“Meerrreee?” A soft sound with a
definite note of inquiry. For the first time Charis looked closely
at her fellow fugitive, meeting as searching a gaze turned up at
her.
The fur which covered its whole body was in tight, tiny curls,
satin-soft against her hands. It had four limbs ending in clawed
paws, but the claws were retractable and no longer caught in her
clothing. There was a short tail like a fringed flap, now tucked
neatly down against the haunches. The head was round, sloping to a
blunt muzzle. Only the ears seemed out of proportion to the rest.
They were large and wide, set sideways instead of opening forward
toward the front of the skull, and their pointed tips had small
tassel-tufts of gray fur of the same color that ringed the large
and strikingly blue eyes and ran in narrow lines down the inner
sides of the legs and on the belly.
Those eyes— Fascinated, Charis found it difficult to look
away from the eyes. She was not trained in beast-empathy, but she
could not deny there was an aura of intelligence about this small
and appealing creature which made her want to claim a measure of
kinship. Yet, for all its charm, it was not to be only cuddled and
caressed; Charis was as certain of that as if it had addressed her
clearly in Basic. It was more than animal, even if she was not sure
how.
“Meerrreee!” No inquiry now but impatience. It
squirmed a little in her hold. Once more a pale yellow tongue made
a lightning dab against her skin. Charis released her grip, fearing
for an instant that it would leave her. But it jumped from her lap
to the rough floor of the crevice and stood looking at the forest
from which its enemy had emerged.
Enemy? The Survey man! Charis had almost forgotten him. What had
restrained her from hailing him? Perhaps his very being here had
been the answer to her call from the post. But why had she not been
allowed to meet him? For allowed was the proper term. A
prohibition she could not explain had been laid upon her. And
Charis knew, without trying such an experiment, that if she
attempted to go to the wood she would not be able to push past an
invisible wall someone or something had used to cut her off.
“Meeerreee?” Again a question from the furred one.
It paused, one front paw slightly raised, looking back at her from
the entrance to the crevice.
Suddenly Charis wanted to get out of this moss-carpeted land.
The frustration of her flight from the very help she wished was
sour in her. Up over the cliff wall back to the sea— The
longing to be again beside the waves was a pulling pain.
“Back to the sea.” She said that aloud as if the
furred one could understand. She came out of the crevice and
glanced up for a way to climb.
“Meeree . . . ”
Charis had expected the animal to vanish into the moss meadow.
Instead, it was demanding her attention in its own way before it
moved sure-footedly along, angling up the surface of the cliff.
Charis followed, warmed by the realization that the animal appeared
to have joined forces with her, if only temporarily. Perhaps its
fear of the enemy in the forest was so overpowering it wanted the
promised protection of her company.
While she was not as agile as the animal, Charis was not far
behind when they reached the crest of the cliff. From here one
could look down on the expanse of the sea and a line of silver
beach. There was a feeling of peace. Peace? For an instant Charis
recaptured the feeling she had known in that first
dream—contentment and peace. The animal trotted ahead, south
along the cliff top. From this point the drop to the sand was too
sheer to descend, so Charis again followed the other’s
lead.
They came down to the silver strand by a path her companion
found. But when Charis would have gone on south, the Warlockian
creature brushed about her ankles, uttering now and then an
imperative cry, plainly wanting her to remain. At last she dropped
down to sit facing the sea, and then, looking about her, she was
startled. This was the cove of her first dream
exactly.
“Meerree?” That tongue-tip touch, a sense of
reassurance, a small warm body pressed against hers, a feeling of
contentment—that all was
well . . . coming from her companion or out of
some depth within herself? Charis did not know.
They came out of the sea, though the girl had not seen them
swimming in. But these were not a threat like the fork-tail. Charis
drew a deep breath of wonder and delight or welcome as the
contentment flowered within her. They came on, walking through the
wash of the waves, then stood to look at her.
Two of them, glittering in the sun, sparkling with light. They
were shorter than she, but they walked and stood with a delicate
grace which Charis knew she would never equal, as if each movement,
conscious or unconscious, were a part of a very ancient and
beautiful dance. Bands of jewel colors made designs about each
throat in gemmed collars, ran down in spirals over chest, waist,
thigh, braceleting the slender legs and arms. Large eyes with
vertical slits of green pupils were fixed on her. She did not find
the saurian shape of their heads in the least
repulsive—different, yes, but not ugly, truly beautiful in
their own fashion. Above their domed, jewel-marked foreheads stood
a sharp V point of spiky growth, a delicate green perhaps two
shades lighter than the sea from which they had come. This extended
down in two bands, one for each shoulder, wider as if aping
wings.
