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The Quillian Sector
#19 in the Dumarest series
E.C. Tubb
Cover art by H. R. Van Dongen
DEDICATION
To Julie Emma Hickmott
FIRST PRINTING,
DECEMBER 1978
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Chapter One
A great bowl of flowers had been set on a small table close to the
window so that their petals reflected the light in a mass of glowing
scarlet necked with amber, the stamens a brilliant yellow around styles
of dusty black. The bowl itself was of veined porphyry, shaped with a
rare elegance, curves melting one into the other to form an object of
both visual and tactile beauty. A thing of delicate elegance in direct
contrast to the room itself, which was bleak in its Spartan simplicity,
all white and functional, the walls devoid of any decoration, even the
carpet a neutral gray.
A room in which to work, to study and to plan with all distraction
kept to a minimum. Something Irae could appreciate, as he could not the
flowers. They were an anomaly and he crossed the room to stand before
them, studying their form and arrangement before lifting his head to
stare through the window itself.
It was set high in the building and framed a view of grim
desolation. The soil had been leached to expose the underlying rock,
the vegetation which once had covered it long since gone, as were the
minerals once contained within the stone. Machines had dug and ripped
and crushed and spewed their detritus, turning a pleasant landscape
into a barren wilderness. Exploitation had left nothing but sourness
and acid rains which, even as he watched, came to add more corrosion to
the thick pane and the metal in which it was set.
Looking down, he could now understand the presence of the flowers;
the contrast they provided to the desolation outside.
"Caradoc's work," said a voice behind him. "He said that a touch of
color would help."
Turning, Irae said, "Help whom? You?"
An accusation, which Yoka dismissed with a small gesture of a hand
which seemed to be fashioned from transparent porcelain. No cyber was
ever fat, for excess tissue lessened the efficiency of the physical
machine which was the body, but Yoka was skeletal in his thinness.
Beneath the scarlet robe, his body was reed-frail, his throat a match
for the gaunt face and sunken eyes which, with his shaven pate, gave
his head the appearance of a skull. A skull set with the jewel of his
eyes which burned now, as always, with the steady flame of trained and
directed intelligence.
He said, "No, Cyber Irae, the flowers are here to set at ease those
ushered into this chamber to wait. Naturally, you grasp the underlying
purpose."
A statement, not a question. For him to have framed the sentence
otherwise would have been tantamount to insult. No cyber could avoid
seeing the obvious, and now that Irae knew the purpose of the room,
the presence of the blooms and the position they occupied was plain. A
contrast and a good one; outside, the bleak desolation of
Titanus—within, the glowing color and beauty of the flowers and what
they, by association, represented. The security of the Cyclan; the
rewards and wealth and comfort the organization could provide to any
who engaged their services. A contrast too subtle to be immediately
appreciated by any visitor, but it was there and would be noted on a
subconscious level.
"Caradoc shows skill and intelligence. An acolyte?"
"No longer." Yoka lifted a hand and touched his breast, fingers thin
and pale against the rich scarlet and the design embroidered on the
fabric, A gesture signifying the acolyte had passed his final tests and
was now one of their number. Beneath his hand the Seal of the Cyclan
glowed and shimmered with reflected light. "A young man who shows
promise. He should give good service and rise high."
And would, unless he committed the unpardonable crime of failure.
Irae looked again at the flowers, at the window and the desolation
beyond, thinking of others who had shown promise and who had failed.
Those who had paid with their lives because of their failure. Others
who had been broken. He did not intend to become one of them.
He said, "You are certain Dumarest is not on this world?"
"I am."
"The prediction that he could be found on Titanus was of
seventy-three per cent probability."
"Not high."
"No, and obviously there were factors we could not take into
account.
Even so, we must be close."
As they had been close before, each time to miss the quarry by a few
minutes of time, by coincidence, by the luck which seemed to follow
Dumarest from world to world. A trail marked by the death of cybers he
had killed in order to ensure his escape.
The irrevocable loss of trained and dedicated intelligences which
should have gone to swell the complex of Central Intelligence.
The reward of every cyber who proved his worth.
"It is against all logic," said Yoka. "How could one man have eluded
capture for so long?"
Luck, and more than luck. The instinct which gave warning when
danger was close. The intelligence which recognized the threat and
remained alert for the little things which gave warning—a stare
maintained too long, a glance, a too-fortuitous meeting, a proffered
friendship, an unexpected invitation—who could tell?
And yet, the Cyclan should be able to tell. The cybers, with their
trained minds which could take a handful of known facts and from them
extrapolate the logical sequence of events encompassing any imaginable
variation. To arrive at a deduction and make a prediction which was as
close as possible to actual prophecy. They should know where a man on
the move would come to rest, had known, but still he had managed to
dodge, to stay one jump ahead.
For too long now. Too long.
Irae studied the flowers. Had an insect hummed among the blossoms he
would have been able to predict on which it would next settle, on the
pattern it would follow. Had he wanted to snare it, he would have known
exactly where to apply the compound which would hold it fast.
An insect—why not a man?
He said, "We know that Dumarest is among the worlds of the Rift.
That is a probability of ninety-nine percent. We have checked the
course of each vessel leaving relevant worlds and have agents alerted
at each port of call. All precautions have been taken."
And still they hadn't proved enough. Like a ghost, Dumarest had
vanished, aided by the unpredictable, riding his luck until even those
searching for him had begun to doubt their powers.
"The Rift," said Yoka. "A good place for a man to hide." Too good. A
section of space in which suns burned close and worlds were plentiful.
An area in which opposed energies created dangerous vortexes and
regions in which matter itself could cease to exist. A place in which
planets rested in isolation in whirls of dust, rolled hidden in masses
of interstellar gloom, hung like glittering gems in a web of
destructive forces. A haystack in which a wisp of straw could so easily
be lost.
Irae lifted his eyes from the bowl of flowers and turned like a
scarlet flame to where Yoka stood respectfully waiting. "Your
conclusions?"
"Based on all available data, the probability of capturing Dumarest
at this time is fifty-three percent. Not until he is located can we
hope to gain information on which to base a more favorable prediction."
"Fifty-three percent?"
"Low," admitted Yoka, "but I said 'capture,' not 'discover'. The
probability of spotting him is higher—seventy-six percent."
"Eighty-seven point five," corrected Irae. "You are too
conservative. Even if he is now in space he must eventually land and
when he does, an agent could spot him."
"If the man is at the right time, at the right place." Yoka had the
stubbornness of age. "It comes to a matter of logistics. In order to
maintain surveillance at every probable port of call at all appropriate
times, we need the services of an army of men. Add to that the
probability that he is on a planet and, unless he makes a move,
locating him will be far from easy. And we must check all worlds." He
ended, "In the Rift they are many."
He said it without change of the smooth, even modulation, devoid of
all irritant factors which all cybers were trained to adopt. And yet,
Irae caught the irony beneath the apparently flat statement.
"You repeat the obvious, Cyber Yoka. I am fully aware of the problem
but we can eliminate a large area of low-order probabilities. We have
information as to where Dumarest was last located, together with the
names and routes of the vessels which left at the critical time."
"Data?" Yoka stood, immobile, as he listened to the stream of facts
and figures, his mind assimilating, correlating, selecting and
discarding various possibilities until he reached a decision. "You are
correct. The probability that Dumarest will be discovered within the
Rift is as you say. The Quillian Sector. He could be there now, but to
locate him will not be easy."
"For a cyber?"
"For anyone but an expert hunter of men." Yoka added, "I have one at
hand."
Leo Bochner didn't look the part. While tall, he appeared slim,
almost womanish, his face unlined, his hands smooth, as was his voice
as he announced himself. He stood waiting with an easy grace.
Instinctively, he selected the one in authority, turning a little to
face Irae, recognizing that while younger than Yoka, he held the
command. A point Irae noted as he did the clothing; good, yet not
obtrusive; fine woven cloth cut to emphasize good taste and not vulgar
ostentation. Clothing which somehow added to the effeminate impression
he had gamed and which lessened the threat of the man.
A mistake?
A less experienced man could have thought so and wondered at Yoka's
judgement, but Irae had long since learned to look beneath the surface
of apparent truth. Now, looking, he noted the smooth pad of muscle
beneath the skin of face, throat and wrists. The iron beneath the
smooth set of lips and jaw. The carriage. The ingrained confidence in
words and manner. The eyes.
The eyes which, even as he watched, changed to give the lie to the
polished dress and manner; turning into those of a beast, a wolf, a
tiger, a hunter of prey.
Then, in a moment, they were again a part of the disguise, calm,
bland, faintly mocking.
Irae said, "Tell me something of yourself."
"I have, shall we say, a certain skill." Bochner's voice carried no
pride, it was merely a vehicle used to convey a fact. "I realized I had
it when very young and took steps to cultivate and perfect. I have an
affinity with wild things. I sense their habits and, knowing
them, can anticipate what they will do." He added with the same easy
tone, "I am probably the finest hunter ever to be born on Pontia, and
on that world you hunt or you starve."
"Animals." Irae watched the eyes as he spoke. "Beasts operating on
instinctive patterns of behavior."
He had looked for anger. None came, nor did the eyes change as they
had before. That, he knew, had been a demonstration, a dropping of the
veil to show a little of the real nature of the man.
Bochner said, "Beast or man, my lord, they are the same."
"A man can think."
"And for that attribute, has lost others. But we talk to little
purpose. My record is known to you."
A good one or he would not now be standing before them. A noted
hunter, a skilled assassin, but this time such skills would be unwanted.
Bochner shrugged as Irae made that clear. "I understand. I find
Dumarest and hold him with the least amount of force necessary until he
can be handed over to your agents. Of course, it may be that I shall
have to cripple him to ruin his mobility. Break his legs, for example,
and even his arms. But his life will not be in danger. That is
acceptable?"
"We want the man unharmed and in full possession of his mental
faculties."
"You want the man in any way he can be delivered," said Bochner
flatly. "As long as he is alive on delivery. If that isn't the case,
why send for me?" His eyes moved from one to the other of the scarlet
figures. "I shall not let you down, my lords. My reputation was not
gained by bungling my commissions. And, speaking of commissions my fee—"
"Will be paid," said Yoka. "The Cyclan does not break its word."
A bow was Bochner's answer, but Irae added more; it was well that
the man should remember the power of the Cyclan, and that it could take
as well as give.
"You will be rewarded," he said, "with wealth and property should
you succeed. With something less pleasant should you fail."
"I shall not fail."
"How can you be sure? How can you even know you will find him?"
"When you cannot?" Bochner was shrewd. "Or when you do, you always
seem to arrive too late? The answer is basically simple; you hunt a man
but I hunt a beast. You operate on the basis of pure logic, but a man
is not a logical creature and does not follow a nice, neat, predictable
path. Not a man with sense. Not one who knows he is being hunted. Not
one who is afraid. Such things confuse the normal pattern. Watch such a
man as I have and you will see his instincts guide his decisions. A
ship arrives—shall he take it or wait for the next? The same with a
raft, a cab, a caravan. The same with a hotel, a meal, a drink in a
tavern. The shape of a door can send quarry scuttling into hiding. The
whisper of a woman who, by chance, speaks his name. The look of an
official which, misunderstood, can lead to flight. How can you predict
exactly where he will go when he doesn't even know himself? What he
will do, when what he is permitted to do depends on chance?"
He was over-simplifying and was wrong in his assessment of the
ability of the Cyclan, but Irae did not correct him. Neither he, nor
any cyber, wished to advertise their abilities to those who had not
hired their services. And the 'chance' to which Bochner referred was
not a matter of infinite variables, as he seemed to think, but a
limited set of paths determined by prevailing factors. A man stranded
on an island could only escape by sea or by air. Without the means to
fly, he was limited to the sea. Without the means to construct or
obtain a boat, he could only swim. If unable to swim, he would be
forced to wade the shallows. Knowing the man, the circumstances, there
was nothing hard in predicting what he would do and where he would go.
Irae said, "Do you know the Quillian Sector?"
"As much as any man can know it."
"Which is to say?"
"Parts well, other parts not so well, a little not at all. But
then," Bochner added, "no one knows them—the worlds hidden in the dust
and those caught in the mesh of destructive forces. There are rumors,
but that is all."
"Expeditions sent and lost," said Yoka. "Companies formed and
dissolved, as the investigations they made turned to nothing. We are
not interested in such planets. We are only interested in your quarry."
"Dumarest."
"Yes, Dumarest You are confident you can track him down?"
"Guide me to a world and if he is on it, I will find him. More, give
me a cluster of worlds and I will show you which he will make for. You
think I boast?" Bochner shook his head. "I speak from knowledge. From
conviction. From experience."
"A claim others have made. Now, they are dead."
"Killed by Dumarest?" Bochner looked at his hands. "I can take care
of myself."
A conviction shared by others before they had died, but Irae didn't
mention that. Instead, he said, "Tell me one thing, Bochner. Aside from
the reward, why do you want to hunt Dumarest?"
"Why?" Bochner inhaled, his breath a sibilant hiss over his teeth.
"Because if half of what you've told me is true, then he is the most
wily, the most dangerous and the most interesting quarry I could ever
hope to find."
The ship was small, unmarked; The crew, taciturn servants of the
Cyclan. Alone in his cabin, Bochner went through his routine exercises,
movements designed to keep his muscles in trim and his reflexes at
their peak. When Caradoc opened the door he was standing, dressed only
in pants, shoes and blouse, a knife balanced on its point on the back
of his right hand, which was held level at waist height. As the young
cyber watched, he dropped the hand and, as the knife dropped towards
his foot snatched at it with his left hand, catching the hilt and
tossing it upwards to circle once before catching it in his right.
"A game," he explained. "One played often on Vrage. There we stood
naked and held our hands at knee height. Miss and you speared a foot.
There was a more sophisticated version played for higher stakes in
which, if you were slow, you usually died." Idly, he spun the knife.
"You have used a blade?"
"No."
"You should. The feel of it does something to a man. Cold,
razor-sharp steel, catching and reflecting the light, speaking with its
edge, its point, words of threat and pain. Watch a man with a knife and
see how he moves. A good fighter becomes an appendage of his weapon. A
man with a gun gives less cause for concern. Why? Can you tell me why?"
"A gun is dispassionate. Everyone knows what a knife can do."
"Cut and slash and maim and cripple. True, but a gun can do that and
more. But still the psychological factor remains." Then in the same
tone of voice he added, "Is that why Dumarest carries a knife?"
"You have read the reports."
"Words on paper—what do they tell me about the man? I need to know
how he looks, how he walks, the manner in which he snuffs the air. You
think I joke? Smell is as important to a man as to a beast, even though
he may not be aware of it. And a man hunted and knowing it seems to
develop his faculties. So what is Dumarest really like?"
"I have never seen him."
"He wears gray, he carries a knife, he travels. High when he can
afford it low when he cannot. Space is full of such wanderers. What
makes him so special?" It was a question to which he expected no
answer, and gained none. Either Caradoc didn't know or had no intention
of telling, but it was early yet and, later—who could tell? Gesturing
to his bunk, he said, "Sit and join me in some wine."
"No," said Caradoc.
"No to the wine, to the offer of rest, or both?"
"I need neither."
A thing Bochner had known but had deliberately ignored, Caradoc was
a cyber and the nearest thing to a living machine possible to achieve.
To him, food was mere fuel to power the body. He was a stranger to
emotion and unable to feel it by virtue of the operation performed on
his cortex shortly after reaching puberty. A creature selected and
trained by the Cyclan, converted into an organic computer, a metabolic
robot who could only know the pleasure of mental achievement.
Sitting, Bochner stared at him, wondering what it would be like to
have been like him, to have worn the scarlet robe, to have relinquished
all the things which most men held dear. Caradoc would never know the
thrill of sitting in a hide waiting for the quarry to appear, to aim,
to select the target, to fire,
to know the heady exultation of one who has dispensed death. The sheer
ecstasy of pitting mind against mind in the hunt for one of his own
kind—the most exciting and dangerous quarry of all. To kill and to
escape, which often was harder than the kill itself. To outguess and
outmaneuver. To anticipate and to watch the stunned sickness
in a quarry's eyes. To hear the babble for mercy, see the futile
twitches as the demoralized creature tried to escape, to plan even
while it begged to die, finally, when the hunter had become bored.
No, Caradoc would never know what it was to be bored and for that
alone, Bochner could envy him.
The wine was in a bottle of crusted glass, the crystal flecked with
inner motes of shimmering gold, the liquid itself a pale amber, holding
the tart freshness of a crisp, new day. Bochner poured and lifted the
cap which served as a cup.
"To your health, my friend." He drank and refilled the small
container. "You object?"
"I wonder."
"Why I drink?"
"Why any man of intelligence should choose to put poison into his
body."
"A good point," mused Bochner. "Why do we do it? To find escape,
perhaps to discover a world of dreams. Some cannot do without the
anodyne of alcohol, but I am not one of them. Listen, my scarlet
accomplice, and try to comprehend. The quarry I hunt lurks in
unsuspected quarters and must be sought in regions you may not
understand. At times, I must sit for long hours in taverns and what
should I drink then? No, I drink as a part of my camouflage and must
maintain my tolerance for alcohol. As a runner must practice to keep up
his acquired ability. A swimmer, his mastery over water." Again he
emptied the cup and again refilled it. "Test me now and you would find
me as sober as yourself. Give me a mark and a gun and I will hit it as
many times as you choose to name. In any case, it helps to pass the
time."
"Quick-time will do that better."
"The drug will shorten the days and little else." Bochner slowly
finished his wine. "But no compound ever yet discovered or invented can
ease the weight of boredom."
An alien concept which Caradoc could understand only on an
intellectual level How could anyone ever grow bored in a universe
filled with an infinity of questions awaiting answers? Even the cabin
in which they sat offered endless scope for mental exercise connected
with its structure, stress factors, cubic capacity, resonance,
relationships of planes and divergences from the mathematical norm.
Bored?
No cyber could ever be that while two atoms remained to pose a
problem of interrelationship proximities. While life remained to set
the eternal question of what and why it existed at all.
But lesser beings needed the convenience of quick-time; the drug
which slowed the metabolism so that normal days passed in apparent
minutes. A means to lessen the tedium of ship life on journeys between
the stars.
The steward brought it an hour later when the vessel was aligned on
its target star and safely on its way. He nodded to Caradoc and,
without a word, lifted the hypogun he carried, aimed it at Bochner's
throat and pressed the release. Air blasted the charge through skin,
fat and muscle directly into the bloodstream. Bochner should have
immediately turned into the rigid semblance of a statue. Instead, he
slumped and fell unconscious on the bunk.
"Minimum dose as ordered, sir," said the steward. "Another?"
"No. You have all that is necessary? Good. Stand aside while I work."
Caradoc turned the unconscious man on his back, handling the bulk
with surprising strength. From a packet the steward handed him, he took
a slender instrument and a small capsule together with a can of
anesthetizing spray fitted with a slender nozzle. Thrusting the nozzle
into Bochner's right nostril, Caradoc hit the release, numbing and
sterilizing the inner membranes. With the instrument, he quested the
nasal passage and located the entrance to the sinus cavity. Removing
the instrument, he fitted the capsule to its end, thrust the small
package into the nostril, pressed and pushed it into the sinus. There
it expanded, thin filaments attaching themselves with minute hooks to
the inner lining, they and the capsule both coated with numbing and
sterile compounds.
As he withdrew the spray after a final treatment Caradoc said to the
steward, "Now. Neutralize and administer quick-time."
A metabolic shock, but Bochner was fit and could stand it, and what
did it matter if the jar to his system should have later repercussions?
He was a tool to be used for the benefit of the Cyclan and nothing
more. The instrument planted within his skull was a device which, on
receiving a signal, would respond with a burst of coded emissions. No
matter where or how he tried to hide, he could be found, and the
capsule itself could be exploded by remote control.
No one living had ever betrayed the Cyclan and Bochner would not be
the first.
Caradoc watched as the steward set him upright, deftly triggering
the hypogun, seeing the slow movements of the hunter's hands and eyes.
Movements which jerked to normal as his own metabolism responded to the
impact of the drug blasted into his bloodstream. The door blurred and
they were alone.
Bochner wished he was more so. He hadn't wanted the company of the
cyber but had known better than to protest Irae's decision. Later, if
the need arose, he would slip away and certainly, if necessary, the
cyber would have to change his appearance. The scarlet robe and naked
scalp were signals the quarry couldn't miss.
Thinking of the hunt, he said, "How can you be so sure he is within
the Quillian Sector?"
"Dumarest?" Caradoc leaned back to rest his shoulders against the
wall. Bochner had noticed nothing wrong and that was proof of his own
efficiency. He sat as Bochner remembered, the cabin looked the same. To
Bochner, his temporary unconsciousness would have seemed no more than
the blink of an eye. "A matter of applied logic."
"A guess?"
"No."
"And yet you can't be certain. I mean, you might know about where he
is but not exactly where. If your logic and skill were good enough
surely there could be no doubt?"
"Doubt?"
"Uncertainty. You would be certain."
"Nothing is ever that," said Caradoc. "Always there is the unknown
factor which must never be ignored. No matter how certain a thing
appears to be, it must never be considered an absolute event. The
probability may be high but, always, it remains a probability."
Bochner nodded, remembering a time during his early youth. A copse
in which a beast was lurking, himself set and armed, the weapon lifted,
aimed, the butt hard against his shoulder, the sights leveled on the
spot in which the creature was sure to appear. A long, delicious moment
of savored anticipation. The nearing climax of the hunt was like the
climax of sex itself, though far more satisfying.
And then the shadow, which had crossed the sun. The raft, which had
appeared in a cloudless sky and, as it threw a patch of darkness over
the front sight, the quarry had appeared to turn, to run, to dodge the
bullet which should have brought it low.
Revenge had done little to ease the hurt and after the dead man had
toppled from the raft, and the vehicle itself risen to vanish into the
distance, the penalty had waited at the end— the blood-price paid in
money and sweat and exile from his home world.
A little thing. One he should have taken into consideration. A
neglect which had altered the trend of his life.
Watching him, Caradoc said, "Imagine a container of boiling liquid
containing tiny motes of solid substance. They are in continuous,
restless activity. The Brownian Movement. The tiny particles are in
motion because of the irregular bombardment of the molecules of the
surrounding medium. Now, imagine one of the particles to be colored for
easy identification. We can tell where it is in relation to the whole.
We can tell where it has been. We can even predict where next it might
be, but never can we be utterly and absolutely certain."
"Dumarest? The colored particle is Dumarest?"
"The analogy will serve."
"And you know about where he is to be found. In the Quillian
Sector." Bochner's face became taut ugly, the skin tightening so that
his cheeks looked like scraped bone. "The place where space goes mad.
Where the suns fight and fill the universe with crazed
patterns of energy so that men kill at a glance and women scream at
imagined terrors. Ealius and Cham and Ninik."
"Swenna," said Caradoc adding to the list. "Vult and Pontia—" He
paused, then said again, "Pontia."
"Where I was born." Bochner's voice matched the taut ugliness of his
face. "I told you I knew the area well."
Chapter Two
Dumarest heard the shout and looked up to see death falling from the
sky. The grab of the digger was overhead, the jaws open, tons of oozing
clay scooped from the cutting, blotting out the pale orange of the
firmament. It should have been neatly deposited in the body of his
truck. Instead, it was plummeting down to crush and bury him. No
accident. The crane was well to one side, the truck closer to it than
himself, but there was no time to think of that.
Even before the warning shout had died he was on the move, lunging
to one side, feeling his foot slip on the loose dirt, toppling
off balance as the load thundered down.
Luck was with him. A second later, or had he been less fast, he
would have been crushed and buried like an insect. As it was, he felt
the impact on his left shoulder, the barest touch of the debris which
rasped down the sleeve of his coverall, the blow throwing him further
in the direction of his fall. He hit a slope, rolling, falling, to land
on the waterlogged clay at the foot of the cutting as over him showered
the mass of clay, dirt and rubble.
Too much rubble. It pressed on his back, drove his face into the
water as it piled on his head, his shoulders, trapping his entire body
with a layer of dirt which pressed with an iron hand. A hand which
could kill, which would kill within minutes unless he could find some
way to breathe.
He strained, body aching, muscles tense, blood thundering in his
ears as, slowly, he lifted. A fraction only; loose dirt compacted by
his upward pressure, yielding a trifle to form a shallow gap beneath
him so that, arms and legs rigid, back arched against the strain, head
turned to rest one cheek in the water, his nose lay above the surface
and he could breathe.
Breathe and wait for a rescue which need never come.
Life was cheap on Ealius. Only the skilled technicians were of
value, the rest were easily replaced. Those in authority could decide
that he wasn't worth the trouble and effort to save. Better to let him
lie, to be covered in, buried, forgotten. But the cutting had to be
kept open, the great channel formed and smoothed, the passage through
the mountain maintained.
After what seemed hours, Dumarest felt and heard the grating
vibration of mechanical jaws.
They were not being operated with any care for the vulnerability of
a human body. The steel teeth dropped, closed, lifted with a load of
clay to set it aside and return for more. Only a concern to avoid
marring the sides of the channel made the operator take small bites at
the mound he had dropped. The fact that any of the scoops could have
sheared through a body didn't seem to have occurred to him.
Dumarest had a more personal interest. He felt a touch against one
leg, kicked, felt metal beneath his foot and then the rasp of the teeth
over his thigh. Luck had saved him; a few more inches and his foot
would have been caught, his leg ripped from its socket as the grab
lifted with resistless force. Before it could return he heaved,
squandering the last of his conserved energy, fighting the crushing
weight on back and shoulders as he thrust himself back to where the
clay had been lifted from his legs. When next the grab returned, he was
ready. As the open jaws dug into the mound he threw himself into the
grab, ducking as the serrated edges closed, one hand caught between two
of the steel teeth of the low jaw, the upper halting an inch from his
wrist as it closed on a stone.
Then up and out to one side, the grab halting, turning, opening as
it jerked to shower its load into the open body of the truck waiting
below. As Dumarest fell, he heard a yell.
"It's Earl! By damn, it's Earl!"
Carl Devoy, the one who had shouted, his face taut beneath a tangle
of rust-colored hair now smeared with ocher clay. He ran to the side of
the truck, heaving himself up and staring over the side.
"Earl?" He sucked in his breath as Dumarest moved. "By God, he's
still alive! Give a hand here! Give a hand!"
He was small, but with a temper to match the color of his hair, and
two men ran to obey. A third arrived with a bucket of water as they
lowered Dumarest to the ground and, without preamble, threw the
contents over the clay smeared figure.
"Earl?"
"I'm all right." Dumarest straightened, breathing deeply, water
running down his head and face to soak his coverall. As he wiped his
hands on his sides, he said, "Who was operating the digger?"
"Menser, He's still operating it." Devoy glanced at the man seated
in the cab of the machine. A transparent canopy gave
weather protection, its clarity now marred with dirt. Behind it, the
face and figure of the operator were blurred. "I saw the bucket jerk
and yelled but I was too late."
"No," said Dumarest. "If you hadn't shouted I'd be dead now. And
then?"
"After the load dropped?" Devoy shrugged. "They figured you had to
be dead and would have left you but Strick wanted the cutting to be
cleared. Ten minutes later and he'd have left it for the next shift to
clear up the mess."
Ten minutes—the difference between life and death. Dumarest looked
at the orange sky, at the bulk of the digger etched against it, at the
dark face which peered at him from behind the canopy. As a whistle blew
the face moved, became a part of the body which climbed down from the
cab, a man who stood almost seven-feet tall and with shoulders to
match. A black giant with massive hands and thighs like trees. A man
who stepped to where Dumarest stood waiting, to halt, to part his lips
in a grin before spitting on the ground.
"Mister, you were lucky."
"No," said Dumarest. "You were careless."
"Meaning the accident?"
"If it was one."
"Hell, man, how can you doubt it? A cable locked and I had to snap
it clear. That's why I swung the grab over and away from the truck.
Sometimes the catch slips and you drop the load."
"On me?"
"I didn't see you." Menser spat again. "I had other things to think
about."
Truth or lie, there was no way of telling and certainly nothing
could be proved. Dumarest studied the man, seeing the eyes, white rims
showing around the irises, the corners tinged with red. The telltale
signs of the drug he chewed, as was the purple spittle he had vented on
the ground. The pungent, shredded leaf which gave euphoria at the cost
of sanity.
Then, as the whistle shrilled again, Devoy said, "Come on, Earl,
let's get away from here. The next shift's taking over."
The residential quarters matched the workings; hard, rough, severely
functional. Sleeping was done in dormitories, eating in a communal
mess, washing in a long, low room flanked by shallow troughs above
which showers supplied water ranging from tepid to steaming hot. The
place itself was filled with steam; writhing vapor which blurred
details in a manmade fog. In it shapes loomed, indistinct, voices
muffled as men called to each other.
Stripped, Dumarest stepped under a shower, feeling the drum of water
on his head, the rivulets cleaning away the grime and dirt from his
hair. Soap came in liquid form from a dispenser and he filled his palm
with the sticky goo, rubbing it hard and getting little result.
"Here, Earl, try this." Devoy handed over a bar of soap from where
he stood in the adjoining shower. "Something special from a friend in
town." His wink left no doubt as to the nature of the friend. "She
likes her men to smell nice. Go ahead," he urged. "It's good."
The soap held a crude perfume but it contained oil and lacked the
harsh bite of the supplied liquid. Dumarest used it, creating a mass of
suds which flowed over the firm muscles of shoulders and back, stomach
and thighs. As he turned beneath the shower to wash them free, Devoy
sucked in his breath.
"Hell, Earl, you look as if you'd been clawed by a giant."
Dumarest turned to examine his legs. On the back of each calf,
running midway up each thigh, ran a wide, purpling bruise: the result
of the raking jaws of the grab. They marred the hard, smooth whiteness
of the skin, as did the other marks carried on his chest and forearms,
the thin cicatrices of old wounds.
Devoy looked at them, recognizing them for what they were, wondering
why he hadn't spotted them before. The long bruises gave the answer to
that; unless they had caught his attention he wouldn't have stared.
Wouldn't now know that Dumarest bore the scars of a man who has fought
with naked blades. That he was a fighter, trained to kill.
He said, "That's Menser's trouble, Earl. I've heard it from others
in the gang. He's been pushing, seeing how far he can go, how much he
can get away with. That accident could have been fixed."
"I know."
"Does he have anything against you? Did he try to push, and you told
him where to get off?"
Dumarest shook his head, then lifted his arms to let the steaming
water cascade over his body, the impact helping to ease the ache of
muscles recently overstrained. Since coming to the workings he had kept
himself to himself, not asking for trouble, not looking for it. The
last thing he wanted was to become the center of attention. Now, it
seemed, Menser had other ideas.
He came into the washroom, voice booming, attended by a handful of
sycophants eager to hook their wagon to a profitable star. On any
construction site there were men who recognized opportunity when they
saw it and took steps to skim the cream. Parasites, using threats and
violence to intimidate others, demanding a share of their pay under the
guise of collecting contributions, donations, or as insurance premiums.
Such men, if they survived, could become rich and powerful with their
own small, private armies to enforce their dictates.
Menser wanted to become one of them.
Dumarest watched as the steam swirled to part, to reveal the giant,
to close again over his giant frame. What the man did was no concern of
his as long as he was left alone, but Menser had recognized in Dumarest
a source of potential trouble. To eliminate him would pay dividends in
more ways than one.
"He's high," said Devoy uneasily. "Doped and crazed and spoiling for
trouble. Let's get out of here."
Good advice, but Dumarest didn't follow it. If trouble was to come
this was as good a place as any in which to meet it. He stood, the soap
in his hand, eyes narrowed as he stared through the vapor. It broke,
shredded, torn into wisps as the giant came forward, head lowered,
shoulders hunched, fists pounding the air as, weaving, he shadowboxed
his way along the edge of the trough. His intention was obvious; to
locate his victim, to strike, to break bones and pulp flesh with hammer
blows and then to explain that he had seen nothing in the steam and had
maimed or killed by accident.
"Earl!" Devoy was anxious.
"Stand clear."
As the smaller man stepped from the shower, Dumarest left the trough
to stand facing the approaching giant. Menser was huge, coiled ropes of
muscle shifting beneath the gleaming ebon of his skin, his head a ball
of bone, hair cropped close to the scalp. Now he looked up, grinning, a
purple stream jetting from between his lips to spatter the floor inches
from Dumarest's feet.
"Waiting for me, friend? Well, now, that's nice of you. A pity
you're going to have another accident." His laughter was soft, feral,
devoid of amusement. "A fatal one this times."
Dumarest threw the soap.
It flashed from his hand to drive against the giant's face, to land
beneath one of the thick eyebrows and to slam against the eye with a
force which tore the orb from its socket, to leave an ugly red hole
streaming blood. A blow which shocked and blinded, one which he
followed with another as, lunging forward, he lifted his foot and sent
the heel up hard against the chin.
It was like kicking a mountain.
Menser yelled, one hand lifting to his ruined eye, the hand falling
as he dodged Dumarest's second kick. Hurt, he was even more dangerous
than before, pain fueling the hate now powering his muscles,
obliterating everything but the desire to rend and kill the man
standing before him. Like an oiled machine, he swung into action, hands
extended, feet moving in little, dancing steps, body poised to turn in
any direction.
A wrestler and a dangerous one. A man with a very high pain
threshold, as his apparent ignoring of his ruined eye testified. One
who had to be treated with respect and caution.
One Dumarest had to kill before being killed.
He moved back, aware of the circle of watchers, the eyes avid with
anticipation, the faces gloating at the free and unexpected spectacle.
Faces rendered more beastlike by the blurring vapor, eyes more feral
because of the steam.
"You bastard!" Menser inched forward. "I was just going to hurt you
a little, break a few bones, maybe, or give you some bruises. Now I'm
going to make you pay for what you did. Your eyes first, maybe. Or
maybe I'll smash both legs and, as you crawl, tear out your arms. Then
I'll take care of your eyes, a thumb in each socket, pressing slowly,
so slowly, until they pop out like stones from a fruit And then—"
His voice whispered on but Dumarest ignored it. A trick to command a
part of his attention and to ruin a little of his concentration. To
weaken him by fear and to soften him by imagined terrors. Blatant
tactics he had long since learned to disregard.
"Earl! Get him, Earl! Get the bastard!"
Carl Devoy offering what help he could and at the same time
revealing both his courage and stupidity. If Menser should win he would
be marked and taken care of—a high price to pay for the encouragement
Dumarest didn't need.
He dropped as the giant came in, turning, his hand rising to chop
with stiffened palm at the man's left knee. He felt the jar and spun to
one side as the right foot lashed at his face, kicking back in turn,
his heel impacting the knee he had struck. Then he was up and on his
feet, circling to keep on the blind side of his opponent, making use of
the advantage he had won.
A fist darted toward him, to scrape against the side of his head as
he weaved, the forearm like an iron bar as he gripped it, throwing back
his weight, trying to throw the giant off balance. Menser yielded,
snarled as his other hand grabbed, laughed as the fingers sank into
Dumarest's shoulder.
"Now," he gloated. "Now!"
His knee jerked upwards, Dumarest turning to avoid the crippling
impact, striking back in turn, his foot aimed at the same left knee. A
weak blow, but one which added to the previously caused damage, and he
followed it with a thrust of his head which hit the nose and sent more
blood to join that streaming from the ruined eye.
Then Menser struck in turn.
His fist rose, darted forward, making a meaty impact as it slammed
against Dumarest's torso. A blow aimed for the face, which had missed
as Dumarest reared upwards, fighting the steel like fingers holding him
fast. One followed by another, which brought stars flashing and the
taste of blood. A third, which created a web of darkness which edged
close as, all around, men yelled in anticipation of the kill.
Dumarest twisted, using his weight to tear free of the gripping
fingers, sweat oiling his skin as he blocked another blow and sent his
own hand to stab fingers in the ruined eye. Menser screamed, jumping
back, hands lifted to protect his face as again Dumarest kicked at the
knee. This time, he felt bone yield, the kneecap splintering, maiming
the giant and robbing him of quick mobility. But even though he had to
fight to maintain his balance, he still had his hands and the strength
they possessed.
"Coward!" Menser snarled his hate as he stood balanced on one foot.
"Come and fight like a man!"
An invitation only a fool would accept. Dumarest feinted, drew back
and then, with a blur of movement, had run forward, his hands busy,
stiffened palms like blunt axes as they drove at the throat, the
windpipe and larynx, crushing both before he withdrew from the closing
arms.
Again.
A third time, this one resulting in a long gash over his shoulder as
Menser clawed at his elusive opponent.
And then again, to leave the giant sprawled like a fallen tree,
blood puddling the floor around his mouth, one leg bent at an
impossible angle, the great machine of his body broken and stilled.
The woman said quietly, "Hold on now, this is going to hurt."
Dumarest heard the rustling behind him as he lay prone on the couch,
a shifting of clothing, a metallic rattle and then something like
liquid fire traced a path over his shoulder.
As he grunted, the woman said, "You should have gone to the
hospital."
"Aren't you a nurse?"
"I was once." Her tone held bitterness. "But that was a long time
ago. Now I earn my living treating young fools who should have more
sense than to get themselves hurt in stupid duels. We have a law
against such things and the penalties are harsh. Hold still, now."
Again came the liquid fire, the touch of acid burning away the
corruption which had festered in the wound. Menser had carried
vileness beneath his fingernails; a paste containing virulent bacteria
which, untreated, could kill. "There, that should do it. You were
lucky."
The woman was wrong. Caution, not luck, had dictated his actions. He
had noticed the festering gash and had suspected its cause. The same
caution had made him seek unofficial aid; had caused him to leave the
camp with pay still uncollected. A precaution against Menser's friends
and others who might have agents lying in wait.
Now, turning, he looked at the woman who stood to one side of the
couch, a small bowl in one hand, the glass stylo with which she had
applied the acid held by her thumb. "Is there anything else?"
"Maintain a watch on your temperature. Should it rise more than five
degrees take antibiotics and seek medical advice."
"The wound itself?"
"Has been cleaned and sealed. The compound of my own devising; the
residue film will peel automatically as the wound heals." She added,
"Is there anything else I can do for you?"
He did not mistake her meaning even though she was still attractive,
though far from young. Many of those who paid for her help would have
wanted more than the service she offered—passion riding on the relief
of assistance given. Perhaps she catered to them. People lived as best
they could and there was little charity on Ealius, but he sensed she
had judged him to hold wider interests,
"I need to get on a ship," said Dumarest. "I'd like to do it without
attracting attention. Would you know how it could be done?"
"The gate is guarded," she said immediately. "All leavings are
checked against the files deposited by the construction company. They
don't want anyone leaving who owes them money. Are you breaking a
contract?"
"No."
"Then you could pass through the gate without difficulty."
"And if I were?"
"Breaking a contract?" She frowned. "There are ways if you have
money. Men who will smuggle you on a vessel as long as you don't care
where you go or how you end. I wouldn't advise using the service they
offer."
"Why not?" Dumarest asked, but already knew the answer. Too many
worlds close by had mines which needed workers and those who operated
them were careless as to how they gained their laborers. A man, buying
a secret passage, could wind up contracted to slave in a living hell.
"What else is there?"
"If you can afford it, there are men who could arrange to have you
signed on as a crew member."
"And would that be safer?" Dumarest eased himself from the couch.
The sting had gone from the wound and he moved his arm a few times to
test the pull of the plastic film covering it. "I'm avoiding enemies,"
he explained. "A little trouble I had—no need for detail. You've heard
it all before."
As she had learned to recognize lies. As Dumarest dressed, she put
away her things, turning to look as he donned the boots and the knife
he carried in the right. They were a match for the pants and
long-sleeved tunic, which rose high to fit snugly around the throat.
Tough material in which was imbedded protective metallic mesh. The gray
plastic was easy to clean and simple to refurbish. A convenience for
any traveler.
As he reached for money, she said, "You paid me in advance."
"For the medical treatment only."
"The advice came free."
"And your silence?" He dropped coins on the couch as she made no
answer, "This is to forget you've ever seen me. And this," he added
more, "is for being what you are."
For not asking questions, for taking him in on the basis of nothing
more than a whispered introduction from an intermediary, for taking
care of the man, in turn. And, perhaps, for looking like someone else
he had known years ago now, and a long journey through space. A woman
who had tended him when, as a young man, he had suffered his first
wound and who had healed the gash as she had tended his desires. Her
name? That was forgotten, together with the name of the world on which
they had met. But some things about her could not be forgotten; the
touch of her hands, the shape of her hair, the clustered wrinkles at
the corners of her eyes, her kindness.
"Thank you," the woman said quietly. She made no effort to pick up
the money. "There is a tavern on the corner of North and Inner. Some
captains and others have a habit of using the back room. Ask for Varn
Egulus. But you are welcome to stay, if you wish."
"No. I must be on my way."
From the house and into the town and out to where the field lay in
its circle of perimeter lights, with ships at rest and the stars
winking like jewels against the black velvet of the sky. At the gate,
men stood in casual attitudes, some uniformed with the garb of the
local authority, others wearing ship uniforms, a few in civilian dress.
Watching, Dumarest noticed how they examined a man coming toward them,
how they checked him, watched after him when they allowed him to pass.
It could have meant nothing, but Menser could have been reported
murdered and even if those watching had testified to the truth,
personal combat was against the local regulations. He could be
arrested, tried, fined or set to a term of forced labor. At best, it
would mean delay.
"Mister!" One of the guards called to him. "You looking for
something?"
"Yesh." He swayed, deliberately slurring his words, one hand pawing
vaguely at the air as it hid his face. "A girl… she promised to meet
me… late . . ." A hiccup emphasised his drunkenness. "Thish
South and Outer?"
"No, you're on Inner and West. South is that way." A hand lifted to
point, lowered as the guard turned away, losing interest but completing
the directions. "Go up it and you'll hit Outer."
Dumarest lurched away, plunging deeper into the shadows, following
directions until he was out of sight. Straightening, he turned up a
narrow alley and made his way back to the road running north, turning
to head back to the one curving around the field.
The tavern was like most of its type, a place where men journeying
between the stars could find the comforts they lacked on their ships,
the dissipations offered for their enjoyment. Dumarest shook his head
as a pert young girl offered her invitation, shook it again as an older
matron repeated it with added detail, shrugged as a man hinted at more
exotic delights. None was offended at his refusal, no recent arrival
could be considered a real prospect but it did no harm to try. Later,
when alcohol had worked its magic, or when drugs had dulled the sharp
edges of discrimination, they and others would try again.
Varn Egulus was a tall man of middle age with a long, serious face,
a beaked nose and hair which was cut and lifted in an elaborate
forelock. His lips were thin, the jaw pronounced, the cheeks hollowed
as if with privation. Beneath thin brows his eyes were shrewd,
watchful, calculating.
He said, "It seems we have a mutual friend. Sit and order some wine.
Good wine—I can afford it since you are paying."
Dumarest obeyed, watching as the man poured, barely sipping at what
his own goblet contained. The woman must have sent word ahead for
Egulus to expect him and he would take his own time in getting to the
point.
"Good wine, this." Egulus lifted his glass and studied the play of
color trapped in the crystal. "Such a wine makes a man glad to be
alive." And then, without changing tone, he said, "Why did you kill
Menser?"
"Did I?"
"Perhaps not, but you match the description of the man who did. The
one who brought the news was most explicit as to detail. He was also
amazed at the speed you—the man— operated. It was like watching the
dart of lightning, he said. Movements faster than the eye could
follow." Egulus tilted his goblet and slowly drank the wine it
contained. Emptied, he lowered it toward the table. Then, before it
could hit the surface, he flung it directly at Dumarest's face.
He smiled as it scattered on the floor.
"Clever," he mused. "You did not catch it as I thought you might
and, most certainly, could have done. You didn't simply block it, and
so risk cuts to hand and face. Instead, you deflected it as if by
accident, to smash on the floor. Which proves nothing to any who might
be watching. Well, to business.
"I command the
Entil. A trader. One of the rules we follow
is that nothing should ever be done without some form of return. To do
otherwise would be to operate at a loss and only the stupid do that. A
cooperative, you understand. We work, take risks, carry any cargo we
can get, and go anywhere a profit is to be made."
And run a ship more like a heap of
wreckage than a vessel
designed to survive in the void. One that is undermanned, with faulty
equipment and dangerous installations.
Egulus smiled again as he guessed Dumarest's thoughts.
"A ship such as you imagine wouldn't last long in the Rift. Also I
have a regard for my life, which is why the Entil is as good
as I can make her. But obviously, you've had experience. What as?
Steward? Handler?"
"Both."
"And?"
"I know a little about engines. A little more about caskets. And,"
Dumarest added, "I can operate a table should the need arise."
"A gambler?" Egulus pursed his lips as Dumarest nodded. "And one who
can take care of himself if he has to. Good. That's an advantage. Now,
this is the situation. You give me the cost of a double High passage
and work as one of the crew. When you decide to quit, I'll compute what
is your share of the profit and pay you off. Fair enough?"
For the captain, more than fair. Unless he was more honest than his
fellows there would be no profits and he and the others would have
gained passage money and service for nothing.
Dumarest said, "About the tables. What I win I keep?"
"You know better than that. It goes into the common fund."
"And if I lose?"
"You pay." The captain's tone hardened a little. "And I should warn
you that I have no intention of haggling. The cost of a double High
passage, take it or leave it. And I want the money now."
"No." Dumarest reached for the wine and called for a new goblet to
replace the broken one. "You'll get it after I'm on the ship and we're
on our way."
"You have it?" Egulus didn't wait for an answer. "You're committing
suicide if you haven't. Unless I get paid, you'll be evicted into the
void."
He meant it. Dumarest said, "Don't worry about the money. You'll get
it. When do we leave?"
"At noon." Egulus reached for the wine Dumarest had poured. "But
we'll hit the gate an hour before dawn. The guards will be sleepy then.
I'll arrange for a uniform for you before we leave here and they'll
take you for one of my crew."
Chapter Three
The
Entil was a pleasant surprise. Despite what the
captain had claimed, Dumarest had expected to see the usual dirt and
neglect of those sharing partnership and unwilling to perform more than
the essential tasks. A ship run on a shoestring, with patches and
stained paint and filters which passed dust and tanks which leaked air.
He had worked on such vessels and traveled on them too often to have
retained any illusions, but the
Entil was the exception to
the rule.
Dumarest checked it after Egulus had seen him aboard and then moved
on to the control room. The passageway was brightly illuminated, the
cabins opening on it clean and neat, the paint shining as if newly
washed. The salon was well furnished, the gaming table covered in
clean, unworn baize, the light above throwing a neatly defined cone of
brilliance. Testing the spigots, Dumarest found they not only supplied
the normal water, but also a weakly alcoholic fruit drink. Unexpected
luxury in any trader or in any vessel lower than the luxury class.
Allain, his guide, shrugged when he mentioned it. The steward was
pushing middle age, his face smooth, bland with the diminution of
curiosity. A man who had found his niche and who now observed the
universe with cynical detachment and an extended palm.
"Egulus is smart. Advertise free wine and it adds the edge to
persuading customers to ride with us instead of another. And it whets
their appetites for something stronger!"
"Which you can supply?"
"Naturally, and you, too." Allain glanced at the table. "Get them a
little high and they get careless. A smart man can really clean up if
he puts his mind to it. Well, you'll learn. Now come and meet Jumoke."
Jumoke was the navigator. He was younger than the steward, with
intense blue eyes and a mouth which betrayed an inner sensitivity. He
rose from the edge of his bunk as Dumarest entered his cabin, extending
his hand, lowering it as Dumarest touched the fingers. They were smooth
and cool, the nails rounded and neatly polished.
He said, "So you have learned the old customs."
"On a world far from here, yes."
"The touching of hands," explained Jumoke to the steward. "A
civilized act or an act performed among civilized peoples to show they
have no hostile intent. On some worlds both hands are extended, on
others only the empty palms are displayed." To Dumarest he said, "From
Naud, perhaps?"
"No."
"Hagor, then? Fiander? Or even Grett? All three worlds use the old
custom. Rumor has it they gained it from the Original People, but so
often does rumor lie. Personally, I come from Vult. You know it?"
"The cesspool of the Rift," said Allain, before Dumarest could
answer. "Every man is a thief or murderer, every woman a harlot, even
the children learn to lie and cheat at their mother's knee. A world of
madness."
"And our next port of call." Jumoke looked at the steward. "Aren't
you supposed to be checking the stores?"
"It's done."
"Completely? You've checked the sensatapes? The rare and delicate
wines? The stronger liquors? The preserved delicacies which fetch so
high a price? Be careful, my friend. If, by your neglect, we lose a
profitable sale, may God help you, for surely we shall not." Jumoke
chuckled as the man hastily left the cabin. "He's good at his work but
sometimes doubts his memory. Vult always disturbs him. Mention it and
you get a tirade. He had a sister once—but never mind that now. We all
have burdens to bear. Allain, myself, you—?" He paused then, as
Dumarest made no comment, shrugged and smiled. "The captain mentioned
you were close. But so close you are reluctant to give the name of your
home world?"
