part of the country. Odd place to stop, but then this whole
business is odd, from what you’ve told me. Why bring your mother up here?” He had no answer for her. They dropped until the skimmer was rising and
falling inconcert with the treetops. So intent were they on the actions of the
dot performing on the tracking Screen that neither of them noticed that not
only had the rain stopped but the cloud cover had cracked. Overhead, one of the
wings of Moth, the interrupted ring which encircled the planet, shimmered golden
against the ceiling of night. “What makes you so sure they’re stopping here
instead of just slowing down for a while?” he asked Lauren. “Because a skimmer operates on a stored charge, just
like a mudder. Remember, they had to come from here down to Patra. Our own
charge is running low, and we’re not on the return leg of a round trip. I don’t
know what model they’re flying, but I saw how big it was. It can’t possibly
retain enough energy to take them much farther than we’ve gone the past several
days. They at least have to be stopping somewhere to recharge, which is good.” “Why is that?” Flinx asked. “Because we’re going to have to recharge, also.” She
pointed to a readout. “We’ve used more than half our own power. If we can’t
recharge somewhere around here, we’re going to have some hiking to do on our
way out.” Flinx regarded her with new respect, if that was
possible; his opinion of her had already reached dizzying heights. “Why didn’t
you tell me when we reached the turnaround point?” She shrugged slightly. “Why? We’ve gone to a lot of
trouble to come as far as we have. You might have argued with me about turning
back.” “No,” Flinx said quietly, “I wouldn’t have done
that” “I didn’t think so. You’re almost as determined to
see this through as I am, and at least as crazy.” She stared up at him, and he stared back. Nothing
more needed to be said. “I vote no.” Nyassa-lee was firm in her disagreement. She sat on
one side of the table and gazed expectantly at her colleagues. Brora was
thoughtfully inspecting the fingernails of his left hand, while Haithnesstoyed
with her eyelashes. “Really,” the tall black woman murmured to her
compatriot, “to show such reluctance at this stage is most discouraging,
Nyassa-lee.” Her fingers left her eyes. “We may never have the chance to
manipulate another subject as promising as this Twelve. Time and events
conspire against us. You know that as well as I.” “I know.” The shorter woman leaned forward in the
chair and gazed between her legs at the floor. Cracks showed between the panels;
the building had been assembled in haste. “I’m just not convinced it’s worth
the risk.” “What risk?” Haithness demanded to know. “We’ve
still seen nothing like a demonstration of threatening power. Quite the
contrary. I’d say. Certainly the subject had the opportunity to display any
such abilities. It’s evident he does not possess them, or he would doubtless
have employed them against us. Instead, what did we see? Knife.” -She made it
sound disgusting as well as primitive. - “She’s right, you know.” Brora rarely
spoke, preferring to let the two senior scientists do most of the arguing. He
stepped in only when he was completely confident of his opinion. “We don’t want another repeat of the girl,”
Nyassa-lee said. “The society couldn’t stand another failure like that.” “Which is precisely why we must pursue this last
opportunity to its conclusion,” Haithness persisted. “We don’t know that it represents our last
opportunity.” “Oh, come on, Nyassa-lee.” Haithness pushed back her
chair and stood; she began pacing nervously back and forth. Bebind her, lights
shone cold green and blue from the consoles hastily assembled. “Even if there
are other subjects of equal potential out there, we’ve no guarantee that any of
us will be around much longer to follow up on them.” “I can’t argue with that,” Nyassa-lee admitted. “Nor
can I argue this Number Twelve’s statistical promise. It’s just those
statistics which frighten me.” “Frighten you?” Haithness stopped pacing and looked
over at her companion of many hard years. The tall woman was surprised. She had
seen Nyassa-lee wield a gun with the cold-blooded efficiency of a qwarm. Fear
seemed foreign to her. “But why? He’s done nothing to justify such fear.” “Oh, no?” Nyassa-lee ticked off her points on the
fingers of one hand. “One, his statistical potential is alarming. Two, he’s
sixteen, on the verge of full maturity. Three, he could cross into that at any
time.” “The girl,” Brora pointed out, “was considerably
younger.” “Agreed,” said Nyassa-lee, “but her abilities were precocious.
Her advantage was surprise. This Number Twelve is developing slowly but with
greater potential. He may be the kind who responds to pressure by reaching
deeper into himself.” “Maybe,” Brora said thoughtfully, “but we have no
proof of it, nor does his profile predict anything of the sort.” “Then how do you square that,” she responded, “with
the fact that he has by himself-“ “He’s not by himself,” Brora interrupted her. “That
woman from the lodge was helping him out on the lake.” “Was helping him. She
didn’t help him get to that point. He followed us all the way to that lake on his own,
with- out any kind of external assistance. To me that indicates the accelerated
development of a Talent we’d better be- ware of.” “All the more reason,” Haithness said angrily,
slapping the table with one palm, “why we must push ahead with our plan!” “I don’t know,” Nyassa-lee murmured, unconvinced. “Do you not agree,” Haithness countered, forcing
her- self to restrain her temper, “that if the operation is a success we stand
a good chance of accomplishing our goal as regards outside manipulation of the
subject?” “Possibly,” Nyassa-lee conceded. “Why just ‘possibly’? Do you doubt the emotional
bond?” “That’s not what concerns me. Suppose, just suppose,
that because his potential is still undeveloped, he has no conscious control of
it?” “What are you saying?” Brora asked. She leaned intently over the table. “With the girl
Mahnahmi we knew where we stood, once she’d revealed herself. Unfortunately,
that knowledge came as a surprise to us, and too late to counteract. We’ve no idea
where we stand vis-a-vis this subject’s Talents. Suppose that, despite the
emotional bond, pressure and fear conspire to release his potential regardless
of his surface feelings? Statistically, the subject is a walking bomb that may
not be capable or mature enough to control itself. That’s what worries me,
Haithness. The emotional bond may be sufficient to control his conscious self.
The unpredictable part of him may react violently in spite of it.” “We cannot abandon our hopes and work on so slim a
supposition, one that we have no solid facts to support,” Haithness insisted.
“Besides, the subject is sixteen. If any- thing, he should have much more
control over himself than the girl did.” “I know, I know,” Nyassa-lee muttered unhappily.
“Everything you say is true, Haithness, yet I can’t help worrying. In any case.
I’m outvoted.” “That you are,” the tall woman said after a
questioning glance at Brora. “And if Cruachan were here with us, you know he’d vote
to proceed too.” “I suppose.” Nyassa-lee smiled thinly. “I worry too
much. Brora, are you sure you can handle the implant?” He nodded. “I haven’t done one in some time, but the
old skills remain. It requires patience more than anything else. You remember.
As to possible unpredictable results, failure, well”-he smiled-“we’re all
condemned already. One more little outrage perpetrated against society’s
archaic laws can’t harm us one way or the other if we fail here.” Off in a nearby corner. Mother Mastiff sat in a
chair, hands clasped in her lap, and listened. She was not bound. There was no
reason to tie her, and she knew why as well as her captors. There was nowhere
to run. She was in excellent condition for a woman her age, but she had had a
good view of the modest complex of deceptive stone and wood structures as the
skimmer had landed. Thousands of square kilometers of damp, hostile forest lay
between the place she had been brought to and the familiar confines of Drallar.
She was no more likely to steal a vehicle than she was to turn twenty again. She wondered what poor Flinx was going through. That
had been him, out on the boat on the lake far to the south. How he had managed
to trace her so far she had no idea. At first, her concern had been for
herself. Now that she had had ample opportunity to listen to the demonic trio
arguing in front of her-for demonic she was certain they were-she found herself
as concerned for the fate of her adopted son as for her own. If she was lost,
well, she had had a long and eventful life. Better perhaps that her brave Flinx
lose track of her than stumble into these monsters again. One of the trio, the short, toad-faced man, had
spoken of “adjusting” her and of “implants.” That was enough to convince her to
prepare for something worse than death. Many of their words made no sense to
her. She still had no idea who the people were, much less where they had come
from or the reasons for their actions. They never spoke to her, ignoring her questions
as well as her curses. Actually, they did not treat her as a human being at
all, but rather as a delicate piece of furniture. Their current conversation
was the most peculiar yet, for one of them was expressing fear of her boy. She
could not imagine why. True, Flinx had tamed a dangerous animal, that horrid
little flying creature, but that was hardly a feat to in- spire fear in such
people. They knew he occasionally had the ability to sense what others were
feeling. Yet far from fearing such erratic and minor talents, these people
discussed them as if they were matters of great importance. None of which explained why they’d kidnapped her. If
their real interest lay with her boy, then why hadn’t they kidnapped him? The
whole affair was too complicated a puzzle for her to figure out. Mother Mastiff
was not a stupid woman, and her deficiency in formal education did not blunt
her sharp, inquiring mind; still she could not fathom what was happening to
her, or why. She let her attention drift from the argument raging
across the table nearby to study the room to which she had been brought. Most
of the illumination came from the impressive array of electronics lining the
walls. Everything she could see hinted of portability and hurried installation.
She had no idea as to the purpose of the instrumentation, but she had been
around enough to know that such devices were expensive. That, and the actions
of the people who had abducted her, hinted at an organization well stocked with
money as well as malign intentions. “I’m not even sure,” Nyassa-lee was saying, “that
the subject realizes how he’s managed to follow us this far.” “There is likely nothing mysterious about it,”
Haithness argued. “Remember that he is a product of an intensely competitive,
if primitive, environment. Urban youths grow up fast when left to their own
resources. He may not have enjoyed much in the way of a formal education, but
he’s been schooled in the real world-something we’ve had to master ourselves
these past years. And he may have had some ordinary, quite natural luck.” “These past years,” Brora was mumbling sadly. “Years
that should have been spent prying into the great mysteries of the universe
instead of learning how to make contacts with and use of the criminal
underworld.” “I feel as wasted as you do, Brora,” the tall woman
said soothingly, “but vindication lies at hand.” “If you’re both determined to proceed, then I vote
that we begin immediately.” Nyassa-lee sighed. “Immediately with what?” a crotchety voice demanded.
For some reason, the question caused the trio to respond, whereas previous
attempts to draw their attention had failed miserably. Nyassa-lee left the table and approached Mother
Mastiff. She tried to adopt a kindly, understanding expression, but was only
partly successful. “We’re scientists embarked on a project of great importance
to all mankind. I’m sorry we’ve been forced to inconvenience you, but this is
all necessary. I wish you were of a more educated turn of mind and could
understand our point of view. It would make things easier for you.” “Inconvenienced!” Mother Mastiff snorted. “Ye pluck
me out of my house and haul me halfway across the planet. That’s inconvenience?
I call it something else.” Her bluster faded as she asked, “What is it you want
with my boy Flinx?” “Your adopted boy,” Nyassa-lee said. While the small
Oriental spoke. Mother Mastiff noted that the other two were studying her the
way a collector might watch a bug on a park bench. That made her even madder,
and the anger helped to put a damper on her fear. “I wouldn’t make things any
easier for you people if ye promised me half the wealth of Terra.” “I’m sorry you feel that way, but it’s only what we
have come to expect,” Nyassa-lee said, turning icy once again. “Have you heard
of the Meliorare Society?” Mother Mastiff shook her head, too angry to cry,
which is what she really wanted to do. Names, words they threw at her, all
meaningless. “We’re part of an experiment,” the Oriental
explained, “an experiment which began on Terra many years ago. We are not only
scientists, we are activists. We believe that the true task of science is not
only to study that which exists but to forge onward and bring into existence
that which does not exist but eventually will. We deter- mined not to stand
still, nor to let nature do so, either.” Mother Mastiff shook her head. “I don’t understand.” “Think,” Nyassa-lee urged her, warming to her
subject, “what is there in Commonwealth society today that could most stand
improvement? The government?” A bitter, derogatory laugh sounded behind her,
from Haithness. “Not the government, then. What about the ships that carry us
from star to star? No? Language, then, an improvement on Terrangio or
symbospeech? What about music or architecture?” Mother Mastiff simply stared at the woman ranting
be- fore her. She was quite certain now, quite certain. These three were all as
insane as a brain-damaged Yax’m. “No, none of those things!” Nyassa-lee snapped. It
was terrible to see such complete assurance in one so diminutive. “It’s us.
We.” She tapped her sternum. “Humankind. And the means for our improvement lie
within.” Her hand went to her head. “In here, in abilities and areas of our
mind still not properly developed. “We and the other members of the Society decided
many years ago that something could and should be done about that. We formed a
cover organization to fool superstitious regulators. In secret, we were able to
select certain human ova, certain sperm, and work carefully with them. Our
planning was minute, our preparations extensive. Through microsurgical techniques, we were able to
alter the genetic code of our humans-to-be prior to womb implantation. The
result was to be, will be, a better version of mankind.” Mother Mastiff gaped at her. Nyassa-lee sighed and
turned to her companions. “As I feared, all this is beyond her meager
comprehension.” “Perfectly understandable,” Brora said. “What I
don’t understand is why you trouble to try?” “It would be easier,” Nyassa-lee said. “Easier for her, or for you?” Haithness wondered.
The smaller woman did not reply. “It won’t matter after the operation, anyway.”
At these words, the fine hair on the back of Mother Mastiff’s neck began to
rise. “It might,” Nyassa-lee insisted. She looked back
down at Mother Mastiff, staring hard into those old eyes. “Don’t you understand
yet, old woman? Your boy, your adopted son: he was one of our subjects.” “No,” Mother Mastiff whispered, though even as she
mouthed the word, she knew the woman’s words must be true. “What-what happened
to your experiment?” “All the children were provided with attention,
affection, education, and certain special training. The majority of the
subjects displayed nothing unusual in the way of ability or talent. They were
quite normal in every way. We proceeded with great care and caution, you see. “A few of the subjects developed abnormally. That is
in the nature of science, unfortunately. We must accept the good together with
the bad. However, in light of our imminent success, those failures were quite
justified.” She sounded as if she were trying to reassure herself as much as
Mother Mastiff. “A few of the children, a very small number, gave
indications of developing those abilities which we believe to lie dormant in
every human brain. We don’t pretend to understand everything about such
Talents. We are in the position of mechanics who have a good idea how to repair
an imperfect machine without really knowing what the re- paired machine is
capable of. This naturally resulted in some surprises. “An ignorant Commonwealth society did not feel as we
did about the importance of our activities. As a result, we have undergone many
years of persecution. Yet we have persisted. As you can see, all of us who are
original members of the Society are nearly as advanced in years as yourself. “The government has been relentless in its efforts
to wipe us out. Over the years, it has whittled away at our number until we
have been reduced to a dedicated few. Yet we need but a single success, one
incontrovertible proof of the worthiness of our work, to free ourselves from
the lies and innuendo with which we have been saddled. “It was a cruel and uncaring government which caused
the dispersal of the children many years ago and which brought us to our
current state of scientific exile. Slowly, patiently, we have worked to try and
relocate those children, in particular any whose profiles showed real promise.
Your Flinx is one of those singled out by statistics as a potential Talent.” “But there’s nothing- abnormal about him,” Mother
Mastiff protested. “He’s a perfectly average, healthy young man. Quieter than
most, perhaps, but that’s all. Is that worth all this trouble? Oh, I’ll admit
be can do some parlor tricks from time to time. But I know a hundred street
magicians who can do the same. Why don’t you go pick on them?” Nyassa-lee smiled that humorless, cold smile.
“You’re lying to us, old woman. We know that he is capable of more than mere
tricks and that something far more important than sleight of hand is involved.” “Well, then,” she continued, trying a different
tack, “why kidnap me? Why pull me away from my home like this? I’m an old
woman, just as ye say. I can’t stand in your way or do ye any harm. If ‘tis
Flinx you’re so concerned with, why did ye not abduct him? I surely could not
have prevented ye from doing so.” “Because he may be dangerous.” Yes, they are quite mad, this lot. Mother Mastiff
mused. Her boy, Flinx, dangerous? Nonsense! He was a sensitive boy, true; he
could sometimes know what others were feeling, but only rarely, and hardly at
all when he most 159 wished to do so. And maybe he could push the
emotions of others a tiny bit. But dangerous? The danger was to him, from these
offworld fools and madmen. “Also,” the little Oriental continued, “we have to
proceed very carefully because we cannot risk further harm to the Society. Our
numbers have already been drastically reduced, partly by our too-hasty attempt
to regain control of one subject child a number of years ago. We cannot risk
making the same mistake with this Number Twelve. Most of our colleagues have
been killed, imprisoned, or selectively mindwiped.” Mother Mastiff’s sense of concern doubled at that
al- most indifferent admission. She didn’t understand all the woman’s chatter
about genetic alterations and improving mankind, but she understood mindwiping,
all right. A criminal had to be found guilty of some especially heinous crime
to be condemned to that treatment, which took away forever a section of his
memories, of his life, of his very self, and left him to wander for the rest of
his days tormented by a dark, empty gap in his mind. “You leave him alone!” she shouted, surprised at the
violence of her reaction. Had she become so attached to the boy? Most of the
time she regarded him as a nuisance inflicted on her by an unkind fate-didn’t
she? “Don’t you hurt him!” She was on her feet and
pounding with both fists on the shoulders of the woman called Nyassa-lee. Though white-haired and no youngster, Nyassa-lee was
a good deal younger and stronger than Mother Mastiff. She took the older
woman’s wrists and gently pushed her back down into the chair. “Now, we’re not going to hurt him. Didn’t I just
explain his importance to us? Would we want to damage someone like that? Of
course not. It’s clear how fond you’ve be- come of your charge. In our own way,
we’re equally fond of him.” What soulless people these are. Mother Mastiff
thought as she slumped helplessly in her chair. What dead, distant shadows of
human beings. “I promise you that we will not try to force the boy
to 160 do anything against his will, nor will we harm him
in any way.” “What do ye mean to do with him, then?” “We need to guide his future maturation,” the woman
explained, “to ensure that whatever abilities he possesses are developed to
their utmost. It’s highly unlikely he can do this without proper instruction
and training, which is why his abilities have not manifested themselves fully
so far. Experience, however, has shown us that when the children reach puberty,
they are no longer willing to accept such training and manipulation. We
therefore have to guide him without his being aware of it.” “How can ye do this without his knowing what is
being done to him?” “By manipulating him through a third party whose
suggestions and directions he will accept freely,” the woman said. “That is
where you become important.” “So ye wish for me to make him do certain things, to
alter his life so that your experiment can be proven a success?” “That’s correct,” Nyassa-lee said. “All this must be
carried out in such a way that he cannot suspect he is being guided by an
outside force.” She gestured toward the far end of the room, past transparent
doors sealing off a self- contained operating theater. In the dim blue and
green light of the instrument readouts, the sterile theater gleamed softly. “We cannot allow the possibility of interference or
misdirection to hamper our efforts, nor can we risk exposure to the
Commonwealth agencies which continue to hound us. It is vital that our
instructions be carried out quickly and efficiently. Therefore, it will be
necessary for us to place certain small devices in your brain, to ensure your
complete compliance with our directives.” “Like hell,” Mother Mastiff snapped. “I’ve spent a hundred
years filling up this head of mine. I know where everything is stored. I don’t
want somebody else messing around up there.” She did not add, as she glanced
surreptitiously toward the operating room, that she had never been under the
knife or the laser and that she had a deathly fear of being cut. “Look,” she
went on desperately, “I’ll be glad to help ye. I’ll tell the boy anything ye
wish, have him study any- thing ye want and avoid whatever matters ye wish him
to avoid. But leave my poor old head alone. Wouldn’t I be much more the help to
ye if I did what ye require voluntarily instead of like some altered pet?” Brora folded his hands on the table and regarded her
emotionlessly. “That would certainly be true. However, there are factors which
unfortunately mitigate against this. “First, there are mental activities you will be
required to carry out which involve complex processes you are not conversant
with but which can be stimulated via direct implants. Second, there is no
guarantee that at some future time you would not become discouraged or
rebellious and tell the subject what you know. That could be a catastrophe for
the experiment. Third, though you may direct the boy with surface willingness,
his abilities may enable him to see your inner distress and know that something
is amiss, whereas I do not think he can detect the implants themselves, as they
are wholly mechanical. Lastly, I think you are lying when you say you would be
willing to help us.” “But I don’t want an operation!” she cried, pounding
at the arms of the chair with her fists. “I tell you ‘tis not necessary! I’ll
do anything ye ask of me if you’ll but leave the boy alone and instruct me. Why
should I lie to ye? You’ve said yourself that he’s not my true child, only an
adopted one. I’ll be glad to help ye, particularly,” she added with a sly
smile, “if there be any money involved.” But the man Brora was shaking his head. “You lie
forcefully, but not forcefully enough, old woman. We’ve spent most of our lives
having to cope with traitors in our midst. We can’t afford another one. I’m
sorry.” His attention was drawn to the main entrance and to the two men who’d
just entered. He nodded toward Mother Mastiff. “Restrain her. She knows enough now to do something
foolish to herself.” One of the new arrivals held Mother Mastiff’s right
arm and glanced back toward Brora. “Anesthetic, sir?” “No, not yet.” Mother
Mastiff stared at the horrid little man and shuddered as he spoke quietly to
the black woman. “What do you think, Haithness?” She examined Mother Mastiff. “Tomorrow is soon
enough. I’m tired. Better to begin fresh. We’ll all need to be alert.” Brora nodded in agreement, leaving the two younger
men to bind the raving Mother Mastiff. Later that evening, over dinner, Nyassa-lee said to
Haithness, “The woman’s advanced age still gives me concern.” “She’s not that old,” the taller woman said,
spooning down something artificial but nourishing. “With care, she has another
twenty years of good health to look forward to.” “I know, but she hasn’t the reserves of a woman of
fifty anymore, either. It’s just as well we haven’t told her how complex
tomorrow’s operation is or explained that her mind will be permanently
altered.” Haithness nodded agreement. “There’s hardly any need
to upset her any more than she already is. Your excessive concern for her
welfare surprises me.” Nyassa-lee picked at her food and did not comment,
but Haithness refused to let the matter drop. “How many of our friends have perished at the hands
of the government? How many have been mindwiped? It’s true that if this old
woman dies, we lose an important element in the experiment, but not necessarily
a final one. We’ve all agreed that implanting her is the best way to proceed.” “I’m not arguing that,” Nyassa-lee said, “only
reminding you that we should be prepared for failure.” Brora leaned back in his chair and sighed. He was
not hungry; he was too excited by the prospects raised by the operation. “We will not fail, Nyassa-lee. This is the best
chance we’ve had in years to gain control over a really promising Subject. We
won’t fail.” He looked over at Haithness. “I checked the implants before
dinner.” “Again?” “Nothing else to do. I couldn’t stand just Waiting
around. The circuitry is complete, cryogenic enervation constant. I anticipate
no trouble in making the synaptic connections.” He glanced toward Nyassa-lee.
“The woman’s age notwithstanding. “As to the part of the old woman that will
unavoidably be lost due to the operation”-he shrugged-“I’ve studied the matter
in depth and see no way around it. Not that there seems a great deal worth
preserving. She’s an ignorant primitive. If anything, the implants and
resulting excisions will result in an improved being.” “Her strongest virtues appear to be cantankerousness
and obstinacy,” Haithness agreed, “coupled to an appalling ignorance of life
outside her immediate community.” ‘Typical speciman,” Brora said. “Ironic that such a
low example should be the key not only to our greatest success but our eventual
vindication.” Nyassa-lee pushed away her food. Her colleague’s
conversation was upsetting to her. “What time tomorrow?” “Reasonably early, I should think,” Haithness
murmured. “It will be the best time for the old woman, and better for us not to
linger over philosophy and speculation.” Brora was startled at the latter implication.
“Surely you don’t expect the boy to show up?” “You’d best stop thinking of him as a boy.” “He barely qualifies as a young adult.” “Barely is sufficient. Though he’s demonstrated nothing
in the way of unexpected talent so far, his persistent pursuit of his adopted
mother is indication enough to me that he possesses a sharp mind in addition to
Talent.” She smiled thinly at Nyassa-lee. “You see, my dear, though I do not
share your proclivity to panic in this case, I do respect and value your
opinion.” “So you are expecting him?” “No, I’m not,” Haithness insisted, “but it would be
awkward if by some miracle he were to show up here prior to the operation’s
successful completion. Once that is accomplished, we’ll naturally want to make
contact with him through his mother. When he finds her unharmed and seemingly
untouched, he will relax into our control.” “But what if he does show up prior to our returning
the old woman to Drallar?” “Don’t
worry,” Haithness said. “I have the standard story prepared, and our personnel
here have been well coached in the pertinent details.” “You think he’d accept that tale?” Nyassa-lee asked.
“That hoary old business of us being an altruistic society of physicians
dedicated to helping the old and enfeebled against the indifference of
government medical facilities?” “It’s true that we’ve utilized the story in various
guises before, but it will be new to the subject,” Haithness reminded her
colleague. “Besides, as Brora says, he barely qualifies as an adult, and his
background does not suggest sophistication. I think he’ll believe us,
especially when we restore his mother to him. That should be enough to satisfy
him. The operation will, of course, be rendered cosmetically undetectable.” “I do better work on a full night’s sleep.” Brora
abruptly pushed back from the table. “Especially prior to a hard day’s work.” They all rose and started toward their quarters,
Brora contemplating the operation near at hand, Haithness the chances for
success, and only Nyassa-lee the last look in Mother Mastiff’s eyes. Chapter Twelve
They had to be close to their destination because
their quarry had been motionless for more than an hour. That’s when the pain
hit Flinx; sharp, hot, and unexpected as al- ways. He winced and shut his eyes
tight while Pip stirred nervously on its master’s shoulder. Alarmed, Lauren turned hurriedly to her young
companion. “What is it? What’s wrong, Flinx?” “Close. We’re very close.” “I can tell that by looking at the tracker,” she
said. “It’s her, it’s Mother Mastiff.” “She’s hurt?” Already Lauren was dropping the
skimmer into the woods. The minidrag writhed on Flinx’s shoulder, hunting for
an unseen enemy. “She’s-she’s not hurting,” Flinx mumbled. “She’s-
there’s worry in her, and fear. Someone’s planning to do something terrible to
her. She fears for me, too, I think. But I can’t understand-1 don’t know what
or wh-“ He blinked. Pip ceased his convulsions. “It’s gone.
Damn it, it’s gone.” He kicked at the console
in frustration. “Gone and I
can’t make it come back.” “I thought-“ He
interrupted her; his expression was one of resignation. “I have no control over
the Talent. No control at all. These feelings hit me when I least expect them,
and never, it seems, when I want them to. Sometimes I can’t even locate the
source. But this time it was Mother Mastiff. I’m sure of it.” “How can you tell that?” Lauren banked the skimmer
to port, dodging a massive emergent. “Because I know how her mind feels.” Lauren threw him an uncertain look, then decided
there was no point in trying to comprehend something beyond her ken. The skimmer slowed to a crawl and quickly settled
down among the concealing trees on a comparatively dry knoll. After cutting the
power, Lauren moved to the rear of the cabin and began assembling packs and
equipment. The night was deep around them, and the sounds of nocturnal forest
dwellers began to seep into the skimmer. “We have to hurry,” Flinx said anxiously. He was al-
ready unsnapping the door latches. “They’re going to hurt her soon!” “Hold it!” Lauren said sharply. “You don’t know
what’s going to happen to her. More important, you don’t know when.” “Soon!” he insisted. The door popped open and slid
back into the transparent outer wall. He stared out into the forest in the
direction he knew they must take even though he hadn’t checked their location
on the tracking screen. “I promise that well get to her as fast as is feasible,”
Lauren assured him as she slipped the sling of the dart rifle over her
shoulder, “but we won’t do her or ourselves any good at all if we go charging
blindly in on those people, whoever they are. Remember, they carried paralysis
weapons on their vehicles. They may have more lethal weapons here. They’re not
going to sit idly by while you march in and demand the return of the woman
they’ve gone to a helluva lot of trouble to haul across a continent. We’ll get
her back, Flinx, just as quickly as we can, but recklessness won’t help us.
Surely you know that. You’re a city boy.” He winced at the “boy,” but otherwise had to agree
with her. With considerable effort he kept himself from dashing blindly into
the black forest. Instead, he forced himself to the back of the skimmer and
checked out the contents of the backpack she had assembled for him. “Don’t I
get a gun, too?” “A fishing lodge isn’t an armory, you know.” She
patted the rifle butt. “This is about all we keep around in the way of a
portable weapon. Besides, I seem to recall you putting away an opponent bigger
than yourself using only your own equipment.” Flinx glanced self-consciously down at his right
boot. His prowess with a knife was not something he was particularly proud of,
and he didn’t like talking about it. “A stiletto’s not much good over distance,
and we may not have darkness for an ally.” “Have you ever handled a real hand weapon?” she
asked him. “A needier? Beam thrower, projectile gun?” “No, but I’ve seen them used, and I know how they
work. It’s not too hard to figure out that you point the business end at the
person you’re mad at and pull the trigger or depress the firing stud.” “Sometimes it’s not quite that simple, Flinx.” She
tightened the belly strap of her backpack. “In any case, you’ll have to make do
with just your blade because there isn’t anything else. And I’m not going to
give you the dart rifle. I’m much more comfortable with it than you’d be. If
you’re worried about my determination to use it, you should know me better than
that by now. I don’t feel like being nice to these people. Kidnappers and
wervil killers.” She checked their course on the tracker, entered it
into her little compass, and led him from the cabin. The ground was
comparatively dry, soft and springy underfoot. As they marched behind twin search beams, Flinx once
more found himself considering his companion. They had a number of important
things in common besides independence. Love of animals, for example. Lauren’s
hair masked the side of her face from him but he felt he could see it, anyway. Pip stirred on its master’s shoulder as it sensed
strange emotions welling up inside Flinx, emotions that were new to the
minidrag and left it feeling not truly upset but decidedly ill at ease. It
tried to slip farther beneath the protective jacket. By the time they reached their destination, it was
very near midnight. They hunkered down in a thick copse and stared between the
trees. Flinx itched to continue, knowing that Mother Mastiff lay in uneasy
sleep somewhere in the complex of buildings not far below. The common sense
that had served him so well since infancy did more to hold him back than logic
or reason. To all appearances, the cluster of dimly lit
structures resembled nothing so much as another hunting or fishing lodge,
though much larger than the one that Lauren man- aged. In the center were the
main lodge buildings, to the left the sleeping quarters for less wealthy
guests, to the right the maintenance and storage sheds. Lauren studied the
layout through the thumb-sized daynight binoculars. Her experienced eye
detected something far more significant than the complex’s deceptive layout. “Those aren’t logs,” she told Flinx. “They’re
resinated plastics. Very nicely camouflaged, but there’s no more wood in them
than in my head. Same thing goes for the masonry and rockwork in the
foundations.” “How can you tell?” he asked curiously. She handed him the tiny viewing device. Flinx put it
to his eyes, and it immediately adjusted itself to his different vision,
changing light and sharpening focus. “Look at the corner joints and the lines along the
ground and ceilings,” she told him. “They’re much too regular, too precise.
That’s usually the result when some- one tries to copy nature. The hand of the
computer, or just man himself, always shows itself. The protrusions on the
logs, the smooth concavities on the ‘rocks’-there are too many obvious
replications from one to the next. “Oh, they’d fool anyone not attuned to such stuff,
and certainly anyone flying over in an aircraft or skimmer. But the materials
in those buildings are fake, which tells us that they were put here recently.
Anyone building a lodge for long-term use in the lake country always uses
native materials.” Closest to their position on the little hillside was
a pair of long, narrow structures. One was dark; the other had several lights
showing. Phosphorescent walkways drew narrow glowing lines between buildings. To the right of the longhouses stood a hexagonal
building, some three stories tall, made of plastic rock surmount- ed with more
plastic paneling. Beyond it sprawled a large two-story structure whose purpose
Flinx could easily divine from the tall doors fronting it and the single mudder
parked outside: a hangar for servicing and protecting vehicles. Nearby squatted a low edifice crowned with a
coiffure of thin silvery cables. The power station wasn’t large enough to
conceal a fusion system. Probably a fuel cell complex, Flinx decided. More puzzling was the absence of any kind of fence
or other barrier. That was carrying verisimilitude a little too far, he
thought. In the absence of any such wall, Flinx’s attention, like Lauren’s, was
drawn to the peculiar central tower, the one structure that clearly had no
place in a resort complex. She examined it closely through the binoculars.
“Lights on in there, too,” she murmured. “Could be meant to pass as some kind
of observation tower, or even a restaurant.” “Seems awfully small at the top
for an eating room,” he commented. Searchlights probed the darkness between the
buildings as the rest of the internal lights winked out. Another hour’s wait in
the damp, chilly bushes confirmed Lauren’s suspicions about the mysterious
tower. “There are six conical objects spaced around the roof,” she told Flinx,
pointing with a gloved hand. “At first, I thought they were searchlights, but
not one of them has shown a light. What the devil could they be?” Flinx had spotted them, too. “I think I recognize
them now. Those are sparksound projectors.” She looked at him in surprise. “What’s that? And how
can you be sure that’s what they are?” He favored her with a wan smile. “I’ve had to avoid
them before this. Each cone projects a wide, flat beam of high-intensity sound.
Immobile objects don’t register on the sensors, so it can be used to blanket a
large area that includes buildings.” He studied the tower intently. “Just guessing from the angles at which the
projectors are set. I’d say that their effective range stops about fifty meters
out from the longhouses.” “Thats not good,” she muttered, trying to make out
the invisible barrier though she knew that was impossible. “It’s worse than you think,” he told her, “because
the computer which monitors the beams is usually programed automatically to
disregard anything that doesn’t conform to human proportions. The interruption
of the sonic field by anything even faintly human will generate a graphic
display on a viewscreen. Any guard watching the screen will be able to tell
what’s entered the protected area and decide on that basis whether or not to
sound further alarm.” He added apologetically, “Rich people are very fond of
this system.” “When we didn’t see a regular fence, I was afraid of
something like this. Isn’t there any way to circumvent it, Flinx? You said you’ve
avoided such things in the past.” He nodded. “I’ve avoided them because there’s no way
to break the system. Not from the outside, anyway. I sup- pose we might be able
to tunnel beneath it.” “How deep into the ground would the sound
penetrate?” “That’s a problem,” he replied. “Depends entirely on
the power being fed to the projectors and the frequencies being generated.
Maybe only a meter, or maybe a dozen. We could tunnel inside the camp and
strike it without knowing we’d done so until we came up into a circle of guns.
Even if we made it, we’d have another problem, be- cause the beams probably
cover the entire camp. We’d al- most have to come up inside one of the
buildings.” “It doesn’t matter,” she murmured, “because we don’t
have any tunneling equipment handy. I’m going to hazard a guess that if they
have the surface monitored so intently, the sky in the immediate vicinity will
be even more carefully covered.” “I’d bet on that, too.” Flinx gestured toward the
tower. “Of course, we could just run the skimmer in on them. There aren’t that
many buildings. Maybe we could find Mother Mastiff and get her out before they
could react.” Lauren continued to study the complex. “There’s
nothing more expensive than a temporary facility fixed up to look permanent. I’d
guess this setup supports between thirty and a hundred people. They’re not
going to make this kind of effort to detect intruders without being damn ready
to repel them as well. Remember, there are only two of us.” “Three,” Flinx corrected her. A pleased hiss sounded
from the vicinity of his shoulder. “Surprise is worth a lot,” Lauren went on. “Maybe
ten, but no more that. We won’t do your mother any good as corpses. Keep in
mind that no one else knows we’re here. If we go down, so do her chances.” “I know the odds aren’t good,” he said irritably,
“but we’ve got to do something.” “And do something we will. You remember that
partially deforested section we flew over earlier today?” Flinx thought a moment, then nodded. “That was a trail line.” “Trail line for what?” “For equalization,” she told him. “For evening out
the odds. For a better weapon than this.” She patted the sling of the dart
rifle. “Better even than that snake riding your shoulder. I don’t share your
confidence in it.” “You haven’t seen Pip in action,” he reminded her.
“What kind of weapon are you talking about?” She stood and brushed bark and dirt from her
coveralls. “You’ll see,” she assured him, .”but we have to be damn careful.”
She gazed toward the camp below. “I wish I could think of a better way, but I
can’t. They’re sure to have guards posted in addition to monitoring the
detection system you described. We don’t even know which building your mother
is in. If we’re going to risk everything on one blind charge, it ought to be
one hell of a charge. “The weapon I have in mind is a volatile one. It can
cut both ways, but I’d rather chance a danger I’m familiar with. Lets get back
to the skimmer.” She pivoted and headed back through the forest.
Flinx rose to join her, forcing himself away from the lights of the camp, which
gleamed like so many reptilian eyes in the night, until the trees swallowed
them up. They were halfway back to the little grove where
they had parked the skimmer when the sensation swept through him. As usual, it
came as a complete surprise, but this time it was very different from his
recent receptions. For one thing, no feeling of pain was attached to it, and
for another, it did not come from the direction of the camp. It arose from an
entirely new source. Oddly, it carried overtones of distress with it, though
distress of a con- fusing kind. It came from Lauren and was directed at him. There was no love in it, no grand, heated follow-up
to the casual kiss she had given him in the skimmer. Affection, yes, which was
not what he had hoped for. Admiration, too, and something more. Something he had not expected from her: a
great wave of concern for him, and to a lesser extent, of pity. Flinx had become more adept at sorting out and
identifying the emotions he received, and there was no mistaking those he was
feeling now. That kiss, then, had not only carried no true love with it-it held
even less than that. She felt sorry for him. He tried to reject the feelings, not only from
disappointment but out of embarrassment. This was worse than looking into
someone’s mind. He was reading her heart, not her thoughts. Though he tried
hard, he could not shut off the flow. He could no more stop the river of
emotion than he could willingly turn it on. He made certain he stayed a step or two behind her
so she would not be able to see his face in the darkness, still soaking up the
waves of concern and sympathy that poured from her, wishing they might be
something else, something more. They hesitated before approaching the skimmer,
circling the landing area once. The quick search revealed that their hiding
place had remained inviolate. Once aboard, Lauren took the craft up. She did
not head toward the camp; in- stead, she turned south and began to retrace
their course over the treetops. Very soon they encountered the long, open gash
in the woods. Lauren hovered above it for several minutes as she studied the
ground, then decisively headed west. Flinx kept to himself, trying to shut the
memory of that emotional deluge out of his mind. Then, quite unexpectedly, the
open space in the trees came to a dead end. “Damn,” Lauren muttered. “Must have picked the wrong
direction. I thought sure I read the surface right. Maybe it’s the other way.” Flinx did not comment as she wheeled the skimmer
around and headed southeast. When the pathway again ended in an unbroken wall
of trees, she angrily wrenched the craft around a second time. This time when
they en- countered the forest wall, she slowed but continued west- ward, her
gaze darting repeatedly from the darkened woods below to the skimmer’s
instrumentation. “Maybe if you were a little more specific, I could
help you look,” he finally said, a touch of frustration in his voice. “I told you. Weapons. Allies, actually. It comes to the
same thing. No sign of them, though. They must have finished eating and entered
semidormancy. That’s how they live; do nothing but eat for several days in a
row, then lie down to sleep it off for a week. The trouble is that once they’ve
finished an eating period, they’re apt to wander off in any direction until
they find a sleep spot that pleases them. We haven’t got the time to search the
whole forest for the herd.” “Herd of what?” Flinx asked. “Didn’t I tell you? Devilopes.” Enlightenment came to Flinx. He had heard of
Devilopes, even seen a small head or two mounted in large commercial buildings.
But he had had no personal experience of them. Few citizens of Drallar did.
There was not even one in the city zoo. As Flinx understood it, Devilopes were not
zooable. The Demichin Devilope was the dominant native life
form on Moth. It was unusual for a herbivore to be the dominant life form, but
excepting man, a fairly recent arrival, they had no natural enemies. They were
comparatively scarce, as were the mounted heads Flinx had seen; the excessive
cost of the taxidermy involved prevented all but the extremely wealthy from
collecting Devilope. The skimmer prowled the treetops, rising to clear
occasional emergents topping ninety meters, dropping lower when the woods
scaled more modest heights. Occasionally, Lauren would take them down to ground
level, only to lift skyward again in disappointment when the omens proved
unhelpful. There was no sign of a Devilope herd. Meanwhile, another series of sensations swept through
Flinx’s active mind, and Pip stirred on his shoulder. He had continually tried
to find Mother Mastiff’s emotions, without success. Instead, his attempts
seemed to be attracting the feelings of everyone but his mother-not. He
wondered anew at his heightened perception since he had acquired his pet;
though it was likely, he reminded himself that here in the vastness of the
northern forests where minds were few and scattered, it might be only natural
that his receptivity improved. These latest sensations carried a female signature.
They were also new, not of Mother Mastiff or Lauren. Cool and calm, they were
vague and hard to define: whoever they belonged to was a particularly
unemotional individual. He felt fear, slight but unmistakable, coupled with a
formidable resolution that was cold, implacable-so hard and unyielding that it
frightened Flinx almost as much as Mother Mastiff’s own terror. Save for the
slight overtones of fear, they might have been the emotions of a machine. The feelings came from the camp where Mother Mastiff
was being held. Flinx had little doubt that they belonged to one of those
mysterious individuals who had abducted her. From the one brief, faint
sensation he felt be could understand her fear. Then it was gone, having lasted
less than a minute. Yet, in that time, Flinx had received a complete emotional
picture of the person whose feelings he had latched onto. Never before had he
encountered a mind so intent on a single purpose and so devoid of those usual
emotional colorations that comprised common humanity. Pip hissed at the empty
air as if ready to strike and defend “ts master. “This isn’t working,” Lauren muttered, trying to see
through the trees. “We’ll have to-“ She paused, frowning at him. “Are you all
right? You’ve got the most peculiar expression on your face.” “I’m okay.” The coldness was at last fading from his
mind; evidently he hadn’t been conscious of how completely it bad possessed
him. Her query snapped him back to immediacy, and he could feel anew the warmth
of the skimmer’s cabin, of his own body. Not for the first time did he find
himself wondering if his unmanageable talent might someday do him harm as well
as good. “I was just thinking.” “You do a lot of that,” she murmured. “Flinx, you’re
the funniest man I’ve ever met.” “You’re not laughing.” “I didn’t mean funny ha ha.” She turned back to the
controls. “I’m going to set us down. This skimmer really isn’t equipped for the
kind of-night-tracking we’re doing. Besides, I don’t know about you, but it’s
late, and I’m worn out.” Flinx was exhausted too, mentally as much as
physically. So he did not object as Lauren selected a stand of trees and set
the skimmer down in their midst. “I don’t think we need to stand a watch,” she said.
“We’re far enough from the camp so that no one’s going to stumble in on us. I
haven’t seen any sign of aerial patrol.” She was at the rear of the skimmer
now, fluffing out the sleeping bags they had brought from the lodge. Plinx sat quietly watching her. He had known a few
girls-young women-back in Drallar. Inhabitants of the marketplace, like
himself, students in the harsh school of the moment. He could never get
interested in any of them, though a few showed more than casual interest in
him. They were not, well, not serious. About life, and other matters. Mother Mastiff repeatedly chided him about his
attitude. “There’s no reason for ye to be so standoffish, boy. You’re no older
than them.” That was not true, of course, but he could not convince her of
that. Lauren was a citizen of another dimension entirely. She was an
attractive, mature woman. A self-confident, thinking adult-which was how Flinx
viewed himself, despite his age. She was already out of pants and shirt and
slip- ping into the thin thermal cocoon of the sleeping bag. “Well?” She blinked at him, pushed her hair away
from her face. “Aren’t you going to bed? Don’t tell me you’re not tired.” “I can hardly stand up,” he admitted. Discarding his
own clothing, he slipped into the sleeping bag next to hers. Lying there
listening to the rhythmic patter of rain against the canopy, he strained toward
her with his mind, seeking a hint, a suggestion of the emotions he so
desperately wanted her to feel. Maddeningly, he could sense nothing at all. The warmth of the sleeping bag and the cabin enveloped
him, and he was acutely aware of the faint musky smell of the woman barely an
arm’s length away. He wanted to reach out to her; to touch that smooth, sun-
darkened flesh; to caress the glistening ringlets of night that tumbled down
the side of her head to cover cheek and neck and finally form a dark bulge
against the bulwark of the sleeping bag. His hand trembled. What do I do, he thought furiously. How do I begin
this? Is there something special I should say first, or should I reach out now
and speak later? How can I tell her what I’m feeling? I can receive. If only I
could broadcast! Pip lay curled into a hard, scaly knot near his feet
in the bottom of the sleeping bag. Flinx slumped in on him- self, tired and
frustrated and helpless. What was there to do now? What could he possibly do
except the expected? A soft whisper reached him from the other sleeping bag.
Black hair shuffled against itself. “Good night, Flinx.” She turned to smile
briefly at him, lighting up the cabin, then turned over and became still. “Good night,” he mumbled. The uncertain hand that
was halfway out of his covering withdrew and clenched convulsively on the rim
of the material. Maybe this was best, he tried to tell himself. Adult
though he believed himself to be, there were mysteries and passwords he was
still unfamiliar with. Besides, there was that surge of pity and compassion he
had detected in her. Admiring, reassuring, but not what he was hoping to feel
from her. He wanted-had to have-something more than that. The one thing he didn’t need was another mother. Chapter Thirteen.
He said nothing when they rose the next morning,
downed a quick breakfast of concentrates, and lifted once again into the murky sky.
The sun was not quite up, though its cloud-diffused light brightened the
treetops. They had to find Lauren’s herd soon, he knew, because the skimmer’s
charge was running low and so were their options. He did not know how much time
Mother Mastiff had left before the source of fear he had detected in her came
to meet her. Perhaps they had been hindered by the absence of
day- light, or perhaps they had simply passed by the place, but this time they
found the herd in minutes. Below the
hovering skimmer they saw a multitude of small hills the color of obsidian.
Black hair rippled in the morning breeze, thick and meter-long. Where one of
the hills shifted in deep sleep, there was a flash of red like a ruby lost in a
coal heap as an eye momentarily opened and closed. Flinx counted more than fifty adults. Scattered
among them were an equal number of adolescents and infants. All lay sprawled on
their sides on the damp ground, shielded somewhat from the rain by the grove
they had chosen as a resting place. So these were the fabled Demichin Devilopes! -awe-
some and threatening even in their satiated sleep. Flinx’s gaze settled on one
immense male snoring away between two towering hardwoods. He guessed its length
at ten meters, its height when erect at close to six. Had it been standing, a
tall man could have walked beneath its belly and barely brushed the lower tips
of the shaggy hair. The downsloping, heavily muscled neck drooped from
between a pair of immense bumped shoulders to end in a nightmarish skull from
which several horns protruded. Some Devilopes had as few as two horns, others
as many as nine. The horns twisted and curled, though most ended by pointing
forward; no two animals’ horns grew in exactly the same way. Bony plates flared
slightly outward from the horns to protect the eyes. The forelegs were longer than the hind-unusual for
so massive a mammal. This extreme fore musculature al- lowed a Devilope to push
over a fully grown tree. That explained the devastated trail that marked their
eating period. A herd would strip a section of forest bare, pushing down the
evergreens to get at the tender branches and needles, even pulling off and
consuming the bark of the main boles. The Devilopes shifted in their sleep, kicking
tree-sized legs. “They’ll sleep like this for days,” Lauren explained
as they circled slowly above the herd. “Until they get hungry again or unless
something disturbs them. They don’t even bother to post sentries. No predator
in its right mind would attack a herd of sleeping Devilopes. There’s always the
danger they’d wake up.” Flinx stared at the ocean of Devilope. “What do we
do with them?” Not to mention how, he thought. “They can’t be tamed, and they can’t be driven,”
Lauren told him, “but sometimes you can draw them. We have to find a young mare
in heat. The season’s right.” Her fingers moved over the controls, and the
skimmer started to drop. “We’re going into that?” Flinx pointed toward the
herd. “Have to,” she said. “There’s no other way. It ought
to be okay. They’re asleep and unafraid.” “That’s more than I can say,” he muttered as the
skimmer dipped into the trees. Lauren maneuvered it carefully, trying to break
as few branches and make as little noise as possible. “What do we need with a
mare in heat?” “Musk oil and blood,” Lauren explained as the
skimmer gently touched down. Up close, the herd was twice as impressive: a
seething, rippling mass of shaggy black hair broken by isolated clumps of
twisted, massive horns, it looked more like a landscape of hell than an
assembly of temporarily inanimate herbivores. When Lauren killed the engine and
popped open the cabin door, Flinx was assailed by a powerful odor and the
steady sonority of the herd’s breathing. Earth humming, he thought. Lauren had the dart rifle out and ready as they
approached the herd on foot. Flinx followed her and tried to pretend that the
black cliffs that lowered over them were basalt and not flesh. “There.” She pointed between a pair of slowly
heaving bulks at a medium-sized animal. Picking her spot, she sighted the long
barrel carefully before putting three darts behind the massive skull. The mare
stirred, coughing once. Then the head, which had begun to rise, relaxed, slowly
sinking back to the surface. Flinx and Lauren held then- breath, but the slight
activity had failed to rouse any of their target’s neighbors. Lauren fearlessly strode between the two hulks that
formed a living canyon and unslung her backpack next to the tranquilized mare.
Before leaving the skimmer, she had extracted several objects from its stores.
These she now methodically laid out in a row on the ground and set to work.
Flinx watched with interest as knife and tools he didn’t recognize did their
work. One container filled rapidly with blood. A second
filled more rapidly with a green crystalline liquid. Lauren’s face was screwed
up like a knot, and as soon as the aroma of the green fluid reached Flinx, he
knew why. The scent was as overpowering as anything his nostrils had ever
encountered. Fortunately, the smell was not bad, merely over- whelming. A loud, sharp grunt sounded from behind him. He
turned, to find himself gazing in horrified fascination at a great crimson eye.
An absurdly tiny black pupil floated in the center of that blood-red disk. Then
the eyelid rolled like a curtain over the apparition. Flinx did not relax.
“Hurry up!” he called softly over his shoulder. “I think this one’s waking up.” “We’re not finished here yet,” Louren replied,
stoppering the second bottle and setting to work with a low-power laser. “I
have to close both wounds first.” “Let nature close them,” he urged her, keeping an
eye en the orb that had fixed blankly on him. The eyelid rippled, and he feared
that the next time it opened, it would likely be to full awareness. “You know me better than that,” she said firmly.
Flinx waited, screaming silently for her to hurry. Finally, she said, “That’s
done. We can go.” “They hurried back through the bulwark of black
hair. Flinx did not allow himself to relax until they sat once more inside the
skimmer. He spent much of the time trying to soothe Pip; in response to its
master’s worry, it had developed a nervous twitch. Despite the tight seal, the miasma rising from the
green bottle nearly choked him. There was no odor from the container of blood. “The green is the oil,” she explained unnecessarily.
“It’s the rutting season.” “I can see what you have in mind to do with that,”
Flinx told her, “but why the blood?” “Released in the open air, the concentrated oil
would be enough to interest the males of the herd. We need to do more than just
interest them. We need to drive them a little crazy. The only way to do that is
to convince them that a ready female is in danger. The herd’s females will
respond to that, too.” She set to work with the skimmer’s simple store of
chemicals. “You ought to be around sometime when the males are
awake and fighting,” she said to him as she mixed oil, blood, and various
catalysts in a sealed container. Flinx was watching the herd anxiously. “The
whole forest shakes. Even the tallest trees tremble. When two of the big males
connect with those skulls and horns, you can hear the sound of the collision
echo for kilometers.” Five minutes later, she held a large flask up to the
dim early-morning light. “There, that should do it. Pheromones and blood and a
few other nose-ticklers. If this doesn’t draw them, nothing will.” “They’ll set off the alarm when they cross the sonic
fence,” he reminded her. “Yes, but by that time they’ll be so berserk,
nothing will turn them. Then it won’t matter what they set off.” She smiled
nastily, then hesitated at the thought. “My only concern is that we find your
mother before they start in on the buildings.” “We’d better,” Flinx said. “There should be enough confusion,” she went on, “to
distract everyone’s attention. Unless they’re downright in- human, the
inhabitants of the camp aren’t going to be thinking of much of anything beyond
saving their own skins. “As to getting your mother out fast, I think we can
assume that she’s not in the hangar area or the power station or that central
tower. That leaves the two long structures off to the west. If we can get
inside and get her out before whoever’s in charge comes to his senses, we
should be able to get away before anyone realizes what’s happening. “Remember, we’ll be the only ones ready for what’s
going to happen. A lot will depend on how these people react. They’re obviously
not stupid, but I don’t see how anyone could be adaptable enough to react
calmly to what we’re going to do to them. Besides, I don’t have any better
ideas.” Flinx shook his head. “Neither do 1. I can see one
difficulty, though. If we’re going to convince this herd that they’re chasing
after an injured Devilope in heat, we’re going to have to stay on the ground. I
don’t see them following the scent up in the air.” “Quite right, and we have to make our actions as
believable as possible. That means bugging the surface. Not only would
tree-level flight confuse the herd, air currents would carry the scent upward
too quickly and dissipate it too fast.” “Then what happens,” Fllinx pressed on, “if this
idea works and the herd does follow us back toward the camp and we hit a tree
or stall or something?” Lauren shrugged. “Can you climb?” “There aren’t many trees in Drallar free for the
climbing,” he told her, “but I’ve done a lot of climbing on the outsides of
buildings.” “You’ll find little difference,” she assured him,
“with the kind of motivation you’ll have if the skimmer stalls. If something
happens, head for the biggest tree you can find. I think they’ll avoid the emergents.
The smaller stuff they’ll just ignore.” She hesitated, stared sideways at him.
“You want to wait a little while to think it over?” “We’re wasting time talking,” he replied, knowing
that every minute brought Mother Mastiff closer and closer to whatever fate her
abductors had planned for her. “I’m ready if you are.” “I’m not ready,” she said, “but I never will be, for
this. So we might as well go.” She settled into the pilot’s chair and thumbed a
control. The rear of the cabin’s canopy swung upward. “Climb into the back. When I give the word, you
uncap the flask and pour out, oh, maybe a tenth of the contents. Then hold it
out back, keep it open, and pour a tenth every time I say so. Got it?” “Got it,” he assured her with more confidence than
he felt. “You just drive this thing and make sure we don’t get into an argument
with a tree.” “Don’t worry about that.” She gave him a last smile
before turning to the control console. The skimmer rose and turned, heading slowly back
toward the somnolent herd. When they were just ten meters from the nearest
animal, Lauren pivoted the craft and hovered, studying the scanner’s display of
the forest ahead. Violent grunts and an occasional bleating sound
began to issue from the herd as Flinx held the still tightly sealed flask over
the stem of the skimmer. He looked around until he found a piece of thin cloth
and tied it across his nose and mouth. “I should have thought of that,” she murmured,
watching him. “Sorry.” “Don’t you want one?” he asked. She shook her head. “I’m up here, and the wind will
carry the scent back away from me. I’ll be all right. You ready?” Her hands
tightened on the wheel. “Ready,” he said. “You ready, Pip?” “The flying snake said nothing; it did not even hiss
in response. But Flinx could feel the coils tighten expectantly around his left
arm and shoulder. “Open and pour,” she instructed him. Flinx popped the seal on the flask as Lauren slowly
edged the skimmer forward. Even with the improvised mask and a breeze to carry
the aroma away from him, the odor was all but overpowering. His eyes watered as
his nostrils rebelled. Somehow he kept his attention on the task at hand and
slowly measured out a tenth of the liquid. A violent, querulous bellow rose from several
massive throats. As the skimmer slipped past a cathedral-like cluster of
hardwoods, Flinx could see one huge male pushing itself erect. It seemed to
dominate the forest even though the great trees rose high above. The metallic
red eyes were fully open now, the tiny black pupils looking like holes in the
crimson. The Devilope shook its head from side to side, back
and forth, and thundered. It took a step forward, then another. Behind it, the
rest of the herd was rising, the initial uncertain bellowing turning to roars of
desire and rage. A second male started forward in the wake of the first; then a
third took up the long, ponderous stride. At this rate, Flinx thought, it would
take them days to reach the camp. But even as he watched and worried, the pace of the
awakening herd began to increase. It took time for such massive animals to get
going. Once they did, they ate up distance. Not Song after, Flinx found himself
wishing for the skimmer to accelerate, and accelerate again. The herd was bearing down on the weaving, dodging
craft. Lauren had to avoid even the smaller trees, which the herd ignored in
its fury to locate the source of that pungent, electrifying odor. She tamed to
yell something to him, but he couldn’t hear her anymore. Trees whizzed by as Lauren somehow managed to m-
crease their speed without running into anything. Behind them sounded a rising
thunder as the noise of hundreds of hooves pulverizing the earth mixed with the
crackle of snapping tree trunks and the moan of larger boles being torn from
their roots. Red eyes and horns were all Flinx could see as he
poured another tenth of the herd-maddening liquid from the flask, drawing the
thunder down on the fragile skimmer and its even more fragile cargo... “There was nothing in the small operating theater that
had not been thoroughly sanitized. Mother Mastiff had no strength left to fight
with as they gently but firmly strapped her to the lukewarm table. Her curses
and imprecations had been reduced to whimpered pleas, more reflex than anything
else, for she had seen by now that nothing would dissuade these crazy people
from their intentions. Eventually, she lost even the will to beg and contented
herself with glaring tight-lipped at her tormentors. Bright lights winked to life, blinding her. The tall
black woman stood to the right of the table, checking a palm- sized circle of
plastic. Mother Mastiff recognized the pressure syringe, and looked away from
it. Like her companions, Haithness wore a pale surgical
gown and a mask that left only her eyes showing. Nyassa- lee plugged in the
shears that would be used to depilate the subject’s skull. Brora, who would
execute the actual implantation, stood off to one side examining a readout on
the display screen that hung just above and behind Mother Mastiff’s head. Occasionally,
he would glance down at a small table holding surgical instruments and several
square transparent boxes frosted with cold. Inside the boxes were the
microelectronic implants that he would place m the subject’s skull. A globular metal mass hung from the ceiling above
the operating table, gloaming like a steel jellyflsh. Wiry arms and tendrils
radiated from its underside. They would sup- ply power to attachments, suction
through hosing, and supplementary service to any organs that exhibited signs of
failure during the operation. There were microthin filament arms that could
substitute for cerebral capillaries, tendrils that could fuse or excavate bone,
and devices that could by-pass the lungs and provide oxygen directly to the
blood. “I’m ready to begin.” Brora smiled thinly across at
Nyassa-lee, who nodded. He looked to his other colleague. “Haithness?” She
answered him with her eyes as she readied the syringe. “A last instrument check, then,” he murmured,
turning his attention to the raised platform containing the micro- surgical
instruments. Overhead, the jellyfish hummed expectantly. “Now that’s funny.” He paused, frowning. “Look
here.” Both women leaned toward him. The instruments, the tiny boxes with their
frozen contents, even the platform itself, seemed to be vibrating. “Trouble over at power?” ventured Nyassa-lee. She
glanced upward and saw that the central support globe was swaying slightly. “I don’t know. Surely if it was anything serious, we
would have been told by now,” Brora muttered. The vibration intensified. One of
the probes tumbled from the holding table and clattered across the plastic
floor. “It’s getting worse, I think.” A faint rumble reached them from some-
where outside. Brora thought it arose somewhere off to the west. “Storm coming?” Nyassa-lee asked, frowning. Brora shook his head. “Thunder wouldn’t make the
table shake, and Weather didn’t say anything about an early storm watch. No
quake, either. This region is seismically stable.” The thunder that continued to grow in their ears did
not come down out of a distant sky but up out of the disturbed earth itself.
Abruptly, the alarm system came to life all around the camp. The three surgeons
stared in confusion at one another as the rumbling shook not only tables and
instruments but the whole building. The warning sirens bowled mournfully. There came a
ripping, tearing noise as something poured through the far end of the
conference room, missing the surgery by an appreciable margin.. It was visible
only for seconds, though in that time it filled the entire chamber. Then it
moved on, trailing sections of false log and plastic stone in its wake, letting
in sky and mist and leaving behind a wide depression in the stelacrete
foundation beneath the floor. Haithness had the best view as debris fell slowly
from the roof to cover the mark: it was a footprint. Nyassa-lee tore off her surgical mask and raced for
the nearest doorway. Brora and Haithness were not far be- hind. At their
departure. Mother Mastiff, who had quietly consigned that portion of herself
that was independent to oblivion, suddenly found her voice again and began
screaming for help. Dust and insulation began to sift from the ceiling
as the violent shaking and rumbling continued to echo around her. The
multiarmed surgical sphere above the operating table was now swinging
dangerously back and forth and threatening, with each successive vibration, to
tear free of its mounting. Mother Mastiff did not waste her energy in a futile
at- tempt to break the straps that bound her. She knew her limits. Instead, she
devoted her remaining strength to yell- ing at the top of her lungs. As soon as they had entered the monitored border
surrounding the camp, Lauren had accelerated and charged at dangerously high
speed right past the central tower. Someone had had the presence of mind to
respond to the frantic alarm siren by reaching for a weapon, but the hastily
aimed and fired energy rifle missed well aft of the already fleeing skimmer. At the same time, the wielder of the rifle had seen
something flung from the rear of the intruder. He had flinched, and when no
explosion had followed, leaned out of the third-story window to stare curiously
at the broken glass and green-red liquid trickling down the side of the
structure. He did not puzzle over it for very long because his attention-and
that of his companions in the tower- was soon occupied by the black tidal wave
that thundered out of the forest. The frustrated, enraged herd concentrated all its
attention on the strongest source of the infuriating odor. The central tower,
which contained the main communications and defensive instrumentation for the
encampment, was soon reduced to a mound of plastic and metal rubble. Meanwhile, Lauren brought the skimmer around in a
wide circle and set it down between the two long buildings on the west side of
the camp. The camp personnel were too busy trying to escape into the forest and
dodging massive horns and hoofs to wonder at the presence of the un- familiar
vehicle in their midst. They had a fifty-fifty chance of picking the right
building on the first try. As luck would have it, they choose correctly ... no
thanks, Flinx thought, to his resolutely unhelpful Talent. The roof was already beginning to cave in on the
operating theater when they finally reached that end of the building. “Flinx, how’d ye-?” Mother Mastiff started to
exclaim. “How did he know how to find you?” Lauren finished
for her as she started working on the restraining straps binding the older
woman’s right arm. “No,” Mother Mastiff corrected her, “I started to
ask how he managed to get here without any money, I didn’t think ye could go
anywhere on Moth without money.” “I had a little, Mother.” Flinx smiled down at
her. She appeared unhurt, simply worn out from her ordeal of the past hectic,
confusing days. “And I have other abilities, you know.” “Ah.” She nodded somberly. “No, not that,” he corrected her. “You’ve forgotten
that there are other ways to make use of things besides paying for them.” She laughed at that. The resounding cackle gladdened
his heart. For an instant, it dominated the screams and the echoes of
destruction that filled the air outside the building. The earth quivered
beneath his feet. “Yes, yes, ye were always good at helping yourself
to whatever ye needed. Haven’t I warned ye time enough against it? But I don’t
think now be the time to reprimand ye.” She looked up at Lauren, who was having
a tough time with the restraining straps. “Now who,” she inquired, her eyebrows rising, “be
this one?” “A friend,” Flinx assured her. “Lauren, meet Mother
Mastiff.” “Charmed, grandma.” Lauren’s teeth clenched as she
fought with the recalcitrant restraints. “Damn magnetic catches built into the
polyethelene.” She glanced across to Flinx. “We may have to cut her loose.” “I know you’ll handle it.” Flinx turned and jogged
toward the broken doorway, ducking just in time to avoid a section of roof
brace as it crashed to the floor. “Hey, where the hell do you think you’re going?”
Lauren shouted at him. “I want some answers,” he yelled back. “I still
don’t know what this is all about, and I’ll be damned if I’m leaving here
without trying to find out!” “ Tis you, boy!” Mother Mastiff yelled after him.
“They wanted to use me to influence you!” But he was already out of earshot. Mother Mastiff laid her head back down and stared
worriedly at the groaning ceiling.
“That boy,” she mumbled, “I don’t know that he hasn’t been more trouble
than he’s worth.” The upper restraint suddenly came loose with a
click, and Lauren breathed a sigh of relief. She was as conscious as Mother
Mastiff of the creaking, unsteady ceiling and the heavy mass of the surgical
globe swaying like a pendulum over the operating table. “I doubt you really mean that, woman,” she said
evenly, “and you ought to stop thinking of him as a boy.” The two women
exchanged a glance, old eyes shooting questions, young ones providing an
eloquent reply. Confident that Lauren would soon free Mother
Mastiff, Flinx was able to let the rage that had been bottled up in- side him
for days finally surge to the fore. So powerful was the suddenly freed emotion
that an alarmed Pip slid off its master’s shoulder and followed anxiously
above. The tiny triangular head darted in all directions in an at- tempt to
locate the as-yet-unperceived source of Flinx’s hate. The fury boiling within him was barely under
control. “They’re not going to get away with what they’ve done,” he told
himself repeatedly. “They’re not going to get away with it.” He did not know
what be was going to do if he confronted these still-unknown assailants, only
that he had to do something. A month ago, he would never have considered going
after so dangerous an enemy, but the past weeks had done much for his
confidence. The herd was beginning to lose some of its fury even
as its members still hunted for the puzzling source of their discomfort.
Females with young were the first to break away, retreating back into the
forest. Then there were only the solitary males roaming the encampment, venting
their frustration and anger on anything larger than a rock. Occasionally, Flinx
passed the remains of those who had not succeeded in fleeing into the trees in
time to avoid the rampaging Devilopes. There was rarely more than a red smear
staining the ground. He was heading for the hangar he and Lauren had
identified from their hilltop. It was the logical final refuge. It didn’t take
long for him to reach the building. As he strode single-mindedly across the
open grounds, it never occurred to him to wonder why none of the snorting, pawing
Devilopes paused to turn and stomp him into the earth. The large doorway fronting the hangar had been
pushed aside. Flinx could see movement and hear faint commands. Without
hesitation, he walked inside and saw a large transport skimmer being loaded
with crates. The loading crew worked desperately under the direction of a
small, elderly Oriental woman. Flinx just stood in the portal, staring. Now
that he had located someone in a position of authority, he really didn’t know
what to do next. Anger and chaos had brought him to the place; there had been
no room in his thoughts for reasoned preparation. A tall black lady standing in
the fore section of the skimmer stopped barking orders long enough to glance
toward the doorway. Her eyes locked on his. Instead of hatred, Flinx found
himself thinking that in her youth this must have been a strikingly beautiful
woman. Cold, though. Both women, so cold. Her hair was nearly all gray, and so
were her eyes. “Haithness.” A man rushed up behind her. “We haven’t
got time for daydreaming. We-“ She pointed with a shaky finger. Brora followed her
finger and found himself gaping at a slim, youthful figure ill the doorway.
“That boy,” Brora whispered. “Is it him?” “Yes, but look higher, Brora. Up in
the light.” The stocky man’s gaze rose, and his air of
interested detachment suddenly deserted him. His mouth dropped open. “Oh, my
God,” he exclaimed, “an Alaspinian minidrag.” “You see,” Haithness murmured as she looked down at
Flinx, regarding him as she would any other laboratory subject, “it explains so
much.” Around them, the sounds of the encampment being destroyed continued to
dominate everyone else’s attention. Brora regamed his composure. “It may, it may, but
the boy may not even be aware that-“ Flinx strained to understand their mumblings, but
there was too much noise behind him. “Where did you come from?” he shouted
toward the skimmer. His new-found maturity quickly deserted him; suddenly, he
was only a furious, frustrated adolescent. “Why did you kidnap my mother? I don’t
like you, you know. I don’t like any of you. I want to know why you’ve done
what you’ve done!” “Be careful,” Nyassa-lee called up to them.