They wore no clothing, save a belt each from which hung various
small implements, and a pair of pouches. Yet their patterned,
scaled skin gave the impression of rich robes.
“Meeerrreeee!” The furred body against hers stirred.
Charis could not doubt that was a cry of pleasure. But she did not
need that welcome from the animal. She had no fear of these sea
ones—the Wyverns surely, the masters—or rather the
mistresses—of Warlock.
They advanced and Charis arose, picking up the furred one,
waiting.
“You are—” she began in Basic, but a
four-digit hand came out, touched her forehead between the eyes.
And in that touch was not the feel of cold reptilian flesh but of
warmth like her own.
No words. Rather it was a flow of thought, of feeling, which
Charis’s off-world mind turned into speech: “Welcome,
Sister-One.”
The claim of kinship did not disturb Charis. Their bodies were
unlike, yes—but that flow of mind to mind—it was good.
It was what she wanted now and forever.
“Welcome.” She found it hard to think, not to speak.
“I have come—”
“You have come. It is good. The journey has been weary,
but now it will be less so.”
The Wyvern’s other hand moved up into the line of
Charis’s vision. Cupped against the scaled palm was a disk of
ivory-white. And once seeing it, she found she could not look away.
A momentary flash of uneasiness at that sudden control and
then . . .
There was no beach, no whispering sea waves. She was in a room
with smooth walls that were faintly opalescent as if they were
coated with sea-shell lining. A window broke one of those surfaces,
giving her a view of open sea and sky. And there was a thick mat
spread under that, a covering of fluffy feathers folded neatly upon
it.
“For the weary—rest.”
Charis was alone except for the furred one she still held. Yet
that suggestion or order was as emphatic as if she had heard the
words spoken. She stumbled to the mat and lay down, drew the fluffy
cover over her bruised and aching body, and then plunged into
another
time—world—existence . . .
There was no arbitrary measurement of time where she went, nor
was memory ever sharp set enough to give her more than bits and
pieces of what she experienced, learned, saw in that other place.
Afterward, things she had garnered sank past full consciousness in
her mind and rose in time of need when she was unaware that she
held such secrets. Schooling, training, testing—all three in
one.
When she awoke again in her windowed room, she was Charis
Nordholm still, but also she was someone else, one who had tasted a
kind of knowledge her species had never known. She could touch the
fringe of that power, hold a little of it; yet the full mystery of
it slipped through her fingers much as if she had tried to hold
tightly the waters of the sea.
Sometimes she sensed disappointment in her teachers, a kind of
exasperation, as if they found her singularly obtuse just when they
hovered on the edge of a crucial revelation, and then her own
denseness was a matter of anger and shame for her. She had such
limitations. But yet she fought and labored against them.
Which was the dream—existence in that other world or this
waking? She knew the room at times and the Citadel in the island
kingdom of the Wyverns, of which it was a part, and other rooms in
other places she knew were not the Citadel. She knew sea depths:
Had she gone there in body or in her dream? She danced and ran
along the sands of shores with companions who sported and played
joyously with the same bursting sense of happy release that she
knew. That, she believed, was real.
She learned to communicate with the furred one, if on a limited
plane. Tsstu was her name and she was one of a rare species from
the forest lands, not merely animal, not quite equivalent to
“human,” but a link between such as Charis’s own
kind had sought for years.
Tsstu and the Wyverns and their half-dream existence in which
she was caught up, absorbed, in which memory faded into another and
far less real dream. But there was to be an awakening as sudden and
as racking as that of a warrior startled from slumber by the
onslaught of the enemy.
It came during one of the periods Charis believed real, when she
was in the Citadel on an island apart from the land mass where the
post stood. She had been teasing her companion Gytha to share
dreams with her, a process of communication which swept one wholly
adrift in wonder. But the young Wyvern seemed absent-minded and
Charis guessed a portion of her attention was elsewhere in rapport
with her kind, whom Charis could only reach if they willed it
so.
“There is trouble?” She thought her question, her
hand going instinctively to the pouch at her belt in which rested
her guide, the carved disk they had given her. She could use it,
though haltingly, to control dangerous life such as the fork-tails
or to travel. Of course, she could not draw upon the full Power;
maybe she never would. Even the Wise One, Gysmay, who was a Reader
of Rods, could not say yes or no on that though, in a way Charis
did not understand, the elder Wyvern could read the future in
part.