"Earth."
"What?"
"Earth," said Dumarest again. The man was a navigator and must have
traveled far. And he could have heard the gossip of others of his kind.
It was possible he had heard of the planet, knew where it was to be
found. A hope which died as Jumoke laughed.
"A humorist! I knew you were a hard man but never that! Earth!" He
laughed again, "You know as well as I that you talk of a legendary
world. One of many—El Dorado, Bonanza, Jackpot, Avalon—the
list is long. Myths invented by men yearning for paradise. Earth!" The
navigator shook his head. "The name alone should warn you of its
nature. Every world contains earth. They are made of it. Crops grow in
it. Who would name a world after dirt?"
"It exists."
"In the mind."
"In space somewhere. It is real."
"Of course." Jumoke sobered, his tone gentle. "If you say so, my
friend. Who am I to argue? We must talk more on the subject, but later.
Now I have work to do in the control room; sensors to check and
instruments to test. You understand?" Then, as he stepped toward the
door of the cabin, he added, "A word of advice. The captain has little
use for those who are less than serious. If he should ask about your
home world, it would be best to lie a little. Tell him you were born on
Ottery, for example. Or Heeg. They, at least, are in the almanac."
Outside, the passage was deserted. As Jumoke headed toward the
control room, Dumarest moved in the other direction toward the hold and
engine room. As handler, it was his job to check the stowing of cargo
and to operate the caskets designed for the transportation of
beasts and often used to carry those riding Low; people traveling
doped, frozen and ninety percent dead, risking the fifteen percent
death rate for the sake of cheap transportation.
Now the caskets were empty and the cargo, a mass of bales and
metal-strapped boxes, already in place. Dumarest checked the
restraints, tightening and adjusting as needed. More cargo could arrive
before they left, but he doubted it. From what Egulus had told him, the
main trade of the
Entil was in carrying passengers. Some of
them could have personal luggage, and maybe personal packets of stores
and cargo, but they would arrive with their owners.
Crouching, Dumarest checked the caskets, tracing the wires and
pipes, rising to swing open the transparent lids, closing them and
operating the controls and watching the gauges showing the drop in
temperature. As he lowered the lid of the last, he saw the woman
standing in the open doorway leading to the engine room.
She was tall, with a helmet of glinting blonde hair, the tresses
cropped to hug the head and to frame the wide, strongly boned face. The
shoulders were wide, a support for the muscles supporting the prominent
breasts which thrust unmistakable mounds beneath the tunic of her
uniform. Her eyes were oval pools of vivid blueness, her ears small and
set tight against the head, the nose a little uptilted above a generous
mouth. The chin matched the cropped hair in its masculine determination
and when she spoke, her voice held a deep resonance.
"Satisfied?"
"Number two needs some attention to the hinges."
"And?"
"Number four is sluggish on the intake."
"Full marks," she said. "Not many would have noticed that. At least
you know your caskets. Ridden in them often?"
"Too often."
"It's a hell of a way to travel." Stepping forward, she extended her
hand in Jumoke's gesture. Touching it, he found it soft yet firm and,
now that he was close, he caught the scent of her perfume. It was
floral, slightly pungent, accentuating her femininity but at variance
with her general appearance. A sign that she was not attempting to
emulate the male, perhaps. A personal touch which gave her an
individuality, and rescued her from the anonymity of a uniform. "So
you're the new man. Glad to have you with us. I'm Dilys Edhessa. The
engineer. You?" She nodded as he gave his name. "Well, you're an
improvement on Gresham. That's his uniform you're wearing. It's too
tight at the shoulders and too loose around the waist but I can fix
that for you."
"What happened to him?"
"Gresham? He tried to hold out and was caught cheating by a couple
of punters. Miners from Cham. He made the mistake of trying to get them
and one shot him from under the table. You want to watch out for that,
by the way. Make sure they keep their hands where you can see them. We
carry some wild types, at times."
"And Gresham?"
"As I said, he'd been holding out on the common fund so when he got
himself killed Yarn wasn't too concerned. He took a bribe from the
miners to forget what had happened and we dumped Gresham into the
void." She made a gesture as if brushing dirt from her hands. "He was
no loss."
"Anything else I should know?"
"I doubt it. You've met Jumoke and Allain? And you know the captain,
of course. Now you've met me. That's the lot. We run the
Entil.
Including you, naturally."
An afterthought, and Dumarest could understand it. He, like the
steward, was expendable. It would be natural for the woman to regard
him as less important than herself. And with reason. Looking past her,
Dumarest could see the humped bulk of the engines, the wink and gleam
of instruments and monitors. A comforting sight; the neatness would
extend to the maintenance of the all important generator.
Following his eyes, she said, "Know anything about engines?"
"A little."
"Good, then you can help me run a check later on. Just routine, but
it would help to have someone relay the readings. Someone who knows
what it's all about." Then she added without change of tone, "Just in
case you've tried a bluff with Yarn, it won't work."
"I know that."
"Listen! What I'm trying to say is if you need a loan? You can pay
it back later."
"Thank you, but it isn't necessary. I mean that."
"Good." She stood looking at him, her eyes level with his own. A
woman as broad as himself but heavier due to the swell of hips,
buttocks and breasts. An Amazon, but one who held an unmistakable
femininity, whose eyes held a genuine concern. "I like the captain but,
at times, he can be hard. As you can be, I guess. You have the look,
Earl, the manner of—hell, what am I talking about?"
"The caskets," he said.
"What?"
"The hinges need fixing, as does the intake. If you'll let me have
some tools, I'll take care of it."
"There's no hurry," she said, welcoming the change of subject, the
path he had opened from the intensity of the moment when, startlingly,
she had felt her body respond to his masculine closeness. "We don't use
them often now. On most of the worlds we visit, it's easy enough for
anyone to earn the cost of a High passage. And few are interested in
traveling Low."
"But they wouldn't be refused if they asked?"
"Of course not. Why turn down a profit?"
"Then I'd better fix the caskets."
"We'll fix them," she corrected. "Together. But why the concern? If
a man's too big a creep to gain the cost of a decent passage, why worry
about him?"
He said dryly, "Call it a vested interest. That creep could be me."
From where he sat in the narrow confines of the cabin, Leo Bochner
said, "In order to survive, an animal needs three essentials; food,
shelter and seclusion. It must eat, have protection against the
elements and, because no matter how strong or savage a predator it may
be, it will need to sleep at times, and so be vulnerable." He helped
himself to some of his amber wine. "A pattern which any hunter must
bear in mind."
Caradoc said nothing, sitting with his face shrouded in
the uplifted cowl of his robe, his hands buried within the wide
sleeves. Bochner was a little drunk, or was trying to give that
impression. If the former, he was betraying a weakness which could kill
him; if the latter, then he must again be trying to get information. An
exercise which the cyber would have found amusing if he had been able
to experience the emotion.
"A pattern which has won me many a trophy," continued Bochner. "To
learn the habits of the quarry, to trail, to anticipate and then,
finally, to close in for the kill." His hand tightened around the cap
of the ornate bottle. "To win and again affirm the superiority of a
thinking mind."
"One fogged with drugs?"
"This?" Bochner lifted the cap and deliberately swallowed what it
contained. "You object?"
"To your drinking, no. To the possibility of your failure, yes. Need
I remind you that the Cyclan has little patience with those who fail?
That when you accepted your present commission you also undertook
certain obligations? It would be wise for you to remember them."
"Don't preach to me, Cyber!" For a moment the smooth,
almost-womanish features changed, to become those of a feral beast, an
animal devoted to the kill. "The Cyclans have hired my skill, nothing
more. And why did they hire me? Why, with all the skills and talents
you claim to possess, was it necessary to find another to hunt down the
man you seek?" Leaning forward a little, he added, "Can't you, even
now, guess why Dumarest has been able to elude you for so long?"
"Chance—"
"Luck! The whining excuse of fools!" Wine gurgled as Bochner
refilled the little cup. "Shall I tell you why? You persist in thinking
of Dumarest as a factor and not as a man. As a unit instead of a
thinking, human being. You make your predictions and assess your
probabilities and point to a certain place and claim that is the spot
at which your quarry is to be found. Yet, the men sent there find they
are too late, or get themselves killed, or discover that some incident
has negated your prediction. And still you haven't trapped your prey,
and still you can't understand why."
Caradoc watched as Bochner emptied his cup and again refilled it
from the bottle.
"Dumarest is a man, not a cypher. An animal with sharpened instincts
and an awareness of danger. But this time, he must know who is hunting
him and why; an advantage he has which I do not. It would help if I
did." Pausing, he waited, and Caradoc noted the steadiness of his hand,
the absence of glimmering reflections from the glass of the bottle, the
surface of the liquid in the cup. A pause which the hunter ended before
it became obvious he waited for an answer. "But no matter how clever he
is, the rules apply to him as they do to a beast. He has the same need
for food, shelter and seclusion. Being human, all can be obtained with
the one commodity— money. To get it he must steal, beg or work. To beg
would take too long and bring too small a return. To steal is not easy,
and to rob others is to take high risks for the sake of little gain.
Therefore, he must work and where would a traveler without great skills
obtain employment in the Quillian Sector? Work which would provide all
a man in his position needs? Well, Cyber, where is he to find it? Where
would he feel safe? Where else but among others of his own kind?
Transients who ask no questions, employed by those who regard them as
nothing but a needed source of labor. A construction site—mines,
roads, buildings, canals—but where, Cyber? On which world?"
"Ealius. We arrive tomorrow."
They landed at sunset when the terminator was bisecting the single
continent and tattered clouds hung like shredded garlands against the
darkening orange of the sky. Bochner paused at the gate as Caradoc went
on his way, asking for and receiving audience with the guard-commander,
a burly, sullen man who softened as money was pressed into his palm.
"Procedure? It's simple. We don't worry about arrivals and only test
people when they leave. We stand them on the detector and ask their
names. If they lie, we hold them for further investigation. If they're
on the list, the same."
"List?"
"Contract-breakers, debtors, those accused of any crime. We catch
them, hold them, pass them on for appropriate action. Dumarest?" He
frowned. "No, no one of that name has passed through."
"How can you be sure? Are you on duty at all times?"
"No, but we keep records and I check the lists. Want to check?"
"I'll take your word for it. Sorry to have taken up your time."
"Dumarest!" The commander frowned, musing. "Wait a minute!
Dumarest—that name's familiar." He turned to where a man sat at a
computer terminal. "Check it, Mallius."
A moment, then, "It's on the list, Commander. Man to be detained if
spotted. An accusation of theft by the Hafal-Glych made on the—"
"Never mind that." The commander looked at Bochner. "Satisfied?"
With the thoroughness of the Cyclan, if nothing else. The listing of
the name was proof of the efficiency of the organization—they must have
alerted agents on every world in the Quillian Sector to keep watch for
Dumarest. His respect for the man increased as he realized what
difficulties he had to face. Still had to face. A cunning and
intelligent quarry who should provide a stimulating chase.
Caradoc, sitting in a room in the foremost hotel, listened to what
he had learned, then said, "Your conclusions?"
"Dumarest must be working for one of the construction companies
here. Maybe the Fydale or the Arbroth—both are large employers of
labor."
"As is the Lenchief."
"You think that is where he is to be found?"
"The probability is high." Caradoc made a gesture of dismissal. "If
you hope to gain your reward I suggest you waste no further time.
Contact me immediately if you have located Dumarest. Once you are
certain you have found the man I will give you further instructions."
Bochner drew in his breath, aware of the rage mounting within him,
the anger which must surely burst to reveal itself on his face. A rage
triggered by the realization that the cyber had already assessed all
possibilities and had arrived at his decision without deigning to
consult his partner. His anger was not helped by the knowledge that his
inquiries at the gate had been a waste of time. Why hadn't he been told?
Caradoc said, "You have the name of the company and can gain its
location if you ask at the desk. They will also arrange for
transportation. Is there more you need before undertaking action?"
"No, I— Bochner forced himself to remember that no cyber
was ever sarcastic and that Caradoc's inquiry had been genuine. "Aren't
you coming with me?"
"There is no need, in fact, my presence could be a
disadvantage. In any case, I have other work to engage my attention
while you execute your commission." Again came the gesture of
dismissal. "Please delay no longer."
Caradoc followed the hunter with his eyes as the man left the room.
Bochner had mastered his obvious rage well and that was to his credit,
but against that was the fact there had been no rational cause for
anger at all. Another demonstration of the futility of emotion; the
crippling reaction of the mind and body to external stimuli which
destroyed the sharp reasoning power of the intellect. Had he considered
the Cyclan to be so devoid of foresight that he had thought it
necessary to question those at the gate? Had he no concept of the power
of the organization which had chosen to utilize his limited skills?
Yoka had chosen him, and the old cyber had long ago proved his
capabilities. Yet, too much importance should not be placed on past
achievements. Age could bring more than physical decay; always there
was the danger of a mind affected by senility. It was barely possible
that all relevant factors had not been taken into account when he had
decided on the use of Bochner. He would include the suggestion in his
report. In the meantime, as he had mentioned to the hunter, he had
other matters to attend to.
A touch on a button and a man answered the summons.
"Master!" The acolyte bowed. One of two sent from a different world
on another vessel—what Bochner didn't know he couldn't guard against.
"Your commands?"
"Send in Fan Dudinka."
He was of middle height, middle-aged, his face marked with lines of
worry, his eyes wary even though his manner was assured. The Head of
the Essalian Group, which faced ruin unless the Cyclan could help them.
"Cyber Caradoc, it is good of you to receive me."
"Please be seated." Caradoc waited until the man had taken a chair.
"As you have been informed, your bid to engage the services of the
Cyclan has been successful. Now it must be clearly understood by you,
and those of your group, that I can take no sides, that I am not
interested in matters of moral right or legal wrong, that my sole
function is to predict the possibility of events resulting from nodes
of action."
"And for that, we pay," said Dudinka. "But, unless we pay—" he
swallowed, "for God's sake, what can we do?"
"The Essalian Group is composed of those who operate farms running
along both banks of the Ess. The river will be diverted once the major
cutting into the mountains is completed. Once that happens, then
shortage of water will make the land unproductive." Caradoc lifted a
hand to still the other's outburst. "I merely review the situation.
Now, as to what you can do—your major crop is the narcotic weed used by
many of the workers. It grows quickly, cures on the stem, can be
harvested and shredded in a matter of weeks from initial planting."
"We could maintain production if we used hydroponic vats," said
Dudinka, "but the cost would be prohibitive."
"And the returns nil. Once you raise your prices to compensate, you
lose your market. Your problem is with the company digging the cutting.
They have no real need to divert the river and could avoid it by
constructing an appropriate channel. If you were to guarantee to meet
the cost, the probability is ninety-one percent they would agree."
"We haven't the money."
"You have the crop. You could sell it to the company at a set price
and deny all free sale. The profits the company would gain from a
monopoly would more than compensate them for the expense of the
channel." Caradoc added, "The probability they would accept such an
arrangement is in the order of ninety-seven percent."
A simple solution to a basically simple problem—the more so when
already the construction company had learned to rely on the advice
given by the Cyclan. All would be satisfied and all would be eager,
when the next problem rose, as it would when the workers left when the
channel was completed, to hire again the services of a cyber. And the
advice he gave would, as always, be slanted to dependency on the
service offered by the Cyclan. Use it and gain wealth and security, and
who dared not use it when a competitor might?
And, once a dependency had been achieved, it was only a step to
later domination.
"Master?" The acolyte was at his side. "Is there anything you
require?"
"No." Caradoc rose from his chair. "I shall rest for a few hours.
Should Bochner call, summon me at once."
Fifty miles from the town, the hunter walked through a man-made
jungle of rips and tears and steaming mounds of noxious vapors and
tormented ooze, of patches of acid vileness and bogs of lurking
dissolution. All construction sites were the same; places where nature
had been ravaged, the earth torn, the area despoiled in order to wrest
wealth or later gain with a casual disregard for the safety or comfort
of those who toiled like insects beneath the sun by day and flood
lights at night.
A good place in which a man could hide.
Or so a man on the run would think, not seeing beyond the immediate
necessity of obtaining shelter and a degree of anonymity. But, in such
places, no man was ever truly alone. Always eyes watched him; those of
the gambling sharks eager to take his pay, of those who sold food and
comforts, of the girls operating in the shacks at the edge of the
perimeter; raddled harlots together with their pimps and the sellers of
chemical dreams. Only in a city could a man be really alone, and only
then if he had the money on which to survive. Without that, he would be
forced to work however and wherever he could.
"Dumarest?" The man in the office shrugged. "Mister, they come and
they go—how the hell can I remember a name? Check with the wages clerk."
"Dumarest?" The clerk scowled. "Do you realize how many we have
working here? How long it will take me to hunt through the files? They
get paid on the first of each month. Come back then."
"Dumarest?" A guard rubbed thoughtfully at his chin. "I can't place
him. Say, why don't you ask among the girls?"
They knew nothing, and neither did the purveyors of killing
delights. Bochner had expected little else. No quarry of any worth
would leave so clear a trail or make such a stupid mistake. But he
picked up a rumor and followed it, and spoke to a man who had a friend
who knew a little more and who was willing to talk, once primed with a
bottle.
"Dumarest? Tall, wears gray, doesn't say much? Yeah, I've seen him.
Fact is, he got into a little trouble recently and killed a man. A fair
fight, so I understand. Didn't see it myself, but I know who did."
"Dumarest?" Carl Devoy was cautious. "Never heard of him. The man
who killed Menser? Well, he did a good job, the bastard asked for it,
but I don't know who did it. Not Dumarest, you can take that as a fact.
Who is he anyway, and why do you want him?"
The official in the morgue was curt.
"Menser? He had an accident. What business is it of yours?" Money
mollified his tone. "Well, I guess it would do no harm to let you see
him. You're lucky, we were going to dump him but the manager said to
wait until dawn. He wanted to get the doctor's report. No doubt about
it—accidental death."
An accident which had ruined an eye, broken a knee, crushed larynx
and windpipe. Bochner examined the injuries, assessing the force which
must have been used, the agility needed to escape the long arms. He
checked the hands, the nails with their sharpened points, the paste
beneath them. An animal and a dangerous one—how much more dangerous
must be the one who had bested him?
Back in the town with a new day brightening the sky, he quested
another jungle. One not as raw as the site, but as viciously alive with
its own form of predators. Men whom he hunted down with the hard-won
skill, the cunning learned over the years. Trees or houses, gutters or
rivers, men or beasts, all were basically the same. Note your target,
wait by the water hole, watch the feeding ground, the accustomed trail,
and then close in for the kill. And if money takes the place of
bullets, then it is that much easier. All it took was time.
"Hurt?" The man had shifty eyes which never stared
at
any one thing for long. "A friend of yours? Hurt, you say?"
"Cut a little." Bochner winced as he moved his arm. "A quarrel that
got out of hand—you know how it is."
"A friend?"
"That's what I said." Again Bochner winced as he moved. "A good
friend. I'd like to help him."
"Then take him to the hospital."
"Which has doctors who'd ask questions, and guards who'd ask more.
Hell, all I want is for someone to bind up a wound and I—my friend—can
pay. For the service, and for anyone who guides him to it." Money sang
its song of appeal as he dropped coins on the table between them. From
the far side of the tavern a man stared, then rose and moved casually
toward the door. Following the movement of the shifty eyes, Bochner
said, "Him?"
"Yeah." The man snarled as a hand fell to grip his own as it tried
to rake up the coins. To crush the flesh against the bone until blood
oozed from beneath the nails. "What the hell are you doing? My hand!"
"Him?"
"I—to hell with it." The man whispered a name, gave directions.
"You'll find help there but if you tell who told you—"
The man who had sauntered toward the door stepped forward as Bochner
approached, fell back as stiffened fingers slammed into the pit of his
stomach, again where the heart beat under the ribs. A precaution—but no
hunter would allow himself to be hunted.
Afternoon found him with a woman who turned stubborn. At dusk, he
had gained a name and had something which was barely alive. Before he
left the house, he had a name only.
Caradoc said, "You are certain?"
"I am sure as to my facts. But as you pointed out, there can be no
such thing as certainty." Bochner was enjoying his triumph. "I tracked
him, do you understand? I followed his trail. From the site to the
town, to where he went to find help, to where he gained it, to where he
went to find another."
"So easily?"
"He was on the move and relying on speed more than covering his
trail. He knew he couldn't do that. There had been a fight and he had
killed a man. After that he had to run." His laughter rose. "To here,
Cyber. To this town. To a tavern close to the field. A week and we
would have lost him. A couple of days, even, but I was hunting him
down. Me, Cyber! Me!"
His pride was a beacon, a force which drove him to pace the room, to
halt before the uncurtained window, to turn and pace again before the
desk at which the cyber sat with poised immobility.
"So you have tracked him down," said Caradoc. "You know just where
Dumarest is to be found. All that remains is to reach out and take him.
Correct?"
"Not exactly."
"Explain." Caradoc listened then said, "The
Belzdek—how
can you be so sure?"
"The name the woman gave me. It was that of a captain, large Krell.
The
Belzdek is his vessel."
"And you assume that Dumarest must be on it?" As Bochner nodded the
cyber added, "But, of course, the woman could have lied."
"No!"
"What makes you so certain? Have you yet to learn that nothing is
ever certain? How can you be convinced she did not lie? After all, you
could hardly have been regarded by her as a friend."
Tortured, dying—no, she would not have considered him that.
Caradoc said, "Assuming that Dumarest killed Menser, we have a time
node from which to base extrapolations. If he left the site
immediately, he would have arrived in the town by sunset. Allow more
for him to have met the woman and be treated by her, more still for him
to have gone to any rendezvous she might have arranged."
"To meet Krell."
"He or another. What is of more concern is the ship departures
during the relevant period." Caradoc picked a paper from a sheaf on his
desk. "Five vessels left in the period between Menser's death and our
arrival; the
Belzdek, Frame, Entil, Wilke and
Ychale.
The latter is an ore-carrier plying between Ealius and Cham on a
regular schedule. The
Wilke is a vessel of a commercial line
operating a circular route and touching at Ninik, Pontia, Vult and
Swenna. The others are traders going where the dictates of cargo and
passengers take them." Caradoc lowered the paper. "Well?"
Bochner said, thoughtfully, "Dumarest didn't pass through the gate."
"He didn't subject himself to the lie detector at the gate,"
corrected the cyber. "Which means he either smuggled himself through or
surmounted the perimeter fence. As that is watched and guarded by
electronic devices, and as no alarm was recorded, it is safe to assume
that he left Ealius by deception."
"And he had to leave," said Bochner. "An animal on the run can only
think of finding a safe place in which to hide. Where, on this world,
could Dumarest find that? After killing Menser, he would be marked for
assassination by the man's friends. Certainly he would have become
prominent, and that would be the last thing he wanted." He frowned,
remembering the woman, her tormented eyes, the way she had spat before
she had screamed out the name. Had she lied? Would she have retained
sufficient resolve? "The
Belzdek," he decided. "I say
Dumarest is on the
Belzdek."
"Which left for Gorion as we landed. The
Entil left the
previous noon for Vult. The
Frame earlier for your own world
of Pontia. Five vessels in all and the possibility remains that
Dumarest could be on any one of them." Pausing, he ended, "Now tell me,
hunter, how would you find your prey?"
"Set traps. Radio ahead and—" Bochner broke off, remembering. "No,"
he said bitterly, "it's not as easy as that. We're in the Rift. In the
Quillian Sector. Damn it! Damn it all to hell!"
Chapter Four
Vult was as Allain had claimed: a mad world inhabited by the insane.
In the sky the sun, huge, mottled with flaring patches of lemon and
orange, burned with a relentless fury, and at night the stars glittered
like a host of hungry, watching eyes. Stars which were close, suns
which filled space with conflicting energies, radiations which
disturbed the delicate neuron paths of the brain, dampening the censor
so that between thought and action there was little restraint. A
harshly savage world where only the strong could hope to survive.
"A bad place, and we've arrived at a bad time." Jumoke looked at the
sky from where he stood, with Dumarest and Dilys at the head of the
ramp. "Look at that sun! An electronic furnace scrambling the ether.
There'll be murder and raping abroad. Be sure you're not the victims."
"Earl will see to that." The woman touched his arm. "Right, Earl?"
Her fingers lingered on the smooth plastic, a gesture the navigator
chose to ignore if he saw it, but one Dumarest knew he would remember
if he had. As if by accident he moved away from the caress, looking
down over the field, the sagging fence around it, the cluster of people
attracted by their arrival. One was on his way toward them.
"There's Inas," said Dilys. "I wonder what he'll have for us this
time?"
Inas was the local agent, a Husai, his dark face adorned by the
pattern of his beard. He touched Jumoke's palm, nodded to the woman,
stared at Dumarest.
"Our replacement for Gresham," she explained. "Any news?"
"With the sun the way it is?" Inas lifted his eyebrows.
"You know better than that, my dear. We can hope for nothing until
the activity dies and even then the messages will have to be decoded.
You?"
"Nothing but static all the way." Jumoke stepped back and made way
for the agent to enter the ship. "Anything good for us?"
"A party for Ellge. They wait in town. Interested?"
"We could be,
if the price is right and nothing better turns up. Still, that's up to
the captain. He's in the salon with a bottle. Wait a moment and I'll
take you up." He turned to look at the others. "Remember what I said
now, be careful."
A warning Dumarest intended to heed. Even as they crossed the field
he could sense the invisible energies prickling his skin despite the
protective mesh in his clothing, the gray plastic he had chosen to wear
rather than his uniform. It was more comfortable, offered better
protection and the knife in his boot was a sign most would recognize
and be warned..
Dilys said, "How many worlds have you visited, Earl? I don't mean
called at like this, but actually lived on for a while. A dozen? A
score?" She turned her head to look at his face. "More than that?"
"I forget."
"You didn't keep count?" She saw him smile and realized she was
talking like an impressionable child. Well, he had impressed her, damn
him! "I suppose after the first dozen they all begin to look the same.
Like women. Isn't that so, Earl? Isn't that what most men think?"
"I don't know what most men think, Dilys."
"You must have heard them talk. Boast, even. About all cats being
grey at night. Men!"
He said mildly. "Are they like that? Men, I mean. Don't they all
begin to act and sound and look alike after the first dozen or so?"
"How should I know?"
"You're a woman—"
"But not a whore!" Then, as she looked at him, her anger vanished
and she smiled. "All right, Earl, you win. I should know better than to
talk like that. In our game, we're all the same. Sex makes no
difference; we work together, take the same risks and share the same
rewards."
"You really believe that?"
"Of course. Why do you ask."
He moved on, not answering, wondering if she was being deliberately
obtuse; if any woman with her degree of femininity could ever delude
herself that she was regarded as other than what she was. If so, Jumoke
could educate her; the man was obviously in love with her. A love which
he seemed to contain, to hold in private, as if to expose it would be
to destroy it. A weakness, perhaps, but some men were like that;
fearing to lose all if they hoped to gain too much.
"Mister!" A man, young, barely more than a boy, came running toward
them, his eyes on Dumarest. "You the handler on that ship? Can you give
me passage? Please, mister, can I ride with you?"
"Where do you want to go?"
"Anywhere. Just as long as I get away from this place. Hell itself,
if that's where you're going. It can't be worse than Vult."
Dilys said, "We can carry you if you've got the price. Have you?"
She shook her head as he mentioned what he had. "It isn't enough for a
High passage, but we could take you if you're willing to ride Low."
"No!" Dumarest was sharp. "No!"
"Why not?"
"You heard what I said." He took her arm and pushed her past the
youngster, who stared after them with sunken, desperate eyes. "Don't
argue with me. Not in public. Not before that boy."
She said nothing until he had led her into a tavern and had ordered
drinks. They were tart, strong, arriving dewed with condensation and
tinkling with ice.
Looking at her glass, Dilys said, "Why, Earl?"
"Why am I buying you a drink? Let's just say that I like you and
want to be friends."
"I'm talking about that boy out there. You turned down a chance to
make a profit. Why?"
He said flatly, "Carry that boy and you'd arrive with a corpse. He
hasn't the fat on him to survive. He hasn't the strength. He's starved
too long and worked too hard to get a stake and, if we take it from
him, we'll be taking his life."
"A chance he's willing to take, Earl." She was stubborn. "A chance
you've no right to stop him taking."
"Have you ever ridden Low?" The flicker of her eyes gave him the
answer. "No. Have you ever opened a casket and seen someone lying dead?
I thought not. You wouldn't like it if you did. You'd like it a lot
less if you knew, when you put him into the box, that you were putting
him into a coffin. Believe me, girl, I'm trying to save that boy's
life."
She stared at him, her eyes searching, then she said slowly, "Yes, I
really believe you mean that. You care about that boy. But why, Earl?
What is he to you? What does it matter if he should die while we carry
him?" Then, understanding, she added, "You. You're thinking of yourself
when young. When you were like that boy, perhaps; young and scared and
a little desperate. Did someone save you then? Is that it? Are you
repaying an old debt?"
He said bluntly, "I was lucky."
With a luck which was still with him. No message could have been
received on Vult from Ealius. If the Cyclan were on his trail, they
were still one step behind—a distance he hoped to increase.
"Earl?" The woman was watching him, her eyes lambent, understanding.
"Earl, you—"
He said, "Drink up and let's get about your business. We don't want
Jumoke to get worried."
They had come to shop, which was Allain's work, but he refused to
set
foot on the world he had reason to hate, and Dilys had volunteered to
replenish the ship's store of luxury items and what staples were
needed. Dumarest followed her from the tavern into the commercial
complex, where thick roofs of translucent crystal softened the glare of
the sun, and inset panels of variegated colors threw a multihued swath
of rainbow brilliance over the covered walks and promenades, the fronts
of shops, the seats on which people lounged, their eyes ever-watchful.
They wore colors as bright as their sun; blouses and tunics set and
studded with odd shapes of metal, stones, scraps of quartz, minerals
which glowed like fireflies—fabrics either dull or shimmering with
chemical sheens, winks and glitters and somber patches. They could have
been clowns, but no clown came armed with spines and spikes on
shoulders and joints, carried knives and clubs at their belts, sported
tomahawks, cutlasses, cleavers, helmets set with slitted visors,
trailing plumes. A populace armed and armored, touchily aggressive,
watchful and radiating a feral zest.
If nothing else those inhabiting Vult were strongly alive.
Dilys sensed the atmosphere and responded to it as she walked close
at Dumarest's side. Colors seemed to grow brighter, the pulse of blood
through her veins, stronger, the air itself held a sharp and virile
fragrance. The scent of violence, she thought, if violence could be
said to have an odor of its own. The scent of physical bodies tense and
aware of the possibility of combat. The exudation of people who had to
be constantly on their guard, constantly alert.
"Earl!" A man had screamed from an adjoining way, and another had
cursed as if with anger rather than pain. A flurry, and they were past
the opening, Dumarest not altering his stride, doing no more than
glancing down the path dimmed and shadowed with dusty purple light.
"Earl, someone is—"
"We mind our own business. Is this the place?"
The store had thick windows meshed with strips of metal, doors which
were held fast with electronic devices, a floor which glowed with
warning light, displays in which goods could be seen but not touched.
Assistants who were armed.
"Madam, sir, it is my pleasure to serve you!" The man wore a quilted
jacket and pants puffed and bright with metal. The helmet winked with
polished gems and, as Dumarest lifted his hand, the visor fell to mask
the face, the eyes.
"My apologies." A hand lifted the metal screen back into place. "A
misunderstanding.. The movement of your hand— I'm sure you understand."
A hand which could have been fitted with a container of acid. A
movement which could have sent it into the eyes.
"Your needs?"
Dilys produced a list and read off items, frowning at the prices
quoted, altering, taking alternatives which, the man assured her, were
every bit as good.
"If they aren't, I'll be back," she warned. "And if I find cause for
complaint, you'll lose more than our trade."
"If you are dissatisfied, then full compensation will be made. And
for you, sir? Is there any item which arouses your interest? You are a
visitor, I know, but it would be prudent to display arms. A short
sword, or, a small axe balanced for throwing? A club, or at least a
whip which can be worn at the wrist?"
And one which would stir the aggressive natures of all who saw it,
inviting challenges and combats and bloody meetings.
Dumarest said, "Have you a gun?"
"A gun?" The man blinked. "Certainly, sir, but are you sure of what
you are asking? Had you been carrying one, the charges would have
detonated as you entered this store. Had it been a laser, the energy
cell would have vented its potential in the form of heat. Outside, on
the streets, in taverns, well—you understand?"
A temptation to any who saw the weapon. A greater challenge than a
whip and a greater prize. One they would not hesitate to kill to
obtain, or kill to prevent being used, or use to prevent others
similarly armed from killing. To carry a gun openly displayed on Vult
was to invite destruction. To use one, the same. Only in houses could
such protection be safely owned.
"I take the liberty of mentioning this because you are strangers,"
said the man. "But should you want a gun, we can supply it. Delivered,
of course, and under guard. Now, if you will tell me the type and
caliber, any decoration you may desire, any adaptation?"
"Never mind." Dumarest turned to the woman. "Have you finished?"
"Here, yes, but I need some abrasive compounds. From Harfleman?"
"Yes, madam, as you say." The man nodded agreement to the question.
"I shall call ahead to warn him of your arrival."
Hartleman was bored, pleased for the company, eager to talk of
worlds he had known as a boy, of Vult, to which he had come a scare of
years earlier. He served barley water tisane and small cakes, and
bemoaned his lot at the same time as he praised his wares and
reputation. Trade was good, but trade could be better. Violence was
bad, but he had known it worse. The radiation was on the increase, but
the scientists said that it could be followed by a period of
comparative calm. And, yes, he could deliver the abrasives to the field
for a small extra charge, but his son was nursing a wound and his
daughter, well, who would allow a girl to wander without an escort on
Vult? His eyes studied the woman.
"How large is the parcel?" said Dumarest He nodded at the answer.
"We'll carry it."
It was small but heavy, pastes of diamond-hard fragments and others
of fine emery, powders which flowed like water and grits, and scored
the fingers if touched. Packed in two bundles, connected by a strap,
they made a drag on his shoulder.
"Ready?" Dumarest waited as the woman made effusive farewells.
Impatience edged his voice. Why was she taking so long?
"Come on, now. Let's move!"
She fell into step beside him, containing her own irritation,
knowing it, and his impatience, to be the result of the radiation
streaming from the setting sun. The light in the promenades had dulled,
somber shadows lying where once had blazed lemons and ambers, violets,
blues, greens and purples. Dusky areas where gold and silver had cast
shimmering pools.
Shadows in which creatures stirred and came to life with fading
glimmers from bizarre adornments.
"Earl!"
"Keep walking."
There were five of them, edging close, eyes moving like restless
insects beneath the rims of helmets, hands twitching at belts, weapons,
clothing. Young men with hard faces, and mouths containing teeth filed
and extended to give them the appearance of wolves.
Scavengers.
Hunters with brains tormented by the disturbing radiation.
Madmen after fun.
Two halted down the promenade as two others moved to stand, one at
each side, the fifth taking up the rear. Those ahead blocked progress,
waiting as Dilys slowed, stepping forward as she halted to run curved
hands over the prominences of her breasts,
"Nice," said one. "Good meat, eh, Felix?"
"Good legs." His companion had a cheek ravaged with scars, eyes
enhanced with flaring tattoos. "Long and solid and smooth all over. I
bet she could crack a man's ribs if she had a mind. Crush him to a
pulp—a fine way to go, right, Val?"
"You said it," said the man on the right. "You said it."
"Big," said the man on the left. "Like a mountain. I've never had a
woman like that. She's big enough to get lost in. Big enough to handle
us all at the same time. Give us a lot of fun. What say, Cia?"
The man at the rear had a voice which dripped like turgid oil.
"I say we waste time. Let's see what's under the wrappings."
Cloth ripped, as the man standing at the woman's side tore , at her
blouse. Flesh showed, smooth, golden, the expanse widening as the
fabric yielded, the twin mounds of her breasts showing to attract all
eyes.
The moment for which Dumarest had been waiting. He spun, hand
lifted, fingers stiff, stabbing like blunted spears at the throat of
the man behind. A blow which ruptured delicate tissues, numbed vital
nerves, sent the man to the ground, twitching, gasping, blood spreading
from his mouth. As he dropped, Dumarest continued the turn, foot
lifting, boot lashing out to slam against the man at his side, to send
him staggering back, doubled, vomiting from the agony of crushed
testicles.
"Felix!"
The man with the tattooed eyes was already in action. He was fast,
smooth, metal glinting as he clawed at his belt and lifted a knife. The
man at his side dragged a cutlass from its sheath. Val, the man at the
woman's side, jumped back like a spider to stand hunched, a small axe
in each hand.
"Bastard," he said. "You hurt. Bastard!"
"We'll get him," said Felix. "We'll have him down and take his eyes,
his ears, the tongue out of his mouth, the meat from between his legs.
Then we'll see about what to do with the woman—Val!"
Dumarest sprang backwards as the man lunged forward, axes gleaming.
Dilys screamed as a razor edge touched her hair and sent a golden
strand falling to her shoulder, screamed again as blood showed in a
thin, red line across her chest; screams intended to distract, to
divert, echoing high and shrill as Dumarest backed, dropping the strap
from his shoulder, the band weighed at each end with the abrasive
pastes. Air whined as he whirled it in a tight circle, released it,
sent it wheeling through the air to hit an upraised arm, to wrap around
it, to slam against the face behind the fragile protection.
Dilys grabbed one of the axes as the man fell, lifted it, swung it
hard against the exposed jaw, the flat side making a dull, liquid sound
as it shattered bone.
"Get them!"
Her attack had been a mistake, one she recognized as Felix shouted.
She should have moved away and remained mobile, instead she was now
stooping over the man she had struck, awkwardly placed, an easy victim
for the man who came running toward her with his cutlass lifted high. A
matter of moments. Dumarest could handle either, but not both at the
same time. But he was on his feet and had the better chance.
As Felix ran toward him, Dumarest dropped his hand, lifted it
weighted with the knife he'd snatched from his boot, swung it back and
forward to send the blade lancing through the air in a calculated
throw. As it landed, the man with the tattooed eyes drove his own knife
hard into Dumarest's stomach.
A gamble taken and won—had the man aimed for the throat or face, the
steel would have done its work. As it was, the point ripped into the
plastic then glanced upwards as it struck the metal buried beneath. A
blow which hit like the kick of a horse, but one Dumarest gave the man
no chance to repeat. His hand fell, gripped the knife-wrist, squeezed
and twisted and his other hand darted forward, the fingers closing
around the throat, digging into the tissue to impact against the
carotids, stilling the flow of blood to the brain and bringing
immediate unconsciousness. A pressure which, if maintained, would bring
death. Dropping the limp figure, Dumarest said, "Dilys?" She was
standing beside the fallen body of the man who had carried the cutlass,
blood making a scarlet swath over her exposed flesh, breasts rising and
falling as they betrayed her agitation.
"Animals," she said. "Beasts. They would have killed you and—"
"They could have friends." Dumarest knelt and jerked his knife free
from the dead man's spine, wiping the blade before thrusting it back
into his boot. Slinging the abrasives over his shoulder, he said,
"Cover up and let's get out of here."
The party for Ellge arrived at dusk and with them bales and crates
and the artifacts constructed of ironstone and silicates found in the
deserts of Vult; things found by the party which consisted of
archaeologists delving for evidence of a race which could have preceded
the present inhabitants. One which was suspected to be other than human.
"Men, as we know them, must have been a fairly recent development,"
said Aares Atanya with dry precision. "An influx from some
overpopulated world, or a colony choosing Vult on which to establish
their own form of society. Such things are common. But I am certain
that before they arrived there was another viable culture which had
adapted itself to local conditions. A life form which could have
evolved here, if not introduced by the same means as the present
inhabitants. Some of the items we found could not have been used by
mankind. Their shape is unsuited to the human hand, and yet they are
undoubtedly tools. The conclusions are interesting, and further
evidence could show traces of movements which could upset all our
accepted beliefs as to our own origins."
"Because Vult may, at one time, have supported a race of lizards or
toads?" One of the others, a young girl with heavily lidded eyes,
smiled as she looked at Dumarest. "You mustn't get carried away, Aares."
"And you must learn to have a more open mind, Gliss."
"But not too open." The younger man sitting beside her closed his
hand protectively on her own. "We must adhere to the principle of
scientific investigation and logical truth. For example, I've heard
people say that all life must have originated on one planet. An obvious
absurdity—how could one small world have supported all the variegated
types we know? If life had evolved on a single planet, then surely all
men would look the same? As it is, we have skins ranging in color from
alabaster to the deepest ebony, hair from silver to jet, eye color,
shape of skulls, subtle differences of limbs—" The man shrugged. "Even
to think of all men having a common origin is patently absurd."
Dumarest said, "But isn't there evidence to support such a
supposition? We all belong to the same species, surely? If not, how
could we interbreed?"
"The same species, yes," admitted the man, "but only if you accept
the ability to interbreed as a sign of similarity. That could be quite
accidental. My own feelings are that life evolved on worlds of similar
type and so would have evolved on similar lines."
"You're forgetting the basic chemical composition," said another.
"The blueprint of the DNA units surely proves that for all mankind
there has to be a common point of origin. I don't mean all came from a
single world. As you say, that is ridiculous, but what if we were
'planted'. By that, I mean supposing that, long ago in the past, a
superior race passed through this galaxy and seeded suitable worlds
with specialized compounds. Spores or sperm or seeds which became life
as we know it? That would account for the diversity of types found on a
variety of worlds, and also the fact we can interbreed."
Gliss said firmly, "That's fantasy, Ulk, and you know it."
"Speculation, my dear. Of course, if you'd rather believe in
accident,
or the idiocy of a single common origin on a small, lonely world,
that's your privilege. Or perhaps you have a more esoteric belief? A
superior being, for example, one who—"
Dumarest said dryly, "I thought that was your belief. A superior
race, a superior being—surely they are the same?" Then, as the girl
shot him a grateful look, he added, "Would anyone care to join me in a
game?"
It was going to be a poor trip, he decided when later he retired to
his cabin. The archaeologists had preferred to talk rather than gamble,
and while their conversation held interest, it wouldn't swell the
profits. Only the girl, Gliss, had shown interest and Dumarest was
certain that it wasn't in games of chance.
He rose when, an hour after he had lain down, the door clicked open
to reveal a figure standing in the opening. The girl, he was sure, and
hoped he could handle her without too much fuss. Then she spoke and he
realized his mistake.
"Earl?"
"Dilys—is something wrong?"
"No." Clothing rustled as she stepped into the cabin and closed the
door behind her. In the darkness, she said, "I wanted—that is—Earl, I
haven't had a chance to thank you for what you did."
"Forget it."
"I can't."
"Why not? We're shipmates, aren't we? We're supposed to help each
other. You would have done the same."
"No, Earl, I couldn't. The way you moved, your speed, that knife you
threw. If it hadn't been for you, those men—"
He said quickly, "Forget it. It's over. You owe me nothing."
"I disagree, Earl. May I talk?"
"If you want." Fully awake now, he remembered something. "How did
you open my door?"
"With the master key." She paused as if awaiting his objection and
when none came she said, "How was it in the salon?"
"Slow. We'll get little extra this trip."
"From the men, no, but from the women?" Her voice held a question.
"I saw the way they looked at you. That young one in particular. Gliss,
I think her name is. Gliss. She was lingering in the passage when I
came along and I was surprised to find your door locked."
"If it hadn't been, would you have entered?"
"If I'd been entertaining, then the door would have been locked,"
he reminded. "What would you have done had I not been alone?"
"Broken the bitch's neck!" Then, while he was still assessing the
intensity of her answer, she added, "No, Earl, I don't mean that. Not
really. I—damn it, why can't you help me? Why won't you understand?"
Something fell on his cheek, a touch of wetness followed by another.
Rearing up on the bed, he felt for the panel, found it, touched a
switch and caused moonglow to illuminate the darkness. In the pale
luminescence he saw her face, her eyes, the tears which filled them to
stream down her cheek.
"I love you," she said. "Earl, I love you."
"Jumoke?"
"Thinks I'm his property. We've been lovers, yes, but he doesn't own
me. No man does that. Not now or ever. Not even you, Earl, though I'd
walk barefoot over broken glass to be at your side. But you don't own
me. No man can ever do that."
She was protesting too strongly, rejecting something he hadn't
offered, defensive when there was no need. A woman too sensitive about
her size, perhaps; one who must have suffered the scorn of others when
young. Finding a haven on the ship and doing work which made her the
equal of any. An environment in which she didn't have to meet
opposition or face the competition of her own sex. Or perhaps it was
more than simply a matter of size. A secret vulnerability which robbed
her of the strength needed in order to survive in hostile situations.
He remembered the recent attack, the way she had frozen, to act the way
she had, in a fury of misguided and unnecessary effort. The man she had
hit had already been rendered harmless. The effort used to smash his
jaw had been an act that had endangered her life.
"Earl?"
"I'm thinking."
"Of us?"
Of Jumoke, and the expression he'd seen in the navigator's eyes on
their return to the ship. Of the way the man had watched Dilys. His
hurt when she had turned from him. His pain when she had praised what
Dumarest had done.
"It's normal," she said quietly. "Ship-marriage, I mean. To last as
long as either of us wants it to. No obligations."
"I know."
"You've had one before?"
"Yes." He looked at her and, in the moonglow, saw Lallia with her
mane of ebon hair. Lallia, now long dead and long since dust. "Yes," he
said again. "I've been ship-wed. But not again. Not with you."
"Am I so repulsive?"
"No." How could he explain? How to tell a woman in love that her
love was not returned? How to be kind when he was being cruel?
"Listen," he said, "and try to understand. You are a lovely woman and
an intelligent one. Too intelligent to act the child and cry when you
can't get your own way. And I think too much of you to lie. I like you,
yes, but I don't want to marry you. Not even ship-marry you. I—"
He broke off as she rested her fingers against his lips. They were
soft and held the scent of perfume, a heady fragrance which
strengthened as she leaned forward to look into his eyes.
"No," she whispered. "Say no more. I understand. You are trying to
save me from hurt, but when has pleasure ever been free of pain? You
are kind, Earl, and gentle. And you care. My darling, you care!"
Chapter Five
On Ellge, they picked up a dancer, a woman of fading beauty with a
heavily painted face, hands which held the likeness of claws, eyes the
bleakness of glass. A creature long past her prime, now moving to
worlds of lesser competition. Those with a cruder appreciation of her
art, on which she could still earn a living and, perhaps, find a man to
support her to the end of her days.
On Vhenga, they took on a dispenser of charms; a thin-faced man with
an embroidered cloak and a box filled with strange nostrums and exotic
ointments. The dancer stayed on, finding a kindred soul in the seller
of charms, spending long hours huddled with him over the gaming table
in the salon, where she played her cards as if they were pieces of her
own flesh.
On Cheen, they were joined by two dour engineers, a time-served
contract man from the mines and a minor historian from the Institute.
On Varge, they took on a professional dealer in items of death.
Like the dispenser of charms, he was tall, thin-faced, sparse in
body, but where Fele Roster had crinkles in the corners of his eyes and
a wry smile wreathing his lips, thin though they might be, Shan
Threnond's face was a mask from which he looked with cynical
indifference on a universe he had taken no part in making, and which he
understood all too well.
A man of business, who wasted no time in setting up his trade in the
salon, unwilling to waste a moment as the
Entil hurtled
through the void, wrapped in the humming, space-eating power of its
Erhaft drive.
"Here we have a small item which must hold interest for all who
value the safety of their skins," he murmured as, with deft hands, he
set out his wares on the rich darkness of a velvet cloth. "In the shape
of a ring, as you see, and the stone and mounting are of intrinsic
value. But note, the stone is drilled and contains three darts, each of
which can be fired by a simple contraction of the muscle. The stone can
be removed and recharged so as to allow practice. Observe." He slipped
the ring on a finger, aimed it at a scrap of board, lowered the
appendage at the second joint. Those watching heard a barely audible
spat
and, on the board, a thing shrilled with vicious life. Almost
immediately, it created an area of disintegration around it; a pit
which dribbled a fine dust and from which, finally, it fell.
"The harmonics are destructive to all organic matter," said the
dealer quietly. "The area affected is half as deep as it is wide. In
flesh there are toxic side effects. The shock-impact is vast, the pain
is great and, aimed at the throat, death is certain."
"Unless the dart is quickly removed?"
"Yes." Shan Threnond glanced at the dancer. "You know of these
things, madam?"