“Remember the subject’s profile!” She hoped they were getting this up- stairs. “He’s not dangerous, I tell you,” Haithness
insisted. “This demonstrates his harmlessness. If he was in command of himself,
he’d be throwing more than childish queries at us by now.” “But the catalyst creature.” Brora waved a hand
toward the flying snake drifting above Flinx. “We don’t know that it’s catalyzing anything,”
Haithness reminded him, “because we don’t know what the boy’s abilities are as
yet. They are only potentials. The minidrag may be doing nothing for him
because it has nothing to work with as yet, other than a damnable persistence
and a preternatural talent for following a thin trail.” She continued to
examine the subject almost within their grasp. “I would give a great deal to
learn how he came to be in possession of a minidrag.” Brora found himself licking his lips. “We failed
with the mother. Maybe we should try taking the subject directly in spite of
our experience with the girl.” “No,” she argued. “We don’t have the authority to
take that kind of risk. Cruachan must be consulted first. It’s his decision to
make. The important thing is for us to get out of here now with our records and
ourselves intact.” “I disagree.” Brora continued to study the boy,
fascinated by his calm. The subject appeared indifferent to the hoofed death
that was devastating the encampment. “Our initial plan has failed. Now is the
time for us to improvise. We should seize the opportunity.” “Even if it’s our last opportunity?” Flinx shouted at them. “What are you talking about?
Why don’t you answer me?” Haithness turned and seemed about to reply when a
vast groaning shook the hangar. Suddenly, its east wall bulged inward. There
were screams of despair as the loading crew flung cargo in all directions and
scattered, ignoring Nyassa-lee’s entreaties. “They didn’t scatter fast enough. Walls and roof came crashing down, burying
personnel, containers, and the big cargo skimmer. Three bull Devilopes pushed
through the ruined wall as Flinx threw himself backward through the doorway.
Metal, plastic, and flesh blended into a chaotic pulp beneath massive hoofs.
Fragments of plastic flew through the air around Fllinx. One nicked his
shoulder. Red eyes flashing, one of the bulls wheeled toward
the single figure sprawled on the ground. The great head lowered. Coincidence, luck, something more: whatever had
protected Flinx from the attention of the herd until now abruptly vanished. The
bull looming overhead was half insane with fury. Its intent was evident in its
gaze: it planned to make Flinx into still another red stain on the earth. Something so tiny it was not noticed swooped in
front of that lowering skull and spat into one plate-sized red eye. The
Devilope bull blinked once, twice against the painful intrusion. That was
enough to drive the venom into its bloodstream. The monster opened its mouth
and let out a frightening bellow as it pulled away from Flinx. It started to
shake its head violently, ignoring the other two bulls, which continued to
crush the remains of the hangar underfoot. Flinx scrambled to his feet and raced from the scene
of destruction, heading back toward the building where he had left Lauren and
Mother Mastiff. Pip rejoined him, choosing to glide just above its master’s
head, temporarily disdaining its familiar perch. Behind them, the Devilope’s bellowing turned thick
and soft. Then there was a crash as it sat down on its rump. It sat for several
moments more before the huge front legs slipped out from under it Very slowly,
like an iceberg calving from a glacier, it fell over on its side. “The eye that
had taken Pip’s venom was gone, leaving behind only an empty socket. Breathing hard, Flinx rushed back into the building
housing the surgery and nearly ran over the fleeing Lauren and Mother Mastiff.
He embraced his mother briefly, in- tensely, then swung her left arm over his
shoulder to give her support. Lauren supported the old woman at her other shoulder
and looked curiously at Flinx. “Did you find who you were looking for?” “I think so,” he told her. “Sennar and Soba are
properly revenged. The Devilopes did it for them.” Lauren nodded as they emerged from the remains of
the building. Outside, the earth-shaking had lessened. “The herd’s dispersing. They’ll reform in the
forest, wonder what came over them, and likely go back to sleep. As soon as
they start doing that, this camp will begin filling up with those who managed
to escape. We need to improve our transportation, and fast. Remember, there’s
nowhere near a full charge in the skimmer. You and I could walk it, but-“ “I can walk anywhere ye can,” Mother Mastiff
insisted. Her condition belied her bravado-if not for the support of Flinx and
Lauren, she would not have been able to stand. “It’s all right, Mother,” Flinx told her. “We’ll
find something.” They boarded their skimmer. Lauren rekeyed the
ignition, removed to prevent potential escapees from absconding with their
craft, and they cruised around the ruined building back into the heart of the
camp. Their fear of danger from survivors was unfounded.
The few men and women who wandered out of their way were too stunned by the
catastrophe to offer even a challenging question. The majority of them had been
administrative or maintenance personnel, quite unaware of the importance of
Flinx or Mother Mastiff. The Devilopes were gone. “The power station was
hardly damaged, perhaps because it lay apart from the rest of the encampment,
perhaps because it operated on automatic and did not offer the herd any living
targets. None of the camp personnel materialized to challenge their use of the
station’s recharge facility, though Lauren kept a ready finger on the trigger
of the dart rifle until a readout showed that the skimmer once again rode on
full power. “I don’t think we have to worry about pursuit,” she
declared. “It doesn’t look like there’s anyone left to pursue. If the leaders
of this bunch got caught in that trampled hangar as you say, Flinx, then we’ve
nothing to worry about.” “I didn’t get my answers,” he muttered
disappointedly. Then, louder, he said, “Let’s get out of this place.” “Yes,” Mother Mastiff agreed quickly. She looked
imploringly at Lauren. “I be a city lady. The country life doesn’t agree with
me.” She grinned her irrepressible grin, and Flinx knew she was going to be all
right. Lauren smiled and nudged the accelerator. The
skimmer moved, lifting above the surrounding trees. They crusied over several
disoriented, spent Devilopes and sped south as fast as the skimmer’s engine
could push them. “I didn’t learn what this was all about,” Flinx
continued to mutter from his seat near the rear of the cabin. “Do you know why they
abducted you, Mother? What did they want with you?” It was on her lips to tell him the tale the
Meliorares had told her the previous night-was it only last night? Some- thing
made her hesitate. Natural caution, concern for him. A lifetime of experience
that taught one not to blunder ahead and blurt out the first thing that comes
to mind, no matter how true it might be. There were things she needed to learn,
things he needed to learn. There would always be time. “You’ve said ‘tis a long story as to how ye managed
to trace me, boy. My tale’s a long one, too. As to what they wanted with me,
tis enough for ye to know now that it involves an old, old crime I once
participated in and a thirst for revenge that never dies. Ye can understand
that.” “Yes, yes I can.” He knew that Mother Mastiff had
enjoyed a diverse and checkered youth. “You can tell me all about it after
we’re back home.” “Yes,” she said, pleased that he had apparently
accepted her explanation. “After we’re safely back home.” She looked toward the
pilot’s chair and saw Lauren gazing quizzically back at her. Mother Mastiff put a finger to her lips. The other
woman nodded, not fully understanding but sensitive enough to go along with the
older woman’s wishes. Chapter Fourteen
Several hours passed. The air was smooth, the mist
thin, the ride comfortable as the skimmer slipped southward. Mother Mastiff
looked back toward the rear of the craft to see Flinx sound asleep. His useful
if loathsome pet was, as usual, curled up close to the boy’s head. She studied the pilot. Pretty, hard, and
self-contained, she decided. Night was beginning to settle over the forest
speeding by below. Within the sealed canopy of the skimmer, it was warm and
dry. “What be your interest in my boy?” she asked evenly. “As a friend. I also had a personal debt to pay,”
Lauren explained. “Those people who abducted you slaughtered a couple of rare
animals who were long-time companions of mine. ‘Revenge never dies.’ “ She
smiled. “You said that a while ago, remember?” “How did ye encounter him?” “He appeared at the lodge I manage on a lake near
here.” “Ah! The fight, yes, I remember. So that place was
yours.” “I just manage it. That’s where I’m heading. I can
help you arrange return passage to Drallar from there.” “How do ye know we’re from the city?” Lauren gestured with a thumb back toward the
sleeping figure behind them. “He told me. He told me a lot.” “That’s odd,” Mother Mastiff commented. “He’s not
the talkative kind, that boy.” She went quiet for a while, watching the forest
slide past below. Flinx slept on, enjoying his first relaxed sleep in some
time. ‘Tis an awful lot of trouble you’ve gone through on
his behalf,” she finally declared, “especially for a total stranger. Especially
for one so young.” “Youth is relative,” Lauren said. “Maybe be brought
out the maternal instinct in me.” “Don’t get profound with me, child,” Mother Mastiff
warned her, “nor sassy, either.” Ironic, that last comment, though. Hadn’t she
once felt the same way about the boy many years ago? “I’ve watched ye, seen the
way ye look at him. Do ye love him?” “Love him?” Lauren’s surprise was quite genuine.
Then, seeing that Mother Mastiff was serious, she forced herself to respond
solemnly. “Certainly not! At least, not in that way. I’m fond of him, sure. I
respect him immensely for what he’s managed to do on his own, and I also feel
sorry for him. There is affection, certainly. But the kind of love you’re
talking about? Not a chance.” “’Youth is relative,”’ Mother Mastiff taunted her
gently. “One must be certain. I’ve seen much in my life, child. There’s little
that can surprise me, or at least so I thought until a few weeks ago.” She
cackled softly. “I’m glad to hear ye say this. Anything else could do harm to
the boy.” “I would never do that,” Lauren assured her. She
glanced back at Flinx’s sleeping form. “I’m going to drop you at the lodge. My
assistant’s name is Sal. I’ll make some pretense of going in to arrange your
transportation and talk to him. Then I’ll take off across the lake. I think it
will be better for him that way. I
don’t want to hurt him.” She hesitated. “You don’t think he’ll do anything
silly, like coming after me?” Mother Mastiff considered thoughtfully, then shook
her head. “He’s just a little too sensible. He’ll understand. I’m sure. As for
me, I don’t know what to say, child. You’ve been so helpful to him and to me.” “ ‘Revenge,’ remember?” She grinned, the lights from
the console glinting off her high cheekbones. “He’s a funny one, your Fllinx. I
don’t think I’ll forget him.” “Ye know, child, ‘tis peculiar,” Mother Mastiff
muttered as she gazed out into the clouds and mist, “but you’re not the first
person to say that.” “And I expect,” Lauren added as she turned her
attention back to her driving, “that I won’t be the last, either.” The mudder
circled the devastated encampment several times before leaving the cover of the
forest and cruising among the ruined buildings. Eventually, it settled to
ground near the stump of what had been a central tower. The woman who stepped out was clad in a dark-green
and brown camouflage suit, as was the man at the vehicle’s controls. He kept
the engine running as his companion marched a half-dozen meters toward the
tower, stopped, and turned a slow circle, hands on hips. Then they both
relaxed, recognizing that whatever had obliterated the installation no longer
posed any threat. No discussion was necessary-they had worked together for a
long time, and words had become superfluous. The man killed the mudder’s engine and exited to
join his associate in surveying the wreckage. A light rain was falling. It did
not soak them, for the camouflage suits repelled moisture. The field was
temporary, but from what they could see of the encampment, they wouldn’t be in
the place long enough to have to recharge. “I’m sick of opening packages, only to find smaller
packages inside,” the man said ruefully. “I’m sick of having every new avenue
we take turn into a dead end.” He gestured toward the destruction surrounding
them; crumpled buildings, isolated wisps of smoke rising from piles of debris,
slag where power had melted metal. “Dead may be the right description, too, judging by
the looks of things.” “Not necessarily.” His companion only half heard
him. She was staring at a wide depression near her feet. It was pointed at one
end. A second, identical mark dented the ground several meters away, another an
equal distance be- yond. As she traced their progress, she saw that they formed
a curving trail. She had not noticed them at first because they were filled
with water. She kicked in the side of the one nearest her boots.
“Footprints,” she said curtly. “Hoof prints,” the man corrected her. His gaze went
to the mist-shrouded woods that surrounded the camp. “I wish I knew more about
this backwater world.” “Don’t criticize yourself. We didn’t plan to spend
so much time here. Besides, the urban center is pretty cosmopolitan.” “Yeah, and civilization stops at its outskirts. The
rest of the planet’s too primitive to rate a class. That’s what’s slowed us up
from the beginning. Too many places to hide.” Her gaze swept the ruins. “Doesn’t seem to have done
them much good.” “No,” he agreed. “I saw the bones on the way in,
same as you did. I wonder if the poor monster died here, too?” “Don’t talk like that,” she said uneasily. “You know
how we’re supposed to refer to him. You don’t watch yourself, you’ll put that
in an official communique sometime and find yourself up for a formal
reprimand.” “Ah, yes, I forgot,” he murmured. “The disadvantaged
child. Pardon me. Rose, but this whole business has been a lousy job from the
beginning. You’re right, though. I shouldn’t single him out. It’s not his
fault. The contrary. He isn’t responsible for what the Meliorares did to him.” “Right,” the woman said. “Well, he’ll soon be
repaired.” “If he got away,” her companion reminded her. “Surely some of them did,” the woman said. The man pointed toward several long walls of rubble
that might once have been buildings. “Speak of the devil.” A figure was headed toward them. It took longer than
was necessary because it did not travel in a straight line. It attempted to,
but every so often would stagger off to its right like a wheel with its
bearings out. The man’s clothes were filthy, his boots caked with mud. They had
not been changed in several days. He waved weakly at the newcomers. Save for
the limp with which he walked, he seemed intact. His stringy hair was soaked
and plastered like wire to his face and head. He made no effort to brush it
from his eyes. He seemed indifferent to the identity of the new
arrivals. His concerns were more prosaic. “Have you any food?” “What happened here?” the woman asked him as soon as
he had limped to within earshot. “Have you any food? God knows there’s plenty of
water. That’s all this miserable place has to offer is plenty of water. All you
want even when you don’t want it. I’ve been living on nuts and berries and what
I’ve been able to salvage from the camp kitchen. Had to fight the scavengers
for everything. Miserable, stinking hole.” “What happened here?” the woman repeated calmly. The
man appeared to be in his late twenties. Too young, she knew, for him to be a
member of the Meliorare’s inner circle. Just an unlucky employee. “Caster,” he mumbled. “Name’s Caster. Excuse me a
minute.” He slid down his crude, handmade crutch until he was sprawled on the
damp earth. “Broke my ankle, I think. It hasn’t healed too well. I need to have
it set right.” He winced, then looked up at them. “Damned if I know. What happened here, I mean. One
minute I was replacing communications modules, and the next all hell opened up.
You should’ve seen ‘em. Goddamn big as the tower, every one of ‘em. Seemed like
it. anyhow. Worst thing was those dish-size bloody eyes with tiny little black
specks lookin’ down at you like a machine. Not decent, them eyes. I don’t know
what brought ‘em down on us like they came, but it sure as hell wasn’t a kind
providence.” “Are you the only survivor?” the man asked. “I haven’t seen anyone else, if that’s what you
mean.” His voice turned pleading. “Hey, have you got any food?” “We can feed you,” the woman said with a smile.
“Listen, who were you working for here?” . “Bunch of
scientists. Uppity bunch. Never talked to us ordinary folk.” He forced a weak
laugh. “Paid well, though. Keep your mouth shut and do your job and see the
countryside. Just never expected the countryside to come visiting me. I’ve had
it with this outfit. Ready to go home. They can keep their damn severance fee.”
A new thought occurred to him, and he squinted up at the couple standing over
him. “Hey, you mean you don’t know who they were? Who are
you people, anyway?” They exchanged a glance; then the woman shrugged.
“No harm in it. Maybe it’ll help his memory.” She pulled a small plastic card from an inside pocket
and showed it to the injured man. It was bright red. On it was printed a name,
then her world of origin: Terra. The eyes of the man on the ground widened
slightly at that. The series of letters which followed added confusion to his
astonishment. FLT-I-PC-MO. The first section he understood. It
told him that this visitor was an autonomous agent, rank Inspector, of the
Commonwealth law enforcement arm, the Peaceforcers. “What does ‘MO’ stand for?” he asked. “Moral Operations section,” she told him, repocketing
the ident. “These scientists you worked for-even though you had little or no
personal contact with them, you must have seen them from time to time?” “Sure. They kept pretty well to themselves, but I
some- times saw ‘em strolling around.” “They were all quite elderly, weren’t they?” He frowned. “You know, I didn’t think much about it,
but yeah, I guess they were. Does that mean something?” “It needn’t trouble you,” the man said soothingly.
“You’ve said you haven’t seen anyone else around since this horde of beasts
overwhelmed you. That doesn’t necessarily mean you’re the only survivor. I
assume some form of transportation was maintained for local use here. You
didn’t see anyone get away in a mudder or skimmer?” The man on the ground thought a moment, and his face
brightened. “Yeah, yeah I did. There was this old lady and a younger
one-good-looking, the younger one. There was a kid with ‘em. I didn’t recognize
‘em, but there were al- ways people coming and going here.” “How old was the kid?” the woman asked him. “Damned if I know. I was running like blazes in one
direction, and their skimmer was beaded in the other, so I didn’t stop to ask
questions. Kid had red hair, though. I remember that. Redheads seem scarce on
this ball of dirt.” “A charmed life,” the older man murmured to his
companion. There was admiration as well as frustration in his voice. “The boy
leads a charmed life.” “As you well know, there may he a lot more than
charm involved,” the woman said tersely. “The old woman he refers to is obviously
the adopting parent, but who was the other?” She frowned, now worried. “It doesn’t matter,” her companion said. He spoke to
the injured man. “Look, how well do you remember the attitudes of this trio? I
know you didn’t have much time. This younger woman, the attractive one. Did she
give the appearance of being in control of the other two? Did it seem as if she
was holding the boy and old lady under guard?” “I told you, I didn’t get much of a look,” Caster
replied. “I didn’t see any weapons showing, if that’s what you’re talking
about.” “Interesting,” the woman murmured. “They may have
enlisted an ally. Another complication to contend with.” She sighed. “Damn this
case, anyway. If it didn’t carry such a high priority with HQ I’d ask to be
taken off.” “You know how far we’d get with a request like
that,” her companion snorted. “We’ll get ‘cm. We’ve come so damn close so many
times already. The odds have to catch up with us.” “Maybe. Remember your packages inside packages,” she
taunted him gently. “Still, it might be easy now.” She waved at the ruined
camp. “It doesn’t look like many, if any, of the Meliorares got away.” “Melio-Meliorares?” The injured man gaped at them.
“Hey, I know that name. Weren’t they the-?” His eyes widened with realization.
“Now wait a second, people, I didn’t-“ “Take it easy,” the man 5n the camouflage suit urged
him. “Your surprise confirms your innocence. Besides, you’re too young. They’ve
taken in smarter folk than you down over the years.” “We shouldn’t have that much trouble relocating the
boy.” She was feeling confident now. “We should be able to pick them up at our
leisure.” “I wish I were as sanguine,” her associate murmured,
chewing on his lower lip. “There’s been nothing leisurely about this business
from the start.” “I didn’t know,” the injured man was babbling. “I
didn’t know they were Meliorares. None of us did, none of us. I just answered
an ad for a technician. No one ever said a word to any of us about-!” “Take it easy, I told you,” the older man snapped,
disgusted at the other’s reaction. People panic so easily, he though: you’ll
have to undergo a truth scan. There’s no that leg set right. There’s food in
the mudder. One thing, though: you’ll have to undergo a truth scan. There’s no
harm in that, you know. Afterwards, you’ll likely be re- leased.” The man struggled to his feet, using his crutch as a
prop. He had calmed down somewhat at the other’s reassuring words. “They never
said a word about anything like that.” “They never do,” the woman commented. “That’s how
they’ve been able to escape custody for so many years. The gullible never ask
questions.” “Meliorares. Hell,” the man mumbled. “If I’d known-“ “If you’d known, then you’d never have taken their
money and gone to work for them, right?” “Of course not. I’ve got my principles.” “Sure you do.” He waved a hand, forestalling the
other man’s imminent protest. “Excuse me, friend. I’ve developed a rather
jaundiced view of humanity during the eight years I’ve spent in MO. Not your
fault. Come on,” he said to the woman named Rose, “there’s nothing more for us
here.” “Me, too? You’re sure?” The younger man limped after
them. “Yeah, you, too,” the Peaceforcer said. “You’re sure
you don’t mind giving a deposition under scan? It’s purely a voluntary procedure.” “Be glad to,” the other said, eager to please. “Damn
lousy Meliorares, taking in innocent workers like that Hope you mindwipe every
last one of ‘em.” “There’s food in back,” the woman said evenly as
they climbed into the mudder. “It’s strange,” her companion remarked a§ they
seated themselves, “how the local wildlife overran this place just in time to
allow our quarry to flee. The histories of these children are full of such
timely coincidences.” “I know,” Rose said as the mudder’s engine rose to a
steady hum and the little vehicle slid forward into the forest. “Take this
flying snake we’ve been told about. It’s from where?” “Alaspin, if the reports are accurate.” “That’s right, Alaspin. If I remember my
galographics correctly, that world’s a fair number of parsecs from here. One
hell of a coincidence.” “But not impossible.” “It seems like nothing’s impossible where these
children are concerned. The sooner we take this one into custody and turn him
over to the psychosurgeons, the better I’ll like it. Give me a good clean
deviant murder any time. This mutant-hunting gives me the shivers.” “He’s not a mutant. Rose,” her companion reminded
her. “That’s as inaccurate as me calling him a monster.” He glanced toward the
rear of the mudder. Their passenger was gobbling food from their stores and
ignoring their conversation. “We don’t even know that he possesses any special
abilities. The last two we tracked down were insipidly normal.” “The Meliorares must have thought differently,” Rose
challenged. “They’ve gone to a lot of trouble to try and catch this one and
look what’s happened to them.” They were well into the forest now, heading south.
The ruined camp was out of sight, swallowed up by trees and rolling terrain
behind them. “Some big native animals did them in,” her companion
said. “A maddened herd that bad nothing whatsoever to do with the boy or any
imagined abilities of his. So far, his trail shows only that he’s the usual
Meliorare disturbed youth. You worry too much. Rose.” “Yeah. I know. It’s the nature of the business,
Feodor.” But their concerns haunted them as night began to
over- take the racing mudder. The woman manning the communications console was
very old, almost as old and shaky as the small starship it- self, but her hands
played the instrumentation with a confidence born of long experience, and her
hearing was sharp enough for her to be certain she had not missed any portion
of the broadcast. She looked up from her station into the face of the tall,
solemn man standing next to her and shook her head slowly. “I’m sorry. Dr. Cruachan, sir. They’re not
responding to any of our call signals. I can’t even raise their tight-beam
frequency anymore.” The tall man nodded slowly, reluctantly. “You know
what this means?” “Yes,” she admitted, sadness tinging her voice.
“Nyassa-lee, Haithness, Brora-all gone now. All those years.” Her voice sank to
a whisper. “We can’t be sure,” Cruachan murmured. “Not one
hundred percent. It’s only that,” he hesitated, “they ought to have responded
by now, at least via the emergency unit.” “That stampede was terrible luck, sir.” “If it was bad luck,” he said softly. “History shows
that where the subject children are concerned, the unknown sometimes gives luck
a push-or a violent shove.” “I know that, sir,” the communicator said. She was
tired, Cruachan knew; but then they were all tired. Time was running out for
them and for the Meliorare Society as well as for its noble, much-misunderstood
goals. There had been thoughts, years ago, of training new acolytes in the techniques
and aims of genetic manipulation pioneered by the Society, but the onus under
which they were forced to operate made the cooperation of foolish younger
researchers impossible to obtain, thanks to the unrelenting barrage of
slanderous propaganda propagated by the Church and the Commonwealth government. Curse them all for the ignorant primitives they
were! The Society was not dead yet! Haithness, Nyassa-lee, Brora-the names were a dirge
in his mind. If they were truly gone now, and it seemed that must be so, that
left very few to carry on the Work. The conflict within him was strong. Should
he press on or flee to set up operations elsewhere? So many old friends,
colleagues, great scientific minds, lost; was this one subject worth it? They
still had no proof that he was. Only graphs and figures to which the computers
held. But the computers didn’t care. Nobody cared. There was nothing to indicate that the subject had
been in any way responsible for the unfortunate stampede that had destroyed the
camp together with their hopes. Of course, it was quite possible that the
subject had perished along with the others, Cruachan mused. If not, if he
decided to pursue this one to a conclusion, then there could be no more
external manipulation attempted. They would have to confront the subject
directly, as they had years ago tried to do with the girl. It was a long, roundabout course to their next
“safe” station. Cruachan was not at all
confident of working through another several years of hiding and seeking out
another promising subject. If the long arm of the Peace- forcers had not caught
up with him by then, time and old age were liable to do the job for the
government. They had come a long way together, he and his associates. A great
effort; many lives had been expended to keep the project alive. He and his few
remaining colleagues had to follow this case to its conclusion. “Thank you, Amareth,” he told the woman waiting
patiently at the console. “Keep the receiver open just in case.” “Of course, Dr. Cruachan, sir.” Turning, he headed slowly toward Conference. Halfway
there, his step picked up, his stride became more brisk. This won’t do, he told
himself. As president of the Society, it was incumbent upon him to set an
example for the others, now more than ever. By the time he reached the meeting
room and strode inside, his initial despair at the reports from below had been
replaced by icy determination. Half a dozen elderly men and women sat waiting for
him. So few, he thought, so few left. The last of the Society, the last
supporters of a great idea. Their upturned faces all silently asked the same
question. “Still no word,” he said firmly. “We must therefore
assume that doctors Brora, Haithness, and Nyassa-lee have been lost.” There
were no outward expressions of grief, no wails or cries. They waited
expectantly for him to continue, and their quiet vote of confidence redoubled
his resolve. “I recommend that we proceed with the attempt to re-
gain control of Number Twelve.” “We have reason to believe that MO operatives are
now working in this region,” an old woman said from the far side of the
comfortable room. “What of it?” another woman asked sharply. “They’ve
always been two steps behind us, and they always will be.” “I wish I was as positive of that as you, Hanson,”
the first woman said. “The longevity of
the Society is the result of foresight and caution, not contempt for those who
hold us in contempt.” She looked up at their leader. “You’re sure about
continuing to operate here, Cruachan?” “More so than ever,” he told her. “We have too much
invested in this Number Twelve not to continue.” He proceeded to recite the
long list of factors responsible for his decision. When he finished, a thin little man seated in the
far corner of the room spoke out sharply in an incongruously deep voice. He had
an artificial leg and heart, but the look in his eyes was as blindly intense as
it had been fifty years earlier. “I concur! The promise still lies here. If the
subject is still accessible-“ “We have no reason to believe he is not,” Cruachan
half lied. “-then we have a chance to get to him before the MO
insects do. As Cruachan says, we must balance the potential here against our
own intensifying infirmities.” He
kicked the floor with his false leg. “Very well,” said the old lady who had raised the
specter of Commonwealth interference. “I see that most of you are of a mind to
continue with our work here. I must confess that I cannot muster an argument
against Dr. Cruachan’s many good points. But we now have a new problem to
overcome which will not be solved by a vote. “Is it true that the last report from the camp
places the subject in proximity to an Alaspinian miniature dragon?” Cruachan nodded slowly. “The presence of the
catalyst creature close to the subject was alluded to, yes.” “Then how are we to proceed? Besides acting as a
magnifying lens for any latent Talent the subject may possess, this particular
animal is deadly in and of itself. If it has formed an emotional bond with the
subject, it will be a much more dangerous opponent than any dozen MO officers.” Cruachan waved her worries aside. “I’ve given the
matter proper consideration. The snake will be taken care of, I promise you. If
we cannot neutralize a mere reptile, then we have no business pretending to the
ideals of our Society.” “It is not a reptile,” a man near the back put in.
He was glassy-eyed because of the thick contact lenses he was forced to wear.
“It is reptilian in appearance, but warm blood flows in its veins, and it
should more properly be classified as-“ “I don’t give a damn what Order it fits into,”
Cruachan broke in impatiently. “The beast will be handled.” His brows drew
together at a sudden thought. “In fact, if such a mental bond now exists, it is
likely stronger than that which ties the subject to his adoptive parent.” “Another chance for external control!” a woman
exclaimed. “Yes. Instead of presenting us with a new threat,
it’s possible this creature may be our key to subject control. So you all see
how seeming difficulties may be turned to our advantage.” “Too bad about Haithness and the others,” one of the
old men murmured. “I’d known Haithness for forty-five years.” “So did I,” Cruachan reminded him. “We must not let
her and Nyassa-lee and Brora down. If, as now seems likely, they have sacrificed
themselves for the cause, they provide us with still another reason to press
onward. As we shrink in numbers, so must we grow in determination.” Murmurs of assent rose from around the conference
room. “We will not abandon this subject,” Cruachan
continued forcefully. “He will be brought under our wing by what- ever means is
required. I call for a formal vote for proceeding.” Cruachan was gratified to see the decision to
continue confirmed unanimously. Such decisions usually were; dissent had no place
in an organization bent to such a singular purpose. “Thank you all,” he said when the hands dropped.
“Remember, this Number Twelve may hold the key to our vindication. We should
proceed with that hope in mind. From this moment on, our entire energy will be
devoted to gaining control over him.” He turned toward the doorway. “We have to hurry. If the MOs find him first, they
will ruin him for our purposes.” The group dissolved in a rush of activity and fresh
resolve that was matched in intensity only by the desperation that gave it
life. Chapter Fifteen
The city stank of human and other beings, of animals
and exotic cooking, of resins and building materials old and new, all affected
by the eternal dampness that permeated organic and inorganic materials alike.
But it was all flowers and spice to Flinx. The transport car hissed to a halt
outside the paneled exterior of the little bar and with the little credit
remaining to him, he paid the machine. It responded with a mechanical “Thank
you, sir” before drifting off up the street in search of its next fare. Mother Mastiff leaned heavily against him as they
made their way inside. Her ordeal had left her feeling her age, and she was
very tired. So tired that she did not pull away from the snake riding high on Flinx’s
shoulder. Once inside, Pip uncoiled from its perch beneath the slickertic
Lauren Walder had provided and made a snake- line for the bar itself. This
place he knew. On the counter ahead sat bowls of pretzels, tarmac nuts, and
other interesting salty delicacies that were almost as much fun to play with as
to eat Flinx had deliberately brought them back to the
market- place via a zigzag, roundabout course, changing transports frequently,
trying until the last moment to travel with other citizens. Try as he might, he
had been unable to see any indication that they had been followed, nor had the
minidrag reacted negatively to any of the travelers who had looked askance at
the exhausted youth and the old woman with him. Still, it was this caution that
prompted them to visit this bar before returning to the shop. It would be wise
not to go home alone, and Small Symm, the bar owner, would be good company to
have around when they again set palm print to the front-door lock. To some
degree his physical talents matched those of Flinx’s mind. As giants go. Small Symm was about average. He had
been a friend of Flinx since the day of the boy’s adoption. He often bought
interesting utensils from Mother Mastiff for use in his establishment. An enormous hand appeared and all but swept the two
travelers into a booth. At the long metal bar, patrons nervously moved aside to
allow the acrobatic flying snake plenty of access to the pretzels. “I’ve heard,” the young giant said by way of
greeting, his voice an echo from deep within a cavernous chest, “that you were
back. Word travels fast in the market.” “We’re okay, Symm.” Flinx favored his friend with a’
tired smile. “I feel like I could sleep for a year, but other than that, we’re
all right.” The giant pulled a table close to the booth and used
it for a chair. “What can I get for the two of you? Some- thing nice and hot to
drink?” “Not now, boy,” Mother Mastiff said with a desultory
wave of one wrinkled hand. “We’re anxious to be home. ‘Tis your good company
we’d make use of, not your beverages.” She turned quiet and let Flinx do the
majority of the explaining. Small Symm frowned, his brows coming together like
clouds in the sky. “You think these people might still be after you?” She almost started to say, “Tis not me they’re after,”
and just did manage to hold her tongue. She still believed it was too soon to
reveal to Flinx everything she had learned. Much too soon. “Unlikely but
possible, and I’m not the type to tempt fate, the unkind bastard.” “I understand.” Symrn stood, his head just clearing
the ceiling. “You would like some friendly companionship on your way home.” “If you could spare the time,” Flinx said
gratefully. “I really believe that we’re finished with these people.” He did
not explain that he thought they were all dead. No need to complicate matters.
“But we’d sure be a lot more comfortable if you’d come with us while we checked
out the shop.” “I’ll be just a moment,” Symm assured him. “Wait
here.” He vanished into a back room. When he returned, it was in the company of
a tall young woman. He spoke softly to her for a minute, she nodding in
response, then rejoined his visitors. He was wearing a slickertic not quite
large enough to protect a medium-sized building. “I’m ready,” he told them. “Nakina will watch business
until I return. Unless you’d rather rest a while longer.” “No, no.” Mother
Mastiff struggled to her feet. “I’ll rest when I’m back home in my shop.” It was not far from Small Symm’s place to the side
street where Mother Mastiff’s stall was located. With Symm carrying her, they
made good time. “Seems empty,” the giant commented as he gently set
the old woman on her feet. It was evening. Most of the shops were already
shuttered, perhaps because the rain was falling harder than usual. In the
marketplace, weather was often the most profound of economic arbiters. “I guess it’s all right.” Mother Mastiff stepped
toward the front door. “Wait a minute.” Flinx put out an arm to hold her
back. “Over there, to the left of the shop.” Symm and Mother Mastiff stared in the indicated
direction. “I don’t see anything,” the giant said. “I thought I saw movement.” Flinx glanced down at
Pip. The flying snake dozed peacefully beneath the cover of the slickertic. Of
course, the snake’s moods were often unpredictable, but his continued calm was
a good sign. Flinx gestured to his right. The giant nodded and moved off like a
huge shadow to conceal himself in the darkness next to the vacant shop off to
the left. Flinx went to his right-to starboard, as Lauren might have said. It had
taken him awhile to forgive her for leaving-and Mother Mastiff for letting her
leave-while he was still sound asleep. He wondered what she was doing, yet the
memory of her was already beginning to fade. It would take some- what longer to
escape his emotions. Mother Mastiff waited and watched as friend and son
moved off in opposite directions. She did not mind standing in the rain. It was
Drallarian rain, which was different somehow from the rain that fell anywhere
else in the universe. Flinx crept warily along the damp plastic walls of
the shop fronts, making his way toward the alley that meandered behind their
home. If the movement he thought he had spied signified the presence of some
scout awaiting their return, he did not want that individual reporting back to
his superiors until Flinx had drained him of in- formation. There-movement again, and no mistaking it this time!
It was moving away from him. He increased his pace, keeping to the darkest
shadows. The stiletto that slept in his boot was in his right hand now, cold
and familiar. Then a cry in the darkness ahead and a looming,
massive shape. Flinx rushed forward, ready to help even though it was unlikely
the giant would need any assistance. Then something new, something unexpected. Nervous laughter? “Hello, Flinx-boy.” In the dim light, Flinx made out
the friendly face of their neighbor Arrapkha. “Hello, yourself.” Flinx put the stiletto back where
it belonged. “You gave me reason to worry. I thought we were finished with
shapes in the night.” “I gave you reason to worry?” The craftsman
indicated the bulk of Small Symm standing behind him. “I’m sorry,” Symm said apologetically. “We couldn’t
see who you were.” “You know now.” He looked back toward Flinx. “I’ve
been watching your shop for you.” Symm went to reassure Mother Mastiff. “You
know, making sure no one broke in and tried to steal anything.” “That was good of you,” Flinx said as they started
back toward the street. “Ifs good to see you back, Flinx-boy. I’d given you
up not long after you left.” “Then why have you kept watching the shop?” The older man grinned. “Couldn’t stop hoping, I
guess. What was it all about, anyway?” “Something illegal that Mother Mastiff was involved
in many years back,” Flinx explained. “She didn’t go into the details. Just
told me that revenge was involved.” “Some people have long memories,” Arrapkha said,
nodding knowingly. “Since you have returned well and safe, I presume that you
made a peace with the people who kidnaped your mother?” “We concluded the business,” Flinx said tersely. They returned to the street, where Small Symm and
Mother Mastiff waited to greet them. “So it was you, Arrapkha. Ye ignorant fleurm,
worrying us like that.” She smiled. “Never thought I’d be glad to see ye,
though.” “Nor I you,” the woodworker confessed. He gestured
toward Flinx. “That boy of yours is as persistent as he is foolhardy. I did my
best to try and convince him not to go rushing off after you.” “I would have told him the same,” she said, “and he
would have ignored me, too. Headstrong, he be.” She al- lowed herself a look of
pardonable pride. Flinx was simply embarrassed. “And fortunate it is for me.” “Old acquaintances and bad business.” Arrapkha
waggled an admonishing finger at her. “Beware of old acquaintances and bad
business and deeds left unresolved.” “Ah, yes.” She changed the subject. “Been watching
the old place for me, eh? Then I’d best check the stock care- fully as soon as
we’re inside.” They both laughed. “If you think it’s all right for me to leave,” Small
Symm murmured. “Nakina has a bad temper, and that’s not good for business.” Mother Mastiff looked thoughtful. “If our friend
here insists he’s kept a close eye on the shop . . .” “I’ve watched and watched,” Arrapkha insisted.
“Unless they’ve tunneled in, no one’s gone inside since your boy left to look
for you.” “No tunneling under these streets,” she observed
with a grin “They’d hit the sewers.” She looked back up at their escort. “Thank
ye, Symm. Ye can rim back to your lovely den of iniquity.” “It’s hardly that,” he replied modestly. “Someday if
I work hard, perhaps.” Flinx extended a hand, which vanished in the giant’s
grasp. “My thanks, also, Symm.” “No trouble. Glad to help.” The giant tamed and
lumbered away into the night. The three friends moved to the front door. Mother
Mastiff placed her right palm against the lock plate. It clicked immediately,
and the door slid aside, admitting them. Flinx activated the lights, enabling
them to see clearly that the stall area was apparently untouched. Stock
remained where they had left it, gleaming and reassuringly familiar in the
light. “Looks to be the same as when I left,” Mother
Mastiff observed gratefully. “Looks to be the same as it did ten years ago.”
Arrapkha shook his head slowly. “You don’t change much, Mother Mastiff, and
neither does some of your stock. I think you’re too fond of certain pieces to
sell them.” “There be nothing I’m too fond of not to sell,” she
shot back, “and my stock changes twice as fast as that pile of beetle-eaten
garbage ye try to pass off on unsuspecting customers as handicrafts.” “Please, no fighting,” Flinx implored them. “I’m
tired of fighting.” “Fighting?” Arrapkfaa said, looking surprised. “We’re not fighting, boy,” Mother Mastiff told him.
“Don’t ye know by now how old friends greet one an- other? By seeing who can
top the other’s insults.” To show him that she meant what she said, she smiled
fondly at Arrapkha. The woodworker wasn’t a bad sort at all. Only a little
slow. The living quarters they found likewise untouched:
in total chaos, exactly as Flinx had last seen it. “Housekeeping,” Mother Mastiff grumbled. “I’ve
always hated housekeeping. Still, someone has to get this place cleaned up, and
better me than ye, boy. Ye have no touch for domesticity, I fear.” “Not tonight, Mother.” Flinx yawned. His initial
sight of his own bed had expanded until it filled the whole room. “No, not tonight, boy. I must confess to being just
the slightest bit tired.” Flinx smiled to himself. She was on the verge of physical
collapse, quite ready to go to sleep wherever her body might fall, but she was
damned if she would show weakness in front of Arrapkha lest it damage her image
of invincibility. “Tomorrow well put things to rights. I work better
in the daytime, anyway.” She tried not to look toward her own bedroom, waiting
on Arrapkha. “Well, then, I will leave you,” the craftsman said. “Again, it’s good to see you back and healthy. The
street wasn’t the same without you.” “We monuments are hard to get rid of,” Mother
Mastiff said. “Perhaps we’ll see ye tomorrow.” “Perhaps,” Arrapkha agreed. He turned and left them,
making certain that the front door locked behind him. Once outside, Arrapkha drew his slickertic tight
around his head and shoulders as he hurried back to his own shop. He had no
more intention of turning his friends over to the authorities, as he had been
instructed, than he did of cutting the price of his stock fifty percent for
some rich merchant. He would not hinder the police, but he would do nothing to
assist them, either. He could always plead ignorance, for which he was famed in
this part of the marketplace. So tired; they looked so tired, he thought. It was
the first time he could remember Mother Mastiff looking her age. Even the boy,
who, though slight of build, had never before seemed exhausted by any labor,
appeared completely worn out. Even that lethal pet that always rode his
shoulder had looked tired. Well, he would give them a few days to get their
house in order and regain their strength. Then he would surprise them by taking
them to Magrim’s for some tea and tall sandwiches and would tell them of the
mysterious visit of the two Peaceforcers to their little street. It would be
interesting to see what Mother Mastiff would make of that. She might welcome
the interest of the authorities in her case-and then again, she might not. Not
knowing the details of her history, Arrapkha could not be sure, which was why
he had elected not to help those offworld visitors. Yes, he decided firmly. Wait a few days and let them
rest up before springing that new information on them. No harm in that, surely.
He opened the door to his own shop and shut it against the night and the rain. One day passed, then another, and gradually the shop
again assumed the appearance of home as the mess the kidnapers had made was
cleaned up. Comfortable in such familiar surroundings, Mother Mastiff regained
her strength rapidly. She was such a resilient old woman, Flinx thought with
admiration. For his part, by the second day he was once again venturing out
into his familiar haunts, greeting old friends, some of whom had heard of the
incident and some of whom had not, but never straying far from the shop lest
even at this late date and in spite of his beliefs some surviving members of the
organization that had abducted Mother Mastiff return, still seeking their
revenge. Nothing materialized, however, to give any credence
to such anxieties. By the third day, he had begun to relax mentally as well as
physcially. It was amazing, he thought, as he settled in that night, the things
that one misses the most during a long absence. Odd how familiar and friendly
one’s own bed becomes when one has had to sleep elsewhere.... It was the hate that woke Pip. Cold and harsh as the
most brutal day winter could muster on the ice world of Tran-ky-ky, it shook
the flying snake from a sound sleep. It was directed not at the minidrag but at
its master. Pink and blue coils slid soundlessly clear of the
thermal blanket. Flinx slept on, unaware of his pet’s activity. Several hours
remained until sunrise. Pip rested and analyzed. Examining the minidrag
lying at the foot of the bed, an observer might have believed it to be a
reasoning being. It was not, of course, but neither was its mental capacity
inconsequential. Actually, no one was quite sure how the mind of the Alaspinian
miniature dragon worked or what profound cogitations it might be capable of,
since no xenobiologist dared get close enough to study it. Blue and pink wings opened, pleats expanding, and
with a gentle whirr the snake took to the air. It hovered high over its
master’s head, worried, searching, trying to pin- point the source of the
unrelenting malignancy that was poisoning its thoughts. The hate was very near.
Worse, it was familiar. There was a curved roof vent that Pip had
appropriated for its own private comings and goings. The snake darted toward
it, the wings folding up at the last second to allow the slim body to slip
through the curving tube. Nothing much bigger than a mouse could have slipped
through that vent. With wings folded flat against its muscular sides, the
minidrag made the passage easily. Pip emerged atop the roof into the light,
early-morning rain. Up that way the bate lay, to the north, up the alley. Wings
unfolded and fanned the air. The minidrag circled once above the shop, paused
to orient itself, then buzzed determinedly into the opening nearby where the
alley emerged into cloudlight. It braked to a halt and hovered, hissing at the
mental snarl that had drawn it. “Over here pretty, pretty,” coaxed a voice. “You
know who hates your master, don’t you? And you know what we’ll do to him if we
get the chance.” The flying snake shot through the partly open
doorway into the hate-filled room beyond. Two humans awaited it with deadly
calm. Never would they have the chance to harm the minidrag’s master. Never! A thin stream of venom spewed from the roof of the
flying snake’s upper jaw and struck toward the nearest of the vicious bipeds.
It never reached the man. Something was between him and Pip, something hard and
transparent. The venom contacted it, hissed in the still air as it started to
eat at the transparent shield. Startled, the two monsters seated behind the
shield flinched and began to rise. But the door opening on the alley had already
slammed shut behind the minidrag. Suddenly, a strange, sweet smell filled the
room. Wingbeats slackened and grew weak. Twin eyelids fluttered and closed. The
flying snake flopped about on the floor like a fish out of water, wings beating
futilely against the plastic as it gasped for breath. “Be careful,” a distant voice warned. “We don’t want
to overdose it. It’s no good to us dead.” “I’d sooner see it dead and take our chances with
the subject,” another said. “We need every hold we can manage, including the
possibility raised by this little devil.” The voices faded. Soon the flying snake had stopped
moving. Long minutes passed before a man dared to enter the sealed room. He was
dressed head to toe in a protective suit. His eyes were anxious behind the
transparent visor. With the long metal prod he carried he poked once, twice at
the comatose minidrag. It jerked convulsively in response to the touches, but
otherwise displayed no sign of life. The man took a deep breath and set the long prod
aside as he bent to pick up the thin body. It hung limply in his gloved hands
as he inspected it. “Still breathing,” he declared to the people pressed
close to the transparent wall. “Good. Get it in the cage quick,” said the shorter
of the two observers. Her companion was studying the hole where the venom had
finally eaten through the protective shield. “I’d like to see a molecular breakdown on this
stuff,” he murmured, careful to keep his fingers clear of the still-sizzling
edges of the ragged gap. “Anything that can eat through pancrylic this fast . .
.” He shook his head in disbelief. “I don’t see how the venom sacs can contain
the stuff without dissolving right through the creature’s jaw.” “You’d need a toxicologist and biochemist to explain
it, if they could,” said the woman standing next to him, like- wise taking a
moment to examine the hole. “Perhaps there’s more to it than just a
straightforward poison. The snake’s mouth may hold several separate sacs whose
con- tents mix only when it’s spraying someone.” “Makes sense.” The man turned away from the shield
that had nearly failed them. “We better get moving. The subject may awaken any
minute now. Be sure you keep the monster thoroughly narcotized.” “Is that necessary?” She frowned. “Surely the cage
will hold it.” “That’s what we thought about the wall. The cage is
tougher, but we don’t want to take any chances. I don’t want our guest spitting
his way free while we’re asleep in our beds.” “No, we sure as hell don’t.” The woman shuddered
slightly. “I’ll take charge of it myself.” “I was hoping you’d say that.” Cruachan smiled to
him- self. He was intimately familiar with the theories that at- tempted to
explain the special bonds that could spring into being between a catalyst
creature such as the minidrag and one of the Talented. Certainly the link that
existed between this creature and the boy known as Number Twelve was as
powerful as any of the imperfectly recorded cases he had studied. It was not
unreasonable to suppose that it could be stronger than the affection bond
between the boy and his adoptive mother. They came at him without warning during his final
period of REM sleep, when he was defenseless. They sprang into existence out of
emptiness, laughing at him, tormenting him with feelings and sensations he
could not define or understand. Nightmares. Someone was twisting a wire around his brain, com-
pressing it tighter and tighter until it seemed certain that his eyes would
explode out of his head and fly across the room. He lay in his bed, twitching slightly,
his eyelids quivering, as they did their work on him and took ad- vantage of
his helpless, unconscious mind. “This batch was worse than most; twisting, abstract
forms, dark swirling colors, and himself somehow in the middle of them all,
racing down a long, ominous corridor. At the end of that corridor lay his
salvation, he knew, and almost as important, answers. Understanding and safety. But the faster he ran, the slower he advanced. The
floor that was not a floor dissolved beneath his feet, dropping him like some
relativistic Alice down a rabbit hole of space-time distortions, while the far
end of the corridor and its promises of light and comprehension receded into
the wastes overhead. He woke up with a silent start and glanced rapidly
around the room. Only after he convinced himself of its reality did he begin to
relax. It was the right room, his room, the one he had
lived in most of his life: tiny, spartan, comfortable. The patter of morning
rain was music on the roof, and faint daylight filtered through the window
above his bed. He swung his legs out clear of the blanket and rubbed both
throbbing eyes with his fingers. The fingers abruptly ceased their ministrations, and
he looked back to the bed. Something was wrong. “Pip?” The flying snake was not coiled in its
familiar position at the top of the pillow, nor was it underneath. Flinx pulled
back the blanket, then bent to peer under the bed. “C’mon boy, don’t hide from
me this morning. I’m worn out, and my head is killing me.” “There was no familiar hissing response to his
confession. He prowled the room’s meager confines, at first puzzled, then
concerned. At last, he stood on the bed and shouted toward the air vent
overhead. “Pip, breakfast!” No comforting hum of brightly hued wings reached him
from beyond. He found a piece of wire and used it to probe the vent. It was
clear to the outside. He left his room and frantically started an
inspection of the rest of the living quarters. Mother Mastiff stood by the
convection stove, cooking something redolent of pepper and less exotic spices.
“Something the matter, boy?” “It’s Pip.” Flinx peered beneath recently righted
furniture, moved bowls, and dropcloths. “I gathered as much from the hollering ye were doing
in your bedroom,” she said sardonically. “Disappeared again, has he?” “He never stays out through morning when he takes a
solo night flight. Never.” “Always a first time, even for monsters,” Mother
Mastiff said, shrugging and
concentrating on her
cooking. “Wouldn’t upset me if the little nastiness never did come
back.” “Shame on you. Mother!” Flinx said, his tone
agonized. “He saved my life, and probably yours, too.” “So I’m an ungrateful old Yax’m,” she snorted. “Ye
know my feelings toward your beast.” Flinx finished inspecting her room, then resolutely
stormed back to his own and began dressing. “I’m going out to look for him.” Mother Mastiff frowned. “Breakfast ready soon. Why
bother yourself, boy? Likely it’ll be back soon enough, more’s the pity.
Besides, if it has got its slimy little self stuck someplace, you’re not likely
to find him.” “He could just be in the alley behind the shop,”
Flinx argued, “and I can hear him even when I can’t see him.” “Suit yourself,
boy.” “And don’t wait breakfast on me.” “Think I’ll starve meself on your account? Much less
on account of some devil-wing.” She had long ago given up arguing with him.
When he made up his mind about some- thing-well, one might as well wish for the
planet’s rings to be completed. He was a dutiful-enough son in most ways, but
he simply refused to be restricted. “It’ll be here when ye get back,” she said softly,
checking the containers and lowering their ambient temperatures fifty degrees.
“Ye can warm it up for your shiftless self.” “Thanks, Mother.” Despite her contorting attempt to
avoid him, he managed to plant a hurried kiss on one leathery cheek. She wiped
at it, but not hard, as she watched him dash from the shop. For an instant, she thought of telling him about
what she had learned days ago up in the forest. About those strange Meliorare
people and their intentions toward him. Then she shrugged the idea off. No,
they were well clear of the horrid folk, and from the glimpse she had of their
camp, they would not be bothering her boy ever again. As to what she had learned of his history, it would
be better to keep that secret for a few years yet. Knowing his stubborn
impulsiveness, such information might send him running off in all sorts of
dangerous directions. Much better not to say anything for a while. When he
reached a reasonable age, twentythree or so, she could let on what she had
learned about his background. By then, he would have taken over management of
the shop, perhaps married. Settled down some to a nice, sensible, quiet life. She tasted the large pot, winced. Too little saxifrage.
She reached for a small shaker. “Pip! To me, boy!” Still no blue and pink flash
enlivening the sky, still no rising hum. Now where would he get to? Flinx
mused. He knew the minidrag was fond of the alley behind the shop. That was
where he had first encountered the flying snake, after all, and to a snake’s
way of thinking, the alley was usually full of interesting things to .eat. For
all the minidrag’s aerial agility, a box tumbling from the crest of a garbage
heap or a rolling container could easily pin it to the ground. Flinx knew that
no stranger was likely to get within ten meters of a trapped snake. Might as well try the first, he decided. Slipping
down the narrow space separating Mother Mastiff’s shop from the vacant
structure next to it, he soon found himself in the alley-way. It was damp and
dark, its overall aspect dismal as usual. He cupped his hands to his mouth, called out, “Pip?” “Over here, boy,” said a soft voice. Flinx tensed, but his hand did not grab for the
knife concealed in his boot. Too early. A glance showed that his retreat
streetward was still unblocked, as was the section of alley behind him. Nor did
the individual standing motionless beneath the archway in front of him look
particularly threatening. Flinx stood his ground and debated with himself,
then finally asked, “If you know where my pet is, you can tell me just as
easily from where you’re standing, and I can hear you plainly from where I’m
standing.” “I know where your pet is,” the man admitted. His
hair was entirely gray, Flinx noted. “I’ll take you to it right now, if you
wish.” Flinx stalled. “Is he all right? He hasn’t gotten
himself into some kind of trouble?” The little man shook his head and smiled pleasantly.
“No, he isn’t in trouble, and he’s just fine. He’s sleeping, in fact.” “Then why can’t you bring him out?” Flinx inquired.
He continued to hold his position, ready to charge the man or race for the
street as the situation dictated. “Because I can’t,” the man said. “Really, I can’t.
I’m just following orders, you know.” “Whose orders?” Flinx asked suspiciously. Suddenly,
events were becoming complicated again. The speaker’s age and attitude abruptly
impacted on him. “Are you with the people who abducted my mother? Because if you’re
trying to get revenge on her for whatever she was involved in years ago by
harming me, it’s not going to work.” “Take it easy, now,” the man said. A voice Flinx
could not hear whispered to the speaker from behind the door. “For heaven’s sake, Anders, don’t get him excited!” “I’m trying not to,” the elderly speaker replied
through clenched teeth. To Flinx he said more loudly, “No one wants to harm you
or your pet, boy. You can have my word on that even if you don’t think it’s
worth anything. My friends and I mean you and your pet only well.” He did not
respond to Flinx’s brief allusion to his adoptive mother’s past. “Then if you mean us only well,” Flinx said, “you
won’t object if I take a minute to go and reassure-“ The speaker took a step forward. “There’s no need to
disturb your parent, boy. In a moment she’ll have her shop open and the crowd
will ensure her safety, if that’s what you’re concerned about. Why alarm her
needlessly? We just want to talk to you. Besides,” he added darkly, taking a
calculated risk, “you don’t have any choice but to listen to me. Not if you
want to see your pet alive again.” “It’s only a pet snake.” Flinx affected an air of
indifference he didn’t feel. “What if I refuse to go with you? There are plenty
of other pets to be had.” The speaker shook his head slowly, his tone
maddeningly knowledgeable. “Not like
this one. That flying snake’s a part of
you, isn’t it?” “How do you know that?” Flinx asked. “How do you
know how I feel about him?” “Because despite what you may think of me right
now,” the speaker said, feeling a little more confident, “I am wise in the ways
of certain things. If you’ll let me, I’ll share that knowledge with you.” Flinx hesitated, torn between concern for Pip and a
sense of foreboding that had nothing to do with his peculiar Talents. But the
man was right: there was no choice. He wouldn’t chance Pip’s coming to harm
even though he couldn’t have said why. “All right.” He started toward the speaker. “I’ll go
with you. You’d better be telling the truth.” “About not wishing to harm you or your pet?” The
smile grew wider. “I promise you that I am.” Try as he might, Flinx couldn’t sense any inimical
feelings emanating from the little man. Given the erratic nature of his
abilities, that proved nothing-for all Flinx could tell, the man might be
planning murder even as he stood there smiling. Up close, the speaker looked
even less formidable. He was barely Flinx’s height, and though not as ancient
as Mother Mastiff, it was doubtful he would be much opposition in a
hand-to-hand fight. “This is my friend and associate Stanzel,” the man
said. An equally elderly woman stepped out of the shadows. She seemed tired but
forced herself to stand straight and look determined. “I don’t want to hurt you, either, boy.” She studied
him with unabashed curiosity. “None of us do.” “So there are still more of you,” Flinx murmured in
confusion. “I don’t understand all this. Why do you have to keep persecuting
Mother Mastiff and me? And now Pip, too? Why?” “Everthing will be explained to you,” the woman
assured him, “if you’ll just come with us.” She gestured up the alley. Flinx strode along between them, noting as he did so
that neither of them appeared to be armed. That was a good sign but a puzzling
one. His stiletto felt cold against his calf. He looked longingly back toward
the shop. If only he could have told Mother Mastiff! But, he reminded himself,
as long as he returned by bedtime, she wouldn’t worry herself. She was used to
his taking off on unannounced explorations. “Mark me words,” she would declaim repeatedly, “that
curiosity of yours will be the death of ye!” If it didn’t involve striking against Mother
Mastiff, though, then what did these people want with him? It was important to
them, very important. If not, they wouldn’t have risked an encounter with his
deadly pet. Despite their age, he still feared them, if only for the fact that
they had apparently managed to capture Pip, a feat beyond the capabilities of
most. But something, an attitude perhaps, marked these
people as different from the usual run-of-the-mill marketplace cutthroats. They
were different from any people he had ever encountered. Their coolness and
indifference combined with their calm professionalism to frighten him. “They alley opened onto a side street, where an
aircar waited. The old man unlocked it and gestured for him to enter. As Flinx
started to step into the little cab, he experienced one of those mysterious,
unannounced bursts of emotional insight. It was brief, so brief he was unsure
he had actually felt it. It wiped out his own fear, leaving him more confused
and uncertain than ever. He might be afraid for Pip and perhaps even a little
for himself, but for some unknown reason, these two outwardly relaxed,
supremely confident individuals were utterly terrified of him! Chapter Sixteen
Cruachan studied the readouts carefully. The section
of the old warehouse in which they had established them-selves was a poor
substitute for the expensively outfitted installation they had laboriously
constructed far to the north. He did not dwell on the loss. Years of
disappointment had inured him to such setbacks. The machines surrounding him
had been hastily assembled and linked together. Wiring was exposed everywhere,
further evidence of haste and lack of time to install equipment properly. It
would have to do, however. He was not disappointed. In spite of all their
problems, they appeared on the verge of accomplishing what they had intended to
do on this world, albeit not in the manner originally planned. It seemed that
the presence of the Alaspinian immigrant was going to turn to their ad-
vantage. For the first time since they had placed them- selves in orbit around
the world, he felt more than merely hopeful. His confidence came from Anders’
and Stanzel’s last report. The subject,
accompanying them quietly, seemed reluctantly willing to cooperate, but had
thus far displayed no sign of unexpected threatening abilities. While a potentially lethal act, the taking of the subject’s
pet had turned out far more successful than the attempted adjustment of the
subject’s adoptive parent. Cruachan now conceded that that had been a mistake.
If only their information had included mention of the catalyst creature in the
first place! He did not blame the informant, though. It was likely that the
minidrag came into the subject’s possession subsequent to the filing of the
informant’s report. He felt like an old tooth, cracked and worn down by
overuse and age. But with the semisymbiotic pet now under their control, the
subject would have to accede to their wishes. There could no longer be any
consideration of at- tempting to influence the boy externally. They would have
to implant the electronic synapses intended ‘for his parent in the lad’s own
brain. Direct control posed some risks, but as far as Cruachan and his
associates could see, they had no other choice. Cruachan was glad the case was
nearing conclusion. He was very tired. It was raining harder than usual for the season when
the little aircar pulled up outside the warehouse. Flinx regarded the place with distaste. The section of Drallar
out toward the shuttleport was bloated with stark, blocky monuments to bad
business and overconsumption, peopled mostly with machines-dark, uninviting,
and alien. He had no thought of changing his mind, of making a
break for the nearest side street or half-open doorway. Whoever these people
were, they were not ignorant. They had correctly surmised the intensity of his
feelings for Pip, which was why they had not bound him and carried no arms. He still couldn’t figure out what they wanted with
him. If they were not lying to him and truly meant him no harm, then of what
use could he be to them? If there was .one thing he couldn’t stand, it was
unanswered questions. He wanted explanations almost as badly as he wanted to
see Pip. They seemed very sure of themselves. Of course, that
no weapons were in evidence did not mean no weapons were around. He could not
square their fear of him with the absence of armament. Perhaps, he mused, they
were afraid of him because they feared he might reveal what he knew of the
kidnaping to the local authorities. Maybe that was what they wanted from. him:
a promise to remain silent. But somehow that didn’t make much sense, either. “I wish you’d tell me what you want with me,” he
said aloud, “and what’s going on.” “It’s not our place to explain.” The man glanced at
his companion and then said, as if unable to suppress his own curiosity, “Have
you ever heard of the Meliorate Society?” Flinx shook his head. “No. I know what the word
means, though. What’s it got to do with me?” “Everything.” He seemed on the verge of saying more,
but the old woman shushed him. The building they entered was surrounded by
similarly nondescript edifices. They were off the main shuttleport accessway.
Flinx had seen only a few people about from the time they had entered the area.
No one was in the dingy hallway. They rode an elevator to the third floor. His
escorts led him through broad, empty corridors, past high-ceilinged storage
rooms filled with plasticine crates and drums. Finally, they halted before a
small speaker set into the plastic of an unmarked door. Words were exchanged
between Flinx’s escort and someone on the other side, and the door opened to
admit them. He found himself in still another room crammed full
of bundles and boxes. What set it apart from a dozen similar rooms was the
right-hand wall. Stacked against it was an impressive array of
electronics. Empty crates nearby hinted
at recent and hasty unpacking and setup. The con- soles were powered-up and
manned. Their operators spared curious glances for the new arrivals before
returning their attention to their equipment. Save for their uniformly grim
expressions, they looked like retirees on a holiday outing. Two people emerged from a door at the rear of the
room. They were soon joined by a third-a tall, silver- haired, ruggedly
handsome man.’ He carried himself like a born leader, and Flinx concentrated on
him immediately. The man smiled down at Flinx. Even though he was close to
Mother Mastiff’s age, the man held himself straight. If he was subject to the
infirmities of old age, he did a masterful job of concealing them. Vanity or
will? Flinx wondered. He sought the man’s emotions and drew the usual blank.
Nor could he feel anything of Pip’s presence in the room or nearby. Even as the tall senior was shaking his hand and
mouthing platitudes, Flinx was searching for the most likely escape route.
There seemed to be only one exit: the door through which he had entered. He had
no idea where the door at the far end of the room led, but suspected that
freedom was not one of the possibilities. “What a great pleasure to finally meet you, my boy,”
the old man was saying. His grip was firm. “We’ve gone to a great deal of
trouble to arrive at this meeting. I would rather not have had to proceed in
this fashion, but circum- stances conspired to force my hand.” “It was you, then”-Flinx gestured at the others-“who
were responsible for abducting my mother?” Cruachan relaxed. There was no danger in this
skinny, innocent boy. Whatever abilities he might possess remained dormant,
awaiting proper instruction and develop- ment. Certainly his attitude was
anything but threatening. “I asked him,” the man who had brought Flinx from
the marketplace reported, “if he’d heard of the Society. He said no.” “No reason for him to,” Cruachan observed. “His life
has been restricted, his horizons limited.” Flinx ignored that appraisal of his limitations.
“Where’s Pip?” “Your pet, I assume? Yes.” The tall man turned and
called out toward the rear doorway. The section of wall containing the door
creaked as hidden winches pulled it aside. Beyond lay still another of the
endless series of storage chambers, packed with the usual containers and drums
and crates. On a table in the forefront stood a transparent cube, perhaps a
meter square, topped with several small metal tanks. Hoses ran from the tanks
into the cube. To the left of the table stood a nervous-looking old
man holding a small, flat control box. His thumb was pressed hard against one
of the buttons set in the box. His eyes shifted regularly from the cube to
Flinx and back to the cube. Pip lay in the bottom of the cube, coiled into
itself apparently deep in sleep. Flmx took a step forward. Cruachan put out a
hand to hold him back. “Your pet is resting comfortably. The air in the
cage has been mixed with a mild soporific. Westhoff is regulating the mixture
and flow of gases even as we speak. H you were to try anything foolish, he
would increase the flow from the tanks before you could possibly free your pet.
You see, the cage has been weld-sealed. There is no latch. “The adjusted normal atmosphere inside the cube will
be completely replaced by the narcoleptic gas, and your pet will be
asphyxiated. It would not take long. All West- hoff has to do is press
violently on the button his thumb is caressing. If necessary, he will throw his
body across it. So you see, there is nothing you could do to prevent him from
carrying out his assignment.” Flinx listened quietly even as he was gauging the
distance between himself and the cage. The elderly man holding the control box
gazed grimly back at him. Even if be could somehow avoid the hands that would
surely reach out to restrain him, he did not see how he could open the cage and
free Pip. His stiletto would be useless against the thick pancrylic. “You’ve made your point,” he said finally. “What do
you want from me?” “Redemption,” Cruachan told him softly. “I don’t understand.” “You will eventually, I hope. For now, suffice for
you to know that we are interested in your erratic but unarguable abilities:
your Talent.” All Flinx’s preconceived ideas collapsed like sand
castles in a typhoon. “You mean you’ve gone through all this, kidnaping Mother
Mastiff and now Pip, just because you’re curious about my abilities?” He shook
his head in disbelief. “I would have done my best to satisfy you with- out your
having to go through all this trouble.” “It’s not quite that simple. You might say one
thing, even believe it, and then your mind might react other- wise.” Crazier
and crazier, Flinx thought dazedly. “I don’t “Just as well,” Cruachan murmured. “You are an
emotional telepath, is that not correct?” “I’m sensitive sometimes to what other people are
feeling, if that’s what you mean,” Flinx replied belligerently. “Nothing else? No precognitive abilities?
Telekinesis? True telepathy? Pyrokinesis? Dimensional perceptivity?” Plinx laughed at him, the sound sharpened by the
tension that filled the room. “I don’t even know what those words mean except
for telepathy. If by that you mean can I read other people’s minds, no. Only
sometimes their feelings. That other stuff, that’s all fantasy, isn’t it?” “Not entirely,” Cruachan replied softly, “not entirely.
“The potentials lie within every human mind, or so we of the Society believe.
When awakened, further stimuli, pro- vided through training and other means,
can bring such abilities to full life. That was the-“ He paused, his smile
returning. “As I said, someday you will understand everything,
I hope. For now, it will be sufficient if you will permit us to run some tests
on you. We wish to measure the probable limits of your Talent and test for
other possible hidden abilities as yet undeveloped.” “What kinds of tests?” Flinx regarded the tail man
warily. “Nothing elaborate. Measurements,
electroencephalotopography.” “That sounds elaborate to me.” “I assure you, there will be no discomfort. If
you’ll just come with me ...” He put a fatherly hand on Flinx’s shoulder. Flinx
flinched. There should have been a snake there, not an unfamiliar hand. Cruachan guided him toward the instruments. “I
promise you, give us twenty-four hours and you’ll have your pet restored to you
unharmed, and you’ll never have to go through this again.” “I don’t know,” Flinx told him. “I’m still not sure
of what you want from me.” It seemed to him that there was an awful lot of
instrumentation around for just a few simple tests, and some of it looked
almost familiar. Where had he seen that tendriled globe before? Over a table in a room far to the north, he realized
suddenly. What do I do? he thought frantically. He could not
lie down on that table, beneath those waiting tentacles. But if he hesitated,
what might they do to Pip out of impatience and anger? Unexpectedly, as his thoughts were tied in knots and
he tried to decide what to do next, a sudden surge of emotion burst into his
brain. There was hate and a little fear and a self-righteous anger that
bordered on the paranoiac. He looked up at Cruachan. The older man smiled
pleasantly down at him, then frowned as he saw the expression that had come
over the subject’s face. “Is some- thing wrong?” Hinx did not reply, methodically searching every
face in the room. None of them seemed to be the source of the feelings he was
receiving. And they were getting steadily stronger, more intense. They
came-they came from- He looked sharply toward the main entrance. “Nobody move!” snapped a determined voice. The
couple who burst through the door, having quietly circum- vented the lock, were
complete strangers to Flinx. A middle-aged pair dressed like offworld tourists,
each holding a gun bigger than a pistol and longer than a rifle carefully
balanced in both hands, they surveyed the startled occupants of the storage
chamber. Flinx did not recognize their weapons. That was un-
usual. His learning expeditions through the marketplace had made him familiar
with most personal armament. But these were new to him. As new as this couple.
They looked unrelentingly average. There was nothing average about the way they
moved, however, or gave commands or held those peculiar guns. The Meliorares
certainly seemed familiar with them. “MO Section, Commonwealth Peaceforce,” the man
barked. “All of you are under government detention as of this moment.” He
grinned crookedly, almost savagely. “The charges against you, the specifics of
which I’m sure you’re all quite familiar with, are many and varied. I don’t
think I have to go into details.” Flinx started gratefully toward them. “I don’t know
how you people found me, but I’m sure glad to see you.” “Hold it right there.” The woman shifted her weapon
toward him. The expression on her face assured Plinx she was ready to shoot him
if he took so much as another half step toward her. He froze, hurt and
confused. There was something new there, partly in her eyes
but also in her mind: not so much fear as a kind of twisted hatred, a loathing.