“Not so, Sharer of my Dreams.” But even as the
answer came, Gytha vanished with a will-to-Otherwise. The
impression she left—Charis frowned—that faint trail of
impression was of trouble, and trouble connected with herself.
She brought out her guide, felt it warm comfortingly on her
palm. Practice with it—that was important. Each time she bent
the Power to her will she was that much more proficient. The day
was fair; she would like to be free in it. What harm in her using
the disk ashore? And Tsstu had been restless. For both of them to
return to the moss meadow might be enjoyable. Memory
moved—the Survey man there. Somehow she had forgotten about
him, just as the post and the traders had receded so far into the
dreamy past that they were far less real than a shared dream.
Cupping the disk, she thought of Tsstu and then heard the
answering “Meerreee” from the corridor. Charis pictured
the moss meadow, questioned, and was answered with an eager assent.
She caught up the small body as it bounded toward her and held it
against her as she breathed upon the disk and made a new
mind-picture—the meadow as she remembered it most vividly by
that solitary fruit tree.
Then Tsstu wriggled out of Charis’s hold, pranced on her
hind legs, waving her front paws in the air ecstatically, until the
girl laughed. She had not felt as young and free as this for as
long as she could remember. To be Ander Nordholm’s assistant
had once absorbed all her interest and energy, and then there had
been nothing but dark shadows until she had seen the Wyverns coming
to her through the sea. But now, no Wyverns—nothing but
Charis and Tsstu, removed from the need for care, in a wide and
welcoming stretch of countryside.
Charis threw out her arms, put up her head, so that the warmth
of the sun was directly on her face. Her hair, which always
intrigued the Wyverns so, she had caught back with a tie the same
green as the clinging tunic she now wore.
This time her feet were shielded from hurt with sandals of shell
seemingly impervious to wear, yet as light as if she were barefoot.
She felt as if she might emulate Tsstu and dance on the moss. She
had taken a few tentative steps when she heard it, a sound which
sent her backing swiftly into the cover of the tree
branches—the hum of an airborne motor.
A copter was coming from the southeast. In general appearance it
was like any other atmosphere flyer imported from off-world. Only
this one had service insignia, the Winged Planet of Survey
surmounted by a gold key. It was slanting away, out to sea in the
general direction of the Citadel.
In all the time she had been with the natives, they had had no
contact that she had known of with any off-worlders save herself.
Nor had the Wyverns ever mentioned such. For the first time Charis
speculated about that. Why had she herself never asked any
questions about the government base, made any attempt to get the
Wyverns to take or send her there? She had seemed to forget her own
species while she was with the Warlockians. And that was so
unnatural that she was uneasy when she realized it now.
“Meeerrreee?” A paw patted her ankle. Tsstu had
caught Charis’s thought or at least her uneasiness. But the
animal’s concern was only partly comforting.
The Wyverns had not wanted Charis to return to her own kind. It
had been their interference on her first awakening that had kept
her from retracing her trail to the post, had made her take cover
from the flyer in the night, avoid the Survey man. She had had only
kindness—yes—and an emotion which her species could
term love, and care and teaching from them. But why had they
brought her here, tried to cut her off from her own blood? What use
did they have for her?
Use—a cold word, and yet one her mind fastened upon now
only too readily. Jagan had brought her here to use as a contact
with these same wielders of strange powers. Then she had been
skillfully detached from the post, led to the meeting by the sea.
And understanding that, Charis broke free of the enchantment which
had bound her to the Otherwhere of the Wyverns.
The copter was out of sight. Had it been summoned for her?
Charis was sure not. But she could have been there when it arrived.
She called Tsstu, caught her up, and concentrated upon the disk to
return.
Nothing happened. She was not back in the Citadel room but still
under the tree in the meadow. Again Charis set her mind to the task
of visualizing the place she wanted to be and it was there, as a
vivid picture in her mind, but only in her mind.
Tsstu whimpered, butted her head under Charis’s chin; the
girl’s fear had spread to her companion. For the third time,
Charis tried the disk. But it was as if whatever power had once
been conducted through that was turned off at the source. Turned
off and by the Wyverns. Charis was as certain of that as if she had
been told so, but there was one way to test the truth of her
guess.