She ignored the stilted courtesy. "I've seen them before. And, on
Heldha, I saw a man whipped to the edge of death for owning such a
thing."
"A backward world, my lady."
"A logical one." One of the engineers rasped a hand over his chin.
"They don't like assassins."
"Does anyone?" Threnond lifted his shoulders in a shrug. "But a man
must protect himself. Surely you would not deny anyone that right? And
a woman must take elementary precautions against those who would do her
harm. You, my lady, must have had experience of such dangers. At least,
felt at times the need to reduce the pressure of an unwanted passion,
shall we say? This will do exactly that." He lifted another item from
his store. "A ring again—but what better place to carry a weapon than
on a finger? There it can remain, always in clear view, apparently
harmless, yet ready for immediate action should the need arise. This
contains a pressurized drug which can be blasted into a face. Within
two seconds, the recipient will be stunned and helpless long enough for
the user to escape, change the situation, or summon aid."
"A whore's device." Fele Roster shook his head in distaste. "No
decent woman would ever allow herself to become involved in the kind of
situation you mention."
"You talk like a fool," snapped the dancer. "Decency has nothing to
do with it. How much?"
"For the ring? In gold, with a genuine ruby, three hundred urus.
With a synthetic gem, a hundred less. For paste and gilt, a hundred—the
cost of the inner mechanism and charge must, of course, remain the
same."
"I'll take a synthetic." The dancer pointed with a hooked finger.
"That one. And another with the darts. How much for both?"
Later, lying beside him in the snug confines of his cabin, Dilys
said, "Why did she buy such things, Earl? An old woman like that."
"She is afraid."
"And so arms herself? Against what?"
Against the terrors of the mind, which were often more frightening
than those of reality. Against age itself, and imagined hunger. Against
potential illness and poverty and neglect. Against threats she had
known
and dangers she had passed and could meet again. Like the scum they had
met on Vult, and others who haunted the dark corners of primitive
worlds.
Dilys said, after he'd explained, "Those rings won't give her much
protection if she is attacked. She could miss, or the attacker could be
armored, or there could be more than one. And the mere attempt to
defend herself could anger them."
"So?"
She flushed, grasping his meaning, sensing his lack of sympathy with
any who thought that way, or who imagined trouble could be avoided by
the closing of eyes.
"Do you think I'm a coward, Earl?"
"No."
"But—?" She broke off as if waiting for an answer, and when none
came, continued, "It's my size. Just because you're big, people think
you must be hard and tough and aggressive, but it isn't like that at
all. At least, not as far as I'm concerned. I hate violence, and always
have. When I see it, I want to run away from it, and when I get mixed
up in it, like on Vult, I—well, I just can't handle it. If that isn't
being a coward, what is?"
"I don't know."
"Don't lie to me, Earl."
"I'm not." Dumarest turned to look at her in the soft, nacreous
lighting. Moonglow touched her cheeks and shadowed her eyes, glimmered
from the rich, full contours of her naked body, touched breasts and
hips and the curve of thighs with creamy halations. "Cowardice is
determined by other people on the basis of what they think someone else
should have done in a particular situation. It's also a cheap term of
abuse. What we're really talking about is survival. Sometimes, in order
to survive, you have to kill. At other times, you have to run. If you
try to kill and fail, then you aren't brave, you're dead. If you run
and escape, you aren't a coward, you're alive."
"Black and white," she said. "You make it sound all so simple.
Either a thing is or it isn't, but surely there are shades of gray?
Possibilities in between?"
"A man is either alive or dead," said Dumarest. "How can there be
degrees between? He can be crippled or ill or diseased, but those are
degrees of efficiency, not of life. He is alive until he is dead."
"And to stay alive, sometimes he has to run." She turned her head to
look at him, the helmet of hair catching and reflecting the light to
make a golden haze framing the broad planes of her face. "Have you ever
had to run, my darling?"
"Yes."
"From home?" She repeated the question wanting, womanlike, to know
of his early days. "Did you run away from home in order to seek
adventure?"
"To avoid starvation," he said bluntly. "I was little more than a
boy and I stowed away on a ship. I was more than lucky—the captain
could have evicted me. Instead, he allowed me to earn my passage. A
long time ago, now. A long time."
Long enough to have moved deeper into the galaxy where suns glowed
hot and close, and shipping was plentiful. Into a region where even the
very name of Earth had become the subject of humor. A planet forgotten,
but one which he had to find. Would find.
"Home," she said gently. "Earth is your home and you want to return.
But why, Earl? If there was nothing for you there when you left, what
can be waiting for you now?"
"Nothing."
"But—"
"You said it, Dilys. Home. A man can have only one."
A place to call his own. A world on which to settle and on which to
make his mark. To build a house and raise a family, to find happiness
and contentment. A dream, one born during the long, lonely journeys
between the stars. An ideal nurtured to give a meaning to life, a
reason for existing. A determination which drove him to find his world
or die trying.
A waste! God, such a waste!
She felt his warmth close beside her, the comfort he gave, the sense
of security she enjoyed when she was with him. A man of whom any woman
could be proud. As she was proud when watching him at work in the
salon, gambling with calm efficiency, apparently unaware of the stares
thrown at him by women, the calculating appraisal of their eyes.
Could they sense the loneliness she had recognized? The bleak
isolation in which he lived, the cold emptiness of life spent
journeying from world to world, the frustration of an endless, hopeless
search? And always a stranger among strangers, any liaison only
temporary, any love doomed to wither, to fade, to die.
"Earl," she whispered, "don't you ever get tired? Don't you ever
want to stop and settle down and live as most men do?" A question she
waited in vain for him to answer. "I've some property on Swenna. It
isn't much, a farm and enough ground to keep a dozen alive, but there
is a river and the mountains are close and, at night during summer, the
air is so sweet with perfume it can make you drunk. If you ever get
tired, Earl, if you ever want a place to stay and rest and maybe relax
awhile, it's yours. I'd be there, if you wanted me. And you wouldn't
regret it, I swear to that." Her hand reached out to touch him, to
glide
in a possessive caress over his shoulder, his arm. "Think about it,
darling. At least think about it."
In the shadows, something moved, a click and a portion of the
chamber bloomed with variegated lights, the hologram seeming to hang
suspended in the air, to have brought a literal section of space itself
into the confined boundaries of the room.
"The Rift," said the technician, "As you ordered, my lord."
Caradoc said, "You are mistaken. I asked for a detailed display of
the Quillian Sector."
"I—my apologies. A mistake. It will be corrected immediately."
And would never be repeated. A word, and the technician would be
demoted, branded as an indifferent worker, denied access to the
sophisticated equipment housed in the building of the Hafal-Glych—a
slur on his reputation which he would never live down. And the word
would be given. Cyber Caradoc had no time for carelessness and no
patience where inefficiency was concerned. Now, as the display changed,
he nodded and gestured dismissal. Only when alone did he step toward
the shimmering profusion of multicolored lights and smoky blotches of
roiling ebon which constituted the Quillian Sector.
A region of space overcrowded with suns, over-profuse with worlds,
hyperactive with electronic forces. Energies which nullified the normal
use of radio—even the high-beam transmitters operating at maximum power
and negating the limitations of light were, at the best, erratic. An
irritation and a danger, but steps had been taken and all was
proceeding according to plan.
Soon, now, the man would be taken.
Soon, now, the long chase would be over and Dumarest would be held
by the Cyclan to yield the secret he possessed and which they
rightfully owned.
A step, and lights reflected their images on the taut features and
the scarlet robe, little dots of blue and green, yellow and amber,
violet and ruby—the latter lost against the fabric but showing like
sores against the skin of Caradoc's face. A good analogy; the ruby
points were planets on which humanoid life was impossible; worlds of
reeking vapors, tormented volcanoes, boiling, acid seas, poisonous
atmospheres.
The dots of other colors showed worlds and suns in various stages of
development and activity.
The ebon blotches were the dust clouds which held the Quillian
Sector as though in the palm of a close-cupped hand.
"Master." An acolyte had entered the room on silent feet. "A message
from Edhal. The
Belzdek reports negative."
So the woman had lied. Caradoc was not surprised; he had expected
nothing less. Bochner could have been mistaken, or could have lied in
turn for some devious reason of his own. A matter of small probability,
but even though small, it existed and had to be taken into account. As
all things had to be taken into account, each given a measure of
relative importance and relevance, each set against all other available
facts in order to arrive at an extrapolated prediction.
An exercise of a mind chosen and trained by the Cyclan, which judged
intellectual ability to be prized above all else.
Again, Caradoc studied the glimmering display, mind active as he
assessed various probabilities, traced various paths between the stars.
Only when he had exhausted all applicable combinations did he step back
and head toward the door leading to the small private room placed at
his disposal by those who ran the Hafal-Glych for the combine's true
owners.
"Total seal," said Caradoc. "I am not to be disturbed for any
reason."
"Master." The acolyte bowed and moved to take up his position
outside the door. His life would be spent in guarding it, should the
need arise.
Within the room, Caradoc touched the wide bracelet banding his left
wrist. Invisible energy streamed from it, creating a zone of force
through which no electronic eye or ear could operate. An added
precaution to ensure his absolute privacy, as was the curtained window
and the locked and guarded door.
Taking his place on a narrow cot, Caradoc closed his eyes and
concentrated on the Samatchazi formulae. Gradually, his senses blurred
and lost their function. Had he opened his eyes he would have been
blind. Isolated in the prison of his skull, his mind ceased to be
irritated by external stimuli and by means of the self-induced sensory
deprivation, became a thing of pure intellect; its reasoning awareness
the only conscious link with life. Only then did the engrafted Homochon
elements become roused from quiescence. Rapport was soon established.
Caradoc took on a new dimension of life.
It was as if his mind had expanded to become a shimmering bubble
which drifted among a host of other bubbles, all resplendent in
variegated colors. A universe filled with glowing beauty which merged
and wended one against the other to swirl and adopt new and
ever-changing patterns of mathematical symmetry. Light which burned
away the darkness of ignorance. Colors which expanded the visual
spectrum. Form which held content. Content which held truth. Truth
fashioned in a web which spanned the universe of which he was a living,
active part. A part even as, at the same time, he was the whole. A
bubble among other bubbles which were one bubble reflected to infinity.
At the heart of the shimmering beauty, at the very epicenter of the
shifting patterns, rested the headquarters of the Cyclan. Buried far
beneath the surface of a remote world, the central intelligence
absorbed his knowledge as a desert absorbs water. A mental
communication of almost instantaneous transference against which
mechanical means of supralight contact were the merest crawl.
A moment, and then it was over.
The rest was sheer enjoyment, a mental intoxication which flooded
his being and filled his brain with dancing motes of euphoric delight.
Always was this period after rapport during which the Homochon elements
sank back into quiescence and the machinery of his body began to
realign itself with mental harmony. Caradoc floated in an ebon
nothingness while he experienced strange, unlived situations, scraps of
memory, fragments of exotic experiences, memories filled with outrй
images—the residue of other intelligences, the overflow of other minds.
It came from the aura surrounding the tremendous installation of
central intelligence, the radiated power of the great cybernetic
complex which was the heart of the Cyclan. One day, he would be a part
of that installation. His body would age and fail but his brain would
be saved, removed from his skull and joined in series with the millions
of other brains taken from cybers who had lived before him and now
continued to live as disembodied brains in vats of nutrient fluid. He
would live as they lived, totally divorced from the irking irritations
of the body, able to concentrate on matters of pure thought. A time of
endless tranquility in which he and they would work to solve each and
every problem of the galaxy.
The reward of every cyber, but one which would be denied to him
should he fail.
Opening his eyes, Caradoc stared at the ceiling, waiting for his
motor functions to reach optimum before rising from the couch. A touch,
and the bracelet was deactivated. The acolyte bowed as he left the room
and entered the chamber to stand once again before the display.
"Master?"
The acolyte was bold, but Caradoc could appreciate his interest. And
no potential cyber could be other than proudly alert—a trait to be
encouraged as long as that pride did not usurp respect.
He said, "Verification of the report from the
Belzdek.
Negative as stated. The
Wilke and the
Ychale have
been eliminated." Reports from cybers fed through central intelligence
and passed on directly to his brain. Another report which he did not
mention and an urgency about which he would think later.
"Which leaves the
Entil and the
Frame, master."
"Both traders and both operating in the Quillian Sector." Caradoc
looked at the acolyte. It was never too soon to test the desired
ability, and never a mistake to encourage its development. Practice in
extrapolation, as in so many other things, led to perfection. "Your
conclusions?"
For a moment the youth hesitated, then made his decision. "The
Entil
master."
A guess? If so, the habit must be eliminated. If not, the steps
leading to the deduction could be elucidated.
"Explain."
"Both vessels are traders, master, but the
Frame headed
initially for Pontia. From there, it would be logical for it to make
for Ninik, and then on to Swenna."
"Why?"
"The relative values of available cargoes. Pontia is a producer of
leathers, oils, furs and feathers, articles of bone, concentrates of
glandular excretions. There is a market for such things on Ninik.
There, a cargo of tools and electronic components could be bought for
sale on Swenna."
"Which is mostly an agricultural world." Caradoc nodded. The
reasoning had been sound, but it betrayed a simplistic grasp of the
essential elements of the situation. "And from Swenna, the
Frame
would have headed outward to the edge of the Quillian Sector? Correct?"
"Yes, master."
"Unless, of course, a cargo of high value was offered for immediate
transport to a different world than those which you mentioned. Or a
group of passengers bought a charter. Or the captain, because of some
intuition, made a diversion. Or a local electronic storm forced the
navigator to change course." Or that Dumarest, and the luck riding with
him, had, by his mere presence, altered the natural sequence of logical
events and introduced a "wild" factor, as he seemed to have done so
often before; a thing Caradoc didn't mention. Instead he continued,
"You appreciate how the most obvious pattern can be distorted by the
smallest of unexpected events. Such events must always be included in
any prediction you may make. In this case, however, you are correct.
Dumarest is not on the
Frame."
And had never been on it—a fact he had gained from his recent
contact with central intelligence. Which meant that unless he had left
the vessel, Dumarest must still be on the
Entil.
Caradoc took a step closer to the shimmering display. Somewhere
among the suns, the dots representing the ship would be moving, halting
at worlds which he saw only as minute flecks of color. Short journeys,
some taking only a few subjective hours. Short stopovers—no trader made
a profit by hugging dirt. Destinations determined by the availability
of cargoes or the needs of paying passengers. The ship moving in a
pattern so erratic as to be almost purely random.
And, hunting it, Leo Bochner was intent on finding his prey.
He stood beneath a sky of maroon shot with clouds of umber, which
shifted to burn with abrupt, coruscating brilliance catching the eye
and filling the heavens with breathtaking splendor. Clouds made of
millions of reflective particles which caught the rays of the rising
sun and hurled them to all sides in sheets and blazes of luminous
effulgence. A kaleidoscope of broken rainbows which would dimmish as
the day progressed and the dawn wind died, to return at sunset when
again the winds would blow and the drifting mirrors would paint the
firmament with poetry in light. An artist's dream and an awesome
spectacle which, even now, was being recorded for the inhabitants of a
mist-shrouded world a score of parsecs distant.
Bochner strolled to where Gale Andrei sat with her recording
apparatus, her slim, lithe figure snug in form-fitting fabrics, the
material delineating her petite femininity. A figure overwhelmed, it
seemed, by the bulk of the apparatus which aimed wide lenses at the
sky; an impression corrected by the deft motion of her slender hands as
she adjusted verniers. The machine was the servant, and the woman its
master, as she worked to balance scope and intensity. Too high a
register in the lower end of the spectrum and the shimmering, ethereal
loveliness of the violets would be dulled. Too much emphasis on the
blues and the somber sullenness of the reds would lose their impact.
Too high a level of brilliance would lessen fine detail and too dark an
image would blunt sensory appreciation.
An attention to detail which had provided her with fame and wealth
and an enviable reputation.
Bochner waited until she finally sighed and sat back in her chair,
massaging her hands to ease the tension of tired muscles.
"Success, Gale?"
"Leo!" She smiled as she saw him. "Yes, I think so. Did you catch
that interplay over the western horizon a few minutes ago? It was
superb! That recording alone will sell at least a hundred thousand
copies on Eltania."
"And on Phenge?"
"Phenge? No."
"A world of fog and misty shadows?"
"You'd think they'd snap up anything connected with light and
beauty," she admitted. "I made that mistake five years ago—a recording
of the ice waterfalls of Brell. The sun hits them at just the right
angle twice a year, and if conditions are right, the result is
fantastic. All the colors ever imagined mixed in the wildest profusion.
It took me two years to get it just right, and when I did, I headed
straight for Phenge. They weren't interested. They liked their mist and
shadows and darkness and didn't want brightness and color. I doubt if I
sold more than a score of recordings. Well, a girl learns."
"We all learn." Bochner glanced at the sky. "But some of us tend to
forget. You've been out here since long before dawn and it's time you
had something to eat. I've ordered a meal for the two of us and it's
waiting for you to enjoy it. Ready?"
She hesitated, searching the sky, then rose from her chair and
shrugged.
"You're right, Leo. I'll get nothing more until sunset. No!"
She moved to prevent him lifting her equipment. "I'll manage."
A proud woman, he thought, as he followed her to the hotel. And a
strong one. She carried the heavy apparatus with apparent ease. As he
would carry his own if he was on a hunt, the pack on his back and the
rifle at the ready, magazine loaded, sights adjusted, safety catch
released—the mechanism an extension of himself as the missile it could
hurl was an extension of his arm, his will.
To kill. To wait and savor the moment. To feel the godlike power
cradled in his arms. To watch the target—the woman, for example. If he
were about to shoot her, where would he aim? A few inches above the
upper curve of her buttocks, he decided. The bullet sent to drive into
the slight concavity at the base of her spine. To smash, to break, to
shock, to kill. She would fall instantly, her head unmarked and
suitable for mounting as a trophy.
He could visualize it set against its background of polished wood.
A small, round head, wreathed in a soft cloud of rich, brown hair.
The eyes would stare from beneath slanting eyebrows, brown and sharply
appraising, touched by a master hand to give them the semblance of
life. The mouth would be slightly open to reveal the inner gleam of
neat, white teeth, the lips themselves full and intriguing in their
implied sensuality. The jut of the chin, with its shallow cleft. The
slender column of the neck. The ears. The high forehead. The…
"Leo!" He blinked, instantly alert, as she called to him.
"Daydreaming?"
"Thinking. Wondering how much longer we shall have to wait."
"It can't be long now." She set down her equipment and stretched as
if unconscious of the way the gesture enhanced the firm thrust of her
breasts. "Today, tomorrow, what does it matter?"
"It doesn't, if you're working." Bochner led the way to where a
table stood beside a window, its surface loaded with glass and cutlery,
china and covered dishes. As they sat, a waiter hurried forward to pour
them both cups of fragrant tisane. "But what is there for me to do on
Kumetat? If any game exists in the wilderness, it is small and
relatively harmless. Suitable only for the training of beginners in the
art of assessing the environment and location of the lair."
"And the stalk?"
He glanced at her and smiled. "The stalk! What can be better? The
art of pitting your mind and strength, your skill and cunning, against
another. A beast which would kill you if given the chance. A creature
armed and armored by nature against which you are weak and defenseless
aside from your own intelligence, the power of your mind."
"And, naturally, of your gun," she said dryly. "We must never forget
the gun, must we?"
"You don't approve?"
"Of killing animals? No."
"Of hunting?"
"Of a stalk where, as you say, it is mind pitted against mind and
cunning against cunning, yes. My father used to hunt when I was young
and he took me with him when I was old enough to keep up. But he never
carried a gun. He used a camera. It was enough to get up close and
record the event. The fun, he used to say, was in the chase. The stalk.
Any fool can kill."
He said blandly, "Of course. Now, may a fool offer you some
refreshment? Slices of meat, cooked in a piquant sauce, and highly
recommended by the chef? This compote of fruits, honey and nuts? A
slice of bread coated with spiced seeds? An egg—they are worth trying.
Or—" He broke off, looking at the hand she had placed on his own.
"Leo, I'm sorry."
"For calling me a fool?"
"You're not that, and we both know it. It's just that, well, a man
with a gun never seems to give an animal a sporting chance. He stands
back and fires and that's it, if he's any shot at all. Where's the
danger?"
"For a man facing a beast which can't reach or hurt him—none," he
admitted. "Such work is butchery. But to hunt a beast you must hit in
exactly the right place with the single shot which is all time will
allow, and first to track it to a point where it is at home and you are
not—that isn't work for fools."
"Or for men?"
Too late, she tried to cover her distaste and, for a moment, he felt
the anger rise within him; the burning rage which had always been his
unconscious reaction to criticism and which, uncontrolled, could lead
him to kill. Had led him to kill; the act itself a catharsis, easing as
it cleansed—a luxury he could not at this time afford. Yet, it was hard
to master his anger. That this mere recorder of transient spectacles
should dare to deride him and what he represented! To mock the grim
essentials of life itself! To ignore the fundamental truth which had
accompanied mankind from the beginning and would stay with him until
the end. How could she be such an ignorant fool?
And yet, looking at her as he reached for syrup and poured it over
the chopped vegetables and prepared cereal in his bowl, he found it
difficult to recognize her stupidity. Had the words been a mask? A
test? A probe to trigger a reaction? Was she also, in her way, a
hunter, and he her prey? Was she the bait skillfully offered to be
withdrawn should he strike too fast or come too close?
Inwardly, he bared his teeth in a smile which was a tiger's snarl.
If so, she had met her match. It was a game in which he did not lack
experience.
He said, "Men do what they must. Some fight. Some hunt. Some kill.
Always there must be those who hunt and those who are hunted. It is a
law of nature."
"Yes," she said, and added in a peculiarly strained tone, "Life is a
continuous act of violence."
"Of course. To live, it is necessary to kill." He gestured at the
table, the plate of eggs, the dish of meat. The movement left no need
for words. "We grow too serious. You record the beauty which you see
and I, too, in a way, seek to provide a similar experience to those who
are willing to pay for it. For death, in essence, is also beauty. As
all great catastrophes are; fires, floods, volcanoes—"
"Destroyers," she said, musingly. "And I suppose the extinction of a
personal universe could be regarded in such a light. After all, to the
one involved, no catastrophe could be greater. The total erasure of all
a living thing held to be real. An end. A termination." She shivered
despite the warmth of the day. "Let's not talk about it."
A reluctance which did not match Bochner's assessment of her
character. She was nothing if not strong, yet she had revealed a
certain sensitivity he found interesting. Was it a mask to hide her
real personality?
He remembered a predator on Rhius which spread false trails of
pungent scent when pursued; exudations which contained subtle
pheromones so that, entranced, those intent on the kill suddenly found
themselves helpless victims to their imagined prey.
Was the girl such a one?
Did it matter if she was?
The afternoon, he decided, after she had bathed and changed and
taken a little rest. When the sun had passed its zenith and the air
still with sultry heat. She would be bored, restless, willing to
indulge in a new experience. Intrigued by his attentions, and
half expecting him to call, as call he would. To sit in her room, her
lair, to talk with her for awhile, to touch, to let the ancient magic
work its biological charm and, even if she struggled, he would take
her. He would make his symbolical kill.
But before the meal was over, the air quivered to the roar of
manmade thunder as the
Entil came in to land.
Chapter Six
The dancer still rode with them, as did the seller of nostrums and
the dealer in items of death. The engineers had gone together with the
time-served contract man, a scarred mercenary taking their place. Charl
Zeda was a man who had lost a hard-won stake in a barren mine and was
now headed back to richer worlds, whose rulers could afford the luxury
of war.
Sitting beside the minor historian, he scowled at his cards. The
game was poker and he did not play it well.
"Two," he said. "No, make it three."
A pair then, and he'd decided against holding a kicker. Dumarest
dealt, watching as the man picked up the cards, noting the scarred
face, the eyes, the hands. The face was a mask, the eyes blinded
windows, but the hands betrayed him. He had not improved his hand.
"You?"
The historian took one. The dancer two. The dealer in death had
passed, and so had Fele Roster. Gale Andrei had not joined the play.
Leo Bochner said, "I'll play these."
A bluff? It matched the impression Dumarest had of the man. He had
not opened the bidding but that meant little—a man with a pat hand
could have free choice. He had raised before the discards, a small sum
which bought him the right to raise again if given the chance, but the
others had merely called. Now he sat, his smooth face bland, his eyes a
little amused, as if he were an adult pandering to children. A man
killing time and unconcerned whether or not he won. A man who could be
trying to buy the pot.
Dumarest glanced at it, then at his own hand. The three lords he
held should win if his calculations had been correct. The single card
the historian had drawn showed he held two pairs, or had tried to fill
a flush or complete a straight. From his reaction he had done neither
nor had he matched either of his pairs. The dancer had played true to
form, taking a wild chance and hoping for impossible odds to favor her
hand. She could have gained similar cards to his own, but they would be
weaker. Bochner was the unknown factor.
Dumarest watched him while appearing to study his cards. A
hunter, now heading to worlds outside the Quillian Sector—the
information he'd gained about the man had been small. His appearance
told more; tall, smooth, his face bland, only the eyes gave a hint as
to his nature. Eyes which were too steady, which held too long, as if
the man were afraid ever to lessen his attention, as if he had long
since learned that nothing was quite what it seemed. The eyes of a man
who emitted a perpetual challenge—the holding of a stare until the
other dropped his eyes.
And then?
Dumarest had met others with such a trait; fighters risking their
lives in the arena with ten-inch naked blades. Men who had developed
tricks in order to survive, who would hold a stare and maintain it
until their opponents looked away, darting in as they did so, taking
advantage of the movement to strike, to kill, to win.
But the man was a hunter, a friend of the woman, Gale Andrei, her
lover, perhaps. It was natural that a hunter should have such eyes.
Natural that he had the ability to sit as if made of stone. Natural
that he should have been waiting on Kumetat?
The mercenary had opened. Now he thrust money into the pot.
"Ten."
The historian hesitated, then threw in his hand. The dancer raised,
light flashing from her gemmed hands as she doubled the bet. Bochner
glanced at Dumarest.
"No limit?"
"None."
"Then I'll call and raise one hundred."
"You bastard!" Furious, the dancer threw down her cards. She had
quit out of turn but no one objected. "Players like you ruin the game!"
Bochner ignored her. Ignored, too, the mercenary who had dropped his
cards to the baize and was obviously waiting to throw them in. "Well,
Earl?"
On the face of it, a simple request as to whether Dumarest would
call, raise or stack his hand, but meeting the cool appraisal of
Bochner's eyes, he sensed it to be far more than that. Would he meet
the
challenge? Call the potential bluff? Face the enemy or run? Use his own
skill and cunning to match that of his adversary? Was he willing to
take a risk? Did he prefer always to be safe? Dared he admit the
possibility of defeat?
Did he have courage? Did he have guts?
Dumarest checked the pot. Bochner's raise had almost doubled it
which meant allowing for what he'd put in earlier, he would be getting
back over fifty per cent return on his money. A good investment for a
few minutes work, and one favored by gamblers who saw a chance to use
the weight of their money to buy the pot.
Dumarest said, "I'll call and raise another hundred."
A chance, but a calculated one, and it was time to discover the
man's method of play. His hand could be stronger, but he had drawn only
one card and Bochner could think he held less than he did. A single
pair, even—a bluff took many forms.
"A hundred?" Bochner pursed his lips, one hand falling to toy with
the coins before him, his eyes never leaving Dumarest's face. An old
trick, to clink metal or rustle paper or allow chips to make their
small drummings while watch was kept for the small, telltale signs of
betrayal. The tension of the lips, the movements of the eyes, the
impatience, the sweat, the very odor of a man under tension, of a man
thirsting for the kill. "A hundred," he said again, this time not
making it a question. Coins rose in his hand, "I think, in that case,
I'll—well, I'll just give it to you."
"You quit?" The dancer grabbed at his cards. "What did you have?"
A blur and Bochner's hand was on her own, the fingers hard against
her flesh, twisting so as to turn the ringed fingers down against the
table.
"No," he said. "You don't see my cards. No one sees them."
"My wrist! You're hurting me!"
She nibbed at the bruised flesh as Bochner released her hand then
rose, fuming, to storm from the salon and into her cabin. Fele Roster
rose and looked down at the others.
"I'd better follow her. There could be something I could do."
"Poison her," suggested the mercenary. "Some people live too long."
"She's no longer young, and worried, and not too well." The seller
of nostrums backed from the table. "I've a compound which can bring her
sleep and pleasant dreams. An illusion of youth which will not last,
but will serve to ease her hurts. And you, sir," he glared at Bochner.
"Perhaps you should remember that your mother was a woman and all women
are worthy of a little consideration."
"A fool," said Charl Zeda, dispassionately, as the man left the
salon. "He loves what was and now can never be. A woman long past her
prime, with only the remnants of a once lovely body to commend her.
Well, if you can't afford the cake, you can at least enjoy the crumbs."
"Fele is a romantic," said Shan Threnond. "He deals in charms and
magic and has come to believe in the potency of an incantation. True,
such things work with the yokels who come to gawk at his tricks at
carnivals and fairs, but at such times, when does a love philter not
work? A vial of colored water, a muttered spell, and nature will take
care of the rest. It is much the same with his salves and lotions, his
powders and pills and capsules, his compounds and nostrums. Chemicals
mixed with herbs and natural oils which sting and smell and titivate
and which, together with time, will either kill or cure."
"Unlike your own wares," said the historian dryly, "which only kill."
"Which protect," corrected the dealer. "Which are a precaution
against a time of need." To Bochner, he said, "I noticed the way in
which you twisted the woman's hand. Her rings?"
"I've seen rings like those before," said Bochner. "And I know how
spiteful such a woman can be. There are those with faces marred by acid
thrown by such as her. I wanted to keep mine intact."
"And your life and that of your lady?" Threnond glanced at Gale
Andrei. "I must show you my wares. If nothing else, they will be of
interest to a man like yourself, and the rings make appreciated gifts.
Later, perhaps?"
"Later." Bochner looked at the cards. "Are we still playing?"
"You might be, I'm not." Charl Zeda leaned back in his chair,
stretching. "A wise man knows when his luck has deserted him."
"Or when it rides with him?"
"True," admitted the mercenary. "Like that time on Tchang when the
charge of my laser had bled and I only had an automatic gun and a score
of cartridges between me and what I knew was extinction. When I ran
into an enemy patrol, I tried to open fire and the damned thing jammed
solid. I thought I was dead for sure, but what I didn't know was that
peace had been signed shortly before and, had I hit anyone, I'd have
been impaled for breaking the truce. That was good luck and I tried to
ride it by buying that damned mine. I thought I finally had it made;
just work a little, dig out some metal, hire some men to dig out more
and I'd live easy the rest of my life. But I was cheated. Even so, I
was still lucky. If I hadn't bought the mine I'd have been with my old
company when they got themselves wiped out with flames in the
Hitach-Lentil war on Loom." He sat, brooding, his seamed face sagging,
suddenly old. "Flamers," he whispered. "A hell of a way to go."
Men screaming, their clothing a mass of flame, skin bursting into a
mass of oozing blisters, blood smoking as it spouted from ruptured
veins. Eyes gone. Feet destroyed. Lungs gone. Hands turned into shreds
of brittle, yet still living, bone. Feet destroyed. Faces.
Unsteadily he rose and crossed the room toward the spigots, the
water, the basic which provided a liquid diet, the weak wine which, too
slowly, could bring a blessed oblivion.
The recording had ended; the thin, keening notes accompanied by the
muffled beat of drums had died into silence and now only the smoke
remained. Jumoke drew it deeply into his lungs, savoring its bite, the
euphoria it would give, the forgetfulness. And yet, some things refused
to die; the touch of a hand, a smile, the feel of warm, lovely flesh.
A whispered word, a promise implied if not spoken, a yearning which was
like a pain.
Was a pain. One which tore at his heart and stung his eyes with
unshed tears; which closed about the innermost core of his being so
that, in his mind, he cried out for the universe to hear.
Dilys—
I love you! I love you!
And would always love her. Would always want her with a need which
went beyond sane logic and calculated reason. His woman. His life.
The smoke curled about his face, fumes rising from the can before
which he squatted, chemical heat releasing the vapors from exotic
compounds, a mist which should have brought a roseate glow. One
destroyed now by the pounding, the echo of drums, the voice which rose
then exploded as Allain burst into the cabin.
"Jumoke! Are you crazy? The Old Man would kill you if he saw you
like this."
The Old Man? Which old man? Who was talking and why? Questions which
shattered like broken glass as the steward grabbed him, lifted him,
thrust his head beneath a faucet and let a mist of water spray over
head and neck as he snuffed the can. Glass which became reality to the
sting of astringent odors as Allain thrust something beneath his nose,
became pain as the man slapped his face, turned into anger at his
cursing.
"That's enough!"
"Like hell it is! You know what you're doing? It's my neck too,
remember. You dumb bastard, I've a mind to—"
"I said that's enough!" Jumoke straightened, water dewing his face,
vanishing as he used the towel Allain handed to him. "What's the
matter? Trouble?"
"You're due to go on duty."
"So soon?"
"You should have reported ten minutes ago. Varn sent me to get you."
Allain glanced at the can with its gaudy label and insidious contents.
"I'll tell him you overslept if he should ask, and you'd better tell
him the same. But if you try a stupid thing like this again, I'll break
both your arms. You'd better believe that."
"I want no favors from you."
"You're getting them, just the same." Stepping closer, Allain said
quietly, "Get a grip on yourself, man. You can't act like this in the
Rift and you know it. Still less, in the Quillian Sector. If yon want
to commit suicide, then wait until after we've
landed."
Jumoke said coldly, "You forget yourself. I'm the navigator and
you're nothing but a damned steward."
"I'm a partner, and even if I wasn't I wouldn't let a friend make
such a fool of himself. What is it, man? Can't you get her out of your
mind?"
He knew, of course, as Gresham had known and Egulus must know. How
could they have remained ignorant when his happiness had illuminated
the ship? When his world had been complete and he had been free of the
pain which rode him now. The loss. The yearning. The endless, empty
yearning.
Damn her!
Damn her all to hell!
And damn Dumarest with her!
Egulus stared hard at him as Jumoke entered the control room. The
captain looked tired, eyes betraying the strain he was under, the need
to remain constantly alert, which was the price of survival for any
officer traversing the Rift.
"You're late."
"I know, Varn. I'm sorry. I overslept."
Egulus accepted the lie, though his nostrils twitched as the
navigator passed him to take his place in the main chair. A captain
needed to know what went on in his vessel and Egulus was no fool, but
there was a time to be hard and a time to compromise. And now, more
than ever, he needed the navigator.
"We're running into a lot of distortion," he said. "Those suns are
playing up and space is a mess. Nodes and vortexes all over the place.
We'd best cut shifts so as to remain alert. I'll send Allain up with
something to help."
Drugs to wash away the fatigue and the residue of the vapors.
Chemicals to steal time from the need to sleep, a debt which would have
to be paid for later but which would buy them a higher margin of
safety. A common practice in dangerous areas of space.
"I'll be all right."
"Did I suggest otherwise?"
"You don't have to worry about me, Varn." Jumoke turned to meet the
captain's eyes. "Go and get some rest now."
"Yes," said Egulus. "Yes, I guess you're right. Rest is what I need."
Rest and more crew, so as to lessen the burden, and the sense to
quit the game while he was still ahead. While he still had his life. A
familiar thought, and one he treasured like an old friend, but one he
would never listen to when the danger was past. As the others, whose
bodies drifted in the Rift, hadn't listened. Captains who had gambled
once too often. Ships which had crumpled like paper bags when caught in
the invisible jaws of the monster which lurked always just beyond the
hull.
Alone, Jumoke checked the instruments, eyes moving with the ease of
long practice from dial to meter, from digital readout to the shades of
color seething behind graduated scales. Sensors which, even now, were
questing space around and ahead. Probes which checked the local
stresses and warned of opposed potentials. Electronic eyes which guided
the hurtling vessel through the vagaries of the plus-C universe through
which it moved, powered and protected by the shimmering haze of its
Erhaft field.
A touch and a meter swung to optimum, a minor adjustment and a dial
settled from its nervous twitching. Things done even as Jumoke
breathed, actions taken without the hampering need for conscious
thought. A game he played to beat the computer which would have made
the necessary correction had the variation grown dangerously wild.
The control room was dimly lit, the glow of telltales like colorful,
watching eyes, the soft susurration of the air-circulators, the
breathing of a thing alive. It was easy to imagine the room as being a
womb, the ship as a living thing. A temptation to give it
anthropomorphic attributes. A woman with the computer for a brain and
the engines for a heart. The sensors, stalked and staring eyes. The
probes, reaching hands. The crew, the seed carried in her belly.
Would he give her a child?
The thought was like the thrust of a knife into his guts, a blade
which turned and dragged and spilled his life so that he doubled and
felt the vomit rise in his throat.
Not that! Dear God, not that!
Because that would be the end and the death of all hope that she
would come back to him, to rest at his side as she had done so often
before, to let his hands rove over her soft and tender body, touching,
fondling, caressing, lingering on the swell of breasts and the curve of
thighs, the softness between them, the moist wonder which had once been
his.
Madness. The whine of a child. He knew it, and knowing it, could do
nothing about it, for what else was a man obsessed but a crying child?
One who wanted more than could be given—and yet he asked so little. The
opportunity to love, to worship, to share.
A hope which had died even as he voiced it.
Leaning back, he saw her face painted against the screens, the
incredible splendor of the universe they portrayed; the stars and
clouds, the sheets of luminescence and curtains of radiance. The fuzz
of distant nebulae, the splinters and pulses and flares. Loveliness to
match her own. A coldness she shared.
"No, Jumoke." He had cringed to the iron resolve of her tone. "No."
"But, Dilys, where's the harm? We've known each other for so long
and you know I love you. Why let a stranger ruin what we have between
us?"
"Had," she corrected. "We've nothing now, Jumoke."
"I—we, for God's sake, Dilys! Must I beg? All right, I'm begging. I
need you. Please!"
"No." Then, looking at him, she had softened a little. "We shared
something, yes, but that was all. It was a physical thing, a
convenience, if you like. We both needed release and each could give it
to the other. But now you ask too much."
"Dilys—"
"I'm not a whore!"
"Did I say you were? But on Aclyte and Nyard women take multiple
husbands. They are shared by the men. Do I ask for so much?"
"You ask too much."
"But—" He had sought for words with which to win her. A phrase to
buy happiness. "Dumarest is just a man, as I am. What makes him so
different?"
"I love him." She had reached out then, and touched his cheek, her
fingers burning even as they felt like ice. "I love him, Jumoke. I love
him!"
The face vanished and he sank into hell.
He would never win her back. Never again feel the pride he had
known. Never again the happiness. She had taken them from him and given
them to another. Dumarest. Jumoke lifted his
hands and looked at them, clenched, the skin taut over the knuckles.
Dumarest, Dumarest and Dilys— he wished both were dead.
"Now!" Gale Andrei turned a switch and the salon bloomed with light.
"The Garden of Emdale," she said. "It is one of my favorites."
Which was why she carried the recording with her—much of what she
did and said was obvious, a trait Bochner had noted and assessed as a
part of her facade. One of apparent childish exuberance, probably
adopted to match her innocent face. But there was nothing innocent
about her as he now knew. Within the slight figure burned a mature
passion but both it and her body had left him curiously unsatisfied. A
trophy won, a symbolical kill made, yet there had been small joy in the
victory. Like swatting a fly, it had been too easy. An act performed
from boredom, and as an aid to his assumed character. A prop he wished
he had done without.
But, in other ways, the woman had skill.
"It's beautiful!" The dancer was entranced. She spun, arms extended,
the transformation of the salon giving her an elfin grace. "Beautiful!"
Even Charl Zeda had to agree, his voice gruff as he added to her
praise. "It's fantastic! My dear, allow me to congratulate you. To
honor you in the accustomed manner."
She turned her lips from his kiss, allowing him only to touch her
cheek and, watching, Bochner could sense her tension, the repugnance
she felt towards the old mercenary. Would she have reacted the same if
Dumarest had offered his salutation?
Bochner glanced to where he stood behind the table, his back to the
wall. The sight pleased him; the stance was that of a cautious man.
Only when he had marked his prey did the hunter allow himself to study
the hologram which had been created by the projector and the woman's
art.
Gale had chosen well. On all sides stood a profusion of flowers
touched with a multitude of hues, reds and greens and blues merging
with violets and scarlets and purples and all degrees of the shades
between. Alone, that would have been impressive, but the blooms were in
motion, kissed by an unfelt breeze, their cups the targets for
wide-winged insects which flashed and shimmered, to hang poised to
flash again in metallic gleams which entranced the eye as their drone
excited the ear.
And, almost, he could smell the flowers.
They filled his vision, numbing his eyes with their form and
brilliance, a poem in color augmented by the insects so that it was
hard not just to sit and stare and let the tide of beauty roll over him
and become one with the moment. He became aware that the salon was
silent aside from the thin hum of the insects. Almost, it could have
been filled with the dead. Then he saw the historian, the man's eyes
enormous in his pallid face, a creature stunned and enamored by
loveliness beyond all his previous experience.
Quietly, Bochner moved from the salon, heading down the passage,
past the cabin he occupied, past the one shared by the mercenary and
historian, the one in which Andrei slept when she chose to rest alone,
the one hired by the dancer, that which formed the steward's office to
halt at the door which gave onto Dumarest's quarters. It swung open as
he manipulated the lock, and he stepped inside to stand as his eyes
searched the compartment.
Here? Would it be here? The thing Dumarest owned which made him so
valuable to the Cyclan that they had hired him to hunt him down.
He saw nothing but the usual furnishings; the bed, the cabinet, the
washbowl with its spray faucet. A chair stood against the bulkhead and
a small boxlike container rested to the side of the bed, close to the
head. It held a door, which he opened. Behind lay gray plastic
clothing, neatly folded, high boots of matching color, a knife.
Bochner lifted it and straightened as he examined the weapon.
It was a tool designed for service, the blade nine-inches long,
curved, the reverse side sweeping in a sharper curve so as to form a
vicious, needle-point. The guard was smooth on the inside, rough on the
outside with a pattern of engraved lines, a means of catching an
opposed blade. The hilt was shaped, wrapped with plastic, topped with a
rounded pommel. Bochner examined it, twisting it, finding it firm and
noting the thin line of weld lying in the junction of pommel and hilt.
He balanced it in his palm, feeling the distribution of weight, the
heft. A good blade, he decided. One deadly in an experienced hand.
Along the edge, the light splintered to form a cloudlike haze—the sign
of sharpness, of keenness so well achieved that it equaled that of a
surgeon's scalpel.
"You! What are you doing here?" The woman was sharp. Bochner turned
as she entered the cabin, the knife poised in his hand. "That isn't
yours," Dilys accused. "What are you doing with it?"
"I was curious."
"Curious enough to break into another's cabin?"
"The door was open," he lied. "I glanced in as I passed and saw this
knife. I am a hunter and have an interest in weapons. An interest which
overcame my discretion, I'm afraid. I couldn't resist examining it.
Earl's?"
"Yes."
"As I thought. Dumarest is the kind of man who would know how to use
it. The kind of man I have a need of." He saw the flicker of interest
in her eyes and, replacing the knife, he closed the door of the boxlike
cabinet. Now, if he could get them both out of the cabin, the door
relocked and Dilys so intrigued that she would fail to mention the
incident to her lover, he would have won. "After you, my dear."
Impelled by his hand, she stepped outside and watched as he closed
the door. He was fortunate, the panel had a spring lock. The game won,
then, but the victory was nothing. It would be better if she warned
Dumarest—a quarry on its guard made for better sport. And yet, only a
fool made a stalk more difficult than it needed to be.
She said, "What did you mean when you said you needed a man like
Earl?"
The bait had been nibbled, gently he tightened the line.
"In my work. As you probably know, I am associated with a consortium
of speculators interested in expanding into wider fields. We cater to
those who like to hunt, and are always in need of men who have both
knowledge and experience in the field. Someone to arrange for various
safaris. To guide and guard our customers, not all of whom are as
knowledgeable as we would like." His smile and gesture made clear his
meaning. "Dumarest would be ideal. He is a man who inspires confidence
and seems to have an innate caution and an awareness of what needs to
be done when it needs to be done. A perfect hunter, guide, guardian and
teacher. On Persing, he—but what is the use?"
"Persing?"
"Yes. A world we are opening up for exploitation. It has magnificent
hills ideal for breeding predators and good cover for those who have a
wish to hunt them. A stalk, properly managed, could take days. We need
a manager, someone to oversee the workers, to maintain the beasts, to
decide on the hunts. In short, someone to take full charge. There is a
house of thirty rooms, the use of a raft, servants and the remuneration
is generous. That isn't taking into account the usual gifts made by
satisfied clients. And there is always the prospect of promotion."
"Which are…"
"Very good. As I told you, we are expanding and there is room for a
good man to climb high and reach the top. Frankly, I'd like Earl to be
that man, but I guess to hope for that is to hope for too much. Well,
that's the way it goes." Then, casually, he added, "Of course, he would
need to be married before we could consider him for the position."
"Married?"
"It makes for stability. A man with a wife and children is more
likely to stay than one who hasn't. You can see our point of view? To
furnish a large house, to make all the arrangements and then, because
of some passing fancy, to be let down—" His shrug was eloquent. "You
are close?"
He would have been a fool not to have known it but she could
appreciate his delicacy.
"We are friends, yes."
"He is a lucky man. Shall we join the others?"
Bochner took her arm, aware of her presence as he had never felt the
presence of another of her sex. Not simply because of her femininity,
which was strong, or her size, which was unusual, but because of
something to do with his own conditioning. The natural reaction of a
man who had felt superior, both in height and ability, to all others
for the majority of his life. It did not please him to feel dwarfed.
Yet, he maintained his smile. The woman was just another game,
another hunt. To bend her to his will, to manipulate, to delude, to
misguide, to dangle the lure of golden promises—all were part of the
sport.
As they walked down the passage, he said, "One thing, my dear, a
matter of confidence. I would not like Earl to know how eager I am to
obtain his services. A business precaution, you understand. It would be
best if he knew nothing of what I told you." Than, casually, he added,
"Has he ever spoken of leaving the
Entil?."
"No."
"But he surely doesn't intend to remain for long?"
"I—I don't know."
He caught the note of doubt, the inner worry which she must strive
to conceal, and felt increased amusement. How simple some people were.
How transparent was a woman in love.
"It must be in his mind," said Bochner. "A world he would like to
make his home. One he may have mentioned to you. Aaras, perhaps, or
Vien." Both were on the edge of the Sector, though still within the
Rift. Logical places for a man like Dumarest to make a change. "Swenna,
perhaps?"
"No," she said, a little too quickly. "The only world he's mentioned
is Earth."
"Earth?"
"He was joking, of course."
"Of course." Bochner yielded precedence as they reached the door
leading to the salon. "After you, my dear."
Allain came toward her as she stepped inside. He looked like a ghost
in a living garden; walking through the tumult of flowers, the glint of
metallic wings adding extra eyes to the tension of his face. He caught
her arm and drew her from the salon.
"Jumoke—have you seen him?"
"No." She sensed his urgency. "Is something wrong?"
"Yarn wants him. The instruments are acting all to hell, and he's
worried. Jumoke could be responsible. He—"
"Jumoke commit sabotage? That's impossible!"
"Once, yes, but now I'm not so sure." The steward was bitter. "He's
been eating smoke and God alone knows what other things. The man's
half-crazed and not even seeing straight. I've tried to cover for him,
but now he's gone too far. Have you seen him? I've checked the salon
but he isn't there. His cabin?"
"Maybe." She made her decision. "I'll look—he'll answer for me."
Answer, if he was inside and read more into her call than was
intended, but that was a problem to be settled later. Now, with the
ship in potential risk, there was no time for worry about personal
commitments. As a crew, all had to stick and operate together.
But he wasn't inside. The door remained closed and, when she opened
it with the master key, the cabin was empty aside from the acrid taint
of drugged vapors.
"Smoke," said Allain, grimly. "He must have hidden some away. I
thought I'd found every can."
"The instruments," she said. "Just what is the situation?"
"Bad. Yarn's doing his best, but Jumoke is the navigator. We're
off course as it is, and surrounded by trouble. At the best, days have
been added to the journey. The worst—" He didn't need to complete the
sentence. "Where the hell is he?"
A jerk gave the answer. A slight movement of the deck beneath their
feet, a twitch of the hull, a movement of the fabric itself, as if the
ship had shrugged within its skin.
Yarn Egulus felt it and reared in his chair, his face ghastly in the
subdued light of the telltales. The historian felt it and shrugged,
happy in his ignorance. Gale Andrei pursed her lips as the hologram
shook a little, then steadied to its former beauty. Bochner felt it and
guessed. Dumarest felt it and knew.