The emotion was directed squarely at him. It was so new, so alien and
sickening, that he didn’t know how to react. He knew only that his would-be
saviors held no more affection for him, and perhaps even less in the way of
good intentions) than this insane society of Meliorare people. His confusion was being replaced by anger, a frantic
fury born of frustration and despair, compounded by helplessness and
desperation. Through no fault of his own, de- siring only to be left alone, he
had become the focal point of forces beyond his control, forces that extended
even be- yond his world. And he didn’t know how, couldn’t begin to think how to
deal with them. Through all the confusion came one lucid
realization: he wasn’t as grown-up as he had thought. Near the back room the man named Westhoff had gone unnoticed
by the Peaceforcers. He did not linger. Putting aside the control box he
commenced a cautious retreat, utilizing crates and containers to make good his
escape. Pressure removed, the button he had been holding
down rebounded. “Over against that empty packing and away from the
consoles. All of you,” the woman commanded them, gesturing meaningfully with
her gun. Rising from their seats and showing empty hands, the Meliorares
hurried to comply with her order. “Anybody touches a switch,” the other Peaceforcer
warned them, “it’ll be the last thing he ever touches.” The woman threw Flinx a hard look. “Hey, you too.
Move it.” Revulsion emanated from her. Disgust and pity washed over Flinx in
waves. She was broadcasting them all. Flinx tried to squeeze the degrading
emotions out of his mind. “I’m not with them,” he protested. “I’m not part of
this.” “I’m afraid that you are, boy, whether you like it
or not,” she told him. “You’ve caused a lot of trouble. But don’t worry.” She
tried to smile. The result was a discomfiting parody. “Everything’s going to be
all right. You’re going to be fixed up so you can live a normal life.” A buzzer suddenly roared to life on one of the
unattended consoles, filling the room with insistent discordance. Cruachan
stared dumbly at it, then at Flinx, then at the Peaceforcers. “For heaven’s sake, don’t threaten him!” “Threaten me?” Flinx was almost crying now, ignoring
Cruachan’s sudden terror, the buzzing, everything, as he spoke to the female
Peaceforcer. “What does he mean, threaten me? What did you mean when you said
you’re going to have me fixed up? I’m fine” “Maybe you are, and maybe you aren’t,” she replied,
“but these Meliorares,” she spat the word out, “seem to think otherwise. That’s
good enough for me. I’m no specialist. They’re the ones who’ll decide what’s to
bedone with you.” “And the sooner the better,” her companion added.
“Did you call for backup?” “As soon as we were sure.” She nodded. “It’ll take
them a few minutes to get here. This isn’t Brizzy, you know.” Flinx felt unsteady on his feet as well as in his
mind. Where he had expected rescue, there was only new hurt, fresh
indifference. No, worse than indifference, for these people saw him only as
some kind of deformed, unhealthy creature. There was no understanding for him
here in this room, not from his ancient persecutors or these new ar- rivals.
The universe, as represented by organizations illegal and legitimate, seemed
wholly against him. Fixed, the woman had said. He was going to be fixed.
But there was nothing wrong with him. Nothing! Why do they want to do these
unnamable things to me? he thought angrily. The pain and confusion produced results unnoticed by
the anxious antagonists facing each other across the floor. Prodded by the
powerful emotions emanating from his master, half-awakened by the thinning
quantity of soporific gas entering its cage, the flying snake awoke. It did not
need to search visually for Flinx- his outburst of hurt was a screaming beacon
marking his location. The snake’s wings remained folded as it quickly
examined its prison. Then it rose up and spat. In the confused babble that
filled the opposite end of the room, the quiet hissing of dissolving pancrylic
Went unnoticed. “Let’s get them outside.” The male Peaceforcer moved
to his right, separating from his companion to stand to one side of the
entrance while she moved to get behind the shifting group gathered in the
middle of the room. “Single file now,” she ordered them, gesturing with
her gun. “All of you. And please keep your hands in the air. No dramatic
last-minute gestures, please. I don’t like a mess.” Cruachan pleaded with her. “Please, we’re just a
bunch of harmless old scholars. This is our last chance. This boy”-and he
indicated Flinx- “may be our last opportunity to prove-“ “I’ve studied your history, read the reports.” “The woman’s voice was icy. “What you did is
beyond redemption or forgiving. You’ll get just what you deserve, and it won’t
be a chance to experiment further on this poor, mal- formed child.” “Please, somebody,” Flinx said desperately, “I don’t
know what you’re talking about! Won’t somebody tell me-?” “Somebody probably will,” she told him. “I’m not
privy to the details, and explanations aren’t my department.” She shuddered
visibly. “Fortunately.” “Rose, look out!” At the warning cry from her
companion, the woman whirled. There was something in the air, humming like a
giant bumblebee, moving rapidly from place to place: a pink and blue blur
against the ceiling. “What the hell’s that?” she blurted. Flinx started to answer, but Cruachan spoke first,
taking a step out of the line and toward the Peaceforcer. “That’s the boy’s
pet, I don’t know how it got out. It’s dangerous.” “Oh, it is, is it?” The muzzle of the short rifle
came up. “No!” Cruachan rushed toward her, the console buzzer
screaming in his ears. “Don’t!” The Peaceforcer reacted instinctively to the
unexpected charge. A brief burst of high-intensity sound struck the leader of
the Meliorares. His stomach exploded through his spine. No sound had come from
the gun. There had been only a slight punching noise when the burst had struck
home. One of the elderly women screamed. The Peaceforcer
cursed her overanxiousness and took aim at the source of her embarrassment. As
she pointed her weapon at Pip, all the fury and pain and anguish crashed
together inside Flinx’s head. “Pip! No’.” he yelled, rushing the woman. The other
Peaceforcer moved to cover his companion. Pip darted toward the rear of the storage
room. The woman’s gun tracked the minidrag as her finger started to tighten on
the trigger. Something happened. Cruachan’s eyes were still open.
A smile of satisfaction appeared on his face. Then he died. Night descended unexpectedly. Flinx was floating inside a giant bass drum. Someone
was pounding on it from both sides. The rhythm was erratic, the sound
soul-deafening. It hurt. Something was resting on his chest. I am lying on my
back, he thought. He raised his head to look down at him- self. Pip lay on the
slickertic, bruised but alive. The flying snake looked dazed. As consciousness
returned with a vengeance, the narrow tongue darted out repeatedly to touch
Plinx’s lips and nose. Content, the minidrag ceased its examination and crawled
from chest to shoulder. Flinx fought to sit up. There was something wrong with his balance. It made
the simple act of changing from a prone to a sitting position into a major
operation. Two things he noted immediately; it was cold, and rain was soaking
his face. Then his vision cleared and he saw the old man bending over him. For an instant the fear returned, but this was no
Meliorare. It was a kindly, unfamiliar face. The oldster was dressed very
differently from the Society members. There hadn’t been anything shabby about
their attire. This stranger was a refugee from a simpler life. “Are you all right, boy?” He looked over his
shoulder. “I think he’s all right.” Flinx looked past the old man. Several other
strangers were gathered behind him. It occurred to Flinx that he was the center
of their concerned curiosity. Strong arms reached toward him and helped him to
his feet. There were comments about the flying snake riding his shoulder. A younger man stepped forward. “You okay?” He
searched Flinx’s face. “I’ve had a little medical training.” “I’m not-1 think-“ Funny, his mouth wasn’t working
right. He swallowed. “What happened?” “You tell me,” said the unsmiling young man. He was
dressed neatly, much more so than the oldster who had first examined Flinx. A
yellow-and-green-striped slickertic covered what Flinx could see of a brightly
colored business suit. “I’m a factotum for the Subhouse of Grandier. I was
Just coming down to check on the arrival of a recent shipment from Evoria.” He
turned and pointed. “That’s our warehouse over there. I nearly tripped over
you.” “Me, too,” the oldster said, “though I’m no factotum
for anybody ‘cept my own house.” He grinned, showing missing teeth. Flinx brushed wet strands of hair from his eyes and
forehead. How had he gotten so wet? He couldn’t remember lying down in the
street. He couldn’t remember lying down at all. Now that those around him had quieted, the roar that
had filled his ears since he had regamed consciousness assumed deafening
proportions. Sirens sounded in counter- part. A couple of blocks away, flames shot skyward from
the top of a warehouse in defiance of the steady, light rain. A fire-control
skimmer hovered off to one side, its crew spraying the flames with
fire-retardant chemical foam. It combined with the rain to knock the blaze back
into itself. “Anyway,” the younger man next to Flinx continued as
they both watched the dying inferno, “I was just entering our office over there
when that building”-he nodded toward the flames-“blew up. If I remember aright,
it was four or five stories tall. There are only two left, as you can see. Top
three must’ve been incinerated in the first seconds. There’s charred debris all
over the streets. Knocked me right off my feet, just like you.” Flinx’s gaze
roved over the crowd that had gathered to watch the unusual sight. Large fires
were rare in Drallar. “Somebody’s let themselves in for a nest o’
trouble,” the oldster muttered. “Storing explosives or volatiles inside the
city limits. Bad business. Bad.” “Someone told me they felt it all the way to the
inurbs,” the younger man said conversationally. “I wonder what the devil was stored in there to cause an
explosion like that? Piece of building went past me like a shot. It’s stuck: in
our front door, no less, if you want to see it. As I was getting up, I saw you
lying there in the street. Either something mercifully small hit you or else
you got knocked out when your head hit the pavement.” “I didn’t see him get hit,” the oldster said. “Doesn’t mean anything, as fast as stuff was flying.”
The executive looked at Flinx. “I’ll bet you never even felt it.” “No,” Fllinx admitted, still terribly confused. “I
didn’t. But I’m okay now.” “You’re sure?” The man looked him over. “Funny.
Whatever it was that knocked you down must have whizzed right past. I don’t see
any bruises or cuts, though it looks like your pet got a little banged up.” “Can do you like that,” the oldster said. “ “Nother
centimeter and maybe you’d have a piece of metal sticking out of your head.
Conversation piece.” He chuckled. Flinx managed a weak grin. “I feel all right now.”
He swayed a moment, then held steady. The executive was still studying the minidrag coiled
around Flinx’s left shoulder. “That’s an interesting pet, all right.” “Everybody thinks so. Thanks for your concern, both
of you.” He staggered forward and joined the ring of spectators gawking at the
obliterated building. Slowly, reluctantly, his brain filled in the blank
spaces pockmarking his memory. Third floor, he’d been up there, and the
Meliorares ... Yes, the Meliorares-that was their name-were getting ready to
run some tests on him. Then the Peaceforcers had broken in, and Pip had gotten
loose, and one of them had been ready to shoot it, and the head Meliorare-Flinx
couldn’t remember his name, only his eyes-had panicked and rushed the
Peaceforcer, and Flinx remembered screaming desperately for the woman not to
fire, not to hurt Pip, not to, not to-! “Then he had awakened, soaked and stunned in the street,
an old man bending solicitously over him and Pip licking his mouth. His hand went to the back of his head, which
throbbed like the drum he had dreamed of being imprisoned inside. There was no
lump there, no blood, but it sure felt like something had whacked him good,
just as the executive had surmised. Only the pain seemed concentrated inside
his head. People were emerging from the burning warehouse:
medical personnel in white slickertics. They were escorting someone between
them. The woman’s clothes were shredded, and blood filled the gaps. Though she
walked under her own power, it took two medics to guide her. Suddenly, Flinx could feel her, for just an instant.
But there was no emotion there, no emotion or feelings of any kind. Then he
noticed her eyes. Her stare was vacant, blank, without motivation. Probably the
explosion had stunned her, he thought. She was the Peaceforcer who had been
about to shoot Pip. In a hospital that blankness would doubtless wear
off, he thought. Though it was almost as if she had been mind- wiped, and not
selectively, either. She looked like a walking husk of a human being. Flinx
turned away from her, uncomfortable without really knowing why, as she was put
in a hospital skimmer. The vehicle rose above the crowd and headed downtown,
siren screaming. Still he fought to reconstruct those last seconds in
the warehouse. What had happened? That unfortunate woman had been about to kill
Pip. Flinx had started toward her, protesting frantically, and her companion
had started to aim his own weapon at him. The weapons themselves functioned
noiselessly. Had the woman fired? Had the man? The instrumentation that had filled the storage
chamber required a lot of power. If the Peaceforcer had missed Flinx, perhaps
deliberately firing a warning shot, the bolt might have struck something
equally sensitive but far more volatile than human flesh. As a rule, warehouses
did not draw much power. There might have been delicately attuned fuel cells in
the room. The shot might have set them off. Or had one of the Meliorares-perhaps the one who had
fled from Pip’s cage-set off some kind of suicide device to keep his colleagues
from the disgrace of an official trial? He felt much better as he considered
both reason- able explanations. They fit what had happened, were very
plausible. . The only thing they failed to explain was bow he had
landed two blocks away, apparently unhurt except for a raging headache. Well, he had been moving toward the door, and
explosions could do funny things. The streets of the industrial district were
notorious for their potholes, which were usually full of rain water. And he was
soaked. Could the force of the explosion have thrown him into one deep enough
to cushion his fall and cause him to skip out again like a stone on a pond?
Obviously, that was what had happened. There was no other possible explanation. His head hurt. Local gendarmes were finally beginning to show up.
At their arrival Flinx instinctively turned away, leaving the crowd behind and
cradling Pip beneath his slickertic. He was glad that he hadn’t been forced to
use his own knife, felt lucky to be alive. Maybe now, at last, external forces
would leave him and Mother Mastiff and Pip in peace. He thought back a last time to that final instant in
the warehouse. The rage and desperation had built up in him until he had been
unable to stand it any longer and had charged blindly at the Peaceforcer about
to kill Pip. He hoped he would never be that angry again in his life. The crowd ignored the boy as he fled the scene; he
vanished into the comforting shadows and narrow alleys that filtered back
toward the central city. There was nothing remarkable about him and no reason
for the gendarmes to stop and question him. The old man and the executive who
had found him lying in the street had already forgot- ten him, engrossed in the
unusual sight of a major fire in perpetually damp Drallar. Flinx made his way back toward the more animated
sections of the city, toward the arguing and shouting and smells and sights of
the marketplace and Mother Mastiff’s warm, familiar little shop. He was sorry.
Sorry for all the trouble he seemed to have caused. Sorry for the funny old
Meliorares who were no more. Sorry for the overzealous Peaceforcers. Mother Mastiff wouldn’t be sorry, he knew. She could
be as vindictive as an AAnn, especially if anything close to her had been
threatened. For himself, however, he regretted the deaths of so
many. All for nothing, all because of some erratic, harmless, usually useless
emotion-reading ability he possessed. Their own fault, though. Everything that
happened was their own fault, Meliorares and Peaceforcers alike. He tried to
warn them. Never try to come between a boy and his snake. The damp trek homeward exhausted his remaining
strength. Never before had the city seemed so immense, its byways and side
streets so convoluted and tortuous. He was completely worn out. Mother Mastiff was manning the shop, waiting for him
as anxiously as she awaited customers. Her thin, aged arm was strong as she
slipped it around his back and helped him the last agonizing steps into the
store. “I’ve been worried like to death over ye, boy! Damn ye for causing a
poor old woman such distress.” Her fingers touched his bruised cheeks, his
forehead, as her eyes searched for serious damage. “And you’re all cut up and
bleeding. What’s to become of ye, Flinx? Ye have got to learn to stay out of
trouble.” He summoned up a grin, glad to be home. “It seems to
come looking for me, Mother.” “Hmpnh! Excuses. The boy’s wit is chock full of
excuses. What happened to ye?” He tried to marshal his thoughts as he slid Pip out
from beneath the slickertic. Mother Mastiff backed away. The millidrag was as
limp as a piece of rope. It lay curled up in its master’s lap, if not asleep
then giving a fine scaly imitation of some similar state. “Some people kidnaped Pip. They called themselves
Meliorares. But they really wanted me. They-“ His expression screwed tight as
he remembered, “One of them said something about wanting to fix me. Fix what?
What did they want with me?” She considered a long moment, studying the boy.
Truly, it appeared that he was telling the truth, that he had learned no more
than what he said. Ignoring the proximity of the hated flying snake, she sat
down and put an arm around his shoulders. “Now mark me well, boy, because this is vital to ye.
I don’t have to tell ye that you’re different. You’ve always been different. Ye
have to hide that as best ye can, and we’ll have to hide ourselves. Drallar’s a
big place. We can move the shop if need be. But you’re going to have to learn
to live quietly, and you’re going to have to keep your differences to yourself,
or we’ll be plagued with more of this unwelcome and unwholesome attention.” “It’s all so silly, Mother, lust because I can
sometimes sense what other people are feeling?” “That. And maybe more.” “There isn’t anything more. That’s all I can do.” “Is it, boy? How did ye get away from these people.”
She looked past him toward the street, suddenly concerned. “Will they be coming
after ye again?” “I don’t think so. Most of them were kind of dead
when I left. I don’t know how I got away from them. I think one of them shot at
something explosive and it blew up. I was blown clear out of a building and
into the street.” “Lucky to be alive ye are, it seems, though by what
providence I wonder. Maybe ‘tis best this way. Maybe ‘tis best ye don’t know
too much about yourself just yet. Your mind always was advanced of your body,
and maybe there’s something more that’s advanced even of that.” “But I don’t want to be different,” he insisted,
almost crying. “I just want to be like everyone else.” “I know ye do, boy,” she said gently, “but each of
us must play the cards fate deals us, and if you’ve been stuck with the joker,
you’ll just have to learn to cope with it, turn it to your advantage somehow.” “I don’t want any advantage! Not if it’s going to
cause us this kind of trouble.” “I’ll have none of that, boy! A difference can
always be to one’s advantage. ‘Tis time ye chose a profession. I know you’ve no
like for running a shop like this one. What is it ye like to do?” He mulled it over a while before replying. “All I
enjoy doing is making other people happy.” She shook her head sadly. “Sometimes I think you’ve
not enough self-interest to keep yourself alive. However, if that’s what ye
like, then you’ll have to find some way to earn a living at it.” “Sometimes I dream of becoming a doctor and healing
people.” “I’d advise ye to set your sights a bit lower, boy.” “All right. An actor, then.” “Nay, not that low. Be sensible. Set yourself to
some- thing ye can do now, without years of study.” “I could perform right here in the marketplace,” he
said thoughtfully. “I can juggle pretty good. You’ve seen me.” “Aye, and yelled at ye often enough for practicing
with my expensive baubles. But ‘tis a sound thought. We must find ye a good
street corner. Surely ye can’t get into trouble performing before these simple
locals.” “Sure! I’ll go and practice right now.” “Easy, boy, easy. You’re nearly asleep on your feet,
and I’ll not have ye breaking either my goods or yourself. Go inside and lie
down. I’ll be in soon to fix ye something to eat. Go on now, boy, and be sure
and take your monster with ye.” Cradling the exhausted Pip in his hands, Flinx rose
and made his way through the displays to the section of the shop that served as
their home. Mother Mastiff’s eyes followed him. What was to become of the boy? Somehow he had come
to the attention of powerful, dangerous people. At least there was a good chance
they wouldn’t be bothered for a while. Not if he had left them “kind of dead.” How had he escaped? Sometimes he still frightened
her. Oh, not because he would ever harm a hair of her old head. Quite the
contrary, as his dogged pursuit and rescue of her these past days had proven.
But there were forces at work within that adolescent body, forces beyond the
comprehension of a simple shopkeeper, forces he might not be able to control.
And there was more to it than reading the emotions of others. Of that she was
certain. How much more she could only suspect, for it was clear enough the boy
had little awareness of them himself. Well, let him play at the trade of jongleur for a
while. Surely that was harmless. Surely he could not find much trouble plying
so simple an occupation. She told herself that repeatedly all the rest of the
after- noon and on into evening as she sat watching him sleep. When she finally
slipped into her own bed, she thought she had put such imaginary fears beyond
her, but such was not the case. She sensed that the boy lying content and peaceful
in the room opposite hers was destined for more than an idle life of
entertaining on street corners. Much
more. She knew somehow that a damnable universe, which was al- ways sticking
its cosmic nose into the destinies of innocent citizens, would never let anyone
as unique as Flinx alone. DON’T MISS THE CONTINUING ADVENTURES OF FLINX AND PIP IN; THE TAR-AIYM KRANG ORPHAN STAR THE END OF THE MATTER and BLOODHYPE ******************************************************* Note: Map of the Commonwealth
and its Chronology Published in 05: Flinx in Flux ******************************************************* About
the Author
Born in New York City in 1946,
Alan Dean Foster was raised in Los Angeles, California. After receiving a
bachelor’s degree in political science and a Master of Fine Arts in motion
pictures from UCLA in 1968-69, he worked for two years as a public relations
copywriter in a small Studio City, California, firm. His writing career began
in 1968 when August Derleth bought a long letter of Foster’s and published it
as a short story in his biannual Arkham Collector Magazine. Sales of short
fiction to other magazines followed. His first try at a novel. The Tar-Aiym
Krang, was published by Ballantine Books in 1972. Foster has toured extensively
through Asia and the isles of the Pacific. Besides traveling, he enjoys
classical and rock music, old films, basketball, body surfing, and karate. He
has taught screenwriting, literature, and film history at UCLA and Los Angeles
City College. Currently, he resides in Arizona
with his wife JoAnn (who is reputed to have the only extant recipe for
Barbarian Cream Pie). ******************************************************* Author: Alan
Dean Foster Title: For
Love Of Mother-Not Original copyright: 1983 Genre: Science
Fiction Version: 1.1 Original date of e-text: 11/28/00 e-text last updated
: 12/14/00 Source: Prepared by: Comments: Download both lit and
txt version. Please
correct any errors you find in this e-text, update
the txt file’s version number and redistribute. ******************************************************* By
Alan Dean Foster : Published by
Ballantine Books: The Icenggger Trilogy ICERIGGER MISSION TO MOULOKIN THE DELUGE DRIVERS The Adventures of Flinx of the Commonwealth FOR LOVE OF MOTHER‑NOT THE TAR‑AIYM KRANG ORPHAN STAR THE END OF THE MATTER FLINX IN FLUX MID‑FLINX BLOODHYPE THE HOWLING STONES The Damned Book One: A CALL TO ARMS Book Two: THE FALSE MIRROR Book Three: THE SPOILS OF WAR THE BLACK HOLE CACHALOT DARK STAR THE
METROGNOME and Other Stories MIDWORLD NOR
CRYSTALTEARS SENTENCED TO PRISM SPLINTER
OF THE MIND'S EYE STAR TREK@ LOGS ONE‑TEN VOYAGE TO THE CITY OF THE DEAD WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE . . . ... WHO NEEDS ENEMIES? MAD AMOS PARALLELITIES* 'forthcoming Books
published by The Ballantine Publishing Group are available at quantity
discounts on bulk purchases for premium, educational, fund‑raising, and
special sales use. For details, please call 1‑500‑733‑3000. ******************************************************* A Del Rey Book Published by Ballantine Books Copyright Q 1983 by Alan Dean Foster All
rights reserved under International and Pan‑American Copyright
Conventions. Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of
Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of
Canada Limited, Toronto. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 82‑90867 ISBN 0‑345‑30511‑6 Manufactured in the United States of America First Edition: March 1983 Fourth Printing: June 1983 Cover art by Michael Whelan ******************************************************* For Michael and
Audrey and Alexa Whelan; Good neighbors… ******************************************************* Chapter One
“Now there’s a scrawny, worthless-looking little runt.”
Mother Mastiff thought. She cuddled the bag of woodcarvings a little closer to
her waist, mating certain it was protected from the rain by a flap of her
slickertic. The steady drizzle that characterized Drallar’s autumn weather fled
from the water-resistant material. Offworlders were hard pressed to distinguish any
difference in the city’s seasons. In the summer, the rain was warm; in autumn
and winter, it was cooler. Springtime saw it give way to a steady, cloying fog.
So rare was the appearance of the sun through the near-perpetual cloud cover
that when it did peep through, the authorities were wont to call a public
holiday. It was not really a slave market Mother Mastiff was
trudging past. That was an archaic term, employed only by cynics. It was merely
the place where labor-income adjustments were formalized. Drallar was the largest city on the world of Moth,
its only true metropolis, and it was not a particularly wealthy one. By keeping
taxes low, it had attracted a good number of offworld businesses and trading
concerns to a well-situated b at mostly inhospitable planet. It compensated by
largely doing away with such annoying commercial aggravations as tariffs and
regulations. While this resulted in considerable prosperity for some, it left
the city government at a loss for general revenue. Among the numerous areas that were rarely
self-appointing was that involving care of the impoverished. In cases In which
indigence was total and an individual was isolated by circumstance,
it was deemed reasonable to allow a wealthier citizen to take over
responsibility from the government. This thinned the welfare rolls and kept the
bureaucracy content, while providing better care for the individual involved-or
so the officials insisted-than he or she could receive from under funded and
impersonal government agencies. The United Church, spiritual arm of the Commonwealth
frowned on such one-sided economic policies. But The Commonwealth did not like
to interfere with domestic policies, and Drallarian officials hastened to
assure the occasional visiting padre or counselor that legal safeguards
prevented abuse, of “adopted” individuals. So it was that Mother Mastiff found
herself leaning on tier cane, clutching the bag of artwork, and staring at the
covered dispersement platform while she tried to catch her breath. One curious
attendee moved too close, crowding her. He glowered when she jabbed him in the toot with her cane but moved aside, not
daring to confront her. Standing motionless on the platform within the Circle
of Compensation was a thin, solemn boy of eight or nine years. His red hair was
kicked down from the rain and contrasted sharply with his dark skin. Wide,
innocent eyes, so big they seemed to wrap around the sides of his face, stared
out across the rain-dampened assembly. He kept his hands clasped behind his
back. Only those eyes moved, their gaze flicking like an insect over the
upturned faces of the crowd. The majority of the milling, would-be purchasers
were indifferent to his presence. To the boy’s right stood a tall, slim representative
of the government who ran the official sale-an assignment of responsibility,
they called it-for the welfare bureau. Across from her a large readout listed
the boy’s vital statistics, which Mother Mastiff eyed casually. Height and weight matched what she could see. Color
of hair, eyes, and skin she had already noted. Living relative, assigned or
otherwise-a blank there. Personal history-another blank. A child of accident
and calamity, she thought, thrown like so many others on the untender mercies
of government care. Yes, he certainly would be better off under the wing of a
private individual, by the looks of him. He might at least receive some decent
food. And yet there was something more to him, something
that set him apart from the listless
precision of orphans who paraded across that rain-swept platform, season after
season. Mother Mastiff sensed something lurking behind those wide, mournful
eyes-a maturity well beyond his years, a greater intensity to his stare than was
to be expected from a child in his position. That stare continued to rove over
the crowd, probing, searching. There was more of the hunter about the boy than
the bunted. The rain continued to fall. What activity there was
among the watchers was concentrated on the back right comer of the platform,
where a modestly attractive girl of about sixteen was next in line for
consignment. Mother Mastiff let out a derisive snort. Government assurances or
not, yea couldn’t tell her that those
pushing, shoving snots in the front row didn’t have something on their minds
be-yond an innocently altruistic concern for the girl’s future. 0h,no! The ever-shifting cluster of potential benefactors
formed an island around which eddied the greater population of the marketplace.
The marketplace itself was concentrated into a ring of stalls and shops and
restaurants and dives that encircled the city center. The result was just modem
enough to function and sufficiently unsophisticated to at’ tract those
intrigued by the mysterious. It held no mysteries for Mother Mastiff. The
marketplace of Drallar was her home. Ninety years she had spent battling that
endless river of humanity and aliens, some-times being sucked down, sometimes
rising above the flow, but never in danger of drowning. Now she had a
shop-small, but her own. She bargained for objects d’art, traded knicknacks,
electronics, and handicrafts, and managed to make just enough to keep herself
clear of such places as the platform on which the boy was standing. She put
herself in his place and shuddered. A ninety-year-old woman would not bring
much of a price. There was an awkwardly patched rip at the neck of
her slickertic, and rain was beginning to find its way through the widening
gap. The pouch of salables she clutched to her thin waist wasn’t growing any
lighter. Mother Mastiff had other business to transact, and she wanted to be
back home before dark. As the sun of Moth set, the murky daylight of Drallar
would fade to a slimy darkness, and things less than courteous would emerge
from the slums that impinged on the marketplace. Only the careless and the
cocky wandered abroad at such times, and Mother Mastiff was neither. As the boy’s eyes roved over the audience, they
eventually reached her own-and stopped.
Suddenly, Mother Mastiff felt queasy, unsteady. Her hand went to her
stomach. Too much grease in the morning’s breakfast, she thought. The eyes had
already moved on. Since she had turned eighty-five, she had had to watch her
diet. But, as she had told a friend, “I’d rather die of indigestion and on a
full stomach than waste away eating pills and concentrates.” “One side there,” she abruptly found herself saying,
not sure what she was doing or why. “One side.” She broke a path through the
crowd, poking one observer in the ribs with her cane, disturbing an
ornithorpe’s ornate arrangement of tail feathers, and generating a chirp of
indignation from an overweight matron. She worked her way down to the open area
directly in front of the platform. The boy took no notice of her; his eyes
continued to scan the uncaring crowd. “Please, ladies and gentle beings,” the official on
the platform pleaded, “won’t one of you give this healthy, honest boy a home?
Your government requests it of you; civilization demands it of you. You have a
chance today to do two good turns at once; one for your king and the other for
this unfortunate youth.” “Id like to
give the king a good turn, all right,” said a voice from the milling crowd,
“right where it would do him the most good.” The official shot the heckler an angry glare but
said nothing. “What’s the minimum asking?” Be that my voice? Mother Mastiff thought in
wonderment. “A mere fifty credits, madam, to satisfy department
obligations and the boy is yours. To watch over and care for.” She hesitated,
then added, “If you think you can handle as active a youngster as this one.” “I’ve handled plenty of youngsters in my time,”
Mother Mastiff returned curtly. Knowing hoots sounded from the amused assembly.
She studied the boy, who was looking down at her again. The queasiness that had
roiled in her stomach the first time their eyes had met did not reoccur.
Grease, she mused, have to cut down on the cooking grease. “Fifty credits, then,” she said. “Sixty.” The deep voice that boomed from somewhere
to the rear of the crowd came as an unexpected interruption to her thoughts. “Seventy,” Mother Mastiff automatically responded.
The official on the platform quickly gazed back into the crowd. “Eighty,” the unseen competitor sounded. She hadn’t counted
on competition. It was one thing to do a child a good turn at reasonable cost
to herself, quite another to saddle herself with an unconscionable expense. “Ninety-curse you,” she said. She turned and tried
to locate her opponent but could not see over the heads of the crowd. The voice
bidding against her was male, powerful, piercing. What the devil would the
owner of such a voice want with a child like this? she thought. “Ninety-five,” it countered. “Thank you, thank you. To you both, the government says.”
The official’s tone and expression had brightened perceptibly. The lively and
utterly unexpected bidding for the redheaded brat had alleviated her boredom as
well as her concern. She would be able to show her boss a better than usual
daily account sheet. “The bid is against you, madam.” “Damn the bid,” Mother Mastiff muttered. She started
to turn away, but something held her back. She was as good a judge of people as
she was of the stock she sold to them, and there was something particular about
this boy-though she couldn’t say precisely what, which struck her as unusual.
There was always profit in the unusual. Besides, that mournful stare was
preying unashamedly on a part of her she usually kept buried. “Oh, hell, one hundred, then, and be damned with
it!” She barely managed to squeeze the figure out. Her mind was in a whirl.
What was she doing there, neglecting her regular business, getting thoroughly
soaked and bidding for an orphaned child? Surely at ninety her maternal
instinct wasn’t being aroused. She had never felt the least maternal instinct
in her life, thank goodness. She waited for the expected nimble of “one hundred
and five,” but instead heard a commotion toward the back of the crowd. She
craned her neck, trying to see, cursing the genes that had left her so short.
There were shouts, then yells of outrage and loud cursing from a dozen
different throats. To the left, past the shielding bulk of the ornithorpe
behind her, she could just make out the bright purple flash of uniformed
gendarmes, their slickertics glaring in the dim light. This group seemed to be
moving with more than usual energy. She turned and fought her way forward and to the
right, where a series of steps led to the platform. Halfway up the stairs, she
squinted back into the crowd. The purple ‘tics were just merging into the first
wall of office and shop complexes. Ahead of them a massive human shape bobbed
and dipped as it retreated from the pursuing police. Mother Mastiff permitted herself a knowing nod.
There were those who might want a young boy for other than humanitarian
purposes. Some of them had criminal dossiers on file that stretched as far back
as her lifeline. Obviously someone in the crowd, a salaried informer, perhaps,
had recognized the individual bidding against her and had notified the
authorities, who had responded with commendable speed. “One hundred credits, then,” the disappointed
official announced from the platform. “Do I hear any more?” Naturally, she
would not, but she played out the game for appearance’s sake. A moment passed
in silence. She shrugged, glanced over
to where Mother Mastiff still stood on the stairway. “He’s yours, old woman.”
Not “madam” any longer, Mother Mastiff thought sardonically. “Pay up, and mind
the regulations, now.” “I’ve been dealing with the regulations of this
government since long before ye were born, woman.” She mounted the last few
steps and, ignoring the official and the boy, strode back toward the Processing
Office. Inside, a bored clerk glanced up at her, noted the transaction-complete
record as it was passed to his desktop computer terminal, and asked
matter-of-factly, “Name?” “Mastiff,” the visitor replied, leaning on her cane. “That the last name?” “First and last.” “Mastiff Mastiff?” The clerk gave her a sour look. “Just Mastiff,”
the old woman said. “The government prefers multiple names.” “Ye know what the government can do with its
preferences.” The clerk sighed. He tapped the terminal’s keys.
“Age?” “None of your business.” She gave it a moment’s
thought and added, “Put down old.” The clerk did so, shaking his head dolefully.
“Income?” “Sufficient.” “Now look here, you,” the clerk began exasperated,
“in such matters as the acquisition of responsibility for welfared individuals,
the city government requires certain specifics.” “The city government can shove its specifics in
after its preferences.” Mother Mastiff gestured toward the platform with her
cane, a wide, sweeping gesture that the clerk had the presence of mind to duck.
“The bidding is over. The other bidder has taken his leave. Hastily. Now I can
take my money and go home, or I can contribute to the government’s balance of
payments and to your salary. Which is it to be?” “Oh, all right,” the clerk agreed petulantly. He
completed his entries and punched a key. A seemingly endless form spat from the
printout slot. Folded, it was about half a centimeter thick. “Read these.” Mother Mastiff hefted the sheaf of forms. “What are
they?” “Regulations regarding your new charge. The boy is
yours to raise, not to mistreat. Should you ever be detected in violation of
the instructions and laws therein stated”-he gestured at the wad-“he can be
recovered from you with forfeiture of the acquisition fee. In addition, you
must familiarize yourself with-“ He broke off the lecture as the boy in
question was escorted into the room by another official. The youngster glanced at the clerk, then up at
Mother Mastiff. Then, as if he’d performed similar rituals on previous
occasions, he walked quietly up to her, took her left hand, and put his right
hand in it. The wide, seemingly guileless eyes of a child gazed up at her face.
They were bright green, she noted absently. “The clerk was about to continue, then found something
unexpected lodged in his throat and turned his attention instead back to his
desk top. “That’s all. The two of you can go.” Mother Mastiff harrumphed as if she had won a
victory and led the boy out onto the streets of Drallar. They had supplied him
with that one vital piece of clothing, a small blue slickertic of his own. He
pulled the cheap plastic tighter over his head as they reached the first
intersection. “Well, boy, ‘tis done. Devil come take me and tell
me if I know why I did it, but I expect that I’m stuck with ye now. And ye,
with me, of course. Do you have anything at the dorm we should go to recover?” He shook his head slowly. Quiet sort, she thought.
That was all to the good. Maybe he wouldn’t be a quick squaller. She still
wondered what had prompted her sudden and uncharacteristic outburst of
generosity. The boy’s hand was warm in her gnarled old palm. That palm usually
enfolded a credcard for processing other people’s money or artwork to be
studied with an eye toward purchase and even, on occasion, a knife employed for
something more radical than the preparation of food, but never before the hand
of a small child. It was a peculiar sensation. They worked their way through crowds hurrying to
beat the onset of night, avoiding the drainage channels that ran down the
center of each street. Thick aromas drifted from the dozens of food stalls and
restaurants that fringed the avenue they were walking. Still the boy said not a
word. Finally, tired of the way his face would turn toward any place from which
steam and smells rose, Mother Mastiff halted before one establishment with
which she was familiar. They were nearly home, anyway. “You hungry, boy?” He nodded slowly, just once. “Stupid of me. I can go all day without food and not
give it a second thought. I forget sometimes that others have not that
tolerance in their bellies.” She nodded toward the doorway. “Well, what are ye
waiting for?” She followed him into the restaurant, then led the
way to a quiet booth set against the wall. A circular console rose from the
center of the table. She studied the menu imprinted on its flank, compared it
with the stature of the child seated expectantly next to her, then punched
several buttons set alongside the menu. Before too long, the console sank into the table,
then reappeared a moment later stacked with food; a thick, pungent stew dimpled
with vegetables, long stalks of some beige tuber, and a mass of multistriped
bread. “Go ahead,” she said when the boy hesitated,
admiring his reserve and table manners. “I’m not too hungry, and I never eat
very much.” She watched him while he devoured the food,
sometimes picking at the colorful bread to assuage what little hunger she felt
herself, barely acknowledging the occasional greeting from a passing
acquaintance or friend. When the bottom of the stew bowl had been licked to a
fine polish and the last scrap of bread had vanished, she asked, “Still
hungry?” He hesitated, measuring her, then gave her a half
nod. “I’m not surprised,” she replied, “but I don’t want ye to have any more
tonight. You’ve just downed enough to fill a grown man. Any more on top of what
you’ve already had and you’d end up wasting it all. Tomorrow morning, okay?” He
nodded slowly, understanding. “And one more thing, boy. Can ye talk?” “Yes.” His voice was lower than anticipated,
unafraid and, she thought, tinged with thankfulness. “I can talk pretty good,” he added without further
prompting, surprising her. “I’ve been told that for my age I’m a very good
talker.” “That’s
nice. I was starting to worry.” She slid from her seat, using her cane to help
her stand, and took his hand once again. “It’s not too far now.” “Not too far to where?” “To where I live. To where ye will live from now
on.” They exited the restaurant and were enveloped by the wet night. “What’s your name?” He spoke without looking up at
her, preferring instead to study the dim storefronts and isolated, illuminated
shops. The intensity of his inspection seemed unnatural. “Mastiff,” she told him, then grinned. “ Tis not my
real name, boy, but one that someone laid upon me many years ago. For better or
worse, it’s stuck longer with me than any man. ‘Tis the name of a dog of
exceptional ferocity and ugliness.” “I don’t think you’re ugly,” the boy replied. “I
think you’re beautiful.” She studied his open, little-boy expression.
Dim-witted, dim-sighted, or maybe just very smart, she thought. “Can I call you Mother?” he asked hopefully, further
confusing her. “You are my mother now, aren’t you?” “Sort of, I expect. Don’t ask me why.” “I won’t cause you any trouble.” His voice was
suddenly concerned, almost frightened. “I’ve never caused anyone any trouble,
honest. I just want to be left alone.” Now what would prompt a desperate confession like
that? she wondered. She decided not to pursue the matter. “I’ve no demands to
make on ye,” she assured him. “I’m a simple old woman, and I live a simple
life. It pleases me. It had best please ye as well.” “It sounds
nice,” he admitted agreeably. “I’ll do my best to help you any way I can.” “Devil knows there’s plenty to do in the shop. I’m
not quite as flexible as I used to be.” She chuckled aloud. “Get tired before
midnight now. You know, I actually need a full four hours’ sleep? Yes, I think
ye can be of service. You’d best be. Ye cost enough.” “I’m sorry,” he said, abruptly downcast. “Stop that. I’ll have none of that in my home.” “I mean, I’m sorry that I upset you.” She let out a wheeze of frustration, knelt and
supported herself with both hands locked to the shaft of the cane. It brought
her down to his eye level. He stood there and gazed solemnly back at her. “Now ye listen to me, boy. I’m no government agent.
I don’t have the vaguest notion what possessed me to take charge of ye, but
‘tis done. I will not beat you unless you deserve it. I’ll see to it that
you’re well fed and reasonably warm. In return, I demand that ye don’t go about
braying stupid things like I’m sorry.’ Be that a deal?” He didn’t have to think it over very long. “It’s a
deal-Mother.” “That’s settled, then.” She shook his hand. The
gesture brought forth a new phenomenon: his first smile. It made his tiny,
lightly freckled face seem to glow, and suddenly the night seemed less chilly. “Let’s hurry,” she said, struggling erect again. “I
don’t like being out this late, and you’re not much the body-guard. Never will
be, by the looks of ye, though that’s no fault of yours.” “Why is it so important to be home when it’s dark?”
he asked, and then added uncertainly, “Is that a stupid question?” “No, boy.” She smiled down at him as she hobbled up
the street. “That’s a smart question. It’s important to be safe at home after
dark because the dead tend to multiply in direct ratio to the absence of light.
Though if you’re cautious and never grow overconfident and learn the ways of
it, you’ll find that the darkness can be your friend as well as your enemy.” “I thought
so,” he said firmly. “I’ve thought so for”-his face screwed up as he
concentrated hard on something-“for as long as I can remember.” “Oh?” She was still smiling at him. “And what makes
you think that it’s so besides the fact I just told it to ye?” “Because,” he replied, “most of the times I can ever
remember being happy were in the dark.” She pondered that as they turned the comer. The rain
had lessened considerably, giving way to the mist that passed for normal air in
the city. It didn’t trouble her lungs, but she worried about the boy. The one
thing she didn’t need was a sick child. He had cost her enough already. Her stall-home was one of many scattered through the
seemingly endless marketplace. Stout shutters protected the nondescript facade,
which occupied ten meters at the far end of a side street. She pressed her palm
to the door lock. The sensitized plastic glowed brightly for an instant, beeped
twice, and then the door opened for them. Once inside, she shoved the door shut behind them,
then automatically turned to inspect her stock to make certain nothing had
disappeared in her absence. “There were racks of copper and silver wares, rare
carved hardwoods for which Moth was justly renowned, well-crafted eating and
drinking utensils, including many clearly designed for non-humans, cheap models
of Moth itself with interrupted rings of flashy floatglitter, and various items
of uncertain purpose. Through this farrago of color and shape, the boy
wandered. His eyes drank in everything, but he asked no questions, which she
thought unusual. It was in the nature of children to inquire about
everything. But then, this was no ordinary child. Toward the rear of the shop front a silver box stood
on a dais. Its touch-sensitive controls
connected the shop directly to the central bank of Drallar and enabled Mother
Mastiff to process financial transactions for all customers, whether they came
from up the street or halfway across the Commonwealth. A universal credcard
allowed access to its owner’s total wealth. Banks stored information; all hard
currency was in general circulation. Past the dais and the door it fronted were four
rooms: a small storage chamber, a bathroom, a kitchen-dining area, and a
bedroom. Mother Mastiff studied the arrangement for several minutes, then set
about clearing the storage room. Ancient and long-unsold items were shoveled
out onto the floor, together with cleaning equipment, clothing, canned goods,
and other items. Somehow she would find room for them elsewhere. Propped up against the far wall was a sturdy old
cot. She touched a button on its side,
and the device sprang to life, skittering about as it arranged itself on
springy legs. Further excavation
revealed a bag of support oil, which she plugged into the mattress. It was full
and warm in minutes. Finally, she covered the cot with a thin thermosensitive
blanket. “This’ll be your room,” she told him. “ Tis no
palace, but ‘tis yours. I know the importance of having something ye can call
your own. Ye can fix up this bower however ye like.” The boy eyed her as if she had just bestowed all the
treasures of Terra on him. “Thank you. Mother,” he said softly. “It’s
wonderful.” “I sell things,” she said, turning away from that
radiant face. She gestured toward the storeroom out front. “The things ye saw on our way in.” “I guessed that. Do you make much money?” “Now ye
sound like the government agent back there at the platform.” She smiled to show
him she was teasing. “I get by. I’d much like to have a larger place than this,
but at this point in my life”—she leaned her cane up against her bed as she
strolled into the larger room-“it seems not likely I ever will. It does not
bother me. I’ve had a good, full life and am content. You’ll soon discover that
my growls and barks are mostly show. Though not always.” She patted him on the
head and pointed toward the com-pact kitchen. “Would ye like something hot to drink before we
re-tire?” “Yes, very much.” Carefully, he took off his
slickertic, which was dry by then. He hung it on a wall hook in his bedroom. “We’ll have to get ye some new clothes,” she
comment-ed, watching him from the kitchen. “These are okay.” “Maybe they are for ye, hut they’re not for me.” She
pinched her nose by way of explanation. “Oh. I understand.” “Now what would ye like to drink?” His face brightened once again. “Tea. What kinds of
tea do you have?” “What kinds of tea do ye like?” “All kinds.” “Then I’ll choose ye one.” She found the cylinder
and depressed the main switch ‘on its side as she filled it with water from the
tap. Then she searched her store of food-stuffs. “This is Anar Black,” she told him, “all the way
from Rhyinpine. Quite a journey for dead leaves to make. I think ‘tis milder
than Anar White, which comes from the same world but grows further down the
mountain sides. I have some local honey if ye like your drink sweet. Expensive,
it is. Moth’s flowers are scarce save where they’re grown in hothouses. This
world belongs to the fungi and the trees; the bees, poor things, have a hard
time of it, even those who’ve grown woolly coats thick enough to keep the damp
and cold out. If honey’s too thick for ye, I’ve other sweeteners.” Hearing no reply, she turned to find him lying still
on the floor, a tawny, curled-up smudge of red hair and dirty old clothes. His
hands were bunched beneath his cheek, cushioning his head. She shook her head and pushed the cylinder’s off but-ton. The pot sighed and ceased
boiling. Bending, she got her wiry ‘arms beneath him and lifted. Somehow she
wrestled him onto the cot without waking him. Her hands pulled the thermal
blanket up to his chin. It was programmed and would warm him quickly. She stood there awhile, amazed at how much pleasure
could be gained from so simple an activity as watching a child sleep. Then,
still wondering what had come over her, she left him and made her way across to
her own room, slowly removing her clothes as she walked. Before long, the last
light in the rear of the little shop winked out, joining its neighbors in
nightfall. Then there was only the light wind and the hiss of moisture
evaporating from warm walls to break the silence of the mist-shrouded dark. Chapter Two
The boy ate as if the previous night’s dinner had
been no more substantial than a distant dream. She cooked him two full
breakfasts and watched as he finished every bite. When the last pachnack was gone, and the final piece of bread
wolfed down, she took him into the shop. He watched intently as she entered the combination
to the metal shutters. As they rose, they admitted a world entirely different
from the empty night. One moment he was staring at the dully reflective line of
metal strips. “The next brought home to him all the noise, the confusion, and
bustle and sights and smells of the great Drallarian marketplace; they flooded
the stall, overwhelming him with their diversity and brilliance. Mother Mastiff
was not a late sleeper-which was good, for the crowd would rise in tandem with
the hidden sun. Not that the marketplace was ever completely deserted. There
were always a few merchants whose wares benefited from the mask of night. The boy could tell it was daytime because it had
grown less dark. But the sun did not shine; it illuminated the raindrops. The
morning had dawned warm, a good sign, and the moisture was still more mist than
rain. A good day for business. Mother Mastiff showed the boy around the shop,
describing various items and reciting their prices and the reasons behind such
pricing. She hoped to someday entrust the operation of the business to him.
That would be better than having to close up every time she needed to rest or
travel elsewhere. The sooner he learned, the better, especially considering the
way he ate. “I’ll do everything I can, Mother,” he assured her
when she had concluded the brief tour. “I know ye will, boy.” She plopped down into her
favorite chair, an over upholstered monstrosity covered with gemmae fur. The
skins were worn down next to nothing, and the chair retained little value, but
it was too comfort-able for her to part with. She watched as the boy turned to
stare at the passing crowd. How quiet
he is, she thought. Quiet and intense. She let him study the passers-by for a
while before beckoning him closer. “We’ve overlooked several things in the rush of the
night, boy. One in particular.” “What’s that?” he asked. “I can’t keep calling ye ‘boy’. Have ye a name?” “They call me Flinx.” “Be that your last name or your first?” He shook his head slowly, his expression unhappy.
“Mother, I don’t know. It’s what they called me.” “What ‘they’ called ye. Who be ‘they’? Your”-she
hesitated-“mother? Your father?’” Again, the slow sad shake of the head, red curls
dancing. “I don’t have a mother or a father. It’s what the people called me.” “What people?” “The people who watched over me and the other
children.” Now that was strange. She frowned. “Other children?
Ye have brothers and sisters, then?” “I don’t”-he strained to remember-“I don’t think so. Maybe they were. I don’t know. They were just the other children.
I remember them from the early time. It was a strange time.” “What was so
strange about it?” “I was happy.” She nodded once, as though she understood. “So. Ye
remember an early time when you were happy and there were lots of other
children living with you.” He nodded vigorously. “Boys and girls both. And we
had everything we could want, everything we asked for. All kinds of good food and toys to play with
and . . .” A wealthy family brought to ruin, perhaps. She let
him ramble on about the early time, the happy time, a while longer. What
catastrophe had overtaken the boy in infancy? “How big was this family?” she asked. “We’ll call it
your family for now. How many other boys and girls were there?” “I don’t remember exactly. Lots.” “Can you count?” “Oh, sure,” he said proudly. “Two, three, four,
five, and lots more than that.” Sounded like more than just a family, though an
extend-ed family could not be ruled out, she knew. “Do ye remember what
happened to them, and to you? Ye were all happy, and ye had lots of friends,
and then something happened.” “The bad people came,” he whispered, his expression
turning down. “Very bad people. They broke into where we lived. The people who
watched us and fed us and gave us toys fought the bad people. There was lots of
noise and guns going off and-and people fell down all around me. Good people and bad people both. I stood and
cried until somebody picked me up and carried me away. They carried me down
lots of halls and dark places, and I remember getting into some kind of a-car?” She nodded approvingly. “Probably. Go on, boy.” “I was moved around a lot. That was the end of the
happy time.” “What happened after that?” she prompted him. “I’m not sure,” he said slowly. “It’s so hard to
remember.” “I know ‘tis painful for ye, Flinx. I need to know
all about ye that I can, so I can help ye as best as I’m able.” “If I tell you,” he asked uncertainly, “you won’t
let the bad people come and take me away?” “No,” she said, her voice suddenly soft. “No, I won’t
let them come and take ye away, Flinx. I won’t let anyone come and take ye away. Ever. I promise ye that.” He moved a little nearer and sat down on the
extended leg support of the big chair. He had his eyes closed as he
concentrated. “I remember never staying in one place for very long
at a time. The people, the good people who took care of me and fed me, they
kept the bad people away. They were al-ways upset about something, and they
yelled at me a lot more than before.” “Were they mad at ye?” “I don’t think so. Not really.” He licked his lips.
“I think they were scared. Mother. I know I was, but I think they were, also.
And then”-a look of confusion stole over his face-“I went to sleep. For a long time. Only, it wasn’t really a
sleep. It was like I was asleep and yet like I wasn’t.” He opened his eyes and
looked up at her. “Do you understand that. Mother? I don’t.” “No, I’m not sure I do, boy.” Her mind worked. Now
who, she wondered, would take the time and trouble to sedate a child for a long
period of time? And why bother? “Then some more bad people suddenly showed up, I
think,” he went on. “I didn’t see them this time. But some of the people who
watched me died or went away. Then there was just me and one man and one lady,
and then they were gone, too.” “Your mother and father?” “No, I don’t think so,” he told her. “Anyway, they
never called themselves that. They were just two of the good people. Then some
other people came and found me. People
I’d never seen before. They took me away with them.” “Were they good people or bad people?” “I don’t think they were either,” the boy replied
care-fully. “I think they were kind of in-between people. I think maybe they
were sorry for me. They tried to be nice, but”-he shrugged-“they were just
in-between people. They moved me around
a lot again, and there were different places and lots of new children I didn’t
know, and then there was yesterday, and you bought me. Right?” She put a hand to her mouth and coughed. “I didn’t
buy ye, actually. I agreed to take responsibility for ye.” “But you paid the government money for me, didn’t
you? I was told that was what was going to happen to me.” “It was only to pay off the debt the government
incurred for taking care of ye,” she explained to him. “I don’t actually own
ye. I would never do that.” “Oh,” he said quietly. “That’s nice. I’m glad.” He
waited a moment, watching her, then added, “That’s everything I can remember.” “Ye did fine.” She leaned forward and pointed to her
right, up the street. The chair groaned. “If ye walk six stalls that way, yell
find a very small shop run by a human. His name be Cheneth. Go up to him and
tell him who ye be and where ye came from. And ye can buy from him”-she thought
a moment, not wishing to overdo things-“a half credit’s worth of whatever ye
see in his shop.” “What kind of shop is it?” he asked excitedly. “Candy,” she said, enjoying the light that came into
his face. “Ye remember what candy is, don’t ye? I can see by the expression on
your face that ye do.” She could also tell by the speed with which he took off
up the street. He was back before long, those deep emerald eyes shining from
his dark face. “Thank you. Mother.” “Go on, go on, move to one side! You’re blocking
my-our-view of the customers. Wander about, learn the ins and outs of where ye
live now.” He vanished like a ray of sunshine, his red hair
disappearing into the crowd. Expensive, she thought to herself. That boy’s going
to be expensive to raise. How by the ringaps did I ever let myself fall into
this? She grumbled silently for another several minutes until a potential
customer appeared. Flinx learned rapidly. He was undemonstrative,
highly adaptable, and so quiet she hardly knew when he was around. Soon he was
amazing her with his knowledge of the layout and workings of the marketplace
and even the greater city beyond. He worked constantly on expanding his store
of information, badgering shopkeepers with persistent questions, refusing to
take “I don’t know” for an answer. Mother Mastiff put no restrictions on him. No one
had ever told her it was improper to give an eight-year-old the run of a city
as wild as Drallar. Never having raised a child before, she could always plead
ignorance, and since he returned dutifully every night, unscathed and unharmed,
she saw no reason to alter the practice despite the clucking disapproval of
some of her neighbors. “That’s no way to handle a boy of an age that
tender,” they admonished her. “If you’re not careful, youll lose him. One
night, he won’t come home from these solo forays.” “A boy he is, tender he’s not,” she would reply.
“Sharp he be, and not just for his age. I don’t worry about him. I haven’t the
time, for one thing. No matter what happens to him, he’s better off than he was
under government care.” “He won’t be better off if he ends up lying dead in
a gutter somewhere,” they warned her. “He won’t,” she would reply confidently. “You’ll be sorry,” they said. “You wait and see.” “I’ve been waiting and seeing going on ninety years”
was her standard reply, “and I haven’t been surprised yet. I don’t expect this boy to break that
record.” But she was wrong. It was midafternoon. The morning mist had developed
into a heavy rain. She was debating whether or not to send the boy out for some
food or to wait. Half a dozen people were wandering through the shop, waiting
for the down-pour to let up-an unusually large number for any day. After a while, Flinx wandered over and tugged shyly
at her billowing skirt. “Mother Mastiff?” “What is it, boy? Don’t bother me now.” She turned
back to the customer who was inspecting antique jewelry that graced a locked
display case near the rear of the stall.
It was rare that she sold a piece of the expensive stuff. When she did,
the profit was considerable. The boy persisted, and she snapped at him. “I told
ye, Flinx, not now!” “It’s very important. Mother.” She let out a sigh of exasperation and looked
apologetically at the outworlder. “Excuse me a moment, good sir. Children, ye
know.” The man smiled absently, thoroughly engrossed in a necklace
that shone with odd pieces of metal and worn wood. “What is it, Flinx?” she demanded, upset with him.
“This better be important. You know how I don’t like to be disturbed when I’m
in the middle of-“ He interrupted her by pointing to the far end of the shop.
“See that man over there?” She looked up, past him. The man in question was
bald and sported a well-trimmed beard and earrings. Instead of the light
slickertic favored by the inhabitants of Moth, he wore a heavy offworld
overcoat of black material. His features were slighter than his height
warranted, and his mouth was almost delicate. Other than the earrings he showed
no jewelry. His boots further marked him as an offworld visitor-they were
relatively clean. “I see him. What about him?” “He’s been stealing jewelry from the end case.” Mother Mastiff frowned. “Are you sure, boy?” Her
tone was anxious. “He’s an offworlder, and by the looks of him, a reasonably
substantial one at that. If we accuse him falsely-“ “I’m positive, mother.” “You saw him steal?” “No, I didn’t exactly see him.” “Then what the devil”-she wondered in a low,
accusatory voice-“are ye talking about?” “Go look at the case,” he urged her. She hesitated, then shrugged mentally. “No harm in
that, I expect.” Now whatever had gotten into the boy? She strolled toward the case, affecting an
air of unconcern. As she drew near, the
outworlder turned and walked away, apparently unperturbed by her approach. He hardly
acted like a nervous thief about to be caught in the act. Then she was bending over the case. Sure enough, the
lock had been professionally picked. At least four rings, among the most
valuable items in her modest stock, were missing. She hesitated only briefly
before glancing down at Flinx. “You’re positive it was him, ye say?” He nodded energetically. Mother Mastiff put two fingers to her lips and let
out a piercing whistle. Almost instantly, a half-dozen neighboring shopkeepers
appeared. Still the bald man showed no hint of panic, simply stared curiously,
along with the others in the store at the abrupt arrivals. The rain continued
to pelt the street. Mother Mastiff raised a hand, pointed directly at the bald
man, and said, “Restrain that thief!” The man’s eyes widened in surprise, but he made no
move toward retreat. Immediately, several angry shopkeepers had him firmly by
the arms. At least two of them were armed. “The bald man stood it for a moment or two, then
angrily shook off his captors. His accent, when he spoke, marked him as a
visitor from one of the softer worlds, like New Riviera or Centaurus B. “Now
just a moment! What is going on here? I warn you, the next person who puts
hands on me will suffer for it!” “Don’t threaten us, citizen,” said Aljean, the
accomplished clothier whose big shop dominated the far corner. “We’ll settle this matter quick, and without
the attention of police. We don’t much like police on this street.” “I sympathize with you there,” the man said,
straightening his overcoat where he had been roughly handled. “I’m not
especially fond of them myself.” After a pause, he added in shock, “Surely that
woman does not mean to imply that I –“ “That’s what she’s implyin’, for sure,” said one of
the men flanking him. “If you’ve nothin’ to fear, then you’ve no reason not to
gift us a moment of your time.” “Certainly not. I don’t see why-“ The outworlder
studied their expressions a moment, then shrugged. “Oh, well, if it will settle
this foolishness.” “It’ll settle it,” another man said from behind a
pistol. “Very well. And I’ll thank you to keep that weapon
pointed away from me, please. Surely you don’t need the succor of technology in
addition to superior numbers?” The shopkeeper hesitated and then turned the muzzle
of his gun downward. But he did not put it away. Mother Mastiff stared at the man for a moment, then
looked expectantly down at Flinx. “Well? Did ye see where he put the rings?” Flinx was gazing steadily at the bald man, those
green eyes unwinking. “No, I didn’t, Mother. But he took them. I’m sure of it.” “Right, then.”
Her attention went back to the offworlder. “Sir, I must ask ye to
consent to a brief body search.” “This is most undignified,” he complained. “I shall
lodge a complaint with my tourist office.” “I’m sorry,” she told him, “but if you’ve nothing to
hide, it’s best that we’re assured of it.” “Oh, very well. Please hurry and get it over with. I
have other places to go today. I’m on holiday, you know.” Acting uncertainly now, two of the men who had
responded to Mother Mastiff’s whistle searched the visitor. They did a thorough
job of it, working him over with the experience of those who had dealt with
thieves before. They searched everything from the lining of his overcoat to the
heels of his boots. When they had finished, they gazed helplessly over at
Mother Mastiff and shook their heads. “Empty he is,” they assured her. “Nothing on him.” “What’s missing. Mother?” Aljean asked gently. “Kill rings,” she explained. “The only four kill
rings in my stock. Took me years to accumulate them, and I wouldn’t know how to
go about replacing them. Search him again.” She nodded at the bald man.
“They’re not very big and would be easy enough to hide.” They complied, paying particular attention this time
to the thick metal belt buckle the man wore. It revealed a bidden compartment
containing the man’s credcard and little else. No rings. When the second search proved equally fruitless,
Mother Mastiff gazed sternly down at her charge. “Well, Flinx, what have ye to
say for yourself?” “He did
take them, he did,” the boy insisted, almost crying. “I know he did.” He was
still staring at the bald man. Suddenly, his eyes widened. “He swallowed them.” “Swallowed-now just a minute,” the visitor
began. “This is getting ugly. Am I to
wait here, accused by a mischievous child?” He shook an angry finger at Flinx,
who did not flinch or break his cold, green stare. “He took them,” the boy repeated, “and swallowed
them.” “Did you see me take these rings?” the bald man
demanded. “No,” Flinx admitted, “I didn’t. But you took them.
You know you did. They’re inside you.” “Charming, the experiences one has on the
slumworlds,” the man said sarcastically. “Really, though, this exercise has
ceased to be entertaining. I must go. My tour allots me only two days in this -wonderful city, and I wouldn’t want to
waste any more time observing quaint local customs. Out of the kindness of my nature, I will not call upon the
gendarmes to arrest you all. One side, please.” He shoved past the uncertain
shopkeepers and walked easily out into the rain. Mother Mastiff eyed the man’s retreating back. Her
friends and fellow merchants watched her expectantly, helplessly. She looked
down at the boy. Flinx had stopped crying. His voice was calm and unemotional
as he gazed back up at her. “He took them, mother, and he’s walking away with
them right now.” She could not explain what motivated her as she
calmly told Aljean, “Call a gendarme, then.” The bald man heard that, stopped, and turned back to
face them through the now gentle rain. “Really, old woman, if you think I’m
going to wait-“ “Aljean,” Mother Mastiff said, “Cheneth?” The two
shopkeepers exchanged a glance, then jogged out to bring the bald man back-if
false restraint charges were filed, they would be against Mother Mastiff and
not them. “I’m sorry, sir,” Cheneth, the candy man, said as he
gestured with his pistol, “but we’re going to have to ask you to wait until the
authorities arrive.” “And then
what? Are they going to haul a free citizen to the magistrate because a child
demands it?” “A simple body scan should be sufficient,” Mother
Mastiff said as the three re-entered the shop. “Surely you’ve no reason to
object to that?” “Of course I’d object to it!” the visitor responded.
“They have no reason or right to-“ “My, but you’re suddenly arguing a lot for someone
with nothing to worry about,” Aljean, the clothier, ob-served. She was
forty-two years old and had run her way through four husbands. She was very
adept at spotting lies, and she was suddenly less convinced of this visitor’s
innocence. “Of course, if perhaps you realize now that you’ve somehow made a
bit of mistake and that we quaint locals aren’t quite the simpletons you
believe us to be, and if you’d rather avoid the inconvenience of a scan, not to
mention official attention, you’ll learn that we’re agreeably forgiving here if
you’ll just return to Mother Mastiff what you’ve taken.” “I haven’t taken a damn-“ the bald man started to
say. “The jails of Drallar are very, very uncomfortable,”
Aljean continued briskly. “Our government resents spending money on public
needs. They especially scrimp when it comes to the comfort of wrongdoers. You
being an offworlder now, I don’t think you’d take well to half a year of
unfiltered underground dampness. Mold will sprout in your lungs, and your
eyelids will mildew.” All of a sudden, the man seemed to slump in on
him-self. He glared down at Flinx, who stared quietly back at him. “I don’t know how the hell you saw me, boy. I swear,
no one saw me! No one!” “I’ll be blessed over,” Cheneth murmured, his jaw drop-ping
as he looked from the thief to the boy who had caught him. “Then you did take
the rings!” “Ay. Call off the authorities,” he said to Aljean
“You’ve said it would be enough if I gave back the rings. I agree.” Mother Mastiff nodded slowly. “I agree, also,
provided that ye promise never to show your reflective crown in this part of
this marketplace ever again.” “My word on it, as a professional,” the man promised
quickly. “I did not lie when I said that I was on holiday.” He gave them a
twisted smile. “I like to make my holidays self-supporting.” Mother Mastiff did not smile back. She held out a
hand. My kill rings, if ye please.” The man’s smile twisted even further. “Soon
enough. But first I will need certain
edibles. There are several fruits which will suffice, or certain standard
medications. I will also need clean cloths and disinfectant. The boy is right,
you see. I did swallow them. Provide what I need and in an hour or so you will
have your cursed rings back.” And forty minutes later she did. After the thief and the little group of admiring
shopkeepers had gone their respective ways. Mother Mastiff took her charge
aside and confronted him with the question no one else had thought to ask. “Now, boy, ye say ye didn’t see him swallow the
rings?” “No, I didn’t, Mother.” Now that the crowd had
dis-persed and he had been vindicated, his shyness returned. “Then how the ringap did ye know?” Flinx hesitated. “Come now, boy, out with it. Ye can tell me,” she
said in a coaxing tone. “I’m your mother now, remember. The only one you’ve
got. I’ve been fair and straightforward with ye. Now ‘tis your turn to do the
same with me.” “You’re sure?” He was fighting with himself, she
saw. “You’re sure you’re not just being nice to me to fool me? You’re not one
of the bad people?” That was a funny thing for him to bring up, she
thought. “Of course I’m not one of them. Do I look like a bad people?” “N-n-no,” he admitted. “But it’s hard to tell,
some-times.” “You’ve lived with me for some time now, boy. Ye
know me better than that.” Her voice became, gentle again. “Come now. Fair is
fair. So stop lying to me by insisting you didn’t see him swallow those rings.” “I didn’t,” he said belligerently, “and I’m not
lying. The man was-he was starting to walk away from the case, and he was
uncomfortable. He was, he felt-what’s the word? He felt guilty.” “Now how do ye know that?” “Because,” he murmured, not looking at her but
staring out at the street where strange people scurried back and forth in the
returning mist, “because I felt it.” He put his small hand to his forehead and
rubbed gently. “Here.” Great Ganwrath of the Flood, Mother Mastiff thought
sharply. The boy’s a Talent. “You mean,” she asked again, “you read his mind?” “No,” he corrected her. “It’s not like that. It’s
just-it’s a feeling I get sometimes.” “Do ye get this feeling whenever ye look at someone
who’s been guilty?” “It’s not only guilty,” he explained, “it’s all
kinds of feelings. People-it’s like a fire. You can feel heat from a fire.” She
nodded slowly. “Well, I can feel certain things from people’s heads. Happiness
or fear or hate and lots of other things I’m not sure about. Like when a man
and a woman are together.” “Can ye do this whenever ye wish?” she asked. “No. Hardly ever. Lots of times I can’t feel a thing.
It’s clean then and doesn’t jump in on me, and I can relax. Then there’s other times when the feeling
will just be there-in here,” he added, tapping his forehead again. “I was
looking toward that man, and the guilt and worry poured out of him like a fire,
especially whenever he looked at the jewel case. He was worried, too, about
being discovered somehow and being caught, and a lot of other things, too. He
was thinking, was throwing out thoughts of lots of quick money. Money he was
going to get unfairly.” “Emotions,” she mused aloud, “all emotions.” She
began to chuckle softly. She had heard of such things before. The boy was an empathic telepath, though a
crude one. He could read other people’s
emotions, though not their actual thoughts. “It’s all right, Flinx,” she assured him. She put
out a hand and gave his hair a playful tousle. “Ye did right well. Ye saved me,
saved us both, a lot of money.” She looked over at the small leatherine purse
that now held the four recovered and cleansed rings. They still smelled of
disinfectant. “No wonder that thief couldn’t figure out how you’d
spotted him. Ye really didn’t see him take the rings.” “No, mother. I wasn’t even sure what he’d taken.” “Ye just felt the reaction in. his mind?” “I guess,” he said. “I-1 don’t know how it happens,
but I know that most people can’t do it, can they?” “No,” she said gently, “most other people can’t. And
sometimes they become very upset if they think there’s someone around like ye
who can.” Flinx nodded solemnly. “Like the bad people?” “Maybe,” she said, considering that possibility.