She raised the disk for the fourth time, this time painting a
mind-picture of the plateau top where the mysterious feast had been
spread. Sea wind in her hair, rock about— She was just where
she had aimed to go. So—she could use the disk here,
but she could not return to the native stronghold.
They must have known that she had left the Citadel. They did not
want her to return while the visitor was there—or ever?
One of those half messages from Tsstu which came not as words or
pictures but obliquely: something wrong near
here . . .
Charis looked from the sea to the slit of valley where she had
seen the fork-tail, secure in her knowledge that neither the sea
beast nor the clakers could attack a disk carrier. From here she
could see nothing amiss below. Two clakers screeched and made for
her and then abruptly sheered away and fled for their nesting
holes. Charis used the disk to reach the scrap of beach below the
cliff. She had forgotten to bring Tsstu but she could see the black
blot against the red of the rock where the little creature was
making a speedy descent.
Tsstu reached the bottom of the cliff and vanished into the
cloak of vegetation. Charis moved inland, the mental call bringing
her to the spring.
A broken bush, torn turf. Then, on a stone, a dark sticky smear
about which flying things buzzed or crawled sluggishly. In the edge
of the pool, something gleamed in a spot of sun.
Charis picked up the stunner—not just any off-world weapon
but one she knew well. When Jagan had had her in his cabin on the
spacer to give her those instructions in what he intended to be her
duties, she had seen such a side arm many times. The inlay of
cross-within-a-circle set into the butt with small black vors
stones had been a personal mark. It was out of the bounds of
possibility that two weapons so marked could be here on
Warlock.
She tried to fire it, but the trigger snapped on emptiness; its
charge was exhausted. The trampled brush, the torn-up sod, and that
smear— Charis forced herself to draw her finger through the
congealed mess. Blood! She was sure it was blood. There had been a
fight here and, judging by the lost stunner, the fight must have
gone against the weapon’s owner or his weapon would not be
left so. Had he faced a fork-tail? But there was no path of
wreckage such as that beast had left on its pursuit of her, traces
of which still remained to be seen. Only there had been a
fight.
Tsstu made a sound deep in her throat, an
“rrrrurrgh” of anger and warning. Moved purely by
impulse, Charis caught up Tsstu and used the disk.
“Meerrreee?” A soft sound with a
definite note of inquiry. For the first time Charis looked closely
at her fellow fugitive, meeting as searching a gaze turned up at
her.
The fur which covered its whole body was in tight, tiny curls,
satin-soft against her hands. It had four limbs ending in clawed
paws, but the claws were retractable and no longer caught in her
clothing. There was a short tail like a fringed flap, now tucked
neatly down against the haunches. The head was round, sloping to a
blunt muzzle. Only the ears seemed out of proportion to the rest.
They were large and wide, set sideways instead of opening forward
toward the front of the skull, and their pointed tips had small
tassel-tufts of gray fur of the same color that ringed the large
and strikingly blue eyes and ran in narrow lines down the inner
sides of the legs and on the belly.
Those eyes— Fascinated, Charis found it difficult to look
away from the eyes. She was not trained in beast-empathy, but she
could not deny there was an aura of intelligence about this small
and appealing creature which made her want to claim a measure of
kinship. Yet, for all its charm, it was not to be only cuddled and
caressed; Charis was as certain of that as if it had addressed her
clearly in Basic. It was more than animal, even if she was not sure
how.
“Meerrreee!” No inquiry now but impatience. It
squirmed a little in her hold. Once more a pale yellow tongue made
a lightning dab against her skin. Charis released her grip, fearing
for an instant that it would leave her. But it jumped from her lap
to the rough floor of the crevice and stood looking at the forest
from which its enemy had emerged.
Enemy? The Survey man! Charis had almost forgotten him. What had
restrained her from hailing him? Perhaps his very being here had
been the answer to her call from the post. But why had she not been
allowed to meet him? For allowed was the proper term. A
prohibition she could not explain had been laid upon her. And
Charis knew, without trying such an experiment, that if she
attempted to go to the wood she would not be able to push past an
invisible wall someone or something had used to cut her off.
“Meeerreee?” Again a question from the furred one.
It paused, one front paw slightly raised, looking back at her from
the entrance to the crevice.
Suddenly Charis wanted to get out of this moss-carpeted land.
The frustration of her flight from the very help she wished was
sour in her. Up over the cliff wall back to the sea— The
longing to be again beside the waves was a pulling pain.