As did the dancer who halted the undulating movements of her arms,
the complex pattern she wove among the blaze of flowers to stand, mouth
open, the scarlet smear of a bloom casting the semblance of blood over
her throat and chest, a blotch which quivered as she screamed.
"The ship! My God, the ship! The field is down!"
Chapter Seven
Jumoke lay where he had died, looking very small now, a limp figure
with burned and blackened hands and a face which had one cheek pressed
hard against the bulk of the generator which he had ruined. A face
still tormented by the devils which had possessed him, one unrelaxed by
the peace he had hoped to gain.
"The bastard!" Allain was bitter. "If he wanted to die, why take us
with him?"
"He was crazy," said Dilys. "You said so yourself."
"And who sent him that way?" The steward's anger was the product of
fear. "You could have given in to him. Let him have you and kept him
sane."
"I'm not property. The ship doesn't own me."
"Where would have been the harm? You went with him before and you
knew how he felt. You could have lied, promised, given him hope. Damn
it, a kiss could have saved us!"
"That's enough," said Dumarest. "Dilys isn't at fault. If anyone is
to blame, it's you. You knew he was eating smoke. Why didn't you stop
him?"
"I tried."
"Like hell you tried!" Dilys flared with a sudden rage. "Did you
report it to Yarn? Did you tell anyone? Did you take precautions
against something like this happening?" She gestured to the body, the
machine. "Damn you, Allain. Damn you!"
Dumarest caught her lifted hand before she could send its palm
against the steward's cheek. For a moment, she struggled with him and
he felt the strength of her, the fear and anger which powered the
muscles beneath the skin, then, abruptly, she was against him, her face
pressed against his own, a dampness on her cheek.
"Earl! Oh, Earl!"
He held her, waiting for the moment to pass, knowing that until it
did, nothing constructive could be done. When she finally straightened,
he said, "How bad is the damage? Can it be fixed?"
"I don't know. I'll have to check."
"Then get on with it." Stopping, Dumarest gripped the body and swung
it to one side. "Allain, you'd better get back to the passengers. Give
them tranquilizers if they need them, and any lies which can give them
comfort. We've had a temporary breakdown which will take a little while
to fix. In the meantime, they can enjoy the hospitality of the ship.
Break out some spirits and strong wines. Euphoriants, too, and get that
woman to play more of her recordings."
"They aren't stupid, Earl. They know what it means once the field is
down."
As they all knew—knowledge which gave no peace of mind. Once the
shimmering haze of the Erhaft field was down the ship dropped to below
light speed, to drift in the immensity between the stars, to be
vulnerable to any wandering scrap of debris which might cross their
path—motes which could penetrate the hull and larger fragments which
would vent their kinetic energy in a fury which would turn metal into
vapor. And there were other dangers, less tangible, but more to be
feared. The impact of invisible energies which could twist and distort
the vessel and all within it, forces which were thick in the area they
now traversed.
"Dilys?"
"I'm working as fast as I can, Earl." She was at the generator,
tools spread in orderly confusion around her, hands grimed, as was her
face, her hair. She had stripped off her blouse and wore nothing above
the waist but the fabric confining her breasts. They, and the flesh of
back and shoulders, glistened with perspiration. "He'd loosed the
covers," she said. "Lifted them and put something inside. A scrap of
wire which he used to short out the coils."
"So?"
"Like Allain said, the poor devil was crazed. He must have wanted to
attract my attention in some way."
"He wanted to die."
"Perhaps not, Earl. He didn't know too much about generators. He
needn't have meant to do much damage."
"He wanted to die and take us with him." To Dumarest it was obvious
and he wondered why she would want to think of excuses for her
ex-lover. Because of that, perhaps, a reluctance to think ill of
someone who had been so close. "Is there anything I can do to help?"
For answer, she shook her head. He had done enough, dragging the
dead body into the hold and cycling it through the lock. Dead meat, fit
only to be dumped into the void, but once it had been a man and one she
could have saved had she been less harsh. Allain had been right. A kiss
could have saved them all.
A kiss, and a little less carelessness on her part.
Had she not left the engine room untended. Hadn't wandered down the
passage to enter Dumarest's cabin and waste time talking to Bochner.
Hadn't become enamored of the picture he had painted, the house and
prospects, the position he'd mentioned. The one dependent on marriage.
Would Earl have married her to make himself eligible?
Was he a man who could be bought?
Questions which now had no meaning. Looking into the interior of the
generator, she could see the damage which Jumoke had caused; delicate
installations now seared and blacked, insulation charred, surfaces
which should have gleamed like mirrors now dulled with the impact of
heat, stained by condensed vapors. Things which could be repaired, and
would be repaired if given the time, but the main problem was within
the triple helixes. Each set at right angles to the other, things of
delicate fabrication, matched to within five decimal places of
similarity. How badly had they been distorted?
It would take instruments to tell. Tests and calibrations, and more
tests with the instruments she had at hand and the knowledge she had
acquired. But, to retune them was another matter. To match them so they
would restore the field, was a matter of luck and skill and time. Luck,
in that they weren't too badly damaged. Skill, to sense and adjust and
manipulate and balance. Time, in which to work.
Time!
Egulus shook his head when Dumarest made his report.
"We haven't the time, Earl. That bastard did a good job on us. He
worked on the instruments before heading for the generator. I guess he
wanted to get us in any way he could."
The captain was being generous—Jumoke had only been interested in
killing the engineer and her new lover.
"Radio?"
"Out. I don't mean we just can't get messages in the Quillian
Sector. That's bad enough, but at least we might have been lucky. No.
The crazy idiot took care of that. Busted it all to hell and the spare
unit with it. I guess we should be thankful he didn't wreck the screens
while he was at it."
A small advantage, and of dubious merit. Had the screens been
wrecked they would have been "blind" but as it was, they could see the
cold hostility of the universe in which they now drifted helplessly.
See the flare of a nearby sun and the ugly corona around it, the
leaping prominences, the blotches of roiling vapors which gave it a
pocked appearance as if it were a thing alive and horribly diseased.
"We're heading towards it," said Egulus, "and without power we're
going to hit it. Jumoke's last gift to his friends and partners." His
hands closed as if he could feel a throat. "I was too gentle," he said
bitterly. "I smelled the stink of that smoke but never thought he would
be such a fool. To lose his head over a woman!"
"That's all you noticed? The smoke?"
"He was tense and withdrawn, but that's normal when in the Rift. To
make a living, we have to take chances and always something can go
wrong. It's worse in the Quillian Sector, but you know about that. We
make profits but we earn them." He ended bleakly. "Greed. It's killed
more men than anything else. The temptation to make an easy profit. To
take that one extra chance."
"Kumetat?"
"We didn't have to go there. I was going to give it a miss this time
and hit it on the way back in. Only there was a cargo, and how could I
refuse?"
An odd cargo for a desert world, Dumarest remembered, but odd things
were carried at times. And he'd had no choice but to stay with the
Entil.
The worlds at which it had touched had been too backward for plentiful
shipping. Too undeveloped for a man to earn the price of another
passage. Bad worlds on which to be stranded. Hard planets to easily
leave. Impossible places on which to hide.
"And if we hadn't got that cargo?"
"We'd be on Tullon by now. At least, that's where we were headed
until we touched at Kumetat. They had an urgent delivery for Mucianus.
A good world. One on the rim of the Sector and close to the edge of the
Rift. We could have stayed awhile, a day or two, maybe. There's always
a choice of cargoes." He ended bitterly, "Now it looks as if we're
going to roast in hell."
The Garden of Emdale had gone, the bright colors vanished, the
flowers, the darting insects, all had disappeared. They had been
followed by the chill mistiness of the Chephron Gorge, with its
souring walls and looming masses, its blurred details and rocks stained
and weathered with time and climate so as to give the appearance of
ranked and leering skulls. Other recordings had followed, and now she
sat engulfed by the glittering magic of the Elg Cavern. A place of
winking points of variegated hue as crystals caught and reflected a
mote of light, amplifying it, splintering it into a hundred component
parts, distorting it, filling the salon with a snowstorm of sparkles,
of eye-catching joy.
But now they gave her no pleasure. Nothing now could give her
pleasure. She was filled with the knowledge that she was to die.
What had she said to Bochner?
An end. An extinction. The total erasure of a personal universe. The
termination of existence.
And he had called it a form of beauty!
She looked to where she had seen him last, but failed to spot him in
the flickering showers of brilliance. At the table, perhaps? Talking to
Threnond about his wares? A stupidity, if he was—how could there be
interest now in instruments of death? Better to buy some of Fele
Roster's compounds. They, at least, could bring sweet dreams and
illusions and a release from the fear of death.
And she was afraid.
God, she was afraid!
"Here!" The mercenary loomed beside her, his scarred face grotesque
in the splintering glitters. He lifted the bottle in his hand and she
could smell the alcohol on his breath. "Have a drink," he urged. "The
steward's been generous. The best, and all free."
"No."
"Drugs then? He—"
"No," she said again, and then added, "Please, I'd rather sit alone."
"In the salon?" His tone was dry and she realized that he was far
less drunk then he seemed. "Haven't you a cabin?"
"Chart, you're an opportunist." The dancer had joined them, her eyes
glittering, mouth twisted in a smile. "But she's too young for you."
"I was offering her a drink."
"And asking for payment, eh?" She gave a harlot's laugh. "Reminding
her that time is short and not to be wasted. Asking about her cabin.
Hinting that one more experience can do her no harm and do you a lot of
good. Why her? Can't I give as much as she can?"
He said flatly, "You've a dirty mouth."
"To match your dirty hands! Mercenaries! Scum! Killers of women and
children! Murderers!" The slap of an open hand preceded her scream of
anger. "Bastard! You hit me! I'll—"
A scuffle, a muffled sound, and the mercenary swore before he
collapsed, his eyes vague, the bottle falling to spill its contents on
the floor. The dancer picked it up, laughing, lost in her drugged
euphoria. She had used the wrong ring, the man would recover and be
none the worse for his experience, but if he struck her again she would
make no mistake. A dart in his throat or one in his eye. One for the
uppity young bitch who played with light. And the third?
The third she would save for herself.
Allain said, "They're getting restless, Earl. I've given them drink
and drugs but they know there's little hope. People act oddly when they
know they're going to die. Some try to cram everything into the last
few days. Some just sit and look at their hands. Some pray. Some even
commit suicide. Can you understand that? They kill themselves because
they are certain they are going to die."
"Everyone has to die."
"That's what I mean. Why anticipate it?" The steward shrugged with
strained bravado. His face was a little too tense, his eyes a little
too bright, but he had a responsibility and recognized it. And some of
the hope he disseminated among the passengers had stuck. Death was
something which happened to others. Always it happened to others. "The
generator?"
"Nothing, as yet."
"Maybe if I helped?"
"You can't help." Dumarest, understanding, was patient. "It's all up
to Dilys."
She'd worked like a machine, drugs giving her a temporary reprieve
from the need to sleep, other compounds robbing tissue and nerve to
provide a chemical strength. Now, she took the steaming cup Dumarest
handed to her and gulped at the protein-rich fluid, sickly sweet with
glucose and laced with vitamins. A second cup of basic followed the
first. She waved aside a third.
"No more, Earl. You'll have me as fat as a pig."
"You need the energy. It's been a long time."
"Yes." She set down the container and glanced at the bulk of the
generator. Dark rings of fatigue circled her eyes and her hands held a
slight tremble. She looked at them, splaying the fingers, examining her
cracked nails, the tips stained with acid, torn with abrasives. "How
long, Earl? Five days?"
"Seven." A week, during which time she hadn't slept and had rarely
eaten. The food he had given her was the prelude to the exhausted sleep
which would follow. "Here." Dumarest handed her a glass filled with a
smoky amber fluid. "Brandy, and Allain tells me it's the best. From his
own private stock." He added, "He has reserved another bottle—one with
poison."
The final drink, but one which she knew he wouldn't share. Death,
when it came, would be met by Dumarest with open eyes. He would fight
it as he had fought it all his life. Facing impossible odds because, no
matter how high they were against him, there was always the chance
that, somehow, he could win.
Lifting the glass, she said, "You'll join me?"
"In a toast, yes." Dumarest raised a second glass. "To success!"
"I can't guarantee that. Let us drink to hope."
"To success," he insisted. "Nothing else will do."
A fact she knew too well, and she drank, slowly, feeling the warmth
of the spirit sting her mouth and throat and trace a warm path to her
stomach. Conscious, too, of the fatigue which dulled her mind and made
every muscle an aching irritation. Had she done all that needed to be
done? The cleaning? The coils? The connections? The adjustments? Had a
tool been overlooked? A scrap of wire? A shred of metal, or a fragment
of insulation? Work had slowed as the hours had passed and it was easy
to overlook the obvious when tired.
"Dilys?" She jerked, aware that she had been dozing, on the edge of
sleep. Dumarest said, "If you've finished your drink, let's find out
how good an engineer you are."
The drink—the remains rested in her glass and she emptied it with a
single swallow. A silent toast to the oblivion which could be waiting
at the turn of a switch. A silent prayer to the gods of chance on whose
laps they now all rested. Dumarest was right, they could use nothing
less than success.
Had she achieved it?
There was only one way to find out.
She took a step forward and swayed, and felt the edge of the
workbench press hard against her spine as she moved back against it.
She sagged, welcoming the support, shaking her head as Dumarest came
toward her.
"No, Earl, I can't. I'm beat You do it. Everything's set— just throw
the switches."
She watched as he obeyed, hearing the generator hum into life,
feeling a success which blazed through her so powerfully that she
straightened and smiled her triumph; a smile which died as the hum
faltered, to steady, to falter again.
"I've failed," she smiled dully. "I tried but I wasn't good enough.
The damned generator isn't going to last."
The place held the memory of summer flowers, of fields graced with
blossoms harvested by smiling girls, to be taken and treated and
condensed into vials of concentrated joy. Traces of perfume which held
the stamp of the one who had worn it Dilys, lying now on her bed, her
face flaccid, the curves of her figure like those of an erotic dream.
Dumarest tightened the restraints, which held her in broad bands of
yielding webbing to her cot. Extra thicknesses of mattresses lay
beneath her and he had arranged further padding so as to cocoon her
within the restraints. Her condition made his task easy; drugged, deep
in exhausted unconsciousness, she had barely stirred as he'd worked.
A woman who had burned herself out. Who had done her best and
discovered it wasn't good enough. An added ingredient to Jumoke's
revenge.
Outside the cabin Dumarest paused, looking along the passage. Allain
emerged from a door, curses following him fading as he closed the
panel. The dancer spitting her venom.
"She's drunk," the steward explained, "but not drunk enough. God,
what a hag!"
"You've put her in restraints?"
"I tried, but she fought like a wildcat. Well, to hell with her."
"Try again later," said Dumarest. "If she's drunk, she isn't
responsible. The rest?"
"Warned and as ready as they'll ever be. Now I'm going to look after
myself." The steward hesitated. "Do you think we'll make it?"
"If the generator holds out, yes."
"And if it doesn't?" Allain answered his own question. "We burn, we
drift, we starve. If we're lucky, we die quick."
"Or we live," said Dumarest. "Luck comes in two kinds."
"Sure, that's what I mean. With good luck we go out easy—with bad we
linger. Well, to hell with it. I'm going to hit the bottle."
He headed for his own cabin as Dumarest moved on. As he entered the
control room, Egulus said, "Dilys?"
"Still out. I wrapped her well."
"The others?" The captain shrugged as he heard the report.
"Passengers! At times they act as if they're crazy. Well, they've had
their warning. My main concern now is with the
Entil."
A crippled ship, now heading towards an isolated world. Taking his
place in the navigator's chair, Dumarest could see it in the screens, a
mottled ball of green and ocher, patched with expanses of dingy white,
streaked with smears of dusty black.
"That's Hyrcanus, as far as I can make out." said Egulus. "But right
or wrong, it's the only chance we have. We make it or burn." He glanced
at the sun, which blazed with awesome splendor. "But if the
generator holds, we've a chance."
One which grew as the ball of the planet swelled larger, colors
breaking into a blurred jumble, the instruments in the control room
clicking as they relayed information.
Closer, and the ship began to shudder a little as opposed gravities
fought for supremacy. A slight shift told of a dying vortex, spewed
from some flaring sun. A peculiar turning sensation as it passed
through an area of intra-dimensional instability. The normal hazards to
be expected within the Rift.
Another which was not.
Egulus swore as the ship died beneath his hands. "The generator!
It's dead!"
Strained beyond endurance by the impact of external forces, the
interior now a mass of fused and molten rubbish, the Erhaft field gone,
and this time never to be replaced.
And the world was close.
Close!
Dumarest said, "The directional vents, are they working?"
"Yes, thank God."
"Then skip! Skip!"
The only chance they had and one which the captain had already
assessed. Now, as they fell towards the mass of the planet below,
Egulus proved his skill. In order to kill their velocity and to prevent
being burned by the atmosphere, he had to maintain height while
remaining within orbit. To use the air-blanket as a boy would a pond.
To send the ship skimming over it as if it were a flung stone,
touching, bouncing, touching again.
The hull turned red as air blasted over it with a thin, high scream,
a scream echoed from somewhere within the vessel. Both screams died as
Egulus operated the vents, lifting the ship a fraction, letting it
hurtle on to drop again, to glow as it had before, to lift and pray and
curse as dials showed red and alarm bells shrilled their warning.
"Kill that damned noise!"
Sweat dripped from Dumarest's face as he hit the switches. The hull
screamed again as the bells fell silent, the shriek maintained as the
air grew hotter, became stifled, became a searing torment.
"Up! Up, damn you!"
"I can't! I—" Egulus hit the controls, feeding extra power into the
vents, praying ever as he worked, prayers which sounded like curses as,
slowly, the screaming died and, velocity killed, the
Entil
fell towards the surface below.
Dumarest watched as the ground streamed past on the screens. They
needed a flat and even expanse, covered with soft dirt, sand, snow,
stunted vegetation, even ice. A place on which to skid for miles until
they came to a halt and, even then, such a landing would be close to a
miracle.
"Nothing." Egulus snarled his anger. "The damned place is a
nightmare!"
Hills, crevasses, chasms, stony wilderness with boulders like
waiting teeth, trees resting on the edges of precipices, plains marked
with undulating serrations like the teeth of saws.
"Water," said Dumarest. "We need water."
It showed ahead and a little to one side, a long narrow inlet which
opened to the grayness of a sea. A strand, and it was below and before
them, choppy waves bearing patches of kelp and whiteness caused by
spume thrown from upthrust rocks. Then they were over it.
"Down," yelled Dumarest. "Down, man, down!"
They were going too fast, but ahead he had caught the loom of
mountains standing etched against the sky. Pillars of stone too high
for them to surmount and too widespread to avoid. The choice between
hitting them and plunging into the sea was no choice at all.
No choice, but a gamble, and one Egulus took as he had when entering
the atmosphere. The
Entil tilted a little, headed downwards,
hit the water to bounce as it had when meeting the atmosphere. Steam
rose, created by the impact of hot metal, the vapor forming a cushion
between the water and the hull.
Bouncing, skipping, as the mountains came closer. As the vessel
creaked and shuddered and blood ran from ears and noses, as soft flesh
suffered from the savage buffeting.
To hit for the last time. To sink. To hit bottom, to lift a little,
to settle again and come to a final rest.
After an eternity, Varn Egulus said, "No water. The hull remained
intact." He sounded as if he couldn't believe it.
"Luck," said Dumarest.
"For us, maybe." The captain wiped the back of his hand over his
face and looked at the blood. "For the others?"
Chapter Eight
The historian was dead—torn from his restraints to be flung against
the hull, to roast, to die screaming in his pain. The dancer was dead,
lying wrapped in her cocoon, hands lifted, the ugly blotches of
disintegration marring throat and torso. Craters made by the darts from
the ring she had carelessly continued to wear, fired by the involuntary
contractions of her finger. An irony she seemed to appreciate as she
stared upwards with blind eyes, her mouth twisted in the rictus of a
smile. The steward was dead, lying in a crumpled heap, a bottle
miraculously unbroken in his hand. The special bottle, which was to
have been saved to the very last. One he had taken by mistake, perhaps,
but his lips bore no smile. Unlike the dancer, he failed to appreciate
the jest.
The rest were alive, bruised but otherwise unhurt aside from Charl
Zeda. He sucked in his breath, sweat breaking out in globules on his
seamed face, as Dumarest used leverage to ease the mercenary's badly
dislocated shoulder back into position.
"That's better." Gently he tested the joint. "I was a fool, moved at
the wrong time and got caught by one of the decelerations. How's the
ship?" He frowned at the answer. "Under the surface, no generator, no
power to lift—how the hell are we to get out?"
A question repeated by Gale Andrei when, later, they had gathered in
the salon.
"We can get out," said Dumarest. "All we need to do is to cycle
through the airlock in the cargo hold. But there are other
considerations."
"Such as?"
"What to do once we are on the surface," said Leo Bochner quickly.
He sat at the girl's side, his hand touching her own. "We could be a
long way from shore and, without navigation aids, may not be able to
tell in which direction it lies. Can you swim?"
"A little. Why?"
"A little, you say. How far is that? A mile? Ten? A score? Fifty?"
Bochner shook his head. "A little isn't enough. We could be more than a
hundred miles from land. Captain?"
"I don't know," admitted Egulus. "We came down fast and had other
things to think about. Earl saw mountains ahead, but we were high at
the time and they would be below the horizon now. In any case, they
were far from close."
"And we must have traveled after we hit the ocean." Fele Roster
pursed his lips, his eyes thoughtful. "How deep are we?"
"We hit bottom." Egulus shrugged at the other's expression. "I'm not
sure how deep, the external gauge was burned, but from the time we took
to descend, I'd say about four or five hundred feet."
"Deep," said Bochner. "Too deep for us to rise to the surface
without difficulty."
"It would be impossible without protection," said Gale Andrei. "If
we tried it we'd litter the surface with our bodies."
"Or provide food for the fish." Shan Threnond looked at his hands,
the rings he had replaced gleaming in the light. "The fish and other
things. Are you sure this world is Hyrcanus, Captain?"
"As near as I can figure, yes. You know it?"
"I've heard rumors." The dealer in death sucked at his lips,
splinters of light darting from his rings to be reflected in little
gleams from his eyes. "If they are to be believed, a wise man would do
well to avoid this place."
"I've heard about it, too," rumbled Charl Zeda. He moved carefully
in his chair, easing his sore shoulder. "A strange and savage world
filled with unexpected perils. The mountains hold a peculiar form of
life, and the seas are not as peaceful as they could be. The air,
too—but every tavern is full of such whispers. If a man believed them
all, he would never find the courage to travel."
"But if we are on Hyrcanus," said Threnond, "we had better think
twice before trusting ourselves to the water. Even with what protection
we can arrange, we'd stand small chance against what it could contain."
"If the rumors are true." Bochner shook his head. "Tales to frighten
children. Stories spun by men while sitting half-drunk, in firelight.
Yarns to interest women and to earn the price of another bottle.
Stories about mythical worlds and beasts and treasures waiting to be
found. You must have heard them, Earl?"
"Yes," said Dumarest. "Often."
"And never been tempted to investigate? To try and find Jackpot,
say, with its fields of precious gems. Or Avalon with its scented
breezes and singing flowers, with its food trees and wine streams and
youth-restoring berries. Or Bonanza, with its veins of rich ores
running like rainbows through the mountains. Never even tried to find
Earth?"
Earth—the only world he had mentioned which he hadn't given a tinsel
shine. And had his voice changed a little as he spoke the name? A
coincidence? Perhaps, but Dumarest mistrusted coincidences.
"Earth," he said. "You know it?"
"Only as a legend, my friend. A name. One among a dozen. Shall I
tell you of others? Of—"
"For God's sake!" Gale Andrei snapped her irritation. "To talk such
rubbish at a time like this! What are we going to do? Are we to just
sit here and wait? Will rescue come? Can it? Can we leave the ship? Can
we reach land if we do?"
"Steady," said Bochner. "Steady."
"You—"
Her hand lifted, swung at his face, halted as he blocked it, the
sound of slapped flesh sounding loud as his own fingers left red welts
on her cheek. As she recoiled, eyes wide with shocked disbelief, he
said, "I suggest you control yourself, my dear. And never attempt to
strike me again."
"Was that necessary?" Dilys Edhessa glared her anger. "You spoke of
terrors to be found on this world—must we add to them? Or do you
consider it the height of courage to strike a defenseless woman?"
"A reaction. I—"
"Forgot yourself? Would you like to strike me?" She came toward him,
overwhelming, eyes cold with her rage. "Try it," she invited. "Just try
it—and I'll break your arm."
"You think you could do that?" He rose to face her, body tense,
poised, hands lifted as if to strike or parry as the need arose. The
stance of a man accustomed to facing danger. That of the hunter he
professed to be—or that of the fighter he had taken pains to hide.
Dumarest said, "Haven't we enough trouble as it is? Sit down, man.
Dilys, what have you to report?"
For a moment she hesitated, then, as Bochner sat, she said, "The
generator's out, as you know, and can't be repaired. We have power
enough to run the life support systems until we starve. We can recycle
air and get water enough, but food is limited. Why, Earl? You knew all
this."
"The other's didn't, or may have forgotten."
"So?" The last of her anger vanished with her shrug. "All right, I'm
sorry. I should have managed to control myself. But I can't stand a man
who hits women."
"Or a woman who kills men?" Dumarest met her eyes. "She could have a
poisoned needle attached to her finger," he explained. "Or a lethal
paste set beneath a sharpened nail. Like Bochner, I, too would have
taken precautions had she slapped at my face."
"And slapped her back?"
"It's one way to teach a lesson." He changed the subject. "Have you
anything which could be adapted to give underwater protection? Masks,
air tanks, suits?"
"Tanks, yes," she said. "Masks could be made and we could use
padding to protect bodies. And, of course, we have the emergency sacs."
The last resort, should a vessel be destroyed while in space, but
only the insanely optimistic would ever use them. Transparent membranes
containing air and other supplies which could maintain life for awhile;
bubbles drifting in the void with those inside them, hoping against
hope that some nearby vessel would hear their radio beacon and come to
the rescue. The wise chose to die with their ship.
"The sacs!" The mercenary lifted his head like a dog smelling food.
"The beacon—don't you have one fitted to the
Entil?"
"Or a radio?" Roster added his suggestion. "We are on a listed world
and it must have a field and people of some kind. We could contact
them. Ask for rescue."
At a price which would leave them stripped of all assets but, dead,
they would have lost everything anyway.
Zeda mistook Egulus's hesitation. "The radio, man! Are you afraid of
losing your vessel as salvage?"
"It's lost anyway," said the captain. "But the radio's useless."
"And the beacon?"
Jumoke had overlooked it, as had Dumarest and the captain, both
assuming the navigator had done his worst. Dilys sucked in her breath
as she drew it from its housing; a small, compact piece of electronic
wizardry which operated only when the generator failed and the field
collapsed, sending a coded electronic "shout" which, even in the Rift,
could be heard by a ship which was close, or by a nearby world. Even in
the Quillian Sector.
And the thing had operated twice.
"A line," said Dilys. "If anyone heard both signals they could draw
a line, extend it, and know just where we are."
"They won't be able to see us," said Egulus. "They could come
looking and pass right over us."
But they would keep looking. A ship in distress was a fortune in
salvage. Add to that the price of cargo, rescue fees and rewards, and
no captain of a hungry trader would give up too soon.
And neither, Dumarest knew, would others who must be searching for
him.
He said, "What now?"
"We wait." Bochner joined the discussion. "We sit and wait until
someone comes to help us. Why not? We have air and food and water. We
have wine and certain other comforts." He glanced at Gale Andrei. "So
why risk death outside?"
"Perhaps we could rig up a new radio?" suggested Charl Zeda. "I've
some experience in electronics and, with the emergency beacon intact,
we have a viable base on which to build. And it doesn't have to be an
ultra-radio—all we want is something which can contact someone locally
and serve to guide them to us. You'll help me, Shan?"
"You need help?"
"For the assembly, yes." The mercenary gestured at his damaged
shoulder. "I'm not too good at fine work at the best of times, and
you're accustomed to handling delicate fabrications. If we could use
the facilities in the engine room?"
"Sure," said Dilys. "Why not? I'll even—" She broke off with a catch
of breath. "What—what's that? What the hell's happening?"
The ship had
moved.
It rolled a little, lifting to settle again, bumping to rest, to
roll once more as, from the hull, came an ugly grating. A sound as if
something hard had dragged over the metal. As the sound faded into
silence, Gale said, "God, what's that?"
The screens answered her. In them loomed the shape of madness,
scaled, tentacular, spines tipped with barbs, mouths lined with rows of
savage teeth. A monstrous creature of the depths attracted by the shock
of their landing, now busy investigating the intruder into its realm.
And it was big. Big.
"It's like a mountain," whispered Fele Roster. With the others, he
stood crammed into the control room and his whisper was an automatic
defense mechanism; what the thing couldn't hear it couldn't be aware
of. "A living mountain."
One which spread in formless confusion, fogging at the edge of
visibility, coils writhing in seemingly endless profusion, tentacles
filing its watery world. The
Entil rolled like an egg in its
grip, its bottom lifting to bang against the rocky bottom, to send
metallic verberations echoing from the stricken metal, gongs to herald
doom.
"The hull." Threnond's voice, while controlled, betrayed his strain.
"How thick is it?"
"God knows." Egulus was somber. "We lost a lot of metal by
vaporization as we came down. Half the thickness, and maybe more." He
remembered the streaming incandescence which had accompanied them
during their desperate journey through the atmosphere. Glowing gases
born of disrupted molecules, the metal of the hull converted to light
and heat by the friction of their descent. "But it'll hold."
A conviction Dumarest didn't share. He examined the screens and the
thing they revealed, following lines, guessing as to size and mass. The
ship, engulfed, would be small in comparison. The thing could lift it
and slam it down until it broke. Or it could wait, maintaining the
pressure of its grip until the hull yielded.
"We could seal the various compartments," said Gale Andrei. "But no,
we have no way of telling which will go first."
"We could."—Dilys broke off, then appealed to the one man she felt
confident had the answer which could save their lives. "Earl—what
should we do?"
Dumarest made no comment, looking at the ulterior of the vessel,
moving from the control room to the greater spaciousness of the salon.
Space ships were not built to operate as submarines. Strength of hull
was not as important in the void as it would have been at great depths,
but the fabric itself was strong to endure the strains and stresses of
electronic storms and the warping effect of the Erhaft field. Strength,
which meant weight. Struts and stanchions fitted on a geometric pattern
so as to make the entire vessel an integrated unit. The immediate
danger wasn't in crushing, but in the weakened hull plates yielding to
admit the rush of water. A flood which would drown them like rats in a
trap.
"Earl?"
"We can wait," he said. "Hope that the thing will tire and leave us
before it manages to crack us open. But that's a gamble I prefer not to
take."
"Why not?"
"Sound." Dumarest looked at Bochner, wondering why he had asked the
question. Surely a hunter would know? "We move and hit things and talk.
Vibrations transmitted through the fabric to the hull where that thing
can sense them. It must know we aren't inanimate and, if it follows the
usual pattern, it will be unwilling to give up its search for food."
"True." Bochner nodded. "What then?"
"We can try to sneak out and hope it won't follow us because we're
so relatively small. You recommend that?"
"No. A thing that size will have attendant predators; scavengers
living on its discards. They'd take care of us if the big beast didn't."
Gale Andrei said bitterly, "So that's it. We can't wait and we can't
leave. Brilliant!"
"And defeatist." Bochner didnt look at her as he spoke. "There is an
alternative."
"What?"
"We lighten the ship," said Dumarest. "We cut free and dump
everything we can. The more we feed through the locks the greater our
buoyancy will be. Once that thing out there releases its grip, we'll
shoot up to the surface like a bubble."
"Simple," she said bitterly. "You make it sound all so damned
simple. But how are you going to make that thing out there let us go?"
The air stank of burning, of hot metal which had vented acrid vapors
and coated the ulterior of the ship with noxious patinas. Bright stubs
showed where lastorches had burned away installations, their energy
adding to the trapped heat so that a coating of moisture dewed the
hull. An omen Dumarest chose to ignore.
He stood in the control room, now such by courtesy only, the chairs
gone, the instruments, the delicate components which had cost high but
which had been discarded as so much unwanted scrap. Only the screens
remained alive, and the communication link to the engine room.
"Now?" Egulus eased the collar of his uniform. His hands were
burned, sore, grimed, as was his face and hair, but despite the heat,
he clung to the symbols of his rank. He was a captain and intended to
remain one. "Earl?"
"A moment." Dumarest spoke into the intercom. "Dilys, have Bochner
vent the last of the material through port four." He waited then,
"Good. It's still clear. Now have Allain's body out in the final load
and stand by for release."
The final load and a hell of a way to treat the dead, thought
Egulus.
To use them as bait. As a diversion. As a bribe to the thing out there
which still held them fast. The dancer and historian didn't
matter—those who hugged dirt belong to it, but Allain had spent too
many years in space to be denied the clean expanse of the universe for
his final resting place.
Well—such things happened. "You think it will work?"
"On its own? Probably not." Dumarest didn't take his eyes from the
screen. "I noticed a reaction when we dumped out the stores. A tentacle
went to investigate. It didn't return to take up its old position. I
think we've confused it a little, but not enough to frighten it."
"Can such a thing feel fear?"
"Concern as to its survival, certainly. All living things must feel
that." Dumarest spoke into the intercom. "Dilys, how is the potential?
Optimum? Good. Maintain and stand by to discharge." To the captain, he
said, "Check that everyone is insulated. No contact with metal of any
kind."
Checking took less than a minute. With the interior of the ship now
an almost empty shell, it was easy to spot those who waited.
"All clear and set, Earl."
Dumarest nodded, checked that he stood on a thick pad of wadded
insulation, and said, "Right, Dilys. Give the word to Bochner. As soon
as he's cycled out the load, hit the switches."
He stood, waiting, feeling the slight vibration of the cycling port,
seeing the creature outside shift a little, a coil rippling as it
moved, a gaping mouth snapping, a tentacle reaching to where the dead
were floating up towards the surface.
Meat and blood and bone. Protein for the beast and for its attendant
scavengers. Food they couldn't resist.
The coils moved faster then. As Dilys hit the switches, they jerked
as if touched by redhot steel.
Current fed from the engines turned the hull into a searing,
charring inferno. Tough skin and gristle burned, crisped, shed a sickly
green ooze. Sparks flashed, as steam bubbled from the points of
contact, lighting the screen with transient glimmers. More sparks
flashed from within the ship itself. Streamers of manmade lightning,
which added to the stench with its reek of ozone, sent tingles to jerk
at nerve and muscle even through the wadded insulation.
The
Entil lifted.
It rose, tilted, moved to halt again as, in a savage paroxysm, the
tentacles gripped in self destructive fury.
"Dilys!"
The power flow was at optimum, higher and it would threaten the
source of its own creation, but as metal yielded, Dumarest knew the
risk had to be taken.
"Maximum, Dilys! Feed every erg you can raise into the hull!"
A plate had bulged inward, another followed, water edging a crack,
turning into a fine jet which sent spray lifting, to fall like rain.
Rain which acted as a conductor for the electronic power so that arcs
flashed and metal turned molten at the points of impact.
"Earl, for God's sake!" Egulus caught at his arm. "We're not going
to make it!"
A statement punctuated by Gale Andrei's scream as Fele Roster,
staggering, fell to touch the bare metal of the hull— to turn into a
pillar of smoking flesh, blood and charred bone.
A sacrifice which toppled to fall and lie sprawled on the floor as
the ship lanced upwards.
To reach the surface and to rise above it. To hang suspended for a
brief moment before crashing down. To sink and rise again and to roll
sickeningly in the grip of cross currents and a screaming wind.
"We've got to get out!" Charl Zeda, his face gray with pain, stood
in the opening of the control room. "Water's coming in."
Not enough to provide an immediate threat, but enough to send a
shallow lake surging over the deck. Dilys came wading through it. Power
was cut, the ship dark except for the pale glow of emergencies, shadows
which held both real and imagined terrors.
"Earl?"
"We've got to abandon the ship." He staggered as the vessel rolled,
landing hard against the hull, hearing the others shout and thresh in
the water. "Get the emergency supplies and what extra clothing you
reserved. The caskets—" He grunted as the ship rolled again. "I'll
handle those with Bochner. Take care of the others, Captain. Keep them
together."
Bochner was waiting at the main lock. Like Dumarest, be had changed
into more serviceable clothing, thick materials, quilted and set with
metal protection. He smiled at the tall figure in gray, his eyes
flashing, noting the boots, the knife.
"A chance, Earl. The creature could be down there waiting for us."
"We've no choice."
"True, and if we stay too long we'll sink for the last time. But,
honestly now, did you anticipate the need to abandon the ship?"
Dumarest said, "On the way down I noticed the wind. Without a keel,
we were bound to roll with the impact. We have no rudder, no sails,
nothing to enable us to steer a course. We could drift for months if we
hadn't been broached."
"And now we have no choice at all." The hunter shrugged. "Well, so
often it happens in life. The path one must follow is seldom the one
offering the greatest delights. The caskets first?"
They slid from the port into the waves, the boxes sealed, bobbing,
parting to the thrust of the wind. It droned over the sea, catching the
leaden water, dashing waves against the wallowing hull. Bundles
followed, all tightly wrapped and fitted with empty containers to
ensure they would float. Then the survivors, Yarn Egulus first.
He dived, surfaced, climbed on one of the caskets. Ropes had been
attached and he gathered others to draw the containers close together.
Then Threnond, together with the mercenary, the latter sinking, to
rise blowing and puffing, to sink again as his sore shoulder hampered
his progress.
Beside him, something broke the water.
"Earl!" Dilys was beside him, her fingers digging into his arm.
"That thing!"
A long, narrow shape, which glided like an oiled dart toward the
struggling man. One with a long, needlelike jaw which gaped to reveal
the flash of pointed teeth. The mercenary saw it, threshed, yelled as
it swung in and away. Blood rose to stain the water with a carmine
flood.
"Charl!" Threnond yelled from the safety of a casket. "Charl!"
He shouted at the wind.
"My God!" Gale lifted a trembling hand to her lips as she stared at
where the mercenary had vanished. "What happened to him?"
"He's dead." Bochner was coldly dispassionate. "That predator must
have got his leg. Those jaws could have severed the limb, and if they
did, it would account for the amount of blood. Only ripped arteries
could have produced so much so fast."
Dilys shuddered.
"But we are left with a problem," continued the hunter. "The blood
will have attracted others and we have still to leave the ship." He
glanced to where the caskets bobbed, together now in the form of a
crude raft. "And our means of escape is moving further away."
Too far. Driven by the wind, the distance was increasing and those
aboard had no way to return.
"We need a line." Dumarest turned, found an end of wire hanging from
a conduit and ripped it from its housing. Lashing one end around his
waist, he threw the other at Bochner. "Hold this. Give me slack. When
it's fast to the raft, pull!"
"Earl!" Dilys stepped toward him, hands outstretched to hold him
back. "No! You can't!"
She was too late. Even as she spoke he dived, hitting the water
cleanly, vanishing to reappear swimming strongly through the waves. He
had covered half the distance to the raft when the shape appeared.
The predator returned, or another just like it. A creature hungry
for
the kill.
Dumarest heard Bochner's warning shout and dived as it closed in,
reaching for his boot, his knife. Steel glimmered in the water as he
turned, eyes searching the gloom, seeing the long, slender body lance
toward him, the jaws gaping, the expanse of the mottled belly as the
creature closed in. A kick, and he moved aside just in time, the
lower jaw rasping against his hip as, twisting, he plunged the blade
into the exposed stomach, dragging back the steel in a long, deep cut
which spilled blood and intestines in a fuming cloud.
The blade clamped between his teeth, Dumarest kicked himself to the
surface and covered the rest of the distance to the caskets. Egulus
reached down and hauled him to safety as water threshed and jaws
snapped at the water where he had been.
"The line." Dumarest handed it to the captain. "Fasten it and pull.
Hurry!"
It tightened, humming like a bowstring as the distance lessened
between the ship and the crude raft. They touched as the
Entil
rolled, settled deeper as they watched, rolled again with a slow,
deliberate movement.
"Jump!" Dumarest reached out to the open port as it swung down
toward the waves. "Jump, damn you!"
Gale landed beside him, slipped and almost fell back into the water,
steadied as his hands closed about her arms. Bochner thrust Dilys
forward and she landed with surprising lightness for her size. The
hunter followed, standing poised as the wind carried them away from the
foundering vessel, watching as it tilted, the nose lifting, lowering,
bubbles rising around it as, with sudden abruptness, it sank beneath
the surface.
"Close." Egulus looked at the ring of spreading froth. "The hull
must have given way after I'd left."
"It did." Bochner drew air deep into his lungs. His face was wet
with spray and the wind turned his hair into a living crest. "Another
few
minutes and we'd have been food for the fish. Well, Earl, what now?"
"We lash everything tight, set up a sail and run before the wind.
Dumarest looked at the sky, the seething spume rising from the waves,
the clouds massed low on the horizon. The sun was a smeared copper
ball, ringed with a lambent
corona and blotched with ebon markings. The air held an acrid metallic
taint and, low on the horizon, he could see the dancing flicker of
lightning. "And we'd better do it before the storm breaks.
Chapter Nine
The weather peaked at dusk, a hammer of wind racing over the ocean,
lifting waves, filling the air with a screaming fury as lightning
danced a jagged saraband. Filigrees of eye-searing brilliance reached
from water to sky, the roar of thunder a savage accompaniment to the
voice of the wind.
Lying huddled in her casket, Dilys Edhessa imagined herself to be
dead and in hell.
It was ridiculous even to hope that anything could live through such
a storm, and so the fact that she could breathe and hear and feel was
nothing but an illusion—a part of the punishment meted out to those who
had strayed from the path, or so the Elder had so often told her when
she had attended the Place of Contemplation when a child.
A long time ago now, but she had never forgotten and now it was all
present in sharp clarity; the old, musty building, the smell of hay and
manure, the dampness, the hard benches, the cold impact of the floor
against her knees. The dimness. The enigmatic shapes. The monotonous
drone of the Elder, who stood fiercely proud of his power and authority
and urged them all to be humble and obedient and true servants of the
Revealed Truth. A bad time, and one she remembered only in nightmares.
But she was dead and not asleep, so why should she be dreaming of the
harsh time of childhood?
"Dilys!"
She felt the touch and stirred and looked up into Dumarest's face.
And that, too, seemed a dream because he was leaning over her,, head
thrust into a narrow opening, water running down his hair and face and,
behind him, the night blazed with unrestrained violence.
"Dilys!" His hand reached out to slap her cheek. "Wake up, girl!
Wake up!"
"Earl?" Water gushed through the opening and she gasped in sudden
shock. Abruptly awake, she became aware of the heaving of her chest,
the pounding of her heart. "I was asleep, I think. Dreaming. I—"
"You were dying." His voice was harsh with anger. "You kept the lid
sealed too long and were breathing your own carbon dioxide."
A mistake both Egulus and Threnond had made as they shared a casket,
but which Bochner had not. He had helped to check the lashings and
adjust the tattered fabric used as a sail. He had even laughed into the
fury of the storm.
"An experience to remember, my friend. At least, the weather is
keeping the predators below. Now, if we can remain afloat—"
If the caskets held and the lashing kept them together. If the
lightning missed and no rocks waited to rip them open with jagged
teeth. If they could run before the wind and not drown or suffocate in
their containers then, possibly, they might survive to drift in calm
waters. But not yet.
Dilys gasped as Dumarest eased himself into the casket beside her.
His clothing was glistening with water and his hands bore thin, ugly
welts from the stranded wire used to lash the caskets together. When
they were settled close, she said, "Is everything all right?"
"So far, yes."
"You were out there a long time."
Almost too long. He remembered her pallor, the waxen appearance of
her face which had given her the likeness of a corpse. A big woman,
she needed a lot of oxygen to maintain the fires of her body. He had
warned her to keep the lid cracked so as to admit air but she had
forgotten, or had been already numbed by inhaling the waste product of
her lungs.
Now, shivering, she said, "The water's cold, Earl. So very cold."
"It'll be warm soon."
"I was dreaming," she said, "of when I was young. I came from a
stern culture, Earl. Did I tell you that? A farming community which
tried to follow the Revealed Truth. We used no machinery of any kind.
Nothing but natural fertilizers. No energy other than that provided by
natural means—muscles and the use of ropes and levers. Of pulleys and
wheels."
"Machinery."
"No, Earl. Such things were not considered to be that. We used no
artificial means of power, but we had a windmill and a water wheel
and…" She nodded, almost asleep, then jerked in his arms, gasping.
"They killed a man. Stoned him to death. They tied him up by the wrists
to a post and stood close and threw stones at him until he stopped
screaming. Stopped moving. It was horrible!"
Another pause. Water blasted through the narrow crack and drenched
her face and hair, and lightning blazed to hurl brilliance through the
transparent lid. In its glare her lips looked black and her hair silver.
"Why?" Dumarest shook her. "Why did they kill him?"
"What?" She gasped again, her breasts pressing against his body,
eyes blinking as they tried to focus. "The man? Why, he'd devised a
system of mirrors to reflect the rays of the sun so as to heat water in
a boiler and so produce steam. With it, he turned a painted wheel set
with bright crystal. A toy to amuse the children, Earl. A toy—and they
killed him because of it."
"For making a machine?"
"Yes," she said dully. "For making a machine."
"And the windmill and water wheel?"
"Were allowed under the Revealed Truth. The wind blew and the water
flowed, but the sun did not boil water and to force it to do that was
acting against the creed. It was to invite the seeds of destruction to
cast down the race again."
Dumarest said quietly, "From terror, they fled to find new places on
which to expiate their sins. Only when cleansed will the race of Man be
again united."
The creed of the Original People—was Dilys one? Had she originated
in a commune of the sect? Had the "Revealed Truth" she had mentioned
contained the belief that all men had originated on one world and that
world had been possibly Earth?
Terror—Terra.
An easy enough transition from one to the other and if she knew, she
might, in her present state of mental fog induced by too high a
percentage of carbon dioxide, be induced to betray the closely guarded
secret.
"Earl?" She stared at him in puzzlement. "What did you say?"
"Nothing. It doesn't matter." A hope to be discarded along with so
many others. More than one commune had turned their backs on machinery,
and she had obviously been born into one. But, in that case, how had
she become an engineer?
"The man who was stoned was my brother," she said, when he asked. "I
had to do what I could to avenge him."
By leaving the community and doing the one thing they would have
hated most for her to do; to embrace the vileness they condemned. To
become a servant of the machine.
"Earl?"
"Nothing." He eased his arm around her, cushioning her against his
body, against the punishing slap of the waves. "Go to sleep, now."
"You'll stay with me?" Like a child, she needed reassurance. "You'll
take care of me?"
"Yes."
"You promise? Earl, you promise?"
"I promise."
She sighed and settled and fell asleep, with her lips parted and the
soft mounds of her breasts rising to press against him like small,
insistent hands. Lying beside her, he watched the glare of lightning
tracing pictures in the sky. Spume thrown by the wind dashed against
the lid like rain. Droplets which clung and quivered to the thrust of
wave's, which ran and formed patterns illuminated by the stroboscopic
effect of the lightning.
Faces. Hair the color of flame, of ebon, of silver and of rich, warm
brown earth. Eyes which held longing and tenderness, fear, anger and
hate. A scarlet shape which advanced with extended hands ready to take
and hold and bend the universe to its will. A ruby monster, squatting
like a spider at the heart of a web of intrigue.
The fifteen units of the affinity twin.
Kalin's gift, and one which the Cyclan would spare no effort to
recover. The discovery made in one of their secret laboratories,
stolen, passed on, now his alone. The knowledge of the sequence in
which the fifteen units must be assembled to be viable.
A secret which could give them the galaxy.
Thunder roared and the casket tilted, a fresh wave dashing over the
lid so that when the lightning next flared, the images had changed. But
the sequence would never be lost until Dumarest was dead, or his mind
so damaged as to be virtually destroyed.
The affinity twin—an artificial symbiont which, when injected into
the bloodstream, moved to the base of the cortex, to nestle there, to
take over control of the entire nervous and sensory apparatus of the
body. An intruder, which would act as an organic relay, creating an
affinity between the dominant half and the subject-host. An affinity
which was a literal cojoining so that, in effect, the dominant half
became the host, seeing, feeling, hearing, using all the motor and
sensory apparatus.
An old and dying man could become young again in a new and virile
body. A cripple become whole. A beggar become a ruler. A crone look
into the mirror and see a beauty. And all would keep their new shapes
until they died, or their own body failed.
Power of incredible potential locked in the arrangement of fifteen
units.