“Maybe like the bad people, yes. Ye can’t control the power, you’re sure?” “I’m sure. I’ve tried. Sometimes it’s just there, a
burning inside my head. But most of the time it’s not.” She nodded. “That’s too bad, too bad. Ye have what’s
called a Talent, Flinx.” “A Talent.” He considered that a moment, then asked
uncertainly, “Is it a good thing?” “It can be. It can also be a dangerous thing, Flinx.
We must make a secret of it, your secret and mine. Don’t ever tell anyone else
about it.” “I won’t,” he murmured, then added energetically, “I
promise. Then you’re not mad at me?” “Mad?” She let out a long, rolling cackle. “Now how
could I be mad with ye, boy? I’ve regained my jewelry, and you’ve gained quite
a bit of respect among our neighbors. In the marketplace, that can be a
tradable commodity, as ye may discover someday. They think you’ve a sharp eye and a sharper tongue. The reality
be something more, though I wouldn’t argue ye can cut words with the best of
them. Keep your Talent to yourself. Remember, our secret.” “Our secret,” he repeated solemnly. “Can ye do anything else?” she asked him, trying not
to sound eager. “Anything besides feeling what others be feeling?” “I don’t think so. Though sometimes it feels like-I
don’t know. It burns, and it makes me afraid. I don’t know how it happens to
me, or why.” “Don’t trouble yourself about it, boy.” She didn’t
press the matter when she saw how it upset him. “There’s nothing to be afraid
of.” She drew him close, held him next to her thin, warm frame. “Ye utilize your mind and everything else ye
own. That’s what it all’s been given to
ye for. A Talent be no different from any other ability. If there be anything
else ye want to try with yourself, ye go ahead and try it. Tis your body and
brain and none other’s.” Chapter Three
The couple came from Burley. Mother Mastiff could
tell that by their rough accents and by the inordinate amount of gleaming metal
jewelry they wore. They were handicraft hunting. The intricately worked burl of
black caulderwood in Mother Mastiff’s shop caught their attention immediately.
It had been finely carved to show a panoramic view of a thoruped colony, one of
many that infested Moth’s northern-hemisphere continents. The carving ran the
entire width of ‘the burl, nearly two meters from end to end. It was a half
meter thick and had been polished to a fine ebony glow. It was a spectacular piece of work. Ordinarily,
Mother Mastiff would not have considered parting with it, for it was the kind
of showpiece that brought passers-by into the stall. But this couple wanted it
desperately, and only the impossibly high price seemed to be holding them back. Flinx wandered in off the street, picked at a pile
of small bracelets, and watched while the man and woman argued. Quite suddenly,
they reached a decision: they had to have the piece. It would complete their
recreation room, and they would be the envy of all their friends. Hang the
shipping cost, the insurance, and the price’ They’d take it. And they did, though the amount on their
credcard barely covered it. Two men came later that afternoon to pick up the
object and deliver it to the hotel where the visitors were staying. Later that night, after the shop had closed, after
supper, Mother Mastiff said casually, “You know, boy, that couple who bought
the caulderwood carving today?” “Yes, Mother?” “They must have been in and out of the shop half a
dozen times before they made up their minds.” “That’s interesting,” Flinx said absently. He was
seated in a corner studying a chip on his portable viewer. He was very diligent
about that. She never thought of sending him to a formal school-rental chips
had been good enough for her as a child, and they’d damn well be good enough
for him. “Yes,” she continued. “They barely had the money for
it. I pressed them, I backed off, I did everything I could think of to
convince them of its worth once I saw that they were really serious about
buying the thing. Every time, no matter what I said, they left the shop and
went off arguing between themselves. “Then ye put in an appearance and stood there and
watched them, and lo-de-do-de, sudden-like, their sales resistance just
crumpled up and went aflight. Be that not interesting?” “Not really,” he replied. “Doesn’t that happen lots
of times?” “Not with an item as expensive as the caulderwood,
it doesn’t. It hardly ever happens that way. Now I don’t sup-pose ye had
anything to do with the sudden change of heart on the part of those two? ‘Tis
not likely ye sensed their hesitation and maybe did something to help them
along?” “Of course not. Mother.” He looked away from his
viewer in surprise. “I can’t do anything like that.” “Oh,” she murmured, disappointed. “Ye wouldn’t be
lying to me now, would ye, boy?” He shook his head violently. “Why would I do a thing
like that? I’m just happy you made so much money on the sale. I’m always glad
when you make money.” “Well, that be one thing we have in common, anyway,”
she said gruffly. “That’s enough viewing for one night. You’ll strain your young eyes. Be to bed,
Flinx.” “All right, Mother.” He walked over and bestowed the
obligatory peck on her cheek before scurrying off to his own room. “G’night.” “Good night, boy.” She stayed awake in her own bedroom for a while,
watching one of the rented entertainment chips on her own viewer. The show had
been recorded on Evoria and benefited from the exotic location and the presence
of thranx performers. It was late when she finally shut it off and readied
herself for ‘sleep. A quick shower, half an hour brushing out her hair, and she
was able to slide with a sigh beneath the thermal blanket. As she lay in the dark, waiting for sleep, a sudden
disquieting thought stole into her mind. Why would the boy lie to her about such a possible ability? He might do it, she thought, because if he could
convince one couple to make an unwanted purchase, he probably could do it to
others. And if he could do it to others, what about this past autumn when she had
been hurrying past the government auction platform on her way across town, and
something had brought her to a puzzling halt.
Wasn’t it possible that the purchase she had made then—the unwanted,
inexplicable-to-this-day purchase that she had never looked at too closely-had
been helped along its way by the mental nudging of the purchased? Why had she
bought him? None of her friends could quite under-stand it either. Disturbed, she slipped out of the bed and walked
across the resting and eating space to the boy’s room. A glance inside revealed
him sleeping soundly beneath his cover, as innocent-looking a child as one
could hope to set eyes upon. But now something else was there, too, something
unseen and unpredictable that she could never be certain about. Never again
would she be able to relax completely in the boy’s presence. Already she had forgotten her initial regrets and
had begun to extend to him the love she had never before been able to give to
his like. He was an endearing little twit and had been more than helpful around
the shop. It was good to have such company in her old age. But for a while now,
just for a while, she would pat and reassure him with one hand and keep the
other close by a weapon. At least until she could be sure in her own mind that
it still was her own mind she could be sure of. Silly old fool, she thought as she turned back
toward her own room. You’ve praised him for having a Talent, and now you’re
worried about it. You can’t have it both ways. Besides, what need to fear a
Talent its owner could not control? That confession of the boy’s seemed
truthful enough, to judge by his distress and bewilderment. She was feeling easier by the time she slipped into
her bed the second time. No, there was no reason to worry. It was interesting,
his Talent, but if he couldn’t control it, well, no need to be concerned. Clearly, anyone unable to master such an ability
would never amount to much, anyway. “Haithness, Cruachan, come here!” The woman seated before the computer screen had
spent still another morning poring through reams of abstract data. She was
trying to put together a chemical puzzle of considerable complexity. But that
morning, as happens on rare occasions, an especially vital piece of the puzzle
had unexpectedly fallen into place. Instead of a morass of figures and
undisciplined graphics, the screen now beamed out an image of perfect symmetry. The man who hurried over from the center of the room
to glance over her shoulder was tall, the lines striping his face impressive.
The dark-haired woman who joined him in staring at the screen was equally
imposing. The chamber in which the three of them worked was
situated in a small, nondescript office building located in an unimportant city
on a backwater world. For all that the equipment they hovered over had a
cobbled-together appearance, most of it was still of a type requiring enormous
expertise to operate and great expense to fund. Both the knowledge and the money came from
scattered, seemingly unrelated locations throughout the Commonwealth. To the
men and women who practically lived in the room, isolation was their honored
burden, obscurity their most potent weapon. For they were members of a uniquely
despised and persecuted minority, at war with the tenets of civilized society.
Truly were their hearts pure and their purposes of noble mien- it was just
their methodology that the rest of civilization questioned. The three staring intently at the computer screen
certainly did not look like candidates for such special attention. The tall man,
Cruachan, had the look of a kindly grandfather; the oriental lady seated before
the console would have seemed more at home in an ancient era, clad in flowing
silks and wooden shoes. Only the tall black woman standing opposite Cruachan
showed some of her inner hardness in her face. That hardness and cold. resolve lived in each of
them, however, fostered and intensified by two decades of persecution. They saw
themselves as men and women apart from the common herd. Their aim was nothing
less than the improvement of mankind in spite of itself. That their methods
might result in damage to the innocent was some-thing they had known from the
beginning. They had put that and other conventionally moral beliefs aside,
believing that such sacrifices were necessary that the majority might benefit.
They called their group the Meliorare Society, an innocent-sounding name drawn
to mask the intention of improving humanity via the artificial manipulation of
genetic material. Their troubles began when several of their less successful
experiments came to light, whereupon the outcry over the revelations had been
enormous. Now they were compelled to work in scattered outposts instead of in a
single research installation, always barely a jump ahead of pursuing government
authorities. They were looked down upon and viewed with horror by the general
populace. Many of their associates had already vanished,
having been discovered and taken into custody by the relentless minions of an
ignorant officialdom: martyrs to science, the survivors knew-inhuman monsters,
according to the media reports. Of course,
the aims of the Meliorare Society were dangerous! Improvement-change-was always viewed as dangerous by the shortsighted.
The members had steeled themselves to that way of thinking, and it no longer
affected them. What mattered were results, not the opinions of the ignorant
masses. So they did not fear dying, did not fear the even
more horrible punishment of selective mindwipe, because they believed in the
rightness of their cause. If only one of their experiments turned out
successfully, it would vindicate the work propounded on Terra some forty years
earlier by the Society’s founder. Then they would be able to re-emerge into the
scientific community that had disowned them. They would be able to point with
pride to a mature, noticeably improved human being. The air of excitement that pervaded the room was
re-strained but clearly felt as they gathered around the computer screen. “This had better live up to its readout,
Nyassa-lee,” Cruachan warned. “I have half a volume of information to process
from the Cannachanna system, and as you know, we’re likely going to have to
abandon this place and move on within the month. That means reset, breakdown of
equipment, and all the difficulties moving entails.” “You know me better than that, Cruachan,” said the
woman seated in the chair. “There was no feeling of triumph in what she had
just done; they had progressed beyond such trivialities. “I’ve been feeding and
cross-correlating records on dispersal and individual subject characteristics
for months now. It’s finally paid off. I’ve located Number Twelve.” The tall black woman leaned closer to the
screen. “Number Twelve-that sticks in
the mind. Male, wasn’t it?” Nyassa-lee nodded and indicated the screen. “Here,
I’II run the relevants back for you.” They refamiliarized themselves with the details of
the case in question. It had been eight years since case interdiction. In the eight
years since, they had encountered a number of other subjects. Most of them had
grown into normal childhood. A few had even displayed tiny flashes of promise,
but nothing worth a full-scale follow-up. Then there had been those whose minds and bodies had
been horribly distorted and twisted by the original surgical manipulations, for
which they each shared the blame. Un-fortunate failures such as those had been
made public by the government and had raised such an emotional outcry among the
scientifically unsophisticated public that the government had been able to
legalize its witch hunt against the Society. Most of the subject children had been recovered by
the government, raised in special homes, and restored to normality. Where
possible, the genetic alterations performed by the Society’s surgeons had been
corrected to enable all the children to live a normal life. If we cannot improve upon the normal, thought
Haithness, then we do not deserve to explore and master the universe. Nature
helps those who help themselves. Why should we not employ our learning and
knowledge to give evolution a boost? From the far corner of the darkened room, a man
called out. “Brora reports that a government shuttle has landed at Calaroom
shuttleport.” “Could be the usual load of agricultural
specialists,” Cruachan said thoughtfully. “Possible,” agreed the individual manning the
communications console, “but can we afford that risk?” “I hate to order evacuation on such slim evidence.
Any word on how many passengers?” “Hard to say,” the man ventured, listening intently
to his receiver. “Brora says at least a dozen he doesn’t recognize.” “That’s a lot of agricultural specialists,
Cruachan,” Haithness pointed out. “It is.” He called across to the communications
specialist. “Tell Brora to pull back and prepare for departure. We can’t take chances. Push evac time from a
month to tonight.” ‘Tonight?” The voice of the communicator had a
dubious ring. “I won’t have half the equipment broken down by then.” “New communications equipment we can buy,” Cruachan
reminded him. “Replacements for ourselves are not available.” The man at the corn console nodded and turned back
to his station, speaking softly and hurriedly into the pickup. Cruachan returned his attention to the
computer screen. Information emerged. NUMBER TWELVE. MALE. PHYSICALLY
UNDISTINGUISED AS A CHILD. Next were descriptions of cerebral index and figures
for cortical energy displacement. Oh, yes; Cruachan remembered now. Unpredictable,
that Number Twelve. Patterns in brain activity suggesting paranormal activity
but nothing concrete. Particularly fascinating had been the amount of activity
emerging from the left side of the cerebrum, usually detected only in females.
That by itself was not reason enough for excitement, but there was also
continuous signs of functioning in at least two sections of brain that were not
normally active, the “dead” areas of the mind. That activity, like the child
himself, had also been unpredictable. And yet, despite such encouraging evidence, the case
history of Number Twelve was devoid of the usual promising developments. No
hint of telepathy, psycho-kinesis, pyrokinesis, dual displacement, or any of
the other multitude of abilities the Society had hoped to bring to full flower
in its experimental children. Still, Number Twelve at least exhibited a possible
some-thing. “Well, this one certainly shows more promise than
the last dozen or so,” Haithness had to admit. “It’s been so long since we had
contact with him. I’d nearly forgotten those activity readings. We need to get
to this one as quickly as possible. Where’s he situated?” Nyassa-lee tapped keys below the readout, bringing
forth answers. “Where in the Commonwealth is that?” Haithness grumbled. “Trading world,” Cruachan put in, thinking hard.
“Centrally located but unimportant in and of itself. A stopover world, low in
native population.” “You won’t mind going there once you’ve seen this,”
Nyassa-lee assured them both. Her fingers moved delicately over the keyboard a
second time, and fresh in-formation glowed on screen. “This is recent, from the
local operative who relocated the subject. It appears that the child has
definitely displayed one Talent, possibly two.
Furthermore, he has done so in public and apparently without any
specialized training.” “Without training,” Cruachan whispered. “Remarkable,
if true.” Nyassa-lee tapped the screen. “This operative has
been reliable in the past and particularly noteworthy for the ac-curacy of his observations.
The Talent in question is a telepathic variant of some sort. The operative is
not a scientifically trained observer, of course, and he is even less certain
of the second one, though its potential value may be even greater.” “What is it?” Haithness asked. “I’ve been hard put to find a name for it.
Basically, it seems that the child may be an emolterator.” The other woman looked confused. “I don’t remember
that on the list of possible Talents.” “It wasn’t there. It’s an original. Original with this
child, it seems,” Cruachan said. Nyassa-lee nodded. “It means that he may be
able to influence the actions of others. Not mind control, nothing as strong as
that. It would be more subtle. One possessing such an ability would have to
utilize it Very carefully. If this report is true . . .” His voice and thoughts
drifted for a moment as he studied the readout. “It seems the child’s Talents have gone unnoticed by
the authorities and that he has developed naturally. All without even the most
rudimentary training. The signs certainly point to powerful potentials waiting
to be unlocked.” “Either the child has grown up unaware of these
Talents,” Nyassa-lee said, studying new information as it appeared on the
screen, “or else he is precociously clever.” “It may be just natural caution,” Haithness put in.
“It will be interesting to find out which is the case.” “Which we will do,” Cruachan said firmly. “It’s been
a long time since we’ve had a subject as promising as this one come back to us.
He could be the one we’ve searched for all these years.” “It had better not be a repeat of the last time we
located a subject with these figures,” Haithness cautioned, then indicated the
new figures materializing on the screen.
“Look at those neurological potentials. Remember the only other child
who showed numbers like that?” “Of course, I remember,” Cruachan said irritably.
“We won’t lose this one the way we lost that girl-what the devil was the little
monster’s name?” “Mahnahmi,” Nyassa-lee reminded him. “Yes, if this
boy’s anything like that one, we’re going to have to be extremely careful. I
couldn’t take a repeat of that experience.” “Neither could I, frankly,” Cruachan admitted. “Our
mistake was in trying to regain control over her directly. End result: the girl vanishes again, and two
more of the society go to a premature end. And we’re still not sure how she
accomplished it.” “We’ll run across her again someday, when our
methods are improved,” Haithness said coolly. “Then we’ll deal with her
properly.” “I’m not sure I’d want to chance it.” Nyassa-lee
looked back at the screen. “Meanwhile, it would be good to keep in mind the
fact that the potential of this Number Twelve theoretically exceeds even that
of the girl.” “True,” Cruachan admitted, studying the figures,
“but it’s clear that his development has been much slower. We should have
plenty of time to cope with any maturing Talent and make certain it is safely
contained, for the child’s benefit as well as our own, of course.” “Of course,” Haithness agreed calmly. “I am curious
to know how you propose to accomplish that. You know how volatile a Talent can
become if stressed.” “Yes, the girl gave us an impressive demonstration
of that, didn’t she?” Nyassa-lee’s fingers brought forth fresh information from
the console. Another call sounded from across the room. “Brora
says he’s now convinced that the new arrivals at the port have nothing to do
with the agricultural station. They have not stopped by the Agri section of
government house; they are gathering instead in the subterranean quarter.” “Tell Brora to speed things up,” Cmachan replied. “I
definitely want the installation broken down by midnight.” “Yes, sir,” the communicator responded briskly. “You didn’t answer my question,” Haithness reminded
the tail man. “How are we going to handle this one? If we try direct control as
we did with the girl, we risk the same consequences. There is no way of
predicting how a subject may react.” “Remember that the girl was still in infancy when we
encountered her. We wrongly mistook her age for harmlessness. There was no
reason to appeal to in her case-she was too young. I never expected that to
work against us.” “It doesn’t matter. The important thing is that he
is still unskilled in the use of his Talent. That is also what makes him dangerous.”
Haithness indicated the figures on the screen. “Look at those. Undisciplined or
not, we must handle this Number Twelve with extreme caution. We need a check of
some kind, something strong enough to mute any juvenile emotional reactions.” Nyassa-lee glanced back and up at her colleague.
“But we cannot wait.” “I agree with you there. This may be our last chance
to gain control and direction over a subject with such potential. We don’t want
to waste our chance.” “I am aware of the considerations and risks,”
Cruachan assured them both. “I do not intend that we should try, as we did with
the girl, to gain control directly. Instead, we will try to obtain control over
someone who exercises control over the subject. Is there anyone who fits the
requisite pattern?” Nyassa-lee turned back to her keyboard. There was a
pause before she replied, “One. It appears that the subject was purchased from
government control by an elderly woman. She has raised the boy as her own.” “Surrogate mother,” Haithness murmured. “That’s
good. It is virtually made to order. We
could not hope for a stronger emotional bond.” There was no warmth in the voice of Haithness. Only
one thing mattered to her: the success of the experiment. Time was running out for the Society, she knew; they
had no way of knowing when the authorities might close in on them forever. They
needed a success now, and this boy
might be their last chance. “I see one possible drawback,” Cruachan said while
pondering the information glowing on the screen. “The woman in question, the
surrogate mother, is of an advanced age, though apparently healthy.” He nudged
Nyassa-lee, who obediently made room for him on the edge of the chair. Cruachan fingered controls and frowned when the in-formation
he sought did not appear on the screen. “No detailed medical information on
her. It could be difficult.” Haithness shrugged indifferently. “It does not
matter what her condition is. We have to proceed regardless.” “I know, I know,” Cruachan replied impatiently. “Our
course is set, then. We will not go from here to Loser’s World in hopes of
relocating subject Number Fifty-six. Instead, we will establish standard mobile
operations aboard the ship. Once we are certain we have escaped pursuit, we will
plot course for this Moth. Then we should have enough time to proceed as
planned.” “It will be necessary to isolate the subject from
the mother.” Haithness was thinking out loud. “Given the nature of the
subject’s observed Talents, if our information is accurate, it may be that
within a limited geographical area he might be able to trace our activities. We
will naturally need an uninterrupted period with the surrogate,” she hesitated
only briefly, “to persuade her to co-operate with us.” A thin smile did little
to alter her expression. Cruachan nodded. “That should not be difficult to
arrange. Fortunately for us, Moth is lightly populated. Technology is not
unknown, but the level varies widely according to location. We should be able
to establish our-selves and the necessary equipment at a sufficient distance
from the metropolis where the subject and his parent are living to ensure our
privacy and standard security.” The communicator turned from his instrumentation and
interrupted them without hesitation. “Brora reports that at least half of the
newly arrived agricultural experts are armed.” “That’s that, then,” Cruachan murmured with a
resigned sigh. Another hurried move, another dash to still another strange
world. “Nyassa-lee, make certain that this information is
transferred to ship storage. Haithness, you-“ “I know what needs to be done, Cruachan.” She turned
from him and calmly began transferring data from main storage to a portacube. The communicator leaned back in his chair and
frowned at his instruments. “I won’t have time to break down much and move it
out to the shuttle.” “It doesn’t matter, Osteen,” Cruachan assured him.
“We have some duplicate equipment already aboard. I don’t like abandoning more
than we have to any more than you do.” He indicated the expensive electronics
with which the room had been paneled. “But we don’t have a choice now. Regardless, something promising, truly
promising, has come to our notice. After all these years, it appears that we
have relocated one of the most promising of all the subject children.” “That’s good news indeed, sir.” Osteen was one of
the few young men in the Meliorare Society. Cruachan would have prefered a man
with more vision as prime communicator, but such individuals were scarce.
Osteen at least was loyal and efficient. It was not his fault that he was
intellectually inferior to the Society’s original membership. But then, such a
collection of visionary minds was not likely to join together again in
Cruachan’s lifetime, he knew. Unless ... unless the Society could put forth a
shining testament to their noble ideals in the person of a single successful
subject. This boy, perhaps, might be their vindication. They had to get to him
quickly. During the past several years, they had had less and less time in
which to work as the Commonwealth closed in on the remnants of the Society.
Their survival rate did not bode well for the future: natural attrition was
beginning to damage the cause as much as government interference. The three of them, along with the sharp-eyed Brora,
who had sounded the latest warning, represented the largest surviving group
from the original membership. The trust of all who had perished devolved upon
them, Cruachan thought. They must not fail with this boy. And he must not fail them. Chapter Four
Loneliness had never bothered Flinx before. He knew
what it was, of course-the condition had been with him all his short life. In
the past, he’d always been able to distance himself from its pain, but this
feeling-this empty aloneness-was different from any loneliness he’d ever
experienced before. It was a physical reality, stabbing at him, creating an
ache in a mysterious, new part of his brain. It was different not only from his
own loneliness but from the aloneness he’d occasionally sensed in others via
his unpredictable Talent. In fact, the experience was so radically new that he
had nothing to compare it with. Yet it was
loneliness; of that he was certain. Loneliness and something else equally
intense and recognizable: hunger. A gnawing, persistent desire for food. The feelings were so bright and uncomplicated that
Flinx couldn’t help but wonder at their source. They beat insistently on his
mind, refusing to fade away. Never before had such emotions been so open to
him, so clear and strong. Normally, they would begin to fade, but these grew
not weaker but stronger-and he did not have to strain to hold them at bay. They
kept hammering at him until his mind finally gave in and woke him up. Flinx rubbed at his eyes. It was pouring outside the
shop, and the narrow window over the bed admitted the dim light of Moth’s
multiple moons, which somehow seeped through the nearly unbroken cloud cover.
Flinx had rarely seen the bright rust-red moon called Flame or its smaller
companions, but he’d spent his years of study well, and he knew where the light
came from. Slipping silently from the bed, he stood up and
pulled on pants and shirt. A glow light bathed the kitchen and dining area in
soft yellow. Across the way, ragged snores came from the vicinity of Mother
Mastiff’s bedroom. The loneliness he sensed was not hers. The feeling persisted into wakefulness. Not a dream,
then, which had been his first thought. The back of his head hurt with the
strength of it, but though the actual pain was beginning to fade, the emotion
was still as strong as it had been in sleep. He did not wake Mother Mastiff as he inspected the
rest of the kitchen area, the bathroom, and the single narrow closet. Quietly,
he opened the front door and slipped out into the stall. The shutters were
locked tight, keeping out weather and intruders alike. The familiar snoring
provided a comforting background to his prowling. Flinx had grown into a lithe young man of slightly
less than average height and mildly attractive appearance. His hair was red as ever, but his dark skill
now hid any suggestion of freckles. He moved with a gracefulness and silence
that many of the older, more experienced marketplace thieves might have envied.
Indeed, he could walk across a room paved with broken glass and metal without
making a sound. It was a technique he had picked up from some of Drallar’s less
reputable citizens, much to Mother Mastiff’s chagrin. All a part of his
education, he had assured her. The thieves had a word for it: “skeoding,” meaning
to walk like a shadow. Only Flinx’s brighter than normal hair made the
professional purloiners cluck their tongues in disapproval. They would have
welcomed him into their company, had he been of a mind to make thievery his
profession. But Flinx would steal only if absolutely necessary, and then only
from those who could afford it. “I only want to use my ability to supplement my
in-come,” he had told the old master who had inquired about his future
intentions, “and Mother Mastiff’s, of course.” The master had laughed, showing broken teeth. “I
understand, boy. I’ve been supplementin’ my income in that manner goin’ on
fifty years now.” He and his colleagues could not believe that one who showed
such skill at relieving others of their possessions would not desire to make a
career of it, especially since the youth’s other prospects appeared dim. “Yer goin’ into the Church, I suppose?” one of the
other thieves had taunted him, “t’become a Counselor First?” “I don’t think the spiritual life is for me,” Flinx
had replied. They all had a good laugh at that. As he quietly opened the lock on the outside door,
he thought back to what he had learned those past few years. A wise man did not move around Drallar late
at night, particularly on so wet and dark a one. But he couldn’t go back to
sleep without locating the source of the feelings that battered at him.
Loneliness and hunger, hunger and loneliness, filled his mind with
restlessness. Who could possibly be broadcasting twin deprivations of such
power? The open doorway revealed a wall of rain. The angled
street carried the water away to Drallar’s efficient under-ground drainage
system. Flinx stood in the gap for a long moment, watching. Suddenly an intense
burst of emptiness made him wince. That decided him. He could no more ignore
that hot pleading than he could leave an unstamped credcard lying orphaned in
the street. “That curiosity of yours will get ye into real
trouble Someday, boy,” Mother Mastiff had told him on more than one occasion.
“Mark me word.” Well, he had marked her word. Marked it and filed
it. He turned away from the door and skeoded back to his little room. It was
early summer, and the rain outside was relatively warm. Disdaining an
underjacket, he took a slickertic from its wall hook and donned it; thus
suitably shielded from the rain, he made his way back to the stall, out into
the street, and closed the main door softly behind him. A few lights like hibernating will-o’-the-wisps
glowed faintly from behind unshuttered shop fronts on the main avenue where the
idling wealthy night-cavorted in relative safety. On the side street where
Mother Mastiff plied her trade, only a rare flicker of illumination emerged
from be-hind locked shutters and windows. As water cascaded off his shoulders, Flinx stood
there and searched his mind. Something sent him off to his right. There was a narrow gap between Mother
Mastiff’s shop and that of old lady Marquin, who was on vacation in the south,
and by turning sideways, he could just squeeze through. Then he was standing in the service alleyway that
ran behind the shops and a large office building. His eyes roved over a lunar
landscape of uncollected garbage and refuse: old plastic packing crates, metal
storage barrels, honeycomb containers for breakables, and other indifferently
disposed of detritus. A couple of fleurms scurried away from his boots. Flinx
watched them warily. He was not squeamish where the omnipresent fleurms were
concerned, but he had a healthy respect for them. The critters were covered in
a thick, silvery fur, and their little mouths were full of fine teeth. Each
animal was as big around as Flinx’s thumb and as long as his forearm. They were
not really worms but legless mammals that did very well in the refuse piles and
composting garbage that filled the alleys of Drallar to overflowing. He had
heard horror stories of old men and women who had fallen into a drunken stupor
in such places-only their exposed bones remained for the finding. Flinx, however, was not drunk. The fleurms could
inflict nasty bites, but they were shy creatures, nearly blind, and greatly
preferred to relinquish the right of way when given the choice. If it was dark on the street in front of the shop,
it was positively stygian in the alley. To the east, far up the straightaway,
he could make out a light and hear intermittent laughter. An odd night for a
party. But the glow gave him a reference point, even if it was too far off to
shed any light on his search. The continuing surge of loneliness that he felt did
not come from that distant celebration, nor did it rise from the heavily
shuttered and barred doorways that opened onto the alley. The emotions Flinx
was absorbing came from somewhere very near. He moved forward, picking his way between the piles
of debris, talking his time so as to give the fleurms and the red-blue carrion
bugs time to scurry from his path. All at once something struck with unexpected force
at his receptive mind. The mental blow sent him to his knees. Somewhere a man was beating his wife. No
unique circumstance, that, but Flinx felt it from the other side of the city.
The woman was frightened and angry. She
was reaching for the tiny dart gun she kept hidden in her bedroom dresser and
was pointing its minuscule barrel at the man. Then it was the husband’s turn to
be frightened. He was pleading with her, not in words that Flinx could hear but
via an emotional avalanche that ended in an abrupt, nonverbal scream of shock.
Then came the emptiness that Flinx had grown to recognize as death. He heard laughter, not from the party up the alley
but from one of the lofty crystal towers that reared above the wealthy inurbs
where the traders and transspatial merhants made their homes. And there was
plotting afoot; someone was going to be cheated. Far beyond the city boundaries in the forest to the
west: happiness and rejoicing, accompanied by a new liquid sensation of
emergence. A baby was born. Very near, perhaps in one of the shops on Mother
Mastiff’s own street, an argument was raging. It involved accounts and
falsification, waves of acrimonious resentment passing between short-term
partners. Then the private grumblings of someone unknown and far away across
the city center, someone plotting to kill, and kill more than one time, but
plotting only-the kind of fantasizing that fills spare moments of every human
brain, be it healthy or sick. Then all the sensations were gone, all of them, the
joyful and the doomed, the debaters and lovers and ineffectual dreamers. There
was only the rain. Blinkmg, he staggered to his feet and stood swaying
un-steadily on the slope of the alley. Rain spattered off his slickertic, wove
its way down the walls of the shops and the office building, to gurgle down the
central drains. Flinx found himself staring blankly up the alley toward the
distant point of light that marked the location of the party. Abruptly, the emotions of everyone at the
party were sharp in his mind; only now he felt no pain. There was only a calm
clarity and assurance. He could see this woman anxiously yet uncertainly
trying to tempt that man, see another criticizing the furniture, still another
wondering how he could possibly live through the next day, feel laughter, fear,
pleasure, lust, admiration, envy: the whole gamut of human emotions. They began to surge toward him like the
storm he had just weathered, threatening the pain again, threatening to
over-whelm him-STOP IT, he ordered himself. Stop it-easy. By careful manipulation of a piece of his mind he
hadn’t even been aware existed before, he discovered he was able to control the
intensity of the emotions that threatened to drown him-not all of which had
been hu-man, either. He had felt at least two that were bizarre, yet
recognizable enough for him to identify. They were the feelings of a mated pair
of ornithorpes. It was the first time he had sensed anything from a nonhuman. Slowly, he found he was able to regulate the
assault, to damp it down to where he could manage it, sort out the individual
feelings, choose, analyze-and then they were gone as suddenly as they had struck,
along with all the rest of the blaze of emotion he had sucked in from around
the city. Hesitantly, he tried to focus his mind and bring
back the sensations. It was as before. Try as he might, his mind stayed empty
of any feelings save his own. His own- and one other. The loneliness was still
there, nagging at him. The feeling was
less demanding now, almost hesitant. The hunger was there, too. Flinx took a step forward, another, a third-and
something alive quickly scuttled out of his path, shoving aside empty
containers and cans, plastic and metal clinking in the damp alley. He strained
to see through the dimness, wishing now that he had had the presence of mind to
bring a portable light from the shop. He took a cautious step toward the pile,
ready to jump up and clear should the fleurms or whatever prove unexpectedly
aggressive. It was not a fleurm. For one thing, it was too long:
nearly a meter. It was thicker, too, though not by much. He thought of the snakelike creatures that
roamed the temperate forests to the south of Drallar. Some of them were
poisonous. Occasionally, they and other forest predators made their way into
the city under cover of rain and darkness to hunt out the small creatures that
infested the urban trash heaps. It was rare, but not unheard of, that a citizen
encountered such an intruder. Flinx leaned close to the pile, and as he did so the
hunger faded. Simultaneously, the feeling of loneliness intensi-fied; the strength
of it almost sent him reeling back against the shop wall. He was certain it
came from the snakelike unknown. The bump of curiosity-which Mother Mastiff was at
such pains to warn him about-quickly overcame his natural caution. All be felt
was amazement that such powerful mental projections could arise from so lowly a
creature. Furthermore, there was no anger in the animal, no rudimentary danger
signals. Only that persistent loneliness and the fleeting sense of hunger. The creature moved again. He could see the bright,
flashing red eyes even in the alley’s faint light. Not a true reptile, he was
sure. A cold-blooded creature would have been reduced to lethargy by the cool
night air. This thing moved too rapidly. Flinx took a step back, away from the pile. The
creature was emerging. It slithered onto the wet pavement and then did
something he did not expect. Snakes were not supposed to fly. The pleated wings were blue and pink, bright enough
for him to identify even in the darkness. No, the snake-thing certainly was not
lethargic, for its wings moved in a blur, giving the creature the sound and
appearance of a gigantic bee. It found a place on his shoulder in a single,
darting movement. Flinx felt thin, muscular coils settle al-most familiarly
around his shoulder. The whole thing had happened too fast for him to dodge. But the creature’s intent was not to harm. It simply
sat, resting against his warmth, and made no move to attack. The speed of the approach had paralyzed
Flinx, but only for a moment. For as soon as it bad settled against him, all
that vast loneliness, every iota of that burning need had fled from the snake.
At the same time, Flinx experienced a clarity within his own mind that he had
never felt before. Whatever the
creature was, wherever it had come from, it not only had the ability to make
itself at home, it seemed to make its new host feel comfortable as well. A new sensation entered Flinx’s mind, rising from
the snake. It was the first time he had ever experienced a mental purr. He sensed
no intelligence in the creature, but there was something else. In its
own way, the empathic communication was as clear as speech, the emotional
equivalent of an ancient Chinese ideograph-a whole series of complex thoughts
expressed as a single projection.
Simple, yet efficient. The small arrowhead-shaped head lifted from Flinx’s
shoulder, its bright little eyes regarding him intently. The pleated wings were
folded flat against the side of the body, giving the creature a normal
snakelike appearance. Flinx stared back, letting his own feelings pour from
him. Slowly, the creature relaxed. “The single long
coiled muscle of itself, which had been squeezing Flinx’s shoulder with
instinctive strength, relaxed, too, until it was only maintaining a gentle
grip, just enough to hold its position.
Pins and needles started to run down Flinx’s arm. He ignored them. The
animal’s head lowered until it moved up against Flinx’s neck. The snake was sound asleep. Flinx stood there for what felt like an eternity,
though surely it was not even half that long. The strange apparition that the
night had brought slept on his shoulder, its small head nestled in the hollow
of shoulder bone and neck tendon. The animal shivered once. Flinx knew it could
not be drawing full warmth from his body because the slictertic formed a layer
between them. Better to get the poor thing inside, he thought, suddenly aware
of how long he had been standing there in the rain. His new companion needed
rest as well as warmth. How he knew that, he could not have explained; but he
knew it as clearly as he recognized his own exhaustion. Flinx did not for a moment debate the snake’s
future. Its presence on his shoulder as
well as in his mind was too natural for him to consider parting with it-unless,
of course, some owner appeared to claim it. Clearly, this was no wild animal.
Also, Flinx was well-read, and if this creature was native to the Drallarian
vicinity, it was news to him. He had never seen or heard of such an animal
be-fore. If it was some kind of valuable pet, its owner would surely come
looking for it, and soon. For now, though, the snake was clearly as much an
orphan as Flinx himself had once been. Flinx had experienced too much suffering
in his own life to ignore it in anything else, even in a lowly snake. For a
while, it was his charge, much as he was Mother Mastiff’s. She had wanted to know his name on that first day
long ago. “What do I call you?” he wondered aloud. The sleeping snake did not
respond. There were thousands of books available to Flinx via
the library chips he rented from Central Education. He had only read a
comparative few, but among them was one with which he had particularly
identified. It was pre-Commonwealth- precivilization, really-but that hadn’t
mitigated its impact on him. Those characters with the funny names; one of them
was called-what? Pip, he ,remembered. He glanced back down at the sleeping
snake. That’ll be your name unless we
learn otherwise one day. As he started back for the shop, he tried to tell
himself that he would worry about that proverbial “one day” if and when it
presented itself, but he could not. He was already worried about it, because
although he had only had contact with the creature for less than an hour, it
seemed a part of him. “The thought of returning the snake to some indifferent,
offworld owner was suddenly more than he could bear. Since he had been an
infant, he couldn’t recall becoming so deeply attached to another living
creature. Not even Mother Mastiff had such a lock on his feelings. Feelings. This creature, this snake-thing, it understood
what he was feeling, understood what it meant to have the emotions of strangers
flood unbidden into one’s mind, interrupting one’s life and making every waking
moment a potential abnormality. That was what made it special. He knew it, and
the snake knew it, too. No longer were they individuals; they had become two
components of a larger whole. I will not give you up, he decided then and there in
the cold morning rain. Not even if some wealthy, fatuous offworlder appears to
lay claim to you. You belong with me. The snake dozed on, seemingly oblivious
to any decisions the human might make. The street fronting the shop was still deserted. The
lock yielded to his palm, and he slipped inside, glad to be out of the weather.
Carefully, he relocked the door. Then he was back in the dining area where the
glow light still shone softly. Using both hands, he unraveled the snake. It did
not resist as he slid the coils from his shoulder. From the bedroom to his
right came Mother Mastiff’s steady snores, a drone that matched the patter of
rain on the roof. Gently, he set the snake down on the single table.
In the glow lamp’s brighter light h& could see its true colors for the
first time. A bright pink and blue diamondback pattern ran the length of the
snake’s body, matching the pleated wings. The belly was a dull golden, hue and
the head emerald green. “Exquisite,” he murmured to the snake. “You’re
exquisite.” The creature’s eyes-no, he corrected himself, Pip’s
eyes-opened in lazy half sleep. It seemed to smile at him. Mental projection, Flinx thought as he
slipped out of the slickertic and hung it on its hook. “Now where can I keep you?” he whispered to himself
as he glanced around the small living area. The stall out front was out of the
question. Mother Mastiff surely had customers suffering from snake phobias, and
they might not take kindly to Pip’s presence-besides, the stall was unheated.
By the same token, he didn’t think Mother Mastiff would react with understanding
if the snake playfully sprang out at her from one of the kitchen storage
cabinets while .she was trying to prepare a meal. His own room was Spartan: There was only the small
computer terminal and chip readout, the single clothes closet he had rigged
himself, and the bed. The closet would have to do. Carrying the snake into his
room, Flinx set it down on the foot of the bed. Then he made a pile of some
dirty clothes on the closet floor. Pip looked clean enough; most scaled
creatures were dirt-shedders, not collectors. He lifted the snake and set it
down gently in the clothes, careful not to bruise the delicate wings. It
recoiled itself there, seemingly content. Flinx smiled at it. He didn’t smile
often. “Now you stay there. Pip,” he whispered, “and in the
morning we’ll see about scrounging something for you to eat.” He watched the
snake for several minutes before fatigue returned with a rush. Yawning, he
pushed his own clothes off the bed, set his boots on the drypad, and climbed
back into bed. A few droplets of water had crawled under the edge of the
slickertic. He brushed them from his hair, sighed deeply, and lapsed into a
rich, undisturbed sleep. Once the flow of mental energy from the human in the
bed had smoothed out and the snake was certain its new symbiote was not about
to enter a disturbing REM period, it quietly uncoiled itself and slithered out of the
closet. Silently, it worked its
way up one of the bed legs, emerging next to the single battered pillow. The animal rested there for a long moment, gazing
through double lidded eyes at the unconscious biped. In-side itself, the snake
was warm and comfortable. The hunger was still there, but it had received an
indication of sorts that it would soon be fed. “The bed was very warm, both the thermal blanket and
the symbiote’s mass exuding comfortable, dry heat. The snake slithered across
the pillow until it was resting against the back of the human’s head. It
stretched itself once, the wings flexing and retracting. Then it coiled itself
tightly into the convenient pocket formed by the symbiote’s neck and shoulder.
Soon its own brain waves matched those of the human as it drifted into its own
variety of sleep. Chapter Five Mother Mastiff was careful not to wake the boy as she
slowly began backing out of his room. Her eyes, alert and fearful, remained
fixed on the alien thing curled up against his head. There was no telling what
it might do if startled into wakefulness. How the invader had penetrated her tight little
home, she had no idea. No time to worry about that now. Her thoughts went to
the little gun, the delicate, ladylike needier she kept under her pillow. No,
too chancy—the snake was much too close to the boy’s head, and she was not as
good a shot as she had been twenty years ago. There was also the possibility the invader might not
even be dangerous. She certainly did not recognize it. In the ninety plus years
she had spent on Moth, she had seen nothing like it. For one thing, there was
no hint of fur any-where on its body. Only scales. That immediately identified
it as a non-native. Well, maybe. Moth was home to a few creatures—deep-digging
burrowers—that did not sport fur. This didn’t look like a burrower to her, but
she was no zoologist, nor had she ever traveled far outside the city limits. Yet she felt certain it came from offworld.
Something she couldn’t put a mental finger on marked the beast as alien, but
that didn’t matter. What did was that it had somehow penetrated to the boy’s
room, and she had better do something about it before it woke up and decided
the matter for her. Get it away from him, she told herself. Away from
his head, at least. Get it away, keep it occupied, then wake the boy and have
him make a run for the gun under her pillow. The broom she hefted had a light metal handle and
wire bristles. Taking it out of storage, she re-entered Flinx’s room and
reached past his head with the broom’s business end. The metal bristles prodded
the invader. The snake stirred at the touch, opened its eyes, and
stared at her. She jabbed at it again, harder this time, trying to work the
bristles between the snake’s head and the boy’s exposed neck. It opened its
mouth, and she instinctively Jerked back, but it was only a yawn. Still sleepy,
then, she thought. Good, its reactions would be slowed. Leaning forward again,
she reached down and shoved hard on the broom. Several of the snake’s coils
went rolling over to the side of the bed, and for the first time she had a
glimpse of its brilliant coloring. Again, she shoved with the broom, but the snake was
no longer on the bed. It hovered in midair, its wings moving so rapidly they
were no more than a blue-pink blur. They generated a rich, vibrant humming
sound in the small room. Aghast and uncertain how to attack this new threat,
Mother Mastiff backed away, holding the broom defensively in front of her.
Awakened by the last shove of the broom, the boy blinked sleepily at her.
“Mother? What is it?” “Hush, be
quiet!” she warned him. “I don’t know how this thing got into your room, but—“ Flinx sat up quickly. He glanced up at the hovering
snake, admiring it for the first time in daylight, and bestowed a reassuring
grin on Mother Mastiff. “Oh, that. That’s just Pip.” The broom dipped slightly, and she stared narrowly
at her charge. “Ye mean, ye know what it be?” “Sure,” he
said cheerfully. “I, uh, heard something; last night, so I went outside to
investigate.” He gestured with a thumb at the snake. “It was back in the
garbage, cold and hungry. Hey, I bet he’s still hungry, and— “I’ll bet it is, too,” she snapped, “and III not
have some scaly, gluttonous carrion eater crawling about my house. Get out!” she yelled at it. “Shoo!” She
swung the broom at the snake once, twice, a third time, forcing Flinx to duck
the flying bristles. Each time, the snake dodged nimbly in the air, displaying
unexpected aerial agility. Once it darted straight to its left, then backward,
then toward the ceiling. “Don’t!” Flinx shouted, suddenly alarmed. “It might
think you’re trying to hurt me.” “A guardian angel with beady eyes and scales?
Mockmush, boy, it knows well what I’m swinging at!” In fact, the snake was well aware the new human had
no intention of banning its symbiote, for it could feel the honest affection
and warmth flowing between them. It did not worry on that score. Conversely, no
love flowed toward it from the new person, and the shiny thing that was being
thrust at it was hard to avoid in the small, enclosed space. “Please, Mother,” Flinx pleaded anxiously,
scrambling out of bed and dragging the blanket with him, “stop it. I don’t know
how it’ll react.” “We’re going to find out, boy,” she told him grimly.
The broom struck, missed, bounced off the far wall. She cocked her arms for
another swing. The snake bad been patient, very patient. It
understood the bond between the two humans. But the broom had backed it into a
comer, and the hard bristles promised danger if they connected solidly with the
snake’s wings. It opened its mouth. There was a barely perceptible squirting
sound. A thin, tight stream of clear liquid shot forward. It sparkled in the
light and impacted on the broom as it was swinging forward. As Mother Mastiff
recovered and brought the broom back for yet another strike, she heard a faint
but definite hissing that did not come from the snake.She hesitated, frowning,
then realized the noise was coming from the broom. A glance showed that
approximately half of the metal bristles had melted away. Something was foaming
and sizzling as it methodically ate its way down the broom. She dropped the weapon as if the metal handle had
abruptly become red hot, her expression fearful. The liquid continued to
sputter and hiss as it ate away the metal.
Soon it had worked its way through the last stubble and was beginning to
eat holes in the metal handle itself. “Boy, get out of the room while ye have the chance,”
she called huskily, staring wide-eyed at the snake while continuing to back
toward her own bedroom. “If it can do that to metal, there’s no telling what—“ Flinx laughed, then hurriedly put a hand to his
mouth and forced himself to be understanding. “I’m sorry, Mother,” he said
apologetically. “It’s just that Pip would never hurt me. And he’s just proved
that he wouldn’t hurt anyone close to me, either.” “How do ye know that?” she sputtered. “You know,” he replied, sounding puzzled, “I
don’t know how I know it. But it’s true. Here, see?” He extended his left arm. Still keeping a wary eye on the woman, who continued
to block the exit, the snake zipped down to land on the proffered perch. In an instant, it had multiple coils wrapped
around the human’s shoulder. Then the snake relaxed, the pleated wings folding
up to lie flat against the gleaming body. “See?” Flinx lowered his arm and gently rubbed the
back of the snake’s head. “He’s just naturally friendly.” “Naturally ugly, ye mean,” Mother Mastiff
snorted. Bending, she picked up the
remnant of the broom and inspected it. All the bristles were gone, along with
several centimeters of handle. A weak crackling still came from the raw edges of
the tube where the metal had dissolved, though the extraordinarily corrosive
liquid seemed to have largely spent itself. She showed the remains of the broom to Flinx, still
nervous about getting too near the thing wrapped around his shoulder. “See that?
Imagine what it. would do to your skin.” “Oh, Mother,
can’t you see?” Flinx spoke with all the exasperation of the young for the
aged. “He was protecting himself, but because he senses that you’re important
to me, he was careful not to spit any of it on you.” “Lucky thing for it,” she said, some of her normal
bravado returning. “Well, it can’t stay here.” “Yes, it can,” Flinx argued. “No, it can’t. I can’t have some lethal varmint like
that fluttering and crawling all over the place, frightening off the
customers.” “He’ll stay with me all the time,” Flinx assured her
soothingly. His hand continued to caress the snake’s head. Its eyes closed contentedly. “See? He’s Just
like any other house pet. He responds to warmth and affection.” Flinx brought
forth his most mournful, pleading expression. It had the intended affect. “Well, it won’t get any warmth or affection from
me,” Mother Mastiff grumbled, “but if you’re determined to keep it . . .” “I think,” Flinx added, throwing fuel on the fire,
“he would become very upset if someone tried to separate us.” Mother Mastiff threw up her hands, simultaneously
signifying acquiescence and acceptance. “Oh, Deity, why couldn’t ye stumble
over a normal pet, like a cat or a saniff? What does the little monster eat,
anyways?” “I don’t know,” Flinx admitted, remembering the
hunger he had sensed the night before and resolving to do something about it
soon. He had been hungry himself and knew more of the meaning of that word than
most people. “Aren’t most snakes
carnivorous?” “This one certainly looks like it,” she said. Reaching down, Flinx gently ran a forefinger along
the edge of the snake’s mouth until he could pry it open. The snake opened one
eye and looked at him curiously but did not raise any objection to the intrusion.
Mother Mastiff held her breath. Flinx leaned close, inspecting. “The teeth are so
small I can’t tell for sure.” “Probably swallows its food whole,” Mother Mastiff
told him. “I hear that’s the wav of it with snakes, through this be no
normal snake and I wouldn’t care to make no predictions about it, much less
about its diet.” “I’ll find out,” Flinx assured her. “If you don’t
need me to help in the shop today—“ “Help, hahl No, go where ye will. Just make sure
that creature goes with ye.” “I’m going to take him around the marketplace,”
Flinx said excitedly, “and see if anyone recognizes him. There’s sure to be
someone who will.” “Don’t bet your blood on it, boy,” she warned him.
“It’s likely an offworld visitor.” “I thought so, too,” he told her. “Wouldn’t that be
interesting? I wonder how it got here?” “Someone with a grudge against me brought it,
probably,” she muttered softly. Then, louder, she said, “There be no telling.
If ‘tis an escaped pet and a rare one, ye can be sure its owner will be
stumbling about here soonest in search of it.” “We’ll see.” Flinx knew the snake belonged right
where it was, riding his shoulder. It felt right. He could all but feel the
wave of contentment it was generating. “And while I’m finding out what he is,” he added
briskly, “I’ll find out what he eats, too.” “Ye do that,” she told him. “Fact be, why not spend
the night at it? I’ve some important buyers coming around suppertime. They were referred to me through the
Shopkeeper’s Association and seem especial interested in some of the larger
items we have, like the muriwood table.
So ye take that awful whatever-it-be,” and she threw a shaky finger in
the direction of the snake, “and stay ye out ‘til well after tenth hour. Then
I’ll think about letting the both of ye back into my house.” “Yes, Mother, thank you,” He ran up to give her a
kiss. She backed off. “Don’t come near me, boy. Not with that monster
sleeping on your arm.” “He wouldn’t hurt you. Mother. Really.” “I’d feel more confident if I had the snake’s word
on it as well as yours, boy. Now go on, get out, be off with the both of ye. If
we’re fortunate, perhaps it will have some homing instinct and fly off when you’re not
looking.” But Pip did not fly off. It gave no sign of wishing
to be anywhere in the Commonwealth save on the shoulder of a certain redheaded
young man. As Flinx strolled through the marketplace, he was
startled to discover that his ability to receive the emotions and feelings of
others had intensified, though none of the isolated bursts of reception matched
in fury that first over-powering deluge of the night before. His receptivity
bad increased in frequency and lucidity, though it still seemed as
unpredictable as ever. Flinx suspected that his new pet might have something to
do with his intensified abilities, but he had no idea how that worked, anymore
than he knew how his Talent operated at the best of times. If only he could find someone to identify the snake!
He could always work through his terminal back home, but requests for information
were automatically monitored at Central, and he was afraid that a query for
information on so rare a creature might trigger alarm on the part of curious
authorities. Flinx preferred not to go through official channels. He had
acquired Mother Mastiff’s opinion of governmental bueaucracy, which placed it
somewhere between slime mold .and the fleurms that infested the alleys. By now, he knew a great many inhabitants of the
marketplace. Wherever he stopped, he inquired about the identity and origin of
his pet. Some regarded the snake with curiosity, some with fear, a few with
indifference. But none recognized it. “Why don’t you ask Makepeace?” one of the vendors
eventually suggested. “He’s traveled offworld. Maybe he’d know.” Flinx found the old soldier sitting on a street
corner with several equally ancient cronies. All of them were pensioneers. Most
were immigrants who had chosen Moth for their final resting place out of love
for its moist climate and because it was a comparatively cheap world to live
on, not to mention the laxity of its police force. On Moth, no one was likely
to question the source of one’s pension money. For several of Makepeace’s
comrades, this was the prime consideration. The other aged men and women studied the snake with
nothing more than casual interest, but Makepeace reacted far more
enthusiastically. “Bless my remaining soul,” he muttered as he leaned close—but
not too close, Flinx noted—for a better look. Pip raised his head curiously, as
if sensing something beyond the norm in
this withered biped. “You know what he is?” Flinx asked hopefully. “Aye, boy. Those are wings bulging its flanks, are
they not?” Flinx nodded. “Then it’s surely an Alaspinian miniature dragon.” Flinx grinned at the old man, then down at Pip. “So
that’s what you are.” The snake looked up at him as if to say. I’m well aware
of what I am, and do you always find the obvious so remarkable? “I thought dragons were mythical creatures,” he said
to Makepeace. “So they are. It’s only a name given from resemblance,
Flinx.” “I suppose you know,” Flinx went on, “that he spits
out a corrosive fluid.” “Corrosive!” The old man leaned back and roared with
laughter, slapping his legs and glancing knowingly at his attentive cronies.
“Corrosive, he says!” He looked back at Flinx. “The minidrag’s toxin is, my boy, a venomous acid
known by a long string of chemical syllables which this old head can’t
remember. I was a soldier-engineer. Biochemistry was never one of my favorite
subjects. I’m more comfortable with mathematical terms than biological
ones. But I can tell you this much,
though I never visited Alas-pin myself.” He pointed at the snake, which drew
its head back uncertainly. “If that there thing was to spit in your eye, you’d
be a kicking, quivering mess on the ground inside a minute—and dead in not much
more than that. I also remember that there’s no known antidote for
several of the Alaspinian toxins, of which that minidrag of yours wields the
most potent. A corrosive, neurological poison—aye, who wouldn’t remember
hearing about that? You say you know
it’s corrosive?” Flinx had an image of the dissolved end of the
broomstick, the metal melted away ike cheese before a hot blade. He nodded. “Just make sure you never get to know of it
personally, lad. I’ve heard tell of such creatures being kept as pets, but it’s
a rare thing. See, the associational decision’s all made by the snake. The
would-be owner has no choice in the matter. You can’t tame ‘em. They pick and
choose for themselves.” He gestured toward Flinx’s shoulder. “Looks like that
one’s sure settled on you.” “He’s more than welcome,” Flinx said affectionately.
“He feels natural there.” “Each to his own,” an elderly woman observed with a
slight shudder. Affirmative nods came from others in the group. “And there’s something else, too.” The old soldier
was frowning, struggling to remember long-dormant knowledge.“What you just said
about it feeling ‘natural’ there reminded me. They say those flying snakes have
funny mental quirks all their own. Now me, I wouldn’t be able to say for
certain if that’s so—I’m only relating hearsay, didn’t read it off no chip. But
the stories persist.” “What kind of stories?” Flinx asked, trying not to
appear overanxious. “Oh, that the snakes are empathic. You know,
telepathic on the emotional level.” He scratched his head. “There’s more to it
than that, but I’m damned if I can remember the rest of it.” “That’s certainly interesting,” Flinx said evenly,
“but pretty unlikely.” “Yeah, I always thought so myself,” Makepeace
agreed.“You wouldn’t have noticed anything like that since being around this
one, of course.” “Not a thing.” Flinx was an expert at projecting an
aura of innocence; in this case, it glowed from his face, not his mind. “Thanks
a lot for your time, Mr. Makepeace, sir.” “You’re more than welcome to it, boy. Old knowledge
dies unless somebody makes use of it. You watch yourself around that thing.
It’s no saniff, and it might could turn on you.” “I’ll be careful,” Flinx assured him brightly. He
turned and hurried away from the gaggle of attentive oldsters.Makepeace was
rubbing his chin and staring after the youngster as he vanished into the
swirling crowd. “Funny. Wonder where
the little flying devil came from? This is one hell of a long way from Alaspin.
That reminds me of the time ...” Flinx glanced down at his shoulder. “So you’re
poisonous, hub? Well, anyone could have guessed that from the little
demonstration you gave with Mother’s broom this morning. If you spit in my eye,
I’ll spit in yours.” The snake did not take him up on the offer. It
stared at him a moment, then turned its head away and studied the street ahead,
evidently more interested in its surroundings than in its master’s
indecipherable words. Maybe miniature dragons don’t have much of a sense
of humor, Flinx mused. Probably he would have ample opportunity to find out.
But at least he knew what his pet was. Glancing up beyond the fringe of the
slickertic hood, he wondered where the snake’s home world lay. Alaspin, old
Makepeace had called it, and said it was far away. The morning mist moistened his upturned face. The
cloud cover seemed lighter than usual. If he was lucky, the gloom would part
sometime that night and he would have a view of Moth’s fragmented ice rings, of
the moon Flame, and beyond that, of the stars. Someday, he thought, someday I’ll travel to far
places as Makepeace and the others have. Someday I’ll get off this minor wet
world and go vagabonding. I’ll be a free adult, with nothing to tie me down and
no responsibilities. I’ll lead a relaxed, uncomplicated life of simple
pleasures. He glanced down at his new-found companion. Maybe someday they would
even travel to the snake’s home world of Alaspin, wherever it might be. Sure you will, he thought bitterly. Better be
realistic, like Mother Mastiff says.
You’re stuck here forever.
Moth’s your home, and Moth’s where you’ll spend the rest of your days.
Count yourself fortunate. You’ve a concerned mother, a warm home, food .... Food. Surely the flying snake was hungrier than
ever. “We’d better get you something to
eat,” he told Pip, who gazed up at him with fresh interest. He checked his credcard. Not much money there. Not
that there ever was. Well, he could manage. Trouble was, he had no idea what
Alaspinian minidrags liked to eat. “I wonder what you’d settle for,” he
murmured. The snake did not respond. “If it’s live food only, then I don’t
think there’s much I can do to help you. Not on a regular basis, anyway. Let’s
try here, first.” They entered a stall well known to Flinx. Most of
the booths and tables were unoccupied, since it was between mealtimes. As it
developed, finding suitable food for the minidrag turned out to be less of a
problem than he had feared. Much to Flinx’s surprise, the flying snake was
omnivorous. It would eat almost anything he set in front of it, but raw meat
seemed to be a special favorite. Flinx cut the meat into small chunks, which
the snake gulped down whole. Flinx helped himself to an occasional bite. When
times were bad, he and Mother Mastiff had existed on far less savory items. Pip was fond of any kind of fruit or berry, though
it shied away from vegetables. Something else they had in, common. Flinx
thought. Oddly enough, the snake would even lap up milk. Flinx was sure he could
supply enough variety to keep his pet both happy and alive. Maybe it would even
eat table scraps. Perhaps that would weaken Mother Mastiff’s antagonism. As be
experimented further, he discovered that the snake was particularly fond of
anything with a high iron content, such as raisins or flakes of guarfish. Had
he been a biochemist equipped with a field laboratory, he might have learned
that the minidrag’s blood contained an extraordinary amount of hemoglobin,
vital to transport the oxygen necessary
to sustain the snake’s hummingbirdlike flight. When Pip had swollen to twice his normal diameter,
Flinx stopped trying new foods on his pet. He relaxed in the booth, sipping
mulled wine and watching the lights of the city wink to life. It wouldn’t be
too bad to live out his life on Moth, he admitted to himself. Drallar was never
dull, and now he had a special companion with whom to share its excitement. Yes, the flying snake had filled a definite void in
his life as well as in some mysterious, deeper part of himself. But he still
longed for the stars and the magical, unvisited worlds that circled them. Be realistic, he ordered himself. He waved to some acquaintances as they strolled past
the restaurant. Older men and women. Sometimes Mother Mastiff worried that he
preferred the company of adults to youngsters his own age. He couldn’t help it.
It wasn’t that he was antisocial, merely that he chose his friends carefully.
It was the immaturity of those his own age that drove him into the company of
adults. A fleeting emotion from one of those to whom he had
waved reached back to him as the group rounded a corner, laughing and joking in
easy camaraderie. Flinx snatched at it,
but it was gone. He sat back in his booth, the wine making him moody. Better to
have no Talent at all, he thought,
than an unmanageable one that only teases. He paid the modest bill, slipping his card into the
table’s central pylon. Outside, the evening rain had begun. Pip rode
comfortably on his shoulder beneath the slickertic, only its head exposed. It
was sated, content. Ought to be after all you ate, Flinx thought as he gazed
fondly down at his pet. Rain transformed the brilliant scales of the snake’s
head into tiny jewels. The moisture did not seem to bother the snake. I wonder,
Flinx thought. Is Alaspin a wet world, also? I should have asked old Makepeace.
He’d probably have known. People lucky enough to travel learn every-thing
sooner or later. Suddenly a stinging, serrated burst of
emotion—hammer blow, unexpected, raw—doubled him over with its force. It was
like a soundless screaming inside his head. Flinx was feeling the naked emotion
behind a scream instead of hearing the scream itself. He had never experienced
anything like it before, and despite that, it felt sickeningly familiar. A bundled-up passer-by halted and bent solicitously
over the crumpled youngster. “Are you all right, son? You—“ He noticed something and quickly backed off. “I—I’m okay, I think,” Flinx managed to gasp. He saw
what had made the man flinch. Pip had been all but asleep on his master’s
shoulder only a moment before. Now the snake was wide awake, head and neck
protruding like a scaly periscope as it seemed to search the night air for
something unseen. Then the last vestiges of that desperate, wailing
cry vanished, leaving Flinx’s head xxxaching and infuriatingly empty.Yet it had
lingered long enough for him to sort it out, to identify it. “Listen, son, if you need help, I can—“ the stranger
started to say, but Flinx did not wait to listen to the kind offer. He was
already halfway down the street, running at full speed over the pavement. His
slickertic fanned out like a cape behind him, and his boots sent water flying
over shop fronts and pedestrians alike. He did not pause to apologize, the
curses sliding off him as unnoticed as the rain. Then he was skidding into a familiar side street.
His heart pounded, and his lungs heaved. The street appeared untouched,
unaltered, yet something here had been violated, and the moment of it had
touched Flinx’s mind.Most of the shops were already shuttered against the
night.There was no sign of human beings in that damp stone canyon. “Mother!” he shouted. “Mother Mastiff!” He pounded
on the lock plate with his palm. The door hummed but did not open—it was locked
from inside. “Mother Mastiff, open up. It’s me, Flinx!” No reply
from the other side. Pip danced on his shoulder, half airborne and half
coiled tight to its master. Flinx moved a dozen steps away from the door, then
charged it, throwing himself into the air sideways and kicking with one leg as
Makepeace had once shown him. The door gave, flying inward. It had only been
bolted, not locksealed. He crouched there, his eyes darting quickly around
the stall. Pip settled back onto his shoulder, but its head moved agitatedly from
side to side, as if it shared its master’s nervousness and concern. The stall looked undisturbed. Flinx moved forward
and tried the inner door. It opened at a touch. The interior of the living area
was a shambles. Pots and pans and food had been overturned in the kitchen.
Clothing and other personal articles lay strewn across floor and furniture. He
moved from the kitchen-dining area to his own room, last-ly to Mother
Mastiff’s, knowing but dreading what he would find. The destruction was worse in her room. The bed
looked as if it had been the scene of attempted murder or an uncontrolled orgy.
Across the bed, hidden from casual view, a small curved door blended neatly
into the wall paneling. Few visitors would be sharp-eyed enough to notice it. It was just wide enough for a man to crawl
through. It stood ajar. A cold breeze drifted in from
outside. Flinx dropped to his knees and started through, not
car ing what he might encounter on the other side. He emerged from the
slip-me-out into the alley and climbed to his feet. The rain had turned to
mist. There was no hint that anything unusual had occurred here. All the chaos
was behind him, inside. Turning, he ran two or three steps to the north,
then stopped himself. He stood there, panting. He had run long and hard from
the street where the scream had struck him, but he was too late. There was no
sign that anyone had even been in the alley. Slowly, dejectedly, he returned to the shop. Why? he
cried to himself. Why has this happened to me? Who would want to kidnap a
harmless old woman like Mother Mastiff? The longer he thought about it, the
less sense it made. He forced himself to take an inventory out front.
There was no sign of anything missing. The shop’s stock seemed to be intact.
Not thieves, then, surprised in the act of burglary. Then what? If not for the
ample evidence that there had been a struggle, he would not even have suspected
that anything was amiss. No, he reminded himself, not quite true. The
lockseal on the front door was dead. It would have taken half the thieves in
Drallar to drag Mother Mastiff from her shop while it stood unsealed. He
thought of thieves a second time, knowing he would not be staying here long.
His mind full of dark and conflicting thoughts, he set about repairing the
lock. Chapter Six
"Pssst! Boy! Flinx-boy!” Flinx moved the door aside slightly and gazed out
into the darkness. The man speaking from the shadows operated a little shop two
stalls up the side street from Mother Mastiff’s, where he made household items
from the hard-woods that Moth grew in abundance. Flinx knew him well, and
stepped out to confront him. “Hello, Arrapkha.” He tried to search the man’s
face, but it was mostly hidden by the overhanging rim of his slickertic. He
could feel nothing from the other man’s mind. A fine and wondrous Talent, he
thought sarcastically to himself. “What happened here? Did you see anything?” “I shouldn’t be out like this.” Arrapkha turned to
glance worriedly up the street to where it intersected the busy main avenue.
“You know what people say in Drallar, Flinx-boy. The best business is minding
one’s own.” “No homilies now, friend,” Flinx said
impatiently. “You’ve been neighbor to
my mother for many years, and you’ve watched me grow up. Where is she?” “I don’t know.” Arrapkha paused to gather his
thoughts.Flinx held back his anxiety and tried to be patient with the
man—Arrapkha was a little slow upstairs but a good soul. “I was working at my lathe, feeling good with
myself. I’d only just sold a pair of
stools to a programmer from the Welter Inurb and was counting my good fortune
when I thought I heard noises from your house.” He smiled faintly. “At first, I
thought nothing of it. You know your mother. She can fly into a rage at anytime
over nothing in particular and make enough noise to bring complaints from the
avenue stores. “Anyhow, I finished turning a broya post—it will be
a fine one, Flinx-boy, fashioned of number-six harpberry wood—“ “Yes, I’m sure,” Flinx said impatiently. “I’m sure
it will be a fine display stand, as all your work is, but what about Mother
Mastiff?” “I’m getting to that, Flinx-boy,” Arrapkha said
petulantly. “As I said, I finished the post, and since the noise continued, I
grew curious. It seamed to be going on a long time even for your mother. So I
put down my work for a moment and thought to come see what was going on. I
mediate for your mother sometimes. “When I was about halfway from my shop to yours, the
noise stopped almost entirely. I was about to return home when I saw something.
At least, I think I did.” He gestured toward the narrow gap that separated
Mother Mastiff’s shop from the vacant shop adjoining hers. “Through there I thought I saw figures moving
quickly up the alley behind your home. I couldn’t be certain. The opening is
small, it was raining at the time, and it’s dark back there. But I’m pretty
sure I saw several figures.” “How many?” Flinx demanded. “Two, three?” “For sure, I couldn’t say,” Arrapkha confessed
sadly. “I couldn’t even for certain tell if they were human or not.More than
two, surely. Yet not a great number, though I could have missed seeing them
all. “Well, I came up to the door quickly then and
buzzed. There was no answer, and it was quiet inside, and the door was locked,
so I thought little more of it. There was no reason to connect shapes in the
alleyway with your mother’s arguing. Remember, I only heard noise from the
shop. “As it grew dark I started to worry, and still the
shop stayed closed. It’s not like Mother Mastiff to stay closed up all day.
Still, her digestion is not what it used to be, and sometimes her liver gives
her trouble. Too much bile.She could have been cursing her own insides.” “I know,” Flinx said. “I’ve had to listen to her
complaints lots of times.” “So I thought best not to interfere. But I have
known both of you for a long time, Flinx-boy, just as you say, so I thought,
when I saw you moving about, that I ought to come and tell you what I’d seen.
It’s clear to me now that I should have probed deeper.” He struck his own
head.“I’m sorry. You know that Frn not the cleverest man in the marketplace.” “It’s all right, Arrapkha. There’s no blame for you
in this matter.” Flinx stood there in the mist for a long moment, silent and
thinking hard. Arrapkha hesitantly broke in on his contemplation.