“Back to the sea.” She said that aloud as if the
furred one could understand. She came out of the crevice and
glanced up for a way to climb.
“Meeree . . . ”
Charis had expected the animal to vanish into the moss meadow.
Instead, it was demanding her attention in its own way before it
moved sure-footedly along, angling up the surface of the cliff.
Charis followed, warmed by the realization that the animal appeared
to have joined forces with her, if only temporarily. Perhaps its
fear of the enemy in the forest was so overpowering it wanted the
promised protection of her company.
While she was not as agile as the animal, Charis was not far
behind when they reached the crest of the cliff. From here one
could look down on the expanse of the sea and a line of silver
beach. There was a feeling of peace. Peace? For an instant Charis
recaptured the feeling she had known in that first
dream—contentment and peace. The animal trotted ahead, south
along the cliff top. From this point the drop to the sand was too
sheer to descend, so Charis again followed the other’s
lead.
They came down to the silver strand by a path her companion
found. But when Charis would have gone on south, the Warlockian
creature brushed about her ankles, uttering now and then an
imperative cry, plainly wanting her to remain. At last she dropped
down to sit facing the sea, and then, looking about her, she was
startled. This was the cove of her first dream
exactly.
“Meerree?” That tongue-tip touch, a sense of
reassurance, a small warm body pressed against hers, a feeling of
contentment—that all was
well . . . coming from her companion or out of
some depth within herself? Charis did not know.
They came out of the sea, though the girl had not seen them
swimming in. But these were not a threat like the fork-tail. Charis
drew a deep breath of wonder and delight or welcome as the
contentment flowered within her. They came on, walking through the
wash of the waves, then stood to look at her.
Two of them, glittering in the sun, sparkling with light. They
were shorter than she, but they walked and stood with a delicate
grace which Charis knew she would never equal, as if each movement,
conscious or unconscious, were a part of a very ancient and
beautiful dance. Bands of jewel colors made designs about each
throat in gemmed collars, ran down in spirals over chest, waist,
thigh, braceleting the slender legs and arms. Large eyes with
vertical slits of green pupils were fixed on her. She did not find
the saurian shape of their heads in the least
repulsive—different, yes, but not ugly, truly beautiful in
their own fashion. Above their domed, jewel-marked foreheads stood
a sharp V point of spiky growth, a delicate green perhaps two
shades lighter than the sea from which they had come. This extended
down in two bands, one for each shoulder, wider as if aping
wings.
They wore no clothing, save a belt each from which hung various
small implements, and a pair of pouches. Yet their patterned,
scaled skin gave the impression of rich robes.
“Meeerrreeee!” The furred body against hers stirred.
Charis could not doubt that was a cry of pleasure. But she did not
need that welcome from the animal. She had no fear of these sea
ones—the Wyverns surely, the masters—or rather the
mistresses—of Warlock.
They advanced and Charis arose, picking up the furred one,
waiting.
“You are—” she began in Basic, but a
four-digit hand came out, touched her forehead between the eyes.
And in that touch was not the feel of cold reptilian flesh but of
warmth like her own.
No words. Rather it was a flow of thought, of feeling, which
Charis’s off-world mind turned into speech: “Welcome,
Sister-One.”
The claim of kinship did not disturb Charis. Their bodies were
unlike, yes—but that flow of mind to mind—it was good.
It was what she wanted now and forever.
“Welcome.” She found it hard to think, not to speak.
“I have come—”
“You have come. It is good. The journey has been weary,
but now it will be less so.”
The Wyvern’s other hand moved up into the line of
Charis’s vision. Cupped against the scaled palm was a disk of
ivory-white. And once seeing it, she found she could not look away.
A momentary flash of uneasiness at that sudden control and
then . . .
There was no beach, no whispering sea waves. She was in a room
with smooth walls that were faintly opalescent as if they were
coated with sea-shell lining. A window broke one of those surfaces,
giving her a view of open sea and sky. And there was a thick mat
spread under that, a covering of fluffy feathers folded neatly upon
it.
“For the weary—rest.”
Charis was alone except for the furred one she still held. Yet
that suggestion or order was as emphatic as if she had heard the
words spoken. She stumbled to the mat and lay down, drew the fluffy
cover over her bruised and aching body, and then plunged into
another
time—world—existence . . .
There was no arbitrary measurement of time where she went, nor
was memory ever sharp set enough to give her more than bits and
pieces of what she experienced, learned, saw in that other place.