The Cyclan knew it, and knew how to use it. They would place the
mind of a cyber into the body of every ruler and person of influence,
and all would dance to their dictates. But before they could hope for
that power, they had to find the order of assembly. They were trying.
They would continue to try, but mathematics was against them. The
possible combinations ran into millions, and it took time to assemble
and test them all. Too much time. Millenia would be needed to check
them all.
Time the Cyclan wanted to save.
Time he could save them. Time… time… time…
Dumarest woke, gasping, reaching up and lifting the lid, relishing
the cool breeze clearing the stale air from the casket. It was a new
day and the storm had passed, the container drifting on an even plane
in the water, barely rocking to the slap of waves. Easing himself from
the woman's arms, he threw back the lid and rose, breathing deeply the
clear, crisp air.
"Earl!" Leo Bochner was up and sitting on the casket he shared with
Gale Andrei. "I was just about to call you."
"Why?"
"Look around. We're in trouble."
The sail was still with them, a tattered fragment flapping against
the mast they had fashioned from welded pipe. The buoyancy containers
rode snug in their frayed lashings, but of the four caskets they had
started with only three remained. One had vanished during the night.
With it had gone their water and food.
Shen Threnond adjusted the sheet of plastic and, as it bellied with
the wind, said, "Once, on Sante, I saw a man who had fasted for thirty
days. It was a show at a carnival and I think he was doing it for a
bet. If he lasted for thirty-seven days he would have beaten the
record."
Egulus said, "Did he?"
"I don't know. I moved on before the period ended but I am sure he
did. He seemed fit enough when I saw him. A little spare, perhaps, but
fit."
"Going without a few meals doesn't hurt anyone." Bochner looked up
from his work. "I've starved for days at a time when on a stalk, and
gained because of it. Hunger sharpens the senses and cleanses the body.
Of course, some can do without better than others."
Gale Andrei snapped, "Meaning me, I suppose. Hell, can't you talk
about anything but food? I'm starving!"
"Not starving," he corrected. "You just want to eat. You're not even
really hungry yet. It's just that your stomach is accustomed to be
filled at regular intervals and has started to complain. Just be
patient. In a few days, it will pass."
Less than that. They had drifted for two days since the storm had
ended, but food wasn't the major problem. Thirst would kill them long
before they could starve.
Dumarest spread the flotation container he had cut open, set it with
others and glanced at Bochner.
"Finished yet?"
"Almost." The hunter, too, had a knife, a heavy bladed instrument
with a serrated back which could saw through bone. With it, he had cut
thin metal into strips and had rolled them into a spiral tube. Plastic
cut from a sheet had sealed the joins. "Here."
Taking it, Dumarest set one end into a water-filled container set
within the ring of curved metal plates. The other end he sealed within
a plastic bag, which he suspended in the sea.
"Some distillery." Dilys shook her head as she studied it. "Where
did
you get the idea of using focused sunlight to heat the boiler?"
"From you."
"You did?" She blinked, not remembering. "Well, even if it
works, the output will be low."
But better than nothing, and it gave them something to do. Egulus
and Gale could attend it while Threnond busied himself with his radio.
And Dilys, as engineer, had been put in charge of the raft itself.
Now, looking over the ocean, she said, "How long can we last, Earl?
I mean really last I can take the truth even if others can't."
By the movement of her eyes, he knew she meant the other woman.
"We can last as long as we want to."
"On hope?"
"On work. On resolve. You know what keeps people alive? The desire
to live. The determination. Too many give up too quickly. They defeat
themselves. They wait for help and when none arrives, they give up."
Dumarest pointed at the sea. "Look at it. A place full of water and
food."
"Food?"
"Fish, girl. Fish."
"If we can catch them. But water?"
"In the fish." He smiled at her blank expression. "Didnt you know
that? A fish is full of drinkable water. All you need to do is catch
one, cut it open, scrape it to a pulp and eat it."
"Is that all?" She remembered the thing which had almost killed him
and which had killed Charl Zeda. "And if it has other ideas?"
"We change its mind." He dropped his hand on her shoulder. "Make me
a line and hooks—you'll have to use wire and what metal is available.
And something for bait. Bright rag, or something shiny might do to
snare our first catch. After that, we can use the body for bait."
Bochner shook his head as he came close. Then, at Dumarest's side,
he said softly, "Spacers—what do they know about basic survival? And if
you think catching fish is so easy, why all the work on the distillery?"
"You tell me."
"Insurance. You alone, or with one other, could survive with
comparative ease. But six of us? No, Earl, not while we're all cramped
on this raft. Small fish won't have enough water content to satisfy us
all, and if we attract larger specimens, then it will be us, not they,
who will provide the repast." Bochner glanced at the sun. "Hot," he
mused. "We're going to sweat. A matter of days, I think. Even with
fish, a matter of days. Then the trouble will start."
The quarrels, the stealing, the fighting, the apathy and, perhaps,
the murders. Certainly the deaths. Who would be the first to go?
Threnond was old, but his frame was tough, and in his time he had lived
hard. Bochner glanced to where he sat in one of the caskets, busy with
his radio. Egulus? Also tough, but with a different form of hardness.
Space weakened a man for survival in the wild. Dilys? She was big and
so would lose more water because of her larger surface area, but she
would have a good reserve of fat and Dumarest would certainly help her
all he could. Gale Andrei? Small, compact, light-boned but with scant
fat, and accustomed to civilized ease. Already, she had begun to
complain. She would be the first to die.
They would all die unless they reached shore soon, or help arrived,
and to hope for that was to believe in miracles. Caradoc was on
Mucianus, waiting for the
Entil to arrive. Trusting in the
traps and snares, the arranged cargoes which were to have guided it
there, himself to see that Dumarest was on it when it did. A good plan
negated by a fool. How long would the cyber wait? Not long, Bochner
knew, then Caradoc would go hunting. With luck, he would discover the
emergency signals from the
Entil. With his trained skill, he
might even be able to determine which world they had reached.
And then?
Bochner smiled and stretched his legs and watched Dumarest at his
work. The quarry, tracked and now ready at hand, the stalk over and the
sport ended before it had really begun. A disappointment. But a
question remained: Why did the Cyclan want Dumarest so badly? What did
he know or possess which made him so valuable?
To discover that would be to engage in a hunt of another kind and
the reward, once the kill was made, could be incredible.
It was taking too long.
Death should not come on slow, creeping feet, but be mercifully
swift so that, at the end, there was no pain, not even the anticipation
of hurt but a sudden, devastating extinction. There shouldn't be
endless days in which the sun burned like a furnace in a mottled sky,
and heat radiated from the water, the caskets, the sail itself as it
flapped against the mast. Only the nights were kind, the heavens
blazing with a luminous splendor reflected in the ocean, the image
broken, at times, by leaping shapes, ripples spreading to
reach to infinity.
Gale Andrei looked at it, her back against the mast, salt crusting
her hair from where she had plunged her head into the sea. Salt which
stung her lips and eyes, creating tears which added to the illusion.
Light, winking and shimmering, forming patterns which changed,
turning sea and sky into a mirrored image, an intricate chiaroscuro of
silver and black which swelled to embrace her, to engulf her, to
swallow her in its insatiable mouth. Death wore beauty as a garment.
But death came accompanied by pain. Thirst consumed her, a fire which
could not be quenched. Her lips were cracked, her throat constricted,
every cell and fiber yearning for water. Pools, baths, rivers into
which she could plunge. Waterfalls and cascades of icy coldness. Long
drinks in dew-adorned glasses, tart and heavy with the chill of ice.
She needed to drink. She had to drink—and if death followed, then it
was worth the price.
Lying on the casket, stripped, body glistening with perspiration,
Bochner saw her move and said nothing. On another, Dilys, restless,
lifted herself on one elbow; a near-naked shape occluding the stars.
Wakened by her movement, Dumarest whispered, "Dilys?"
"It's Gale. She—" Her voice rose to a shout. "No, you fool! No!"
Dumarest heard the splash as he rose. Like the others, he was naked
but for shorts, hard white flesh gleaming in the starlight, silver
droplets lifting as he plunged after the girl who now floated in the
sea. Bochner caught him as he reached the edge of the raft. "No!"
"The girl—"
"She's mad. Thirst-crazed. Gulping down sea water even as she bathes
in it." He grunted as Dumarest pushed him aside. "No, you fool! The
predators—"
They had followed for days, eager for the prey they sensed would
inevitably be theirs. Long shapes which glided, breaking water at
times, never coming too close to risk capture, ignoring the baited
hooks which had only caught their natural prey sheltering under the
raft. Now, as the girl thrashed in wild abandon, they closed in.
Dumarest saw them as he stood, knife in hand, eyes calculating time
and distance. A moment, then he dived, hitting the water in a shallow
curve, reaching the girl to grab her by the hair, to drag back her
face, to slam his knife-weighted fist hard against her jaw. As he
headed back to the edge of the raft, the first predator struck.
Dazed, half-stunned by the blow which had forestalled her
anticipated resistance, the girl felt the rasp of scales against her
thighs and screamed.
"Earl!" Bochner stood on the edge of the raft, hand extended.
"Quickly, you fool! Quickly!"
"The girl—"
"To hell with her." The hunter snarled his impatience. "Save
yourself, man. Hurry!"
He snarled again as Dumarest ignored the instruction and dived in
turn. He hit the water like an eel, twisting, body curved, hand and
knife extended as, again, the predator attacked. Blood foamed from the
creature, to fog the water and dull the gleam of starlight. More blood
followed as the girl screamed. Dumarest released her, slashed at an
arrowing shape, felt the impact of his blade on skin and flesh.
"Gale!"
She drifted to one side, face down, hair spread, cradled in the
water as beneath her something rose to tear, to sink again.
"Earl!" Bochner thrashed at the water, then headed toward the raft.
"Quick, man. The girl's dead. Save yourself!"
Move while the girl provided a distraction. Reach the raft while her
body was being torn into shreds. To grip outstretched hands and to
climb to safety. To slump, conscious of weakness, of the price exertion
needed to be paid.
"Earl!" Dilys was beside him, her face anxious as she stared at his
thigh, the raw patch where the skin had been rasped
and which now oozed blood. "You're hurt!"
"I'll live."
"Gale—"
"Is dead." Hadn't she seen? "We can't help her now, but we can help
ourselves. Let's get some of those fish!"
Crazed by the blood, the flesh, the fish were easy prey to the
nooses, the lines and hooks, the stabbing blades. Before they
dispersed, three of them jerked in one of the caskets adding their
blood to the saline in which they died. Food and water for those who
survived—the gift Gale Andrei had bought with her life.
"She was crazed," said Bochner dispassionately. "I guessed she'd be
the first to go. I knew she was near the edge, but didn't think she was
about to break."
"You should have stopped her."
"Going into the sea? How?" The hunter stared at Dilys. "She was gone
before I knew it, and once in the water what could I have done?"
"What Earl did. Gone in after her."
"And got myself killed as he almost did?" Bochner pointed to the
wound. "If I hadn't gone in after him when I did, that leg wouldn't be
scraped, it'd be gone. He'd be dead now, if it hadn't been for me."
A claim Dumarest didn't bother to dispute, but why had the man dived
into the sea to help him and not the girl?
Egulus said, "I think the wind is rising. Look at the sail."
It billowed from the mast, snapping, suddenly taut, and the captain
went to adjust one of the guy ropes. When it was to his satisfaction he
stood, looking upwards, starlight limning his face, his eyes. An aged
and haggard face. A pair of yearning eyes.
Dumarest could understand why. Up there, in the vast immensities of
space, ships lanced from world to world, eating distance with the power
of their drives, while down where the captain stood, they inched along
over endless water on a bleak journey to an unknown destination.
He said quietly, "It won't be long before you're back up there,
Captain."
"As what?" Egulus didn't lower his eyes. "A steward? A handler? What
chance have I of ever getting another ship of my own?"
"The big lines?"
"Don't want or trust men who've been free traders. We're too
independent, and not used to wearing the reins. Once a mans had a ship
of his own—" Egulus sighed and looked down and became suddenly brusque.
"To hell with it! Let's get busy on these damned fish before the sun
rises to bake our bones!"
The next day they saw land.
Chapter Ten
It loomed on the horizon, a smudge against the harsh clarity of the
sky, a blur which gradually gained resolution. A high peak, flanked by
lesser hills, all joined by a series of slopes which ran down to a
shore of black, volcanic sand, toothed with rocks against which the sea
lashed in foaming irritation.
In pools, they found limpets and mollusks which provided a mouthful
of moist nourishment—the fish they had caught had been consumed in the
three days they had waited to be carried to land. Edging the shore,
vegetation rose in a dull, green wall, boles darkly brown against the
sand, the leaves spined and serrated like the blades of vicious spears.
"There could be a break," suggested Egulus. "If we follow the coast,
we could find a river or something."
"We need water, food and shelter," said Dumarest. "We won't find
them by hugging the shore."
"But can we move through that tangle?" Dilys touched a leaf, moved
it to one side, looked at the web of branches waiting in the gloom.
"We'll be cut to shreds."
"Not if we take precautions." Dumarest glanced at the raft. It held
materials which could be fashioned into forms of protection. "We've got
clothing and can use extra padding. Get ready, now. Wear all you can,
and make sure you protect face and hands." His voice hardened as only
Bochner made a move. "Do it, damn you! If you hope to live, get to
work!"
Bochner had his quilted and protected garb, as Dumarest had his own
clothing. With thick gloves, crudely shaped but serviceable, and with
heads enclosed in metal cans cut with slits to provide vision, they
moved to take the lead. The vegetation was stubborn, falling slowly
beneath their knives, the metal edges blunting and showing the stains
of acid.
"We need lasers," grumbled the hunter. "Heavy duty weapons to burn a
path through this jungle. With knives alone, we haven't a chance."
"It should thin further within." Dumarest rasped the side of a stone
over his blade. "We'll take turns, me, then you, then me, again. Short
spells and halt to sharpen. A narrow passage will do as long as the
branches are cut to allow progress. We'll halt to rest when we reach a
clearing."
It took three hours during which they hacked and cut and squeezed
past ripping thorns and jagged spines, their padding torn, sweat
running down their bodies, the roar of blood loud in their ears as they
sagged from exhaustion.
Dilys collapsed as they reached the clearing, lying to gasp, to pull
the fabric from head and face, to sprawl, panting like a dog. Threnond
was little better. Egulus leaned back against a mass of branches and
looked upwards. The sky was hidden beneath a roof of greenery.
"Food," he said bitterly. "Water and shelter. Well, I guess we've
found that, at least. The shelter of a grave. We could die in here and
no one would ever be able to find us."
"If anyone is bothering to look." Bochner looked up from where he
sat. "Any luck with the radio yet?"
"I've been sending a distress call for days, now." Threnond looked
at the radio equipment in his hand. It was a jumble of adapted
components, powered by a small energy cell. "If anyone's heard it, they
haven't answered."
"Or you haven't caught it, if they did." Egulus was pessimistic.
"What difference does it make? They'll never find us in here."
"Not here," agreed Dumarest, "but we'd be easy to spot if we were on
the summit of that peak we saw."
"The peak?" Dilys lifted her head. "Earl, that's miles away! We
can't—"
"We can!" He rose and stepped toward her and lifted her upright with
an explosion of violence which gave his face the likeness of a savage
animal. "We can if we try. If we want to. But we won't if we just sit
around moaning that it can't be done. Now, move! On your feet and move!"
The sun passed zenith and headed toward the horizon. An hour before
dusk they found a small stream and bathed, cooling their bodies and
filling their stomachs in turn, as others kept watch; a precaution
Dumarest insisted on and one which Bochner noted. A trait of his
quarry's character—how many would have thought to be so careful at such
a time and in such a seemingly harmless place?
Later, as the shadows closed in, he said, "We need to eat, Earl.
Climbing to that peak will take energy the rest haven't got. Of course,
we could leave them here and send help later."
Or forget them. The simplest way, but he didn't hint at that. The
bait had been enough. He could learn from the way it was taken.
"We could," said Dumarest, "if we find help. If that help is willing
to do as we ask. If it can find them when it tries."
"An old man," said Bochner. "A captain without a ship. A woman."
"People."
"True, but there are so many people." Bochner looked into the
shadows. "With water there could be game. If so, it would follow
trails—need I tell you what is obvious?"
They set snares made of woven wires and waited and caught small,
furred creatures which squeaked and died and were skinned to roast over
a fire created by sparks struck from steel. Daylight provided more food
from the snares which had been set overnight, and again they began to
climb. At dusk, the vegetation had developed into tall trees which
soared like the columns of an ancient cathedral, their upper branches
plumed to hide the sky. Progress was easier, but slowed by the thick
humus which held the damp consistency of mud.
And there was no more game.
Its lack puzzled Bochner.
"There are fruits," he pointed out. "And there should be things to
eat them. There are insects and yet no apparent lifeform adapted to
prey on them. See?"
With his boot he scraped back a portion of the dirt, revealing a
host of scurrying beetles. The fruits, small, hard-skinned, now
rotting, lay where they had fallen.
Dumarest looked at the trees, the immediate area. Life took many
forms, but always it followed certain patterns. The large preyed on the
small and where there was food there was something to eat it. The
animals they had snared and eaten had been rodents, ratlike things with
teeth and jaws adapted
to an omnivorous diet. They had been fairly plentiful further down the
slopes—why not here?
Threnond said, "What's the matter? Are we lost?"
"No."
"How can you tell?" The dealer in items of death was hungry and
irritable and conscious of his overriding fatigue. He set down the
radio and moved off into the shadows clustered between the boles.
"While you decide, I've something to attend to. A natural function—you
understand."
A delicacy he had demonstrated before, but not with such abruptness.
Dumarest took a step after him, halted as Bochner rested a hand on his
arm.
"Let him go, Earl."
"There could be danger."
"Always there is the possibility of danger, my friend. In the wine
you drink, the food you eat, the bed in which you sleep. We are
surrounded by perils, but to guard against them all is beyond the
ability of man. We take what precautions we can and, for the rest we
trust to luck. If our luck is good, we continue to survive. If it is
bad—" he shrugged, "then we cease to have cause to worry."
And no man should be fool enough to burden himself with the welfare
of another—a point Bochner hadn't emphasized but had left in no doubt.
A tenet of his philosophy revealed in the tone of his voice, the
expression of his eyes, the words chosen to illustrate a meaning. When
a man played cards, he betrayed more than he guessed to a skilled
observer and Dumarest had assessed his motivation. The cult of self,
the way of the feline. The law of the beast who has only one instinct,
one drive. To survive at all costs. To live. To continue to exist, for
without personal existence there was nothing.
And yet he had dived into the ocean, risking death to save another.
"Threnond!" Dumarest raised his voice. "Shan? Shan, where are you?"
Silence, broken only by the rustle of feet in the humus as the woman
and Egulus came to join them. A silence which held a sudden, brooding
menace.
"Shan!"
"He can't be far," whispered Dilys. "There was no need for him to go
far."
"Shan!" Dumarest looked up and around, feeling the old, familiar
prickle of impending danger, the primitive warning which had served him
so well before. "Stay together," he said. "Keep watch. Bochner, you
light a fire. Hurry!"
He moved to where a clump of saplings stood between separated trees.
As flame rose from the fire the hunter had built, Dumarest cut down
four of the slender poles, trimmed them, sharpened their ends to form
crude spears.
As Dilys took hers, she said, "Why this, Earl? Trouble?"
"Maybe not. Just hold on to it, in case. Use it to lean on if you
like."
"Sure, just like an—"
She broke off as he lifted a hand, listening. From above and to one
side, falling with a gentle rustle through the leaves, came something
which twisted and turned to land like a flattened snake.
"A belt!" Egidus lunged forward. "By God, it's a belt!"
After it came nightmare.
It dropped with a thin chatter of castanets, veiled, gems flashing
in the firelight, fans and parasols flared and shimmering with a
nacreous sheen. A thing which followed the bole, suspended on a thin
strand, swinging, touching Egulus, who yelled and sprang back and
yelled again as he fell, to roll helpless on loam.
To stare with horror at the mammoth spider dropping towards him.
"Earl! My God! What—"
Dilys spoke to empty air. Dumarest was gone, lunging forward with a
speed which, in the firelight, made him seem little more than a blur.
To halt, spear upraised, butt on the loam beside the fallen captain,
the sharpened point buried deep in the mat of fur covering the spider's
thorax, wood shredding beneath the snap of its mandibles, silk pluming
from the pulsing spinnerets forming clouds of gossamer which drifted
like a mantle to clog his head and arms.
A silken shroud from which he tore himself with desperate energy.
"Earl!" Bochner shouted from where he came running, "Above!"
A hint of movement in the shadows and another monstrous creature
plummeted, to strike and seize and lift its prey to the lair it owned
high in the topmost branches of the trees. Dumarest sprang aside, steel
lifting from his boot, point and edge cutting at the snapping castanets
of the mandibles, stabbing at the gems of the eyes. Ichor dripped on
his hand, and an acrid stench filled his nostrils as hooked limbs tore
shreds from his padding. Limbs which jerked as they were slashed, to
lie severed on the loam, twitching as the body of the creature twisted
on its suspending filament, to attack with mindless ferocity again, to
die as Bochner impaled it with his wooden shaft.
"Back!" The hunter looked up. "Back, Earl! There could be more!"
"Get to the girl!" Dumarest stooped, grabbed the captain by the arms
and dragged him upright to his feet. Bochner hadn't moved. "Damn it,
man! Get to the girl!"
A fraction of hesitation and the hunter obeyed. Dilys stood beside
the fire, eyes wide, spear trembling in her hand as she stared into the
shadows. From above, from all sides, came a thin cluttering, a scrape
and rustle of chiton, the impact of limbs against branches and leaves
as things edged forward through the upper layers of vegetation.
"A nightmare." Egulus looked ill. "A thing from hell itself. It
almost had me. It would have had me but for Earl, Threnond?"
He hadn't been as lucky. Dumarest held out the belt he had
recovered, together with the spears.
"Is it his?"
"I don't know. It could have been." Egulus shivered. "What now?"
"We build up the fire. Gather fuel—go with him, Bochner. Keep guard
while he picks up what he can."
"And me, Earl?"
"You stay here." He looked at the woman. "Keep the fire as high as
you can. Don't move away from it, but don't stay immobile. Move about,
look around, keep watch and if you see anything, scream."
"And that will drive them away?"
"No." He was blunt. "But it may distract them."
"For how long?" She stared into the darkness, her voice high, thin,
verging on hysteria. "All right? And after that, what? Can we stay
awake all the time? Can we hope to beat those things off as we move?
Earl! What the hell can we do?"
"We wait," he said. "We watch and we plan. We keep our heads. Now
tend the fire."
A job which would keep her busy and occupy her mind. Flames rose as
she fed scraps of wood to the coals, leaping tongues of red and orange,
edged with grayish smoke, the light painting the boles around with
shimmers of transient brightness, glows which faded to flare again, to
give the impression of movement, of watching eyes.
"They'll come again," said Bochner. "They've tasted blood and
they'll be eager for more easy prey."
Egulus said, "Threnond—a hell of a way for a man to die. Squatting,
thinking, then something swinging down to—" He broke off, swallowing.
"He didn't even have time to scream. And then what? They lifted him up?
Carried him? Held him in a web like a fly? Thank God, he knew nothing
about it."
"Maybe," said Dumarest.
"He was dead," said Bochner quickly. "He had to be dead. Otherwise
he would have screamed or struggled. We'd have heard something."
"We did."
"His belt falling. What does that mean?"
Dumarest said, "He wore that belt under his clothing, so to fall, it
must have been exposed. Which means he was stripped."
"So where's the rest of his clothing?"
"I don't know," admitted Dumarest. "Maybe it was shredded and
scattered around. Maybe it's up in the trees and the belt fell by
accident."
"If it hadn't, I'd be dead by now," said Egulus. "We could all be
dead." He looked up and around, eyes uneasy, a muscle twitching on one
cheek. "For God's sake, can't we get away from here? Move back down the
slope? Find a clearing or something?"
"Tomorrow, yes."
"Why not now?"
"We're trapped," said Bochner. "If we move away from the fire,
they'll have us. If we try to take it with us, they'll follow. All we
can do is to keep it alight and watch. If we're lucky, they won't
attack in force."
"And if not?"
"We'll be dead." The hunter smiled. "We'll die fighting, but we'll
be dead just the same. A brave finish, you agree? To stand with
companions battling hopeless odds. Sagas have been written about less.
But have hope, friend. Always have hope."
Dumarest said, "They won't attack in force. If that was their habit,
we'd have been overrun long ago. I think it's a matter of
territory—game belongs to the spiders under whose trees it strays. At
the moment, we're at a junction, as it were, and so present a problem.
When the vacancy we made by killing those things is filled, then the
newcomers may attack."
Dilys said, "And if they do?"
"We fight back. We win."
"And leave?"
"Yes," said Dumarest. "After we have found Threnond."
Bochner stirred, not asleep yet not wholly awake, his mind drifting
in a vague region composed of memory and fantasy, constructing regions
of what-might-have-been together with those of what-could-be. Dumarest
was far more complex than he had at first appeared. There were levels
within the man which he was only now beginning to fully appreciate. A
sense of function, of fitness, of instinctive reaction which added new
dimensions to apparent simplicity. Nothing he did could be simple,
always there had to be a complex motivation directed not even on a
conscious level but operating on the subconscious need to ensure
survival. And yet, there were elements which negated that facile
theory. A man driven by the need simply to exist was predictable and so
made poor sport. Threaten, and he would respond in one of certain ways;
he would beg, run, bribe, plead, bargain, even kill. Dumarest would do
all these, if necessary, and yet that was not all. There had to be
more. If not, how had he managed to elude the Cyclan for so long?
And what made them so desperate to find and hold him?
Always it came back to that—the tantalizing promise of fantastic
reward. Not just for the sake of material gain but for the other, far
more intense pleasure of personal achievement. Of running down the most
wily and the most dangerous quarry he had ever known to the final,
bitter end. Not just to make a kill—any fool could destroy—but to win
on all levels so that when the hunt was ended, the stalk consummated,
and he was closing in for the termination, the usual orgasmic pleasure
would be multiplied a hundredfold.
To win.
To pit mind against mind, body against body, skill and cunning and
intelligence against equal attributes and to win. To be proven the
best. To gain in stature by the other's defeat.
To live!
A noise, and he was fully awake, one hand reaching for his knife,
the other for his spear. Against the glow of the fire, the bulk of the
woman showed monstrous; female flesh rendered even more shapeless by
the clothing and padding she wore. For a moment he compared her with
Gale Andrei and her slim boyishness, then dismissed them both. Women,
never important, were now an unwanted complication.
Dumarest stood beyond her, head tilted, eyes searching the heights.
Egulus, lying supine, stirred and coughed—the noise he had heard—and
Bochner lifted himself from the loam to rise and flex his muscles. A
creature of the wild preparing himself for action.
They had, he thought, been lucky. It was close to dawn and the night
had passed without incident. Lying, resting his bones if nothing else,
he had waited on the edge of instant alertness, ready for any attack,
eyes acting as watchful guardians as, apparently, he dreamed. Now, with
the new day, they could move back down the slope, skirt the area, press
on up the hill to the peak.
If the area could be skirted.
If there was no attack.
Standing, he felt his mind flash to an alternate possibility. He and
Dumarest, wandering this world, two hunters living on the land, knowing
and relishing the taste and feel of a primitive existence, sharing and
finding joy in their own, personal world.
A moment, then it was gone and only a semiregretful glow remained.
The main hunt still remained. The stalk, the challenge, the need to
act, to delude, to beat intelligence and caution with the same of his
own.
He said, "Earl? Are we ready to move out?"
"Not yet." Dumarest, Bochner noticed, had removed all the padding
he'd worn. "Strip. I want everything but your own clothing. You too,
Dilys. And you, captain."
"Why?"
"For smoke. Most of the padding is plastic and it'll produce a
thick, black cloud when burned."
"Smoke?" Egulus frowned, then thought he had the answer. "To get rid
of the spiders? Will it work?"
"It might. At least, it will stop them seeing me."
"Seeing you?" Dilys remembered what he had said. "Earl, you're not
going after Threnond!"
"Someone has to."
"But why? He's dead. You said so yourself."
"No, others said that. I'm afraid he could still be alive." Dumarest
stooped and lifted burning sticks from the fire, "If he is, then he's
in the worst land of hell. We can't leave him in it."
He carried the mass of burning wood to the place where the belt had
fallen and she followed him, searching for words, for a reason why he
shouldn't do what he obviously intended to do. Only a madman would want
to climb the tree to face what could lurk above. Threnond was dead—he
had to be dead. How could he possibly be alive?
Bochner knew. He said urgently, "Earl, the risk is too great. Even
if they did sting and poison him, there's nothing you can do. We have
no cure. You'd be throwing your life away for nothing."
Dumarest said, "If you want to help, stand guard while Dilys feeds
the fire. If not, get the hell away from here. Captain?"
"I'm with you, Earl." Egulus came forward, his arms filled with
discarded padding, eyes anxious as he stared into the dying night. "I
don't understand this, but in space we help each other. Threnond wasn't
a spacer, but he'd bought passage and I guess I'm responsible for him,
in a way." He added with simple dignity, "Just tell me what you want me
to do."
"Stand guard, keep watch, take care of anything which might attack."
Dumarest glanced at the bole of the tree, his eyes following it to the
summit. "It's light up there. Dilys, start making smoke."
It billowed from the embers as she fed plastic to the embers, thick,
black, acrid. Rising in a pillar about the bole of the tree, drawn
upwards by the dawn wind blowing over the forest, spreading in odd
vagaries of shape, coils hanging as if solid, to writhe, to drift like
reluctant phantoms, to stain the greenery with fingers of pollution.
In the midst of it, Dumarest climbed upwards like a mechanical doll.
A rope circled the tree, the loop enclosing his body and forming a rest
against which he could strain while his boots found holds on the trunk.
Hands flapping the rope upwards, body moving in synchronization with
feet and support, he was gone before they knew it, a dim shape which
vanished into darkness.
"They'll get him," said Egulus. "He won't be able to see them and
they'll get him before he knows it."
"No." Bochner released his breath in a long sigh. "He knows what
he's doing. The smoke will clear the area."
Of spiders and oxygen, both given time. And the released poisons
could be as fatal to man as arachnids. Why was he risking his life? Why?
High above, Dumarest paused, blinking, conscious of the pain in his
lungs, the constriction. The cloth he had wrapped around his mouth did
little to filter the smoke from the air and it was time to lose even
that protection. A quick move and it was around his throat, the blade
of his knife clamped in his mouth, and again he was climbing up to
where the leaves made an umbrella to trap the smoke as it hid the sky.
The sky and other things.
Something thin and sticky touched his cheek, stinging, as he forged
upwards and tore it free. Another traced a silken path over his sleeve,
more joined it, formed a mesh which parted as he jerked his arm, lifted
to settle on his hair. The smoke protected him, settled vapor
preventing the silk from adhering as designed to do, maintaining the
freedom of motion he needed. A rustle and his hand lifted, caught the
hilt of the knife, slashed as mandibles snapped an inch from his cheek,
slashed again to complete the ruin, then again to send the oozing
creature from its perch to plummet below.
One taken care of—how many others would be waiting?
The things were the size of a small dog, legs doubling the body
area, mandibles capable of closing around a neck. The hooked limbs
could rip and tear flesh from bones, but the most dangerous part was
the venom which would numb and paralyze with immediate effect. One
bite, if it broke the skin, and he would be worse than dead.
A branch interrupted his upward progress and, in a sudden area of
clarity in the smoke, he saw a scuttling shape, silk streaming from its
spinnerets, limbs rasping as it lunged towards him. Chiton broke
beneath the smash of his fist, covering his knuckles with ooze, and a
thrust of his knife drove steel into the main ganglion, cutting and
twisting and severing the muscles leading to the mandibles. Higher, and
the smoke thinned, ebon wreaths tracing smears across the morning,
soiling the first pearly light.
Touching the twinkle of diamond dew, which graced the clouds of
gossamer hanging in delicate veils.
Laying a patina of darkness on the long shape shrouded and bound
with layers of web to branches which crossed and made a platform.
A bier for the, as yet, undead.
Threnond was stung, paralyzed, locked in a mental torment of
helpless awareness. Meat processed for later consumption by the newborn
spiders which would hatch from the eggs festooning his chest and
throat, his stomach, groin and thighs. Doomed to lie immobile while the
hungry mandibles gnawed into his flesh. To know the horror of being
eaten alive.
His eyes were open, glazed, already seats of torment. Targets for
the glare of the rising sun. Blindness would be the first of his many
extra hells.
There was no cure and only one mercy.
Dumarest administered it, then slid down the bole of the tree to
land, coughing, doubled and retching as acrid vapor tore at his lungs.
He heard Bochner cry a warning, then the impact of a sudden weight on
his back, the snap of mandibles at his shoulders, the touch of chiton
against his cheek. A touch which fell away as the hunter smashed the
scrabbling spider to the loam, to thrust his wooden spear into its
thorax, to crush it with his boot as it fretted the shaft.
Another which, crippled, moved slowly back up a tree. A third, which
Egulus killed as Dumarest, fighting for breath, stumbled free of the
smoke.
"So, you found him." Bochner glanced at the red smears where
Dumarest had wiped his knife against his thigh. "And gave him an easy
way out."
"Thank God for that." Egulus glanced uneasily up at the smoke. "I
know what it's about now. Some spiders sting and paralyze, and others
do not—how did you know which kind these are?"
"I didn't." Dumarest straightened, fighting a sudden giddiness. He
had inhaled too much poison. "I just couldn't take the chance."
"He was lucky," said Bochner. "Threnond, I mean. He was damned
lucky."
Dilys said, "Lucky? I thought he was dead."
"He is. That's what I mean." The hunter glanced at Dumarest.
"Sometimes that's what a friend is for—and he had one of the best."
Chapter Eleven
The fire was small, the animal skinned and suspended over it slowly
cooking, the smell tantalizing as it stimulated primitive appetites.
Watching it, Dilys remembered her youth. Would the spit have been
considered a machine? The means of starting the blaze? Vagrant
thoughts, which grew in the dullness of fatigue. Fruits of an
undisciplined mind.
Leaning back against a rock, she looked at the vast expanse of the
sea far below. Light shimmered from the water in brief splinters of
flashing brilliance, sparkles which caught the eye to vanish even as
they were born, to flash again in a coruscating pattern of hypnotic
attraction. A floor to match the sweeping bowl of the sky in which the
sun hung like a watching, malefic eye.
And, suddenly, she was afraid.
All her life she had been confined. The village had been small and
always there had been walls. Even later, when she had run away to the
town to study, there had been close restraints; the cramped room she
shared with others, the lecture halls, the classrooms, the workshops
and, later, the interiors of ships, the engine rooms she had made her
world. And now, agoraphobia gripped her so that she wanted to cringe
and hide from the threat of the vast, open spaces.
"Dilys?" Dumarest was beside her. "Is anything wrong?"
Had she cried out in her sudden terror? Had he sensed her need? No
matter, he was close and she felt a warm reassurance. Impulsively, she
reached out to take his hand.
"Earl! Earl, I—"
"Should be watching the fire," he said quickly. "If you let the meat
burn, I'll beat you."
He was joking, turning the subject from intense emotion, and yet she
sensed that it was not wholly a jest. If the need arose he would beat
her. Strike her, as he had killed Threnond. From need. From mercy.
Could she have done the same?
Could Egulus?
They came from different worlds, she thought. To them, the hull was
the natural boundary, the hum of engines the voice of the wind, the
glow of lights the shine of the sun. Planets were places to be visited
and left without delay. Worlds were names in an almanac. Here, on the
dirt, they were like stranded fish.
And she was tired. Tired!
They had dropped down the slope until clear of the trees, then
turned to the left where Dumarest had spotted a long ridge running up
the foothills. A relatively safe path a few miles away, the distance
trebled by the undulations of the terrain, trebled again by the
difficulty of progress. A time of stumbling on, of drinking when they
found water, eating when they had food. Days which had passed into
nights and nights which had turned pale and become days again. How
many? She had forgotten.
"You're tired," said Dumarest, "but it won't be long now. We're
almost at the summit of the peak. Tomorrow we'll be able to see what's
on the other side." Then, when she made no comment, he added, "Watch
the meat, girl. Game is scarce up here."
Game and fruits and even leaves succulent enough to chew. He looked
back down the slope as he left the girl, frowning as he judged their
progress. It was too slow. Hardship had weakened them but here, facing
the sea, was a bad place to linger. Over the crest would be shelter and
the possibility of larger game.
Egulus sat with the radio on his lap, Bochner beside him. The
captain was busy checking the mechanism, fingers deft as he traced
circuits and tested connections.
"It's crude, Earl." He looked up as Dumarest's shadow fell over the
mechanism. "Threnond had to use what was available, but he had limited
knowledge of electronics. I'm trying to alter the circuits a little to
boost the emissions."
"It's still working?"
"Yes. I've tested the energy cell and it's viable. The thing is, I'm
not too sure of the emissions. It should be sending on the general
planetary band if it's to be any good at all, but there's no way of
telling."
"Ships and field installations operate on a wide-band spectrum,"
said Dumarest. "They might not recognize it as a message at first, but
they'll hear and investigate."
"By adjusting the receptors," agreed the captain. "If the operator
on duty isn't a fool, or thinking of something else, or is willing to
take the time and use the power. On any normal world I wouldn't be so
anxious, but this is Hyrcanus."
"What difference does it make?" Bochner scowled. "There's a field,
isn't there? A town of sorts? People!"
"Yes, but we have that, too." Egulus jerked his head at the sun.
"And we're in the Quillian Sector. Space is full of noise. From here,
you send word by courier and get it the same way. Close in, they can
hear us but we don't know in which direction the field could be lying.
It could even be on the other side of the planet."
"If it is?"
Egulus shrugged. "Luck," he said. "It's a matter of luck. They could
pick up our transmission or it need never reach them."
And, even if it was heard, it could be ignored.
Dumarest said, "Can you increase the power? Send out an overall
blast?"
"Maybe." The captain frowned, thinking. "If I can rig the circuits,
yes. Threnond used the emergency alarm as a base and the capacitors are
an integral part. He bypassed them, but they can be reincorporated. But
if we do that, Earl, we'll be taking a chance. The power won't last."
"How long?"
Again the captain frowned. "I can't be sure. We've used up a lot
during the journey. About three strong emissions, I'd say. Maybe one or
two weak ones, then finish."
"A gamble," said Bochner. "If they don't hear us we'll have to make
our own way." His teeth flashed in a smile as he thought about it.
"Back to the beginnings, Earl. To hunt and trap and make do as best we
can. It won't be too bad. We've skill and adaptability and we've a
woman."
"Savages." Egulus looked at the radio. "I was on an expedition once.
We'd heard about a ship which had been wrecked in the mountains of
Glechen. We didn't find it but we found what could have been the
survivors. They couldn't read, spoke in grunts, were covered in scabs
and practiced cannibalism. Fifty years, maybe less, and they were back
in the dirt."
"They were soft." Bochner echoed his contempt. "If a man is anything
at all he'll find a way to make out, no matter what his environment.
That's what life is all about, isn't it? To take what is and make it
what you want it to be. Right, Earl?"
"Save the power." Dumarest ignored the question as he looked at
Egulus. "Adjust the radio, but don't use it until we reach the summit."
To the hunter, he said, "Well eat and move on. You go ahead and scout
If you find anything of interest, just leave it. No private hunts. No
risks."
Bochner said flatly, "Are you giving me orders?"
Dumarest caught the tone, saw the sudden tension, the stance which
betrayed anger barely controlled. A reaction to fatigue too long
denied, of nerves worn, yet masked by a casual facade. Of a maniacal
pride which, even now, had to challenge the hint of another's authority.
He said mildly, "No, I'm not giving you orders. You stay with the
others, if you want I'll go ahead and scout."
"You think I'm tired?"
"I don't know what you are." Dumarest met the eyes, wild, wide, the
irises edged with white. "But me, I'm bushed."
The admission brought the reaction he'd expected. Bochner relaxed,
smiling, armored in his conviction of superiority.
"Hell, Earl," he said. "I'm bushed, too—a little. You go ahead and
rest."
They reached the summit as darkness began to edge the horizon and
the light of the dying sun threw streamers of red and gold, orange and
amber against the vault of the sky. A spectacle which would have
entranced Gale Andrei, but she, dead, had no eyes to see and they were
too exhausted to do more than slump and stare at what lay beyond the
peaks edging the shore.
A rolling savannah of bush and scrub, interspersed with clumps of
trees now touched with the golden promise of the fading light. A stream
which meandered toward a river which must wind on a slow and torturous
path to the sea some distance to one side. Clouds, like smoke in the
far distance, and beyond them, the soaring loom of mountains, their
summits touched with perpetual white.
"Nothing!" Dily's voiced her disappointment. "Earl, there's nothing!"
Game trails, which his eye could see even in the dusk. Places which
could conceal, timber which could make huts and fires, brush adaptable
to protective stockades, and water which could be navigated, given
craft which strong hands and sharp stones could build. A world in which
men could live given the determination. But she saw nothing.
"No houses," she said dully. "No roads. No animals. No signs of
life. A wilderness. It's a damned wilderness!"
"Easy." Dumarest caught her by the arm, his fingers relaying a warm
comfort. "Just take it easy. Ask Bochner to start a fire and make some
sort of a camp." It would give them both something to do. "Find some
rocks and make sure they aren't harboring snakes. The night will bring
wind, so bear that in mind. Come now!" He smiled and lifted up her
chin. "Look on the bright side. There could be swamps or desert down
there. Salt flats or marsh. Remember that place you spoke of on Swenna?
Your land? Is it so different?"
"No," she admitted. "I guess not."
"Then why the disappointment? It should be like coming home."
But on Swenna there would be a town and neighbors, and even if they
weren't close, they would be there and within contact range. Now she
felt as if no one else but themselves existed on this entire planet.
That they had crashed to live as best they might, to live and die
without ever seeing the civilization she had known. The ships and towns
and busy places. The markets and communes and the sound of eager voices.
Bochner said, "Gather fuel, woman. Get it while there is still light
to see. And watch for snakes and things which could bite." His smile
was ugly, that of a predator enjoying the moment before the kill. "Come
now, move!"
The tone of command, which she had heard so often as a child and had
never learned to like. For a moment she faced him, tempted to challenge
his assumption that she would obey, to take him, hold him, use her
hands to crush out his life. A moment only, then she recognized the
weakness which made her less than the hunter. Sometimes, at rare
intervals, she could overcome it, but always there had to be the
stimulus. Now it was easier to turn and move off to gather dried
grasses and broken twigs, patches of moss and windblown debris which
would burn.
Egulus said, "Here, Earl? It's as high as we're going to get unless
we head for those mountains."
"Here." Dumarest looked at the sun, the sea bathed in washes of
color, swaths of warm and enticing hue which matched and augmented the
splendor of the sky. "But not yet. Wait until its well after dark. We
don't want to fight the sun more than we have to."
"After dark," agreed the captain. "We've three good, strong bursts,
Earl. Shall I send them out quickly, one after the other, or space them
out?"
"Space them through the night. Send the last at dawn. Wait, then use
what power is left to do what you can."
"And if we get no response?" Egulus sucked at his lips as Dumarest
made no answer. "Maybe I can pick up something by switching to
reception. No luck so far, but the hills could have blocked the signal.
At least we might get a line as to the whereabouts of the field."
And if not they could, perhaps, see ships coming in to land. Others
leaving—if they were on the right hemisphere.
Darkness brought a chill wind, which caught at the fire and sent the
flames dancing to paint the area in shifting patterns of light. From
the shadowed savannah, something cried out with a harsh, grating sound
quickly ended. A beast falling to the claws and fangs of a predator or
the mating call of an animal in heat. It was not repeated and Dumarest,
standing watch, guessed the former to be the most likely explanation.
He turned as Bochner came towards him. The hunter looked at the cold
gleam of the knife lifted towards him and smiled.
"I could have killed you, Earl, had I wanted."
"Perhaps."
"You imply doubt. There is no doubt. I could have been on you before
you knew it. A move. A single blow and you would be dead, now." The
hunter drew in his breath, released it with a soft inhalation. "My
friend, I am a practical man and know you are, also. What if rescue
does not arrive?"
"We live."
"Of course, but how? I mean in what manner? Three men and only one
woman—you recognize the problem? The captain, I think, can be left out
of the equation, but there is still you and me. Frankly, the need of a
woman is, to me, only a minor irritation, but there is a question of
principle. Of precedence. You understand?"
Dumarest remembered the cry he had heard—death sending its warning.
Was he listening to another? Had he received it?
Against the glow of the fire the hunter's face was in shadow, the
light which delineated his stance masking his expression, but there
were things the shadows couldn't hide. The scent which came from him;
the odor born of released adrenalin, of pulsing blood, of muscular
tension and glandular secretions all designed to lift and hold the body
to a fighting pitch. Odors Dumarest had smelled before when facing men
in the arena. The stench which came through oil and sweat and which
usually held the taint of fear. A taint now absent.
Bochner said again, "You understand?"
"Yes," said Dumarest. "I understand."
"And the woman?"
"Will make her own choice."
"I don't think so."
Dumarest looked at the shape limned in the firelight, the shadowed
face in which reflected starlight betrayed the eyes. "I can't agree."
"So?"
"I think that as you're so wakeful you can take over the watch.
Arguments can wait until later." He added dryly, "And don't worry, I
won't creep up on you in the dark."
Dawn came with splinters of light and a wind which dropped as the
day grew older. Dilys, refreshed by her sleep, tried to wash her face
and hair in the dew which assuaged their thirst. Too little
and too hard to collect, tantalizing rather than satisfying. When she
complained, Dumarest waved at the savannah.
"We're too high for water up here. It's all running to lower levels."
"Why can't we wait down there?"
"Smoke." He looked at the fire. "Down lower it will be masked
against the hills. Up here, it can be seen for miles."
The obvious, which she had overlooked. Irritably, she began to pile
the remaining fuel on the embers.
"Save that until later," advised Dumarest, "until the morning winds
have died. And if we're going to keep it fed, we'll need more fuel."
They descended to find it, dropping down the landward slope to
gather and haul ferns and branches, twigs, roots, dried stems and
saplings to be piled beside the fire. Dumarest downed a scurrying shape
with his thrown knife and Bochner tried to emulate the feat. His blade
pierced a leg and sent the rodent, screaming, to bite at the steel.
Screams which died as he broke the creature's neck, but he was not
pleased. Dumarest had killed clean at twice the distance.
"A dangerous man, that," said Egulus when, later, he watched with
Dumarest beside the fire. Fed with the remaining scraps of available
plastic, it threw an ebon column into the sky. "I saw his face when he
realized you had bested him. He can't stand to be beaten at anything.
I've known men like that before. I suppose, in a way, I was one myself.
What I wanted, I had to get. I did, too-but that's over now. The
Entil
is gone."
"What do you know of him?"
"Leo Bochner?" The captain shrugged. "Nothing. He wanted passage and
could pay for it. What else was there for me to know? You must have
learned more about him than I did?"
A man who had boarded with expensive equipment; weapons and items of
price, to be expected from a successful hunter and the representative
of a wealthy consortium. His luggage was gone now, dumped with the rest
of the jettisoned weight, and he had not protested. That, in itself,
was unusual. In Dumarest's experience, the wealthy hated to lose their
possessions; few were realistic enough to accept the necessity for
sacrifice.
He said, "Anything on the radio?"
"Nothing." Egulus picked it up and tripped a switch. "I've been
saving power. It's on to receive now. I—" He broke off, grunting with
surprise. "I think—yes, by God! A signal!"
Dumarest listened to the sharp series of blips, the silence, the
blips again.
As the following silence dragged he said, "Direction?"
"Hard to tell with precision." Egulus scowled at the instrument.
"From land, though. Somewhere over there."
His hand pointed over the savannah, aimed above the heads of Bochner
and Dilys as they searched for edible grasses lower down the slope.
Looking at her, the captain shook his head.
"Jumoke was a fool, Earl. He had no patience. I told him that your
association with Dilys wouldn't last but he refused to listen. He even
wanted to share. The bastard!" His hands tightened on the radio. "The
crazy bastard! The work of a lifetime thrown away because he became
obsessed with a woman!"
"It's over." Dumarest could appreciate the man's anger. "It's all in
the past now, Captain."
"Yes." Egulus looked at his hands and eased their pressure. "Yes,
Earl, but the woman is still with us. She still could be a source of
trouble. You and Bochner—if she favors him, will you let her go?"
"I don't own her."
"Maybe she wishes you did. Maybe she'd want you to fight over her.
You and Bochner like a couple of rutting dogs, with her watching and
willing to mate with the one who wins." Egulus ended bitterly, "You and
Bochner—I don't count."