“So sorry I am, Flinx-boy. If there’s anything I can do to help, if you need a
place to sleep tonight, ay, even with the devil thing on your shoulder, you are
welcome to share my home.” “I’ve spent many a night out on my own, sir,” Flinx
told him, “but the offer’s appreciated. Thank you for your help. At least now I
have a better idea of what happened, though not for the life of me why. Could
you see if Mother Mastiff was among those running down the alley?She’s not
here.” “So I guessed from your look and words. No, I cannot
say she was one of them. I saw only shapes that seemed to be human, or at least
upright. But they seemed to run with difficulty.” “Maybe they were carrying her.” “It may be, Flinx-boy, it may be. Surely she would
not go off on her own with strangers without leaving you so much as a message.” “No, she wouldn’t,” Flinx agreed, “and if she went
with the people you saw, it wasn’t because they were her friends. The inside of
the house is all torn up. She didn’t go with them quietly.” “Then surely for some reason she’s been
kidnaped,”Arrapkha concurred. “Fifty years ago, I might could give a reason for
such a thing. She was a beauty then. Mother Mastiff, though she has not aged
gracefully. Grace was not a part of her, not even then. A hard woman always,
but attractive. But for this to happen now—“ He shook his head. “A true puzzle.
Did she have access to much money?” Flinx shook his head rapidly. “Urn. I thought not. Well, then, did she owe anyone
any dangerous amounts?” “She owed a lot of people, but no great sums,” Flinx
replied. “At least, nothing that she ever spoke to me about and nothing I ever
overheard talk of.” “I do not understand it, then,” Arrapkha said
solemnly. “Nor do I, friend.” “Perhaps,” Arrapkha suggested, “someone wished a
private conversation with her and will bring her back in the morning?” Flinx shook his head a second time. “I think that
since she didn’t go with them voluntarily, she won’t be allowed to come back
voluntarily. Regardless, one thing she always told me was not to sit around and
stare blankly at the inexplicable but always to try and find answers. If she
does come walking freely home tomorrow, then I can at least try to meet her
coming.” “Then you’re determined to go out after her?”
Arrapkha lifted bushy black eyebrows. “What else can I do?” “You could wait. You’re a nice young fellow,
Flinx-boy.” He waved toward the distant avenue. “Most every-one in the
marketplace who knows you thinks so, also. You won’t lack for a place to stay
or food to eat if you decide to wait for her. Your problem is that you’re too
young, and the young are always overanxious.” “Sorry, Arrapkha. I know you mean well for me, but I
just can’t sit around here and wait. I think I’d be wasting my time and, worse,
maybe hers as well. Mother Mastiff doesn’t have much time left to her.” “And what if her time, excuse me, has already fled?”
Arrapkha asked forcefully. Subtlety was not a strong trait of the marketplace’s
inhabitants. “Will you involve your-self then in something dangerous which has
chosen to spare you?” “I have to know. I have to go after her and see if I
can help.” “I don’t understand,” Arrapkha said sadly. “You’re a
smart young man, much smarter than 1. Why risk your-self? She wouldn’t want you
to, you know. She’s not really your mother.” “Mother or mother-not,” Flinx replied, “she’s the
only mother I’ve ever known. There’s more to it than simple biology, Arrapkha.
The years have taught me that much.” The older man nodded. “I thought you might say
something like that, Flinx-boy. Well, I can at least wish you luck. It’s all I
have to give you. Do you have credit?” “A little, on my card.” “If you need more, I can transfer.” Arrapkha started
to pull out his own card. “No, not now, anyway. I may need such help later.”
He broke into a broad smile. “You’re a good friend, Arrapkha. Your friendship
is as solid as your woodwork.” He turned. “Did you see which direction these
figures took?” “That’s little to start on.” He pointed to the
north. “That way, up the alley. They could have turned off any time. And in the
weather”—he indicated the clouds hanging limply overhead—“they’ll have left no
trail for you to follow.” “Perhaps not,” Flinx admitted. “We’ll see.” “I expect you will, Flinx-boy, since you feel so
strongly about this. All I can do, then, is wish luck to you.” He turned and
strode back up the street toward his shop, keeping the slickertic tight around
his head and neck. Flinx waited until the rain had swallowed up the
older man before going back inside and closing the door behind him. He wandered
morosely around the living area, salvaging this or that from the mess and
returning things to their proper places. Before long, he found himself in
Mother Mastiff’s room. He sat down on the bed and stared at the ajar
slip-me-out that led to the alley. “What do you think, Pip? Where did she go, and who
took her, and why? And how am I going to find her? I don’t even know how to
start.” He shut his eyes, strained, tried to sense the kinds
of emotions he knew she must be generating, wherever she had been taken. There
was nothing. Nothing from Mother Mastiff, nothing from anyone else. His Talent mocked
him. He started fixing up the bedroom, hoping that contact with familiar
objects might trigger some kind of reaction in his mind. Something, anything,
that would give him a start on tracking her down. Pip slipped off his shoulder
and slithered across the bed, playing with covers and pillows. There were gaps—missing clothing—in the single
closet, Flinx noted. Whoever had abducted her evidently intended to keep her
for a while. The sight cheered him because they would not have troubled to take
along clothing for someone they intended to kill immediately. Pip had worked its way across the bed to the night
table and was winding its sinuous way among the bottles and containers there.
“Back off that, Pip, before you break something. There’s been enough damage
done here today.” The irritation in his voice arose more out of personal upset
than any real concern. The minidrag had yet to knock over anything. Pip reacted, though not to his master’s admonition.
The snake spread luminous wings and fluttered from the tabletop to the
slip-me-out. It hovered there, watching him. While Flinx gaped at his pet, it
flew back to the night table, hummed over a bottle, then darted back to the
opening. Flinx’s momentary paralysis left him, and he rushed
to the end table. The thin plasticine bottle that had attracted Pip was
uncapped. It normally held a tenth liter of a particularly powerful cheap
perfume of which Mother Mastiff was inordinately fond. Now he saw that the
bottle was empty. If Mother Mastiff had retained enough presence of
mind to remember that the Drallarian gendarmery occasionally employed the
services of tracking animals—for the first time hope crowded despair from
Flinx’s thoughts. Those animals could track odors even through Moth’s perpetual
dampness. If an Alaspinian minidrag possessed the same ability
... Was he completely misinterpreting the flying snake’s actions? “Pip?” The flying snake seemed to accept the mention of its
name as significant, for it promptly spun in midair and darted through the
slip-me-out. Flinx dropped to his hands and knees and crawled after. In
seconds, he was in the alley again. As he climbed to his feet, he searched for
his pet. It was moving eastward, almost out of sight. “Pip, wait!” The snake obediently halted, hovering
in place until its master had caught up. Then it took off up the alley again. Flinx settled into a steady run. He was an excellent
runner and in superb condition, on which he had always prided himself. He
resolved to follow the flying snake until one or the other of them dropped. Any moment he expected the snake to pause outside
one of the innumerable faceless structures that peppered the commercial
sections of Drallar. But while the minidrag twisted and whirled down alleys and
up streets, not once did it hesitate in its steady flight. Soon Flinx found his
wind beginning to fail him. Each time he stopped, the snake would wait
impatiently until its master caught up again. Drallar was the largest city on Moth, but it was a
village compared to the great cities of Terra or the under-ground complexes of
Hivehom and Evoria, so Flinx was not surprised that when Pip finally began to
slow, they had reached the northwestern outskirts of the metropolis. Here the
buildings no longer had to be built close to one another. Small storage
structures were scattered about, and individual homes of blocked wood and
plastic began to blend into the first phalanx of evergreen forest. Pip
hesitated before the trees, zooming in anxious circles, soaring to scan the
treetops. It ignored Flinx’s entreaties and calls until finally satisfied, whereupon
the snake turned and dropped down to settle once again on the familiar perch of
his master’s shoulder. Turning a slow circle, Flinx fought to pick up even
a fragment of lingering emotion. Once again, his efforts met with failure. It
seemed clear that whoever had carried off Mother Mastiff had taken her into the
forest and that the olfactory trail that had led Pip so far had finally
dissipated in the steady onslaught of mist and rain. On a drier world or in one
of Moth’s few deserts, things might have been different, but here Pip had come
to a dead end. After a moment’s thought, Flinx started away from
the trees. In addition to the storage buildings and homes, several small
industrial complexes were visible nearby, including two of the ubiquitous sawmills
that ringed the city and processed Moth’s most prolific crop. Plinx wandered
among them until he located a public corn station on a service street. He
stepped inside and slid the spanda-wood door shut behind him. Even after
curing, spanda retained ‘a significant coefficient of expansion. When he closed
the door, it sealed itself against the elements, and only the ventilation
membranes would keep him from suffocating. He took out his battered credcard
and slid it into the receptacle on the unit, then punched the keyboard. A
pleasant-looking middle-aged woman appeared on the small viewscreen. “Yes, sir.
What can I do for you?” “Is there a Missing Persons Bureau in the Drallar
Municipal Strata?” “Just a moment, please.” There was a pause while she
glanced at something out of range of the pickup. “Human or alien?” “Human, please.” “Native or visitor?” “Native.” “You wish connection?” “Thank you, yes.” The woman continued to stare at
him for a moment, and Flinx decided she was fascinated by the coiled shape riding
his shoulder. The screen finally flashed once and then cleared. This time, the individual staring back at him was
male, bald, and bored. His age was indeterminate, his attitude barely civil.
Flinx had never liked bureaucrats. “Yes, what is it? “Last night,” he declared, “or early this
morning”—in his rush through the city streets he’d completely lost track of the
time—“I—my mother disappeared. A neighbor saw some people running away down an
alley, and our house was all torn apart. I don’t know how to start looking for
her. I think she’s been taken out of the city via the north-west quadrant, but
I can’t be sure.” The man perked up slightly, though his voice sounded
doubtful. “I see. This sounds more like a matter for the police than for
Missing Persons.” “Not necessarily,” Flinx said, “if you follow my
meaning.” “Oh.” The man smiled understandingly. “Just a
moment. I’ll check for you.” He worked a keyboard out of Flinx’s view. “Yes, there was a number of arrests
made last night, several of them including women. How old is your mother?” “Close to a hundred,” Flinx said, “but quite
lively.” “Not lively enough to be in with the group I was
thinking of,” the clerk responded. “Name?” Flinx hesitated. “I always just called her Mother
Mastiff.” The man frowned, then studied his unseen readout.
“Is Mastiff a first name or last name? I’m assuming the ‘Mother’ is an
honorific.” Flinx found himself staring dumbly at the clerk.
Suddenly, he was aware of the enormous gaps that made up much of his life. “I—I
don’t know, for sure.” The bureaucrat’s attitude turned stony. “Is this
some kind of joke, young man?” “No, sir,” Flinx hastened to assure him, “it’s no
joke. I’m telling you the truth when I say that I don’t know.See, she’s not my
natural mother.” “Ah,” the clerk murmured discreetly. “Well, then,
what’s your last name?” “I—“ To his great amazement, Flinx discovered that
he was starting to cry. It was a unique phenomenon that he had avoided for some
time; now, when he least needed it, it afflicted him. The tears did have an effect on the clerk, though.
“Look, young man, I didn’t mean to upset you. All I can tell you is that no
woman of that advanced an age is OQ last night’s arrest recording. For that
matter, no one that old has been reported in custody by any other official
source. Does that help you at all?” Flinx nodded slowly. It helped, but not in the way
he’d hoped. “Th-thank you very much, sir.” “Wait, young man! If you’ll give me your name, maybe
I can have a gendarme sent out with—“ The image died as Flinx flicked the
disconnect button. His credcard popped from its slot. Slowly, wiping at his
eyes, he put it back inside his shirt. Would the clerk bother to trace the
call? Flinx decided not. For an instant, the bureaucrat had thought the call was
from some kid pulling a joke on him.
After a moment’s reflection, he would probably think so again. No one of Mother Mastiff’s age arrested or reported
in. Not at Missing Persons, which was bad, but also not at the morgue, which
was good because that reinforced his first thoughts: Mother Mastiff had been
carried off by unknown persons whose motives remained as mysterious as did
their identity. He gazed out the little booth’s window at the looming, alien
forest into which it seemed she and her captors had vanished, and exhaustion
washed over him. It was toasty warm in the corn booth. The booth’s chair was purposely uncomfortable, but
the floor was heated and no harder. For a change, he relished his modest size
as he worked himself into a halfway comfortable position on the floor. There
was little room for Pip in the cramped space, so the flying snake reluctantly
found itself a perch on the corn unit. Anyone entering the booth to make a call
would be in for a nasty shock. It was well into morning when Flinx finally awoke,
stiff and cramped but mentally rested. Rising and stretching, he pushed aside
the door and left the corn booth. To the north lay the first ranks of the
seemingly endless forest, which ran from Moth’s lower temperate zone to its
arctic.To the south lay the city, friendly, familiar. It would be hard to turn
his back on it. Pip fluttered above him, did a slow circle in the
air, then rose and started northwestward. In minutes, the minidrag was back. In
its wordless way, it was reaffirming its feelings of the night before: Mother
Mastiff had passed that way. Flinx thought a moment. Perhaps her captors, in
order to confuse even the most unlikely pursuit, had carried her out into the
forest, only to circle back into the city again. How was he to know for certain? The government
couldn’t help him further. All right, then. He had always been good at prying
information from strangers. They seemed to trust him instinctively, seeing in
him a physically unimposing, seemingly not-too-bright youngster. He could probe
as facilely here as in the markeplace. Leaving the booth and the sawmill block, he began
his investigation by questioning the occupants of the smaller businesses and
homes. He found most houses deserted, their inhabitants having long since gone
off to work, but the industrial sites and businesses were coming alive as the
city’s commercial bloodstream began to circulate. Flinx confronted the workers
as they entered through doors and gates, as they parked their occasional
individual transports, and as they stepped off public vehicles. Outside the entrance to a small firm that
manufactured wooden fittings for kitchen units, he encountered someone not
going to work but leaving. “Excuse me, sir,” he said for what seemed like the
hundred thousandth time, “did you by any chance see a group of people pass
through this part of town last night? “They would have had an upset old lady
with them, perhaps restrained somehow.” “Now that’s funny of you to mention,” the man said
unexpectedly. “See, I’m the night guard at Koyunlu over there.” He gestured at
the small building that was filling up with workers. “I didn’t see no old
woman, but there was something of a commotion late last night over that way.”
He pointed at the road which came to a dead end against the nearby trees. “There was a lot of shouting and yelling and
cursing. I took a look with my nightsight—that’s my job, you know—and I saw a
bunch of people getting out of a rented city transport. They were switching
over to a mudder.” The watchman appeared sympathetic. “They weren’t
potential thieves or young vandals, so I didn’t watch them for long. I don’t
know if they were the people you’re looking for.” Flinx thought a moment, then asked, “You say that
you heard cursing. Could you tell if any of it was from a woman?” The man grinned. “I see what you thinking, son. No,
they were too far away. But I tell you this: someone in that bunch could swear
like any dozen sewer riders.” Flinx could barely contain his excitement. “That’s
them; that’s her! That’s got to be her!” “In fact,” the watchman continued, “that’s really
what made it stick in me mind. Not that you don’t see people switching
transports at night—you do, even way out here. It’s Just a bad time to go
mudding into the woods, and when it is done, it’s usually done quietly. No need
that I can see for all that yelling and shouting.” “It was them, all right,” Flinx murmured decisively.
“It was her swearing—or her kidnappers swearing at her.” “Kidnap—“ The man seemed to notice Flinx’s youth for
the first time. “Say, soa, maybe you’d better come along with me.” “No, I can’t.” Flinx. started to hack up, smiling
apologetically. “I have to go after them. I have to find her.” “Just hold on a second there, son,” the watchman said.
“Ill give a call to the police. We can use the company corns. You want to do
this right and proper so’s—“ “They won’t do anything,” Flinx said angrily. “I
know them.” On an intimate basis, he could have added, since he’d been arrested
for petty theft on more than one occasion. He was probably on their
question-list right now. They would hold him and keep him from going after
Mother Mastiff. “You wait, son,” the watchman insisted. “I’m not
going to be part of something—“ As he spoke, he reached out a big hand.
Something bright blue-green-pink hissed threateningly. A triangular head darted
menacingly at the clutching hand. The man hastily drew it back. “Damn,” he said, “that’s alive!” “Very alive,” Flinx said, continuing to back away.
“Thanks for your help, sir.” He turned and dashed toward the city. “Boy, just a minute!” The watchman stared after the
retreating figure. Then he shrugged. He was tired. It had been a long, dull
night save for that one noisy bunch he’d seen, and he was anxious to be home
and asleep. He sure as hell didn’t need trouble himself with the antics of some
kid. Pushing the entire incident from his thoughts, he headed toward the
company transport stop. Once he was sure he was out of sight of the
watchman, Flinx paused to catch his breath. At least he knew with some
certainty that Mother Mastiff had been kidnapped and taken out of the city. Why
she had been carried off into the great northern forest he could not imagine. In addition to the hurt at the back of his mind, a
new ache had begun to make itself felt. He had had nothing to eat since the
previous night. He could hardly go charging off into Moth’s vast evergreen
wilderness on an empty stomach. Prepare yourself properly, then proceed. That’s what
Mother Mastiff had always taught him. Ill go home, he told himself. Back to the
shop, back to the marketplace. The kidnapers had switched to a mudder. Such a
vehicle was out of Flinx’s financial reach, but he knew where he could rent a
stupava running bird. That would give him flexibility as well as speed. His legs still throbbed from the seemingly endless
run across the city the previous day,
so he used public transport to return home. Time was more important than
credits. The transport chose a main spoke avenue and in minutes deposited him
in the marketplace. From the drop-off, it was but a short sprint to the
shop. He found himself half expecting to see Mother Mastiff standing in the
entrance, mopping the stoop and waiting to bawl him out for being gone for so
long. But the shop was quiet, the living space still disarranged and forlorn.
None-the less, Flinx checked it carefully.
There were several items whose positions he had memorized before
leaving; they were undisturbed. He began to collect a small pile of things to take
with him. Some hasty trading in the market produced a small backpack and as
much concentrated food as he could cram into it. Despite the speed of his
bargaining, he received full value for those items he traded off from Mother
Mastiff’s stock. With Pip riding his shoulder, few thought to cheat him. When
anyone tried, the minidrag’s reactions instantly alerted its master and Flinx
simply took his trade elsewhere. Flinx switched his city boots for less gaudy but
more durable forest models. His slickertic would serve just as well among the
trees as among the city’s towers. The outright sale of several items gave his
credcard balance a healthy boost. Then it was back to the shop for a last look
around. Empty. So empty without her. He made certain the shutters were locked, then
did the same to the front door. Before leaving, he stopped at a stall up the
street. “You’re out of your mind, Flinx-boy.” Arrapkha said
from the entrance to his stall, shaking his head dolefully. The shop smelled of
wood dust and varnish. “Do you know what the forest is like? It runs from here
to the North Pole. Three thousand, four thousand kilometers as the tarpac flies
and not a decent-sized city to be found. “There’s mud up there so deep it could swallow all
of Drallar, not to mention things that eat and things that poison. Nobody goes
into the north forest except explorers and herders, hunters and sportsmen—crazy
folk from offworld who like that sort of nowhere land. Biologists and
botanists—not normal folk like you and me.” “Normal folk didn’t carry off my mother,” Flinx
replied. Since he couldn’t discourage the youngster, Arrapkha
tried to make light of the situation. “Worse for them that they did. I don’t
think they know what they’ve gotten themselves into.” Flinx smiled politely. “Thanks, Arrapkha. If it
wasn’t for your help, I wouldn’t have known where to begin.” “Almost I wish I’d said nothing last night,” he
muttered sadly. “Well, luck to you, Flinx-boy. I’ll remember you.” “You’ll see me again,” Flinx assured him with more
confidence than he truly felt. “Both of us.” “I hope so. Without your Mother Mastiff, the
marketplace will be a duller place.” “Duller and emptier,” Flinx agreed. “I have to go
after her, friend Arrapkha. I really have no choice.” “If you insist. Go, then.” Flinx favored the woodworker with a last smile, then
spun and marched rapidly toward the main avenue. Arrapkha watched until the
youngster was swallowed up by the crowd, then retreated to his own stall. He
had business to attend to, and that, after all, was the first rule of life in
the marketplace. Flinx hadn’t gone far before the smells of the
market were replaced by the odors, heavy and musky, of locally popular native
transport animals. They were usually slower and less efficient then mechanized
transport, but they had other advantages: they could not be traced via their
emissions, and they were cheap to rent and to use. In a licensed barn, Flinx picked out a
healthy-looking stupava. The tall running bird was a good forager and could
live off the land. It stood two and a half meters at its bright orange crest
and closely resembled its far more intelligent cousins, the omithorpes, who did
not object to the use of ignorant relatives as beasts of burden. Flinx haggled
with the barn manager for a while, finally settling on a fair price. The woman
brought the bird out of its stall and saddled it for the youngster. “You’re not
going to do anything funny with this bird, now?” “Just going for a little vacation,” Flinx answered
her blithely. “I’ve finished my studies for the year and owe myself the time
off.” “Well, Garuyie here will take you anywhere you might
want to go. He’s a fine, strong bird.” She stroked the tall bird’s feathers. “I know.” Flinx put his right foot in the first
stirrup, his left in the second, and threw his body into the saddle. “I can see
that from his legs.” The woman nodded, feeling a little more relaxed.
Evidently, her youthful customer knew what he was doing. She handed him the reins. “All right, then. Have a -pleasant journey.” Flinx had indeed ridden such birds before, but only
within the city limits and not for any length of time. He snapped the reins,
then gave the bird a serious whistle. It booted back and started off, its long
legs moving easily. Guiding it with gentle tugs of the reins and sharp
whistles, Flinx soon had the stupava moving at a respectable rate up the first
spoke avenue, jostling aside irritated pedestrians and avoiding faster public
vehicles. The stupava seemed undisturbed by Pip’s presence, a good sign. It would
not do to bead into the great forest on an easily spooked mount. In a gratifyingly short time, Flinx found they had
retraced his frenzied marathon of the night before. A sawmill passed by on his
left, the corn booth that had sheltered him somewhere behind it. Then only the
forest loomed ahead. Trees, a hundred meters tall and higher soared above
scattered smaller trees and bushes. Where the pavement vanished there was only
a muddy trail. The stupava wouldn’t mind that—its splayed, partially webbed feet
would carry them over the bogs and sumps with ease. “Heigh there!” he shouted softly at the bird,
following the command with a crisp whistle. The stupava cawed once, jerked its
head sharply against the bridle, and dashed off into the woods. The regular flap-flap
from beneath its feet gave away to an irregular whacking sound broken by
occasional splashes as it spanned a deeper puddle. Sometimes they touched thick
moss or fungi and there was no sound at all. In no time, the immense trees
formed a solid wall of bark and green behind Flinx, and the city that was his
home was for the first time completely out of his sight. Chapter Seven
Joppe the Thief thought sure he had found himself a
couple of fleurms. The man and woman he was stalking so intently looked to be
in their midthirties. Their dress was casual, so casual that one not interested
in it might not have identified them as offworlders. Their presence in that
part of Drallar’s marketplace late at night proved one of two things to Joppe:
either they had a great deal of confidence in their ability to pass unnoticed,
or they were simply ignorant. Joppe guessed they were searching for a little
excitement. That was fine with Toppe. He would happily provide
them with some excitement, something really memorable to relate to the
neighbors back home on some softer world like Terra or New Riviera. They did
not look like the kind who would be awkward about it. If they were, then they
might have more than merely an interesting encounter to talk about. Joppe was hungry. He had not made a strike in over a
week. He regarded the strolling, chatting couple with the eye of a covetous
farmer examining a pair of his prize meat animals. As it was still comparatively early, not: all the
lights had been extinguished in that part of the marketplace, but enough of the
shops had closed to give Joppe hope. The nature of his work required privacy.
He did not rush himself. Joppe had an instinctive feel for his work. He had to
balance waiting for more shopkeepers to retire against the possibility of the
couple’s realizing their error and turning back toward the more brightly lit
sections of the market. The couple did not seem inclined to do that. Joppe’s
hopes continued to rise. He could hear them clearly, talking about some sight
seen earlier in the day. Joppe’s hand closed around the handle of the little
needier in his pocket, and he started forward, closing the distance between
himself and his prey. By now the couple had reached the end of the cul-de-sac
and had stopped in front of the last shop, which was shuttered and dark. They
seemed to be debating something. Then the man bent to the shop’s door and took
several objects from his pockets. He started manipulating something out of
Joppe’s view. The thief slowed, the needier only halfway out of
his holster pocket, and stared in confusion. What were they up to? He moved a
little nearer, still clinging to the shadows. He was close enough to see that
the door was sealed with a palm lock, which required the imprint of all five of
the shop owner’s fingers, in proper sequence, to release. The little black disk
that the tourist had attached to the palm lock was a very expensive,
sophisticated device for decoding and solving such locks. The man’s fingers
roved over the keys, and he examined the readout with the attitude of someone
who not only knew exactly what he was doing but who had done it frequently. While the man worked at the door, his companion
stood watching him, hands on hips, obviously intent on what he was doing.
Abruptly, she glanced away from her husband, and Joppe found himself staring
straight at her. The matronly giggle she had affected all evening was
abruptly gone from her voice. Suddenly, nothing about her seemed soft. The
unexpected transformation, accomplished solely by a change in posture and tone,
was shocking. “I’m sorry we had to waste your evening, friend, but we needed a
good screen to keep away the rest of the rabble. Thanks for that. Now turn
around, call it a bad day, and look elsewhere. We don’t have time for you right
now. Oh, and leave that gun where it won’t do you or anyone else any harm,
okay?” Then she smiled pleasantly. Too startled to react, Joppe just stood there, his
hand still clutching the
needier. He could take this one,
he thought momentarily. However, something in her stance held him back. The
proximity of a weapon was clearly implied, as was the intent to use it. Her
companion had paused in his work and crouched before the doorway in a waiting
position. This was all very wrong, Joppe thought. He was not
an especially imaginative individual, but he was an intent observer, and he was
good at putting things together. Here stood an offworld couple dressed for an evening
out, calmly working a lock decoder on an unprepossessing stall doorway at the
end of a side street on a dark and damp night. That, plus the way the woman had
spoken to him, did not add up Joppe let go the needier and took his hand from his
pocket. Slowly, his fingers spread so that they could see he held nothing in
them. He nodded once, smiled a twisted, fleeting smile at the woman, and backed away. She
returned his smile. He backed away until the shadows engulfed him once again
and he stood behind a protective stone wall. He sucked in a deep breath and let
it out. His pulse was racing. Unable to restrain his curiosity, he turned and
just peeked around the edge of the wall. The woman had not budged, and was
still staring after him. The man had returned to his work. Joppe was well out of his depth, and he knew it.
Without another backward glance, he turned and jogged off toward the main
avenue, disappointed with his luck and still hungry for a strike. As to the
purpose of the peculiar couple, he gave it not another thought. Such folk
operated on a level far above that of Joppe and his ilk and were better
forgotten. “Sensible, that one,” the woman said thoughtfully.
She turned her attention from the distant street to her companion’s work. “I
thought he might give us trouble.” “Better that he didn’t,” her companion agreed. “We
don’t need to fool with such silliness. Not now.” His fingertips danced lightly
over the keys set into the black disk. “How you coming?” the woman asked, peering over his
shoulder. “How does it look like I’m coming?” “No need to be sarcastic,” she said easily. “It’s an updated twenty-six,” he informed her. “I
didn’t expect anyone in this slum would take the trouble and expense to keep
updating something like this. Someone sure likes his privacy.” “Don’t you?” “Very funny.” Suddenly, the disk emitted a soft beep,
and the numbers on the readout froze. “That’s got it.” The man’s tone was
relaxed, methodical. There was no pleasure in his announcement, only a cool,
professional satisfaction. He touched buttons set at five points spaced evenly
around the black disk. It beeped again, twice. The illuminated numbers vanished
from the readout. Unsealing the disk, he slid it back inside his coat. There
were a number of pockets inside that coat, all filled with the kinds of things
that would raise the hackles of any police chief. The man put a hand on the
door and pushed. It moved aside easily. After a last, cursory glance up the
narrow street, the two of them stepped inside. The center section of the man’s ornate belt buckle
promptly came to life, throwing a narrow but powerful beam of light. It was
matched a moment later by a similar beam projected from his companion’s brooch.
They wandered around the stall, noting the goods on display and occasionally
sniffing disdainfully at various overpriced items. Inspection led them to an
inner door and its simpler locking mechanism. Both stood just inside the second doorway and gazed
around the living area. “Someone put up a hell of fight,” the man commented
softly. “The boy—or his adoptive mother, do you think?” “The
woman moved in, stooping to examine an overturned end table and the little
silver vase that had tumbled from it. The vase was empty. She carefully
replaced it where it had fallen. “Maybe both of them.” Her companion was already
inspecting the larger of the two bedrooms. They went through the area
methodically: kitchen, bedrooms, even the hygiene facilities. When they had finished—and it did not take them very
long—and when fingerprinted samples of air and dust and tiny bits of hopefully
significant detritus had been relegated to the safety of tiny storage vials,
the man asked his companion, “What do you think? Wait for them here?” The woman shook her head as she glanced around the
kitchen-dining area. “They obviously left under duress—and you know what that
suggests.” “Sure, that’s occurred to me. No way it couldn’t.
But there’s no guarantee.” She laughed, once. “Yeah, there’s no guarantee, but
what do you think?’ “The same as you. I’m just saying we shouldn’t jump
to conclusions.” “I know, I know. Isn’t it odd, though, that both of
them are missing? That surely suggests something other than a common break-in.” “I said I concurred.” The man’s tone was a mite
testy. “What now?” “The shopkeeper up the street who watched us break
in,” she said. He nodded agreement. They retraced their steps, leaving nothing disturbed
save the air and the dust. The palm lock snapped tight behind them as they
stepped back out into the street, giving no hint that it had been foiled. The
couple strolled back up the little side street until they stood before
Arrapkha’s doorway. They thumbed the buzzer several times. After the third try, the man leaned close to the
little speaker set above the buzzer. “It’s been a long, hard day for us, sir,
and we’re both very tired. We mean you no harm, but we are empowered to take
whatever steps we think advisable to carry out our assignment. Those steps will
include making our own entrance if you don’t let us in. “We saw you watching us as we let ourselves into the
old woman’s shop. I promise you we can let ourselves into your place just as
easily. You might also like to know that we have an automon trained on the
alley behind your shop. If you have a slip-me-out in your back wall, it won’t
do you a bit of good. So why not be pleasant about this”—he smiled in case the
shopkeeper had a video pickup hidden somewhere—“and come on out? If you prefer,
we can chat here on the street, in full view of your other neighbors.” They waited a suitable time. The woman looked at her
companion, shrugged, and withdrew a small, thimble-shaped object from an inside
breast pocket. The door opened immediately. The man nodded, then smiled. The
woman put the thimble-thing away and moved back. Arrapkha stepped outside, closing the door behind
him, and looked hesitantly from one visitor to the other. “What can I do for
you, lady and sir, this night? Your insistence moved me to concern despite the
fact that I am closed now for more than—“ “Skip the banter,” the man said crisply. “We know
you were watching us. You know that we’re not here to buy”—he glanced at the
sign above the doorway—“wood-work. Or do you deny having watched us?” “Well, no,” Arrapkha began, “but I—“ “And you didn’t call the police,” the man continued
easily, “because the police often ask questions you’d rather not answer, right?” “Sir, I assure you that I—“ “We’re looking for the old woman and the boy who
live in that shop.” The man glanced briefly back toward Mother Mastiffs stall.
“You wouldn’t happen to know where they are, would you?” Arrapkha shook his head, his expression blank. “No,
sir, I would not.” “There are signs of a struggle inside. This is a
small street. You didn’t hear anything, see anything?” “A struggle? Dear me,” Arrapbka muttered, showing
signs of distress. “Well, you know, even though this is a small street, it can
still be very noisy here, even at night. We don’t always pay close attention.” “I’ll bet,” the woman muttered. “Just like you
didn’t pay attention to all the noise we weren’t making while we were letting
ourselves into your neighbor’s shop?” Arrapkha favored her with a wan smile. “We haven’t time for these games,” the man said
impatiently, reaching into his pants pocket. “Please, sir and lady.” A look of genuine concern
came over Arrapkha’s face. “You said that you wouldn’t do anything—“ “We won’t.” The man’s hand paused a moment as he saw
the shopkeeper’s nervous stare. “Even if we have to, we probably won’t.” He
slowly withdrew his hand to bring out a small folder. Arrapkha let out a
relieved sigh, and studied the contents of the folder. His eyes widened. The visitor slipped the little case back into his
pocket. “Now, then,” he said pleasantly, “I tell you again that we mean you no
harm, nor have we any intention of banning the old woman and her boy. Quite the
contrary. If they’ve been the victims of violence, as seems probable, we need
to know everything you know, so that if they’re still alive, we can help them.
Regardless of what you may think of us personally and what we stand for, you
must realize that if they’ve met with ill fortune, they’re bound to be better
off in our care than in the hands of whoever carried them away. You can see
that, surely.” “Besides,” his companion added matter-of-factly, “if
you don’t tell us what you know, we’ll escort you to a place in city center
where you’ll be strapped into a machine, and you’ll end up telling us, anyway.
It won’t hurt you, but it will waste our time. I don’t like wasted time.” She
stared into his eyes. “Understand?” Arrapkha nodded slowly. “The old woman you seek—Mother Mastiff?” The man
nodded encouragingly. “I think I saw her carried off by several figures. I
couldn’t even tell you if they were human or alien. It was dark and misty.” “Isn’t it always here?” the man muttered. “Go on.” “That’s all I know, all I saw.” Arrapkha shrugged. “Truly.”
He pointed down the street toward the gap that separated Mother Mastiff’s shop
from the one next to hers. “Through there I saw struggling shapes in the alley.
It still confuses me. She is a very old woman, quite harmless.” “How long ago was this?” the man asked him. Arrapkha
told him. “And the boy? What of the boy?” “He returned home that same night. He often goes off
by himself until quite late. At least he’s been doing so for as long as I’ve
known him, which is most of his life.” “Long solo walks through this city? At his age?” the
woman asked. Arrapkha tried not to show his surprise at the woman’s seemingly
casual remark. These people knew a great deal in spite of how far they had come
from. “He’s not your average youth,” Arrapkha informed
them, seeing no harm in doing so. “He’s grown up largely on his own here.” He
waved toward the brighter lights and the noise that drifted in from the main
avenue. “If you let it, Drallar will mature you quickly.” “I’m sure.” The man nodded. “You were saying about
the boy?” “He came back that night, saw what had happened, and
was very upset. He’s an emotional type, though he fights not to show it, I
think. Mother Mastiff is all he has.” Still the couple did not respond, remaining
maddeningly uninformative. Arrapkha went on. “He vowed to find her. I don’t think he has much chance.” “He went after her, then?” the woman asked eagerly.
“How long ago?” Arrapkha told her. She muttered in some language
that Arrapkha did not recognize, then added in the more familiar Commonwealth
lingua franca to her companion, “Only a couple of days. We missed them by a
lousy couple of days.” “It’s happened before,” the man reminded her,
seeming unperturbed. His attention returned to Arrapkha. “Which way did the boy
intend to go?” “I have no idea,” the shopkeeper said. “You know,” the man said pleasantly, “maybe we just
ought to all take that little jaunt downtown and visit the machine.” “Please, sir, I tell you truly everything. You have
believed my words until now. Why should it be different because the facts no
longer please you? That is not my fault. What reason would I have for suddenly
lying to you?” “I don’t know,” the man said in a more
conversational tone. “What reason would you?” “No reason.” Arrapkha felt his few wits deserting
him, “Please, I don’t understand what’s happening here. It’s all very confusing
to me. What is all this interest suddenly in poor old Mother Mastiff and this
Flinx-boy?” “We’d only confuse you further by telling you,
wouldn’t we?” the man said. “So you have no idea how the boy intended to begin
his search?” “None at all because that is all that he told me,”
Arrapkha confessed. “He said only that he was determined to find her. Then he
left.” “Well, that’s wonderful. That’s just wonderful,” the
man declared sardonically. “All that work, all that research, and we get them
narrowed down to one modest-size city. Now we get to start all over again with
a whole damn world to cover.” “It’s not that bad,” the woman soothed. “The native
population is thin outside the city.” “It’s not that which worries me.” The man sounded
tired. “It’s our happy competitors.” “I think we’ll run into them simultaneously.” The
woman gestured at Arrapkha as if he weren’t there. “We’ve learned all we can
from this one.” “Yes. One more thing, though.” He turned to Arrapkha
and handed him a small blue metal box. A single button marred its otherwise
smooth, vitreous surface. “This is a sealed-beam, high-intensity, low-power
transmitter,” he explained to the shopkeeper. “If either the woman or the boy
should return here, all you have to do is push that button once. That will
summon help, both for them and for you. Do you understand?” “Yes,” Arrapkha said slowly. He accepted the metal
box, then turned it over in his hand and inspected it. “There is a reward—a considerable reward,” the woman
added, “for anyone who assists us in bringing this matter to a speedy and
successful resolution.” She looked past him, into the little woodworking shop.
“I don’t know what kind of a life you make for yourself here, but it can’t be
much. This isn’t exactly the high-rent district. The reward would amount to
more, much more, than you’re likely to clear in an entire year.” “It sounds nice,” Arrapkha admitted slowly. “It
would be very nice to make a lot of money.” “All right, then,” the man said. “Remember, the
people who’ll show up here in response to a signal from the cube won’t
necessarily include us, but they’ll be people familiar with our mission. We’ll
follow as quickly as we’re able. You’re certain you understand all this, now?” “I understand.” “Fine.” The man did not offer to shake Arrapkha’s
hand. “Your help is appreciated, and I’m sorry if we upset you.” Arrapkha shrugged. “Life is full of tiny upsets.” “So it is,” the man agreed. He turned to his
companion. “Let’s go.” They ran back toward the main avenue, leaving Arrapkha
standing in front of his shop. After several hours, Arrapkha put away his
woodworking tools, cleaned himself, and prepared to retire. The blue metal cube
sat on the stand next to his bed. Arrapkha studied it for a moment. Then he
picked it up and walked into the bathroom. Without ceremony or hesitation, he
dropped it into the waste-disposal unit and thumbed the “flush” control. He
wondered how it would affect the cube, if it would send any kind of signal, and
if those on the receiving end of such a signal would interpret it properly. Feeling much better, he slipped into bed and went to
sleep. Chapter Eight
The forest was full of revelations for the
thoroughly urbanized Flinx. The first few nights were hard. The silence hit him
with unexpected force, and he found sleeping difficult. Pip spent those nights
in uneasy rest, sensing its master’s discomfort. Only the stupava, its head
bobbing methodically with its soft snores, was content. By the fourth night, Flinx slept soundly, and by the
fifth, he was actually enjoying the silence. I’ve been deceived by
circumstances and fate, he thought. This is much better than city life. True,
he missed the color, the excitement, the ever-shifting landscape of beings from
dozens of worlds parading through the marketplace and the wealthy inurbs, the
smells of different foods and the sounds of sinister bargains being
consummated. Nor did the forest offer him any opportunity to practice his skills:
there wasn’t anything to steal. The woods gave freely of their bounty. It was
all too easy, somehow. He had almost relaxed when the squook surprised him.
It shot out of its hole in the ground, startling the stupava and nearly causing
it to buck Flinx off. The squook was, like its near-relative the canish, a
hyperactive ground dwelling carnivore. It was somewhat larger, boasting claws the length of
Flinx's own fingers. The slim, brown-and-black-striped body was built low to
the ground. It spent the majority of its life burrowing, searching out other,
herbivorous burrowers, but it occasionally would erupt from its hole in an
attempt to snag and drag down some larger prey. The critter had evidently mistaken the comparatively
light footsteps of the stupava for those of a much smaller animal. The bird
squawked and wrenched at its reins while Flinx fought to bring it under
control. At its master's surge of alarm. Pip had instantly leaped clear and now hovered
menacingly over the occupied burrow. The squook favored the minidrag with an impressive
snarl but could only glare at its airborne nemesis. Though the riding bird was
clearly afraid of it, the squook still had a healthy respect for the bird's
long, powerfully muscled legs. Still, if it could just get its teeth around one
of those legs, it could bring the large meal to the ground. But it wasn't so sure about the human perched on the
bird's back. Though uncommon thereabouts, humans were not unknown to the
inhabitants of that part of the great forest. A squook could kill a human, but
the reverse was also true. And then there was that peculiar and utterly
unfamiliar humming thing that darted through the air overhead. That made three opponents, one alien and
unpredictable, the other two potentially dangerous. Letting out a last,
disgruntled snarl, the squook backed into its burrow and expanded to fill the
opening. With only its muzzle showing, it sat there and set up a steady warning
bark. Flinx finally got the stupava back under control and
urged it forward. The angry calls of the squook receded slowly behind him. There had been no real danger, he thought. On the
other hand, if he had lost his saddle and fallen off—he recalled clearly the
long, toothy snout of the carnivore and watched the forest with more respect. Nothing else emerged to menace them. They
encountered nothing larger than the many soaring rodents which Inhabited that
part of the forest. Pip amused itself by flying circles around them, for they were natural
gliders rather than true fliers. They could do nothing but squeak angrily at
the intruder as it executed intricate aerial maneuvers in their midst. Those
that chattered and complained the loudest, the flying snake selected for lunch. "That's enough. Pip," Flinx called out to
the gallivanting minidrag one day. "Leave them alone and get down
here." Responding to the urgency of its master's mind, the flying snake
stopped tormenting the flying rodents and zipped down to wrap itself gently
around Flinx's neck. The inn they were approaching was one of hundreds
that formed an informal backwoods network in the uninhabited parts of the vast
forests. Such establishments provided temporary home to hardwood merchants and
cutters, sightseers, fishermen and hunters, prospectors, and other nomadic
types. There were more inns than a casual observer might expect to find because
there were more nomads. They liked the endless forest. The trees concealed many
people and a comparable quantity of sin. Flinx tethered the stupava in the animal compound,
next to a pair of muccax. The inn door sensed his presence and slid aside,
admitting him. Smoke rose from a central chimney, but the stone fireplace was
more for atmosphere than for heating. The latter was handled by thermal coils
running beneath the inn floors. Many of the structures dotting the forest were rustic only in
appearance, their innards as modem in design and construction as the
shuttleport outside Drallar. The offworlder tourists who came to Moth to sample
the delights of its wilderness generally liked their rough accommodations the
same as their liquor: neat. "Hello." The innkeeper was only a few years
older than Flinx. "You're out by yourself?" He glanc'ed at Pip.
"That's an interesting pet you have." "Thanks," Flinx said absently, ignoring the
first comment. "What time do you serve midday meal?" He looked
longingly toward the nearby dining room, calculating what remained on his
credcard. At the present rate, he would starve before he could catch up to his
quarry. "You don't want a room, then?" "No, thanks." He would sleep in a tube tent
in the forest, as usual. Exhaustion made him sleep as soundly these days as any
soft bed. "What about your animal?" The innkeeper
gestured toward the animal compound outside. "He'll be all right." The young innkeeper looked indifferent. A pleasant
enough sort, Flinx thought, but sheltered-like so many of his potential friends back in Drallar. "You can get a meal here anytime. We're all
autoserve here. This isn't a fancy place. We can't afford a live kitchen." "The machines will be fine for me," Flinx
told him. He walked through the entry area and on into the dining room. Other
people were already seated about, enjoying their food. There was a young
touring couple and one solitary man far back in a corner. After the usual curious glance
at Pip, they ignored the newcomer. Flinx walked over to the autochef, his mouth
watering. Living off the land was fine for the stupava, but occasionally he
needed something neither stale nor dehydrated. He made his selections from the
extensive list, inserted his card, and waited while it processed the request.
Two minutes later he picked up his meal, chose a table, and dug into the roast,
fried tuber, and crisp green vegetable. Two tall cups of domestic
coffee-substitute washed it down. The innkeeper strolled in. He chatted a moment with
the couple, then sauntered over to Flinx's table. Despite his desire for
solitude, Flinx didn't feel much like arguing, so he said nothing when the
'keeper pulled over a chair and sat down nearby. "Excuse me," the young man said cheerfully.
"I don't see many people my own age here, let alone anyone younger
traveling on his own-certainly never with so interesting a companion." He
pointed to Pip. The flying snake had slithered down from Flinx's neck
and was sprawled across the table, gulping down green seeds. They complemented
a steady diet of arboreal rodents. The seeds really weren't necessary, but the
minidrag was not one to pass up a meal that couldn't fight back. "What are you doing out here all by
yourself?" A real diplomat, this one, Flinx thought to himself.
"I'm looking for a friend," he explained, chewing another chunk of
roast. "No one's left any messages for you here if
that's what you're wondering," the innkeeper said. "The friends I'm looking for don't like to
leave messages," Flinx said between mouthfuls. "Maybe you've seen
them," he asked without much hope. "A very old woman is traveling
with them." "We don't get many very old people out this
way," the innkeeper confessed. "They stay closer to the city. That's
what's so funny." Flinx stopped in midchew. "There was a group in
here just recently that might be the friends you're looking for." Flinx swallowed carefully. "This old woman is
short, a good deal shorter than me. She's close to a hundred." "Except for her mouth, which, is a lot
younger?" "You've seen her!" The meal was suddenly
forgotten. "Five days ago," the innkeeper said.
Flinx's heart sank. The distance between them was increasing, not growing
shorter. "Did you happen to see which way they
went?" "Their mudder took off almost due north. I
thought that was odd, too, because the line of inns most tourists follow runs
pretty much northwest from here, not north. There are a few lodges due north,
of course, up in the Lakes District, but not many. They were a funny bunch, and
not just because the old woman was with them. They didn't look like sightseers
or fishermen." Trying not to show too much anxiety, Flinx forced
himself to finish the rest of his meal. It wasn't that he didn't appreciate the
help, but the talkative youth seemed just the type to blab to anyone who might
be curious about a visiting stranger, including the forest patrol. Flinx did
not want anyone slowing his pursuit with awkward questions-especially since he
intended to increase his speed as soon as feasible and like as not by methods
the police would frown upon. Nor had he forgotten the watchman in Drallar whose
helpfulness had nearly turned to interference. "You've been a big help," he told the
other. "What's all this about?" the innkeeper persisted
as Flinx finished the last of his food and let Pip slide up his proffered arm
and onto his shoulder. "What's going on?" Flinx thought frantically. What could he say to keep
this loudmouthed innocent from calling up the patrol? "They're on vacation-my great-grandmother and
some other relatives. They argue a lot." The innkeeper nodded knowingly.
"I wasn't supposed to be able to go along," Flinx continued with a
wink. "But I slipped away from my studies, and I've sort of been playing
at trailing them. You know. When they get to the lodge where they'll be
spending the rest of the month, I'm going to pop in and surprise them. Once I
land in their laps, they can hardly send me home, can they?" "I get it." The innkeeper smiled. "I
won't tell anyone." "Thanks." Flinx rose. "Food's
good." He gathered up Pip and headed for the door. "Hey," the innkeeper called out at a sudden
thought, "what lodge are your relatives headed for?" But Flinx was
already gone. Outside, he hurriedly mounted his stupava and turned
it into the woods. Five days, he thought worriedly. Two more at this pace and
they would be ten ahead of him. The stupava was doing its best, but that was
not going to be good enough. Somehow he had to increase his speed. He reined in
and let the bird catch its breath as he extracted a ten-centimeter-square sheet
of plastic from his backpack. It was half a centimeter thick and had cost him
plenty back in the marketplace, but he could hardly have risked this journey
without it. A series of contact switches ran down the left side of the plastic.
He touched the uppermost one, and the sheet promptly lit up. Additional
manipulation of the controls produced a map of the forest, and further
adjustments zoomed in on a blowup of his immediate surroundings. He entered the name of the inn where he had had his
hasty meal. Instantly, the map shifted position. It was as if he were flying
above an abstract landscape. When the image settled, he widened the field of
view, expanding the map until it included several other inns and a small town
that he had unknowingly skirted the previous day. He touched controls, and the
map zoomed in on the town. On its fringe was a small wood-processing plant,
several minor commercial structures, a forest service station, and a
communications supply-and-repair terminal. He thought about trying the forest
service station first, then decided that of all the structures it was the one
most likely to be manned around the clock. That left the communications depot.
He turned off the map, replaced it carefully in his pack, and chucked the
reins. The bird whistled and started forward. Night was falling, and soon the sun would have
settled completely behind the shielding clouds. One thing he could count on was
the absence of moon-even Flame's maroon glow could not penetrate the cloud
cover that night. Though he had completely missed the town, it was not
far off. The buildings were scattered across a little knoll the driest land
around-and remained hidden by trees until he was right on top of them. Most of
the homes and apartments were located across the knoll. To his left was a low,
rambling structure in which a few lights shone behind double-glazed windows:
the forest station. The communications depot was 'directly ahead of him. He
slid easily off the back of the stupava, tied it to a nearby log, and waited
for midnight. A single, three-meter-high fence ran around the
depot, enclosing the servicing yard. Flinx could make out the silhouettes of
several large vehicles designed for traveling through the dense forest with a
full complement of crew and equipment. Flinx wasn't interested in them. They
were too big, too awkward for his needs. Surely there had to be something
better suited to his purpose parked inside the machine-shod beyond. There had
better be. He doubted that the sawmill or smaller commercial buildings would
have anything better to offer. He made certain the stupava's bonds were loose. If he
failed, he would need the riding bird in a hurry, and if he succeeded, the
stupava would grow restless before too long and would break free to find its
way back to Drallar and its barn. That was another reason Flinx had chosen the
riding bird over the toadlike muccax: a muccax had no homing instinct With Pip coiled firmly around his left shoulder, he
made his way down through the night mist. The yard was not paved, but the
ground there had been packed to a comparative dryness and he was able to move
silently along the fence. He carefully made a complete circuit of both yard and
buildings. No lights were visible, nor did he see any suggestion of alarm
beams. Though he had circumvented antitheft equipment before, this would be the
first time he had tried to break into a government-owned facility. The fence arched outward at the top, a design that would
make climbing over it difficult, and he could clearly see transmitter points
positioned atop each post, ready to set off the alarm if anything interrupted
their circuit. Flinx lowered his gaze to the back gate. The catch there
appeared to be purely mechanical, almost too simple. He could open it without
any special tools. The catch to the catch was a duplicate of the units that ran
along the crest of the fence. He could not open the latch without interrupting
the beam and setting off the alarm. Cutting through the mesh of the fence itself was out
of the question. The meal was sensitized:
any nonprogrammed disruption of its structure would sound the alarm as
surely as if he had tried to knock a section over with a dozer. Nudging Pip aside, Flinx slipped off his backpack and
hunted through it. In addition to the concentrated foods and basic medical
supplies, he carried equipment that would have shocked the innkeeper who had
chatted with him earlier that day. He didn't need long to find what he was looking
for. From the pack he extracted one of several odd lengths of wire. A single
contact switch was spliced to its center. Making certain the switch was open,
he looped one end of the wire carefully around the tiny transmitter point on
the left side of the gate latch. Gently, he formed the wire into an arch and
brought it across the long latch to loop it over the transmitter on the
opposite side. A minuscule LED on the wire's switch glowed a satisfying green. Then out of the backpack Flinx took a small, oddly
formed piece of dull metal, inserted it into the gate lock, and turned it a
couple of times. In the heat from his hand, the metal softened and flowed
obediently. The latch clicked..
Holding the metal tool with only two fingers, Flinx lowered the heat it was
absorbing until it resolidified, and then turned it. He heard asecond, softer
click from the latch. He pulled it free, put a hand on the gate, and pushed. It
moved two meters inward, swaying slightly on its supports. He hesitated. No
audible alarm ran through the night. He hoped that a rural cummunity would have
no need of silent alarms. Still, he gathered up his tools and backpack and
retreated hastily to the forest. He waited until half an hour had passed without
anyone's appearing to check the gate or the yard, then he crept back to the
fence. The gate still sat ajar. The glass fiber, looped from terminal to
terminal, permitted the alarm beam to flow uninterrupted, but there would be a
problem when he had to open the gate farther than the length of the wire
allowed. He slipped easily into the maintenance yard. Pip flew
over the fence and hovered just above its master's tousled hair. Flinx searched the yard. There was still no hint that
his intrusion had been detected. The machine shed lay directly in front of him,
doorless and open to the night. He used the huge repair vehicles for cover as
he made his way into the shed. Among the equipment and supplies were a pair of
two-passenger mudders. His heart beat a little faster. The compact vehicles bad
flared undersides and enclosed cabs to protect pilot and passenger in
side-by-side comfort. He tried them both. Jumping the simple electric
engines was easy enough. He grew anxious when the fuel gauge on the first
machine didn't react, indicating an empty storage cell, but the second mudder
showed a ninety-five-percent charge. That was better than good; it was
critical, because he doubted he would have access to recharge stations where he
was going. Since the depot remained peaceful, Flinx gambled his
success thus far to resolve one additional difficulty: the mudder's government
marldngs. In a storage cabinet, he found dozens of cans of catalytic bonding
paint. He chose a couple of cans of brown. After a moment's thought, he went
back to the cabinet and selected an additional canister of red. He had never
had a personal transport of his own-as long as he was going to add a little
art, he might as well put some flash into it. Besides, that would be more in
keeping with the character of a sixteen-year old boy. The trees would still
conceal it well. When he had finished spraying the mudder, he climbed
into the pilot's seat. Pip settled into the empty one along-side. The controls
were simple and straightforward, as he'd expected. His right hand went to the
little steering wheel, his left to the jump he had installed beneath the dash.
The engine came to life, its steady hum little louder than Pip's. A nudge on
the accelerator sent the mudder forward. The single, wide-beam searchlight
mounted on its nose remained dark. It would stay that way until he was sure he
was safe. He drove into the yard, and still there was no sign
of concern from the nearby buildings. At the gate, he left the craft on hover
and jumped out. Patching his remaining passfibers onto the first, he was able
to open the gate wide enough for the mudder to pass through. He was so fearful
of being spotted that he nearly forgot to duck as he drove through the gap-the
fibers that served to fool the alarm system almost decapitated him. Then he was out through the gate, on the smooth
surface bordering the depot. In moments, he was concealed by the forest. A
touch on a dash control locked the transparent plastic dome over his head,
shutting out the mist. Another control set the craft's heater to thrumming. For
the first time since he had left Drallar, he was warm. He held the mudder's speed down until he was well
away from the town. Then he felt safe in turning on the searchlight. The
high-power beam pierced the darkness and revealed paths between the trees. Now
he was able to accelerate, and soon the mudder was skipping along over the
moist earth. Too fast, perhaps, for night-driving, but Flinx wanted to make up
time on his quarry. And he was a little drunk with success. It wouldn't have been that easy in Drallar, he told
himself. Out here, where there wasn't much to steal, he had succeeded because
thieves were scarce. The underside of the mudder was coated with a special
hydrophobic polyresin that allowed it to slide across a moist but solid surface
with almost no friction, propelled by the single electric jet located in the
vehicle's stem. It also made very little noise; not that he could detect any
sign of pursuit. The mudder's compass control kept him beaded north. It was midmoming before Flinx finally felt the need
to stop. He used daylight and the canister of red paint to decorate the brown
vehicle, adding decorative stripes to side and front. It took his mind off his
problems for a little while. Then he was traveling again, in a craft no casual
observer would ever have mistaken for a sober government vehicle. The night before there had been a touch of a mental
tingle of almost painful familiarity. As usual, it vanished the instant he
sought to concentrate on it, but he felt sure that that touch had reached out
to him from somewhere to the north. Confident and comfortable, he soared along with the
dome retracted. Suddenly, the air turned gray with thousands of furry bodies no
bigger than his little finger. They swarmed about him on tiny membranous wings,
and he swatted at them with his free hand as he slowed the car to a crawl. They
were so dense he couldn't see clearly. Pip was delighted, both with the opportunities for
play and for dining. Soon the storm of miniature fliers became so thick that
Plinx had to bring the mudder to a complete halt for fear of running into
something ahead. At least now he could use both hands to beat at them. He hesitated to close the protective dome for fear of
panicking the dozens that would inevitably be trapped inside. Besides, except
for blocking his view, they weren't bothering him. Their square little teeth
were designed for cracking the hulls of nuts and seeds, and they showed no
interest in live flesh. They had large bright-yellow eyes, and two thin legs
suitable for grasping branches. Flinx wondered at them, as well as how long it
would be before they moved on and he could resume his journey. Suddenly, the air was full of whooshing
sounds. The earth erupted head-sized round shapes. Flinx saw long thin snouts
full of needlelike teeth and multiple arms projecting from narrow bodies. The whooshing
noise was composed of a long series of explosive popping sounds. He squinted through the mass of fliers and saw one
creature after another emerge from vertical burrows. The poppers were
black-bodied with yellow and orange variolitic colorings. They became airborne
by inflating a pair of sausage-shaped air sacs attached to their spines-by
regulating the amount of air in the sacs, the animals could control not only
their altitude but their direction. They lit into the swarm of fliers,
utilizing long, thin snouts to snatch one after another from the air. Once a
popper had made several catches, it would deflate its air sacs and settle
parachutelike to the ground. They always seemed to land directly above their
respective burrows, down which they would promptly vanish. When neither the cloud of fliers nor attacking
poppers showed any signs of thinning, Flinx made the decision to move forward.
He traveled slowly, picking his way through the trees. He had traveled nearly a
kilometer before the swarms started to disperse, and eventually he passed into
open forest once again. A backward glance showed a solid wall of gray, black,
and yellow-orange shifting like smoke among the trees. It took a moment before
he realized something was missing from the mudder. "Pip?" The minidrag was not coiled on the
passenger seat, nor was it drifting on the air currents above the mudder. It took Flinx several worried minutes before he
located his pet lying on its belly in the storage compartment behind the seats,
swollen to three times its usual diameter. It had thoroughly gorged itself on
the tasty little gray fliers. Flinx was convinced that his currently immobile
companion did not look at all well. "That'll teach you to make a durq of
yourself," he told his pet. The minidrag moved once, slowly, before giving
up totally on the effort. It would be a while before it flew again, even to its
master's shoulder. Flinx continued northward, hardly pausing to sleep.
Two days had passed since he had appropriated the mudder. Given the likely
laxity of rural bureaucratic types, it might be some time before its absence
was remarked upon. By the time someone figured out that a real theft had been
pulled off, Flinx would be two hundred kilometers away, and the local
authorities would have no way of knowing which direction he had taken. Skimming
along just above the surface, a mudder left no trail. Its simple electric jet
emitted practically no waste heat to be detected from the air. But Flinx did
not expect any kind of elaborate pursuit, not for a single, small,
comparatively inexpensive vehicle. He continued to wonder about all the effort and
expense someone was going through to abduct a harmless old woman. The
implausibility of the whole situation served only to heighten his anxiety and
did nothing to dampen his anger or determination. Several days went by before he detected the change in
the air. It was an alien feeling, something he couldn't place. The omnipresent
dampness remained, but it had become sharper, more direct in his nostrils.
"Now what do you suppose that is, Pip?" he murmured aloud. The flying
snake would not have answered had it been able. All its efforts and energies
were still directed to the task of digesting fur, meat, and bone. The mudder moved up a slight hill. At its crest a gap
in the trees revealed a scene that took Flinx's breath away. At first, he
thought he had somehow stumbled onto the ocean. No, he knew that couldn't be.
No ocean lay –north from Drallar, not until one reached the frozen pole or
unless one traveled east or west for thousands of kilometers. Though the body of water looked like an ocean, he
recognized it for what it was: a lake, one of the hundreds that occupied the
territory from his present position northward to the arctic. No sunlight shone
directly on it, for the clouds were as thick here as they were in distant
Drallar, but enough light filtered through to create a glare-a glare that
exploded off that vast sheet of water to reflect from the cloud cover overhead
and bounced again from the water. The-Blue-That-Blinded, Flinx thought. He knew enough
of Moth's geography to recognize the first of the lakes which bore that
collective description. The lake itself he could not put a name to, not without
his map. It was only one of hundreds of similarly impressive bodies of fresh
water whose names he had had no need to memorize during his readings, for he
had never expected to visit that part of the world. The glare imprisoned between surface and clouds
brought tears to his eyes as he headed the mudder toward the water's edge. The
lake blocked his path northward. He needed to know whether to skirt it to the
east or the west or to attempt a crossing. He had no way of figuring out what
his quarry had done. The weather was calm. Only a modest chop broke the
otherwise smooth expanse before him. A mudder could travel over water as well
as land, provided its charge held out; if not, the vehicle would sink quickly. Flinx decided that the first thing he needed was some
advice. So he turned to his map, which showed a single, isolated lodge just to
the east. He headed for it. The building came into view ten minutes later, a
large rambling structure of native stone and wood. Boats were tied up to the
single pier out back. Several land vehicles were parked near the front. Flinx
tensed momentarily, then relaxed. None of the craft displayed government
markings. Surely his theft had been discovered by now, but it was likely that
the search would tend more in the direction of populated areas to the south
-toward Drallar- rather than into the trackless north. . Nevertheless, he took a moment to inspect the
assembled vehicles carefully. All four were deserted. Two of them were
tracked-strictly land transportation. The others were mudders, larger and
fancier than his own, boasting thickly upholstered lounges and self-darkening
protective domes. Private transport, he knew. More comfortable than his own
craft but certainly no more durable. There was no sign of riding animals.
Probably anyone who could afford to travel this far north could afford
mechanized transportation. Flinx brought the mudder to a stop alongside the
other vehicles and took the precaution of disconnecting the ignition jumper. It
wouldn't do to have a curious passer-by spy the obviously illegal modification. The mudder
settled to the ground, and he stepped out over the mudguard onto the surface. The parking area had not been pounded hard and
smooth, and his boots picked up plenty of muck as he walked up to the wooden
steps leading inside. Suction hoses cleaned off most of the mud. The steps led
onto a covered porch populated by the kind of rustic wooden furniture so
popular with tourists who liked to feel they were roughing it. Beyond was a
narrow hall paneled with peeled, glistening tree trunks, stained dark. Flinx thought the inn a likely place to obtain
information about lake conditions, but before that, something equally important
demanded his attention. Food. He could smell it somewhere close by, and he owed
himself a break from the concentrates that had been fueling him for many days.
His credcard still showed a positive balance, and there was no telling when he
would be fortunate enough to encounter honest cooking again. Nor would he have
to worry about curious stares from other patrons-Pip, still unable to eat,
would not be dining with him this time. He inhaled deeply. It almost smelled as
if the food were being prepared by a live chef instead of a machine. Flinx found his way to the broad, exposed-beam
dining room. The far wall had a fire blazing in a rock fireplace. To the left
lay the source of the wonderful aroma: a real kitchen. A couple of furry shapes
snored peacefully nearby. An older couple sat near the entrance. They were
absorbed in their meal and didn’t even turn to look up at him. Two younger
couples ate and chatted close by the fireplace. In the back comer was a group
of oldsters, all clad in heavy north-country attire. He started down the few steps into the dining room,
intending to question someone in the kitchen about the possibility of a meal.
Suddenly, something hit his mind so hard he had to lean against the nearby wall
for support. Two younger men had entered the dining room from a
far, outside door. They were talking to the group of diners in the far corner.
No one had looked toward Flinx; no one had said a word to him. He tottered away from the wall, caught and balanced
himself at the old couple's table. The man looked up from his plate at the
uninvited visitor and frowned. "You feeling poorly, son?" Flinx didn't answer, but continued to stare across
the room. Faces-he couldn't make out faces beneath all that heavy clothing.
They remained hidden from his sight-but not from something else. He spoke sharply, unthinkingly. "Mother?" Chapter Nine
One of the bundled figures spun in its chair to gape
at him. Her eyes were wide with surprise as well as with a warning Flinx
ignored. She started to rise from her seat. The rest of the group gazed at the young man standing
across the room. One of the younger men put a hand on Mother Mastiff's shoulder
and forced her back into her chair. She promptly bit him. The man's companion
pulled something out of a coat pocket and started toward Flinx. The group's
stunned expressions, brought on by Flinx's unexpected appearance, had turned
grim. Flinx searched the floor and walls nearby, found the
switch he was hunting for, and stabbed at it. The lights in the dining room
went out, leaving only the dim daylight from the far windows to illuminate the
room. What a fantastic Talent he possessed, he thought as
he dove for cover. It had reacted sharply to Mother Mastiff's presence-after he
had all but tripped over her. The room filled with screams from the regular guests,
mixed with the curses of those Flinx had surprised. He did not try to make his
way toward the table where Mother Mastiff was being held; he had been through
too many street fights for that. Keeping the layout of the dining room in his
mind, he retreated and dropped to a crawl, taking the long way around the room
toward the table in an attempt to sneak behind her captors. Three had been
seated at the table with her, plus the two who had arrived later. Five
opponents. "Where is he-somebody get some lights!"
Very helpful of them, Flinx mused, to let him know their location. He would
have to make use of the information quickly, he knew. Soon one of the guests,
or a lodge employee, would have the lights back on, robbing him of his only
advantage. A sharp crackling richocheted around the room,
accompanied by a brief flash of light. One of the other guests screamed a
warning. Flinx smiled to himself. With every-one bugging the floor, that ought
to keep the lights off a little longer. A second bolt split the air at table level, passing
close enough to set his skin twitching. Paralysis beam. Though Flinx took some
comfort from this demonstration of his opponent's intent not to shoot to kill,
he did not stop to think why they might take such care. The kidnappers
continued to fire blindly through the darkness. With those nerve-petrifying
beams filling the room, no employee was likely to take a stab at a light
switch. Grateful once more for his small size, Flinx kept
moving on his belly until he reached the far wall. At the same time, the random
firing ceased. Imagining one of his opponents feeling along the walls in search
of a light switch, Flinx readied himself for a hurried crawl past the glow of
the fireplace. Then someone let out a violent curse, and he heard the sound of
chair and table going over very close by. Flinx's hand went to his boot. He
rose to a crouching position, waiting. Again, he heard the sound of stumbling, louder and
just ahead. He put his hand on a nearby chair and shoved it into the darkness.
A man appeared in the glow from the fireplace, and a flash enveloped the chair.
Flinx darted in behind the man and used the stiletto as old Makepeace had
instructed him. The man was twice Flinx's size, but his flesh was no tougher
than anyone else's. He exhaled once, a sharp wheeze, before collapsing in a heap. Flinx darted forward,
out of the illuminating glare of the fire. "Erin," a voice called uncertainly,
"you okay?" Several new flashes filled the air, striking the stone
around the fireplace where Flinx had stood moments earlier. If the intent of
those shots was to catch Flinx unaware, they failed; on the other hand, they
did force him to hug the floor again. Moments later, the lights winked back on, shockingly
bright. Flinx tensed beneath the table that sheltered him, but he needn't have
worried. The party of travelers had fled, along with the remaining
paralysis-beam wielder and Mother Mastiff. Flinx climbed to his feet. The other guests remained
cowering on the floor. There was no hint of what had brought the lights back to
life, and he had no time to think about it. The door at the far end of the room was ajar. It led
out onto a curving porch. He hurried to it but paused just inside to throw a
chair out ahead of him. When no one fired on it, he took a deep breath and
jumped out, rolling across the porch and springing out of the roll into a
fighting crouch. There was no enemy waiting to confront him-the porch
was deserted. The beach off to the left was not. Two mudders were parked on the
shore. As Flinx watched helplessly, the travelers he had sought for so long
piled into the two crafts. Heedless now of his own safety, he charged down the
steps onto the slight slope leading toward the lake shore. The first mudder was
already cruising across the wave tops. By the time he reached the water's edge and
sank exhausted to his knees, the useless knife held limply in his right hand,
both craft were already well out on the lake surface itself. Fighting for breath, Flinx forced himself erect and
started back up the slope. He would have to go after them quickly. If he lost
sight of them on the vast lake, he would have no way of knowing on which far
shore they would emerge. He staggered around the front of the lodge and grabbed
at the entrance to his mudder. A supine and unsettled shape stared back at him.
Pip looked distinctly unhappy. It flittered once, then collapsed back onto the
seat. "Fine help you were," Flinx snapped at his
pet. The minidrag, if possible, managed to look even more miserable. Clearly, it
had sensed danger to Flinx and had tried to go to his aid, but simply couldn't
manage to get airborne. Flinx started to climb into the cab when a voice and
a hand on his shoulder restrained him. "Just a minute." Flinx tensed,
but a glance at Pip showed that the flying snake was not reacting defensively. "I can't," he started to say as he turned.