Afterward, things she had garnered sank past full consciousness in
her mind and rose in time of need when she was unaware that she
held such secrets. Schooling, training, testing—all three in
one.
When she awoke again in her windowed room, she was Charis
Nordholm still, but also she was someone else, one who had tasted a
kind of knowledge her species had never known. She could touch the
fringe of that power, hold a little of it; yet the full mystery of
it slipped through her fingers much as if she had tried to hold
tightly the waters of the sea.
Sometimes she sensed disappointment in her teachers, a kind of
exasperation, as if they found her singularly obtuse just when they
hovered on the edge of a crucial revelation, and then her own
denseness was a matter of anger and shame for her. She had such
limitations. But yet she fought and labored against them.
Which was the dream—existence in that other world or this
waking? She knew the room at times and the Citadel in the island
kingdom of the Wyverns, of which it was a part, and other rooms in
other places she knew were not the Citadel. She knew sea depths:
Had she gone there in body or in her dream? She danced and ran
along the sands of shores with companions who sported and played
joyously with the same bursting sense of happy release that she
knew. That, she believed, was real.
She learned to communicate with the furred one, if on a limited
plane. Tsstu was her name and she was one of a rare species from
the forest lands, not merely animal, not quite equivalent to
“human,” but a link between such as Charis’s own
kind had sought for years.
Tsstu and the Wyverns and their half-dream existence in which
she was caught up, absorbed, in which memory faded into another and
far less real dream. But there was to be an awakening as sudden and
as racking as that of a warrior startled from slumber by the
onslaught of the enemy.
It came during one of the periods Charis believed real, when she
was in the Citadel on an island apart from the land mass where the
post stood. She had been teasing her companion Gytha to share
dreams with her, a process of communication which swept one wholly
adrift in wonder. But the young Wyvern seemed absent-minded and
Charis guessed a portion of her attention was elsewhere in rapport
with her kind, whom Charis could only reach if they willed it
so.
“There is trouble?” She thought her question, her
hand going instinctively to the pouch at her belt in which rested
her guide, the carved disk they had given her. She could use it,
though haltingly, to control dangerous life such as the fork-tails
or to travel. Of course, she could not draw upon the full Power;
maybe she never would. Even the Wise One, Gysmay, who was a Reader
of Rods, could not say yes or no on that though, in a way Charis
did not understand, the elder Wyvern could read the future in
part.
“Not so, Sharer of my Dreams.” But even as the
answer came, Gytha vanished with a will-to-Otherwise. The
impression she left—Charis frowned—that faint trail of
impression was of trouble, and trouble connected with herself.
She brought out her guide, felt it warm comfortingly on her
palm. Practice with it—that was important. Each time she bent
the Power to her will she was that much more proficient. The day
was fair; she would like to be free in it. What harm in her using
the disk ashore? And Tsstu had been restless. For both of them to
return to the moss meadow might be enjoyable. Memory
moved—the Survey man there. Somehow she had forgotten about
him, just as the post and the traders had receded so far into the
dreamy past that they were far less real than a shared dream.
Cupping the disk, she thought of Tsstu and then heard the
answering “Meerreee” from the corridor. Charis pictured
the moss meadow, questioned, and was answered with an eager assent.
She caught up the small body as it bounded toward her and held it
against her as she breathed upon the disk and made a new
mind-picture—the meadow as she remembered it most vividly by
that solitary fruit tree.
Then Tsstu wriggled out of Charis’s hold, pranced on her
hind legs, waving her front paws in the air ecstatically, until the
girl laughed. She had not felt as young and free as this for as
long as she could remember. To be Ander Nordholm’s assistant
had once absorbed all her interest and energy, and then there had
been nothing but dark shadows until she had seen the Wyverns coming
to her through the sea. But now, no Wyverns—nothing but
Charis and Tsstu, removed from the need for care, in a wide and
welcoming stretch of countryside.
Charis threw out her arms, put up her head, so that the warmth
of the sun was directly on her face. Her hair, which always
intrigued the Wyverns so, she had caught back with a tie the same
green as the clinging tunic she now wore.
This time her feet were shielded from hurt with sandals of shell
seemingly impervious to wear, yet as light as if she were barefoot.
She felt as if she might emulate Tsstu and dance on the moss. She
had taken a few tentative steps when she heard it, a sound which
sent her backing swiftly into the cover of the tree
branches—the hum of an airborne motor.