Dumarest said quietly, "You're wrong, Yarn. You and she have more in
common than you think. You belong to the same world. Before Jumoke—were
you close?"
"Yes."
"And she left you for the navigator?"
"She's her own master, Earl. You know how it is in space. We have
our own customs and a captain has to respect them. And we were all
partners, don't forget. Each of us technically equal to the other—hell,
why waste time talking about it!"
"Check the radio," said Dumarest. "See if there are any further
signals."
He added more fuel to the fire as the captain obeyed, damp leaves,
mosses and green twigs which thickened the column of smoke into a
brown-gray pillar against the sky. Turning, he stared toward the
distant range of mountains. They were too far for him to make out other
than general detail, but there could be mines and men working them and
passes leading to farms beyond. Even a lone prospector, sending in a
report, could have accounted for the signals.
An hour later they spotted the raft.
Chapter Twelve
Dilys watched as it came towards them, conscious of a tremendous
relief. Soon, now, she would be on her way to houses and people. To the
field and ships and the warm comfort and security of familiar things.
"They've come!" Her voice carried gladness. "They've come to rescue
us!"
Egulus said, "They must have picked up our signals and come to
investigate."
He was more cautious than the girl, and with reason. Investigation
did not assume rescue; that implied payment and they had little to
offer. A caution Dumarest shared.
"Spread out," he said. "Bochner, you take the left and I'll take the
right. If they move against us, don't hesitate to act."
Orders which, for once, the hunter didn't object to obeying. He took
up his position, looking at the advancing raft, head tilted, eyes
narrowed.
"Small," he commented. "It could belong to a lone prospector or
hunter."
"It's seen us," said Dilys. "It's heading directly toward the smoke."
Words spoken for reassurance—it had been obvious from the first that
the raft was making for the peak on which they stood. Dumarest watched
as it lowered its line of flight. Small, as Bochner had said, a hollow
shell fitted with controls at one end, a rail around the body which
would hold a padded seat. If there was a protective canopy, it was
folded back. The body holding the antigrav units was equipped with
landing skids, and the sound of the engine powering the units was a
soft humming purr.
It would be holding one man at least, the driver. Then, as he caught
a blur of movement, Dumarest revised his figures. Two men, including
the driver. The head he had seen toward the rear of the craft could not
have belonged to the man at the controls.
"Two men." Bochner had also spotted the movement. "Either that's all
there are or the rest are lying low. In which case, we could have a
problem."
"Earl?" Dilys had heard and looked questioningly at Dumarest. "What
does he mean?"
"Nothing. Just wave and call out."
To act the person in distress and to reveal the fact that she was a
woman. Bait, if those who could be lurking inside the raft were
scavengers; men who would kill for the sake of what they could steal. A
good reason for landing if those within the vehicle were not the honest
rescuers she thought.
The craft dropped lower, slowed, passed over them to swing in a wide
circle over the sea before returning to settle gently on the edge of
the summit.
Two men only, one at the controls, the other sitting in the body of
the raft. A tall man, wearing dull fabrics and a peaked cap. One
Bochner recognized. Caradoc, in disguise.
Oddly, he wasn't surprised.
The cyber glanced at him, then at the others. "Trouble?"
"Yes." Dumarest stepped toward the raft. "Our ship crashed and we're
lucky to be alive. Can you take us to safety?"
"Of course." The smooth, even modulation held no hesitation. "Are
there others besides yourselves?"
"No." Dumarest glanced at the man seated at the controls. Young, his
face devoid of expression, hands resting on his knees. They were slim,
with delicate fingers, the nails neatly rounded. He wore a loose robe
of coarse brown material, the sleeves wide, the garment held by a
cincture at the waist. "How did you know we were here? Did you pick up
our signal?"
"Yes," said Caradoc.
"So we were lucky. A gamble which paid off." Dumarest added
casually, "Did you have to travel far?"
"Twelve hours."
A thousand miles, at the usual touring speed of a raft and the
rotation of Hyrcanus, was fast. They must have started out before the
signal had been sent from the peak.
"A long time," said Dumarest. "It was good of you to take the
trouble. Do you have any other business this way?"
"No."
"So you just picked up our signal and came straight to the rescue?"
Dumarest glanced at the bundle within the raft. "Carrying survival
gear, too, I see."
"An elementary precaution," said Caradoc. "Our action seems to
disturb you. Why?"
Bochner could have told him and he stood, fuming, at the idiocy of
the man. Even a young and inexperienced cyber should be aware that men
did nothing without hope of reward. Certainly not the men living on
worlds such as this. Fuel had to be paid for. The expense of the raft
met. Time and energy expended in another's behalf had to be compensated
for. At the very least, Caradoc should have asked what the party was
prepared to pay for transportation. And Dumarest had been shrewd—that
question as to the signal!
The answer had been as good as a confession.
"Disturb me?" Dumarest smiled and shook his head, lifting his hands
as if to display their emptiness. Neither of the men in the raft were
armed, as far as he could see. Another anomaly—but the wide sleeves of
the robe the driver wore could cover more than wrists and arms. "Just
the reverse. I am more pleased to see you than you can imagine. We are
all pleased to see you. The alternative—" He broke off with a shrug.
"Can you take us all aboard?"
"Unfortunately, that is not possible," said Caradoc. "The distance
to be covered is long and we developed a fault which has lessened our
load capacity. I can take one now, and make arrangements for the rest
to be picked up later. You." He pointed at Dumarest. "I shall take you."
"No!" Bochner stepped forward, fighting to control his anger. The
quarry was his and, he realized, now his only assurance of safety. Once
the cyber had Dumarest, he would have no further use for the hunter.
"Take me with you," he urged. "You can dump the survival gear, if you
have to lighten the raft. Take me, too!"
A message made as plain as he dared if he hoped to maintain his
pretense. And if Caradoc should betray him— what? To face Dumarest with
naked blades? To attack and beat the cyber and his acolyte and,
somehow, hold the quarry for later delivery?
Thoughts which spun and stilled as the cyber said, "That would be
illogical. True, the possibility of an accident is small but,
nevertheless, it exists. Without the survival gear we should be taking
an unnecessary risk."
Dumarest said quickly, "Bochner! Hit them! Now!"
He was at the raft before the hunter had moved, reaching for the
cyber, freezing as the driver whipped his hand into his sleeve and sent
a beam of searing heat to pass a foot before his eyes. Another shot
from the laser fused stone at Bochner's foot, a third sent smoke rising
from crisped and incinerated hair.
"Yvan! Up!"
A touch and the raft had lifted, to hang poised in the air four feet
from the edge of the summit and three above the uppermost level. From
his vantage point Caradoc looked down at the group below.
Dumarest—the man the Cyclan had hunted for so long, now within his
grasp. If Bochner had not spoken he would have been helpless now,
drugged into unconsciousness by the hypogun clipped beneath the rail.
And yet, would he have walked into the trap? Caradoc remembered the
questions, the looks, the final command.
How had he known?
Bochner could have told him, but the hunter was at Dumarest's side,
beating the last of the embers from his hair.
"They shot at us, Earl. Why, for God's sake?"
"The tall man's a cyber. The other is his acolyte. He didn't shoot
to kill."
"I could argue that." Bochner touched his seared hair. "Are you sure
that man's a cyber?"
"I'm sure." The tone, the lack of human curiosity, the failure to
act as normal men would have acted. And the last, cold calculation
which, coupled with his instinctive reaction, left no doubt.
"So, where does that leave us?" Bochner stared at the raft. A jump
and he could reach it, but if the acolyte fired he would be dead when
he did. And the man would fire, and had already shown his skill with
the weapon now carried openly in his hand. "He could kill us, Earl.
Burn us down."
All, but not Dumarest. He could be crippled, laser fire directed
against his knees and elbows to leave him helpless. Injuries
which would leave his brain and the secret it held intact.
Caradoc said, "A bargain, Dumarest I guarantee the safety of the
rest if you will agree to accompany us."
A bargain from which he would gain nothing. Dumarest looked at the
raft, the acolyte standing at the controls, the tall figure of the
cyber at the rear of the vehicle. They were too tense, too alert, for
any plan he might make to have any chance of success.
"I don't know you," he said. "Your name?" He nodded when Caradoc
gave it. "You are young but are obviously clever. You should rise high
and become a power in the Cyclan. My capture alone will assure that."
"You admit defeat?"
"Can I admit anything else?" Dumarest's shrug was visible evidence
of his acceptance of the situation. "But I'm curious as to how you
managed to trace me. It couldn't have been easy."
"A matter of simple application."
"For you, perhaps, but far from simple to anyone else. And after the
Entil was wrecked? How could you have possibly known we would
have reached this planet?" No cyber could be flattered, but Dumarest
knew of the single pleasure they could experience, that of mental
achievement. Caradoc was young, and had already shown a certain
carelessness. If he could be persuaded to talk, to relax a little, and
the acolyte with him—it would be the only chance he would get.
He nodded as the cyber explained; the emergency signals received,
plotted, a line traced to Hyrcanus—work requiring the application of a
dedicated genius made ordinary in the even modulation.
"And then, of course, you picked up our transmission." Dumarest
pursed his lips, a man obviously facing the inevitable, one willing to
end a futile struggle. "Well, I guess that's about it. If you'll bring
the raft in closer, I'll jump aboard."
"No!" Bochner's voice was a snarl of anger. The knife he lifted an
edged splinter of brilliance as he lifted it to rest against Dumarest's
throat. "You take him then you take me, or I'll kill him before your
eyes!"
"Yvan!"
Dumarest spun as the acolyte lifted his laser, turning away from the
threatening steel, his hand dropping to his lifted boot, his own blade
rising, flashing as it lanced through the air, the winking brilliance
of reflected light vanishing as the blade hit and plunged into living
flesh.
As the acolyte fell, screaming, Dumarest sprang forward, throwing
himself into the air as the raft lifted, the tall figure of the cyber
falling, to hang half-suspended over the edge, blood welling from the
charred hole burned in his side.
Dead or injured from the accidental shot, he was powerless to help
or interfere. Dumarest caught at the rail, felt one hand slip, hung by
the other as the vehicle rose into the air. Falling, the acolyte had
hit the controls.
Dumarest glanced down, saw the land now far below, the faces of the
others on the summit small blobs which shrank even as he looked. Wind
from the sea caught his hair and chilled his face, pressing against his
body with invisible hands, adding to the strain on his hand and arm.
Heaving his body upward, he managed to send his free hand to grip the
rail and hung, panting from the effort, his weakened body radiating
messages of exhaustion. He wanted to rest, yet to wait too long was to
invite disaster. Already his muscles ached from the strain of
supporting his weight, the tissues of shoulders and arms a burning pain.
Waiting, he felt the raft tilt to the impact of the wind and heaved,
one leg rising, foot and knee striving to reach and pass over the rail.
An attempt which failed, and fresh pain flooded his arms and back as
they took the strain of his falling weight. Sucking air into his lungs
so as to hyperventilate his blood, he waited, then as the raft tilted,
tried again. Blood roared in his ears and he felt the pounding of his
heart as he heaved once more, the rail slowly coming closer to his
chin, to pass beneath it, to press like a rod of heated iron against
the soft flesh of his throat as he worked to get an elbow over the rail.
When he finally managed to flop into the open body of the raft, he
was trembling and drenched with sweat. Able to do nothing but lie and
breathe and wait for the strength to move. When finally he sat upright,
the peak was a blur on the horizon, the plume of smoke from the fire a
wavering thread against the sky.
The acolyte was dead, lying in a puddle of his own blood, one hand
gripping the blade buried in his chest, sightless eyes staring at the
sun. Dumarest recovered his knife and threw the body over the side. As
it fell, the raft lifted and he adjusted the controls, killing the lift
and sending the vehicle back towards the peak.
Incredibly, Caradoc was still alive.
He breathed in shallow gasps, small bubbles breaking at his lips to
form carmine circles, unconscious from shock and the loss of blood.
Dumarest lifted him from the rail and lay him down beside the bundle in
the body of the raft. The wound was deep, the edges charred and
blackened, but the very fury of the blast had cauterized the flesh,
staunching the wound and sealing it against further loss of blood.
Dumarest looked at the hypogun where it rested against the side just
below the rail. He could guess what it contained. Lifting it, he aimed
at the cyber's flaccid throat and triggered it twice. A double dose of
drugs to send Caradoc into a deeper oblivion.
"Earl!" Dilys came running as he grounded the raft. "Thank God,
you're safe! I saw something fall—I thought it could be you!" She came
to him, face wet with tears. "Oh, Earl!"
Egulus said, "The way you moved! The speed! But what happened? The
cyber—"
"Is dead, I hope." Bochner thrust the captain to one side and
snarled as he saw the limp figure. "Kill him, Earl! Get rid of the
cold-blooded bastard!"
"Why?"
"He was after you, wasn't he? Chased you across space from Ealius?
Wanted to take you and hold you, right?"
"Right," said Dumarest. "But how did you know?"
"What? I—"
"Never mind." Dumarest stooped and lifted the limp body of the
cyber. "Here, take him. Set him down beside the fire. You'd better
cover him up with something. You could find blankets in here."
He lifted the survival kit and threw it after the hunter.
Bochner looked at it. "Am I a nurse?"
"You're the fittest man here, aren't you? The best? You've wanted to
prove it often enough, so prove it now. You can stay behind to look
after the cyber. To take care of your friend."
"You're mad." Bochner took a step toward where Dumarest stood beside
the raft. "Insane. What the hell do you mean—my friend? Do you
think I'm working with Caradoc?"
"Are you?"
"No! And if you want to call me a liar, go ahead!" Bochner crouched,
hands spread, an animal poised to spring. "Talk," he said. "It's just
talk. You've no proof. I've been expecting something like this. An
excuse for you to turn against me. To take the woman for yourself. If
the raft hadn't come, you'd have tried to put your knife in my back.
Now you want to dump me. Leave me on this peak. Well, I've a better
idea. You stay while I take the raft. You act as a nurse to the cyber
while—"
He moved even as he spoke, the words serving as a distraction, one
which Dumarest had recognized. The hunter snarled, his hands slicing
through empty air as Dumarest moved, anticipating the attack. Bochner
turned, snatching at the knife he carried in his belt, grunting as
Dumarest closed in, hand gripping his wrist, his own blade lifted to
catch the sun.
For a long, dragging moment they stood, muscle set against muscle,
bodies locked, poised in a composition which held the somber elements
of death.
Too late, Bochner recognized the trap into which he had been lured.
The weakness Dumarest had admitted, the fatigue, the earlier
withdrawals from confrontation—all designed to deceive. Now he had met
his match. Now he would die.
It waited in the glimmer of the blade, in the edge, the needle point
in the cold stare of the eyes so close to his own. In the bleak
ferocity of those eyes which he had never seen before. In the strength
against which he was helpless. In the determination which closed the
space between the threatening point and his throat.
Closed it until no gap remained.
Pressed until the prick of metal bit into his skin.
"Go ahead," Bochner whispered. "Do it! Do it!"
Death, the supreme hunter, the thing which stalked a man all his
life and, no matter how he should turn or twist, hide or run, was
always victorious in the end. And what matter when the end came? Now,
or in a year, made no difference. A dozen years, even, a score. What
was a lifetime against eternity?
"Now," he breathed again. "Now!"
Strike and have done. To the victor, the spoils. To the winner, the
loot and the fame and the glory. To the loser, only the restfulness of
oblivion.
"No!" Dilys ran forward to catch at Dumarest's arm. "No, Earl! No!
He saved your life!"
Once certainly, perhaps even twice. Dumarest felt again the cold
rasp of chiton against his cheek and remembered how Threnond had died.
Bochner had saved him then—and Caradoc needed a nurse.
"You bastard!" The hunter cried out in his rage as Dumarest shoved
him back off balance. Recovering, he touched his throat and looked at
the blood on his hand. "You cowardly bastard! You lack the guts to kill
me!"
"The Cyclan will do that if you let him die." Dumarest gestured
towards Caradoc. "You wanted a challenge? You've got one."
"To keep him alive up here while you take the raft? And then what?
To carry him on my back over a thousand miles of wilderness?"
"I'll send back help."
"Maybe." Bochner looked at his hands. They were trembling. To be
mocked, and before a woman. To be fooled. To be made to feel
stupid—Dumarest should have killed while he had the chance. "All right,
Earl. This round goes to you. But I won't forget. Damn you, I won't
forget!"
Hyrcanus was small, the town named after the planet, the only town
the world contained. The field was a patch of dirt seared and torn and
dotted with discarded rubbish. The fence was a ring of scrub
delineating the area, but there were ships waiting to leave and cargo
needing to be loaded. From the window of his room in the tavern,
Dumarest could see it all.
As could Dilys, at his side.
"That's the
Shalarius," she said, pointing. "It's bound
for Mucianus. And that's the
Zloth. It's bound for Egremond."
"And that?"
"A private charter I think. Sealed hull, no contact, handler like a
zombie."
Caradoc's vessel, and Dumarest wondered how long it would wait
before sending out a rescue party. Not too long, he guessed, and it
would be well to be far away when the cyber was found.
The woman seemed to be following his thoughts. "Did you mean it,
Earl? About sending back help?"
"Yes."
"But you didn't specify just when." She frowned, thinking, trying to
fill out gaps. "Why did you save him?"
"Bochner?"
"No. The cyber. You could have killed him. Thrown him after the
acolyte. Why didn't you, Earl? He was after you, wasn't he? Chasing
you, as Bochner said. Why leave him alive?"
Dumarest said, dryly, "A thousand miles, Dilys. A long way over
unknown ground, and we weren't fit to begin with. How long do you think
it would have taken?"
"Too long, if we could have made it at all. But what's that lot to
do with it?" She blinked, understanding. "The raft. Caradoc brought us
the raft."
"Yes."
"And saved us from having to walk. Perhaps he even saved our lives.
And you spared his because of that?"
Because of that, and because the man had been hurt, helpless and
dying, perhaps already dead if Bochner had failed to administer aid, or
the wound had proved beyond treatment.
"You're a strange man, Earl." Dilys reached out to touch his hair,
her fingers traveling down over his cheek to linger on his lips. "So
hard and strong, at times, and so gentle at others. I think I sensed it
from the first. It was something I needed. Something I shall always
need. Earl—must it end?"
She read the answer in his eyes.
"Yes, I suppose it must, something else I've known from the
beginning. But it hurts. Poor Jumoke—how it hurts!"
But not for long, and not as badly as she chose to think, at the
moment. A quick, clean cut, with a minimum of pain, leaving a wound
which quickly healed. She would not be left alone.
Dumarest turned from the window as Egulus entered the room. "And
luck?"
"Some." The captain sat down, lifted the bottle standing on the
table and poured himself a glass of wine. Lifting it, he looked at the
murky amber of the local produce and said,
"The
Shalarius can give us all passage if we can pay.
High only, no Low-—the journey is too short for that. On Mucianus,
I've word of a friend who has a ship undergoing repair. I think he
could use an ex-captain."
"And an engineer?"
"I guess so." Egulus looked at the woman then at Dumarest. "But I
thought—"
"I belong with you, Yarn. We share the same world." Her hand fell to
his shoulder to squeeze with a warm intimacy which squared his
shoulders and took years from his face. "We'll get along."
"Without money?"
"We have money." Dumarest reached into his pocket and spread the
table with sparkling glitters. The stones he had taken from Threnond's
belt which the man had used as a repository for his wealth. "These can
be sold to gain enough for our passages."
"Ours?" Egulus looked the question. "Are you coming with us?"
Dumarest shook his head. "No. I'll make my own way."
"On the
Zloth? It's heading back into the Rift."
Back into the region where suns were close and space was a maze of
conflicting energies. Where a ship could hide and a man get lost. To
where once again he could take up his search for Earth.
The End.
dummy2
The Quillian Sector
#19 in the Dumarest series
E.C. Tubb
Cover art by H. R. Van Dongen
DEDICATION
To Julie Emma Hickmott
FIRST PRINTING,
DECEMBER 1978
PRINTED IN U. S. A.
Chapter One
A great bowl of flowers had been set on a small table close to the
window so that their petals reflected the light in a mass of glowing
scarlet necked with amber, the stamens a brilliant yellow around styles
of dusty black. The bowl itself was of veined porphyry, shaped with a
rare elegance, curves melting one into the other to form an object of
both visual and tactile beauty. A thing of delicate elegance in direct
contrast to the room itself, which was bleak in its Spartan simplicity,
all white and functional, the walls devoid of any decoration, even the
carpet a neutral gray.
A room in which to work, to study and to plan with all distraction
kept to a minimum. Something Irae could appreciate, as he could not the
flowers. They were an anomaly and he crossed the room to stand before
them, studying their form and arrangement before lifting his head to
stare through the window itself.
It was set high in the building and framed a view of grim
desolation. The soil had been leached to expose the underlying rock,
the vegetation which once had covered it long since gone, as were the
minerals once contained within the stone. Machines had dug and ripped
and crushed and spewed their detritus, turning a pleasant landscape
into a barren wilderness. Exploitation had left nothing but sourness
and acid rains which, even as he watched, came to add more corrosion to
the thick pane and the metal in which it was set.
Looking down, he could now understand the presence of the flowers;
the contrast they provided to the desolation outside.
"Caradoc's work," said a voice behind him. "He said that a touch of
color would help."
Turning, Irae said, "Help whom? You?"
An accusation, which Yoka dismissed with a small gesture of a hand
which seemed to be fashioned from transparent porcelain. No cyber was
ever fat, for excess tissue lessened the efficiency of the physical
machine which was the body, but Yoka was skeletal in his thinness.
Beneath the scarlet robe, his body was reed-frail, his throat a match
for the gaunt face and sunken eyes which, with his shaven pate, gave
his head the appearance of a skull. A skull set with the jewel of his
eyes which burned now, as always, with the steady flame of trained and
directed intelligence.
He said, "No, Cyber Irae, the flowers are here to set at ease those
ushered into this chamber to wait. Naturally, you grasp the underlying
purpose."
A statement, not a question. For him to have framed the sentence
otherwise would have been tantamount to insult. No cyber could avoid
seeing the obvious, and now that Irae knew the purpose of the room,
the presence of the blooms and the position they occupied was plain. A
contrast and a good one; outside, the bleak desolation of
Titanus—within, the glowing color and beauty of the flowers and what
they, by association, represented. The security of the Cyclan; the
rewards and wealth and comfort the organization could provide to any
who engaged their services. A contrast too subtle to be immediately
appreciated by any visitor, but it was there and would be noted on a
subconscious level.
"Caradoc shows skill and intelligence. An acolyte?"
"No longer." Yoka lifted a hand and touched his breast, fingers thin
and pale against the rich scarlet and the design embroidered on the
fabric, A gesture signifying the acolyte had passed his final tests and
was now one of their number. Beneath his hand the Seal of the Cyclan
glowed and shimmered with reflected light. "A young man who shows
promise. He should give good service and rise high."
And would, unless he committed the unpardonable crime of failure.
Irae looked again at the flowers, at the window and the desolation
beyond, thinking of others who had shown promise and who had failed.
Those who had paid with their lives because of their failure. Others
who had been broken. He did not intend to become one of them.
He said, "You are certain Dumarest is not on this world?"
"I am."
"The prediction that he could be found on Titanus was of
seventy-three per cent probability."
"Not high."
"No, and obviously there were factors we could not take into
account.
Even so, we must be close."
As they had been close before, each time to miss the quarry by a few
minutes of time, by coincidence, by the luck which seemed to follow
Dumarest from world to world. A trail marked by the death of cybers he
had killed in order to ensure his escape.
The irrevocable loss of trained and dedicated intelligences which
should have gone to swell the complex of Central Intelligence.
The reward of every cyber who proved his worth.
"It is against all logic," said Yoka. "How could one man have eluded
capture for so long?"
Luck, and more than luck. The instinct which gave warning when
danger was close. The intelligence which recognized the threat and
remained alert for the little things which gave warning—a stare
maintained too long, a glance, a too-fortuitous meeting, a proffered
friendship, an unexpected invitation—who could tell?
And yet, the Cyclan should be able to tell. The cybers, with their
trained minds which could take a handful of known facts and from them
extrapolate the logical sequence of events encompassing any imaginable
variation. To arrive at a deduction and make a prediction which was as
close as possible to actual prophecy. They should know where a man on
the move would come to rest, had known, but still he had managed to
dodge, to stay one jump ahead.
For too long now. Too long.
Irae studied the flowers. Had an insect hummed among the blossoms he
would have been able to predict on which it would next settle, on the
pattern it would follow. Had he wanted to snare it, he would have known
exactly where to apply the compound which would hold it fast.
An insect—why not a man?
He said, "We know that Dumarest is among the worlds of the Rift.
That is a probability of ninety-nine percent. We have checked the
course of each vessel leaving relevant worlds and have agents alerted
at each port of call. All precautions have been taken."
And still they hadn't proved enough. Like a ghost, Dumarest had
vanished, aided by the unpredictable, riding his luck until even those
searching for him had begun to doubt their powers.
"The Rift," said Yoka. "A good place for a man to hide." Too good. A
section of space in which suns burned close and worlds were plentiful.
An area in which opposed energies created dangerous vortexes and
regions in which matter itself could cease to exist. A place in which
planets rested in isolation in whirls of dust, rolled hidden in masses
of interstellar gloom, hung like glittering gems in a web of
destructive forces. A haystack in which a wisp of straw could so easily
be lost.
Irae lifted his eyes from the bowl of flowers and turned like a
scarlet flame to where Yoka stood respectfully waiting. "Your
conclusions?"
"Based on all available data, the probability of capturing Dumarest
at this time is fifty-three percent. Not until he is located can we
hope to gain information on which to base a more favorable prediction."
"Fifty-three percent?"
"Low," admitted Yoka, "but I said 'capture,' not 'discover'. The
probability of spotting him is higher—seventy-six percent."
"Eighty-seven point five," corrected Irae. "You are too
conservative. Even if he is now in space he must eventually land and
when he does, an agent could spot him."
"If the man is at the right time, at the right place." Yoka had the
stubbornness of age. "It comes to a matter of logistics. In order to
maintain surveillance at every probable port of call at all appropriate
times, we need the services of an army of men. Add to that the
probability that he is on a planet and, unless he makes a move,
locating him will be far from easy. And we must check all worlds." He
ended, "In the Rift they are many."
He said it without change of the smooth, even modulation, devoid of
all irritant factors which all cybers were trained to adopt. And yet,
Irae caught the irony beneath the apparently flat statement.
"You repeat the obvious, Cyber Yoka. I am fully aware of the problem
but we can eliminate a large area of low-order probabilities. We have
information as to where Dumarest was last located, together with the
names and routes of the vessels which left at the critical time."
"Data?" Yoka stood, immobile, as he listened to the stream of facts
and figures, his mind assimilating, correlating, selecting and
discarding various possibilities until he reached a decision. "You are
correct. The probability that Dumarest will be discovered within the
Rift is as you say. The Quillian Sector. He could be there now, but to
locate him will not be easy."
"For a cyber?"
"For anyone but an expert hunter of men." Yoka added, "I have one at
hand."
Leo Bochner didn't look the part. While tall, he appeared slim,
almost womanish, his face unlined, his hands smooth, as was his voice
as he announced himself. He stood waiting with an easy grace.
Instinctively, he selected the one in authority, turning a little to
face Irae, recognizing that while younger than Yoka, he held the
command. A point Irae noted as he did the clothing; good, yet not
obtrusive; fine woven cloth cut to emphasize good taste and not vulgar
ostentation. Clothing which somehow added to the effeminate impression
he had gamed and which lessened the threat of the man.
A mistake?
A less experienced man could have thought so and wondered at Yoka's
judgement, but Irae had long since learned to look beneath the surface
of apparent truth. Now, looking, he noted the smooth pad of muscle
beneath the skin of face, throat and wrists. The iron beneath the
smooth set of lips and jaw. The carriage. The ingrained confidence in
words and manner. The eyes.
The eyes which, even as he watched, changed to give the lie to the
polished dress and manner; turning into those of a beast, a wolf, a
tiger, a hunter of prey.
Then, in a moment, they were again a part of the disguise, calm,
bland, faintly mocking.
Irae said, "Tell me something of yourself."
"I have, shall we say, a certain skill." Bochner's voice carried no
pride, it was merely a vehicle used to convey a fact. "I realized I had
it when very young and took steps to cultivate and perfect. I have an
affinity with wild things. I sense their habits and, knowing
them, can anticipate what they will do." He added with the same easy
tone, "I am probably the finest hunter ever to be born on Pontia, and
on that world you hunt or you starve."
"Animals." Irae watched the eyes as he spoke. "Beasts operating on
instinctive patterns of behavior."
He had looked for anger. None came, nor did the eyes change as they
had before. That, he knew, had been a demonstration, a dropping of the
veil to show a little of the real nature of the man.
Bochner said, "Beast or man, my lord, they are the same."
"A man can think."
"And for that attribute, has lost others. But we talk to little
purpose. My record is known to you."
A good one or he would not now be standing before them. A noted
hunter, a skilled assassin, but this time such skills would be unwanted.
Bochner shrugged as Irae made that clear. "I understand. I find
Dumarest and hold him with the least amount of force necessary until he
can be handed over to your agents. Of course, it may be that I shall
have to cripple him to ruin his mobility. Break his legs, for example,
and even his arms. But his life will not be in danger. That is
acceptable?"
"We want the man unharmed and in full possession of his mental
faculties."
"You want the man in any way he can be delivered," said Bochner
flatly. "As long as he is alive on delivery. If that isn't the case,
why send for me?" His eyes moved from one to the other of the scarlet
figures. "I shall not let you down, my lords. My reputation was not
gained by bungling my commissions. And, speaking of commissions my fee—"
"Will be paid," said Yoka. "The Cyclan does not break its word."
A bow was Bochner's answer, but Irae added more; it was well that
the man should remember the power of the Cyclan, and that it could take
as well as give.
"You will be rewarded," he said, "with wealth and property should
you succeed. With something less pleasant should you fail."
"I shall not fail."
"How can you be sure? How can you even know you will find him?"
"When you cannot?" Bochner was shrewd. "Or when you do, you always
seem to arrive too late? The answer is basically simple; you hunt a man
but I hunt a beast. You operate on the basis of pure logic, but a man
is not a logical creature and does not follow a nice, neat, predictable
path. Not a man with sense. Not one who knows he is being hunted. Not
one who is afraid. Such things confuse the normal pattern. Watch such a
man as I have and you will see his instincts guide his decisions. A
ship arrives—shall he take it or wait for the next? The same with a
raft, a cab, a caravan. The same with a hotel, a meal, a drink in a
tavern. The shape of a door can send quarry scuttling into hiding. The
whisper of a woman who, by chance, speaks his name. The look of an
official which, misunderstood, can lead to flight. How can you predict
exactly where he will go when he doesn't even know himself? What he
will do, when what he is permitted to do depends on chance?"
He was over-simplifying and was wrong in his assessment of the
ability of the Cyclan, but Irae did not correct him. Neither he, nor
any cyber, wished to advertise their abilities to those who had not
hired their services. And the 'chance' to which Bochner referred was
not a matter of infinite variables, as he seemed to think, but a
limited set of paths determined by prevailing factors. A man stranded
on an island could only escape by sea or by air. Without the means to
fly, he was limited to the sea. Without the means to construct or
obtain a boat, he could only swim. If unable to swim, he would be
forced to wade the shallows. Knowing the man, the circumstances, there
was nothing hard in predicting what he would do and where he would go.
Irae said, "Do you know the Quillian Sector?"
"As much as any man can know it."
"Which is to say?"
"Parts well, other parts not so well, a little not at all. But
then," Bochner added, "no one knows them—the worlds hidden in the dust
and those caught in the mesh of destructive forces. There are rumors,
but that is all."
"Expeditions sent and lost," said Yoka. "Companies formed and
dissolved, as the investigations they made turned to nothing. We are
not interested in such planets. We are only interested in your quarry."
"Dumarest."
"Yes, Dumarest You are confident you can track him down?"
"Guide me to a world and if he is on it, I will find him. More, give
me a cluster of worlds and I will show you which he will make for. You
think I boast?" Bochner shook his head. "I speak from knowledge. From
conviction. From experience."
"A claim others have made. Now, they are dead."
"Killed by Dumarest?" Bochner looked at his hands. "I can take care
of myself."
A conviction shared by others before they had died, but Irae didn't
mention that. Instead, he said, "Tell me one thing, Bochner. Aside from
the reward, why do you want to hunt Dumarest?"
"Why?" Bochner inhaled, his breath a sibilant hiss over his teeth.
"Because if half of what you've told me is true, then he is the most
wily, the most dangerous and the most interesting quarry I could ever
hope to find."
The ship was small, unmarked; The crew, taciturn servants of the
Cyclan. Alone in his cabin, Bochner went through his routine exercises,
movements designed to keep his muscles in trim and his reflexes at
their peak. When Caradoc opened the door he was standing, dressed only
in pants, shoes and blouse, a knife balanced on its point on the back
of his right hand, which was held level at waist height. As the young
cyber watched, he dropped the hand and, as the knife dropped towards
his foot snatched at it with his left hand, catching the hilt and
tossing it upwards to circle once before catching it in his right.
"A game," he explained. "One played often on Vrage. There we stood
naked and held our hands at knee height. Miss and you speared a foot.
There was a more sophisticated version played for higher stakes in
which, if you were slow, you usually died." Idly, he spun the knife.
"You have used a blade?"
"No."
"You should. The feel of it does something to a man. Cold,
razor-sharp steel, catching and reflecting the light, speaking with its
edge, its point, words of threat and pain. Watch a man with a knife and
see how he moves. A good fighter becomes an appendage of his weapon. A
man with a gun gives less cause for concern. Why? Can you tell me why?"
"A gun is dispassionate. Everyone knows what a knife can do."
"Cut and slash and maim and cripple. True, but a gun can do that and
more. But still the psychological factor remains." Then in the same
tone of voice he added, "Is that why Dumarest carries a knife?"
"You have read the reports."
"Words on paper—what do they tell me about the man? I need to know
how he looks, how he walks, the manner in which he snuffs the air. You
think I joke? Smell is as important to a man as to a beast, even though
he may not be aware of it. And a man hunted and knowing it seems to
develop his faculties. So what is Dumarest really like?"
"I have never seen him."
"He wears gray, he carries a knife, he travels. High when he can
afford it low when he cannot. Space is full of such wanderers. What
makes him so special?" It was a question to which he expected no
answer, and gained none. Either Caradoc didn't know or had no intention
of telling, but it was early yet and, later—who could tell? Gesturing
to his bunk, he said, "Sit and join me in some wine."
"No," said Caradoc.
"No to the wine, to the offer of rest, or both?"
"I need neither."
A thing Bochner had known but had deliberately ignored, Caradoc was
a cyber and the nearest thing to a living machine possible to achieve.
To him, food was mere fuel to power the body. He was a stranger to
emotion and unable to feel it by virtue of the operation performed on
his cortex shortly after reaching puberty. A creature selected and
trained by the Cyclan, converted into an organic computer, a metabolic
robot who could only know the pleasure of mental achievement.
Sitting, Bochner stared at him, wondering what it would be like to
have been like him, to have worn the scarlet robe, to have relinquished
all the things which most men held dear. Caradoc would never know the
thrill of sitting in a hide waiting for the quarry to appear, to aim,
to select the target, to fire,
to know the heady exultation of one who has dispensed death. The sheer
ecstasy of pitting mind against mind in the hunt for one of his own
kind—the most exciting and dangerous quarry of all. To kill and to
escape, which often was harder than the kill itself. To outguess and
outmaneuver. To anticipate and to watch the stunned sickness
in a quarry's eyes. To hear the babble for mercy, see the futile
twitches as the demoralized creature tried to escape, to plan even
while it begged to die, finally, when the hunter had become bored.
No, Caradoc would never know what it was to be bored and for that
alone, Bochner could envy him.
The wine was in a bottle of crusted glass, the crystal flecked with
inner motes of shimmering gold, the liquid itself a pale amber, holding
the tart freshness of a crisp, new day. Bochner poured and lifted the
cap which served as a cup.
"To your health, my friend." He drank and refilled the small
container. "You object?"
"I wonder."
"Why I drink?"
"Why any man of intelligence should choose to put poison into his
body."
"A good point," mused Bochner. "Why do we do it? To find escape,
perhaps to discover a world of dreams. Some cannot do without the
anodyne of alcohol, but I am not one of them. Listen, my scarlet
accomplice, and try to comprehend. The quarry I hunt lurks in
unsuspected quarters and must be sought in regions you may not
understand. At times, I must sit for long hours in taverns and what
should I drink then? No, I drink as a part of my camouflage and must
maintain my tolerance for alcohol. As a runner must practice to keep up
his acquired ability. A swimmer, his mastery over water." Again he
emptied the cup and again refilled it. "Test me now and you would find
me as sober as yourself. Give me a mark and a gun and I will hit it as
many times as you choose to name. In any case, it helps to pass the
time."
"Quick-time will do that better."
"The drug will shorten the days and little else." Bochner slowly
finished his wine. "But no compound ever yet discovered or invented can
ease the weight of boredom."
An alien concept which Caradoc could understand only on an
intellectual level How could anyone ever grow bored in a universe
filled with an infinity of questions awaiting answers? Even the cabin
in which they sat offered endless scope for mental exercise connected
with its structure, stress factors, cubic capacity, resonance,
relationships of planes and divergences from the mathematical norm.
Bored?
No cyber could ever be that while two atoms remained to pose a
problem of interrelationship proximities. While life remained to set
the eternal question of what and why it existed at all.
But lesser beings needed the convenience of quick-time; the drug
which slowed the metabolism so that normal days passed in apparent
minutes. A means to lessen the tedium of ship life on journeys between
the stars.
The steward brought it an hour later when the vessel was aligned on
its target star and safely on its way. He nodded to Caradoc and,
without a word, lifted the hypogun he carried, aimed it at Bochner's
throat and pressed the release. Air blasted the charge through skin,
fat and muscle directly into the bloodstream. Bochner should have
immediately turned into the rigid semblance of a statue. Instead, he
slumped and fell unconscious on the bunk.
"Minimum dose as ordered, sir," said the steward. "Another?"
"No. You have all that is necessary? Good. Stand aside while I work."
Caradoc turned the unconscious man on his back, handling the bulk
with surprising strength. From a packet the steward handed him, he took
a slender instrument and a small capsule together with a can of
anesthetizing spray fitted with a slender nozzle. Thrusting the nozzle
into Bochner's right nostril, Caradoc hit the release, numbing and
sterilizing the inner membranes. With the instrument, he quested the
nasal passage and located the entrance to the sinus cavity. Removing
the instrument, he fitted the capsule to its end, thrust the small
package into the nostril, pressed and pushed it into the sinus. There
it expanded, thin filaments attaching themselves with minute hooks to
the inner lining, they and the capsule both coated with numbing and
sterile compounds.
As he withdrew the spray after a final treatment Caradoc said to the
steward, "Now. Neutralize and administer quick-time."
A metabolic shock, but Bochner was fit and could stand it, and what
did it matter if the jar to his system should have later repercussions?
He was a tool to be used for the benefit of the Cyclan and nothing
more. The instrument planted within his skull was a device which, on
receiving a signal, would respond with a burst of coded emissions. No
matter where or how he tried to hide, he could be found, and the
capsule itself could be exploded by remote control.
No one living had ever betrayed the Cyclan and Bochner would not be
the first.
Caradoc watched as the steward set him upright, deftly triggering
the hypogun, seeing the slow movements of the hunter's hands and eyes.
Movements which jerked to normal as his own metabolism responded to the
impact of the drug blasted into his bloodstream. The door blurred and
they were alone.
Bochner wished he was more so. He hadn't wanted the company of the
cyber but had known better than to protest Irae's decision. Later, if
the need arose, he would slip away and certainly, if necessary, the
cyber would have to change his appearance. The scarlet robe and naked
scalp were signals the quarry couldn't miss.
Thinking of the hunt, he said, "How can you be so sure he is within
the Quillian Sector?"
"Dumarest?" Caradoc leaned back to rest his shoulders against the
wall. Bochner had noticed nothing wrong and that was proof of his own
efficiency. He sat as Bochner remembered, the cabin looked the same. To
Bochner, his temporary unconsciousness would have seemed no more than
the blink of an eye. "A matter of applied logic."
"A guess?"
"No."
"And yet you can't be certain. I mean, you might know about where he
is but not exactly where. If your logic and skill were good enough
surely there could be no doubt?"
"Doubt?"
"Uncertainty. You would be certain."
"Nothing is ever that," said Caradoc. "Always there is the unknown
factor which must never be ignored. No matter how certain a thing
appears to be, it must never be considered an absolute event. The
probability may be high but, always, it remains a probability."
Bochner nodded, remembering a time during his early youth. A copse
in which a beast was lurking, himself set and armed, the weapon lifted,
aimed, the butt hard against his shoulder, the sights leveled on the
spot in which the creature was sure to appear. A long, delicious moment
of savored anticipation. The nearing climax of the hunt was like the
climax of sex itself, though far more satisfying.
And then the shadow, which had crossed the sun. The raft, which had
appeared in a cloudless sky and, as it threw a patch of darkness over
the front sight, the quarry had appeared to turn, to run, to dodge the
bullet which should have brought it low.
Revenge had done little to ease the hurt and after the dead man had
toppled from the raft, and the vehicle itself risen to vanish into the
distance, the penalty had waited at the end— the blood-price paid in
money and sweat and exile from his home world.
A little thing. One he should have taken into consideration. A
neglect which had altered the trend of his life.
Watching him, Caradoc said, "Imagine a container of boiling liquid
containing tiny motes of solid substance. They are in continuous,
restless activity. The Brownian Movement. The tiny particles are in
motion because of the irregular bombardment of the molecules of the
surrounding medium. Now, imagine one of the particles to be colored for
easy identification. We can tell where it is in relation to the whole.
We can tell where it has been. We can even predict where next it might
be, but never can we be utterly and absolutely certain."
"Dumarest? The colored particle is Dumarest?"
"The analogy will serve."
"And you know about where he is to be found. In the Quillian
Sector." Bochner's face became taut ugly, the skin tightening so that
his cheeks looked like scraped bone. "The place where space goes mad.
Where the suns fight and fill the universe with crazed
patterns of energy so that men kill at a glance and women scream at
imagined terrors. Ealius and Cham and Ninik."
"Swenna," said Caradoc adding to the list. "Vult and Pontia—" He
paused, then said again, "Pontia."
"Where I was born." Bochner's voice matched the taut ugliness of his
face. "I told you I knew the area well."
Chapter Two
Dumarest heard the shout and looked up to see death falling from the
sky. The grab of the digger was overhead, the jaws open, tons of oozing
clay scooped from the cutting, blotting out the pale orange of the
firmament. It should have been neatly deposited in the body of his
truck. Instead, it was plummeting down to crush and bury him. No
accident. The crane was well to one side, the truck closer to it than
himself, but there was no time to think of that.
Even before the warning shout had died he was on the move, lunging
to one side, feeling his foot slip on the loose dirt, toppling
off balance as the load thundered down.
Luck was with him. A second later, or had he been less fast, he
would have been crushed and buried like an insect. As it was, he felt
the impact on his left shoulder, the barest touch of the debris which
rasped down the sleeve of his coverall, the blow throwing him further
in the direction of his fall. He hit a slope, rolling, falling, to land
on the waterlogged clay at the foot of the cutting as over him showered
the mass of clay, dirt and rubble.
Too much rubble. It pressed on his back, drove his face into the
water as it piled on his head, his shoulders, trapping his entire body
with a layer of dirt which pressed with an iron hand. A hand which
could kill, which would kill within minutes unless he could find some
way to breathe.
He strained, body aching, muscles tense, blood thundering in his
ears as, slowly, he lifted. A fraction only; loose dirt compacted by
his upward pressure, yielding a trifle to form a shallow gap beneath
him so that, arms and legs rigid, back arched against the strain, head
turned to rest one cheek in the water, his nose lay above the surface
and he could breathe.
Breathe and wait for a rescue which need never come.
Life was cheap on Ealius. Only the skilled technicians were of
value, the rest were easily replaced. Those in authority could decide
that he wasn't worth the trouble and effort to save. Better to let him
lie, to be covered in, buried, forgotten. But the cutting had to be
kept open, the great channel formed and smoothed, the passage through
the mountain maintained.
After what seemed hours, Dumarest felt and heard the grating
vibration of mechanical jaws.
They were not being operated with any care for the vulnerability of
a human body. The steel teeth dropped, closed, lifted with a load of
clay to set it aside and return for more. Only a concern to avoid
marring the sides of the channel made the operator take small bites at
the mound he had dropped. The fact that any of the scoops could have
sheared through a body didn't seem to have occurred to him.
Dumarest had a more personal interest. He felt a touch against one
leg, kicked, felt metal beneath his foot and then the rasp of the teeth
over his thigh. Luck had saved him; a few more inches and his foot
would have been caught, his leg ripped from its socket as the grab
lifted with resistless force. Before it could return he heaved,
squandering the last of his conserved energy, fighting the crushing
weight on back and shoulders as he thrust himself back to where the
clay had been lifted from his legs. When next the grab returned, he was
ready. As the open jaws dug into the mound he threw himself into the
grab, ducking as the serrated edges closed, one hand caught between two
of the steel teeth of the low jaw, the upper halting an inch from his
wrist as it closed on a stone.
Then up and out to one side, the grab halting, turning, opening as
it jerked to shower its load into the open body of the truck waiting
below. As Dumarest fell, he heard a yell.
"It's Earl! By damn, it's Earl!"
Carl Devoy, the one who had shouted, his face taut beneath a tangle
of rust-colored hair now smeared with ocher clay. He ran to the side of
the truck, heaving himself up and staring over the side.
"Earl?" He sucked in his breath as Dumarest moved. "By God, he's
still alive! Give a hand here! Give a hand!"
He was small, but with a temper to match the color of his hair, and
two men ran to obey. A third arrived with a bucket of water as they
lowered Dumarest to the ground and, without preamble, threw the
contents over the clay smeared figure.
"Earl?"
"I'm all right." Dumarest straightened, breathing deeply, water
running down his head and face to soak his coverall. As he wiped his
hands on his sides, he said, "Who was operating the digger?"
"Menser, He's still operating it." Devoy glanced at the man seated
in the cab of the machine. A transparent canopy gave
weather protection, its clarity now marred with dirt. Behind it, the
face and figure of the operator were blurred. "I saw the bucket jerk
and yelled but I was too late."
"No," said Dumarest. "If you hadn't shouted I'd be dead now. And
then?"
"After the load dropped?" Devoy shrugged. "They figured you had to
be dead and would have left you but Strick wanted the cutting to be
cleared. Ten minutes later and he'd have left it for the next shift to
clear up the mess."
Ten minutes—the difference between life and death. Dumarest looked
at the orange sky, at the bulk of the digger etched against it, at the
dark face which peered at him from behind the canopy. As a whistle blew
the face moved, became a part of the body which climbed down from the
cab, a man who stood almost seven-feet tall and with shoulders to
match. A black giant with massive hands and thighs like trees. A man
who stepped to where Dumarest stood waiting, to halt, to part his lips
in a grin before spitting on the ground.
"Mister, you were lucky."
"No," said Dumarest. "You were careless."
"Meaning the accident?"
"If it was one."
"Hell, man, how can you doubt it? A cable locked and I had to snap
it clear. That's why I swung the grab over and away from the truck.
Sometimes the catch slips and you drop the load."
"On me?"
"I didn't see you." Menser spat again. "I had other things to think
about."
Truth or lie, there was no way of telling and certainly nothing
could be proved. Dumarest studied the man, seeing the eyes, white rims
showing around the irises, the corners tinged with red. The telltale
signs of the drug he chewed, as was the purple spittle he had vented on
the ground. The pungent, shredded leaf which gave euphoria at the cost
of sanity.
Then, as the whistle shrilled again, Devoy said, "Come on, Earl,
let's get away from here. The next shift's taking over."
The residential quarters matched the workings; hard, rough, severely
functional. Sleeping was done in dormitories, eating in a communal
mess, washing in a long, low room flanked by shallow troughs above
which showers supplied water ranging from tepid to steaming hot. The
place itself was filled with steam; writhing vapor which blurred
details in a manmade fog. In it shapes loomed, indistinct, voices
muffled as men called to each other.
Stripped, Dumarest stepped under a shower, feeling the drum of water
on his head, the rivulets cleaning away the grime and dirt from his
hair. Soap came in liquid form from a dispenser and he filled his palm
with the sticky goo, rubbing it hard and getting little result.