When he saw who was confronting him, he found himself able only to stare. She seemed to tower over him, though in reality she
was no more than a couple of centimeters taller. Black hair fell in tight
ringlets to her shoulders. Her bush jacket was tucked into pants that were
tucked into low boots. She was slim but not skinny. The mouth and nose were
child-sized, the cheekbones high beneath huge, owl-like brown eyes. Her skin
was nearly as dark as Flinx's, but it was a product of the glare from the
nearby lake and not heredity. She was the most strikingly beautiful woman he
had ever seen. He tracked down his voice and mumbled, "I have
to go after them." The hand remained on his shoulder. He might have thrown
it off, and might not. "My name's Lauren Walder," she said.
"I'm the general manager at Granite Shallows." Her voice was full of
barely controlled fury as she used her head to gesture toward the lake.
Ringlets flew. "What have you to do with those idiots?" "They've kidnapped my mother, the woman who
adopted me," he explained. "I don't know why, and I don't much care
right now. I just want to get her back." "You're a little out-numbered, aren't you?" "I'm used to that." He pointed toward the
dining-room windows and the still-open porch doorway. "It's not me lying
dead on your floor in there." She frowned at him, drawing her brows together.
"How do you know the man's dead?" "Because I killed him." "I see," she said, studying him in a new
light. "With what?" "My stiletto," he said. "I don't see any stiletto." She looked him
up and down. "You're not supposed to. Look, I've got to go.
If I get too far behind them-" "Take it easy," she said, trying to soothe him.
"I've got something I have to show you." "You don't seem to understand," he said
insistently. "I've no way to track them. I won't know where they touch
land and-" "Don't worry about it. You won't lose
them." "How do you know?" "Because we'll run them down in a little while.
Let them relax and think they've escaped." Her fingers tightened on his shoulder. "I promise you we'll
catch them." "Well ..." He spared another glance for
Pip. Maybe in a little while the flying snake would be ready to take to the
air. That could make a significant difference in any fight to come. "If
you're sure ..." She nodded once, appearing as competent as she was
beautiful. Lodge manager, he thought. She ought to know what she was talking
about. He could trust her for a few minutes, anyway. "What's so important to show me?" he asked. "Come with me." Her tone was still soaked
with anger. She led him back into the lodge, across the porch and back into the
dining room. Several members of her staff were treating one of the women who
had been dining when the lights had gone out and the guns had gone off. Her
husband and companions were hovering anxiously over her; and she was panting
heavily, holding one hand to her chest. "Heart condition," Lauren explained
tersely. Flinx looked around. Tables and chairs were still
overturned, but there was no other indication that a desperate fight had been
fought in the room. Paralysis beams did not damage inanimate objects. The man
he had slain had been moved by lodge personnel. He was glad of that. Lauren led him toward the kitchen. Lying next to the
doorway were the pair of furry shapes he had noticed when he had first entered
the room. Up close, he could see their round faces, twisted in agony. The short
stubby legs were curled tightly beneath the fuzzy bodies. Their fur was a rust
red except for yellow circles around the eyes, which were shut tight.
Permanently. "Sennar and Soba." Lauren spoke while
gazing at the dead animals with a mixture of fury and hurt. "They're
wervils-or were," she added bitterly. "I raised them from kittens.
Found them abandoned in the woods. They liked to sleep here by the kitchen.
Everybody liked to feed them. They must have moved at the wrong time. In the
dark, one of those"-she used a word Flinx didn't recognize, which was
unusual in itself-"must have mistaken them for you. They were firing at
anything that moved, I've been told." She paused a moment, then added,
"You must have the luck of a pregnant Yax'm. They hit just about
everything in the room except you." "I was down on the floor," Flinx explained.
"I only stand up when I have to." "Yes, as that one found out." She jerked a
thumb in the direction of the main hall. Flinx could see attendants wrapping a
body in lodge sheets. He was a little startled to see how big his opponent had
actually been. In the dark, though, it's only the size of your knife that
matters. "They didn't have to do this," the manager
was murmuring, staring at the dead animals. "They didn't have to be so
damned indiscriminate. Four years I've coddled those two. Four years.
"They never showed anything but love to anyone who ever went near
them." Flinx waited quietly. After a while, she gestured for him to follow her.
They walked out into the main hall, down a side corridor, and entered a
storeroom. Lauren unlocked a transparent wall case and removed a large,
complex-looking rifle and a couple of small, wheel-shaped plastic containers.
She snapped one of them into the large slot set in the underside of the rifle.
The weapon seemed too bulky for her, but she swung it easily across her back
and set her right arm through the support strap. She added a pistol to her
service belt, then led him back out into the corridor. "I've never seen a gun like that before."
Flinx indicated the rifle. "What do you hunt with it?" "It's not for hunting," she told him.
"Fishing gear. Each of those clips"-and she gestured at the
wheel-shapes she had handed over to Flinx-"holds about a thousand darts.
Each dart carries a few milliliters of an extremely potent neurotoxm. Prick
your finger on one end ..." She shrugged meaningfully. "The darts are loaded into the clips at the
factory in Drallar, and then the clips are sealed. You can't get a dart out
unless you fire it through this." She patted the butt of the rifle, then
turned a corner. They were back in the main hallway. "You use a gun to kill fish?" She smiled across at him. Not much of a smile but a
first, he thought. "You've never been up to The-Blue-That-Blinded before, have you?" "I've lived my whole life in Drallar," he
said, which for all practical purposes was the truth. "We don't use these to kill the fish," she
explained. "Only to slow them up if they get too close to the boat." Flinx nodded, trying to picture the weapon in use. He
knew that the lakes of The-Blue-That-Blinded were home to some big fish, but
apparently he had never realized just how big. Of course, if the fish were
proportional to the size of the lakes ... "How big is this lake?" "Patra? Barely a couple of hundred kilometers
across. A pond. The really big lakes are further off to the northwest,
like Turquoise and Hanamar. Geographers are always arguing over whether they
should be called lakes or inland seas. Geographers are damn fools." They exited from the lodge. At least it wasn't
raining, Flinx thought. That should make tracking the fleeing mudders a little
easier. Flinx jumped, slightly when something landed heavily
on his shoulder. He stared down at it with a disapproving look. "About
time." The flying snake steadied himself on his master but did not meet
his eyes. "Now that's an interesting pet," Lauren
Walder commented not flinching from the minidrag as most strangers did. Another point in her
favor, Flinx thought. "Where on Moth do you find a creature like
that?" "In a garbage heap," Flinx said, "which
is what he's turned himself into. He overate a few days ago and still hasn't
digested it all." "I was going to say that he looks more agile
than that landing implied." She led him around the side of the main lodge
building. There was a small inlet and a second pier stretching into the lake.
Flinx had not been able to see it from where he had parked his mudder. "I said that we'd catch up to them." She
pointed toward the pier. The boat was a single concave arch, each end of the
arch spreading out to form a supportive hull. The cabin was located atop the
arch and was excavated into it. Vents lined the flanks of the peculiar
catamaran. Flinx wondered at their purpose. Some heavy equipment resembling
construction cranes hung from the rear corners of the aft decking. A similar,
smaller boat bobbed in the water nearby. They mounted a curving ladder and Flinx found himself
watching as Lauren shrugged off the rifle and settled herself into the pilot's
chair. She spoke as she checked
readouts and threw switches. "We'll catch them inside an hour," she
assured Flinx. "A mudder's fast, but not nearly as fast over water as
this." A deep rumble from the boat's stern; air whistled into the multiple
intakes lining the side of the craft, and the rumbling intensified. Lauren touched several additional controls whereupon
the magnetic couplers disengaged from the pier. She then moved the switch set
into the side of the steering wheel. Thunder filled the air, making Pip twitch
slightly. The water astern began to bubble like a geyser as a powerful stream
of water spurted from the subsurface nozzles hidden in the twin hulls. The boat
leaped forward, cleaving the waves. Flinx stood next to the pilot's chair and shouted
over the roar of the wind assailing the open cabin. "How will we know
which way they've gone?" Lauren leaned to her right and flicked a couple of
switches below a circular screen, which promptly came to life. Several bright yellow
dots appeared on the transparency. "This shows the whole lake." She
touched other controls. All but two dots on the screen turned from yellow to
green. "Fishing boats from the other lodges that ring Patra. They have
compatible instrumentation.” She tapped the screen, with a fingernail.
"That pair that's stayed
yellow? Moving, nonorganic,
incompatible transponder. Who do you suppose that might be?" Flinx said nothing, just stared at the tracking
screen. Before long, he found himself staring over the bow that wasn't actually
a bow. The twin hulls of the ]et catamaran knifed through the surface of the
lake as Lauren steadily increased their speed. She glanced occasionally over at the tracker.
"They're moving pretty well-must be pushing their mudders to maximum.
Headed due north, probably looking to deplane at Point Horakov. We have to
catch them before they cross, of course. This is no mudder. Useless off the
water." "Will we?" Flinx asked anxiously.
"Catch them, I mean." His eyes searched the cloud-swept horizon,
looking for the telltale glare of diffused sunlight on metal. "No problem," she assured him. "Not
unless they have some special engines in those mudders. I'd think if they did,
they'd be using 'cm right now." "What happens when we catch them?" "I'll try cutting in front of them," she
said thoughtfully. "If that doesn't make them stop, well-" she
indicated the rifle resting nearby. "We can pick them off one at a time.
That rifle's accurate to a kilometer. The darts are gas-propelled, you see, and
the gun has a telescopic sight that'll let me put a dart in somebody's ear if I
have to." "What if they shoot back?" "Not a paralysis pistol made that can outrange
that rifle, let alone cover any distance with accuracy. The effect is
dispersed. It's only at close range that paralysis is effective on people. Or
lethal to small animals," she added bitterly. "If they'll surrender,
we’ll take them in and turn them over to the game authorities. You can add your
own charges at the same time. Wervils are an endangered species on Moth. Of
course, I'd much prefer that the scum resist so that we can defend
ourselves." Such bloodthirstiness in so attractive a woman was
no surprise to Flinx. He’d encountered it before in the marketplace. It was her
motivation that was new to him. He wondered how old she was. Probably twice his
own age, he thought, though it was difficult to tell for sure. Time spent in
the wilderness had put rough edges on her that even harsh city life would be
hard put to equal. It was a different kind of roughness; Flinx thought it very
becoming. “What .if they choose to give themselves up?” He
knew that was hardly likely, but he was curious to know what her contingency
for such a possibility might be. “Like I said, we take them back with us and turn
them over to the game warden in Kalish.” He made a short, stabbing motion with one hand. “That
could be awkward for me.” “Don’t worry,” she told him. “I’ll see to it that
you’re not involved. It’s not only the game laws they’ve violated. Remember
that injured guest? Ms. Marteenson’s a sick woman. The effect of a paralysis
beam on her could be permanent. So it’s not just the game authorities who’ll be
interested in these people. “As to you and your mother, the two of you can
disappear. Why has she been kidnapped? For ransom?” “She hasn’t any money,” Flinx replied. “Not enough to
bother with, anyway.” “Well, then, why?” Lauren’s eyes stayed on the
tracker, occasionally drifting to scan the sky for signs of rain. The jet boat
had a portable cover that she hoped they wouldn’t have to use. It would make
aiming more difficult. “That’s what I’d like to know,” Flinx told her.
“Maybe we’ll find out when we catch up with them.” “We should,” she agreed, “though that won’t do
Sennar and Soba any good. You’ve probably guessed by now that my opinion of
human beings is pretty low. Present company excepted. I’m very fond of animals.
Much rather associate with them. I never had a wervil betray me, or any other
creature of the woods, for that matter. You know where you stand with an
animal. That’s a major reason why I’ve chosen the kind of life I have.” “I know a few other people who feel the way you do,”
Flinx said. “You don’t have to apologize for it.” “I wasn’t apologizing,” she replied
matter-of-factly. “Yet you manage a hunting lodge.” “Not a hunting lodge,” she corrected him. “Fishing
lodge. Strictly fishing. We don’t accommodate hunters here, but I can’t stop
other lodges from doing so.” “You have no sympathy for the fish, then? It’s a
question of scales versus fur? The AAnn wouldn’t like that.” She smiled. “Who cares what the AAnn think? As for
the rest of your argument, it’s hard to get cozy with a fish. I’ve seen the
fish of this lake gobble up helpless young wervils and other innocents that
make the mistake of straying too far out into the water. Though if it came down
to it”—she adjusted a control on the instrument dash, and the jet boat leaped
to starboard—“I’m not sure I wouldn’t prefer the company of fish to that of
people either.” “It’s simple, then,” Flinx said. “You’re a chronic
antisocial.” She shrugged indifferently. “I’m me. Lauren Walder.
I’m happy with what I am. Are you happy with what you are?” His smile faded. “I don’t know what I am yet.” He
dropped his gaze and brooded at the tracker, his attention focused on the
nearing yellow dot that indicated their quarry. Odd thing for a young man like that to say, she
thought. Most people would’ve said they didn’t know who they were yet.
Slip of the tongue. She let the remark pass. The gap between pursued and pursuer shrank rapidly
on the tracker. It wasn’t long before Flinx was able to gesture excitedly over
the bow and shout, “There they are!” Lauren squinted and saw only water and cloud, then
glanced down at the tracker. “You’ve got mighty sharp eyes, Flinx.” “Prerequisite for survival in Drallar,” he
explained. A moment later she saw the mudders also, skittering
along just above the waves and still headed for the northern shore.
Simultaneously, those in the mudders reacted to the appearance of the boat
behind them. They accelerated and for a moment moved out of sight again. Lauren
increased the power. This time they didn’t pull away from the jet boat. She nodded slightly. “I thought so. Standard mudder
engines, no surprises. I don’t think they’re hiding anything from us.” She
glanced at her companion. “Think you can drive this thing for a little while?” Flinx had spent the past half hour studying the
controls as well as the image on the tracker. The instrumentation was no more
complex than that of his mudder. On the other hand, he was used to driving over
land. “I think so,” he said. This was not the time for excessive caution. “Good.” She slid out of the pilot’s chair and waited
until he slipped in and took control over the wheel. “It’s very responsive,”
she warned him, “and at the speed we’re traveling, even a slight turn of the
wheel will send us shooting off in another direction. So watch it.” “I’ll be okay,” he assured her. He could feel the
vibration of the engine through the wheel. The sensation was exhilarating. A flash of light suddenly marked the fleeing
mudders, but it dissipated well shy of the jet boat’s bow. Flinx maintained the
gap between the three craft. The flash was repeated; it did no more damage to
the boat or its crew than would a flashlight beam. “No long-range weapons,” Lauren murmured. “If they
had ‘em, now’d be the time to use ‘em.” Flinx saw she was hefting the dart
rifle. It was nearly as tall as she was. She settled it onto a vacant bracket
and bent over to peer through the complex telescopic sight. In that position,
it resembled a small cannon more than a rifle. Two more flares of light shot from the mudders,
futile stabs at the pursuing jet boat. “I can see them,” Lauren announced as
she squinted through the sight. “They look confused. That’s sensible. I don’t
see anything but hand weapons. Two of them seem to be arguing. I don’t think
they expected this kind of pursuit.” “They didn’t expect to see me in the dining room,
either,” Flinx said confidentially. “Ill bet they’re confused.” She looked over from the sight. “You’re sure they
weren’t looking for you to follow?” “I doubt it, or I’d never have come this close to
them.” She grunted once and returned her eyes to the sight.
“At this range, I can pick their teeth.” She moved the rifle slightly. “Hold
her steady, please.” She pushed the button which took the place of a regular
trigger. The gun went phut! and something tiny and explosive burst from
the muzzle. “Warning shot,” she explained. “There- someone’s
pulling the dart out. I put it in the back of the pilot’s chair. Now they’re gathering
around and studying it, except the driver, of course. Now they’re looking back
at us. One of them’s keeping two hands on a little old lady. Your mother?” “I’m sure,” Flinx said tightly. “She’s giving the one restraining her fits, trying
to bite him, kicking at him even though it looks like her feet are bound at the
ankles.” “That’s her, all right.” Flinx couldn’t repress a
grin. “What are they doing now?” Lauren frowned. “Uh oh. Putting up some kind of
transparent shield. Now the regular vehicle dome over that. The dome we can
penetrate. I don’t know about the shield-thing. Well, that’s no problem. Go to
port.” “Port?” Flinx repeated. “To your left,” she said. “We’ll cut around in front
of them and block their course. Maybe when they see that we can not only catch
them but run circles around them, they’ll be willing to listen to reason.” Flinx obediently turned the wheel to his left and
felt the catamaran respond instantly. “Okay, now back to star-to your right, not too
sharply.” “The boat split the water as he turned the wheel. Suddenly, everything changed. A new sound, a deep
humming, became audible. “Damn,” Lauren said in frustration, pointing upward. Flinx’s gaze went toward the clouds. The skimmer
that had appeared from out of the northern horizon was of pretty good size. It
was certainly more than big enough to hold its own crew in addition to the
mudders’ occupants. If there was any doubt as to the skimmer’s intent, it was
quickly eliminated as the versatile craft dipped low, circled once, and then
settled toward the first mudder as it strove to match the smaller vehicle’s
speed. “If they get aboard, we’ll lose them permanently,”
said a worried Flinx. “Can you pick them off as they try to transfer?” Already
the skimmer’s crew had matched velocity with the mudder and was dropping a
chute ladder toward the water. Lauren bent over the rifle again. Her finger
hesitated over the button; then she unexpectedly, pulled back and whacked the
butt of the gun angrily. “Lovely people. They’re holding your mother next to
the base of the chute. I can’t get a clear shot.” “What are we going to do? We can’t just keep
circling them like this!” “How the hell should I know?” She abandoned the
rifle and rushed to a storage locker amidships. “Mudders, paralysis pistols,
kidnapping, and now a skimmer sent out from the north. Who are these people,
anyway?” “I don’t know,” Flinx snapped. “I told you before
that I don’t understand any of this.” He hesitated, trying to watch her and
keep the jet boat circling the still-racing mudders and the skimmer hovering
above them. “What are you going to do now?” The device she had extracted from the storage locker
was as long as the dart rifle but much narrower. “When I give the word,” she
said tightly, “I want you to charge them and pull aside at the last moment. I
don’t think they’ll be expecting a rush on our part. They’re much too busy
transferring to the skimmer.” “What are you going to try and do?” he asked
curiously. “Disable the skimmer?” “With a dart gun? Are you kidding?” she snorted.
“Just do as I say.” “So long as what you say continues making sense,” he
agreed, a bit put off by her tone. “You’re wasting time. Do it!” He threw the wheel hard over. The catamaran spun on
the surface so sharply that the portside hull lifted clear of the water. A high
rooster tail obscured them from sight for a moment. In seconds, they were on top of the mudder and the
skimmer drifting steadily above it. Activity on both craft intensified as the
jet boat bore down on the mudder. As Lauren suspected, the last thing their
opponents were expecting was a broadside charge. A couple of shots passed
behind the onrushing boat, hastily dispatched and imperfectly aimed. “Hard to port!” Lauren shouted above the roar of the
engine. Those still on board the mudder had hunched down in anticipation of a
collision. Flinx leaned on the wheel. Engine screaming, the catamaran spun to
its left, nearly drowning those starting up the chute ladder toward the
skimmer. Lauren must have fired at least once, Flinx thought
as the jet boat sped away. He turned the wheel, and they started back toward
their quarry in a wide arc. To his surprise, the woman put the peculiar-looking
weapon back in the storage locker and returned to the bracket-held dart rifle.
“Now let’s go back and take our best shots.” “A one-shot gun?” he murmured. “I didn’t even hear
it go off. What was the purpose of that crazy charge?” He wrestled with the
wheel. “That charge was our insurance, Flinx.” She gestured
back toward the storage locker where she had repositioned the narrow gun. “That
gun was a Marker. We use it to help track injured fish that break their lines.”
She nodded toward the skimmer. “I think I hit it twice. The gun fires a capsule
which holds a specially sensitized gel. Epoxied bonder, sticks to anything
on contact, and it’s not water soluble. As long as they don’t think to check
the underside of their skimmer for damage, and there’s no reason for them to do
so since it’s operating perfectly, they’ll never see the gel. It’s transparent,
anyway. Now we can track them.” “Not with this boat, surely.” “No. But there’s a skimmer back at the lodge.
Would’ve taken too long to ready it or we’d be on it now instead of on this
boat. Wish we were. No reason to expect a skimmer to show up suddenly to help them,
though.” She gestured toward the mudder. “As long as they don’t get too far ahead of us,
we’ll beable to follow them-just like we did with this boat. But if we can hurt
them now ...” She looked back through the telescopic sight. “Ah, they’ve taken
your mother up on a hoist. Strapped in. I’m sure she didn’t make it easy for
them.” “She wouldn’t,” Flinx murmured affectionately. “Clear shooting now,” Lauren said delightedly. A
loud beeping sounded from the tracking unit. “What’s that?” Flinx gave the device a puzzled
glance. Lauren uttered a curse and pulled away from the
rifle. A quick glance at the screen and Flinx found himself shoved none too
gently out of the pilot’s chair. He landed on the deck hard. “Hey, what’s-!” Lauren wasn’t listening to him as she wrenched the
wheel hard to starboard. Flinx frantically grabbed for some support as the boat
heeled over. He could just see the port hull rising clear of the water as
something immense and silvery-sided erupted from the lake’s surface. Chapter Ten
Screams and shouts came from the vicinity of the
mudders and the skimmer. A violent reactive wave nearly cap-sized the jet boat;
only Lauren’s skillful and experienced maneuvering kept them afloat. Flinx saw a vast argent spine shot through with
flecks of gold that shone in the diffused sunlight. It looked like a huge pipe
emerging from beneath the waves, and it turned the sunlight to rainbows. Then
it was gone, not endless as he first believed. Another wave shook the catamaran
as the monster submerged once again. Flinx pulled himself up to where he could
peer over the edge of the cabin compartment. The mudders had vanished completely, sucked down in
a single gulp by whatever had materialized from the depths of the lake. The
skimmer itself just missed being dragged down by that great gulf of a mouth. It
hovered above the disturbed section of lake where its companion craft had been
only a moment ago. Then someone on the skimmer apparently made a decision, for
it rose another twenty meters toward the clouds and accelerated rapidly
northward. “They’re
leaving,” Flinx shouted. “We have to get back to the lodge, get the skimmer you
mentioned, and hurry after them before—“ “We have to get out of here alive first.” Lauren
followed her announcement with another curse as her hands tore at the wheel.
The silver mountain lifted from the lake just starboard of the jet boat. Flinx
was gifted with a long, uncomfortable view down a throat wide enough to swallow
several mudders intact. Or a jet boat. The jaws slammed shut, sending a heavy
spray crashing over the gunwales. The monster was so close Flinx could smell
its horrid breath. Then it was sinking back into the waters boiling behind the
catamaran. Something moved on his shoulder, and he reached up
to grasp at the muscular form that was uncoiling. “No, Pipl Easy... this one’s
too big even for you.” The snake struggled for a moment before relaxing. It
bobbed and ducked nervously, however, sensing a threat not only to its master
but to itself. Yet it responded to the pressure of Flinx’s restraining fingers
and held its position. For a third time, the penestral struck, snapping in
frustration at the spot where the jet boat had been only seconds earlier.
Thanks to the tracker, which had first warned Lauren of the nightmare’s approach,
they were able to avoid its upward rush. “This won’t do,” she murmured. “It’ll keep working
us until I make a mistake. Then it’ll take us the way it took the poor souls
still stuck on those mudders.” She studied the tracker intently. “It’s circling
now. Trying to cut us off from shallow water and the shore. We’ll let it think
we’re headed that way. Then we’ll reverse back into deep water.” “Why?” She ignored the question. “You didn’t care for it
when I had to shove you away from the wheel a few minutes ago, did you? Here,
it’s all yours again.” She reached down and half pulled, half guided him back
into the pilot’s chair. “That’s enough.” She threw the wheel over, and the boat
seemed to spin on its axis. Flinx grabbed for the wheel. “It’ll follow us straight now instead of trying to
ambush us from below and will try to hit us from astern. Keep us headed out
into the lake and let me know when it’s tangent to our square.” She indicated
the red dot on the tracking screen that was closing on them from behind. “But shouldn’t we—?” She wasn’t listening to him as she made her way back
to the pair of
gantry-like structures protruding from the rear of the boat. She took a seat
behind one, stretched it out so the arm hung free over the water, then checked
controls. “When I tell you,” she shouted back at him over the
roar of the engine and the spray, “go hard a-port. That’s left.” “I remember,” he snapped back at her. His attention
was locked to the tracker. “It’s getting awfully close.” “Good.” She positioned herself carefully in the
seat, touched a switch. Flexible braces snapped shut across her waist, hips,
shoulders and legs, pinning her to the seat in a striped cocoon. “Awfully close,” Flinx reiterated. “Not ready yet,” she murmured. “A fisherman has to be
patient.” The
water astern began to bubble, a disturbance more widespread than a mere boat
engine could produce. “Now!” she shouted. Flinx wrenched the wheel to his left.
Simultaneously, the surface of the lake exploded behind them. With both hands on
the wheel, there was nothing Flinx could do except cry out as Pip left its
perch and launched itself into the air. A muffled explosion sounded from the
stern, and a moment later its echo reached him as the harpoon struck the
penestral just beneath one of the winglike fins that shielded its gills. The soaring monster displaced the lake where the jet
boat had been before Flinx had sent it screaming into a tight turn. A distant crump
reached the surface as the harpoon’s delayed charge went off inside the guts of
the penestral. Polyline spewed from a drum inside the ship’s hull, a gel
coating eliminating dangerous heat buildup where line rubbed the deck. “Cut the engine,” came the command from astern. “But then we won’t have any—“ he started to protest “Do it,” she ordered.Flinx sighed. He was not a good
swimmer. He flicked he accelerator until their speed dropped to nothing. The jet engine sank
to an idle. Instantly, the catamaran began moving in reverse. The twin hulls
were pointed aft as well as forward, and the boat moved neatly through the
water as it was towed backward. The retreating polyline slowed from a blur to
where Flinx could count space markings as it slid off the boat. Meanwhile,
Lauren had reloaded the harpoon gun and was watching the surface carefully. She called back to him. "Where's the
penestral?" "Still moving ahead of us, but I think it's
slowing.": "That's to be expected. Keep your hands on the
accelerator and the wheel." "It's still slowing," he told her.
"Slowing, slowing—I can't see it anymore. I think it's under the
boat!" "Go!" she yelled, but at that point he
didn't need to be told what to do; he had already jammed the accelerator
control forward. The jet boat roared, shot out across the lake. An instant
later a geyser erupted bebind them as the penestral tried to swallow the sky.
Flinx heard the harpoon gun discharge a second time. This time, the penestral was struck just behind one
crystal-like eye the size of a telescope mirror. It collapsed back into the
water like a tridee scene running in reverse, sending up huge waves over which
the retreating catamaran rode with ease. The waves were matched in frequency if
not intensity by the palpitations of Flinx's stomach. This time, the fish didn't sink back into the depths.
It stayed on the surface, thrashing convulsively. "Bring us back around," Lauren directed
Flinx. She was sweating profusely as she reloaded the harpoon cannon for the
third time. Only the autoloading equipment made it possible for one person to
manipulate the heavy metal shaft and its explosive charge. This harpoon was slightly smaller and thinner than
the two that had preceded it. As the boat swung back toward the penestral,
Flinx heard the gun go off again. Several minutes passed. The penestral stopped
fighting and began to sink. Lauren touched another button. There was a hum as a
compressor located inside the catamaran started up, pumping air through the
plastic line that ran to the hollow shaft of the last harpoon. She unstrapped
herself from the chair and began to oversee the reeling in of the colossal
catch. "Air'11 keep it afloat for days," she said idly, exchanging
seats with Flinx once again. "Too big for darts, this one." "Why bother with it?" Flinx stared as the
silver-sided mountain expanded and drew alongside the catamaran. "You might be right—it's not much of a fish. Bet
it doesn't run more than fifteen meters." Flinx gaped at her. "But
there are hungry people in Kaslin and the other towns south of the lake, and
the penestral's a good food fish—lean and not fatty. They'll make good use of
it. What they don't eat they'll process for resale further south. The credit
will go to the lodge. "Besides, we have guests staying with us who
come up to Patra regularly, twice a year for many years, and who in all that
time have never seen anything bigger than a five-meter minnow. Your first time
and you've participated in a catch. You should feel proud." "I didn't catch it," he corrected her
quickly. "You did." "Sorry, modesty's not permitted on this lake.
Catching even a penestral's a cooperative effort. Dodging is just as important
as firing the gun. Otherwise, we end up on his trophy wall."
She jabbed a thumb in the direction of the inflated bulk now secured to the
side of the catamaran. A weight settled gently onto Flinx's left shoulder.
'I hoped you hadn't gone off to try and attack it," he said to the
minidrag as it slipped multiple coils around his arm. "It's good to know
you have some instinct for self-preservation." The flying snake
stared quizzically back at him, then closed its eyes and relaxed. Flinx inspected what he could see of the penestral
while the jet boat headed back toward the southern shore. "Those people in
the mudders, they didn't stand a chance." "Never knew what hit
them," Lauren agreed. "I'm sure they weren't carrying any kind of
tracking equipment. No reason for it. If our tracker had been out of order,
we'd have joined the mudders in the penestral's belly." A quick death at least, Flinx thought. Death was a
frequent visitor to the unwary in the Drallarian marketplace, so he was
no stranger to it. Thoughts of death reminded him of Mother Mastiff. Would his
persistence result in her captors' deciding she wasn't worth the trouble
anymore? What might they have in mind for her, now that her presence had caused
the death of a number of them? Surely, he decided, they wouldn't kill her out
of hand. They had gone to so much trouble already. But the thought made him worry even more. Exhilarated by the fight, Lauren's voice was slightly
elevated and hurried. She had reason to be short of wind, Flinx thought.
"One of these days, Flinx, after we've finished with this business, you'll
have to come back up here. I'll take you over to Lake Hozingar or Utuhuku. Now
those are respectable-sized lakes and home to some decent-sized fish. Not like
poor little Patra, here. At Hozingar, you can see the real meaning of the name
The-Blue-That-Blinded." Flinx regarded the immense carcass slung alongside
the jet boat in light of her words. "I know there are bigger lakes than
this one, but I didn't know they held bigger penestrals." "Oh, the penestral's a midrange predator,"
she told him conversationally. "On Hozingar you don't go fishing for
penestral. You fish for oboweir." "What," Flinx asked, "is an
oboweir?" "A fish that feeds regularly on
penestrala." "Oh," he said quietly, trying to stretch
his Imagination to handle the picture her words had conjured up. Quite a crowd was waiting to greet them as they tied
up at the lodge pier. Lauren had moored the inflated penestral to a buoy
nearby. The carcass drew too much water to be brought right inshore. Flinx slipped through the oohing and ahhing
guests, leaving Lauren to handle the questions. Several of her employees fought
their way to her and added questions of their own. Eventually, the crowd began
to break up, some to return to their rooms, others to remain to gawk at the
fish bobbing slowly on the surface. Flinx had collapsed gratefully into a chair on the
porch that encircled the main building. "How much do you want for the use
of the skimmer and a tracker?" he asked Lauren when she was able to join
him. "Ill-need you to show me how to use it, of course." She frowned at him. "I'm not sure I follow you,
Flinx." "I told you, I'm going after them. You've made
it possible for me to do that, and I'm very grateful to you." She looked thoughtful. "Management will scream
when they find out I've taken out the skimmer for personal use. They're a lot
more expensive than a jet boat or mudder. We'll have to be careful with it." He still wasn't listening to her, his mind full of
plans for pursuing the Mdnappers. "I don't know how I'll ever repay you
for this, Lauren." "Don't worry about it. The lodge's share of profit
from the disposal of the penestral ought to defray all the operating expenses.
Come on, get yourself and your snake out of that chair. We have to gather
supplies. The skimmer's usually used for making quick runs between here and
Attock. That's where we pick up our guests. We'll need to stock some food, of
course, and I want to make sure the engine is fully charged. And if I don't
take ten minutes to comb my hair out, I'm going to die." She tugged at the
tangles of black ringlets that the action on the lake had produced. "Just a minute." This time it was Flinx who
put out the restraining hand as he bounded out of the chair. "I think I've
misunderstood. You don't mean you're coming with me?" "You don't know how to use the tracking
equipment," she pointed out. "I can figure it out," he assured her
confidently. "It didn't take me long to figure out how to handle the boat,
did it?" "You don't know the country." "I'm not interested in the country," he
responded. "I'm not going on a sightseeing trip. That's what the tracker's
for, isn't it? Just loan the stuff to me. I'll pay you back somehow. Let me
just have the tracker and a charge for my mudder, if you're worried about the
skimmer." "You're forgetting about my wervils. Besides, you can't
track a skimmer with a mudder. What if you hit a can-you?" "Surely you're not giving up your work
here," he said, trying another tack, "just so you can seek revenge
for the deaths of a couple of pets?" "I told you, wervils are an endangered species
on Moth. And I also told you how I feel about animals." "I know," he protested, "but that still
doesn't—" He broke off his protest as she reached out to
ruffle his hair. "You know, you remind me of another wervil I cared for
once, though his fur wasn't quite as bright as yours. Near enough,
though." Then she went on more seriously. "Flinx, I don't like these
people, whoever they are. I don't like them because of what they've done to
you, and I don't like them because of what they've done to me. Because of that,
I'm going to help you as well as myself. Because I'd be going out after them
whether you were hereor not, for the sake of Sennar and Soba. "Don't try to deny that you couldn't use a
little help and don't give me any of that archaic nonsense about your not
wanting me along because I'm a woman." "Oh, don't worry," he told her crisply.
"The last thing I'd try to do would be to inflict any archaic nonsense on
you." That caused her to hesitate momentarily, uncertain
whether he was joking or not. "Anyway," she added, "if I can't
go, not that you can stop me, then you couldn't go, either. Because I'm the
only one who has access to the skimmer." It was not hard for Flinx to give in. "I haven't
got time to argue with you." "And also the sense not to, I suspect. But
you're right about the time. The tracker should pick up the gel underneath
their skimmer right away, but let's not play our luck to the limit. I don't
know what kind of skimmer they were using. I've never seen the like before, so
I've no idea if it's faster than usual. We go together, then?" "Together. On two conditions, Lauren." Again, she found herself frowning at him. Just when
she thought she could predict his actions, he would do something to surprise
her again. "Say them, anyway." "First, that Pip continues to tolerate
you." He rubbed the back of the flying snake's head affectionately. It
rose delightedly against the pressure. "You see, I have certain feelings
toward animals myself." "And the other condition?" she inquired. "If you ever touch my hair like that again,
you'd better be
prepared for me to kick your lovely backside all the way to the Pole. Old
ladies have been doing that to me ever since I can remember, and I've had my
fill of it!" She grinned at him. "It's a deal, then. I'm glad
your snake isn't as touchy as you are. Let's go. I have to leave a message for
my superiors in case they call in and want to know not only where their skimmer
is but their lodge manager as well." When she informed the assistant manager of the lodge,
he was very upset. "But what do I tell Kilkenny if he calls from Attoka?
What if he has guests to send up?" "We're not expecting anyone for another week.
You know that, Sal. Tell him anything you want." She was arranging items
in a small sack as she spoke. "No, tell him I've gone to the aid of a
traveler in distress across the Sake. That's an acceptable excuse in any
circumstance." The assistant looked past her to where Flinx stood
waiting impatiently, chucking Pip under its jaw and staring in the direction of
the lake. "He doesn't look like he's very distressed to
me." "His distress is well hidden," Lauren informed
him, "which is more than I can say for you, Sal. I'm surprised at you.
We'll be back real soon." "Uh-huh. It's just that I'm not a very good
liar, Lauren. You know that." "Do the best you can." She patted his
cheek affectionately.
"And I'm not lying. He really is in trouble." "But the skimmer, Lauren." "You still have the lodge mudders and the boats.
Short of a major catastrophe of some kind, I can see no reason why you'd need
the skimmer. It's really only here to be used in case of emergency. To my mind"—she
gestured toward Flinx—"this is an emergency." The assistant kicked at the dirt. "It's your
neck." "Yes, it's my neck." "Suppose they ask which way you went?" "Tell them I've headed—" A cough
interrupted her. She looked back at Flinx and nodded once. "Just say that
I've had to go across Patra." "But which way across?" "Across the lake. Sal." "Oh. Okay, I understand. You've got your reasons
for doing this, I guess." "I guess I do. And if I'm wrong, well, you
always wanted to be manager here, anyway, Sal." "Now hold on a minute, Lauren. I never
said—" "Do the best you can for me," she gently
admonished him. "This means something to me." "You really expect to be back soon?" "Depends on how things go. See you, Sal." "Take care of yourself, Lauren." He watched
as she turned to rejoin the strange youth, then shrugged and started back up
the steps into the lodge. As Lauren had said, it was her neck. It didn't take long for the skimmer to be checked
out. Flinx climbed aboard and admired the utilitarian vehicle. For almost the
first time since he left Drallar, he would be traveling totally clear of such
persistent obstacles as mist-shrouded boulders and towering trees. The
machine's body was made of black resin. It was large enough to accommodate a
dozen passengers and crew. In addition to the standard emergency stores, Lauren
provisioned it with additional food and medical supplies. They also took along
the dart rifle and several clips and a portable sounding tracker. Flinx studied the tracking screen and the single
moving dot that drifted northwestward across the transparency. A series of
concentric gauging rings filled the circular screen. The dot that represented
their quarry had already reached the outermost ring. "They'll move off the screen in a little while,"
he murmured to Lauren. "Don't worry. I'm sure they're convinced by now
that they've lost us." "They're zigzagging all over the screen,"
he noted. "Taking no chances. Doesn't do any good if
you're showing up on a tracker. But you're right. We'd better get moving." She slid into the pilot's chair and thumbed controls.
The whine of the skimmer's engine drowned out the tracker's gentle hum as the
craft rose several meters. Lauren held it there as she ran a final instrument
check, then pivoted the vehicle on an invisible axis and drove it from the
hangar. A nudge of the altitude switch sent them ten, twenty, thirty meters
into the air above the lodge. A touch on the accelerator and they were rushing
toward the beach. Despite the warmth of the cabin heater, Flinx still
felt cold as he gazed single-mindedly at the screen. "I told you not to worry," Lauren said with
a glance at his expression as they crossed the shoreline. "We'll catch
them." "It's not that." Flinx peered out through
the transparent cabin cover. "I was thinking about what might catch
us." "I've yet to see the penestral that can pick out
and catch an airborne target moving at our speed thirty meters up. An oboweir
might do it, but there aren't any oboweirs in Lake Patra. Leastwise, none that
I've ever heard tell of." Nevertheless, Flinx's attention and thoughts remained
evenly divided between the horizon ahead and the potentially lethal waters
below. "I understand you've had some trouble
here." Sal relaxed in the chair in the dining room and
sipped at a hot cup of toma as he regarded his visitors. They had arrived in
their own mudder, which immediately stamped them as independent as well as
wealthy. If he played this right, he might convince them to spend a few days at
the lodge. They had several expensive suites vacant, and if he could place this
pair in one, it certainly wouldn't do his record any harm. Usually, he could
place an offworlder by accent, but not these two. Their words were clear but
their phonemes amorphous. It puzzled him. Routine had returned as soon as Lauren and her
charity case had departed. No one had called from down south, not the district
manager, not anyone. He was feeling very content. Unless, of course, the
company had decided to send its own investigators instead of simply calling in
a checkup. That thought made him frown at the woman. "Say, are you two Company?" "No," the woman's companion replied,
smiling pleasantly. "Goodness no, nothing like that. We just like a little
excitement, that's all. If something unusual's going on in the area, it kind of
tickles our curiosity, if you know what I mean." "You had a man killed here, didn't you?"
the woman asked. "Well, yes, it did get pretty lively here for a
day." No accounting for taste, Sal mused. "Someone was killed during
a fight. A nonguest," he hastened to add. "Right in here. Quite a
melee." "Can you describe any of those involved?"
she asked him. "Not really. I'm not even positive which guests
were involved and which day visitors. I didn't witness the argument myself, you
see, and by the time I arrived, most of the participants had left." The woman accepted this admission with a disappointed
nod. "Was there a young man involved? Say, of about sixteen?" "Yes, him I did see. Bright-red hair?" "That's the one," she admitted. "Say, is he dangerous or anything?" The
assistant manager leaned forward in his chair, suddenly concerned. "Why do you want to know?" the man asked. "Well, my superior here, the regular
manager—Lauren Walder. She went off with him." "Went off with him?" The pleasant
expression that had dominated the woman's face quickly vanished, to be replaced
by something much harder. "Yes. Three, maybe four days ago now. I'm still
not completely sure why. She only told me that the young man had a problem and
she was going to try to help him out." "Which way did their mudder go?" the man
asked. "North, across Lake Patra," Sal informed
them. "They're not in a mudder, though. She took the
lodge skimmer." "A skimmer!" The woman threw up her hands
in frustration and sat down heavily in a chair opposite the assistant.
"We're losing ground," she told her companion, "instead of
gaining on him. If he catches up with them before we do, we could lose him and
the . . ." Her companion cut the air with the edge of his hand, and her
words trailed away to an indecipherable mumble. The gesture had been quick and
partly concealed, but Sal had noticed it nonetheless. "Now you've really got me worried," he told
the pair. "If Lauren's in some kind of trouble—" "She could be," the man admitted, pleased
that the assistant had changed the subject. Sal thought a moment. "Would she be in danger
from these people who had the fight here, or from the redhead?" "Conceivably from both." The man was only
half lying. "You'd better tell us everything you know." "I already have," Sal replied. "You said they went north, across the lake.
Can't you be any more specific than that?" Sal looked helpless. "Lauren wouldn't be any
more specific than that." "They might not continue heading north." "No, they might not. Do you have a tracker for
following other craft?" Sal asked. The man shook his head. "We didn't think we'd
need one. The last we knew, the young man we'd like to talk With was traveling
on stupava-back." "I think he arrived here in a mudder." The woman looked surprised and grinned ruefully at
her companion. "No wonder we fell behind. Resourceful, isn't he?" "Too resourceful for my liking," the man
murmured, "and maybe for his own good if he backs those you know-whos into
a corner." The women sighed, then rose from her chair.
"Well, we've wasted enough time here. We'll just have to return to
Pranbeth for a skimmer and tracking unit. Unless you think we should try to
catch up to them in the mudder." The man let out a short, humorless laugh,
then turned back
to the assistant manager. "Thanks, son. You've been helpful." "I wish I could be more so," Sal told him
anxiously. "If anything were to happen to Lauren—you'll see that nothing
happens to her, won't you?" "I promise you we'll do our best," the
woman assured him. "We don't want to see innocent bystanders hurt. We
don't even want to see noninnocents hurt." She favored him with a maternal
smile, which for some reason did nothing to make the nervous assistant feel any
better about the situation. Chapter Eleven
The tracker hummed quietly, the single glowing dot
showing clearly on its screen as the skimmer rushed north-ward. It was clipping
the tops of the tallest trees, more than eighty meters above the bogs and muck
that passed for the ground. They had crossed Lake Patra, then an intervening
neck of dry land, then the much larger lake known as Tigranocerta and were once
more cruising over the forest. A cold rain was falling, spattering off the
skimmer's acrylic canopy to form a constantly changing wet topography that
obscured much of the view outside. The skimmer's instruments kept its speed
responsive, maintaining a predetermined distance between it and its quarry to
the north. Awfully quiet, Lauren Walder thought. He's awfully
quiet, and maybe something else. "No, I'm not too young," he said into the
silence that filled the cabin, his tone softly defensive. Lauren's eyebrows lifted. "You can read
minds?" He responded with a shy smile. "No, not
that." Fingers stroked the head of the minidrag sleeping on his shoulder.
"I just feel things at times. Not thoughts, nothing that elaborate. Just the way people are feeling.” He
glanced up at her. “From the way I thought you were feeling just now, I thought
you were going to say something along that line.” “Well, you were right,” she confessed, wondering
what to make of the rest of his declaration. “I’m not, you know.” “How old are you?” she asked. “Sixteen. As best I know. I can’t be certain.” Sixteen going on sixty, she thought sadly. During
her rare visits to Drallar, she had seen his type before. Child of
circumstance, raised in the streets and instructed by wrong example and
accident, though he seemed to have tamed out better than his brethren. His face
held the knowledge withheld from his more fortunate contemporaries, but it
didn’t seem to have made him vicious or bitter. Still she felt there was something else at work
here. “How old do you think I am?” she asked idly. Flinx pursed his lips as he stared at her. “Twenty- three,”
he told her without hesitating. She laughed softly and clapped both hands together
in delight. “So that’s what I’m helping, a sixteen-year-old vengeful diplomat!”
Her laughter faded. The smile remained. “Tell me about yourself, Flinx.” It was a question that no stranger in Drallar would
ever be so brazen as to ask. But this was not Drallar, he re- minded himself.
Besides, he owed this woman. So he told her as much as he knew. When he finished
his narrative, she continued to stare solemnly at him, nod- ding her head as if
his words had done no more than con- firm suspicions already held. She spared a
glance to make sure the tracker was still functioning efficiently, then looked
back at him. “You haven’t exactly had a comfort- able childhood, have you?” “I wouldn’t know,” he replied, “because I only have
hearsay to compare it with.” “Take my word for it, you haven’t. You’ve also man-
aged to get along with the majority of humanity even though they don’t seem to
want to have anything to do 149 with you. Whereas I’ve had to avoid the
majority of people who seem to want to have a lot to do with me.” Impulsively,
she leaned over out of the pilot’s chair and kissed him. At the last instant,
he flinched, nervous at such. unaccustomed proximity to another human
being-especially an attractive member of the opposite sex-and the kiss, which
was meant for his cheek, landed instead on his lips. That made her pull back fast. The smile stayed on
her face, and she only blinked once in surprise. It had been an accident, after
all. “Take my word for something else, Flinx. If you live long enough, life
gets better.” “Is that one of the Church’s homilies?” He wondered
if she wore some caustic substance to protect her lips from burning, because
his own were on fire. “No,” she said. “That’s a Lauren Walder homily.” “Glad to hear it. I’ve never had much use for the
Church.” “Nor have 1. Nor have most people. That’s why it’s
been so successful, I expect.” She turned her gaze to the tracker. “They’re
starting to slow down. We’ll do the same.” “Do you think they’ve seen us?” Suddenly, he didn’t
really care what the people in the skimmer ahead of them decided to do. The
fire spread from his lips to his mouth, ran down his throat, and dispersed
across his whole body. It was a sweet, thick fire. “I doubt it,” she replied. “I’ll bet they’re close
to their destination.” Her hands manipulated controls. “How far ahead of us are they?” He walked forward to
peer over her shoulder at the screen. He could have stood to her left, but he
was suddenly conscious of the warmth of her, the perfume of her hair. He was
very careful not to touch her. She performed some quick calculations, using the
tracker’s predictor. “Day or so. We don’t want to run up their tail. There’s
nothing up in this part of the country. Odd place to stop, but then this whole
business is odd, from what you’ve told me. Why bring your mother up here?” He had no answer for her. They dropped until the skimmer was rising and
falling inconcert with the treetops. So intent were they on the actions of the
dot performing on the tracking Screen that neither of them noticed that not
only had the rain stopped but the cloud cover had cracked. Overhead, one of the
wings of Moth, the interrupted ring which encircled the planet, shimmered golden
against the ceiling of night. “What makes you so sure they’re stopping here
instead of just slowing down for a while?” he asked Lauren. “Because a skimmer operates on a stored charge, just
like a mudder. Remember, they had to come from here down to Patra. Our own
charge is running low, and we’re not on the return leg of a round trip. I don’t
know what model they’re flying, but I saw how big it was. It can’t possibly
retain enough energy to take them much farther than we’ve gone the past several
days. They at least have to be stopping somewhere to recharge, which is good.” “Why is that?” Flinx asked. “Because we’re going to have to recharge, also.” She
pointed to a readout. “We’ve used more than half our own power. If we can’t
recharge somewhere around here, we’re going to have some hiking to do on our
way out.” Flinx regarded her with new respect, if that was
possible; his opinion of her had already reached dizzying heights. “Why didn’t
you tell me when we reached the turnaround point?” She shrugged slightly. “Why? We’ve gone to a lot of
trouble to come as far as we have. You might have argued with me about turning
back.” “No,” Flinx said quietly, “I wouldn’t have done
that” “I didn’t think so. You’re almost as determined to
see this through as I am, and at least as crazy.” She stared up at him, and he stared back. Nothing
more needed to be said. “I vote no.” Nyassa-lee was firm in her disagreement. She sat on
one side of the table and gazed expectantly at her colleagues. Brora was
thoughtfully inspecting the fingernails of his left hand, while Haithnesstoyed
with her eyelashes. “Really,” the tall black woman murmured to her
compatriot, “to show such reluctance at this stage is most discouraging,
Nyassa-lee.” Her fingers left her eyes. “We may never have the chance to
manipulate another subject as promising as this Twelve. Time and events
conspire against us. You know that as well as I.” “I know.” The shorter woman leaned forward in the
chair and gazed between her legs at the floor. Cracks showed between the panels;
the building had been assembled in haste. “I’m just not convinced it’s worth
the risk.” “What risk?” Haithness demanded to know. “We’ve
still seen nothing like a demonstration of threatening power. Quite the
contrary. I’d say. Certainly the subject had the opportunity to display any
such abilities. It’s evident he does not possess them, or he would doubtless
have employed them against us. Instead, what did we see? Knife.” -She made it
sound disgusting as well as primitive. - “She’s right, you know.” Brora rarely
spoke, preferring to let the two senior scientists do most of the arguing. He
stepped in only when he was completely confident of his opinion. “We don’t want another repeat of the girl,”
Nyassa-lee said. “The society couldn’t stand another failure like that.” “Which is precisely why we must pursue this last
opportunity to its conclusion,” Haithness persisted. “We don’t know that it represents our last
opportunity.” “Oh, come on, Nyassa-lee.” Haithness pushed back her
chair and stood; she began pacing nervously back and forth. Bebind her, lights
shone cold green and blue from the consoles hastily assembled. “Even if there
are other subjects of equal potential out there, we’ve no guarantee that any of
us will be around much longer to follow up on them.” “I can’t argue with that,” Nyassa-lee admitted. “Nor
can I argue this Number Twelve’s statistical promise. It’s just those
statistics which frighten me.” “Frighten you?” Haithness stopped pacing and looked
over at her companion of many hard years. The tall woman was surprised. She had
seen Nyassa-lee wield a gun with the cold-blooded efficiency of a qwarm. Fear
seemed foreign to her. “But why? He’s done nothing to justify such fear.” “Oh, no?” Nyassa-lee ticked off her points on the
fingers of one hand. “One, his statistical potential is alarming. Two, he’s
sixteen, on the verge of full maturity. Three, he could cross into that at any
time.” “The girl,” Brora pointed out, “was considerably
younger.” “Agreed,” said Nyassa-lee, “but her abilities were precocious.
Her advantage was surprise. This Number Twelve is developing slowly but with
greater potential. He may be the kind who responds to pressure by reaching
deeper into himself.” “Maybe,” Brora said thoughtfully, “but we have no
proof of it, nor does his profile predict anything of the sort.” “Then how do you square that,” she responded, “with
the fact that he has by himself-“ “He’s not by himself,” Brora interrupted her. “That
woman from the lodge was helping him out on the lake.” “Was helping him. She
didn’t help him get to that point. He followed us all the way to that lake on his own,
with- out any kind of external assistance. To me that indicates the accelerated
development of a Talent we’d better be- ware of.” “All the more reason,” Haithness said angrily,
slapping the table with one palm, “why we must push ahead with our plan!” “I don’t know,” Nyassa-lee murmured, unconvinced. “Do you not agree,” Haithness countered, forcing
her- self to restrain her temper, “that if the operation is a success we stand
a good chance of accomplishing our goal as regards outside manipulation of the
subject?” “Possibly,” Nyassa-lee conceded. “Why just ‘possibly’? Do you doubt the emotional
bond?” “That’s not what concerns me. Suppose, just suppose,
that because his potential is still undeveloped, he has no conscious control of
it?” “What are you saying?” Brora asked. She leaned intently over the table. “With the girl
Mahnahmi we knew where we stood, once she’d revealed herself. Unfortunately,
that knowledge came as a surprise to us, and too late to counteract. We’ve no idea
where we stand vis-a-vis this subject’s Talents. Suppose that, despite the
emotional bond, pressure and fear conspire to release his potential regardless
of his surface feelings? Statistically, the subject is a walking bomb that may
not be capable or mature enough to control itself. That’s what worries me,
Haithness. The emotional bond may be sufficient to control his conscious self.
The unpredictable part of him may react violently in spite of it.” “We cannot abandon our hopes and work on so slim a
supposition, one that we have no solid facts to support,” Haithness insisted.
“Besides, the subject is sixteen. If any- thing, he should have much more
control over himself than the girl did.” “I know, I know,” Nyassa-lee muttered unhappily.
“Everything you say is true, Haithness, yet I can’t help worrying. In any case.
I’m outvoted.” “That you are,” the tall woman said after a
questioning glance at Brora. “And if Cruachan were here with us, you know he’d vote
to proceed too.” “I suppose.” Nyassa-lee smiled thinly. “I worry too
much. Brora, are you sure you can handle the implant?” He nodded. “I haven’t done one in some time, but the
old skills remain. It requires patience more than anything else. You remember.
As to possible unpredictable results, failure, well”-he smiled-“we’re all
condemned already. One more little outrage perpetrated against society’s
archaic laws can’t harm us one way or the other if we fail here.” Off in a nearby corner. Mother Mastiff sat in a
chair, hands clasped in her lap, and listened. She was not bound. There was no
reason to tie her, and she knew why as well as her captors. There was nowhere
to run. She was in excellent condition for a woman her age, but she had had a
good view of the modest complex of deceptive stone and wood structures as the
skimmer had landed. Thousands of square kilometers of damp, hostile forest lay
between the place she had been brought to and the familiar confines of Drallar.
She was no more likely to steal a vehicle than she was to turn twenty again. She wondered what poor Flinx was going through. That
had been him, out on the boat on the lake far to the south. How he had managed
to trace her so far she had no idea. At first, her concern had been for
herself. Now that she had had ample opportunity to listen to the demonic trio
arguing in front of her-for demonic she was certain they were-she found herself
as concerned for the fate of her adopted son as for her own. If she was lost,
well, she had had a long and eventful life. Better perhaps that her brave Flinx
lose track of her than stumble into these monsters again. One of the trio, the short, toad-faced man, had
spoken of “adjusting” her and of “implants.” That was enough to convince her to
prepare for something worse than death. Many of their words made no sense to
her. She still had no idea who the people were, much less where they had come
from or the reasons for their actions. They never spoke to her, ignoring her questions
as well as her curses. Actually, they did not treat her as a human being at
all, but rather as a delicate piece of furniture. Their current conversation
was the most peculiar yet, for one of them was expressing fear of her boy. She
could not imagine why. True, Flinx had tamed a dangerous animal, that horrid
little flying creature, but that was hardly a feat to in- spire fear in such
people. They knew he occasionally had the ability to sense what others were
feeling. Yet far from fearing such erratic and minor talents, these people
discussed them as if they were matters of great importance. None of which explained why they’d kidnapped her. If
their real interest lay with her boy, then why hadn’t they kidnapped him? The
whole affair was too complicated a puzzle for her to figure out. Mother Mastiff
was not a stupid woman, and her deficiency in formal education did not blunt
her sharp, inquiring mind; still she could not fathom what was happening to
her, or why. She let her attention drift from the argument raging
across the table nearby to study the room to which she had been brought. Most
of the illumination came from the impressive array of electronics lining the
walls. Everything she could see hinted of portability and hurried installation.
She had no idea as to the purpose of the instrumentation, but she had been
around enough to know that such devices were expensive. That, and the actions
of the people who had abducted her, hinted at an organization well stocked with
money as well as malign intentions. “I’m not even sure,” Nyassa-lee was saying, “that
the subject realizes how he’s managed to follow us this far.” “There is likely nothing mysterious about it,”
Haithness argued. “Remember that he is a product of an intensely competitive,
if primitive, environment. Urban youths grow up fast when left to their own
resources. He may not have enjoyed much in the way of a formal education, but
he’s been schooled in the real world-something we’ve had to master ourselves
these past years. And he may have had some ordinary, quite natural luck.” “These past years,” Brora was mumbling sadly. “Years
that should have been spent prying into the great mysteries of the universe
instead of learning how to make contacts with and use of the criminal
underworld.” “I feel as wasted as you do, Brora,” the tall woman
said soothingly, “but vindication lies at hand.” “If you’re both determined to proceed, then I vote
that we begin immediately.” Nyassa-lee sighed. “Immediately with what?” a crotchety voice demanded.
For some reason, the question caused the trio to respond, whereas previous
attempts to draw their attention had failed miserably. Nyassa-lee left the table and approached Mother
Mastiff. She tried to adopt a kindly, understanding expression, but was only
partly successful. “We’re scientists embarked on a project of great importance
to all mankind. I’m sorry we’ve been forced to inconvenience you, but this is
all necessary. I wish you were of a more educated turn of mind and could
understand our point of view. It would make things easier for you.” “Inconvenienced!” Mother Mastiff snorted. “Ye pluck
me out of my house and haul me halfway across the planet. That’s inconvenience?
I call it something else.” Her bluster faded as she asked, “What is it you want
with my boy Flinx?” “Your adopted boy,” Nyassa-lee said. While the small
Oriental spoke. Mother Mastiff noted that the other two were studying her the
way a collector might watch a bug on a park bench. That made her even madder,
and the anger helped to put a damper on her fear. “I wouldn’t make things any
easier for you people if ye promised me half the wealth of Terra.” “I’m sorry you feel that way, but it’s only what we
have come to expect,” Nyassa-lee said, turning icy once again. “Have you heard
of the Meliorare Society?” Mother Mastiff shook her head, too angry to cry,
which is what she really wanted to do. Names, words they threw at her, all
meaningless. “We’re part of an experiment,” the Oriental
explained, “an experiment which began on Terra many years ago. We are not only
scientists, we are activists. We believe that the true task of science is not
only to study that which exists but to forge onward and bring into existence
that which does not exist but eventually will. We deter- mined not to stand
still, nor to let nature do so, either.” Mother Mastiff shook her head. “I don’t understand.” “Think,” Nyassa-lee urged her, warming to her
subject, “what is there in Commonwealth society today that could most stand
improvement? The government?” A bitter, derogatory laugh sounded behind her,
from Haithness. “Not the government, then. What about the ships that carry us
from star to star? No? Language, then, an improvement on Terrangio or
symbospeech? What about music or architecture?” Mother Mastiff simply stared at the woman ranting
be- fore her. She was quite certain now, quite certain. These three were all as
insane as a brain-damaged Yax’m. “No, none of those things!” Nyassa-lee snapped. It
was terrible to see such complete assurance in one so diminutive. “It’s us.
We.” She tapped her sternum. “Humankind. And the means for our improvement lie
within.” Her hand went to her head. “In here, in abilities and areas of our
mind still not properly developed. “We and the other members of the Society decided
many years ago that something could and should be done about that. We formed a
cover organization to fool superstitious regulators. In secret, we were able to
select certain human ova, certain sperm, and work carefully with them. Our
planning was minute, our preparations extensive. Through microsurgical techniques, we were able to
alter the genetic code of our humans-to-be prior to womb implantation. The
result was to be, will be, a better version of mankind.” Mother Mastiff gaped at her. Nyassa-lee sighed and
turned to her companions. “As I feared, all this is beyond her meager
comprehension.” “Perfectly understandable,” Brora said. “What I
don’t understand is why you trouble to try?” “It would be easier,” Nyassa-lee said. “Easier for her, or for you?” Haithness wondered.
The smaller woman did not reply. “It won’t matter after the operation, anyway.”
At these words, the fine hair on the back of Mother Mastiff’s neck began to
rise. “It might,” Nyassa-lee insisted. She looked back
down at Mother Mastiff, staring hard into those old eyes. “Don’t you understand
yet, old woman? Your boy, your adopted son: he was one of our subjects.” “No,” Mother Mastiff whispered, though even as she
mouthed the word, she knew the woman’s words must be true. “What-what happened
to your experiment?” “All the children were provided with attention,
affection, education, and certain special training. The majority of the
subjects displayed nothing unusual in the way of ability or talent. They were
quite normal in every way. We proceeded with great care and caution, you see. “A few of the subjects developed abnormally. That is
in the nature of science, unfortunately. We must accept the good together with
the bad. However, in light of our imminent success, those failures were quite
justified.” She sounded as if she were trying to reassure herself as much as
Mother Mastiff. “A few of the children, a very small number, gave
indications of developing those abilities which we believe to lie dormant in
every human brain. We don’t pretend to understand everything about such
Talents. We are in the position of mechanics who have a good idea how to repair
an imperfect machine without really knowing what the re- paired machine is
capable of. This naturally resulted in some surprises. “An ignorant Commonwealth society did not feel as we
did about the importance of our activities. As a result, we have undergone many
years of persecution. Yet we have persisted. As you can see, all of us who are
original members of the Society are nearly as advanced in years as yourself. “The government has been relentless in its efforts
to wipe us out. Over the years, it has whittled away at our number until we
have been reduced to a dedicated few. Yet we need but a single success, one
incontrovertible proof of the worthiness of our work, to free ourselves from
the lies and innuendo with which we have been saddled. “It was a cruel and uncaring government which caused
the dispersal of the children many years ago and which brought us to our
current state of scientific exile. Slowly, patiently, we have worked to try and
relocate those children, in particular any whose profiles showed real promise.
Your Flinx is one of those singled out by statistics as a potential Talent.” “But there’s nothing- abnormal about him,” Mother
Mastiff protested. “He’s a perfectly average, healthy young man. Quieter than
most, perhaps, but that’s all. Is that worth all this trouble? Oh, I’ll admit
be can do some parlor tricks from time to time. But I know a hundred street
magicians who can do the same. Why don’t you go pick on them?” Nyassa-lee smiled that humorless, cold smile.
“You’re lying to us, old woman. We know that he is capable of more than mere
tricks and that something far more important than sleight of hand is involved.” “Well, then,” she continued, trying a different
tack, “why kidnap me? Why pull me away from my home like this? I’m an old
woman, just as ye say. I can’t stand in your way or do ye any harm. If ‘tis
Flinx you’re so concerned with, why did ye not abduct him? I surely could not
have prevented ye from doing so.” “Because he may be dangerous.” Yes, they are quite mad, this lot. Mother Mastiff
mused. Her boy, Flinx, dangerous? Nonsense! He was a sensitive boy, true; he
could sometimes know what others were feeling, but only rarely, and hardly at
all when he most 159 wished to do so. And maybe he could push the
emotions of others a tiny bit. But dangerous? The danger was to him, from these
offworld fools and madmen. “Also,” the little Oriental continued, “we have to
proceed very carefully because we cannot risk further harm to the Society. Our
numbers have already been drastically reduced, partly by our too-hasty attempt
to regain control of one subject child a number of years ago. We cannot risk
making the same mistake with this Number Twelve. Most of our colleagues have
been killed, imprisoned, or selectively mindwiped.” Mother Mastiff’s sense of concern doubled at that
al- most indifferent admission. She didn’t understand all the woman’s chatter
about genetic alterations and improving mankind, but she understood mindwiping,
all right. A criminal had to be found guilty of some especially heinous crime
to be condemned to that treatment, which took away forever a section of his
memories, of his life, of his very self, and left him to wander for the rest of
his days tormented by a dark, empty gap in his mind. “You leave him alone!” she shouted, surprised at the
violence of her reaction. Had she become so attached to the boy? Most of the
time she regarded him as a nuisance inflicted on her by an unkind fate-didn’t
she? “Don’t you hurt him!” She was on her feet and
pounding with both fists on the shoulders of the woman called Nyassa-lee. Though white-haired and no youngster, Nyassa-lee was
a good deal younger and stronger than Mother Mastiff. She took the older
woman’s wrists and gently pushed her back down into the chair. “Now, we’re not going to hurt him. Didn’t I just
explain his importance to us? Would we want to damage someone like that? Of
course not. It’s clear how fond you’ve be- come of your charge. In our own way,
we’re equally fond of him.” What soulless people these are. Mother Mastiff
thought as she slumped helplessly in her chair. What dead, distant shadows of
human beings. “I promise you that we will not try to force the boy
to 160 do anything against his will, nor will we harm him
in any way.” “What do ye mean to do with him, then?” “We need to guide his future maturation,” the woman
explained, “to ensure that whatever abilities he possesses are developed to
their utmost. It’s highly unlikely he can do this without proper instruction
and training, which is why his abilities have not manifested themselves fully
so far. Experience, however, has shown us that when the children reach puberty,
they are no longer willing to accept such training and manipulation. We
therefore have to guide him without his being aware of it.” “How can ye do this without his knowing what is
being done to him?” “By manipulating him through a third party whose
suggestions and directions he will accept freely,” the woman said. “That is
where you become important.” “So ye wish for me to make him do certain things, to
alter his life so that your experiment can be proven a success?” “That’s correct,” Nyassa-lee said. “All this must be
carried out in such a way that he cannot suspect he is being guided by an
outside force.” She gestured toward the far end of the room, past transparent
doors sealing off a self- contained operating theater. In the dim blue and
green light of the instrument readouts, the sterile theater gleamed softly. “We cannot allow the possibility of interference or
misdirection to hamper our efforts, nor can we risk exposure to the
Commonwealth agencies which continue to hound us. It is vital that our
instructions be carried out quickly and efficiently. Therefore, it will be
necessary for us to place certain small devices in your brain, to ensure your
complete compliance with our directives.” “Like hell,” Mother Mastiff snapped. “I’ve spent a hundred
years filling up this head of mine. I know where everything is stored. I don’t
want somebody else messing around up there.” She did not add, as she glanced
surreptitiously toward the operating room, that she had never been under the
knife or the laser and that she had a deathly fear of being cut. “Look,” she
went on desperately, “I’ll be glad to help ye. I’ll tell the boy anything ye
wish, have him study any- thing ye want and avoid whatever matters ye wish him
to avoid. But leave my poor old head alone. Wouldn’t I be much more the help to
ye if I did what ye require voluntarily instead of like some altered pet?” Brora folded his hands on the table and regarded her
emotionlessly. “That would certainly be true. However, there are factors which
unfortunately mitigate against this. “First, there are mental activities you will be
required to carry out which involve complex processes you are not conversant
with but which can be stimulated via direct implants. Second, there is no
guarantee that at some future time you would not become discouraged or
rebellious and tell the subject what you know. That could be a catastrophe for
the experiment. Third, though you may direct the boy with surface willingness,
his abilities may enable him to see your inner distress and know that something
is amiss, whereas I do not think he can detect the implants themselves, as they
are wholly mechanical. Lastly, I think you are lying when you say you would be
willing to help us.” “But I don’t want an operation!” she cried, pounding
at the arms of the chair with her fists. “I tell you ‘tis not necessary! I’ll
do anything ye ask of me if you’ll but leave the boy alone and instruct me. Why
should I lie to ye? You’ve said yourself that he’s not my true child, only an
adopted one. I’ll be glad to help ye, particularly,” she added with a sly
smile, “if there be any money involved.” But the man Brora was shaking his head. “You lie
forcefully, but not forcefully enough, old woman. We’ve spent most of our lives
having to cope with traitors in our midst. We can’t afford another one. I’m
sorry.” His attention was drawn to the main entrance and to the two men who’d
just entered. He nodded toward Mother Mastiff. “Restrain her. She knows enough now to do something
foolish to herself.” One of the new arrivals held Mother Mastiff’s right
arm and glanced back toward Brora. “Anesthetic, sir?” “No, not yet.” Mother
Mastiff stared at the horrid little man and shuddered as he spoke quietly to
the black woman. “What do you think, Haithness?” She examined Mother Mastiff. “Tomorrow is soon
enough. I’m tired. Better to begin fresh. We’ll all need to be alert.” Brora nodded in agreement, leaving the two younger
men to bind the raving Mother Mastiff. Later that evening, over dinner, Nyassa-lee said to
Haithness, “The woman’s advanced age still gives me concern.” “She’s not that old,” the taller woman said,
spooning down something artificial but nourishing. “With care, she has another
twenty years of good health to look forward to.” “I know, but she hasn’t the reserves of a woman of
fifty anymore, either. It’s just as well we haven’t told her how complex
tomorrow’s operation is or explained that her mind will be permanently
altered.” Haithness nodded agreement. “There’s hardly any need
to upset her any more than she already is. Your excessive concern for her
welfare surprises me.” Nyassa-lee picked at her food and did not comment,
but Haithness refused to let the matter drop. “How many of our friends have perished at the hands
of the government? How many have been mindwiped? It’s true that if this old
woman dies, we lose an important element in the experiment, but not necessarily
a final one. We’ve all agreed that implanting her is the best way to proceed.” “I’m not arguing that,” Nyassa-lee said, “only
reminding you that we should be prepared for failure.” Brora leaned back in his chair and sighed. He was
not hungry; he was too excited by the prospects raised by the operation. “We will not fail, Nyassa-lee. This is the best
chance we’ve had in years to gain control over a really promising Subject. We
won’t fail.” He looked over at Haithness. “I checked the implants before
dinner.” “Again?” “Nothing else to do. I couldn’t stand just Waiting
around. The circuitry is complete, cryogenic enervation constant. I anticipate
no trouble in making the synaptic connections.” He glanced toward Nyassa-lee.