A copter was coming from the southeast. In general appearance it
was like any other atmosphere flyer imported from off-world. Only
this one had service insignia, the Winged Planet of Survey
surmounted by a gold key. It was slanting away, out to sea in the
general direction of the Citadel.
In all the time she had been with the natives, they had had no
contact that she had known of with any off-worlders save herself.
Nor had the Wyverns ever mentioned such. For the first time Charis
speculated about that. Why had she herself never asked any
questions about the government base, made any attempt to get the
Wyverns to take or send her there? She had seemed to forget her own
species while she was with the Warlockians. And that was so
unnatural that she was uneasy when she realized it now.
“Meeerrreee?” A paw patted her ankle. Tsstu had
caught Charis’s thought or at least her uneasiness. But the
animal’s concern was only partly comforting.
The Wyverns had not wanted Charis to return to her own kind. It
had been their interference on her first awakening that had kept
her from retracing her trail to the post, had made her take cover
from the flyer in the night, avoid the Survey man. She had had only
kindness—yes—and an emotion which her species could
term love, and care and teaching from them. But why had they
brought her here, tried to cut her off from her own blood? What use
did they have for her?
Use—a cold word, and yet one her mind fastened upon now
only too readily. Jagan had brought her here to use as a contact
with these same wielders of strange powers. Then she had been
skillfully detached from the post, led to the meeting by the sea.
And understanding that, Charis broke free of the enchantment which
had bound her to the Otherwhere of the Wyverns.
The copter was out of sight. Had it been summoned for her?
Charis was sure not. But she could have been there when it arrived.
She called Tsstu, caught her up, and concentrated upon the disk to
return.
Nothing happened. She was not back in the Citadel room but still
under the tree in the meadow. Again Charis set her mind to the task
of visualizing the place she wanted to be and it was there, as a
vivid picture in her mind, but only in her mind.
Tsstu whimpered, butted her head under Charis’s chin; the
girl’s fear had spread to her companion. For the third time,
Charis tried the disk. But it was as if whatever power had once
been conducted through that was turned off at the source. Turned
off and by the Wyverns. Charis was as certain of that as if she had
been told so, but there was one way to test the truth of her
guess.
She raised the disk for the fourth time, this time painting a
mind-picture of the plateau top where the mysterious feast had been
spread. Sea wind in her hair, rock about— She was just where
she had aimed to go. So—she could use the disk here,
but she could not return to the native stronghold.
They must have known that she had left the Citadel. They did not
want her to return while the visitor was there—or ever?
One of those half messages from Tsstu which came not as words or
pictures but obliquely: something wrong near
here . . .
Charis looked from the sea to the slit of valley where she had
seen the fork-tail, secure in her knowledge that neither the sea
beast nor the clakers could attack a disk carrier. From here she
could see nothing amiss below. Two clakers screeched and made for
her and then abruptly sheered away and fled for their nesting
holes. Charis used the disk to reach the scrap of beach below the
cliff. She had forgotten to bring Tsstu but she could see the black
blot against the red of the rock where the little creature was
making a speedy descent.
Tsstu reached the bottom of the cliff and vanished into the
cloak of vegetation. Charis moved inland, the mental call bringing
her to the spring.
A broken bush, torn turf. Then, on a stone, a dark sticky smear
about which flying things buzzed or crawled sluggishly. In the edge
of the pool, something gleamed in a spot of sun.
Charis picked up the stunner—not just any off-world weapon
but one she knew well. When Jagan had had her in his cabin on the
spacer to give her those instructions in what he intended to be her
duties, she had seen such a side arm many times. The inlay of
cross-within-a-circle set into the butt with small black vors
stones had been a personal mark. It was out of the bounds of
possibility that two weapons so marked could be here on
Warlock.
She tried to fire it, but the trigger snapped on emptiness; its
charge was exhausted. The trampled brush, the torn-up sod, and that
smear— Charis forced herself to draw her finger through the
congealed mess. Blood! She was sure it was blood. There had been a
fight here and, judging by the lost stunner, the fight must have
gone against the weapon’s owner or his weapon would not be
left so. Had he faced a fork-tail? But there was no path of
wreckage such as that beast had left on its pursuit of her, traces
of which still remained to be seen. Only there had been a
fight.
Tsstu made a sound deep in her throat, an
“rrrrurrgh” of anger and warning. Moved purely by
impulse, Charis caught up Tsstu and used the disk.