"Here, Earl, try this." Devoy handed over a bar of soap from where
he stood in the adjoining shower. "Something special from a friend in
town." His wink left no doubt as to the nature of the friend. "She
likes her men to smell nice. Go ahead," he urged. "It's good."
The soap held a crude perfume but it contained oil and lacked the
harsh bite of the supplied liquid. Dumarest used it, creating a mass of
suds which flowed over the firm muscles of shoulders and back, stomach
and thighs. As he turned beneath the shower to wash them free, Devoy
sucked in his breath.
"Hell, Earl, you look as if you'd been clawed by a giant."
Dumarest turned to examine his legs. On the back of each calf,
running midway up each thigh, ran a wide, purpling bruise: the result
of the raking jaws of the grab. They marred the hard, smooth whiteness
of the skin, as did the other marks carried on his chest and forearms,
the thin cicatrices of old wounds.
Devoy looked at them, recognizing them for what they were, wondering
why he hadn't spotted them before. The long bruises gave the answer to
that; unless they had caught his attention he wouldn't have stared.
Wouldn't now know that Dumarest bore the scars of a man who has fought
with naked blades. That he was a fighter, trained to kill.
He said, "That's Menser's trouble, Earl. I've heard it from others
in the gang. He's been pushing, seeing how far he can go, how much he
can get away with. That accident could have been fixed."
"I know."
"Does he have anything against you? Did he try to push, and you told
him where to get off?"
Dumarest shook his head, then lifted his arms to let the steaming
water cascade over his body, the impact helping to ease the ache of
muscles recently overstrained. Since coming to the workings he had kept
himself to himself, not asking for trouble, not looking for it. The
last thing he wanted was to become the center of attention. Now, it
seemed, Menser had other ideas.
He came into the washroom, voice booming, attended by a handful of
sycophants eager to hook their wagon to a profitable star. On any
construction site there were men who recognized opportunity when they
saw it and took steps to skim the cream. Parasites, using threats and
violence to intimidate others, demanding a share of their pay under the
guise of collecting contributions, donations, or as insurance premiums.
Such men, if they survived, could become rich and powerful with their
own small, private armies to enforce their dictates.
Menser wanted to become one of them.
Dumarest watched as the steam swirled to part, to reveal the giant,
to close again over his giant frame. What the man did was no concern of
his as long as he was left alone, but Menser had recognized in Dumarest
a source of potential trouble. To eliminate him would pay dividends in
more ways than one.
"He's high," said Devoy uneasily. "Doped and crazed and spoiling for
trouble. Let's get out of here."
Good advice, but Dumarest didn't follow it. If trouble was to come
this was as good a place as any in which to meet it. He stood, the soap
in his hand, eyes narrowed as he stared through the vapor. It broke,
shredded, torn into wisps as the giant came forward, head lowered,
shoulders hunched, fists pounding the air as, weaving, he shadowboxed
his way along the edge of the trough. His intention was obvious; to
locate his victim, to strike, to break bones and pulp flesh with hammer
blows and then to explain that he had seen nothing in the steam and had
maimed or killed by accident.
"Earl!" Devoy was anxious.
"Stand clear."
As the smaller man stepped from the shower, Dumarest left the trough
to stand facing the approaching giant. Menser was huge, coiled ropes of
muscle shifting beneath the gleaming ebon of his skin, his head a ball
of bone, hair cropped close to the scalp. Now he looked up, grinning, a
purple stream jetting from between his lips to spatter the floor inches
from Dumarest's feet.
"Waiting for me, friend? Well, now, that's nice of you. A pity
you're going to have another accident." His laughter was soft, feral,
devoid of amusement. "A fatal one this times."
Dumarest threw the soap.
It flashed from his hand to drive against the giant's face, to land
beneath one of the thick eyebrows and to slam against the eye with a
force which tore the orb from its socket, to leave an ugly red hole
streaming blood. A blow which shocked and blinded, one which he
followed with another as, lunging forward, he lifted his foot and sent
the heel up hard against the chin.
It was like kicking a mountain.
Menser yelled, one hand lifting to his ruined eye, the hand falling
as he dodged Dumarest's second kick. Hurt, he was even more dangerous
than before, pain fueling the hate now powering his muscles,
obliterating everything but the desire to rend and kill the man
standing before him. Like an oiled machine, he swung into action, hands
extended, feet moving in little, dancing steps, body poised to turn in
any direction.
A wrestler and a dangerous one. A man with a very high pain
threshold, as his apparent ignoring of his ruined eye testified. One
who had to be treated with respect and caution.
One Dumarest had to kill before being killed.
He moved back, aware of the circle of watchers, the eyes avid with
anticipation, the faces gloating at the free and unexpected spectacle.
Faces rendered more beastlike by the blurring vapor, eyes more feral
because of the steam.
"You bastard!" Menser inched forward. "I was just going to hurt you
a little, break a few bones, maybe, or give you some bruises. Now I'm
going to make you pay for what you did. Your eyes first, maybe. Or
maybe I'll smash both legs and, as you crawl, tear out your arms. Then
I'll take care of your eyes, a thumb in each socket, pressing slowly,
so slowly, until they pop out like stones from a fruit And then—"
His voice whispered on but Dumarest ignored it. A trick to command a
part of his attention and to ruin a little of his concentration. To
weaken him by fear and to soften him by imagined terrors. Blatant
tactics he had long since learned to disregard.
"Earl! Get him, Earl! Get the bastard!"
Carl Devoy offering what help he could and at the same time
revealing both his courage and stupidity. If Menser should win he would
be marked and taken care of—a high price to pay for the encouragement
Dumarest didn't need.
He dropped as the giant came in, turning, his hand rising to chop
with stiffened palm at the man's left knee. He felt the jar and spun to
one side as the right foot lashed at his face, kicking back in turn,
his heel impacting the knee he had struck. Then he was up and on his
feet, circling to keep on the blind side of his opponent, making use of
the advantage he had won.
A fist darted toward him, to scrape against the side of his head as
he weaved, the forearm like an iron bar as he gripped it, throwing back
his weight, trying to throw the giant off balance. Menser yielded,
snarled as his other hand grabbed, laughed as the fingers sank into
Dumarest's shoulder.
"Now," he gloated. "Now!"
His knee jerked upwards, Dumarest turning to avoid the crippling
impact, striking back in turn, his foot aimed at the same left knee. A
weak blow, but one which added to the previously caused damage, and he
followed it with a thrust of his head which hit the nose and sent more
blood to join that streaming from the ruined eye.
Then Menser struck in turn.
His fist rose, darted forward, making a meaty impact as it slammed
against Dumarest's torso. A blow aimed for the face, which had missed
as Dumarest reared upwards, fighting the steel like fingers holding him
fast. One followed by another, which brought stars flashing and the
taste of blood. A third, which created a web of darkness which edged
close as, all around, men yelled in anticipation of the kill.
Dumarest twisted, using his weight to tear free of the gripping
fingers, sweat oiling his skin as he blocked another blow and sent his
own hand to stab fingers in the ruined eye. Menser screamed, jumping
back, hands lifted to protect his face as again Dumarest kicked at the
knee. This time, he felt bone yield, the kneecap splintering, maiming
the giant and robbing him of quick mobility. But even though he had to
fight to maintain his balance, he still had his hands and the strength
they possessed.
"Coward!" Menser snarled his hate as he stood balanced on one foot.
"Come and fight like a man!"
An invitation only a fool would accept. Dumarest feinted, drew back
and then, with a blur of movement, had run forward, his hands busy,
stiffened palms like blunt axes as they drove at the throat, the
windpipe and larynx, crushing both before he withdrew from the closing
arms.
Again.
A third time, this one resulting in a long gash over his shoulder as
Menser clawed at his elusive opponent.
And then again, to leave the giant sprawled like a fallen tree,
blood puddling the floor around his mouth, one leg bent at an
impossible angle, the great machine of his body broken and stilled.
The woman said quietly, "Hold on now, this is going to hurt."
Dumarest heard the rustling behind him as he lay prone on the couch,
a shifting of clothing, a metallic rattle and then something like
liquid fire traced a path over his shoulder.
As he grunted, the woman said, "You should have gone to the
hospital."
"Aren't you a nurse?"
"I was once." Her tone held bitterness. "But that was a long time
ago. Now I earn my living treating young fools who should have more
sense than to get themselves hurt in stupid duels. We have a law
against such things and the penalties are harsh. Hold still, now."
Again came the liquid fire, the touch of acid burning away the
corruption which had festered in the wound. Menser had carried
vileness beneath his fingernails; a paste containing virulent bacteria
which, untreated, could kill. "There, that should do it. You were
lucky."
The woman was wrong. Caution, not luck, had dictated his actions. He
had noticed the festering gash and had suspected its cause. The same
caution had made him seek unofficial aid; had caused him to leave the
camp with pay still uncollected. A precaution against Menser's friends
and others who might have agents lying in wait.
Now, turning, he looked at the woman who stood to one side of the
couch, a small bowl in one hand, the glass stylo with which she had
applied the acid held by her thumb. "Is there anything else?"
"Maintain a watch on your temperature. Should it rise more than five
degrees take antibiotics and seek medical advice."
"The wound itself?"
"Has been cleaned and sealed. The compound of my own devising; the
residue film will peel automatically as the wound heals." She added,
"Is there anything else I can do for you?"
He did not mistake her meaning even though she was still attractive,
though far from young. Many of those who paid for her help would have
wanted more than the service she offered—passion riding on the relief
of assistance given. Perhaps she catered to them. People lived as best
they could and there was little charity on Ealius, but he sensed she
had judged him to hold wider interests,
"I need to get on a ship," said Dumarest. "I'd like to do it without
attracting attention. Would you know how it could be done?"
"The gate is guarded," she said immediately. "All leavings are
checked against the files deposited by the construction company. They
don't want anyone leaving who owes them money. Are you breaking a
contract?"
"No."
"Then you could pass through the gate without difficulty."
"And if I were?"
"Breaking a contract?" She frowned. "There are ways if you have
money. Men who will smuggle you on a vessel as long as you don't care
where you go or how you end. I wouldn't advise using the service they
offer."
"Why not?" Dumarest asked, but already knew the answer. Too many
worlds close by had mines which needed workers and those who operated
them were careless as to how they gained their laborers. A man, buying
a secret passage, could wind up contracted to slave in a living hell.
"What else is there?"
"If you can afford it, there are men who could arrange to have you
signed on as a crew member."
"And would that be safer?" Dumarest eased himself from the couch.
The sting had gone from the wound and he moved his arm a few times to
test the pull of the plastic film covering it. "I'm avoiding enemies,"
he explained. "A little trouble I had—no need for detail. You've heard
it all before."
As she had learned to recognize lies. As Dumarest dressed, she put
away her things, turning to look as he donned the boots and the knife
he carried in the right. They were a match for the pants and
long-sleeved tunic, which rose high to fit snugly around the throat.
Tough material in which was imbedded protective metallic mesh. The gray
plastic was easy to clean and simple to refurbish. A convenience for
any traveler.
As he reached for money, she said, "You paid me in advance."
"For the medical treatment only."
"The advice came free."
"And your silence?" He dropped coins on the couch as she made no
answer, "This is to forget you've ever seen me. And this," he added
more, "is for being what you are."
For not asking questions, for taking him in on the basis of nothing
more than a whispered introduction from an intermediary, for taking
care of the man, in turn. And, perhaps, for looking like someone else
he had known years ago now, and a long journey through space. A woman
who had tended him when, as a young man, he had suffered his first
wound and who had healed the gash as she had tended his desires. Her
name? That was forgotten, together with the name of the world on which
they had met. But some things about her could not be forgotten; the
touch of her hands, the shape of her hair, the clustered wrinkles at
the corners of her eyes, her kindness.
"Thank you," the woman said quietly. She made no effort to pick up
the money. "There is a tavern on the corner of North and Inner. Some
captains and others have a habit of using the back room. Ask for Varn
Egulus. But you are welcome to stay, if you wish."
"No. I must be on my way."
From the house and into the town and out to where the field lay in
its circle of perimeter lights, with ships at rest and the stars
winking like jewels against the black velvet of the sky. At the gate,
men stood in casual attitudes, some uniformed with the garb of the
local authority, others wearing ship uniforms, a few in civilian dress.
Watching, Dumarest noticed how they examined a man coming toward them,
how they checked him, watched after him when they allowed him to pass.
It could have meant nothing, but Menser could have been reported
murdered and even if those watching had testified to the truth,
personal combat was against the local regulations. He could be
arrested, tried, fined or set to a term of forced labor. At best, it
would mean delay.
"Mister!" One of the guards called to him. "You looking for
something?"
"Yesh." He swayed, deliberately slurring his words, one hand pawing
vaguely at the air as it hid his face. "A girl… she promised to meet
me… late . . ." A hiccup emphasised his drunkenness. "Thish
South and Outer?"
"No, you're on Inner and West. South is that way." A hand lifted to
point, lowered as the guard turned away, losing interest but completing
the directions. "Go up it and you'll hit Outer."
Dumarest lurched away, plunging deeper into the shadows, following
directions until he was out of sight. Straightening, he turned up a
narrow alley and made his way back to the road running north, turning
to head back to the one curving around the field.
The tavern was like most of its type, a place where men journeying
between the stars could find the comforts they lacked on their ships,
the dissipations offered for their enjoyment. Dumarest shook his head
as a pert young girl offered her invitation, shook it again as an older
matron repeated it with added detail, shrugged as a man hinted at more
exotic delights. None was offended at his refusal, no recent arrival
could be considered a real prospect but it did no harm to try. Later,
when alcohol had worked its magic, or when drugs had dulled the sharp
edges of discrimination, they and others would try again.
Varn Egulus was a tall man of middle age with a long, serious face,
a beaked nose and hair which was cut and lifted in an elaborate
forelock. His lips were thin, the jaw pronounced, the cheeks hollowed
as if with privation. Beneath thin brows his eyes were shrewd,
watchful, calculating.
He said, "It seems we have a mutual friend. Sit and order some wine.
Good wine—I can afford it since you are paying."
Dumarest obeyed, watching as the man poured, barely sipping at what
his own goblet contained. The woman must have sent word ahead for
Egulus to expect him and he would take his own time in getting to the
point.
"Good wine, this." Egulus lifted his glass and studied the play of
color trapped in the crystal. "Such a wine makes a man glad to be
alive." And then, without changing tone, he said, "Why did you kill
Menser?"
"Did I?"
"Perhaps not, but you match the description of the man who did. The
one who brought the news was most explicit as to detail. He was also
amazed at the speed you—the man— operated. It was like watching the
dart of lightning, he said. Movements faster than the eye could
follow." Egulus tilted his goblet and slowly drank the wine it
contained. Emptied, he lowered it toward the table. Then, before it
could hit the surface, he flung it directly at Dumarest's face.
He smiled as it scattered on the floor.
"Clever," he mused. "You did not catch it as I thought you might
and, most certainly, could have done. You didn't simply block it, and
so risk cuts to hand and face. Instead, you deflected it as if by
accident, to smash on the floor. Which proves nothing to any who might
be watching. Well, to business.
"I command the
Entil. A trader. One of the rules we follow
is that nothing should ever be done without some form of return. To do
otherwise would be to operate at a loss and only the stupid do that. A
cooperative, you understand. We work, take risks, carry any cargo we
can get, and go anywhere a profit is to be made."
And run a ship more like a heap of
wreckage than a vessel
designed to survive in the void. One that is undermanned, with faulty
equipment and dangerous installations.
Egulus smiled again as he guessed Dumarest's thoughts.
"A ship such as you imagine wouldn't last long in the Rift. Also I
have a regard for my life, which is why the Entil is as good
as I can make her. But obviously, you've had experience. What as?
Steward? Handler?"
"Both."
"And?"
"I know a little about engines. A little more about caskets. And,"
Dumarest added, "I can operate a table should the need arise."
"A gambler?" Egulus pursed his lips as Dumarest nodded. "And one who
can take care of himself if he has to. Good. That's an advantage. Now,
this is the situation. You give me the cost of a double High passage
and work as one of the crew. When you decide to quit, I'll compute what
is your share of the profit and pay you off. Fair enough?"
For the captain, more than fair. Unless he was more honest than his
fellows there would be no profits and he and the others would have
gained passage money and service for nothing.
Dumarest said, "About the tables. What I win I keep?"
"You know better than that. It goes into the common fund."
"And if I lose?"
"You pay." The captain's tone hardened a little. "And I should warn
you that I have no intention of haggling. The cost of a double High
passage, take it or leave it. And I want the money now."
"No." Dumarest reached for the wine and called for a new goblet to
replace the broken one. "You'll get it after I'm on the ship and we're
on our way."
"You have it?" Egulus didn't wait for an answer. "You're committing
suicide if you haven't. Unless I get paid, you'll be evicted into the
void."
He meant it. Dumarest said, "Don't worry about the money. You'll get
it. When do we leave?"
"At noon." Egulus reached for the wine Dumarest had poured. "But
we'll hit the gate an hour before dawn. The guards will be sleepy then.
I'll arrange for a uniform for you before we leave here and they'll
take you for one of my crew."
Chapter Three
The
Entil was a pleasant surprise. Despite what the
captain had claimed, Dumarest had expected to see the usual dirt and
neglect of those sharing partnership and unwilling to perform more than
the essential tasks. A ship run on a shoestring, with patches and
stained paint and filters which passed dust and tanks which leaked air.
He had worked on such vessels and traveled on them too often to have
retained any illusions, but the
Entil was the exception to
the rule.
Dumarest checked it after Egulus had seen him aboard and then moved
on to the control room. The passageway was brightly illuminated, the
cabins opening on it clean and neat, the paint shining as if newly
washed. The salon was well furnished, the gaming table covered in
clean, unworn baize, the light above throwing a neatly defined cone of
brilliance. Testing the spigots, Dumarest found they not only supplied
the normal water, but also a weakly alcoholic fruit drink. Unexpected
luxury in any trader or in any vessel lower than the luxury class.
Allain, his guide, shrugged when he mentioned it. The steward was
pushing middle age, his face smooth, bland with the diminution of
curiosity. A man who had found his niche and who now observed the
universe with cynical detachment and an extended palm.
"Egulus is smart. Advertise free wine and it adds the edge to
persuading customers to ride with us instead of another. And it whets
their appetites for something stronger!"
"Which you can supply?"
"Naturally, and you, too." Allain glanced at the table. "Get them a
little high and they get careless. A smart man can really clean up if
he puts his mind to it. Well, you'll learn. Now come and meet Jumoke."
Jumoke was the navigator. He was younger than the steward, with
intense blue eyes and a mouth which betrayed an inner sensitivity. He
rose from the edge of his bunk as Dumarest entered his cabin, extending
his hand, lowering it as Dumarest touched the fingers. They were smooth
and cool, the nails rounded and neatly polished.
He said, "So you have learned the old customs."
"On a world far from here, yes."
"The touching of hands," explained Jumoke to the steward. "A
civilized act or an act performed among civilized peoples to show they
have no hostile intent. On some worlds both hands are extended, on
others only the empty palms are displayed." To Dumarest he said, "From
Naud, perhaps?"
"No."
"Hagor, then? Fiander? Or even Grett? All three worlds use the old
custom. Rumor has it they gained it from the Original People, but so
often does rumor lie. Personally, I come from Vult. You know it?"
"The cesspool of the Rift," said Allain, before Dumarest could
answer. "Every man is a thief or murderer, every woman a harlot, even
the children learn to lie and cheat at their mother's knee. A world of
madness."
"And our next port of call." Jumoke looked at the steward. "Aren't
you supposed to be checking the stores?"
"It's done."
"Completely? You've checked the sensatapes? The rare and delicate
wines? The stronger liquors? The preserved delicacies which fetch so
high a price? Be careful, my friend. If, by your neglect, we lose a
profitable sale, may God help you, for surely we shall not." Jumoke
chuckled as the man hastily left the cabin. "He's good at his work but
sometimes doubts his memory. Vult always disturbs him. Mention it and
you get a tirade. He had a sister once—but never mind that now. We all
have burdens to bear. Allain, myself, you—?" He paused then, as
Dumarest made no comment, shrugged and smiled. "The captain mentioned
you were close. But so close you are reluctant to give the name of your
home world?"
"Earth."
"What?"
"Earth," said Dumarest again. The man was a navigator and must have
traveled far. And he could have heard the gossip of others of his kind.
It was possible he had heard of the planet, knew where it was to be
found. A hope which died as Jumoke laughed.
"A humorist! I knew you were a hard man but never that! Earth!" He
laughed again, "You know as well as I that you talk of a legendary
world. One of many—El Dorado, Bonanza, Jackpot, Avalon—the
list is long. Myths invented by men yearning for paradise. Earth!" The
navigator shook his head. "The name alone should warn you of its
nature. Every world contains earth. They are made of it. Crops grow in
it. Who would name a world after dirt?"
"It exists."
"In the mind."
"In space somewhere. It is real."
"Of course." Jumoke sobered, his tone gentle. "If you say so, my
friend. Who am I to argue? We must talk more on the subject, but later.
Now I have work to do in the control room; sensors to check and
instruments to test. You understand?" Then, as he stepped toward the
door of the cabin, he added, "A word of advice. The captain has little
use for those who are less than serious. If he should ask about your
home world, it would be best to lie a little. Tell him you were born on
Ottery, for example. Or Heeg. They, at least, are in the almanac."
Outside, the passage was deserted. As Jumoke headed toward the
control room, Dumarest moved in the other direction toward the hold and
engine room. As handler, it was his job to check the stowing of cargo
and to operate the caskets designed for the transportation of
beasts and often used to carry those riding Low; people traveling
doped, frozen and ninety percent dead, risking the fifteen percent
death rate for the sake of cheap transportation.
Now the caskets were empty and the cargo, a mass of bales and
metal-strapped boxes, already in place. Dumarest checked the
restraints, tightening and adjusting as needed. More cargo could arrive
before they left, but he doubted it. From what Egulus had told him, the
main trade of the
Entil was in carrying passengers. Some of
them could have personal luggage, and maybe personal packets of stores
and cargo, but they would arrive with their owners.
Crouching, Dumarest checked the caskets, tracing the wires and
pipes, rising to swing open the transparent lids, closing them and
operating the controls and watching the gauges showing the drop in
temperature. As he lowered the lid of the last, he saw the woman
standing in the open doorway leading to the engine room.
She was tall, with a helmet of glinting blonde hair, the tresses
cropped to hug the head and to frame the wide, strongly boned face. The
shoulders were wide, a support for the muscles supporting the prominent
breasts which thrust unmistakable mounds beneath the tunic of her
uniform. Her eyes were oval pools of vivid blueness, her ears small and
set tight against the head, the nose a little uptilted above a generous
mouth. The chin matched the cropped hair in its masculine determination
and when she spoke, her voice held a deep resonance.
"Satisfied?"
"Number two needs some attention to the hinges."
"And?"
"Number four is sluggish on the intake."
"Full marks," she said. "Not many would have noticed that. At least
you know your caskets. Ridden in them often?"
"Too often."
"It's a hell of a way to travel." Stepping forward, she extended her
hand in Jumoke's gesture. Touching it, he found it soft yet firm and,
now that he was close, he caught the scent of her perfume. It was
floral, slightly pungent, accentuating her femininity but at variance
with her general appearance. A sign that she was not attempting to
emulate the male, perhaps. A personal touch which gave her an
individuality, and rescued her from the anonymity of a uniform. "So
you're the new man. Glad to have you with us. I'm Dilys Edhessa. The
engineer. You?" She nodded as he gave his name. "Well, you're an
improvement on Gresham. That's his uniform you're wearing. It's too
tight at the shoulders and too loose around the waist but I can fix
that for you."
"What happened to him?"
"Gresham? He tried to hold out and was caught cheating by a couple
of punters. Miners from Cham. He made the mistake of trying to get them
and one shot him from under the table. You want to watch out for that,
by the way. Make sure they keep their hands where you can see them. We
carry some wild types, at times."
"And Gresham?"
"As I said, he'd been holding out on the common fund so when he got
himself killed Yarn wasn't too concerned. He took a bribe from the
miners to forget what had happened and we dumped Gresham into the
void." She made a gesture as if brushing dirt from her hands. "He was
no loss."
"Anything else I should know?"
"I doubt it. You've met Jumoke and Allain? And you know the captain,
of course. Now you've met me. That's the lot. We run the
Entil.
Including you, naturally."
An afterthought, and Dumarest could understand it. He, like the
steward, was expendable. It would be natural for the woman to regard
him as less important than herself. And with reason. Looking past her,
Dumarest could see the humped bulk of the engines, the wink and gleam
of instruments and monitors. A comforting sight; the neatness would
extend to the maintenance of the all important generator.
Following his eyes, she said, "Know anything about engines?"
"A little."
"Good, then you can help me run a check later on. Just routine, but
it would help to have someone relay the readings. Someone who knows
what it's all about." Then she added without change of tone, "Just in
case you've tried a bluff with Yarn, it won't work."
"I know that."
"Listen! What I'm trying to say is if you need a loan? You can pay
it back later."
"Thank you, but it isn't necessary. I mean that."
"Good." She stood looking at him, her eyes level with his own. A
woman as broad as himself but heavier due to the swell of hips,
buttocks and breasts. An Amazon, but one who held an unmistakable
femininity, whose eyes held a genuine concern. "I like the captain but,
at times, he can be hard. As you can be, I guess. You have the look,
Earl, the manner of—hell, what am I talking about?"
"The caskets," he said.
"What?"
"The hinges need fixing, as does the intake. If you'll let me have
some tools, I'll take care of it."
"There's no hurry," she said, welcoming the change of subject, the
path he had opened from the intensity of the moment when, startlingly,
she had felt her body respond to his masculine closeness. "We don't use
them often now. On most of the worlds we visit, it's easy enough for
anyone to earn the cost of a High passage. And few are interested in
traveling Low."
"But they wouldn't be refused if they asked?"
"Of course not. Why turn down a profit?"
"Then I'd better fix the caskets."
"We'll fix them," she corrected. "Together. But why the concern? If
a man's too big a creep to gain the cost of a decent passage, why worry
about him?"
He said dryly, "Call it a vested interest. That creep could be me."
From where he sat in the narrow confines of the cabin, Leo Bochner
said, "In order to survive, an animal needs three essentials; food,
shelter and seclusion. It must eat, have protection against the
elements and, because no matter how strong or savage a predator it may
be, it will need to sleep at times, and so be vulnerable." He helped
himself to some of his amber wine. "A pattern which any hunter must
bear in mind."
Caradoc said nothing, sitting with his face shrouded in
the uplifted cowl of his robe, his hands buried within the wide
sleeves. Bochner was a little drunk, or was trying to give that
impression. If the former, he was betraying a weakness which could kill
him; if the latter, then he must again be trying to get information. An
exercise which the cyber would have found amusing if he had been able
to experience the emotion.
"A pattern which has won me many a trophy," continued Bochner. "To
learn the habits of the quarry, to trail, to anticipate and then,
finally, to close in for the kill." His hand tightened around the cap
of the ornate bottle. "To win and again affirm the superiority of a
thinking mind."
"One fogged with drugs?"
"This?" Bochner lifted the cap and deliberately swallowed what it
contained. "You object?"
"To your drinking, no. To the possibility of your failure, yes. Need
I remind you that the Cyclan has little patience with those who fail?
That when you accepted your present commission you also undertook
certain obligations? It would be wise for you to remember them."
"Don't preach to me, Cyber!" For a moment the smooth,
almost-womanish features changed, to become those of a feral beast, an
animal devoted to the kill. "The Cyclans have hired my skill, nothing
more. And why did they hire me? Why, with all the skills and talents
you claim to possess, was it necessary to find another to hunt down the
man you seek?" Leaning forward a little, he added, "Can't you, even
now, guess why Dumarest has been able to elude you for so long?"
"Chance—"
"Luck! The whining excuse of fools!" Wine gurgled as Bochner
refilled the little cup. "Shall I tell you why? You persist in thinking
of Dumarest as a factor and not as a man. As a unit instead of a
thinking, human being. You make your predictions and assess your
probabilities and point to a certain place and claim that is the spot
at which your quarry is to be found. Yet, the men sent there find they
are too late, or get themselves killed, or discover that some incident
has negated your prediction. And still you haven't trapped your prey,
and still you can't understand why."
Caradoc watched as Bochner emptied his cup and again refilled it
from the bottle.
"Dumarest is a man, not a cypher. An animal with sharpened instincts
and an awareness of danger. But this time, he must know who is hunting
him and why; an advantage he has which I do not. It would help if I
did." Pausing, he waited, and Caradoc noted the steadiness of his hand,
the absence of glimmering reflections from the glass of the bottle, the
surface of the liquid in the cup. A pause which the hunter ended before
it became obvious he waited for an answer. "But no matter how clever he
is, the rules apply to him as they do to a beast. He has the same need
for food, shelter and seclusion. Being human, all can be obtained with
the one commodity— money. To get it he must steal, beg or work. To beg
would take too long and bring too small a return. To steal is not easy,
and to rob others is to take high risks for the sake of little gain.
Therefore, he must work and where would a traveler without great skills
obtain employment in the Quillian Sector? Work which would provide all
a man in his position needs? Well, Cyber, where is he to find it? Where
would he feel safe? Where else but among others of his own kind?
Transients who ask no questions, employed by those who regard them as
nothing but a needed source of labor. A construction site—mines,
roads, buildings, canals—but where, Cyber? On which world?"
"Ealius. We arrive tomorrow."
They landed at sunset when the terminator was bisecting the single
continent and tattered clouds hung like shredded garlands against the
darkening orange of the sky. Bochner paused at the gate as Caradoc went
on his way, asking for and receiving audience with the guard-commander,
a burly, sullen man who softened as money was pressed into his palm.
"Procedure? It's simple. We don't worry about arrivals and only test
people when they leave. We stand them on the detector and ask their
names. If they lie, we hold them for further investigation. If they're
on the list, the same."
"List?"
"Contract-breakers, debtors, those accused of any crime. We catch
them, hold them, pass them on for appropriate action. Dumarest?" He
frowned. "No, no one of that name has passed through."
"How can you be sure? Are you on duty at all times?"
"No, but we keep records and I check the lists. Want to check?"
"I'll take your word for it. Sorry to have taken up your time."
"Dumarest!" The commander frowned, musing. "Wait a minute!
Dumarest—that name's familiar." He turned to where a man sat at a
computer terminal. "Check it, Mallius."
A moment, then, "It's on the list, Commander. Man to be detained if
spotted. An accusation of theft by the Hafal-Glych made on the—"
"Never mind that." The commander looked at Bochner. "Satisfied?"
With the thoroughness of the Cyclan, if nothing else. The listing of
the name was proof of the efficiency of the organization—they must have
alerted agents on every world in the Quillian Sector to keep watch for
Dumarest. His respect for the man increased as he realized what
difficulties he had to face. Still had to face. A cunning and
intelligent quarry who should provide a stimulating chase.
Caradoc, sitting in a room in the foremost hotel, listened to what
he had learned, then said, "Your conclusions?"
"Dumarest must be working for one of the construction companies
here. Maybe the Fydale or the Arbroth—both are large employers of
labor."
"As is the Lenchief."
"You think that is where he is to be found?"
"The probability is high." Caradoc made a gesture of dismissal. "If
you hope to gain your reward I suggest you waste no further time.
Contact me immediately if you have located Dumarest. Once you are
certain you have found the man I will give you further instructions."
Bochner drew in his breath, aware of the rage mounting within him,
the anger which must surely burst to reveal itself on his face. A rage
triggered by the realization that the cyber had already assessed all
possibilities and had arrived at his decision without deigning to
consult his partner. His anger was not helped by the knowledge that his
inquiries at the gate had been a waste of time. Why hadn't he been told?
Caradoc said, "You have the name of the company and can gain its
location if you ask at the desk. They will also arrange for
transportation. Is there more you need before undertaking action?"
"No, I— Bochner forced himself to remember that no cyber
was ever sarcastic and that Caradoc's inquiry had been genuine. "Aren't
you coming with me?"
"There is no need, in fact, my presence could be a
disadvantage. In any case, I have other work to engage my attention
while you execute your commission." Again came the gesture of
dismissal. "Please delay no longer."
Caradoc followed the hunter with his eyes as the man left the room.
Bochner had mastered his obvious rage well and that was to his credit,
but against that was the fact there had been no rational cause for
anger at all. Another demonstration of the futility of emotion; the
crippling reaction of the mind and body to external stimuli which
destroyed the sharp reasoning power of the intellect. Had he considered
the Cyclan to be so devoid of foresight that he had thought it
necessary to question those at the gate? Had he no concept of the power
of the organization which had chosen to utilize his limited skills?
Yoka had chosen him, and the old cyber had long ago proved his
capabilities. Yet, too much importance should not be placed on past
achievements. Age could bring more than physical decay; always there
was the danger of a mind affected by senility. It was barely possible
that all relevant factors had not been taken into account when he had
decided on the use of Bochner. He would include the suggestion in his
report. In the meantime, as he had mentioned to the hunter, he had
other matters to attend to.
A touch on a button and a man answered the summons.
"Master!" The acolyte bowed. One of two sent from a different world
on another vessel—what Bochner didn't know he couldn't guard against.
"Your commands?"
"Send in Fan Dudinka."
He was of middle height, middle-aged, his face marked with lines of
worry, his eyes wary even though his manner was assured. The Head of
the Essalian Group, which faced ruin unless the Cyclan could help them.
"Cyber Caradoc, it is good of you to receive me."
"Please be seated." Caradoc waited until the man had taken a chair.
"As you have been informed, your bid to engage the services of the
Cyclan has been successful. Now it must be clearly understood by you,
and those of your group, that I can take no sides, that I am not
interested in matters of moral right or legal wrong, that my sole
function is to predict the possibility of events resulting from nodes
of action."
"And for that, we pay," said Dudinka. "But, unless we pay—" he
swallowed, "for God's sake, what can we do?"
"The Essalian Group is composed of those who operate farms running
along both banks of the Ess. The river will be diverted once the major
cutting into the mountains is completed. Once that happens, then
shortage of water will make the land unproductive." Caradoc lifted a
hand to still the other's outburst. "I merely review the situation.
Now, as to what you can do—your major crop is the narcotic weed used by
many of the workers. It grows quickly, cures on the stem, can be
harvested and shredded in a matter of weeks from initial planting."
"We could maintain production if we used hydroponic vats," said
Dudinka, "but the cost would be prohibitive."
"And the returns nil. Once you raise your prices to compensate, you
lose your market. Your problem is with the company digging the cutting.
They have no real need to divert the river and could avoid it by
constructing an appropriate channel. If you were to guarantee to meet
the cost, the probability is ninety-one percent they would agree."
"We haven't the money."
"You have the crop. You could sell it to the company at a set price
and deny all free sale. The profits the company would gain from a
monopoly would more than compensate them for the expense of the
channel." Caradoc added, "The probability they would accept such an
arrangement is in the order of ninety-seven percent."
A simple solution to a basically simple problem—the more so when
already the construction company had learned to rely on the advice
given by the Cyclan. All would be satisfied and all would be eager,
when the next problem rose, as it would when the workers left when the
channel was completed, to hire again the services of a cyber. And the
advice he gave would, as always, be slanted to dependency on the
service offered by the Cyclan. Use it and gain wealth and security, and
who dared not use it when a competitor might?
And, once a dependency had been achieved, it was only a step to
later domination.
"Master?" The acolyte was at his side. "Is there anything you
require?"
"No." Caradoc rose from his chair. "I shall rest for a few hours.
Should Bochner call, summon me at once."
Fifty miles from the town, the hunter walked through a man-made
jungle of rips and tears and steaming mounds of noxious vapors and
tormented ooze, of patches of acid vileness and bogs of lurking
dissolution. All construction sites were the same; places where nature
had been ravaged, the earth torn, the area despoiled in order to wrest
wealth or later gain with a casual disregard for the safety or comfort
of those who toiled like insects beneath the sun by day and flood
lights at night.
A good place in which a man could hide.
Or so a man on the run would think, not seeing beyond the immediate
necessity of obtaining shelter and a degree of anonymity. But, in such
places, no man was ever truly alone. Always eyes watched him; those of
the gambling sharks eager to take his pay, of those who sold food and
comforts, of the girls operating in the shacks at the edge of the
perimeter; raddled harlots together with their pimps and the sellers of
chemical dreams. Only in a city could a man be really alone, and only
then if he had the money on which to survive. Without that, he would be
forced to work however and wherever he could.
"Dumarest?" The man in the office shrugged. "Mister, they come and
they go—how the hell can I remember a name? Check with the wages clerk."
"Dumarest?" The clerk scowled. "Do you realize how many we have
working here? How long it will take me to hunt through the files? They
get paid on the first of each month. Come back then."
"Dumarest?" A guard rubbed thoughtfully at his chin. "I can't place
him. Say, why don't you ask among the girls?"
They knew nothing, and neither did the purveyors of killing
delights. Bochner had expected little else. No quarry of any worth
would leave so clear a trail or make such a stupid mistake. But he
picked up a rumor and followed it, and spoke to a man who had a friend
who knew a little more and who was willing to talk, once primed with a
bottle.
"Dumarest? Tall, wears gray, doesn't say much? Yeah, I've seen him.
Fact is, he got into a little trouble recently and killed a man. A fair
fight, so I understand. Didn't see it myself, but I know who did."
"Dumarest?" Carl Devoy was cautious. "Never heard of him. The man
who killed Menser? Well, he did a good job, the bastard asked for it,
but I don't know who did it. Not Dumarest, you can take that as a fact.
Who is he anyway, and why do you want him?"
The official in the morgue was curt.
"Menser? He had an accident. What business is it of yours?" Money
mollified his tone. "Well, I guess it would do no harm to let you see
him. You're lucky, we were going to dump him but the manager said to
wait until dawn. He wanted to get the doctor's report. No doubt about
it—accidental death."
An accident which had ruined an eye, broken a knee, crushed larynx
and windpipe. Bochner examined the injuries, assessing the force which
must have been used, the agility needed to escape the long arms. He
checked the hands, the nails with their sharpened points, the paste
beneath them. An animal and a dangerous one—how much more dangerous
must be the one who had bested him?
Back in the town with a new day brightening the sky, he quested
another jungle. One not as raw as the site, but as viciously alive with
its own form of predators. Men whom he hunted down with the hard-won
skill, the cunning learned over the years. Trees or houses, gutters or
rivers, men or beasts, all were basically the same. Note your target,
wait by the water hole, watch the feeding ground, the accustomed trail,
and then close in for the kill. And if money takes the place of
bullets, then it is that much easier. All it took was time.
"Hurt?" The man had shifty eyes which never stared
at
any one thing for long. "A friend of yours? Hurt, you say?"
"Cut a little." Bochner winced as he moved his arm. "A quarrel that
got out of hand—you know how it is."
"A friend?"
"That's what I said." Again Bochner winced as he moved. "A good
friend. I'd like to help him."
"Then take him to the hospital."
"Which has doctors who'd ask questions, and guards who'd ask more.
Hell, all I want is for someone to bind up a wound and I—my friend—can
pay. For the service, and for anyone who guides him to it." Money sang
its song of appeal as he dropped coins on the table between them. From
the far side of the tavern a man stared, then rose and moved casually
toward the door. Following the movement of the shifty eyes, Bochner
said, "Him?"
"Yeah." The man snarled as a hand fell to grip his own as it tried
to rake up the coins. To crush the flesh against the bone until blood
oozed from beneath the nails. "What the hell are you doing? My hand!"
"Him?"
"I—to hell with it." The man whispered a name, gave directions.
"You'll find help there but if you tell who told you—"
The man who had sauntered toward the door stepped forward as Bochner
approached, fell back as stiffened fingers slammed into the pit of his
stomach, again where the heart beat under the ribs. A precaution—but no
hunter would allow himself to be hunted.
Afternoon found him with a woman who turned stubborn. At dusk, he
had gained a name and had something which was barely alive. Before he
left the house, he had a name only.
Caradoc said, "You are certain?"
"I am sure as to my facts. But as you pointed out, there can be no
such thing as certainty." Bochner was enjoying his triumph. "I tracked
him, do you understand? I followed his trail. From the site to the
town, to where he went to find help, to where he gained it, to where he
went to find another."
"So easily?"
"He was on the move and relying on speed more than covering his
trail. He knew he couldn't do that. There had been a fight and he had
killed a man. After that he had to run." His laughter rose. "To here,
Cyber. To this town. To a tavern close to the field. A week and we
would have lost him. A couple of days, even, but I was hunting him
down. Me, Cyber! Me!"
His pride was a beacon, a force which drove him to pace the room, to
halt before the uncurtained window, to turn and pace again before the
desk at which the cyber sat with poised immobility.
"So you have tracked him down," said Caradoc. "You know just where
Dumarest is to be found. All that remains is to reach out and take him.
Correct?"
"Not exactly."
"Explain." Caradoc listened then said, "The
Belzdek—how
can you be so sure?"
"The name the woman gave me. It was that of a captain, large Krell.
The
Belzdek is his vessel."
"And you assume that Dumarest must be on it?" As Bochner nodded the
cyber added, "But, of course, the woman could have lied."
"No!"
"What makes you so certain? Have you yet to learn that nothing is
ever certain? How can you be convinced she did not lie? After all, you
could hardly have been regarded by her as a friend."
Tortured, dying—no, she would not have considered him that.
Caradoc said, "Assuming that Dumarest killed Menser, we have a time
node from which to base extrapolations. If he left the site
immediately, he would have arrived in the town by sunset. Allow more
for him to have met the woman and be treated by her, more still for him
to have gone to any rendezvous she might have arranged."
"To meet Krell."
"He or another. What is of more concern is the ship departures
during the relevant period." Caradoc picked a paper from a sheaf on his
desk. "Five vessels left in the period between Menser's death and our
arrival; the
Belzdek, Frame, Entil, Wilke and
Ychale.
The latter is an ore-carrier plying between Ealius and Cham on a
regular schedule. The
Wilke is a vessel of a commercial line
operating a circular route and touching at Ninik, Pontia, Vult and
Swenna. The others are traders going where the dictates of cargo and
passengers take them." Caradoc lowered the paper. "Well?"
Bochner said, thoughtfully, "Dumarest didn't pass through the gate."
"He didn't subject himself to the lie detector at the gate,"
corrected the cyber. "Which means he either smuggled himself through or
surmounted the perimeter fence. As that is watched and guarded by
electronic devices, and as no alarm was recorded, it is safe to assume
that he left Ealius by deception."
"And he had to leave," said Bochner. "An animal on the run can only
think of finding a safe place in which to hide. Where, on this world,
could Dumarest find that? After killing Menser, he would be marked for
assassination by the man's friends. Certainly he would have become
prominent, and that would be the last thing he wanted." He frowned,
remembering the woman, her tormented eyes, the way she had spat before
she had screamed out the name. Had she lied? Would she have retained
sufficient resolve? "The
Belzdek," he decided. "I say
Dumarest is on the
Belzdek."
"Which left for Gorion as we landed. The
Entil left the
previous noon for Vult. The
Frame earlier for your own world
of Pontia. Five vessels in all and the possibility remains that
Dumarest could be on any one of them." Pausing, he ended, "Now tell me,
hunter, how would you find your prey?"
"Set traps. Radio ahead and—" Bochner broke off, remembering. "No,"
he said bitterly, "it's not as easy as that. We're in the Rift. In the
Quillian Sector. Damn it! Damn it all to hell!"
Chapter Four
Vult was as Allain had claimed: a mad world inhabited by the insane.
In the sky the sun, huge, mottled with flaring patches of lemon and
orange, burned with a relentless fury, and at night the stars glittered
like a host of hungry, watching eyes. Stars which were close, suns
which filled space with conflicting energies, radiations which
disturbed the delicate neuron paths of the brain, dampening the censor
so that between thought and action there was little restraint. A
harshly savage world where only the strong could hope to survive.
"A bad place, and we've arrived at a bad time." Jumoke looked at the
sky from where he stood, with Dumarest and Dilys at the head of the
ramp. "Look at that sun! An electronic furnace scrambling the ether.
There'll be murder and raping abroad. Be sure you're not the victims."
"Earl will see to that." The woman touched his arm. "Right, Earl?"
Her fingers lingered on the smooth plastic, a gesture the navigator
chose to ignore if he saw it, but one Dumarest knew he would remember
if he had. As if by accident he moved away from the caress, looking
down over the field, the sagging fence around it, the cluster of people
attracted by their arrival. One was on his way toward them.
"There's Inas," said Dilys. "I wonder what he'll have for us this
time?"
Inas was the local agent, a Husai, his dark face adorned by the
pattern of his beard. He touched Jumoke's palm, nodded to the woman,
stared at Dumarest.
"Our replacement for Gresham," she explained. "Any news?"
"With the sun the way it is?" Inas lifted his eyebrows.
"You know better than that, my dear. We can hope for nothing until
the activity dies and even then the messages will have to be decoded.
You?"
"Nothing but static all the way." Jumoke stepped back and made way
for the agent to enter the ship. "Anything good for us?"
"A party for Ellge. They wait in town. Interested?"
"We could be,
if the price is right and nothing better turns up. Still, that's up to
the captain. He's in the salon with a bottle. Wait a moment and I'll
take you up." He turned to look at the others. "Remember what I said
now, be careful."
A warning Dumarest intended to heed. Even as they crossed the field
he could sense the invisible energies prickling his skin despite the
protective mesh in his clothing, the gray plastic he had chosen to wear
rather than his uniform. It was more comfortable, offered better
protection and the knife in his boot was a sign most would recognize
and be warned..
Dilys said, "How many worlds have you visited, Earl? I don't mean
called at like this, but actually lived on for a while. A dozen? A
score?" She turned her head to look at his face. "More than that?"
"I forget."
"You didn't keep count?" She saw him smile and realized she was
talking like an impressionable child. Well, he had impressed her, damn
him! "I suppose after the first dozen they all begin to look the same.
Like women. Isn't that so, Earl? Isn't that what most men think?"
"I don't know what most men think, Dilys."
"You must have heard them talk. Boast, even. About all cats being
grey at night. Men!"
He said mildly. "Are they like that? Men, I mean. Don't they all
begin to act and sound and look alike after the first dozen or so?"
"How should I know?"
"You're a woman—"
"But not a whore!" Then, as she looked at him, her anger vanished
and she smiled. "All right, Earl, you win. I should know better than to
talk like that. In our game, we're all the same. Sex makes no
difference; we work together, take the same risks and share the same
rewards."
"You really believe that?"
"Of course. Why do you ask."
He moved on, not answering, wondering if she was being deliberately
obtuse; if any woman with her degree of femininity could ever delude
herself that she was regarded as other than what she was. If so, Jumoke
could educate her; the man was obviously in love with her. A love which
he seemed to contain, to hold in private, as if to expose it would be
to destroy it. A weakness, perhaps, but some men were like that;
fearing to lose all if they hoped to gain too much.
"Mister!" A man, young, barely more than a boy, came running toward
them, his eyes on Dumarest. "You the handler on that ship? Can you give
me passage? Please, mister, can I ride with you?"
"Where do you want to go?"
"Anywhere. Just as long as I get away from this place. Hell itself,
if that's where you're going. It can't be worse than Vult."
Dilys said, "We can carry you if you've got the price. Have you?"
She shook her head as he mentioned what he had. "It isn't enough for a
High passage, but we could take you if you're willing to ride Low."
"No!" Dumarest was sharp. "No!"
"Why not?"
"You heard what I said." He took her arm and pushed her past the
youngster, who stared after them with sunken, desperate eyes. "Don't
argue with me. Not in public. Not before that boy."
She said nothing until he had led her into a tavern and had ordered
drinks. They were tart, strong, arriving dewed with condensation and
tinkling with ice.
Looking at her glass, Dilys said, "Why, Earl?"
"Why am I buying you a drink? Let's just say that I like you and
want to be friends."
"I'm talking about that boy out there. You turned down a chance to
make a profit. Why?"
He said flatly, "Carry that boy and you'd arrive with a corpse. He
hasn't the fat on him to survive. He hasn't the strength. He's starved
too long and worked too hard to get a stake and, if we take it from
him, we'll be taking his life."
"A chance he's willing to take, Earl." She was stubborn. "A chance
you've no right to stop him taking."
"Have you ever ridden Low?" The flicker of her eyes gave him the
answer. "No. Have you ever opened a casket and seen someone lying dead?
I thought not. You wouldn't like it if you did. You'd like it a lot
less if you knew, when you put him into the box, that you were putting
him into a coffin. Believe me, girl, I'm trying to save that boy's
life."
She stared at him, her eyes searching, then she said slowly, "Yes, I
really believe you mean that. You care about that boy. But why, Earl?
What is he to you? What does it matter if he should die while we carry
him?" Then, understanding, she added, "You. You're thinking of yourself
when young. When you were like that boy, perhaps; young and scared and
a little desperate. Did someone save you then? Is that it? Are you
repaying an old debt?"