“The woman’s age notwithstanding. “As to the part of the old woman that will
unavoidably be lost due to the operation”-he shrugged-“I’ve studied the matter
in depth and see no way around it. Not that there seems a great deal worth
preserving. She’s an ignorant primitive. If anything, the implants and
resulting excisions will result in an improved being.” “Her strongest virtues appear to be cantankerousness
and obstinacy,” Haithness agreed, “coupled to an appalling ignorance of life
outside her immediate community.” ‘Typical speciman,” Brora said. “Ironic that such a
low example should be the key not only to our greatest success but our eventual
vindication.” Nyassa-lee pushed away her food. Her colleague’s
conversation was upsetting to her. “What time tomorrow?” “Reasonably early, I should think,” Haithness
murmured. “It will be the best time for the old woman, and better for us not to
linger over philosophy and speculation.” Brora was startled at the latter implication.
“Surely you don’t expect the boy to show up?” “You’d best stop thinking of him as a boy.” “He barely qualifies as a young adult.” “Barely is sufficient. Though he’s demonstrated nothing
in the way of unexpected talent so far, his persistent pursuit of his adopted
mother is indication enough to me that he possesses a sharp mind in addition to
Talent.” She smiled thinly at Nyassa-lee. “You see, my dear, though I do not
share your proclivity to panic in this case, I do respect and value your
opinion.” “So you are expecting him?” “No, I’m not,” Haithness insisted, “but it would be
awkward if by some miracle he were to show up here prior to the operation’s
successful completion. Once that is accomplished, we’ll naturally want to make
contact with him through his mother. When he finds her unharmed and seemingly
untouched, he will relax into our control.” “But what if he does show up prior to our returning
the old woman to Drallar?” “Don’t
worry,” Haithness said. “I have the standard story prepared, and our personnel
here have been well coached in the pertinent details.” “You think he’d accept that tale?” Nyassa-lee asked.
“That hoary old business of us being an altruistic society of physicians
dedicated to helping the old and enfeebled against the indifference of
government medical facilities?” “It’s true that we’ve utilized the story in various
guises before, but it will be new to the subject,” Haithness reminded her
colleague. “Besides, as Brora says, he barely qualifies as an adult, and his
background does not suggest sophistication. I think he’ll believe us,
especially when we restore his mother to him. That should be enough to satisfy
him. The operation will, of course, be rendered cosmetically undetectable.” “I do better work on a full night’s sleep.” Brora
abruptly pushed back from the table. “Especially prior to a hard day’s work.” They all rose and started toward their quarters,
Brora contemplating the operation near at hand, Haithness the chances for
success, and only Nyassa-lee the last look in Mother Mastiff’s eyes. Chapter Twelve
They had to be close to their destination because
their quarry had been motionless for more than an hour. That’s when the pain
hit Flinx; sharp, hot, and unexpected as al- ways. He winced and shut his eyes
tight while Pip stirred nervously on its master’s shoulder. Alarmed, Lauren turned hurriedly to her young
companion. “What is it? What’s wrong, Flinx?” “Close. We’re very close.” “I can tell that by looking at the tracker,” she
said. “It’s her, it’s Mother Mastiff.” “She’s hurt?” Already Lauren was dropping the
skimmer into the woods. The minidrag writhed on Flinx’s shoulder, hunting for
an unseen enemy. “She’s-she’s not hurting,” Flinx mumbled. “She’s-
there’s worry in her, and fear. Someone’s planning to do something terrible to
her. She fears for me, too, I think. But I can’t understand-1 don’t know what
or wh-“ He blinked. Pip ceased his convulsions. “It’s gone.
Damn it, it’s gone.” He kicked at the console
in frustration. “Gone and I
can’t make it come back.” “I thought-“ He
interrupted her; his expression was one of resignation. “I have no control over
the Talent. No control at all. These feelings hit me when I least expect them,
and never, it seems, when I want them to. Sometimes I can’t even locate the
source. But this time it was Mother Mastiff. I’m sure of it.” “How can you tell that?” Lauren banked the skimmer
to port, dodging a massive emergent. “Because I know how her mind feels.” Lauren threw him an uncertain look, then decided
there was no point in trying to comprehend something beyond her ken. The skimmer slowed to a crawl and quickly settled
down among the concealing trees on a comparatively dry knoll. After cutting the
power, Lauren moved to the rear of the cabin and began assembling packs and
equipment. The night was deep around them, and the sounds of nocturnal forest
dwellers began to seep into the skimmer. “We have to hurry,” Flinx said anxiously. He was al-
ready unsnapping the door latches. “They’re going to hurt her soon!” “Hold it!” Lauren said sharply. “You don’t know
what’s going to happen to her. More important, you don’t know when.” “Soon!” he insisted. The door popped open and slid
back into the transparent outer wall. He stared out into the forest in the
direction he knew they must take even though he hadn’t checked their location
on the tracking screen. “I promise that well get to her as fast as is feasible,”
Lauren assured him as she slipped the sling of the dart rifle over her
shoulder, “but we won’t do her or ourselves any good at all if we go charging
blindly in on those people, whoever they are. Remember, they carried paralysis
weapons on their vehicles. They may have more lethal weapons here. They’re not
going to sit idly by while you march in and demand the return of the woman
they’ve gone to a helluva lot of trouble to haul across a continent. We’ll get
her back, Flinx, just as quickly as we can, but recklessness won’t help us.
Surely you know that. You’re a city boy.” He winced at the “boy,” but otherwise had to agree
with her. With considerable effort he kept himself from dashing blindly into
the black forest. Instead, he forced himself to the back of the skimmer and
checked out the contents of the backpack she had assembled for him. “Don’t I
get a gun, too?” “A fishing lodge isn’t an armory, you know.” She
patted the rifle butt. “This is about all we keep around in the way of a
portable weapon. Besides, I seem to recall you putting away an opponent bigger
than yourself using only your own equipment.” Flinx glanced self-consciously down at his right
boot. His prowess with a knife was not something he was particularly proud of,
and he didn’t like talking about it. “A stiletto’s not much good over distance,
and we may not have darkness for an ally.” “Have you ever handled a real hand weapon?” she
asked him. “A needier? Beam thrower, projectile gun?” “No, but I’ve seen them used, and I know how they
work. It’s not too hard to figure out that you point the business end at the
person you’re mad at and pull the trigger or depress the firing stud.” “Sometimes it’s not quite that simple, Flinx.” She
tightened the belly strap of her backpack. “In any case, you’ll have to make do
with just your blade because there isn’t anything else. And I’m not going to
give you the dart rifle. I’m much more comfortable with it than you’d be. If
you’re worried about my determination to use it, you should know me better than
that by now. I don’t feel like being nice to these people. Kidnappers and
wervil killers.” She checked their course on the tracker, entered it
into her little compass, and led him from the cabin. The ground was
comparatively dry, soft and springy underfoot. As they marched behind twin search beams, Flinx once
more found himself considering his companion. They had a number of important
things in common besides independence. Love of animals, for example. Lauren’s
hair masked the side of her face from him but he felt he could see it, anyway. Pip stirred on its master’s shoulder as it sensed
strange emotions welling up inside Flinx, emotions that were new to the
minidrag and left it feeling not truly upset but decidedly ill at ease. It
tried to slip farther beneath the protective jacket. By the time they reached their destination, it was
very near midnight. They hunkered down in a thick copse and stared between the
trees. Flinx itched to continue, knowing that Mother Mastiff lay in uneasy
sleep somewhere in the complex of buildings not far below. The common sense
that had served him so well since infancy did more to hold him back than logic
or reason. To all appearances, the cluster of dimly lit
structures resembled nothing so much as another hunting or fishing lodge,
though much larger than the one that Lauren man- aged. In the center were the
main lodge buildings, to the left the sleeping quarters for less wealthy
guests, to the right the maintenance and storage sheds. Lauren studied the
layout through the thumb-sized daynight binoculars. Her experienced eye
detected something far more significant than the complex’s deceptive layout. “Those aren’t logs,” she told Flinx. “They’re
resinated plastics. Very nicely camouflaged, but there’s no more wood in them
than in my head. Same thing goes for the masonry and rockwork in the
foundations.” “How can you tell?” he asked curiously. She handed him the tiny viewing device. Flinx put it
to his eyes, and it immediately adjusted itself to his different vision,
changing light and sharpening focus. “Look at the corner joints and the lines along the
ground and ceilings,” she told him. “They’re much too regular, too precise.
That’s usually the result when some- one tries to copy nature. The hand of the
computer, or just man himself, always shows itself. The protrusions on the
logs, the smooth concavities on the ‘rocks’-there are too many obvious
replications from one to the next. “Oh, they’d fool anyone not attuned to such stuff,
and certainly anyone flying over in an aircraft or skimmer. But the materials
in those buildings are fake, which tells us that they were put here recently.
Anyone building a lodge for long-term use in the lake country always uses
native materials.” Closest to their position on the little hillside was
a pair of long, narrow structures. One was dark; the other had several lights
showing. Phosphorescent walkways drew narrow glowing lines between buildings. To the right of the longhouses stood a hexagonal
building, some three stories tall, made of plastic rock surmount- ed with more
plastic paneling. Beyond it sprawled a large two-story structure whose purpose
Flinx could easily divine from the tall doors fronting it and the single mudder
parked outside: a hangar for servicing and protecting vehicles. Nearby squatted a low edifice crowned with a
coiffure of thin silvery cables. The power station wasn’t large enough to
conceal a fusion system. Probably a fuel cell complex, Flinx decided. More puzzling was the absence of any kind of fence
or other barrier. That was carrying verisimilitude a little too far, he
thought. In the absence of any such wall, Flinx’s attention, like Lauren’s, was
drawn to the peculiar central tower, the one structure that clearly had no
place in a resort complex. She examined it closely through the binoculars.
“Lights on in there, too,” she murmured. “Could be meant to pass as some kind
of observation tower, or even a restaurant.” “Seems awfully small at the top
for an eating room,” he commented. Searchlights probed the darkness between the
buildings as the rest of the internal lights winked out. Another hour’s wait in
the damp, chilly bushes confirmed Lauren’s suspicions about the mysterious
tower. “There are six conical objects spaced around the roof,” she told Flinx,
pointing with a gloved hand. “At first, I thought they were searchlights, but
not one of them has shown a light. What the devil could they be?” Flinx had spotted them, too. “I think I recognize
them now. Those are sparksound projectors.” She looked at him in surprise. “What’s that? And how
can you be sure that’s what they are?” He favored her with a wan smile. “I’ve had to avoid
them before this. Each cone projects a wide, flat beam of high-intensity sound.
Immobile objects don’t register on the sensors, so it can be used to blanket a
large area that includes buildings.” He studied the tower intently. “Just guessing from the angles at which the
projectors are set. I’d say that their effective range stops about fifty meters
out from the longhouses.” “Thats not good,” she muttered, trying to make out
the invisible barrier though she knew that was impossible. “It’s worse than you think,” he told her, “because
the computer which monitors the beams is usually programed automatically to
disregard anything that doesn’t conform to human proportions. The interruption
of the sonic field by anything even faintly human will generate a graphic
display on a viewscreen. Any guard watching the screen will be able to tell
what’s entered the protected area and decide on that basis whether or not to
sound further alarm.” He added apologetically, “Rich people are very fond of
this system.” “When we didn’t see a regular fence, I was afraid of
something like this. Isn’t there any way to circumvent it, Flinx? You said you’ve
avoided such things in the past.” He nodded. “I’ve avoided them because there’s no way
to break the system. Not from the outside, anyway. I sup- pose we might be able
to tunnel beneath it.” “How deep into the ground would the sound
penetrate?” “That’s a problem,” he replied. “Depends entirely on
the power being fed to the projectors and the frequencies being generated.
Maybe only a meter, or maybe a dozen. We could tunnel inside the camp and
strike it without knowing we’d done so until we came up into a circle of guns.
Even if we made it, we’d have another problem, be- cause the beams probably
cover the entire camp. We’d al- most have to come up inside one of the
buildings.” “It doesn’t matter,” she murmured, “because we don’t
have any tunneling equipment handy. I’m going to hazard a guess that if they
have the surface monitored so intently, the sky in the immediate vicinity will
be even more carefully covered.” “I’d bet on that, too.” Flinx gestured toward the
tower. “Of course, we could just run the skimmer in on them. There aren’t that
many buildings. Maybe we could find Mother Mastiff and get her out before they
could react.” Lauren continued to study the complex. “There’s
nothing more expensive than a temporary facility fixed up to look permanent. I’d
guess this setup supports between thirty and a hundred people. They’re not
going to make this kind of effort to detect intruders without being damn ready
to repel them as well. Remember, there are only two of us.” “Three,” Flinx corrected her. A pleased hiss sounded
from the vicinity of his shoulder. “Surprise is worth a lot,” Lauren went on. “Maybe
ten, but no more that. We won’t do your mother any good as corpses. Keep in
mind that no one else knows we’re here. If we go down, so do her chances.” “I know the odds aren’t good,” he said irritably,
“but we’ve got to do something.” “And do something we will. You remember that
partially deforested section we flew over earlier today?” Flinx thought a moment, then nodded. “That was a trail line.” “Trail line for what?” “For equalization,” she told him. “For evening out
the odds. For a better weapon than this.” She patted the sling of the dart
rifle. “Better even than that snake riding your shoulder. I don’t share your
confidence in it.” “You haven’t seen Pip in action,” he reminded her.
“What kind of weapon are you talking about?” She stood and brushed bark and dirt from her
coveralls. “You’ll see,” she assured him, .”but we have to be damn careful.”
She gazed toward the camp below. “I wish I could think of a better way, but I
can’t. They’re sure to have guards posted in addition to monitoring the
detection system you described. We don’t even know which building your mother
is in. If we’re going to risk everything on one blind charge, it ought to be
one hell of a charge. “The weapon I have in mind is a volatile one. It can
cut both ways, but I’d rather chance a danger I’m familiar with. Lets get back
to the skimmer.” She pivoted and headed back through the forest.
Flinx rose to join her, forcing himself away from the lights of the camp, which
gleamed like so many reptilian eyes in the night, until the trees swallowed
them up. They were halfway back to the little grove where
they had parked the skimmer when the sensation swept through him. As usual, it
came as a complete surprise, but this time it was very different from his
recent receptions. For one thing, no feeling of pain was attached to it, and
for another, it did not come from the direction of the camp. It arose from an
entirely new source. Oddly, it carried overtones of distress with it, though
distress of a con- fusing kind. It came from Lauren and was directed at him. There was no love in it, no grand, heated follow-up
to the casual kiss she had given him in the skimmer. Affection, yes, which was
not what he had hoped for. Admiration, too, and something more. Something he had not expected from her: a
great wave of concern for him, and to a lesser extent, of pity. Flinx had become more adept at sorting out and
identifying the emotions he received, and there was no mistaking those he was
feeling now. That kiss, then, had not only carried no true love with it-it held
even less than that. She felt sorry for him. He tried to reject the feelings, not only from
disappointment but out of embarrassment. This was worse than looking into
someone’s mind. He was reading her heart, not her thoughts. Though he tried
hard, he could not shut off the flow. He could no more stop the river of
emotion than he could willingly turn it on. He made certain he stayed a step or two behind her
so she would not be able to see his face in the darkness, still soaking up the
waves of concern and sympathy that poured from her, wishing they might be
something else, something more. They hesitated before approaching the skimmer,
circling the landing area once. The quick search revealed that their hiding
place had remained inviolate. Once aboard, Lauren took the craft up. She did
not head toward the camp; in- stead, she turned south and began to retrace
their course over the treetops. Very soon they encountered the long, open gash
in the woods. Lauren hovered above it for several minutes as she studied the
ground, then decisively headed west. Flinx kept to himself, trying to shut the
memory of that emotional deluge out of his mind. Then, quite unexpectedly, the
open space in the trees came to a dead end. “Damn,” Lauren muttered. “Must have picked the wrong
direction. I thought sure I read the surface right. Maybe it’s the other way.” Flinx did not comment as she wheeled the skimmer
around and headed southeast. When the pathway again ended in an unbroken wall
of trees, she angrily wrenched the craft around a second time. This time when
they en- countered the forest wall, she slowed but continued west- ward, her
gaze darting repeatedly from the darkened woods below to the skimmer’s
instrumentation. “Maybe if you were a little more specific, I could
help you look,” he finally said, a touch of frustration in his voice. “I told you. Weapons. Allies, actually. It comes to the
same thing. No sign of them, though. They must have finished eating and entered
semidormancy. That’s how they live; do nothing but eat for several days in a
row, then lie down to sleep it off for a week. The trouble is that once they’ve
finished an eating period, they’re apt to wander off in any direction until
they find a sleep spot that pleases them. We haven’t got the time to search the
whole forest for the herd.” “Herd of what?” Flinx asked. “Didn’t I tell you? Devilopes.” Enlightenment came to Flinx. He had heard of
Devilopes, even seen a small head or two mounted in large commercial buildings.
But he had had no personal experience of them. Few citizens of Drallar did.
There was not even one in the city zoo. As Flinx understood it, Devilopes were not
zooable. The Demichin Devilope was the dominant native life
form on Moth. It was unusual for a herbivore to be the dominant life form, but
excepting man, a fairly recent arrival, they had no natural enemies. They were
comparatively scarce, as were the mounted heads Flinx had seen; the excessive
cost of the taxidermy involved prevented all but the extremely wealthy from
collecting Devilope. The skimmer prowled the treetops, rising to clear
occasional emergents topping ninety meters, dropping lower when the woods
scaled more modest heights. Occasionally, Lauren would take them down to ground
level, only to lift skyward again in disappointment when the omens proved
unhelpful. There was no sign of a Devilope herd. Meanwhile, another series of sensations swept through
Flinx’s active mind, and Pip stirred on his shoulder. He had continually tried
to find Mother Mastiff’s emotions, without success. Instead, his attempts
seemed to be attracting the feelings of everyone but his mother-not. He
wondered anew at his heightened perception since he had acquired his pet;
though it was likely, he reminded himself that here in the vastness of the
northern forests where minds were few and scattered, it might be only natural
that his receptivity improved. These latest sensations carried a female signature.
They were also new, not of Mother Mastiff or Lauren. Cool and calm, they were
vague and hard to define: whoever they belonged to was a particularly
unemotional individual. He felt fear, slight but unmistakable, coupled with a
formidable resolution that was cold, implacable-so hard and unyielding that it
frightened Flinx almost as much as Mother Mastiff’s own terror. Save for the
slight overtones of fear, they might have been the emotions of a machine. The feelings came from the camp where Mother Mastiff
was being held. Flinx had little doubt that they belonged to one of those
mysterious individuals who had abducted her. From the one brief, faint
sensation he felt be could understand her fear. Then it was gone, having lasted
less than a minute. Yet, in that time, Flinx had received a complete emotional
picture of the person whose feelings he had latched onto. Never before had he
encountered a mind so intent on a single purpose and so devoid of those usual
emotional colorations that comprised common humanity. Pip hissed at the empty
air as if ready to strike and defend “ts master. “This isn’t working,” Lauren muttered, trying to see
through the trees. “We’ll have to-“ She paused, frowning at him. “Are you all
right? You’ve got the most peculiar expression on your face.” “I’m okay.” The coldness was at last fading from his
mind; evidently he hadn’t been conscious of how completely it bad possessed
him. Her query snapped him back to immediacy, and he could feel anew the warmth
of the skimmer’s cabin, of his own body. Not for the first time did he find
himself wondering if his unmanageable talent might someday do him harm as well
as good. “I was just thinking.” “You do a lot of that,” she murmured. “Flinx, you’re
the funniest man I’ve ever met.” “You’re not laughing.” “I didn’t mean funny ha ha.” She turned back to the
controls. “I’m going to set us down. This skimmer really isn’t equipped for the
kind of-night-tracking we’re doing. Besides, I don’t know about you, but it’s
late, and I’m worn out.” Flinx was exhausted too, mentally as much as
physically. So he did not object as Lauren selected a stand of trees and set
the skimmer down in their midst. “I don’t think we need to stand a watch,” she said.
“We’re far enough from the camp so that no one’s going to stumble in on us. I
haven’t seen any sign of aerial patrol.” She was at the rear of the skimmer
now, fluffing out the sleeping bags they had brought from the lodge. Plinx sat quietly watching her. He had known a few
girls-young women-back in Drallar. Inhabitants of the marketplace, like
himself, students in the harsh school of the moment. He could never get
interested in any of them, though a few showed more than casual interest in
him. They were not, well, not serious. About life, and other matters. Mother Mastiff repeatedly chided him about his
attitude. “There’s no reason for ye to be so standoffish, boy. You’re no older
than them.” That was not true, of course, but he could not convince her of
that. Lauren was a citizen of another dimension entirely. She was an
attractive, mature woman. A self-confident, thinking adult-which was how Flinx
viewed himself, despite his age. She was already out of pants and shirt and
slip- ping into the thin thermal cocoon of the sleeping bag. “Well?” She blinked at him, pushed her hair away
from her face. “Aren’t you going to bed? Don’t tell me you’re not tired.” “I can hardly stand up,” he admitted. Discarding his
own clothing, he slipped into the sleeping bag next to hers. Lying there
listening to the rhythmic patter of rain against the canopy, he strained toward
her with his mind, seeking a hint, a suggestion of the emotions he so
desperately wanted her to feel. Maddeningly, he could sense nothing at all. The warmth of the sleeping bag and the cabin enveloped
him, and he was acutely aware of the faint musky smell of the woman barely an
arm’s length away. He wanted to reach out to her; to touch that smooth, sun-
darkened flesh; to caress the glistening ringlets of night that tumbled down
the side of her head to cover cheek and neck and finally form a dark bulge
against the bulwark of the sleeping bag. His hand trembled. What do I do, he thought furiously. How do I begin
this? Is there something special I should say first, or should I reach out now
and speak later? How can I tell her what I’m feeling? I can receive. If only I
could broadcast! Pip lay curled into a hard, scaly knot near his feet
in the bottom of the sleeping bag. Flinx slumped in on him- self, tired and
frustrated and helpless. What was there to do now? What could he possibly do
except the expected? A soft whisper reached him from the other sleeping bag.
Black hair shuffled against itself. “Good night, Flinx.” She turned to smile
briefly at him, lighting up the cabin, then turned over and became still. “Good night,” he mumbled. The uncertain hand that
was halfway out of his covering withdrew and clenched convulsively on the rim
of the material. Maybe this was best, he tried to tell himself. Adult
though he believed himself to be, there were mysteries and passwords he was
still unfamiliar with. Besides, there was that surge of pity and compassion he
had detected in her. Admiring, reassuring, but not what he was hoping to feel
from her. He wanted-had to have-something more than that. The one thing he didn’t need was another mother. Chapter Thirteen.
He said nothing when they rose the next morning,
downed a quick breakfast of concentrates, and lifted once again into the murky sky.
The sun was not quite up, though its cloud-diffused light brightened the
treetops. They had to find Lauren’s herd soon, he knew, because the skimmer’s
charge was running low and so were their options. He did not know how much time
Mother Mastiff had left before the source of fear he had detected in her came
to meet her. Perhaps they had been hindered by the absence of
day- light, or perhaps they had simply passed by the place, but this time they
found the herd in minutes. Below the
hovering skimmer they saw a multitude of small hills the color of obsidian.
Black hair rippled in the morning breeze, thick and meter-long. Where one of
the hills shifted in deep sleep, there was a flash of red like a ruby lost in a
coal heap as an eye momentarily opened and closed. Flinx counted more than fifty adults. Scattered
among them were an equal number of adolescents and infants. All lay sprawled on
their sides on the damp ground, shielded somewhat from the rain by the grove
they had chosen as a resting place. So these were the fabled Demichin Devilopes! -awe-
some and threatening even in their satiated sleep. Flinx’s gaze settled on one
immense male snoring away between two towering hardwoods. He guessed its length
at ten meters, its height when erect at close to six. Had it been standing, a
tall man could have walked beneath its belly and barely brushed the lower tips
of the shaggy hair. The downsloping, heavily muscled neck drooped from
between a pair of immense bumped shoulders to end in a nightmarish skull from
which several horns protruded. Some Devilopes had as few as two horns, others
as many as nine. The horns twisted and curled, though most ended by pointing
forward; no two animals’ horns grew in exactly the same way. Bony plates flared
slightly outward from the horns to protect the eyes. The forelegs were longer than the hind-unusual for
so massive a mammal. This extreme fore musculature al- lowed a Devilope to push
over a fully grown tree. That explained the devastated trail that marked their
eating period. A herd would strip a section of forest bare, pushing down the
evergreens to get at the tender branches and needles, even pulling off and
consuming the bark of the main boles. The Devilopes shifted in their sleep, kicking
tree-sized legs. “They’ll sleep like this for days,” Lauren explained
as they circled slowly above the herd. “Until they get hungry again or unless
something disturbs them. They don’t even bother to post sentries. No predator
in its right mind would attack a herd of sleeping Devilopes. There’s always the
danger they’d wake up.” Flinx stared at the ocean of Devilope. “What do we
do with them?” Not to mention how, he thought. “They can’t be tamed, and they can’t be driven,”
Lauren told him, “but sometimes you can draw them. We have to find a young mare
in heat. The season’s right.” Her fingers moved over the controls, and the
skimmer started to drop. “We’re going into that?” Flinx pointed toward the
herd. “Have to,” she said. “There’s no other way. It ought
to be okay. They’re asleep and unafraid.” “That’s more than I can say,” he muttered as the
skimmer dipped into the trees. Lauren maneuvered it carefully, trying to break
as few branches and make as little noise as possible. “What do we need with a
mare in heat?” “Musk oil and blood,” Lauren explained as the
skimmer gently touched down. Up close, the herd was twice as impressive: a
seething, rippling mass of shaggy black hair broken by isolated clumps of
twisted, massive horns, it looked more like a landscape of hell than an
assembly of temporarily inanimate herbivores. When Lauren killed the engine and
popped open the cabin door, Flinx was assailed by a powerful odor and the
steady sonority of the herd’s breathing. Earth humming, he thought. Lauren had the dart rifle out and ready as they
approached the herd on foot. Flinx followed her and tried to pretend that the
black cliffs that lowered over them were basalt and not flesh. “There.” She pointed between a pair of slowly
heaving bulks at a medium-sized animal. Picking her spot, she sighted the long
barrel carefully before putting three darts behind the massive skull. The mare
stirred, coughing once. Then the head, which had begun to rise, relaxed, slowly
sinking back to the surface. Flinx and Lauren held then- breath, but the slight
activity had failed to rouse any of their target’s neighbors. Lauren fearlessly strode between the two hulks that
formed a living canyon and unslung her backpack next to the tranquilized mare.
Before leaving the skimmer, she had extracted several objects from its stores.
These she now methodically laid out in a row on the ground and set to work.
Flinx watched with interest as knife and tools he didn’t recognize did their
work. One container filled rapidly with blood. A second
filled more rapidly with a green crystalline liquid. Lauren’s face was screwed
up like a knot, and as soon as the aroma of the green fluid reached Flinx, he
knew why. The scent was as overpowering as anything his nostrils had ever
encountered. Fortunately, the smell was not bad, merely over- whelming. A loud, sharp grunt sounded from behind him. He
turned, to find himself gazing in horrified fascination at a great crimson eye.
An absurdly tiny black pupil floated in the center of that blood-red disk. Then
the eyelid rolled like a curtain over the apparition. Flinx did not relax.
“Hurry up!” he called softly over his shoulder. “I think this one’s waking up.” “We’re not finished here yet,” Louren replied,
stoppering the second bottle and setting to work with a low-power laser. “I
have to close both wounds first.” “Let nature close them,” he urged her, keeping an
eye en the orb that had fixed blankly on him. The eyelid rippled, and he feared
that the next time it opened, it would likely be to full awareness. “You know me better than that,” she said firmly.
Flinx waited, screaming silently for her to hurry. Finally, she said, “That’s
done. We can go.” “They hurried back through the bulwark of black
hair. Flinx did not allow himself to relax until they sat once more inside the
skimmer. He spent much of the time trying to soothe Pip; in response to its
master’s worry, it had developed a nervous twitch. Despite the tight seal, the miasma rising from the
green bottle nearly choked him. There was no odor from the container of blood. “The green is the oil,” she explained unnecessarily.
“It’s the rutting season.” “I can see what you have in mind to do with that,”
Flinx told her, “but why the blood?” “Released in the open air, the concentrated oil
would be enough to interest the males of the herd. We need to do more than just
interest them. We need to drive them a little crazy. The only way to do that is
to convince them that a ready female is in danger. The herd’s females will
respond to that, too.” She set to work with the skimmer’s simple store of
chemicals. “You ought to be around sometime when the males are
awake and fighting,” she said to him as she mixed oil, blood, and various
catalysts in a sealed container. Flinx was watching the herd anxiously. “The
whole forest shakes. Even the tallest trees tremble. When two of the big males
connect with those skulls and horns, you can hear the sound of the collision
echo for kilometers.” Five minutes later, she held a large flask up to the
dim early-morning light. “There, that should do it. Pheromones and blood and a
few other nose-ticklers. If this doesn’t draw them, nothing will.” “They’ll set off the alarm when they cross the sonic
fence,” he reminded her. “Yes, but by that time they’ll be so berserk,
nothing will turn them. Then it won’t matter what they set off.” She smiled
nastily, then hesitated at the thought. “My only concern is that we find your
mother before they start in on the buildings.” “We’d better,” Flinx said. “There should be enough confusion,” she went on, “to
distract everyone’s attention. Unless they’re downright in- human, the
inhabitants of the camp aren’t going to be thinking of much of anything beyond
saving their own skins. “As to getting your mother out fast, I think we can
assume that she’s not in the hangar area or the power station or that central
tower. That leaves the two long structures off to the west. If we can get
inside and get her out before whoever’s in charge comes to his senses, we
should be able to get away before anyone realizes what’s happening. “Remember, we’ll be the only ones ready for what’s
going to happen. A lot will depend on how these people react. They’re obviously
not stupid, but I don’t see how anyone could be adaptable enough to react
calmly to what we’re going to do to them. Besides, I don’t have any better
ideas.” Flinx shook his head. “Neither do 1. I can see one
difficulty, though. If we’re going to convince this herd that they’re chasing
after an injured Devilope in heat, we’re going to have to stay on the ground. I
don’t see them following the scent up in the air.” “Quite right, and we have to make our actions as
believable as possible. That means bugging the surface. Not only would
tree-level flight confuse the herd, air currents would carry the scent upward
too quickly and dissipate it too fast.” “Then what happens,” Fllinx pressed on, “if this
idea works and the herd does follow us back toward the camp and we hit a tree
or stall or something?” Lauren shrugged. “Can you climb?” “There aren’t many trees in Drallar free for the
climbing,” he told her, “but I’ve done a lot of climbing on the outsides of
buildings.” “You’ll find little difference,” she assured him,
“with the kind of motivation you’ll have if the skimmer stalls. If something
happens, head for the biggest tree you can find. I think they’ll avoid the emergents.
The smaller stuff they’ll just ignore.” She hesitated, stared sideways at him.
“You want to wait a little while to think it over?” “We’re wasting time talking,” he replied, knowing
that every minute brought Mother Mastiff closer and closer to whatever fate her
abductors had planned for her. “I’m ready if you are.” “I’m not ready,” she said, “but I never will be, for
this. So we might as well go.” She settled into the pilot’s chair and thumbed a
control. The rear of the cabin’s canopy swung upward. “Climb into the back. When I give the word, you
uncap the flask and pour out, oh, maybe a tenth of the contents. Then hold it
out back, keep it open, and pour a tenth every time I say so. Got it?” “Got it,” he assured her with more confidence than
he felt. “You just drive this thing and make sure we don’t get into an argument
with a tree.” “Don’t worry about that.” She gave him a last smile
before turning to the control console. The skimmer rose and turned, heading slowly back
toward the somnolent herd. When they were just ten meters from the nearest
animal, Lauren pivoted the craft and hovered, studying the scanner’s display of
the forest ahead. Violent grunts and an occasional bleating sound
began to issue from the herd as Flinx held the still tightly sealed flask over
the stem of the skimmer. He looked around until he found a piece of thin cloth
and tied it across his nose and mouth. “I should have thought of that,” she murmured,
watching him. “Sorry.” “Don’t you want one?” he asked. She shook her head. “I’m up here, and the wind will
carry the scent back away from me. I’ll be all right. You ready?” Her hands
tightened on the wheel. “Ready,” he said. “You ready, Pip?” “The flying snake said nothing; it did not even hiss
in response. But Flinx could feel the coils tighten expectantly around his left
arm and shoulder. “Open and pour,” she instructed him. Flinx popped the seal on the flask as Lauren slowly
edged the skimmer forward. Even with the improvised mask and a breeze to carry
the aroma away from him, the odor was all but overpowering. His eyes watered as
his nostrils rebelled. Somehow he kept his attention on the task at hand and
slowly measured out a tenth of the liquid. A violent, querulous bellow rose from several
massive throats. As the skimmer slipped past a cathedral-like cluster of
hardwoods, Flinx could see one huge male pushing itself erect. It seemed to
dominate the forest even though the great trees rose high above. The metallic
red eyes were fully open now, the tiny black pupils looking like holes in the
crimson. The Devilope shook its head from side to side, back
and forth, and thundered. It took a step forward, then another. Behind it, the
rest of the herd was rising, the initial uncertain bellowing turning to roars of
desire and rage. A second male started forward in the wake of the first; then a
third took up the long, ponderous stride. At this rate, Flinx thought, it would
take them days to reach the camp. But even as he watched and worried, the pace of the
awakening herd began to increase. It took time for such massive animals to get
going. Once they did, they ate up distance. Not Song after, Flinx found himself
wishing for the skimmer to accelerate, and accelerate again. The herd was bearing down on the weaving, dodging
craft. Lauren had to avoid even the smaller trees, which the herd ignored in
its fury to locate the source of that pungent, electrifying odor. She tamed to
yell something to him, but he couldn’t hear her anymore. Trees whizzed by as Lauren somehow managed to m-
crease their speed without running into anything. Behind them sounded a rising
thunder as the noise of hundreds of hooves pulverizing the earth mixed with the
crackle of snapping tree trunks and the moan of larger boles being torn from
their roots. Red eyes and horns were all Flinx could see as he
poured another tenth of the herd-maddening liquid from the flask, drawing the
thunder down on the fragile skimmer and its even more fragile cargo... “There was nothing in the small operating theater that
had not been thoroughly sanitized. Mother Mastiff had no strength left to fight
with as they gently but firmly strapped her to the lukewarm table. Her curses
and imprecations had been reduced to whimpered pleas, more reflex than anything
else, for she had seen by now that nothing would dissuade these crazy people
from their intentions. Eventually, she lost even the will to beg and contented
herself with glaring tight-lipped at her tormentors. Bright lights winked to life, blinding her. The tall
black woman stood to the right of the table, checking a palm- sized circle of
plastic. Mother Mastiff recognized the pressure syringe, and looked away from
it. Like her companions, Haithness wore a pale surgical
gown and a mask that left only her eyes showing. Nyassa- lee plugged in the
shears that would be used to depilate the subject’s skull. Brora, who would
execute the actual implantation, stood off to one side examining a readout on
the display screen that hung just above and behind Mother Mastiff’s head. Occasionally,
he would glance down at a small table holding surgical instruments and several
square transparent boxes frosted with cold. Inside the boxes were the
microelectronic implants that he would place m the subject’s skull. A globular metal mass hung from the ceiling above
the operating table, gloaming like a steel jellyflsh. Wiry arms and tendrils
radiated from its underside. They would sup- ply power to attachments, suction
through hosing, and supplementary service to any organs that exhibited signs of
failure during the operation. There were microthin filament arms that could
substitute for cerebral capillaries, tendrils that could fuse or excavate bone,
and devices that could by-pass the lungs and provide oxygen directly to the
blood. “I’m ready to begin.” Brora smiled thinly across at
Nyassa-lee, who nodded. He looked to his other colleague. “Haithness?” She
answered him with her eyes as she readied the syringe. “A last instrument check, then,” he murmured,
turning his attention to the raised platform containing the micro- surgical
instruments. Overhead, the jellyfish hummed expectantly. “Now that’s funny.” He paused, frowning. “Look
here.” Both women leaned toward him. The instruments, the tiny boxes with their
frozen contents, even the platform itself, seemed to be vibrating. “Trouble over at power?” ventured Nyassa-lee. She
glanced upward and saw that the central support globe was swaying slightly. “I don’t know. Surely if it was anything serious, we
would have been told by now,” Brora muttered. The vibration intensified. One of
the probes tumbled from the holding table and clattered across the plastic
floor. “It’s getting worse, I think.” A faint rumble reached them from some-
where outside. Brora thought it arose somewhere off to the west. “Storm coming?” Nyassa-lee asked, frowning. Brora shook his head. “Thunder wouldn’t make the
table shake, and Weather didn’t say anything about an early storm watch. No
quake, either. This region is seismically stable.” The thunder that continued to grow in their ears did
not come down out of a distant sky but up out of the disturbed earth itself.
Abruptly, the alarm system came to life all around the camp. The three surgeons
stared in confusion at one another as the rumbling shook not only tables and
instruments but the whole building. The warning sirens bowled mournfully. There came a
ripping, tearing noise as something poured through the far end of the
conference room, missing the surgery by an appreciable margin.. It was visible
only for seconds, though in that time it filled the entire chamber. Then it
moved on, trailing sections of false log and plastic stone in its wake, letting
in sky and mist and leaving behind a wide depression in the stelacrete
foundation beneath the floor. Haithness had the best view as debris fell slowly
from the roof to cover the mark: it was a footprint. Nyassa-lee tore off her surgical mask and raced for
the nearest doorway. Brora and Haithness were not far be- hind. At their
departure. Mother Mastiff, who had quietly consigned that portion of herself
that was independent to oblivion, suddenly found her voice again and began
screaming for help. Dust and insulation began to sift from the ceiling
as the violent shaking and rumbling continued to echo around her. The
multiarmed surgical sphere above the operating table was now swinging
dangerously back and forth and threatening, with each successive vibration, to
tear free of its mounting. Mother Mastiff did not waste her energy in a futile
at- tempt to break the straps that bound her. She knew her limits. Instead, she
devoted her remaining strength to yell- ing at the top of her lungs. As soon as they had entered the monitored border
surrounding the camp, Lauren had accelerated and charged at dangerously high
speed right past the central tower. Someone had had the presence of mind to
respond to the frantic alarm siren by reaching for a weapon, but the hastily
aimed and fired energy rifle missed well aft of the already fleeing skimmer. At the same time, the wielder of the rifle had seen
something flung from the rear of the intruder. He had flinched, and when no
explosion had followed, leaned out of the third-story window to stare curiously
at the broken glass and green-red liquid trickling down the side of the
structure. He did not puzzle over it for very long because his attention-and
that of his companions in the tower- was soon occupied by the black tidal wave
that thundered out of the forest. The frustrated, enraged herd concentrated all its
attention on the strongest source of the infuriating odor. The central tower,
which contained the main communications and defensive instrumentation for the
encampment, was soon reduced to a mound of plastic and metal rubble. Meanwhile, Lauren brought the skimmer around in a
wide circle and set it down between the two long buildings on the west side of
the camp. The camp personnel were too busy trying to escape into the forest and
dodging massive horns and hoofs to wonder at the presence of the un- familiar
vehicle in their midst. They had a fifty-fifty chance of picking the right
building on the first try. As luck would have it, they choose correctly ... no
thanks, Flinx thought, to his resolutely unhelpful Talent. The roof was already beginning to cave in on the
operating theater when they finally reached that end of the building. “Flinx, how’d ye-?” Mother Mastiff started to
exclaim. “How did he know how to find you?” Lauren finished
for her as she started working on the restraining straps binding the older
woman’s right arm. “No,” Mother Mastiff corrected her, “I started to
ask how he managed to get here without any money, I didn’t think ye could go
anywhere on Moth without money.” “I had a little, Mother.” Flinx smiled down at
her. She appeared unhurt, simply worn out from her ordeal of the past hectic,
confusing days. “And I have other abilities, you know.” “Ah.” She nodded somberly. “No, not that,” he corrected her. “You’ve forgotten
that there are other ways to make use of things besides paying for them.” She laughed at that. The resounding cackle gladdened
his heart. For an instant, it dominated the screams and the echoes of
destruction that filled the air outside the building. The earth quivered
beneath his feet. “Yes, yes, ye were always good at helping yourself
to whatever ye needed. Haven’t I warned ye time enough against it? But I don’t
think now be the time to reprimand ye.” She looked up at Lauren, who was having
a tough time with the restraining straps. “Now who,” she inquired, her eyebrows rising, “be
this one?” “A friend,” Flinx assured her. “Lauren, meet Mother
Mastiff.” “Charmed, grandma.” Lauren’s teeth clenched as she
fought with the recalcitrant restraints. “Damn magnetic catches built into the
polyethelene.” She glanced across to Flinx. “We may have to cut her loose.” “I know you’ll handle it.” Flinx turned and jogged
toward the broken doorway, ducking just in time to avoid a section of roof
brace as it crashed to the floor. “Hey, where the hell do you think you’re going?”
Lauren shouted at him. “I want some answers,” he yelled back. “I still
don’t know what this is all about, and I’ll be damned if I’m leaving here
without trying to find out!” “ Tis you, boy!” Mother Mastiff yelled after him.
“They wanted to use me to influence you!” But he was already out of earshot. Mother Mastiff laid her head back down and stared
worriedly at the groaning ceiling.
“That boy,” she mumbled, “I don’t know that he hasn’t been more trouble
than he’s worth.” The upper restraint suddenly came loose with a
click, and Lauren breathed a sigh of relief. She was as conscious as Mother
Mastiff of the creaking, unsteady ceiling and the heavy mass of the surgical
globe swaying like a pendulum over the operating table. “I doubt you really mean that, woman,” she said
evenly, “and you ought to stop thinking of him as a boy.” The two women
exchanged a glance, old eyes shooting questions, young ones providing an
eloquent reply. Confident that Lauren would soon free Mother
Mastiff, Flinx was able to let the rage that had been bottled up in- side him
for days finally surge to the fore. So powerful was the suddenly freed emotion
that an alarmed Pip slid off its master’s shoulder and followed anxiously
above. The tiny triangular head darted in all directions in an at- tempt to
locate the as-yet-unperceived source of Flinx’s hate. The fury boiling within him was barely under
control. “They’re not going to get away with what they’ve done,” he told
himself repeatedly. “They’re not going to get away with it.” He did not know
what be was going to do if he confronted these still-unknown assailants, only
that he had to do something. A month ago, he would never have considered going
after so dangerous an enemy, but the past weeks had done much for his
confidence. The herd was beginning to lose some of its fury even
as its members still hunted for the puzzling source of their discomfort.
Females with young were the first to break away, retreating back into the
forest. Then there were only the solitary males roaming the encampment, venting
their frustration and anger on anything larger than a rock. Occasionally, Flinx
passed the remains of those who had not succeeded in fleeing into the trees in
time to avoid the rampaging Devilopes. There was rarely more than a red smear
staining the ground. He was heading for the hangar he and Lauren had
identified from their hilltop. It was the logical final refuge. It didn’t take
long for him to reach the building. As he strode single-mindedly across the
open grounds, it never occurred to him to wonder why none of the snorting, pawing
Devilopes paused to turn and stomp him into the earth. The large doorway fronting the hangar had been
pushed aside. Flinx could see movement and hear faint commands. Without
hesitation, he walked inside and saw a large transport skimmer being loaded
with crates. The loading crew worked desperately under the direction of a
small, elderly Oriental woman. Flinx just stood in the portal, staring. Now
that he had located someone in a position of authority, he really didn’t know
what to do next. Anger and chaos had brought him to the place; there had been
no room in his thoughts for reasoned preparation. A tall black lady standing in
the fore section of the skimmer stopped barking orders long enough to glance
toward the doorway. Her eyes locked on his. Instead of hatred, Flinx found
himself thinking that in her youth this must have been a strikingly beautiful
woman. Cold, though. Both women, so cold. Her hair was nearly all gray, and so
were her eyes. “Haithness.” A man rushed up behind her. “We haven’t
got time for daydreaming. We-“ She pointed with a shaky finger. Brora followed her
finger and found himself gaping at a slim, youthful figure ill the doorway.
“That boy,” Brora whispered. “Is it him?” “Yes, but look higher, Brora. Up in
the light.” The stocky man’s gaze rose, and his air of
interested detachment suddenly deserted him. His mouth dropped open. “Oh, my
God,” he exclaimed, “an Alaspinian minidrag.” “You see,” Haithness murmured as she looked down at
Flinx, regarding him as she would any other laboratory subject, “it explains so
much.” Around them, the sounds of the encampment being destroyed continued to
dominate everyone else’s attention. Brora regamed his composure. “It may, it may, but
the boy may not even be aware that-“ Flinx strained to understand their mumblings, but
there was too much noise behind him. “Where did you come from?” he shouted
toward the skimmer. His new-found maturity quickly deserted him; suddenly, he
was only a furious, frustrated adolescent. “Why did you kidnap my mother? I don’t
like you, you know. I don’t like any of you. I want to know why you’ve done
what you’ve done!” “Be careful,” Nyassa-lee called up to them.
“Remember the subject’s profile!” She hoped they were getting this up- stairs. “He’s not dangerous, I tell you,” Haithness
insisted. “This demonstrates his harmlessness. If he was in command of himself,
he’d be throwing more than childish queries at us by now.” “But the catalyst creature.” Brora waved a hand
toward the flying snake drifting above Flinx. “We don’t know that it’s catalyzing anything,”
Haithness reminded him, “because we don’t know what the boy’s abilities are as
yet. They are only potentials. The minidrag may be doing nothing for him
because it has nothing to work with as yet, other than a damnable persistence
and a preternatural talent for following a thin trail.” She continued to
examine the subject almost within their grasp. “I would give a great deal to
learn how he came to be in possession of a minidrag.” Brora found himself licking his lips. “We failed
with the mother. Maybe we should try taking the subject directly in spite of
our experience with the girl.” “No,” she argued. “We don’t have the authority to
take that kind of risk. Cruachan must be consulted first. It’s his decision to
make. The important thing is for us to get out of here now with our records and
ourselves intact.” “I disagree.” Brora continued to study the boy,
fascinated by his calm. The subject appeared indifferent to the hoofed death
that was devastating the encampment. “Our initial plan has failed. Now is the
time for us to improvise. We should seize the opportunity.” “Even if it’s our last opportunity?” Flinx shouted at them. “What are you talking about?
Why don’t you answer me?” Haithness turned and seemed about to reply when a
vast groaning shook the hangar. Suddenly, its east wall bulged inward. There
were screams of despair as the loading crew flung cargo in all directions and
scattered, ignoring Nyassa-lee’s entreaties. “They didn’t scatter fast enough. Walls and roof came crashing down, burying
personnel, containers, and the big cargo skimmer. Three bull Devilopes pushed
through the ruined wall as Flinx threw himself backward through the doorway.
Metal, plastic, and flesh blended into a chaotic pulp beneath massive hoofs.
Fragments of plastic flew through the air around Fllinx. One nicked his
shoulder. Red eyes flashing, one of the bulls wheeled toward
the single figure sprawled on the ground. The great head lowered. Coincidence, luck, something more: whatever had
protected Flinx from the attention of the herd until now abruptly vanished. The
bull looming overhead was half insane with fury. Its intent was evident in its
gaze: it planned to make Flinx into still another red stain on the earth. Something so tiny it was not noticed swooped in
front of that lowering skull and spat into one plate-sized red eye. The
Devilope bull blinked once, twice against the painful intrusion. That was
enough to drive the venom into its bloodstream. The monster opened its mouth
and let out a frightening bellow as it pulled away from Flinx. It started to
shake its head violently, ignoring the other two bulls, which continued to
crush the remains of the hangar underfoot. Flinx scrambled to his feet and raced from the scene
of destruction, heading back toward the building where he had left Lauren and
Mother Mastiff. Pip rejoined him, choosing to glide just above its master’s
head, temporarily disdaining its familiar perch. Behind them, the Devilope’s bellowing turned thick
and soft. Then there was a crash as it sat down on its rump. It sat for several
moments more before the huge front legs slipped out from under it Very slowly,
like an iceberg calving from a glacier, it fell over on its side. “The eye that
had taken Pip’s venom was gone, leaving behind only an empty socket. Breathing hard, Flinx rushed back into the building
housing the surgery and nearly ran over the fleeing Lauren and Mother Mastiff.
He embraced his mother briefly, in- tensely, then swung her left arm over his
shoulder to give her support. Lauren supported the old woman at her other shoulder
and looked curiously at Flinx. “Did you find who you were looking for?” “I think so,” he told her. “Sennar and Soba are
properly revenged. The Devilopes did it for them.” Lauren nodded as they emerged from the remains of
the building. Outside, the earth-shaking had lessened. “The herd’s dispersing. They’ll reform in the
forest, wonder what came over them, and likely go back to sleep. As soon as
they start doing that, this camp will begin filling up with those who managed
to escape. We need to improve our transportation, and fast. Remember, there’s
nowhere near a full charge in the skimmer. You and I could walk it, but-“ “I can walk anywhere ye can,” Mother Mastiff
insisted. Her condition belied her bravado-if not for the support of Flinx and
Lauren, she would not have been able to stand. “It’s all right, Mother,” Flinx told her. “We’ll
find something.” They boarded their skimmer. Lauren rekeyed the
ignition, removed to prevent potential escapees from absconding with their
craft, and they cruised around the ruined building back into the heart of the
camp. Their fear of danger from survivors was unfounded.
The few men and women who wandered out of their way were too stunned by the
catastrophe to offer even a challenging question. The majority of them had been
administrative or maintenance personnel, quite unaware of the importance of
Flinx or Mother Mastiff. The Devilopes were gone. “The power station was
hardly damaged, perhaps because it lay apart from the rest of the encampment,
perhaps because it operated on automatic and did not offer the herd any living
targets. None of the camp personnel materialized to challenge their use of the
station’s recharge facility, though Lauren kept a ready finger on the trigger
of the dart rifle until a readout showed that the skimmer once again rode on
full power. “I don’t think we have to worry about pursuit,” she
declared. “It doesn’t look like there’s anyone left to pursue. If the leaders
of this bunch got caught in that trampled hangar as you say, Flinx, then we’ve
nothing to worry about.” “I didn’t get my answers,” he muttered
disappointedly. Then, louder, he said, “Let’s get out of this place.” “Yes,” Mother Mastiff agreed quickly. She looked
imploringly at Lauren. “I be a city lady. The country life doesn’t agree with
me.” She grinned her irrepressible grin, and Flinx knew she was going to be all
right. Lauren smiled and nudged the accelerator. The
skimmer moved, lifting above the surrounding trees. They crusied over several
disoriented, spent Devilopes and sped south as fast as the skimmer’s engine
could push them. “I didn’t learn what this was all about,” Flinx
continued to mutter from his seat near the rear of the cabin. “Do you know why they
abducted you, Mother? What did they want with you?” It was on her lips to tell him the tale the
Meliorares had told her the previous night-was it only last night? Some- thing
made her hesitate. Natural caution, concern for him. A lifetime of experience
that taught one not to blunder ahead and blurt out the first thing that comes
to mind, no matter how true it might be. There were things she needed to learn,
things he needed to learn. There would always be time. “You’ve said ‘tis a long story as to how ye managed
to trace me, boy. My tale’s a long one, too. As to what they wanted with me,
tis enough for ye to know now that it involves an old, old crime I once
participated in and a thirst for revenge that never dies. Ye can understand
that.” “Yes, yes I can.” He knew that Mother Mastiff had
enjoyed a diverse and checkered youth. “You can tell me all about it after
we’re back home.” “Yes,” she said, pleased that he had apparently
accepted her explanation. “After we’re safely back home.” She looked toward the
pilot’s chair and saw Lauren gazing quizzically back at her. Mother Mastiff put a finger to her lips. The other
woman nodded, not fully understanding but sensitive enough to go along with the
older woman’s wishes. Chapter Fourteen
Several hours passed. The air was smooth, the mist
thin, the ride comfortable as the skimmer slipped southward. Mother Mastiff
looked back toward the rear of the craft to see Flinx sound asleep. His useful
if loathsome pet was, as usual, curled up close to the boy’s head. She studied the pilot. Pretty, hard, and
self-contained, she decided. Night was beginning to settle over the forest
speeding by below. Within the sealed canopy of the skimmer, it was warm and
dry. “What be your interest in my boy?” she asked evenly. “As a friend. I also had a personal debt to pay,”
Lauren explained. “Those people who abducted you slaughtered a couple of rare
animals who were long-time companions of mine. ‘Revenge never dies.’ “ She
smiled. “You said that a while ago, remember?” “How did ye encounter him?” “He appeared at the lodge I manage on a lake near
here.” “Ah! The fight, yes, I remember. So that place was
yours.” “I just manage it. That’s where I’m heading. I can
help you arrange return passage to Drallar from there.” “How do ye know we’re from the city?” Lauren gestured with a thumb back toward the
sleeping figure behind them. “He told me. He told me a lot.” “That’s odd,” Mother Mastiff commented. “He’s not
the talkative kind, that boy.” She went quiet for a while, watching the forest
slide past below. Flinx slept on, enjoying his first relaxed sleep in some
time. ‘Tis an awful lot of trouble you’ve gone through on
his behalf,” she finally declared, “especially for a total stranger. Especially
for one so young.” “Youth is relative,” Lauren said. “Maybe be brought
out the maternal instinct in me.” “Don’t get profound with me, child,” Mother Mastiff
warned her, “nor sassy, either.” Ironic, that last comment, though. Hadn’t she
once felt the same way about the boy many years ago? “I’ve watched ye, seen the
way ye look at him. Do ye love him?” “Love him?” Lauren’s surprise was quite genuine.
Then, seeing that Mother Mastiff was serious, she forced herself to respond
solemnly. “Certainly not! At least, not in that way. I’m fond of him, sure. I
respect him immensely for what he’s managed to do on his own, and I also feel
sorry for him. There is affection, certainly. But the kind of love you’re
talking about? Not a chance.” “’Youth is relative,”’ Mother Mastiff taunted her
gently. “One must be certain. I’ve seen much in my life, child. There’s little
that can surprise me, or at least so I thought until a few weeks ago.” She
cackled softly. “I’m glad to hear ye say this. Anything else could do harm to
the boy.” “I would never do that,” Lauren assured her. She
glanced back at Flinx’s sleeping form. “I’m going to drop you at the lodge. My
assistant’s name is Sal. I’ll make some pretense of going in to arrange your
transportation and talk to him. Then I’ll take off across the lake. I think it
will be better for him that way. I
don’t want to hurt him.” She hesitated. “You don’t think he’ll do anything
silly, like coming after me?” Mother Mastiff considered thoughtfully, then shook
her head. “He’s just a little too sensible. He’ll understand. I’m sure. As for
me, I don’t know what to say, child. You’ve been so helpful to him and to me.” “ ‘Revenge,’ remember?” She grinned, the lights from
the console glinting off her high cheekbones. “He’s a funny one, your Fllinx. I
don’t think I’ll forget him.” “Ye know, child, ‘tis peculiar,” Mother Mastiff
muttered as she gazed out into the clouds and mist, “but you’re not the first
person to say that.” “And I expect,” Lauren added as she turned her
attention back to her driving, “that I won’t be the last, either.” The mudder
circled the devastated encampment several times before leaving the cover of the
forest and cruising among the ruined buildings. Eventually, it settled to
ground near the stump of what had been a central tower. The woman who stepped out was clad in a dark-green
and brown camouflage suit, as was the man at the vehicle’s controls. He kept
the engine running as his companion marched a half-dozen meters toward the
tower, stopped, and turned a slow circle, hands on hips. Then they both
relaxed, recognizing that whatever had obliterated the installation no longer
posed any threat. No discussion was necessary-they had worked together for a
long time, and words had become superfluous. The man killed the mudder’s engine and exited to
join his associate in surveying the wreckage. A light rain was falling. It did
not soak them, for the camouflage suits repelled moisture. The field was
temporary, but from what they could see of the encampment, they wouldn’t be in
the place long enough to have to recharge. “I’m sick of opening packages, only to find smaller
packages inside,” the man said ruefully. “I’m sick of having every new avenue
we take turn into a dead end.” He gestured toward the destruction surrounding
them; crumpled buildings, isolated wisps of smoke rising from piles of debris,
slag where power had melted metal. “Dead may be the right description, too, judging by
the looks of things.” “Not necessarily.” His companion only half heard
him. She was staring at a wide depression near her feet. It was pointed at one
end. A second, identical mark dented the ground several meters away, another an
equal distance be- yond. As she traced their progress, she saw that they formed
a curving trail. She had not noticed them at first because they were filled
with water. She kicked in the side of the one nearest her boots.
“Footprints,” she said curtly. “Hoof prints,” the man corrected her. His gaze went
to the mist-shrouded woods that surrounded the camp. “I wish I knew more about
this backwater world.” “Don’t criticize yourself. We didn’t plan to spend
so much time here. Besides, the urban center is pretty cosmopolitan.” “Yeah, and civilization stops at its outskirts. The
rest of the planet’s too primitive to rate a class. That’s what’s slowed us up
from the beginning. Too many places to hide.” Her gaze swept the ruins. “Doesn’t seem to have done
them much good.” “No,” he agreed. “I saw the bones on the way in,
same as you did. I wonder if the poor monster died here, too?” “Don’t talk like that,” she said uneasily. “You know
how we’re supposed to refer to him. You don’t watch yourself, you’ll put that
in an official communique sometime and find yourself up for a formal
reprimand.” “Ah, yes, I forgot,” he murmured. “The disadvantaged
child. Pardon me. Rose, but this whole business has been a lousy job from the
beginning. You’re right, though. I shouldn’t single him out. It’s not his
fault. The contrary. He isn’t responsible for what the Meliorares did to him.” “Right,” the woman said. “Well, he’ll soon be
repaired.” “If he got away,” her companion reminded her. “Surely some of them did,” the woman said. The man pointed toward several long walls of rubble
that might once have been buildings. “Speak of the devil.” A figure was headed toward them. It took longer than
was necessary because it did not travel in a straight line. It attempted to,
but every so often would stagger off to its right like a wheel with its
bearings out. The man’s clothes were filthy, his boots caked with mud. They had
not been changed in several days. He waved weakly at the newcomers. Save for
the limp with which he walked, he seemed intact. His stringy hair was soaked
and plastered like wire to his face and head. He made no effort to brush it
from his eyes. He seemed indifferent to the identity of the new
arrivals. His concerns were more prosaic. “Have you any food?” “What happened here?” the woman asked him as soon as
he had limped to within earshot. “Have you any food? God knows there’s plenty of
water. That’s all this miserable place has to offer is plenty of water. All you
want even when you don’t want it. I’ve been living on nuts and berries and what
I’ve been able to salvage from the camp kitchen. Had to fight the scavengers
for everything. Miserable, stinking hole.” “What happened here?” the woman repeated calmly. The
man appeared to be in his late twenties. Too young, she knew, for him to be a
member of the Meliorare’s inner circle. Just an unlucky employee. “Caster,” he mumbled. “Name’s Caster. Excuse me a
minute.” He slid down his crude, handmade crutch until he was sprawled on the
damp earth. “Broke my ankle, I think. It hasn’t healed too well. I need to have
it set right.” He winced, then looked up at them. “Damned if I know. What happened here, I mean. One
minute I was replacing communications modules, and the next all hell opened up.
You should’ve seen ‘em. Goddamn big as the tower, every one of ‘em. Seemed like
it. anyhow. Worst thing was those dish-size bloody eyes with tiny little black
specks lookin’ down at you like a machine. Not decent, them eyes. I don’t know
what brought ‘em down on us like they came, but it sure as hell wasn’t a kind
providence.” “Are you the only survivor?” the man asked. “I haven’t seen anyone else, if that’s what you
mean.” His voice turned pleading. “Hey, have you got any food?” “We can feed you,” the woman said with a smile.
“Listen, who were you working for here?” . “Bunch of
scientists. Uppity bunch. Never talked to us ordinary folk.” He forced a weak
laugh. “Paid well, though. Keep your mouth shut and do your job and see the
countryside. Just never expected the countryside to come visiting me. I’ve had
it with this outfit. Ready to go home. They can keep their damn severance fee.”
A new thought occurred to him, and he squinted up at the couple standing over
him. “Hey, you mean you don’t know who they were? Who are
you people, anyway?” They exchanged a glance; then the woman shrugged.
“No harm in it. Maybe it’ll help his memory.” She pulled a small plastic card from an inside pocket
and showed it to the injured man. It was bright red. On it was printed a name,
then her world of origin: Terra. The eyes of the man on the ground widened
slightly at that. The series of letters which followed added confusion to his
astonishment. FLT-I-PC-MO. The first section he understood. It
told him that this visitor was an autonomous agent, rank Inspector, of the
Commonwealth law enforcement arm, the Peaceforcers. “What does ‘MO’ stand for?” he asked. “Moral Operations section,” she told him, repocketing
the ident. “These scientists you worked for-even though you had little or no
personal contact with them, you must have seen them from time to time?” “Sure. They kept pretty well to themselves, but I
some- times saw ‘em strolling around.” “They were all quite elderly, weren’t they?” He frowned. “You know, I didn’t think much about it,
but yeah, I guess they were. Does that mean something?” “It needn’t trouble you,” the man said soothingly.
“You’ve said you haven’t seen anyone else around since this horde of beasts
overwhelmed you. That doesn’t necessarily mean you’re the only survivor. I
assume some form of transportation was maintained for local use here. You
didn’t see anyone get away in a mudder or skimmer?” The man on the ground thought a moment, and his face
brightened. “Yeah, yeah I did. There was this old lady and a younger
one-good-looking, the younger one. There was a kid with ‘em. I didn’t recognize
‘em, but there were al- ways people coming and going here.” “How old was the kid?” the woman asked him. “Damned if I know. I was running like blazes in one
direction, and their skimmer was beaded in the other, so I didn’t stop to ask
questions. Kid had red hair, though. I remember that. Redheads seem scarce on
this ball of dirt.” “A charmed life,” the older man murmured to his
companion. There was admiration as well as frustration in his voice. “The boy
leads a charmed life.” “As you well know, there may he a lot more than
charm involved,” the woman said tersely. “The old woman he refers to is obviously
the adopting parent, but who was the other?” She frowned, now worried. “It doesn’t matter,” her companion said. He spoke to
the injured man. “Look, how well do you remember the attitudes of this trio? I
know you didn’t have much time. This younger woman, the attractive one. Did she
give the appearance of being in control of the other two? Did it seem as if she
was holding the boy and old lady under guard?” “I told you, I didn’t get much of a look,” Caster
replied. “I didn’t see any weapons showing, if that’s what you’re talking
about.” “Interesting,” the woman murmured. “They may have
enlisted an ally. Another complication to contend with.” She sighed. “Damn this
case, anyway. If it didn’t carry such a high priority with HQ I’d ask to be
taken off.” “You know how far we’d get with a request like
that,” her companion snorted. “We’ll get ‘cm. We’ve come so damn close so many
times already. The odds have to catch up with us.” “Maybe. Remember your packages inside packages,” she
taunted him gently. “Still, it might be easy now.” She waved at the ruined
camp. “It doesn’t look like many, if any, of the Meliorares got away.” “Melio-Meliorares?” The injured man gaped at them.
“Hey, I know that name. Weren’t they the-?” His eyes widened with realization.
“Now wait a second, people, I didn’t-“ “Take it easy,” the man 5n the camouflage suit urged
him. “Your surprise confirms your innocence. Besides, you’re too young. They’ve
taken in smarter folk than you down over the years.” “We shouldn’t have that much trouble relocating the
boy.” She was feeling confident now. “We should be able to pick them up at our
leisure.” “I wish I were as sanguine,” her associate murmured,
chewing on his lower lip. “There’s been nothing leisurely about this business
from the start.” “I didn’t know,” the injured man was babbling. “I
didn’t know they were Meliorares. None of us did, none of us. I just answered
an ad for a technician. No one ever said a word to any of us about-!” “Take it easy, I told you,” the older man snapped,
disgusted at the other’s reaction. People panic so easily, he though: you’ll
have to undergo a truth scan. There’s no that leg set right. There’s food in
the mudder. One thing, though: you’ll have to undergo a truth scan. There’s no
harm in that, you know. Afterwards, you’ll likely be re- leased.” The man struggled to his feet, using his crutch as a
prop. He had calmed down somewhat at the other’s reassuring words. “They never
said a word about anything like that.” “They never do,” the woman commented. “That’s how
they’ve been able to escape custody for so many years. The gullible never ask
questions.” “Meliorares. Hell,” the man mumbled. “If I’d known-“ “If you’d known, then you’d never have taken their
money and gone to work for them, right?” “Of course not. I’ve got my principles.” “Sure you do.” He waved a hand, forestalling the
other man’s imminent protest. “Excuse me, friend. I’ve developed a rather
jaundiced view of humanity during the eight years I’ve spent in MO. Not your
fault. Come on,” he said to the woman named Rose, “there’s nothing more for us
here.” “Me, too? You’re sure?” The younger man limped after
them. “Yeah, you, too,” the Peaceforcer said. “You’re sure
you don’t mind giving a deposition under scan? It’s purely a voluntary procedure.” “Be glad to,” the other said, eager to please. “Damn
lousy Meliorares, taking in innocent workers like that Hope you mindwipe every
last one of ‘em.” “There’s food in back,” the woman said evenly as
they climbed into the mudder. “It’s strange,” her companion remarked a§ they
seated themselves, “how the local wildlife overran this place just in time to
allow our quarry to flee. The histories of these children are full of such
timely coincidences.” “I know,” Rose said as the mudder’s engine rose to a
steady hum and the little vehicle slid forward into the forest. “Take this
flying snake we’ve been told about. It’s from where?” “Alaspin, if the reports are accurate.” “That’s right, Alaspin. If I remember my
galographics correctly, that world’s a fair number of parsecs from here. One
hell of a coincidence.” “But not impossible.” “It seems like nothing’s impossible where these
children are concerned. The sooner we take this one into custody and turn him
over to the psychosurgeons, the better I’ll like it. Give me a good clean
deviant murder any time. This mutant-hunting gives me the shivers.” “He’s not a mutant. Rose,” her companion reminded
her. “That’s as inaccurate as me calling him a monster.” He glanced toward the
rear of the mudder. Their passenger was gobbling food from their stores and
ignoring their conversation. “We don’t even know that he possesses any special
abilities. The last two we tracked down were insipidly normal.” “The Meliorares must have thought differently,” Rose
challenged. “They’ve gone to a lot of trouble to try and catch this one and
look what’s happened to them.” They were well into the forest now, heading south.
The ruined camp was out of sight, swallowed up by trees and rolling terrain
behind them. “Some big native animals did them in,” her companion
said. “A maddened herd that bad nothing whatsoever to do with the boy or any
imagined abilities of his. So far, his trail shows only that he’s the usual
Meliorare disturbed youth. You worry too much. Rose.” “Yeah. I know. It’s the nature of the business,
Feodor.” But their concerns haunted them as night began to
over- take the racing mudder. The woman manning the communications console was
very old, almost as old and shaky as the small starship it- self, but her hands
played the instrumentation with a confidence born of long experience, and her
hearing was sharp enough for her to be certain she had not missed any portion
of the broadcast. She looked up from her station into the face of the tall,
solemn man standing next to her and shook her head slowly. “I’m sorry. Dr. Cruachan, sir. They’re not
responding to any of our call signals. I can’t even raise their tight-beam
frequency anymore.” The tall man nodded slowly, reluctantly. “You know
what this means?” “Yes,” she admitted, sadness tinging her voice.
“Nyassa-lee, Haithness, Brora-all gone now. All those years.” Her voice sank to
a whisper. “We can’t be sure,” Cruachan murmured. “Not one
hundred percent. It’s only that,” he hesitated, “they ought to have responded
by now, at least via the emergency unit.” “That stampede was terrible luck, sir.” “If it was bad luck,” he said softly. “History shows
that where the subject children are concerned, the unknown sometimes gives luck
a push-or a violent shove.” “I know that, sir,” the communicator said. She was
tired, Cruachan knew; but then they were all tired. Time was running out for
them and for the Meliorare Society as well as for its noble, much-misunderstood
goals. There had been thoughts, years ago, of training new acolytes in the techniques
and aims of genetic manipulation pioneered by the Society, but the onus under
which they were forced to operate made the cooperation of foolish younger
researchers impossible to obtain, thanks to the unrelenting barrage of
slanderous propaganda propagated by the Church and the Commonwealth government. Curse them all for the ignorant primitives they
were! The Society was not dead yet! Haithness, Nyassa-lee, Brora-the names were a dirge
in his mind. If they were truly gone now, and it seemed that must be so, that
left very few to carry on the Work. The conflict within him was strong. Should
he press on or flee to set up operations elsewhere? So many old friends,
colleagues, great scientific minds, lost; was this one subject worth it? They
still had no proof that he was. Only graphs and figures to which the computers
held. But the computers didn’t care. Nobody cared. There was nothing to indicate that the subject had
been in any way responsible for the unfortunate stampede that had destroyed the
camp together with their hopes. Of course, it was quite possible that the
subject had perished along with the others, Cruachan mused. If not, if he
decided to pursue this one to a conclusion, then there could be no more
external manipulation attempted. They would have to confront the subject
directly, as they had years ago tried to do with the girl. It was a long, roundabout course to their next
“safe” station. Cruachan was not at all
confident of working through another several years of hiding and seeking out
another promising subject. If the long arm of the Peace- forcers had not caught
up with him by then, time and old age were liable to do the job for the
government. They had come a long way together, he and his associates. A great
effort; many lives had been expended to keep the project alive. He and his few
remaining colleagues had to follow this case to its conclusion. “Thank you, Amareth,” he told the woman waiting
patiently at the console. “Keep the receiver open just in case.” “Of course, Dr. Cruachan, sir.” Turning, he headed slowly toward Conference. Halfway
there, his step picked up, his stride became more brisk. This won’t do, he told
himself. As president of the Society, it was incumbent upon him to set an
example for the others, now more than ever. By the time he reached the meeting
room and strode inside, his initial despair at the reports from below had been
replaced by icy determination. Half a dozen elderly men and women sat waiting for
him. So few, he thought, so few left. The last of the Society, the last
supporters of a great idea. Their upturned faces all silently asked the same
question. “Still no word,” he said firmly. “We must therefore
assume that doctors Brora, Haithness, and Nyassa-lee have been lost.” There
were no outward expressions of grief, no wails or cries. They waited
expectantly for him to continue, and their quiet vote of confidence redoubled
his resolve. “I recommend that we proceed with the attempt to re-
gain control of Number Twelve.” “We have reason to believe that MO operatives are
now working in this region,” an old woman said from the far side of the
comfortable room. “What of it?” another woman asked sharply. “They’ve
always been two steps behind us, and they always will be.” “I wish I was as positive of that as you, Hanson,”
the first woman said. “The longevity of
the Society is the result of foresight and caution, not contempt for those who
hold us in contempt.” She looked up at their leader. “You’re sure about
continuing to operate here, Cruachan?” “More so than ever,” he told her. “We have too much
invested in this Number Twelve not to continue.” He proceeded to recite the
long list of factors responsible for his decision. When he finished, a thin little man seated in the
far corner of the room spoke out sharply in an incongruously deep voice. He had
an artificial leg and heart, but the look in his eyes was as blindly intense as
it had been fifty years earlier. “I concur! The promise still lies here. If the
subject is still accessible-“ “We have no reason to believe he is not,” Cruachan
half lied. “-then we have a chance to get to him before the MO
insects do. As Cruachan says, we must balance the potential here against our
own intensifying infirmities.” He
kicked the floor with his false leg. “Very well,” said the old lady who had raised the
specter of Commonwealth interference. “I see that most of you are of a mind to
continue with our work here. I must confess that I cannot muster an argument
against Dr. Cruachan’s many good points. But we now have a new problem to
overcome which will not be solved by a vote. “Is it true that the last report from the camp
places the subject in proximity to an Alaspinian miniature dragon?” Cruachan nodded slowly. “The presence of the
catalyst creature close to the subject was alluded to, yes.” “Then how are we to proceed? Besides acting as a
magnifying lens for any latent Talent the subject may possess, this particular
animal is deadly in and of itself. If it has formed an emotional bond with the
subject, it will be a much more dangerous opponent than any dozen MO officers.” Cruachan waved her worries aside. “I’ve given the
matter proper consideration. The snake will be taken care of, I promise you. If
we cannot neutralize a mere reptile, then we have no business pretending to the
ideals of our Society.” “It is not a reptile,” a man near the back put in.
He was glassy-eyed because of the thick contact lenses he was forced to wear.
“It is reptilian in appearance, but warm blood flows in its veins, and it
should more properly be classified as-“ “I don’t give a damn what Order it fits into,”
Cruachan broke in impatiently. “The beast will be handled.” His brows drew
together at a sudden thought. “In fact, if such a mental bond now exists, it is
likely stronger than that which ties the subject to his adoptive parent.” “Another chance for external control!” a woman
exclaimed. “Yes. Instead of presenting us with a new threat,
it’s possible this creature may be our key to subject control. So you all see
how seeming difficulties may be turned to our advantage.” “Too bad about Haithness and the others,” one of the
old men murmured. “I’d known Haithness for forty-five years.” “So did I,” Cruachan reminded him. “We must not let
her and Nyassa-lee and Brora down. If, as now seems likely, they have sacrificed
themselves for the cause, they provide us with still another reason to press
onward. As we shrink in numbers, so must we grow in determination.” Murmurs of assent rose from around the conference
room. “We will not abandon this subject,” Cruachan
continued forcefully. “He will be brought under our wing by what- ever means is
required. I call for a formal vote for proceeding.” Cruachan was gratified to see the decision to
continue confirmed unanimously. Such decisions usually were; dissent had no place
in an organization bent to such a singular purpose. “Thank you all,” he said when the hands dropped.
“Remember, this Number Twelve may hold the key to our vindication. We should
proceed with that hope in mind. From this moment on, our entire energy will be
devoted to gaining control over him.” He turned toward the doorway. “We have to hurry. If the MOs find him first, they
will ruin him for our purposes.” The group dissolved in a rush of activity and fresh
resolve that was matched in intensity only by the desperation that gave it
life. Chapter Fifteen
The city stank of human and other beings, of animals
and exotic cooking, of resins and building materials old and new, all affected
by the eternal dampness that permeated organic and inorganic materials alike.
But it was all flowers and spice to Flinx. The transport car hissed to a halt
outside the paneled exterior of the little bar and with the little credit
remaining to him, he paid the machine. It responded with a mechanical “Thank
you, sir” before drifting off up the street in search of its next fare. Mother Mastiff leaned heavily against him as they
made their way inside. Her ordeal had left her feeling her age, and she was
very tired. So tired that she did not pull away from the snake riding high on Flinx’s
shoulder. Once inside, Pip uncoiled from its perch beneath the slickertic
Lauren Walder had provided and made a snake- line for the bar itself. This
place he knew. On the counter ahead sat bowls of pretzels, tarmac nuts, and
other interesting salty delicacies that were almost as much fun to play with as
to eat Flinx had deliberately brought them back to the
market- place via a zigzag, roundabout course, changing transports frequently,
trying until the last moment to travel with other citizens. Try as he might, he
had been unable to see any indication that they had been followed, nor had the
minidrag reacted negatively to any of the travelers who had looked askance at
the exhausted youth and the old woman with him. Still, it was this caution that
prompted them to visit this bar before returning to the shop. It would be wise
not to go home alone, and Small Symm, the bar owner, would be good company to
have around when they again set palm print to the front-door lock. To some
degree his physical talents matched those of Flinx’s mind. As giants go. Small Symm was about average. He had
been a friend of Flinx since the day of the boy’s adoption. He often bought
interesting utensils from Mother Mastiff for use in his establishment. An enormous hand appeared and all but swept the two
travelers into a booth. At the long metal bar, patrons nervously moved aside to
allow the acrobatic flying snake plenty of access to the pretzels. “I’ve heard,” the young giant said by way of
greeting, his voice an echo from deep within a cavernous chest, “that you were
back. Word travels fast in the market.” “We’re okay, Symm.” Flinx favored his friend with a’
tired smile. “I feel like I could sleep for a year, but other than that, we’re
all right.” The giant pulled a table close to the booth and used
it for a chair. “What can I get for the two of you? Some- thing nice and hot to
drink?” “Not now, boy,” Mother Mastiff said with a desultory
wave of one wrinkled hand. “We’re anxious to be home. ‘Tis your good company
we’d make use of, not your beverages.” She turned quiet and let Flinx do the
majority of the explaining. Small Symm frowned, his brows coming together like
clouds in the sky. “You think these people might still be after you?” She almost started to say, “Tis not me they’re after,”
and just did manage to hold her tongue. She still believed it was too soon to
reveal to Flinx everything she had learned. Much too soon. “Unlikely but
possible, and I’m not the type to tempt fate, the unkind bastard.” “I understand.” Symrn stood, his head just clearing
the ceiling. “You would like some friendly companionship on your way home.” “If you could spare the time,” Flinx said
gratefully. “I really believe that we’re finished with these people.” He did
not explain that he thought they were all dead. No need to complicate matters.
“But we’d sure be a lot more comfortable if you’d come with us while we checked
out the shop.” “I’ll be just a moment,” Symm assured him. “Wait
here.” He vanished into a back room. When he returned, it was in the company of
a tall young woman. He spoke softly to her for a minute, she nodding in
response, then rejoined his visitors. He was wearing a slickertic not quite
large enough to protect a medium-sized building. “I’m ready,” he told them. “Nakina will watch business
until I return. Unless you’d rather rest a while longer.” “No, no.” Mother
Mastiff struggled to her feet. “I’ll rest when I’m back home in my shop.” It was not far from Small Symm’s place to the side
street where Mother Mastiff’s stall was located. With Symm carrying her, they
made good time. “Seems empty,” the giant commented as he gently set
the old woman on her feet. It was evening. Most of the shops were already
shuttered, perhaps because the rain was falling harder than usual. In the
marketplace, weather was often the most profound of economic arbiters. “I guess it’s all right.” Mother Mastiff stepped
toward the front door. “Wait a minute.” Flinx put out an arm to hold her
back. “Over there, to the left of the shop.” Symm and Mother Mastiff stared in the indicated
direction. “I don’t see anything,” the giant said. “I thought I saw movement.” Flinx glanced down at
Pip. The flying snake dozed peacefully beneath the cover of the slickertic. Of
course, the snake’s moods were often unpredictable, but his continued calm was
a good sign. Flinx gestured to his right. The giant nodded and moved off like a
huge shadow to conceal himself in the darkness next to the vacant shop off to
the left. Flinx went to his right-to starboard, as Lauren might have said. It had
taken him awhile to forgive her for leaving-and Mother Mastiff for letting her
leave-while he was still sound asleep. He wondered what she was doing, yet the
memory of her was already beginning to fade. It would take some- what longer to
escape his emotions. Mother Mastiff waited and watched as friend and son
moved off in opposite directions. She did not mind standing in the rain. It was
Drallarian rain, which was different somehow from the rain that fell anywhere
else in the universe. Flinx crept warily along the damp plastic walls of
the shop fronts, making his way toward the alley that meandered behind their
home. If the movement he thought he had spied signified the presence of some
scout awaiting their return, he did not want that individual reporting back to
his superiors until Flinx had drained him of in- formation. There-movement again, and no mistaking it this time!
It was moving away from him. He increased his pace, keeping to the darkest
shadows. The stiletto that slept in his boot was in his right hand now, cold
and familiar. Then a cry in the darkness ahead and a looming,
massive shape. Flinx rushed forward, ready to help even though it was unlikely
the giant would need any assistance. Then something new, something unexpected. Nervous laughter? “Hello, Flinx-boy.” In the dim light, Flinx made out
the friendly face of their neighbor Arrapkha. “Hello, yourself.” Flinx put the stiletto back where
it belonged. “You gave me reason to worry. I thought we were finished with
shapes in the night.” “I gave you reason to worry?” The craftsman
indicated the bulk of Small Symm standing behind him. “I’m sorry,” Symm said apologetically. “We couldn’t
see who you were.” “You know now.” He looked back toward Flinx. “I’ve
been watching your shop for you.” Symm went to reassure Mother Mastiff. “You
know, making sure no one broke in and tried to steal anything.” “That was good of you,” Flinx said as they started
back toward the street. “Ifs good to see you back, Flinx-boy. I’d given you
up not long after you left.” “Then why have you kept watching the shop?” The older man grinned. “Couldn’t stop hoping, I
guess. What was it all about, anyway?” “Something illegal that Mother Mastiff was involved
in many years back,” Flinx explained. “She didn’t go into the details. Just
told me that revenge was involved.” “Some people have long memories,” Arrapkha said,
nodding knowingly. “Since you have returned well and safe, I presume that you
made a peace with the people who kidnaped your mother?” “We concluded the business,” Flinx said tersely. They returned to the street, where Small Symm and
Mother Mastiff waited to greet them. “So it was you, Arrapkha. Ye ignorant fleurm,
worrying us like that.” She smiled. “Never thought I’d be glad to see ye,
though.” “Nor I you,” the woodworker confessed. He gestured
toward Flinx. “That boy of yours is as persistent as he is foolhardy. I did my
best to try and convince him not to go rushing off after you.” “I would have told him the same,” she said, “and he
would have ignored me, too. Headstrong, he be.” She al- lowed herself a look of
pardonable pride. Flinx was simply embarrassed. “And fortunate it is for me.” “Old acquaintances and bad business.” Arrapkha
waggled an admonishing finger at her. “Beware of old acquaintances and bad
business and deeds left unresolved.” “Ah, yes.” She changed the subject. “Been watching
the old place for me, eh? Then I’d best check the stock care- fully as soon as
we’re inside.” They both laughed. “If you think it’s all right for me to leave,” Small
Symm murmured. “Nakina has a bad temper, and that’s not good for business.” Mother Mastiff looked thoughtful. “If our friend
here insists he’s kept a close eye on the shop . . .” “I’ve watched and watched,” Arrapkha insisted.
“Unless they’ve tunneled in, no one’s gone inside since your boy left to look
for you.” “No tunneling under these streets,” she observed
with a grin “They’d hit the sewers.” She looked back up at their escort. “Thank
ye, Symm. Ye can rim back to your lovely den of iniquity.” “It’s hardly that,” he replied modestly. “Someday if
I work hard, perhaps.” Flinx extended a hand, which vanished in the giant’s
grasp. “My thanks, also, Symm.” “No trouble. Glad to help.” The giant tamed and
lumbered away into the night. The three friends moved to the front door. Mother
Mastiff placed her right palm against the lock plate. It clicked immediately,
and the door slid aside, admitting them. Flinx activated the lights, enabling
them to see clearly that the stall area was apparently untouched. Stock
remained where they had left it, gleaming and reassuringly familiar in the
light. “Looks to be the same as when I left,” Mother
Mastiff observed gratefully. “Looks to be the same as it did ten years ago.”
Arrapkha shook his head slowly. “You don’t change much, Mother Mastiff, and
neither does some of your stock. I think you’re too fond of certain pieces to
sell them.” “There be nothing I’m too fond of not to sell,” she
shot back, “and my stock changes twice as fast as that pile of beetle-eaten
garbage ye try to pass off on unsuspecting customers as handicrafts.” “Please, no fighting,” Flinx implored them. “I’m
tired of fighting.” “Fighting?” Arrapkfaa said, looking surprised. “We’re not fighting, boy,” Mother Mastiff told him.
“Don’t ye know by now how old friends greet one an- other? By seeing who can
top the other’s insults.” To show him that she meant what she said, she smiled
fondly at Arrapkha. The woodworker wasn’t a bad sort at all. Only a little
slow. The living quarters they found likewise untouched:
in total chaos, exactly as Flinx had last seen it. “Housekeeping,” Mother Mastiff grumbled. “I’ve
always hated housekeeping. Still, someone has to get this place cleaned up, and
better me than ye, boy. Ye have no touch for domesticity, I fear.” “Not tonight, Mother.” Flinx yawned. His initial
sight of his own bed had expanded until it filled the whole room. “No, not tonight, boy. I must confess to being just
the slightest bit tired.” Flinx smiled to himself. She was on the verge of physical
collapse, quite ready to go to sleep wherever her body might fall, but she was
damned if she would show weakness in front of Arrapkha lest it damage her image
of invincibility. “Tomorrow well put things to rights. I work better
in the daytime, anyway.” She tried not to look toward her own bedroom, waiting
on Arrapkha. “Well, then, I will leave you,” the craftsman said. “Again, it’s good to see you back and healthy. The
street wasn’t the same without you.” “We monuments are hard to get rid of,” Mother
Mastiff said. “Perhaps we’ll see ye tomorrow.” “Perhaps,” Arrapkha agreed. He turned and left them,
making certain that the front door locked behind him. Once outside, Arrapkha drew his slickertic tight
around his head and shoulders as he hurried back to his own shop. He had no
more intention of turning his friends over to the authorities, as he had been
instructed, than he did of cutting the price of his stock fifty percent for
some rich merchant. He would not hinder the police, but he would do nothing to
assist them, either. He could always plead ignorance, for which he was famed in
this part of the marketplace. So tired; they looked so tired, he thought. It was
the first time he could remember Mother Mastiff looking her age. Even the boy,
who, though slight of build, had never before seemed exhausted by any labor,
appeared completely worn out. Even that lethal pet that always rode his
shoulder had looked tired. Well, he would give them a few days to get their
house in order and regain their strength. Then he would surprise them by taking
them to Magrim’s for some tea and tall sandwiches and would tell them of the
mysterious visit of the two Peaceforcers to their little street. It would be
interesting to see what Mother Mastiff would make of that. She might welcome
the interest of the authorities in her case-and then again, she might not. Not
knowing the details of her history, Arrapkha could not be sure, which was why
he had elected not to help those offworld visitors. Yes, he decided firmly. Wait a few days and let them
rest up before springing that new information on them. No harm in that, surely.
He opened the door to his own shop and shut it against the night and the rain. One day passed, then another, and gradually the shop
again assumed the appearance of home as the mess the kidnapers had made was
cleaned up. Comfortable in such familiar surroundings, Mother Mastiff regained
her strength rapidly. She was such a resilient old woman, Flinx thought with
admiration. For his part, by the second day he was once again venturing out
into his familiar haunts, greeting old friends, some of whom had heard of the
incident and some of whom had not, but never straying far from the shop lest
even at this late date and in spite of his beliefs some surviving members of the
organization that had abducted Mother Mastiff return, still seeking their
revenge. Nothing materialized, however, to give any credence
to such anxieties. By the third day, he had begun to relax mentally as well as
physcially. It was amazing, he thought, as he settled in that night, the things
that one misses the most during a long absence. Odd how familiar and friendly
one’s own bed becomes when one has had to sleep elsewhere.... It was the hate that woke Pip. Cold and harsh as the
most brutal day winter could muster on the ice world of Tran-ky-ky, it shook
the flying snake from a sound sleep. It was directed not at the minidrag but at
its master. Pink and blue coils slid soundlessly clear of the
thermal blanket. Flinx slept on, unaware of his pet’s activity. Several hours
remained until sunrise. Pip rested and analyzed. Examining the minidrag
lying at the foot of the bed, an observer might have believed it to be a
reasoning being. It was not, of course, but neither was its mental capacity
inconsequential. Actually, no one was quite sure how the mind of the Alaspinian
miniature dragon worked or what profound cogitations it might be capable of,
since no xenobiologist dared get close enough to study it. Blue and pink wings opened, pleats expanding, and
with a gentle whirr the snake took to the air. It hovered high over its
master’s head, worried, searching, trying to pin- point the source of the
unrelenting malignancy that was poisoning its thoughts. The hate was very near.
Worse, it was familiar. There was a curved roof vent that Pip had
appropriated for its own private comings and goings. The snake darted toward
it, the wings folding up at the last second to allow the slim body to slip
through the curving tube. Nothing much bigger than a mouse could have slipped
through that vent. With wings folded flat against its muscular sides, the
minidrag made the passage easily. Pip emerged atop the roof into the light,
early-morning rain. Up that way the bate lay, to the north, up the alley. Wings
unfolded and fanned the air. The minidrag circled once above the shop, paused
to orient itself, then buzzed determinedly into the opening nearby where the
alley emerged into cloudlight. It braked to a halt and hovered, hissing at the
mental snarl that had drawn it. “Over here pretty, pretty,” coaxed a voice. “You
know who hates your master, don’t you? And you know what we’ll do to him if we
get the chance.” The flying snake shot through the partly open
doorway into the hate-filled room beyond. Two humans awaited it with deadly
calm. Never would they have the chance to harm the minidrag’s master. Never! A thin stream of venom spewed from the roof of the
flying snake’s upper jaw and struck toward the nearest of the vicious bipeds.
It never reached the man. Something was between him and Pip, something hard and
transparent. The venom contacted it, hissed in the still air as it started to
eat at the transparent shield. Startled, the two monsters seated behind the
shield flinched and began to rise. But the door opening on the alley had already
slammed shut behind the minidrag. Suddenly, a strange, sweet smell filled the
room. Wingbeats slackened and grew weak. Twin eyelids fluttered and closed. The
flying snake flopped about on the floor like a fish out of water, wings beating
futilely against the plastic as it gasped for breath. “Be careful,” a distant voice warned. “We don’t want
to overdose it. It’s no good to us dead.” “I’d sooner see it dead and take our chances with
the subject,” another said. “We need every hold we can manage, including the
possibility raised by this little devil.” The voices faded. Soon the flying snake had stopped
moving. Long minutes passed before a man dared to enter the sealed room. He was
dressed head to toe in a protective suit. His eyes were anxious behind the
transparent visor. With the long metal prod he carried he poked once, twice at
the comatose minidrag. It jerked convulsively in response to the touches, but
otherwise displayed no sign of life. The man took a deep breath and set the long prod
aside as he bent to pick up the thin body. It hung limply in his gloved hands
as he inspected it. “Still breathing,” he declared to the people pressed
close to the transparent wall. “Good. Get it in the cage quick,” said the shorter
of the two observers. Her companion was studying the hole where the venom had
finally eaten through the protective shield. “I’d like to see a molecular breakdown on this
stuff,” he murmured, careful to keep his fingers clear of the still-sizzling
edges of the ragged gap. “Anything that can eat through pancrylic this fast . .
.” He shook his head in disbelief. “I don’t see how the venom sacs can contain
the stuff without dissolving right through the creature’s jaw.” “You’d need a toxicologist and biochemist to explain
it, if they could,” said the woman standing next to him, like- wise taking a
moment to examine the hole. “Perhaps there’s more to it than just a
straightforward poison. The snake’s mouth may hold several separate sacs whose
con- tents mix only when it’s spraying someone.” “Makes sense.” The man turned away from the shield
that had nearly failed them. “We better get moving. The subject may awaken any
minute now. Be sure you keep the monster thoroughly narcotized.” “Is that necessary?” She frowned. “Surely the cage
will hold it.” “That’s what we thought about the wall. The cage is
tougher, but we don’t want to take any chances. I don’t want our guest spitting
his way free while we’re asleep in our beds.” “No, we sure as hell don’t.” The woman shuddered
slightly. “I’ll take charge of it myself.” “I was hoping you’d say that.” Cruachan smiled to
him- self. He was intimately familiar with the theories that at- tempted to
explain the special bonds that could spring into being between a catalyst
creature such as the minidrag and one of the Talented. Certainly the link that
existed between this creature and the boy known as Number Twelve was as
powerful as any of the imperfectly recorded cases he had studied. It was not
unreasonable to suppose that it could be stronger than the affection bond
between the boy and his adoptive mother. They came at him without warning during his final
period of REM sleep, when he was defenseless. They sprang into existence out of
emptiness, laughing at him, tormenting him with feelings and sensations he
could not define or understand. Nightmares. Someone was twisting a wire around his brain, com-
pressing it tighter and tighter until it seemed certain that his eyes would
explode out of his head and fly across the room. He lay in his bed, twitching slightly,
his eyelids quivering, as they did their work on him and took ad- vantage of
his helpless, unconscious mind. “This batch was worse than most; twisting, abstract
forms, dark swirling colors, and himself somehow in the middle of them all,
racing down a long, ominous corridor. At the end of that corridor lay his
salvation, he knew, and almost as important, answers. Understanding and safety. But the faster he ran, the slower he advanced. The
floor that was not a floor dissolved beneath his feet, dropping him like some
relativistic Alice down a rabbit hole of space-time distortions, while the far
end of the corridor and its promises of light and comprehension receded into
the wastes overhead. He woke up with a silent start and glanced rapidly
around the room. Only after he convinced himself of its reality did he begin to
relax. It was the right room, his room, the one he had
lived in most of his life: tiny, spartan, comfortable. The patter of morning
rain was music on the roof, and faint daylight filtered through the window
above his bed. He swung his legs out clear of the blanket and rubbed both
throbbing eyes with his fingers. The fingers abruptly ceased their ministrations, and
he looked back to the bed. Something was wrong. “Pip?” The flying snake was not coiled in its
familiar position at the top of the pillow, nor was it underneath. Flinx pulled
back the blanket, then bent to peer under the bed. “C’mon boy, don’t hide from
me this morning. I’m worn out, and my head is killing me.” “There was no familiar hissing response to his
confession. He prowled the room’s meager confines, at first puzzled, then
concerned. At last, he stood on the bed and shouted toward the air vent
overhead. “Pip, breakfast!” No comforting hum of brightly hued wings reached him
from beyond. He found a piece of wire and used it to probe the vent. It was
clear to the outside. He left his room and frantically started an
inspection of the rest of the living quarters. Mother Mastiff stood by the
convection stove, cooking something redolent of pepper and less exotic spices.
“Something the matter, boy?” “It’s Pip.” Flinx peered beneath recently righted
furniture, moved bowls, and dropcloths. “I gathered as much from the hollering ye were doing
in your bedroom,” she said sardonically. “Disappeared again, has he?” “He never stays out through morning when he takes a
solo night flight. Never.” “Always a first time, even for monsters,” Mother
Mastiff said, shrugging and
concentrating on her
cooking. “Wouldn’t upset me if the little nastiness never did come
back.” “Shame on you. Mother!” Flinx said, his tone
agonized. “He saved my life, and probably yours, too.” “So I’m an ungrateful old Yax’m,” she snorted. “Ye
know my feelings toward your beast.” Flinx finished inspecting her room, then resolutely
stormed back to his own and began dressing. “I’m going out to look for him.” Mother Mastiff frowned. “Breakfast ready soon. Why
bother yourself, boy? Likely it’ll be back soon enough, more’s the pity.
Besides, if it has got its slimy little self stuck someplace, you’re not likely
to find him.” “He could just be in the alley behind the shop,”
Flinx argued, “and I can hear him even when I can’t see him.” “Suit yourself,
boy.” “And don’t wait breakfast on me.” “Think I’ll starve meself on your account? Much less
on account of some devil-wing.” She had long ago given up arguing with him.
When he made up his mind about some- thing-well, one might as well wish for the
planet’s rings to be completed. He was a dutiful-enough son in most ways, but
he simply refused to be restricted. “It’ll be here when ye get back,” she said softly,
checking the containers and lowering their ambient temperatures fifty degrees.
“Ye can warm it up for your shiftless self.” “Thanks, Mother.” Despite her contorting attempt to
avoid him, he managed to plant a hurried kiss on one leathery cheek. She wiped
at it, but not hard, as she watched him dash from the shop. For an instant, she thought of telling him about
what she had learned days ago up in the forest. About those strange Meliorare
people and their intentions toward him. Then she shrugged the idea off. No,
they were well clear of the horrid folk, and from the glimpse she had of their
camp, they would not be bothering her boy ever again. As to what she had learned of his history, it would
be better to keep that secret for a few years yet. Knowing his stubborn
impulsiveness, such information might send him running off in all sorts of
dangerous directions. Much better not to say anything for a while. When he
reached a reasonable age, twentythree or so, she could let on what she had
learned about his background. By then, he would have taken over management of
the shop, perhaps married. Settled down some to a nice, sensible, quiet life. She tasted the large pot, winced. Too little saxifrage.
She reached for a small shaker. “Pip! To me, boy!” Still no blue and pink flash
enlivening the sky, still no rising hum. Now where would he get to? Flinx
mused. He knew the minidrag was fond of the alley behind the shop. That was
where he had first encountered the flying snake, after all, and to a snake’s
way of thinking, the alley was usually full of interesting things to .eat. For
all the minidrag’s aerial agility, a box tumbling from the crest of a garbage
heap or a rolling container could easily pin it to the ground. Flinx knew that
no stranger was likely to get within ten meters of a trapped snake. Might as well try the first, he decided. Slipping
down the narrow space separating Mother Mastiff’s shop from the vacant
structure next to it, he soon found himself in the alley-way. It was damp and
dark, its overall aspect dismal as usual. He cupped his hands to his mouth, called out, “Pip?” “Over here, boy,” said a soft voice. Flinx tensed, but his hand did not grab for the
knife concealed in his boot. Too early. A glance showed that his retreat
streetward was still unblocked, as was the section of alley behind him. Nor did
the individual standing motionless beneath the archway in front of him look
particularly threatening. Flinx stood his ground and debated with himself,
then finally asked, “If you know where my pet is, you can tell me just as
easily from where you’re standing, and I can hear you plainly from where I’m
standing.” “I know where your pet is,” the man admitted. His
hair was entirely gray, Flinx noted. “I’ll take you to it right now, if you
wish.” Flinx stalled. “Is he all right? He hasn’t gotten
himself into some kind of trouble?” The little man shook his head and smiled pleasantly.
“No, he isn’t in trouble, and he’s just fine. He’s sleeping, in fact.” “Then why can’t you bring him out?” Flinx inquired.
He continued to hold his position, ready to charge the man or race for the
street as the situation dictated. “Because I can’t,” the man said. “Really, I can’t.
I’m just following orders, you know.” “Whose orders?” Flinx asked suspiciously. Suddenly,
events were becoming complicated again. The speaker’s age and attitude abruptly
impacted on him. “Are you with the people who abducted my mother? Because if you’re
trying to get revenge on her for whatever she was involved in years ago by
harming me, it’s not going to work.” “Take it easy, now,” the man said. A voice Flinx
could not hear whispered to the speaker from behind the door. “For heaven’s sake, Anders, don’t get him excited!” “I’m trying not to,” the elderly speaker replied
through clenched teeth. To Flinx he said more loudly, “No one wants to harm you
or your pet, boy. You can have my word on that even if you don’t think it’s
worth anything. My friends and I mean you and your pet only well.” He did not
respond to Flinx’s brief allusion to his adoptive mother’s past. “Then if you mean us only well,” Flinx said, “you
won’t object if I take a minute to go and reassure-“ The speaker took a step forward. “There’s no need to
disturb your parent, boy. In a moment she’ll have her shop open and the crowd
will ensure her safety, if that’s what you’re concerned about. Why alarm her
needlessly? We just want to talk to you. Besides,” he added darkly, taking a
calculated risk, “you don’t have any choice but to listen to me. Not if you
want to see your pet alive again.” “It’s only a pet snake.” Flinx affected an air of
indifference he didn’t feel. “What if I refuse to go with you? There are plenty
of other pets to be had.” The speaker shook his head slowly, his tone
maddeningly knowledgeable. “Not like
this one. That flying snake’s a part of
you, isn’t it?” “How do you know that?” Flinx asked. “How do you
know how I feel about him?” “Because despite what you may think of me right
now,” the speaker said, feeling a little more confident, “I am wise in the ways
of certain things. If you’ll let me, I’ll share that knowledge with you.” Flinx hesitated, torn between concern for Pip and a
sense of foreboding that had nothing to do with his peculiar Talents. But the
man was right: there was no choice. He wouldn’t chance Pip’s coming to harm
even though he couldn’t have said why. “All right.” He started toward the speaker. “I’ll go
with you. You’d better be telling the truth.” “About not wishing to harm you or your pet?” The
smile grew wider. “I promise you that I am.” Try as he might, Flinx couldn’t sense any inimical
feelings emanating from the little man. Given the erratic nature of his
abilities, that proved nothing-for all Flinx could tell, the man might be
planning murder even as he stood there smiling. Up close, the speaker looked
even less formidable. He was barely Flinx’s height, and though not as ancient
as Mother Mastiff, it was doubtful he would be much opposition in a
hand-to-hand fight. “This is my friend and associate Stanzel,” the man
said. An equally elderly woman stepped out of the shadows. She seemed tired but
forced herself to stand straight and look determined. “I don’t want to hurt you, either, boy.” She studied
him with unabashed curiosity. “None of us do.” “So there are still more of you,” Flinx murmured in
confusion. “I don’t understand all this. Why do you have to keep persecuting
Mother Mastiff and me? And now Pip, too? Why?” “Everthing will be explained to you,” the woman
assured him, “if you’ll just come with us.” She gestured up the alley. Flinx strode along between them, noting as he did so
that neither of them appeared to be armed. That was a good sign but a puzzling
one. His stiletto felt cold against his calf. He looked longingly back toward
the shop. If only he could have told Mother Mastiff! But, he reminded himself,
as long as he returned by bedtime, she wouldn’t worry herself. She was used to
his taking off on unannounced explorations. “Mark me words,” she would declaim repeatedly, “that
curiosity of yours will be the death of ye!” If it didn’t involve striking against Mother
Mastiff, though, then what did these people want with him? It was important to
them, very important. If not, they wouldn’t have risked an encounter with his
deadly pet. Despite their age, he still feared them, if only for the fact that
they had apparently managed to capture Pip, a feat beyond the capabilities of
most. But something, an attitude perhaps, marked these
people as different from the usual run-of-the-mill marketplace cutthroats. They
were different from any people he had ever encountered. Their coolness and
indifference combined with their calm professionalism to frighten him. “They alley opened onto a side street, where an
aircar waited. The old man unlocked it and gestured for him to enter. As Flinx
started to step into the little cab, he experienced one of those mysterious,
unannounced bursts of emotional insight. It was brief, so brief he was unsure
he had actually felt it. It wiped out his own fear, leaving him more confused
and uncertain than ever. He might be afraid for Pip and perhaps even a little
for himself, but for some unknown reason, these two outwardly relaxed,
supremely confident individuals were utterly terrified of him! Chapter Sixteen
Cruachan studied the readouts carefully. The section
of the old warehouse in which they had established them-selves was a poor
substitute for the expensively outfitted installation they had laboriously
constructed far to the north. He did not dwell on the loss. Years of
disappointment had inured him to such setbacks. The machines surrounding him
had been hastily assembled and linked together. Wiring was exposed everywhere,
further evidence of haste and lack of time to install equipment properly. It
would have to do, however. He was not disappointed. In spite of all their
problems, they appeared on the verge of accomplishing what they had intended to
do on this world, albeit not in the manner originally planned. It seemed that
the presence of the Alaspinian immigrant was going to turn to their ad-
vantage. For the first time since they had placed them- selves in orbit around
the world, he felt more than merely hopeful. His confidence came from Anders’
and Stanzel’s last report. The subject,
accompanying them quietly, seemed reluctantly willing to cooperate, but had
thus far displayed no sign of unexpected threatening abilities. While a potentially lethal act, the taking of the subject’s
pet had turned out far more successful than the attempted adjustment of the
subject’s adoptive parent. Cruachan now conceded that that had been a mistake.
If only their information had included mention of the catalyst creature in the
first place! He did not blame the informant, though. It was likely that the
minidrag came into the subject’s possession subsequent to the filing of the
informant’s report. He felt like an old tooth, cracked and worn down by
overuse and age. But with the semisymbiotic pet now under their control, the
subject would have to accede to their wishes. There could no longer be any
consideration of at- tempting to influence the boy externally. They would have
to implant the electronic synapses intended ‘for his parent in the lad’s own
brain. Direct control posed some risks, but as far as Cruachan and his
associates could see, they had no other choice. Cruachan was glad the case was
nearing conclusion. He was very tired. It was raining harder than usual for the season when
the little aircar pulled up outside the warehouse. Flinx regarded the place with distaste. The section of Drallar
out toward the shuttleport was bloated with stark, blocky monuments to bad
business and overconsumption, peopled mostly with machines-dark, uninviting,
and alien. He had no thought of changing his mind, of making a
break for the nearest side street or half-open doorway. Whoever these people
were, they were not ignorant. They had correctly surmised the intensity of his
feelings for Pip, which was why they had not bound him and carried no arms. He still couldn’t figure out what they wanted with
him. If they were not lying to him and truly meant him no harm, then of what
use could he be to them? If there was .one thing he couldn’t stand, it was
unanswered questions. He wanted explanations almost as badly as he wanted to
see Pip. They seemed very sure of themselves. Of course, that
no weapons were in evidence did not mean no weapons were around. He could not
square their fear of him with the absence of armament. Perhaps, he mused, they
were afraid of him because they feared he might reveal what he knew of the
kidnaping to the local authorities. Maybe that was what they wanted from. him:
a promise to remain silent. But somehow that didn’t make much sense, either. “I wish you’d tell me what you want with me,” he
said aloud, “and what’s going on.” “It’s not our place to explain.” The man glanced at
his companion and then said, as if unable to suppress his own curiosity, “Have
you ever heard of the Meliorate Society?” Flinx shook his head. “No. I know what the word
means, though. What’s it got to do with me?” “Everything.” He seemed on the verge of saying more,
but the old woman shushed him. The building they entered was surrounded by
similarly nondescript edifices. They were off the main shuttleport accessway.
Flinx had seen only a few people about from the time they had entered the area.
No one was in the dingy hallway. They rode an elevator to the third floor. His
escorts led him through broad, empty corridors, past high-ceilinged storage
rooms filled with plasticine crates and drums. Finally, they halted before a
small speaker set into the plastic of an unmarked door. Words were exchanged
between Flinx’s escort and someone on the other side, and the door opened to
admit them. He found himself in still another room crammed full
of bundles and boxes. What set it apart from a dozen similar rooms was the
right-hand wall. Stacked against it was an impressive array of
electronics. Empty crates nearby hinted
at recent and hasty unpacking and setup. The con- soles were powered-up and
manned. Their operators spared curious glances for the new arrivals before
returning their attention to their equipment. Save for their uniformly grim
expressions, they looked like retirees on a holiday outing. Two people emerged from a door at the rear of the
room. They were soon joined by a third-a tall, silver- haired, ruggedly
handsome man.’ He carried himself like a born leader, and Flinx concentrated on
him immediately. The man smiled down at Flinx. Even though he was close to
Mother Mastiff’s age, the man held himself straight. If he was subject to the
infirmities of old age, he did a masterful job of concealing them. Vanity or
will? Flinx wondered. He sought the man’s emotions and drew the usual blank.
Nor could he feel anything of Pip’s presence in the room or nearby. Even as the tall senior was shaking his hand and
mouthing platitudes, Flinx was searching for the most likely escape route.
There seemed to be only one exit: the door through which he had entered. He had
no idea where the door at the far end of the room led, but suspected that
freedom was not one of the possibilities. “What a great pleasure to finally meet you, my boy,”
the old man was saying. His grip was firm. “We’ve gone to a great deal of
trouble to arrive at this meeting. I would rather not have had to proceed in
this fashion, but circum- stances conspired to force my hand.” “It was you, then”-Flinx gestured at the others-“who
were responsible for abducting my mother?” Cruachan relaxed. There was no danger in this
skinny, innocent boy. Whatever abilities he might possess remained dormant,
awaiting proper instruction and develop- ment. Certainly his attitude was
anything but threatening. “I asked him,” the man who had brought Flinx from
the marketplace reported, “if he’d heard of the Society. He said no.” “No reason for him to,” Cruachan observed. “His life
has been restricted, his horizons limited.” Flinx ignored that appraisal of his limitations.
“Where’s Pip?” “Your pet, I assume? Yes.” The tall man turned and
called out toward the rear doorway. The section of wall containing the door
creaked as hidden winches pulled it aside. Beyond lay still another of the
endless series of storage chambers, packed with the usual containers and drums
and crates. On a table in the forefront stood a transparent cube, perhaps a
meter square, topped with several small metal tanks. Hoses ran from the tanks
into the cube. To the left of the table stood a nervous-looking old
man holding a small, flat control box. His thumb was pressed hard against one
of the buttons set in the box. His eyes shifted regularly from the cube to
Flinx and back to the cube. Pip lay in the bottom of the cube, coiled into
itself apparently deep in sleep. Flmx took a step forward. Cruachan put out a
hand to hold him back. “Your pet is resting comfortably. The air in the
cage has been mixed with a mild soporific. Westhoff is regulating the mixture
and flow of gases even as we speak. H you were to try anything foolish, he
would increase the flow from the tanks before you could possibly free your pet.
You see, the cage has been weld-sealed. There is no latch. “The adjusted normal atmosphere inside the cube will
be completely replaced by the narcoleptic gas, and your pet will be
asphyxiated. It would not take long. All West- hoff has to do is press
violently on the button his thumb is caressing. If necessary, he will throw his
body across it. So you see, there is nothing you could do to prevent him from
carrying out his assignment.” Flinx listened quietly even as he was gauging the
distance between himself and the cage. The elderly man holding the control box
gazed grimly back at him. Even if be could somehow avoid the hands that would
surely reach out to restrain him, he did not see how he could open the cage and
free Pip. His stiletto would be useless against the thick pancrylic. “You’ve made your point,” he said finally. “What do
you want from me?” “Redemption,” Cruachan told him softly. “I don’t understand.” “You will eventually, I hope. For now, suffice for
you to know that we are interested in your erratic but unarguable abilities:
your Talent.” All Flinx’s preconceived ideas collapsed like sand
castles in a typhoon. “You mean you’ve gone through all this, kidnaping Mother
Mastiff and now Pip, just because you’re curious about my abilities?” He shook
his head in disbelief. “I would have done my best to satisfy you with- out your
having to go through all this trouble.” “It’s not quite that simple. You might say one
thing, even believe it, and then your mind might react other- wise.” Crazier
and crazier, Flinx thought dazedly. “I don’t “Just as well,” Cruachan murmured. “You are an
emotional telepath, is that not correct?” “I’m sensitive sometimes to what other people are
feeling, if that’s what you mean,” Flinx replied belligerently. “Nothing else? No precognitive abilities?
Telekinesis? True telepathy? Pyrokinesis? Dimensional perceptivity?” Plinx laughed at him, the sound sharpened by the
tension that filled the room. “I don’t even know what those words mean except
for telepathy. If by that you mean can I read other people’s minds, no. Only
sometimes their feelings. That other stuff, that’s all fantasy, isn’t it?” “Not entirely,” Cruachan replied softly, “not entirely.
“The potentials lie within every human mind, or so we of the Society believe.
When awakened, further stimuli, pro- vided through training and other means,
can bring such abilities to full life. That was the-“ He paused, his smile
returning. “As I said, someday you will understand everything,
I hope. For now, it will be sufficient if you will permit us to run some tests
on you. We wish to measure the probable limits of your Talent and test for
other possible hidden abilities as yet undeveloped.” “What kinds of tests?” Flinx regarded the tail man
warily. “Nothing elaborate. Measurements,
electroencephalotopography.” “That sounds elaborate to me.” “I assure you, there will be no discomfort. If
you’ll just come with me ...” He put a fatherly hand on Flinx’s shoulder. Flinx
flinched. There should have been a snake there, not an unfamiliar hand. Cruachan guided him toward the instruments. “I
promise you, give us twenty-four hours and you’ll have your pet restored to you
unharmed, and you’ll never have to go through this again.” “I don’t know,” Flinx told him. “I’m still not sure
of what you want from me.” It seemed to him that there was an awful lot of
instrumentation around for just a few simple tests, and some of it looked
almost familiar. Where had he seen that tendriled globe before? Over a table in a room far to the north, he realized
suddenly. What do I do? he thought frantically. He could not
lie down on that table, beneath those waiting tentacles. But if he hesitated,
what might they do to Pip out of impatience and anger? Unexpectedly, as his thoughts were tied in knots and
he tried to decide what to do next, a sudden surge of emotion burst into his
brain. There was hate and a little fear and a self-righteous anger that
bordered on the paranoiac. He looked up at Cruachan. The older man smiled
pleasantly down at him, then frowned as he saw the expression that had come
over the subject’s face. “Is some- thing wrong?” Hinx did not reply, methodically searching every
face in the room. None of them seemed to be the source of the feelings he was
receiving. And they were getting steadily stronger, more intense. They
came-they came from- He looked sharply toward the main entrance. “Nobody move!” snapped a determined voice. The
couple who burst through the door, having quietly circum- vented the lock, were
complete strangers to Flinx. A middle-aged pair dressed like offworld tourists,
each holding a gun bigger than a pistol and longer than a rifle carefully
balanced in both hands, they surveyed the startled occupants of the storage
chamber. Flinx did not recognize their weapons. That was un-
usual. His learning expeditions through the marketplace had made him familiar
with most personal armament. But these were new to him. As new as this couple.
They looked unrelentingly average. There was nothing average about the way they
moved, however, or gave commands or held those peculiar guns. The Meliorares
certainly seemed familiar with them. “MO Section, Commonwealth Peaceforce,” the man
barked. “All of you are under government detention as of this moment.” He
grinned crookedly, almost savagely. “The charges against you, the specifics of
which I’m sure you’re all quite familiar with, are many and varied. I don’t
think I have to go into details.” Flinx started gratefully toward them. “I don’t know
how you people found me, but I’m sure glad to see you.” “Hold it right there.” The woman shifted her weapon
toward him. The expression on her face assured Plinx she was ready to shoot him
if he took so much as another half step toward her. He froze, hurt and
confused. There was something new there, partly in her eyes
but also in her mind: not so much fear as a kind of twisted hatred, a loathing.
The emotion was directed squarely at him. It was so new, so alien and
sickening, that he didn’t know how to react. He knew only that his would-be
saviors held no more affection for him, and perhaps even less in the way of
good intentions) than this insane society of Meliorare people. His confusion was being replaced by anger, a frantic
fury born of frustration and despair, compounded by helplessness and
desperation. Through no fault of his own, de- siring only to be left alone, he
had become the focal point of forces beyond his control, forces that extended
even be- yond his world. And he didn’t know how, couldn’t begin to think how to
deal with them. Through all the confusion came one lucid
realization: he wasn’t as grown-up as he had thought. Near the back room the man named Westhoff had gone unnoticed
by the Peaceforcers. He did not linger. Putting aside the control box he
commenced a cautious retreat, utilizing crates and containers to make good his
escape. Pressure removed, the button he had been holding
down rebounded. “Over against that empty packing and away from the
consoles. All of you,” the woman commanded them, gesturing meaningfully with
her gun. Rising from their seats and showing empty hands, the Meliorares
hurried to comply with her order. “Anybody touches a switch,” the other Peaceforcer
warned them, “it’ll be the last thing he ever touches.” The woman threw Flinx a hard look. “Hey, you too.
Move it.” Revulsion emanated from her. Disgust and pity washed over Flinx in
waves. She was broadcasting them all. Flinx tried to squeeze the degrading
emotions out of his mind. “I’m not with them,” he protested. “I’m not part of
this.” “I’m afraid that you are, boy, whether you like it
or not,” she told him. “You’ve caused a lot of trouble. But don’t worry.” She
tried to smile. The result was a discomfiting parody. “Everything’s going to be
all right. You’re going to be fixed up so you can live a normal life.” A buzzer suddenly roared to life on one of the
unattended consoles, filling the room with insistent discordance. Cruachan
stared dumbly at it, then at Flinx, then at the Peaceforcers. “For heaven’s sake, don’t threaten him!” “Threaten me?” Flinx was almost crying now, ignoring
Cruachan’s sudden terror, the buzzing, everything, as he spoke to the female
Peaceforcer. “What does he mean, threaten me? What did you mean when you said
you’re going to have me fixed up? I’m fine” “Maybe you are, and maybe you aren’t,” she replied,
“but these Meliorares,” she spat the word out, “seem to think otherwise. That’s
good enough for me. I’m no specialist. They’re the ones who’ll decide what’s to
bedone with you.” “And the sooner the better,” her companion added.
“Did you call for backup?” “As soon as we were sure.” She nodded. “It’ll take
them a few minutes to get here. This isn’t Brizzy, you know.” Flinx felt unsteady on his feet as well as in his
mind. Where he had expected rescue, there was only new hurt, fresh
indifference. No, worse than indifference, for these people saw him only as
some kind of deformed, unhealthy creature. There was no understanding for him
here in this room, not from his ancient persecutors or these new ar- rivals.
The universe, as represented by organizations illegal and legitimate, seemed
wholly against him. Fixed, the woman had said. He was going to be fixed.
But there was nothing wrong with him. Nothing! Why do they want to do these
unnamable things to me? he thought angrily. The pain and confusion produced results unnoticed by
the anxious antagonists facing each other across the floor. Prodded by the
powerful emotions emanating from his master, half-awakened by the thinning
quantity of soporific gas entering its cage, the flying snake awoke. It did not
need to search visually for Flinx- his outburst of hurt was a screaming beacon
marking his location. The snake’s wings remained folded as it quickly
examined its prison. Then it rose up and spat. In the confused babble that
filled the opposite end of the room, the quiet hissing of dissolving pancrylic
Went unnoticed. “Let’s get them outside.” The male Peaceforcer moved
to his right, separating from his companion to stand to one side of the
entrance while she moved to get behind the shifting group gathered in the
middle of the room. “Single file now,” she ordered them, gesturing with
her gun. “All of you. And please keep your hands in the air. No dramatic
last-minute gestures, please. I don’t like a mess.” Cruachan pleaded with her. “Please, we’re just a
bunch of harmless old scholars. This is our last chance. This boy”-and he
indicated Flinx- “may be our last opportunity to prove-“ “I’ve studied your history, read the reports.” “The woman’s voice was icy. “What you did is
beyond redemption or forgiving. You’ll get just what you deserve, and it won’t
be a chance to experiment further on this poor, mal- formed child.” “Please, somebody,” Flinx said desperately, “I don’t
know what you’re talking about! Won’t somebody tell me-?” “Somebody probably will,” she told him. “I’m not
privy to the details, and explanations aren’t my department.” She shuddered
visibly. “Fortunately.” “Rose, look out!” At the warning cry from her
companion, the woman whirled. There was something in the air, humming like a
giant bumblebee, moving rapidly from place to place: a pink and blue blur
against the ceiling. “What the hell’s that?” she blurted. Flinx started to answer, but Cruachan spoke first,
taking a step out of the line and toward the Peaceforcer. “That’s the boy’s
pet, I don’t know how it got out. It’s dangerous.” “Oh, it is, is it?” The muzzle of the short rifle
came up. “No!” Cruachan rushed toward her, the console buzzer
screaming in his ears. “Don’t!” The Peaceforcer reacted instinctively to the
unexpected charge. A brief burst of high-intensity sound struck the leader of
the Meliorares. His stomach exploded through his spine. No sound had come from
the gun. There had been only a slight punching noise when the burst had struck
home. One of the elderly women screamed. The Peaceforcer
cursed her overanxiousness and took aim at the source of her embarrassment. As
she pointed her weapon at Pip, all the fury and pain and anguish crashed
together inside Flinx’s head. “Pip! No’.” he yelled, rushing the woman. The other
Peaceforcer moved to cover his companion. Pip darted toward the rear of the storage
room. The woman’s gun tracked the minidrag as her finger started to tighten on
the trigger. Something happened. Cruachan’s eyes were still open.
A smile of satisfaction appeared on his face. Then he died. Night descended unexpectedly. Flinx was floating inside a giant bass drum. Someone
was pounding on it from both sides. The rhythm was erratic, the sound
soul-deafening. It hurt. Something was resting on his chest. I am lying on my
back, he thought. He raised his head to look down at him- self. Pip lay on the
slickertic, bruised but alive. The flying snake looked dazed. As consciousness
returned with a vengeance, the narrow tongue darted out repeatedly to touch
Plinx’s lips and nose. Content, the minidrag ceased its examination and crawled
from chest to shoulder. Flinx fought to sit up. There was something wrong with his balance. It made
the simple act of changing from a prone to a sitting position into a major
operation. Two things he noted immediately; it was cold, and rain was soaking
his face. Then his vision cleared and he saw the old man bending over him. For an instant the fear returned, but this was no
Meliorare. It was a kindly, unfamiliar face. The oldster was dressed very
differently from the Society members. There hadn’t been anything shabby about
their attire. This stranger was a refugee from a simpler life. “Are you all right, boy?” He looked over his
shoulder. “I think he’s all right.” Flinx looked past the old man. Several other
strangers were gathered behind him. It occurred to Flinx that he was the center
of their concerned curiosity. Strong arms reached toward him and helped him to
his feet. There were comments about the flying snake riding his shoulder. A younger man stepped forward. “You okay?” He
searched Flinx’s face. “I’ve had a little medical training.” “I’m not-1 think-“ Funny, his mouth wasn’t working
right. He swallowed. “What happened?” “You tell me,” said the unsmiling young man. He was
dressed neatly, much more so than the oldster who had first examined Flinx. A
yellow-and-green-striped slickertic covered what Flinx could see of a brightly
colored business suit. “I’m a factotum for the Subhouse of Grandier. I was
Just coming down to check on the arrival of a recent shipment from Evoria.” He
turned and pointed. “That’s our warehouse over there. I nearly tripped over
you.” “Me, too,” the oldster said, “though I’m no factotum
for anybody ‘cept my own house.” He grinned, showing missing teeth. Flinx brushed wet strands of hair from his eyes and
forehead. How had he gotten so wet? He couldn’t remember lying down in the
street. He couldn’t remember lying down at all. Now that those around him had quieted, the roar that
had filled his ears since he had regamed consciousness assumed deafening
proportions. Sirens sounded in counter- part. A couple of blocks away, flames shot skyward from
the top of a warehouse in defiance of the steady, light rain. A fire-control
skimmer hovered off to one side, its crew spraying the flames with
fire-retardant chemical foam. It combined with the rain to knock the blaze back
into itself. “Anyway,” the younger man next to Flinx continued as
they both watched the dying inferno, “I was just entering our office over there
when that building”-he nodded toward the flames-“blew up. If I remember aright,
it was four or five stories tall. There are only two left, as you can see. Top
three must’ve been incinerated in the first seconds. There’s charred debris all
over the streets. Knocked me right off my feet, just like you.” Flinx’s gaze
roved over the crowd that had gathered to watch the unusual sight. Large fires
were rare in Drallar. “Somebody’s let themselves in for a nest o’
trouble,” the oldster muttered. “Storing explosives or volatiles inside the
city limits. Bad business. Bad.” “Someone told me they felt it all the way to the
inurbs,” the younger man said conversationally. “I wonder what the devil was stored in there to cause an
explosion like that? Piece of building went past me like a shot. It’s stuck: in
our front door, no less, if you want to see it. As I was getting up, I saw you
lying there in the street. Either something mercifully small hit you or else
you got knocked out when your head hit the pavement.” “I didn’t see him get hit,” the oldster said. “Doesn’t mean anything, as fast as stuff was flying.”
The executive looked at Flinx. “I’ll bet you never even felt it.” “No,” Fllinx admitted, still terribly confused. “I
didn’t. But I’m okay now.” “You’re sure?” The man looked him over. “Funny.
Whatever it was that knocked you down must have whizzed right past. I don’t see
any bruises or cuts, though it looks like your pet got a little banged up.” “Can do you like that,” the oldster said. “ “Nother
centimeter and maybe you’d have a piece of metal sticking out of your head.
Conversation piece.” He chuckled. Flinx managed a weak grin. “I feel all right now.”
He swayed a moment, then held steady. The executive was still studying the minidrag coiled
around Flinx’s left shoulder. “That’s an interesting pet, all right.” “Everybody thinks so. Thanks for your concern, both
of you.” He staggered forward and joined the ring of spectators gawking at the
obliterated building. Slowly, reluctantly, his brain filled in the blank
spaces pockmarking his memory. Third floor, he’d been up there, and the
Meliorares ... Yes, the Meliorares-that was their name-were getting ready to
run some tests on him. Then the Peaceforcers had broken in, and Pip had gotten
loose, and one of them had been ready to shoot it, and the head Meliorare-Flinx
couldn’t remember his name, only his eyes-had panicked and rushed the
Peaceforcer, and Flinx remembered screaming desperately for the woman not to
fire, not to hurt Pip, not to, not to-! “Then he had awakened, soaked and stunned in the street,
an old man bending solicitously over him and Pip licking his mouth. His hand went to the back of his head, which
throbbed like the drum he had dreamed of being imprisoned inside. There was no
lump there, no blood, but it sure felt like something had whacked him good,
just as the executive had surmised. Only the pain seemed concentrated inside
his head. People were emerging from the burning warehouse:
medical personnel in white slickertics. They were escorting someone between
them. The woman’s clothes were shredded, and blood filled the gaps. Though she
walked under her own power, it took two medics to guide her. Suddenly, Flinx could feel her, for just an instant.
But there was no emotion there, no emotion or feelings of any kind. Then he
noticed her eyes. Her stare was vacant, blank, without motivation. Probably the
explosion had stunned her, he thought. She was the Peaceforcer who had been
about to shoot Pip. In a hospital that blankness would doubtless wear
off, he thought. Though it was almost as if she had been mind- wiped, and not
selectively, either. She looked like a walking husk of a human being. Flinx
turned away from her, uncomfortable without really knowing why, as she was put
in a hospital skimmer. The vehicle rose above the crowd and headed downtown,
siren screaming. Still he fought to reconstruct those last seconds in
the warehouse. What had happened? That unfortunate woman had been about to kill
Pip. Flinx had started toward her, protesting frantically, and her companion
had started to aim his own weapon at him. The weapons themselves functioned
noiselessly. Had the woman fired? Had the man? The instrumentation that had filled the storage
chamber required a lot of power. If the Peaceforcer had missed Flinx, perhaps
deliberately firing a warning shot, the bolt might have struck something
equally sensitive but far more volatile than human flesh. As a rule, warehouses
did not draw much power. There might have been delicately attuned fuel cells in
the room. The shot might have set them off. Or had one of the Meliorares-perhaps the one who had
fled from Pip’s cage-set off some kind of suicide device to keep his colleagues
from the disgrace of an official trial? He felt much better as he considered
both reason- able explanations. They fit what had happened, were very
plausible. . The only thing they failed to explain was bow he had
landed two blocks away, apparently unhurt except for a raging headache. Well, he had been moving toward the door, and
explosions could do funny things. The streets of the industrial district were
notorious for their potholes, which were usually full of rain water. And he was
soaked. Could the force of the explosion have thrown him into one deep enough
to cushion his fall and cause him to skip out again like a stone on a pond?
Obviously, that was what had happened. There was no other possible explanation. His head hurt. Local gendarmes were finally beginning to show up.
At their arrival Flinx instinctively turned away, leaving the crowd behind and
cradling Pip beneath his slickertic. He was glad that he hadn’t been forced to
use his own knife, felt lucky to be alive. Maybe now, at last, external forces
would leave him and Mother Mastiff and Pip in peace. He thought back a last time to that final instant in
the warehouse. The rage and desperation had built up in him until he had been
unable to stand it any longer and had charged blindly at the Peaceforcer about
to kill Pip. He hoped he would never be that angry again in his life. The crowd ignored the boy as he fled the scene; he
vanished into the comforting shadows and narrow alleys that filtered back
toward the central city. There was nothing remarkable about him and no reason
for the gendarmes to stop and question him. The old man and the executive who
had found him lying in the street had already forgot- ten him, engrossed in the
unusual sight of a major fire in perpetually damp Drallar. Flinx made his way back toward the more animated
sections of the city, toward the arguing and shouting and smells and sights of
the marketplace and Mother Mastiff’s warm, familiar little shop. He was sorry.
Sorry for all the trouble he seemed to have caused. Sorry for the funny old
Meliorares who were no more. Sorry for the overzealous Peaceforcers. Mother Mastiff wouldn’t be sorry, he knew. She could
be as vindictive as an AAnn, especially if anything close to her had been
threatened. For himself, however, he regretted the deaths of so
many. All for nothing, all because of some erratic, harmless, usually useless
emotion-reading ability he possessed. Their own fault, though. Everything that
happened was their own fault, Meliorares and Peaceforcers alike. He tried to
warn them. Never try to come between a boy and his snake. The damp trek homeward exhausted his remaining
strength. Never before had the city seemed so immense, its byways and side
streets so convoluted and tortuous. He was completely worn out. Mother Mastiff was manning the shop, waiting for him
as anxiously as she awaited customers. Her thin, aged arm was strong as she
slipped it around his back and helped him the last agonizing steps into the
store. “I’ve been worried like to death over ye, boy! Damn ye for causing a
poor old woman such distress.” Her fingers touched his bruised cheeks, his
forehead, as her eyes searched for serious damage. “And you’re all cut up and
bleeding. What’s to become of ye, Flinx? Ye have got to learn to stay out of
trouble.” He summoned up a grin, glad to be home. “It seems to
come looking for me, Mother.” “Hmpnh! Excuses. The boy’s wit is chock full of
excuses. What happened to ye?” He tried to marshal his thoughts as he slid Pip out
from beneath the slickertic. Mother Mastiff backed away. The millidrag was as
limp as a piece of rope. It lay curled up in its master’s lap, if not asleep
then giving a fine scaly imitation of some similar state. “Some people kidnaped Pip. They called themselves
Meliorares. But they really wanted me. They-“ His expression screwed tight as
he remembered, “One of them said something about wanting to fix me. Fix what?
What did they want with me?” She considered a long moment, studying the boy.
Truly, it appeared that he was telling the truth, that he had learned no more
than what he said. Ignoring the proximity of the hated flying snake, she sat
down and put an arm around his shoulders. “Now mark me well, boy, because this is vital to ye.
I don’t have to tell ye that you’re different. You’ve always been different. Ye
have to hide that as best ye can, and we’ll have to hide ourselves. Drallar’s a
big place. We can move the shop if need be. But you’re going to have to learn
to live quietly, and you’re going to have to keep your differences to yourself,
or we’ll be plagued with more of this unwelcome and unwholesome attention.” “It’s all so silly, Mother, lust because I can
sometimes sense what other people are feeling?” “That. And maybe more.” “There isn’t anything more. That’s all I can do.” “Is it, boy? How did ye get away from these people.”
She looked past him toward the street, suddenly concerned. “Will they be coming
after ye again?” “I don’t think so. Most of them were kind of dead
when I left. I don’t know how I got away from them. I think one of them shot at
something explosive and it blew up. I was blown clear out of a building and
into the street.” “Lucky to be alive ye are, it seems, though by what
providence I wonder. Maybe ‘tis best this way. Maybe ‘tis best ye don’t know
too much about yourself just yet. Your mind always was advanced of your body,
and maybe there’s something more that’s advanced even of that.” “But I don’t want to be different,” he insisted,
almost crying. “I just want to be like everyone else.” “I know ye do, boy,” she said gently, “but each of
us must play the cards fate deals us, and if you’ve been stuck with the joker,
you’ll just have to learn to cope with it, turn it to your advantage somehow.” “I don’t want any advantage! Not if it’s going to
cause us this kind of trouble.” “I’ll have none of that, boy! A difference can
always be to one’s advantage. ‘Tis time ye chose a profession. I know you’ve no
like for running a shop like this one. What is it ye like to do?” He mulled it over a while before replying. “All I
enjoy doing is making other people happy.” She shook her head sadly. “Sometimes I think you’ve
not enough self-interest to keep yourself alive. However, if that’s what ye
like, then you’ll have to find some way to earn a living at it.” “Sometimes I dream of becoming a doctor and healing
people.” “I’d advise ye to set your sights a bit lower, boy.” “All right. An actor, then.” “Nay, not that low. Be sensible. Set yourself to
some- thing ye can do now, without years of study.” “I could perform right here in the marketplace,” he
said thoughtfully. “I can juggle pretty good. You’ve seen me.” “Aye, and yelled at ye often enough for practicing
with my expensive baubles. But ‘tis a sound thought. We must find ye a good
street corner. Surely ye can’t get into trouble performing before these simple
locals.” “Sure! I’ll go and practice right now.” “Easy, boy, easy. You’re nearly asleep on your feet,
and I’ll not have ye breaking either my goods or yourself. Go inside and lie
down. I’ll be in soon to fix ye something to eat. Go on now, boy, and be sure
and take your monster with ye.” Cradling the exhausted Pip in his hands, Flinx rose
and made his way through the displays to the section of the shop that served as
their home. Mother Mastiff’s eyes followed him. What was to become of the boy? Somehow he had come
to the attention of powerful, dangerous people. At least there was a good chance
they wouldn’t be bothered for a while. Not if he had left them “kind of dead.” How had he escaped? Sometimes he still frightened
her. Oh, not because he would ever harm a hair of her old head. Quite the
contrary, as his dogged pursuit and rescue of her these past days had proven.
But there were forces at work within that adolescent body, forces beyond the
comprehension of a simple shopkeeper, forces he might not be able to control.
And there was more to it than reading the emotions of others. Of that she was
certain. How much more she could only suspect, for it was clear enough the boy
had little awareness of them himself. Well, let him play at the trade of jongleur for a
while. Surely that was harmless. Surely he could not find much trouble plying
so simple an occupation. She told herself that repeatedly all the rest of the
after- noon and on into evening as she sat watching him sleep. When she finally
slipped into her own bed, she thought she had put such imaginary fears beyond
her, but such was not the case. She sensed that the boy lying content and peaceful
in the room opposite hers was destined for more than an idle life of
entertaining on street corners. Much
more. She knew somehow that a damnable universe, which was al- ways sticking
its cosmic nose into the destinies of innocent citizens, would never let anyone
as unique as Flinx alone. DON’T MISS THE CONTINUING ADVENTURES OF FLINX AND PIP IN; THE TAR-AIYM KRANG ORPHAN STAR THE END OF THE MATTER and BLOODHYPE ******************************************************* Note: Map of the Commonwealth
and its Chronology Published in 05: Flinx in Flux ******************************************************* About
the Author
Born in New York City in 1946,
Alan Dean Foster was raised in Los Angeles, California. After receiving a
bachelor’s degree in political science and a Master of Fine Arts in motion
pictures from UCLA in 1968-69, he worked for two years as a public relations
copywriter in a small Studio City, California, firm. His writing career began
in 1968 when August Derleth bought a long letter of Foster’s and published it
as a short story in his biannual Arkham Collector Magazine. Sales of short
fiction to other magazines followed. His first try at a novel. The Tar-Aiym
Krang, was published by Ballantine Books in 1972. Foster has toured extensively
through Asia and the isles of the Pacific. Besides traveling, he enjoys
classical and rock music, old films, basketball, body surfing, and karate. He
has taught screenwriting, literature, and film history at UCLA and Los Angeles
City College. Currently, he resides in Arizona
with his wife JoAnn (who is reputed to have the only extant recipe for
Barbarian Cream Pie). |
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