He said bluntly, "I was lucky."
With a luck which was still with him. No message could have been
received on Vult from Ealius. If the Cyclan were on his trail, they
were still one step behind—a distance he hoped to increase.
"Earl?" The woman was watching him, her eyes lambent, understanding.
"Earl, you—"
He said, "Drink up and let's get about your business. We don't want
Jumoke to get worried."
They had come to shop, which was Allain's work, but he refused to
set
foot on the world he had reason to hate, and Dilys had volunteered to
replenish the ship's store of luxury items and what staples were
needed. Dumarest followed her from the tavern into the commercial
complex, where thick roofs of translucent crystal softened the glare of
the sun, and inset panels of variegated colors threw a multihued swath
of rainbow brilliance over the covered walks and promenades, the fronts
of shops, the seats on which people lounged, their eyes ever-watchful.
They wore colors as bright as their sun; blouses and tunics set and
studded with odd shapes of metal, stones, scraps of quartz, minerals
which glowed like fireflies—fabrics either dull or shimmering with
chemical sheens, winks and glitters and somber patches. They could have
been clowns, but no clown came armed with spines and spikes on
shoulders and joints, carried knives and clubs at their belts, sported
tomahawks, cutlasses, cleavers, helmets set with slitted visors,
trailing plumes. A populace armed and armored, touchily aggressive,
watchful and radiating a feral zest.
If nothing else those inhabiting Vult were strongly alive.
Dilys sensed the atmosphere and responded to it as she walked close
at Dumarest's side. Colors seemed to grow brighter, the pulse of blood
through her veins, stronger, the air itself held a sharp and virile
fragrance. The scent of violence, she thought, if violence could be
said to have an odor of its own. The scent of physical bodies tense and
aware of the possibility of combat. The exudation of people who had to
be constantly on their guard, constantly alert.
"Earl!" A man had screamed from an adjoining way, and another had
cursed as if with anger rather than pain. A flurry, and they were past
the opening, Dumarest not altering his stride, doing no more than
glancing down the path dimmed and shadowed with dusty purple light.
"Earl, someone is—"
"We mind our own business. Is this the place?"
The store had thick windows meshed with strips of metal, doors which
were held fast with electronic devices, a floor which glowed with
warning light, displays in which goods could be seen but not touched.
Assistants who were armed.
"Madam, sir, it is my pleasure to serve you!" The man wore a quilted
jacket and pants puffed and bright with metal. The helmet winked with
polished gems and, as Dumarest lifted his hand, the visor fell to mask
the face, the eyes.
"My apologies." A hand lifted the metal screen back into place. "A
misunderstanding.. The movement of your hand— I'm sure you understand."
A hand which could have been fitted with a container of acid. A
movement which could have sent it into the eyes.
"Your needs?"
Dilys produced a list and read off items, frowning at the prices
quoted, altering, taking alternatives which, the man assured her, were
every bit as good.
"If they aren't, I'll be back," she warned. "And if I find cause for
complaint, you'll lose more than our trade."
"If you are dissatisfied, then full compensation will be made. And
for you, sir? Is there any item which arouses your interest? You are a
visitor, I know, but it would be prudent to display arms. A short
sword, or, a small axe balanced for throwing? A club, or at least a
whip which can be worn at the wrist?"
And one which would stir the aggressive natures of all who saw it,
inviting challenges and combats and bloody meetings.
Dumarest said, "Have you a gun?"
"A gun?" The man blinked. "Certainly, sir, but are you sure of what
you are asking? Had you been carrying one, the charges would have
detonated as you entered this store. Had it been a laser, the energy
cell would have vented its potential in the form of heat. Outside, on
the streets, in taverns, well—you understand?"
A temptation to any who saw the weapon. A greater challenge than a
whip and a greater prize. One they would not hesitate to kill to
obtain, or kill to prevent being used, or use to prevent others
similarly armed from killing. To carry a gun openly displayed on Vult
was to invite destruction. To use one, the same. Only in houses could
such protection be safely owned.
"I take the liberty of mentioning this because you are strangers,"
said the man. "But should you want a gun, we can supply it. Delivered,
of course, and under guard. Now, if you will tell me the type and
caliber, any decoration you may desire, any adaptation?"
"Never mind." Dumarest turned to the woman. "Have you finished?"
"Here, yes, but I need some abrasive compounds. From Harfleman?"
"Yes, madam, as you say." The man nodded agreement to the question.
"I shall call ahead to warn him of your arrival."
Hartleman was bored, pleased for the company, eager to talk of
worlds he had known as a boy, of Vult, to which he had come a scare of
years earlier. He served barley water tisane and small cakes, and
bemoaned his lot at the same time as he praised his wares and
reputation. Trade was good, but trade could be better. Violence was
bad, but he had known it worse. The radiation was on the increase, but
the scientists said that it could be followed by a period of
comparative calm. And, yes, he could deliver the abrasives to the field
for a small extra charge, but his son was nursing a wound and his
daughter, well, who would allow a girl to wander without an escort on
Vult? His eyes studied the woman.
"How large is the parcel?" said Dumarest He nodded at the answer.
"We'll carry it."
It was small but heavy, pastes of diamond-hard fragments and others
of fine emery, powders which flowed like water and grits, and scored
the fingers if touched. Packed in two bundles, connected by a strap,
they made a drag on his shoulder.
"Ready?" Dumarest waited as the woman made effusive farewells.
Impatience edged his voice. Why was she taking so long?
"Come on, now. Let's move!"
She fell into step beside him, containing her own irritation,
knowing it, and his impatience, to be the result of the radiation
streaming from the setting sun. The light in the promenades had dulled,
somber shadows lying where once had blazed lemons and ambers, violets,
blues, greens and purples. Dusky areas where gold and silver had cast
shimmering pools.
Shadows in which creatures stirred and came to life with fading
glimmers from bizarre adornments.
"Earl!"
"Keep walking."
There were five of them, edging close, eyes moving like restless
insects beneath the rims of helmets, hands twitching at belts, weapons,
clothing. Young men with hard faces, and mouths containing teeth filed
and extended to give them the appearance of wolves.
Scavengers.
Hunters with brains tormented by the disturbing radiation.
Madmen after fun.
Two halted down the promenade as two others moved to stand, one at
each side, the fifth taking up the rear. Those ahead blocked progress,
waiting as Dilys slowed, stepping forward as she halted to run curved
hands over the prominences of her breasts,
"Nice," said one. "Good meat, eh, Felix?"
"Good legs." His companion had a cheek ravaged with scars, eyes
enhanced with flaring tattoos. "Long and solid and smooth all over. I
bet she could crack a man's ribs if she had a mind. Crush him to a
pulp—a fine way to go, right, Val?"
"You said it," said the man on the right. "You said it."
"Big," said the man on the left. "Like a mountain. I've never had a
woman like that. She's big enough to get lost in. Big enough to handle
us all at the same time. Give us a lot of fun. What say, Cia?"
The man at the rear had a voice which dripped like turgid oil.
"I say we waste time. Let's see what's under the wrappings."
Cloth ripped, as the man standing at the woman's side tore , at her
blouse. Flesh showed, smooth, golden, the expanse widening as the
fabric yielded, the twin mounds of her breasts showing to attract all
eyes.
The moment for which Dumarest had been waiting. He spun, hand
lifted, fingers stiff, stabbing like blunted spears at the throat of
the man behind. A blow which ruptured delicate tissues, numbed vital
nerves, sent the man to the ground, twitching, gasping, blood spreading
from his mouth. As he dropped, Dumarest continued the turn, foot
lifting, boot lashing out to slam against the man at his side, to send
him staggering back, doubled, vomiting from the agony of crushed
testicles.
"Felix!"
The man with the tattooed eyes was already in action. He was fast,
smooth, metal glinting as he clawed at his belt and lifted a knife. The
man at his side dragged a cutlass from its sheath. Val, the man at the
woman's side, jumped back like a spider to stand hunched, a small axe
in each hand.
"Bastard," he said. "You hurt. Bastard!"
"We'll get him," said Felix. "We'll have him down and take his eyes,
his ears, the tongue out of his mouth, the meat from between his legs.
Then we'll see about what to do with the woman—Val!"
Dumarest sprang backwards as the man lunged forward, axes gleaming.
Dilys screamed as a razor edge touched her hair and sent a golden
strand falling to her shoulder, screamed again as blood showed in a
thin, red line across her chest; screams intended to distract, to
divert, echoing high and shrill as Dumarest backed, dropping the strap
from his shoulder, the band weighed at each end with the abrasive
pastes. Air whined as he whirled it in a tight circle, released it,
sent it wheeling through the air to hit an upraised arm, to wrap around
it, to slam against the face behind the fragile protection.
Dilys grabbed one of the axes as the man fell, lifted it, swung it
hard against the exposed jaw, the flat side making a dull, liquid sound
as it shattered bone.
"Get them!"
Her attack had been a mistake, one she recognized as Felix shouted.
She should have moved away and remained mobile, instead she was now
stooping over the man she had struck, awkwardly placed, an easy victim
for the man who came running toward her with his cutlass lifted high. A
matter of moments. Dumarest could handle either, but not both at the
same time. But he was on his feet and had the better chance.
As Felix ran toward him, Dumarest dropped his hand, lifted it
weighted with the knife he'd snatched from his boot, swung it back and
forward to send the blade lancing through the air in a calculated
throw. As it landed, the man with the tattooed eyes drove his own knife
hard into Dumarest's stomach.
A gamble taken and won—had the man aimed for the throat or face, the
steel would have done its work. As it was, the point ripped into the
plastic then glanced upwards as it struck the metal buried beneath. A
blow which hit like the kick of a horse, but one Dumarest gave the man
no chance to repeat. His hand fell, gripped the knife-wrist, squeezed
and twisted and his other hand darted forward, the fingers closing
around the throat, digging into the tissue to impact against the
carotids, stilling the flow of blood to the brain and bringing
immediate unconsciousness. A pressure which, if maintained, would bring
death. Dropping the limp figure, Dumarest said, "Dilys?" She was
standing beside the fallen body of the man who had carried the cutlass,
blood making a scarlet swath over her exposed flesh, breasts rising and
falling as they betrayed her agitation.
"Animals," she said. "Beasts. They would have killed you and—"
"They could have friends." Dumarest knelt and jerked his knife free
from the dead man's spine, wiping the blade before thrusting it back
into his boot. Slinging the abrasives over his shoulder, he said,
"Cover up and let's get out of here."
The party for Ellge arrived at dusk and with them bales and crates
and the artifacts constructed of ironstone and silicates found in the
deserts of Vult; things found by the party which consisted of
archaeologists delving for evidence of a race which could have preceded
the present inhabitants. One which was suspected to be other than human.
"Men, as we know them, must have been a fairly recent development,"
said Aares Atanya with dry precision. "An influx from some
overpopulated world, or a colony choosing Vult on which to establish
their own form of society. Such things are common. But I am certain
that before they arrived there was another viable culture which had
adapted itself to local conditions. A life form which could have
evolved here, if not introduced by the same means as the present
inhabitants. Some of the items we found could not have been used by
mankind. Their shape is unsuited to the human hand, and yet they are
undoubtedly tools. The conclusions are interesting, and further
evidence could show traces of movements which could upset all our
accepted beliefs as to our own origins."
"Because Vult may, at one time, have supported a race of lizards or
toads?" One of the others, a young girl with heavily lidded eyes,
smiled as she looked at Dumarest. "You mustn't get carried away, Aares."
"And you must learn to have a more open mind, Gliss."
"But not too open." The younger man sitting beside her closed his
hand protectively on her own. "We must adhere to the principle of
scientific investigation and logical truth. For example, I've heard
people say that all life must have originated on one planet. An obvious
absurdity—how could one small world have supported all the variegated
types we know? If life had evolved on a single planet, then surely all
men would look the same? As it is, we have skins ranging in color from
alabaster to the deepest ebony, hair from silver to jet, eye color,
shape of skulls, subtle differences of limbs—" The man shrugged. "Even
to think of all men having a common origin is patently absurd."
Dumarest said, "But isn't there evidence to support such a
supposition? We all belong to the same species, surely? If not, how
could we interbreed?"
"The same species, yes," admitted the man, "but only if you accept
the ability to interbreed as a sign of similarity. That could be quite
accidental. My own feelings are that life evolved on worlds of similar
type and so would have evolved on similar lines."
"You're forgetting the basic chemical composition," said another.
"The blueprint of the DNA units surely proves that for all mankind
there has to be a common point of origin. I don't mean all came from a
single world. As you say, that is ridiculous, but what if we were
'planted'. By that, I mean supposing that, long ago in the past, a
superior race passed through this galaxy and seeded suitable worlds
with specialized compounds. Spores or sperm or seeds which became life
as we know it? That would account for the diversity of types found on a
variety of worlds, and also the fact we can interbreed."
Gliss said firmly, "That's fantasy, Ulk, and you know it."
"Speculation, my dear. Of course, if you'd rather believe in
accident,
or the idiocy of a single common origin on a small, lonely world,
that's your privilege. Or perhaps you have a more esoteric belief? A
superior being, for example, one who—"
Dumarest said dryly, "I thought that was your belief. A superior
race, a superior being—surely they are the same?" Then, as the girl
shot him a grateful look, he added, "Would anyone care to join me in a
game?"
It was going to be a poor trip, he decided when later he retired to
his cabin. The archaeologists had preferred to talk rather than gamble,
and while their conversation held interest, it wouldn't swell the
profits. Only the girl, Gliss, had shown interest and Dumarest was
certain that it wasn't in games of chance.
He rose when, an hour after he had lain down, the door clicked open
to reveal a figure standing in the opening. The girl, he was sure, and
hoped he could handle her without too much fuss. Then she spoke and he
realized his mistake.
"Earl?"
"Dilys—is something wrong?"
"No." Clothing rustled as she stepped into the cabin and closed the
door behind her. In the darkness, she said, "I wanted—that is—Earl, I
haven't had a chance to thank you for what you did."
"Forget it."
"I can't."
"Why not? We're shipmates, aren't we? We're supposed to help each
other. You would have done the same."
"No, Earl, I couldn't. The way you moved, your speed, that knife you
threw. If it hadn't been for you, those men—"
He said quickly, "Forget it. It's over. You owe me nothing."
"I disagree, Earl. May I talk?"
"If you want." Fully awake now, he remembered something. "How did
you open my door?"
"With the master key." She paused as if awaiting his objection and
when none came she said, "How was it in the salon?"
"Slow. We'll get little extra this trip."
"From the men, no, but from the women?" Her voice held a question.
"I saw the way they looked at you. That young one in particular. Gliss,
I think her name is. Gliss. She was lingering in the passage when I
came along and I was surprised to find your door locked."
"If it hadn't been, would you have entered?"
"If I'd been entertaining, then the door would have been locked,"
he reminded. "What would you have done had I not been alone?"
"Broken the bitch's neck!" Then, while he was still assessing the
intensity of her answer, she added, "No, Earl, I don't mean that. Not
really. I—damn it, why can't you help me? Why won't you understand?"
Something fell on his cheek, a touch of wetness followed by another.
Rearing up on the bed, he felt for the panel, found it, touched a
switch and caused moonglow to illuminate the darkness. In the pale
luminescence he saw her face, her eyes, the tears which filled them to
stream down her cheek.
"I love you," she said. "Earl, I love you."
"Jumoke?"
"Thinks I'm his property. We've been lovers, yes, but he doesn't own
me. No man does that. Not now or ever. Not even you, Earl, though I'd
walk barefoot over broken glass to be at your side. But you don't own
me. No man can ever do that."
She was protesting too strongly, rejecting something he hadn't
offered, defensive when there was no need. A woman too sensitive about
her size, perhaps; one who must have suffered the scorn of others when
young. Finding a haven on the ship and doing work which made her the
equal of any. An environment in which she didn't have to meet
opposition or face the competition of her own sex. Or perhaps it was
more than simply a matter of size. A secret vulnerability which robbed
her of the strength needed in order to survive in hostile situations.
He remembered the recent attack, the way she had frozen, to act the way
she had, in a fury of misguided and unnecessary effort. The man she had
hit had already been rendered harmless. The effort used to smash his
jaw had been an act that had endangered her life.
"Earl?"
"I'm thinking."
"Of us?"
Of Jumoke, and the expression he'd seen in the navigator's eyes on
their return to the ship. Of the way the man had watched Dilys. His
hurt when she had turned from him. His pain when she had praised what
Dumarest had done.
"It's normal," she said quietly. "Ship-marriage, I mean. To last as
long as either of us wants it to. No obligations."
"I know."
"You've had one before?"
"Yes." He looked at her and, in the moonglow, saw Lallia with her
mane of ebon hair. Lallia, now long dead and long since dust. "Yes," he
said again. "I've been ship-wed. But not again. Not with you."
"Am I so repulsive?"
"No." How could he explain? How to tell a woman in love that her
love was not returned? How to be kind when he was being cruel?
"Listen," he said, "and try to understand. You are a lovely woman and
an intelligent one. Too intelligent to act the child and cry when you
can't get your own way. And I think too much of you to lie. I like you,
yes, but I don't want to marry you. Not even ship-marry you. I—"
He broke off as she rested her fingers against his lips. They were
soft and held the scent of perfume, a heady fragrance which
strengthened as she leaned forward to look into his eyes.
"No," she whispered. "Say no more. I understand. You are trying to
save me from hurt, but when has pleasure ever been free of pain? You
are kind, Earl, and gentle. And you care. My darling, you care!"
Chapter Five
On Ellge, they picked up a dancer, a woman of fading beauty with a
heavily painted face, hands which held the likeness of claws, eyes the
bleakness of glass. A creature long past her prime, now moving to
worlds of lesser competition. Those with a cruder appreciation of her
art, on which she could still earn a living and, perhaps, find a man to
support her to the end of her days.
On Vhenga, they took on a dispenser of charms; a thin-faced man with
an embroidered cloak and a box filled with strange nostrums and exotic
ointments. The dancer stayed on, finding a kindred soul in the seller
of charms, spending long hours huddled with him over the gaming table
in the salon, where she played her cards as if they were pieces of her
own flesh.
On Cheen, they were joined by two dour engineers, a time-served
contract man from the mines and a minor historian from the Institute.
On Varge, they took on a professional dealer in items of death.
Like the dispenser of charms, he was tall, thin-faced, sparse in
body, but where Fele Roster had crinkles in the corners of his eyes and
a wry smile wreathing his lips, thin though they might be, Shan
Threnond's face was a mask from which he looked with cynical
indifference on a universe he had taken no part in making, and which he
understood all too well.
A man of business, who wasted no time in setting up his trade in the
salon, unwilling to waste a moment as the
Entil hurtled
through the void, wrapped in the humming, space-eating power of its
Erhaft drive.
"Here we have a small item which must hold interest for all who
value the safety of their skins," he murmured as, with deft hands, he
set out his wares on the rich darkness of a velvet cloth. "In the shape
of a ring, as you see, and the stone and mounting are of intrinsic
value. But note, the stone is drilled and contains three darts, each of
which can be fired by a simple contraction of the muscle. The stone can
be removed and recharged so as to allow practice. Observe." He slipped
the ring on a finger, aimed it at a scrap of board, lowered the
appendage at the second joint. Those watching heard a barely audible
spat
and, on the board, a thing shrilled with vicious life. Almost
immediately, it created an area of disintegration around it; a pit
which dribbled a fine dust and from which, finally, it fell.
"The harmonics are destructive to all organic matter," said the
dealer quietly. "The area affected is half as deep as it is wide. In
flesh there are toxic side effects. The shock-impact is vast, the pain
is great and, aimed at the throat, death is certain."
"Unless the dart is quickly removed?"
"Yes." Shan Threnond glanced at the dancer. "You know of these
things, madam?"
She ignored the stilted courtesy. "I've seen them before. And, on
Heldha, I saw a man whipped to the edge of death for owning such a
thing."
"A backward world, my lady."
"A logical one." One of the engineers rasped a hand over his chin.
"They don't like assassins."
"Does anyone?" Threnond lifted his shoulders in a shrug. "But a man
must protect himself. Surely you would not deny anyone that right? And
a woman must take elementary precautions against those who would do her
harm. You, my lady, must have had experience of such dangers. At least,
felt at times the need to reduce the pressure of an unwanted passion,
shall we say? This will do exactly that." He lifted another item from
his store. "A ring again—but what better place to carry a weapon than
on a finger? There it can remain, always in clear view, apparently
harmless, yet ready for immediate action should the need arise. This
contains a pressurized drug which can be blasted into a face. Within
two seconds, the recipient will be stunned and helpless long enough for
the user to escape, change the situation, or summon aid."
"A whore's device." Fele Roster shook his head in distaste. "No
decent woman would ever allow herself to become involved in the kind of
situation you mention."
"You talk like a fool," snapped the dancer. "Decency has nothing to
do with it. How much?"
"For the ring? In gold, with a genuine ruby, three hundred urus.
With a synthetic gem, a hundred less. For paste and gilt, a hundred—the
cost of the inner mechanism and charge must, of course, remain the
same."
"I'll take a synthetic." The dancer pointed with a hooked finger.
"That one. And another with the darts. How much for both?"
Later, lying beside him in the snug confines of his cabin, Dilys
said, "Why did she buy such things, Earl? An old woman like that."
"She is afraid."
"And so arms herself? Against what?"
Against the terrors of the mind, which were often more frightening
than those of reality. Against age itself, and imagined hunger. Against
potential illness and poverty and neglect. Against threats she had
known
and dangers she had passed and could meet again. Like the scum they had
met on Vult, and others who haunted the dark corners of primitive
worlds.
Dilys said, after he'd explained, "Those rings won't give her much
protection if she is attacked. She could miss, or the attacker could be
armored, or there could be more than one. And the mere attempt to
defend herself could anger them."
"So?"
She flushed, grasping his meaning, sensing his lack of sympathy with
any who thought that way, or who imagined trouble could be avoided by
the closing of eyes.
"Do you think I'm a coward, Earl?"
"No."
"But—?" She broke off as if waiting for an answer, and when none
came, continued, "It's my size. Just because you're big, people think
you must be hard and tough and aggressive, but it isn't like that at
all. At least, not as far as I'm concerned. I hate violence, and always
have. When I see it, I want to run away from it, and when I get mixed
up in it, like on Vult, I—well, I just can't handle it. If that isn't
being a coward, what is?"
"I don't know."
"Don't lie to me, Earl."
"I'm not." Dumarest turned to look at her in the soft, nacreous
lighting. Moonglow touched her cheeks and shadowed her eyes, glimmered
from the rich, full contours of her naked body, touched breasts and
hips and the curve of thighs with creamy halations. "Cowardice is
determined by other people on the basis of what they think someone else
should have done in a particular situation. It's also a cheap term of
abuse. What we're really talking about is survival. Sometimes, in order
to survive, you have to kill. At other times, you have to run. If you
try to kill and fail, then you aren't brave, you're dead. If you run
and escape, you aren't a coward, you're alive."
"Black and white," she said. "You make it sound all so simple.
Either a thing is or it isn't, but surely there are shades of gray?
Possibilities in between?"
"A man is either alive or dead," said Dumarest. "How can there be
degrees between? He can be crippled or ill or diseased, but those are
degrees of efficiency, not of life. He is alive until he is dead."
"And to stay alive, sometimes he has to run." She turned her head to
look at him, the helmet of hair catching and reflecting the light to
make a golden haze framing the broad planes of her face. "Have you ever
had to run, my darling?"
"Yes."
"From home?" She repeated the question wanting, womanlike, to know
of his early days. "Did you run away from home in order to seek
adventure?"
"To avoid starvation," he said bluntly. "I was little more than a
boy and I stowed away on a ship. I was more than lucky—the captain
could have evicted me. Instead, he allowed me to earn my passage. A
long time ago, now. A long time."
Long enough to have moved deeper into the galaxy where suns glowed
hot and close, and shipping was plentiful. Into a region where even the
very name of Earth had become the subject of humor. A planet forgotten,
but one which he had to find. Would find.
"Home," she said gently. "Earth is your home and you want to return.
But why, Earl? If there was nothing for you there when you left, what
can be waiting for you now?"
"Nothing."
"But—"
"You said it, Dilys. Home. A man can have only one."
A place to call his own. A world on which to settle and on which to
make his mark. To build a house and raise a family, to find happiness
and contentment. A dream, one born during the long, lonely journeys
between the stars. An ideal nurtured to give a meaning to life, a
reason for existing. A determination which drove him to find his world
or die trying.
A waste! God, such a waste!
She felt his warmth close beside her, the comfort he gave, the sense
of security she enjoyed when she was with him. A man of whom any woman
could be proud. As she was proud when watching him at work in the
salon, gambling with calm efficiency, apparently unaware of the stares
thrown at him by women, the calculating appraisal of their eyes.
Could they sense the loneliness she had recognized? The bleak
isolation in which he lived, the cold emptiness of life spent
journeying from world to world, the frustration of an endless, hopeless
search? And always a stranger among strangers, any liaison only
temporary, any love doomed to wither, to fade, to die.
"Earl," she whispered, "don't you ever get tired? Don't you ever
want to stop and settle down and live as most men do?" A question she
waited in vain for him to answer. "I've some property on Swenna. It
isn't much, a farm and enough ground to keep a dozen alive, but there
is a river and the mountains are close and, at night during summer, the
air is so sweet with perfume it can make you drunk. If you ever get
tired, Earl, if you ever want a place to stay and rest and maybe relax
awhile, it's yours. I'd be there, if you wanted me. And you wouldn't
regret it, I swear to that." Her hand reached out to touch him, to
glide
in a possessive caress over his shoulder, his arm. "Think about it,
darling. At least think about it."
In the shadows, something moved, a click and a portion of the
chamber bloomed with variegated lights, the hologram seeming to hang
suspended in the air, to have brought a literal section of space itself
into the confined boundaries of the room.
"The Rift," said the technician, "As you ordered, my lord."
Caradoc said, "You are mistaken. I asked for a detailed display of
the Quillian Sector."
"I—my apologies. A mistake. It will be corrected immediately."
And would never be repeated. A word, and the technician would be
demoted, branded as an indifferent worker, denied access to the
sophisticated equipment housed in the building of the Hafal-Glych—a
slur on his reputation which he would never live down. And the word
would be given. Cyber Caradoc had no time for carelessness and no
patience where inefficiency was concerned. Now, as the display changed,
he nodded and gestured dismissal. Only when alone did he step toward
the shimmering profusion of multicolored lights and smoky blotches of
roiling ebon which constituted the Quillian Sector.
A region of space overcrowded with suns, over-profuse with worlds,
hyperactive with electronic forces. Energies which nullified the normal
use of radio—even the high-beam transmitters operating at maximum power
and negating the limitations of light were, at the best, erratic. An
irritation and a danger, but steps had been taken and all was
proceeding according to plan.
Soon, now, the man would be taken.
Soon, now, the long chase would be over and Dumarest would be held
by the Cyclan to yield the secret he possessed and which they
rightfully owned.
A step, and lights reflected their images on the taut features and
the scarlet robe, little dots of blue and green, yellow and amber,
violet and ruby—the latter lost against the fabric but showing like
sores against the skin of Caradoc's face. A good analogy; the ruby
points were planets on which humanoid life was impossible; worlds of
reeking vapors, tormented volcanoes, boiling, acid seas, poisonous
atmospheres.
The dots of other colors showed worlds and suns in various stages of
development and activity.
The ebon blotches were the dust clouds which held the Quillian
Sector as though in the palm of a close-cupped hand.
"Master." An acolyte had entered the room on silent feet. "A message
from Edhal. The
Belzdek reports negative."
So the woman had lied. Caradoc was not surprised; he had expected
nothing less. Bochner could have been mistaken, or could have lied in
turn for some devious reason of his own. A matter of small probability,
but even though small, it existed and had to be taken into account. As
all things had to be taken into account, each given a measure of
relative importance and relevance, each set against all other available
facts in order to arrive at an extrapolated prediction.
An exercise of a mind chosen and trained by the Cyclan, which judged
intellectual ability to be prized above all else.
Again, Caradoc studied the glimmering display, mind active as he
assessed various probabilities, traced various paths between the stars.
Only when he had exhausted all applicable combinations did he step back
and head toward the door leading to the small private room placed at
his disposal by those who ran the Hafal-Glych for the combine's true
owners.
"Total seal," said Caradoc. "I am not to be disturbed for any
reason."
"Master." The acolyte bowed and moved to take up his position
outside the door. His life would be spent in guarding it, should the
need arise.
Within the room, Caradoc touched the wide bracelet banding his left
wrist. Invisible energy streamed from it, creating a zone of force
through which no electronic eye or ear could operate. An added
precaution to ensure his absolute privacy, as was the curtained window
and the locked and guarded door.
Taking his place on a narrow cot, Caradoc closed his eyes and
concentrated on the Samatchazi formulae. Gradually, his senses blurred
and lost their function. Had he opened his eyes he would have been
blind. Isolated in the prison of his skull, his mind ceased to be
irritated by external stimuli and by means of the self-induced sensory
deprivation, became a thing of pure intellect; its reasoning awareness
the only conscious link with life. Only then did the engrafted Homochon
elements become roused from quiescence. Rapport was soon established.
Caradoc took on a new dimension of life.
It was as if his mind had expanded to become a shimmering bubble
which drifted among a host of other bubbles, all resplendent in
variegated colors. A universe filled with glowing beauty which merged
and wended one against the other to swirl and adopt new and
ever-changing patterns of mathematical symmetry. Light which burned
away the darkness of ignorance. Colors which expanded the visual
spectrum. Form which held content. Content which held truth. Truth
fashioned in a web which spanned the universe of which he was a living,
active part. A part even as, at the same time, he was the whole. A
bubble among other bubbles which were one bubble reflected to infinity.
At the heart of the shimmering beauty, at the very epicenter of the
shifting patterns, rested the headquarters of the Cyclan. Buried far
beneath the surface of a remote world, the central intelligence
absorbed his knowledge as a desert absorbs water. A mental
communication of almost instantaneous transference against which
mechanical means of supralight contact were the merest crawl.
A moment, and then it was over.
The rest was sheer enjoyment, a mental intoxication which flooded
his being and filled his brain with dancing motes of euphoric delight.
Always was this period after rapport during which the Homochon elements
sank back into quiescence and the machinery of his body began to
realign itself with mental harmony. Caradoc floated in an ebon
nothingness while he experienced strange, unlived situations, scraps of
memory, fragments of exotic experiences, memories filled with outrй
images—the residue of other intelligences, the overflow of other minds.
It came from the aura surrounding the tremendous installation of
central intelligence, the radiated power of the great cybernetic
complex which was the heart of the Cyclan. One day, he would be a part
of that installation. His body would age and fail but his brain would
be saved, removed from his skull and joined in series with the millions
of other brains taken from cybers who had lived before him and now
continued to live as disembodied brains in vats of nutrient fluid. He
would live as they lived, totally divorced from the irking irritations
of the body, able to concentrate on matters of pure thought. A time of
endless tranquility in which he and they would work to solve each and
every problem of the galaxy.
The reward of every cyber, but one which would be denied to him
should he fail.
Opening his eyes, Caradoc stared at the ceiling, waiting for his
motor functions to reach optimum before rising from the couch. A touch,
and the bracelet was deactivated. The acolyte bowed as he left the room
and entered the chamber to stand once again before the display.
"Master?"
The acolyte was bold, but Caradoc could appreciate his interest. And
no potential cyber could be other than proudly alert—a trait to be
encouraged as long as that pride did not usurp respect.
He said, "Verification of the report from the
Belzdek.
Negative as stated. The
Wilke and the
Ychale have
been eliminated." Reports from cybers fed through central intelligence
and passed on directly to his brain. Another report which he did not
mention and an urgency about which he would think later.
"Which leaves the
Entil and the
Frame, master."
"Both traders and both operating in the Quillian Sector." Caradoc
looked at the acolyte. It was never too soon to test the desired
ability, and never a mistake to encourage its development. Practice in
extrapolation, as in so many other things, led to perfection. "Your
conclusions?"
For a moment the youth hesitated, then made his decision. "The
Entil
master."
A guess? If so, the habit must be eliminated. If not, the steps
leading to the deduction could be elucidated.
"Explain."
"Both vessels are traders, master, but the
Frame headed
initially for Pontia. From there, it would be logical for it to make
for Ninik, and then on to Swenna."
"Why?"
"The relative values of available cargoes. Pontia is a producer of
leathers, oils, furs and feathers, articles of bone, concentrates of
glandular excretions. There is a market for such things on Ninik.
There, a cargo of tools and electronic components could be bought for
sale on Swenna."
"Which is mostly an agricultural world." Caradoc nodded. The
reasoning had been sound, but it betrayed a simplistic grasp of the
essential elements of the situation. "And from Swenna, the
Frame
would have headed outward to the edge of the Quillian Sector? Correct?"
"Yes, master."
"Unless, of course, a cargo of high value was offered for immediate
transport to a different world than those which you mentioned. Or a
group of passengers bought a charter. Or the captain, because of some
intuition, made a diversion. Or a local electronic storm forced the
navigator to change course." Or that Dumarest, and the luck riding with
him, had, by his mere presence, altered the natural sequence of logical
events and introduced a "wild" factor, as he seemed to have done so
often before; a thing Caradoc didn't mention. Instead he continued,
"You appreciate how the most obvious pattern can be distorted by the
smallest of unexpected events. Such events must always be included in
any prediction you may make. In this case, however, you are correct.
Dumarest is not on the
Frame."
And had never been on it—a fact he had gained from his recent
contact with central intelligence. Which meant that unless he had left
the vessel, Dumarest must still be on the
Entil.
Caradoc took a step closer to the shimmering display. Somewhere
among the suns, the dots representing the ship would be moving, halting
at worlds which he saw only as minute flecks of color. Short journeys,
some taking only a few subjective hours. Short stopovers—no trader made
a profit by hugging dirt. Destinations determined by the availability
of cargoes or the needs of paying passengers. The ship moving in a
pattern so erratic as to be almost purely random.
And, hunting it, Leo Bochner was intent on finding his prey.
He stood beneath a sky of maroon shot with clouds of umber, which
shifted to burn with abrupt, coruscating brilliance catching the eye
and filling the heavens with breathtaking splendor. Clouds made of
millions of reflective particles which caught the rays of the rising
sun and hurled them to all sides in sheets and blazes of luminous
effulgence. A kaleidoscope of broken rainbows which would dimmish as
the day progressed and the dawn wind died, to return at sunset when
again the winds would blow and the drifting mirrors would paint the
firmament with poetry in light. An artist's dream and an awesome
spectacle which, even now, was being recorded for the inhabitants of a
mist-shrouded world a score of parsecs distant.
Bochner strolled to where Gale Andrei sat with her recording
apparatus, her slim, lithe figure snug in form-fitting fabrics, the
material delineating her petite femininity. A figure overwhelmed, it
seemed, by the bulk of the apparatus which aimed wide lenses at the
sky; an impression corrected by the deft motion of her slender hands as
she adjusted verniers. The machine was the servant, and the woman its
master, as she worked to balance scope and intensity. Too high a
register in the lower end of the spectrum and the shimmering, ethereal
loveliness of the violets would be dulled. Too much emphasis on the
blues and the somber sullenness of the reds would lose their impact.
Too high a level of brilliance would lessen fine detail and too dark an
image would blunt sensory appreciation.
An attention to detail which had provided her with fame and wealth
and an enviable reputation.
Bochner waited until she finally sighed and sat back in her chair,
massaging her hands to ease the tension of tired muscles.
"Success, Gale?"
"Leo!" She smiled as she saw him. "Yes, I think so. Did you catch
that interplay over the western horizon a few minutes ago? It was
superb! That recording alone will sell at least a hundred thousand
copies on Eltania."
"And on Phenge?"
"Phenge? No."
"A world of fog and misty shadows?"
"You'd think they'd snap up anything connected with light and
beauty," she admitted. "I made that mistake five years ago—a recording
of the ice waterfalls of Brell. The sun hits them at just the right
angle twice a year, and if conditions are right, the result is
fantastic. All the colors ever imagined mixed in the wildest profusion.
It took me two years to get it just right, and when I did, I headed
straight for Phenge. They weren't interested. They liked their mist and
shadows and darkness and didn't want brightness and color. I doubt if I
sold more than a score of recordings. Well, a girl learns."
"We all learn." Bochner glanced at the sky. "But some of us tend to
forget. You've been out here since long before dawn and it's time you
had something to eat. I've ordered a meal for the two of us and it's
waiting for you to enjoy it. Ready?"
She hesitated, searching the sky, then rose from her chair and
shrugged.
"You're right, Leo. I'll get nothing more until sunset. No!"
She moved to prevent him lifting her equipment. "I'll manage."
A proud woman, he thought, as he followed her to the hotel. And a
strong one. She carried the heavy apparatus with apparent ease. As he
would carry his own if he was on a hunt, the pack on his back and the
rifle at the ready, magazine loaded, sights adjusted, safety catch
released—the mechanism an extension of himself as the missile it could
hurl was an extension of his arm, his will.
To kill. To wait and savor the moment. To feel the godlike power
cradled in his arms. To watch the target—the woman, for example. If he
were about to shoot her, where would he aim? A few inches above the
upper curve of her buttocks, he decided. The bullet sent to drive into
the slight concavity at the base of her spine. To smash, to break, to
shock, to kill. She would fall instantly, her head unmarked and
suitable for mounting as a trophy.
He could visualize it set against its background of polished wood.
A small, round head, wreathed in a soft cloud of rich, brown hair.
The eyes would stare from beneath slanting eyebrows, brown and sharply
appraising, touched by a master hand to give them the semblance of
life. The mouth would be slightly open to reveal the inner gleam of
neat, white teeth, the lips themselves full and intriguing in their
implied sensuality. The jut of the chin, with its shallow cleft. The
slender column of the neck. The ears. The high forehead. The…
"Leo!" He blinked, instantly alert, as she called to him.
"Daydreaming?"
"Thinking. Wondering how much longer we shall have to wait."
"It can't be long now." She set down her equipment and stretched as
if unconscious of the way the gesture enhanced the firm thrust of her
breasts. "Today, tomorrow, what does it matter?"
"It doesn't, if you're working." Bochner led the way to where a
table stood beside a window, its surface loaded with glass and cutlery,
china and covered dishes. As they sat, a waiter hurried forward to pour
them both cups of fragrant tisane. "But what is there for me to do on
Kumetat? If any game exists in the wilderness, it is small and
relatively harmless. Suitable only for the training of beginners in the
art of assessing the environment and location of the lair."
"And the stalk?"
He glanced at her and smiled. "The stalk! What can be better? The
art of pitting your mind and strength, your skill and cunning, against
another. A beast which would kill you if given the chance. A creature
armed and armored by nature against which you are weak and defenseless
aside from your own intelligence, the power of your mind."
"And, naturally, of your gun," she said dryly. "We must never forget
the gun, must we?"
"You don't approve?"
"Of killing animals? No."
"Of hunting?"
"Of a stalk where, as you say, it is mind pitted against mind and
cunning against cunning, yes. My father used to hunt when I was young
and he took me with him when I was old enough to keep up. But he never
carried a gun. He used a camera. It was enough to get up close and
record the event. The fun, he used to say, was in the chase. The stalk.
Any fool can kill."
He said blandly, "Of course. Now, may a fool offer you some
refreshment? Slices of meat, cooked in a piquant sauce, and highly
recommended by the chef? This compote of fruits, honey and nuts? A
slice of bread coated with spiced seeds? An egg—they are worth trying.
Or—" He broke off, looking at the hand she had placed on his own.
"Leo, I'm sorry."
"For calling me a fool?"
"You're not that, and we both know it. It's just that, well, a man
with a gun never seems to give an animal a sporting chance. He stands
back and fires and that's it, if he's any shot at all. Where's the
danger?"
"For a man facing a beast which can't reach or hurt him—none," he
admitted. "Such work is butchery. But to hunt a beast you must hit in
exactly the right place with the single shot which is all time will
allow, and first to track it to a point where it is at home and you are
not—that isn't work for fools."
"Or for men?"
Too late, she tried to cover her distaste and, for a moment, he felt
the anger rise within him; the burning rage which had always been his
unconscious reaction to criticism and which, uncontrolled, could lead
him to kill. Had led him to kill; the act itself a catharsis, easing as
it cleansed—a luxury he could not at this time afford. Yet, it was hard
to master his anger. That this mere recorder of transient spectacles
should dare to deride him and what he represented! To mock the grim
essentials of life itself! To ignore the fundamental truth which had
accompanied mankind from the beginning and would stay with him until
the end. How could she be such an ignorant fool?
And yet, looking at her as he reached for syrup and poured it over
the chopped vegetables and prepared cereal in his bowl, he found it
difficult to recognize her stupidity. Had the words been a mask? A
test? A probe to trigger a reaction? Was she also, in her way, a
hunter, and he her prey? Was she the bait skillfully offered to be
withdrawn should he strike too fast or come too close?
Inwardly, he bared his teeth in a smile which was a tiger's snarl.
If so, she had met her match. It was a game in which he did not lack
experience.
He said, "Men do what they must. Some fight. Some hunt. Some kill.
Always there must be those who hunt and those who are hunted. It is a
law of nature."
"Yes," she said, and added in a peculiarly strained tone, "Life is a
continuous act of violence."
"Of course. To live, it is necessary to kill." He gestured at the
table, the plate of eggs, the dish of meat. The movement left no need
for words. "We grow too serious. You record the beauty which you see
and I, too, in a way, seek to provide a similar experience to those who
are willing to pay for it. For death, in essence, is also beauty. As
all great catastrophes are; fires, floods, volcanoes—"
"Destroyers," she said, musingly. "And I suppose the extinction of a
personal universe could be regarded in such a light. After all, to the
one involved, no catastrophe could be greater. The total erasure of all
a living thing held to be real. An end. A termination." She shivered
despite the warmth of the day. "Let's not talk about it."
A reluctance which did not match Bochner's assessment of her
character. She was nothing if not strong, yet she had revealed a
certain sensitivity he found interesting. Was it a mask to hide her
real personality?
He remembered a predator on Rhius which spread false trails of
pungent scent when pursued; exudations which contained subtle
pheromones so that, entranced, those intent on the kill suddenly found
themselves helpless victims to their imagined prey.
Was the girl such a one?
Did it matter if she was?
The afternoon, he decided, after she had bathed and changed and
taken a little rest. When the sun had passed its zenith and the air
still with sultry heat. She would be bored, restless, willing to
indulge in a new experience. Intrigued by his attentions, and
half expecting him to call, as call he would. To sit in her room, her
lair, to talk with her for awhile, to touch, to let the ancient magic
work its biological charm and, even if she struggled, he would take
her. He would make his symbolical kill.
But before the meal was over, the air quivered to the roar of
manmade thunder as the
Entil came in to land.
Chapter Six
The dancer still rode with them, as did the seller of nostrums and
the dealer in items of death. The engineers had gone together with the
time-served contract man, a scarred mercenary taking their place. Charl
Zeda was a man who had lost a hard-won stake in a barren mine and was
now headed back to richer worlds, whose rulers could afford the luxury
of war.
Sitting beside the minor historian, he scowled at his cards. The
game was poker and he did not play it well.
"Two," he said. "No, make it three."
A pair then, and he'd decided against holding a kicker. Dumarest
dealt, watching as the man picked up the cards, noting the scarred
face, the eyes, the hands. The face was a mask, the eyes blinded
windows, but the hands betrayed him. He had not improved his hand.
"You?"
The historian took one. The dancer two. The dealer in death had
passed, and so had Fele Roster. Gale Andrei had not joined the play.
Leo Bochner said, "I'll play these."
A bluff? It matched the impression Dumarest had of the man. He had
not opened the bidding but that meant little—a man with a pat hand
could have free choice. He had raised before the discards, a small sum
which bought him the right to raise again if given the chance, but the
others had merely called. Now he sat, his smooth face bland, his eyes a
little amused, as if he were an adult pandering to children. A man
killing time and unconcerned whether or not he won. A man who could be
trying to buy the pot.
Dumarest glanced at it, then at his own hand. The three lords he
held should win if his calculations had been correct. The single card
the historian had drawn showed he held two pairs, or had tried to fill
a flush or complete a straight. From his reaction he had done neither
nor had he matched either of his pairs. The dancer had played true to
form, taking a wild chance and hoping for impossible odds to favor her
hand. She could have gained similar cards to his own, but they would be
weaker. Bochner was the unknown factor.
Dumarest watched him while appearing to study his cards. A
hunter, now heading to worlds outside the Quillian Sector—the
information he'd gained about the man had been small. His appearance
told more; tall, smooth, his face bland, only the eyes gave a hint as
to his nature. Eyes which were too steady, which held too long, as if
the man were afraid ever to lessen his attention, as if he had long
since learned that nothing was quite what it seemed. The eyes of a man
who emitted a perpetual challenge—the holding of a stare until the
other dropped his eyes.
And then?
Dumarest had met others with such a trait; fighters risking their
lives in the arena with ten-inch naked blades. Men who had developed
tricks in order to survive, who would hold a stare and maintain it
until their opponents looked away, darting in as they did so, taking
advantage of the movement to strike, to kill, to win.
But the man was a hunter, a friend of the woman, Gale Andrei, her
lover, perhaps. It was natural that a hunter should have such eyes.
Natural that he had the ability to sit as if made of stone. Natural
that he should have been waiting on Kumetat?
The mercenary had opened. Now he thrust money into the pot.
"Ten."
The historian hesitated, then threw in his hand. The dancer raised,
light flashing from her gemmed hands as she doubled the bet. Bochner
glanced at Dumarest.
"No limit?"
"None."
"Then I'll call and raise one hundred."
"You bastard!" Furious, the dancer threw down her cards. She had
quit out of turn but no one objected. "Players like you ruin the game!"
Bochner ignored her. Ignored, too, the mercenary who had dropped his
cards to the baize and was obviously waiting to throw them in. "Well,
Earl?"
On the face of it, a simple request as to whether Dumarest would
call, raise or stack his hand, but meeting the cool appraisal of
Bochner's eyes, he sensed it to be far more than that. Would he meet
the
challenge? Call the potential bluff? Face the enemy or run? Use his own
skill and cunning to match that of his adversary? Was he willing to
take a risk? Did he prefer always to be safe? Dared he admit the
possibility of defeat?
Did he have courage? Did he have guts?
Dumarest checked the pot. Bochner's raise had almost doubled it
which meant allowing for what he'd put in earlier, he would be getting
back over fifty per cent return on his money. A good investment for a
few minutes work, and one favored by gamblers who saw a chance to use
the weight of their money to buy the pot.
Dumarest said, "I'll call and raise another hundred."
A chance, but a calculated one, and it was time to discover the
man's method of play. His hand could be stronger, but he had drawn only
one card and Bochner could think he held less than he did. A single
pair, even—a bluff took many forms.
"A hundred?" Bochner pursed his lips, one hand falling to toy with
the coins before him, his eyes never leaving Dumarest's face. An old
trick, to clink metal or rustle paper or allow chips to make their
small drummings while watch was kept for the small, telltale signs of
betrayal. The tension of the lips, the movements of the eyes, the
impatience, the sweat, the very odor of a man under tension, of a man
thirsting for the kill. "A hundred," he said again, this time not
making it a question. Coins rose in his hand, "I think, in that case,
I'll—well, I'll just give it to you."
"You quit?" The dancer grabbed at his cards. "What did you have?"
A blur and Bochner's hand was on her own, the fingers hard against
her flesh, twisting so as to turn the ringed fingers down against the
table.
"No," he said. "You don't see my cards. No one sees them."
"My wrist! You're hurting me!"
She nibbed at the bruised flesh as Bochner released her hand then
rose, fuming, to storm from the salon and into her cabin. Fele Roster
rose and looked down at the others.
"I'd better follow her. There could be something I could do."
"Poison her," suggested the mercenary. "Some people live too long."
"She's no longer young, and worried, and not too well." The seller
of nostrums backed from the table. "I've a compound which can bring her
sleep and pleasant dreams. An illusion of youth which will not last,
but will serve to ease her hurts. And you, sir," he glared at Bochner.
"Perhaps you should remember that your mother was a woman and all women
are worthy of a little consideration."
"A fool," said Charl Zeda, dispassionately, as the man left the
salon. "He loves what was and now can never be. A woman long past her
prime, with only the remnants of a once lovely body to commend her.
Well, if you can't afford the cake, you can at least enjoy the crumbs."
"Fele is a romantic," said Shan Threnond. "He deals in charms and
magic and has come to believe in the potency of an incantation. True,
such things work with the yokels who come to gawk at his tricks at
carnivals and fairs, but at such times, when does a love philter not
work? A vial of colored water, a muttered spell, and nature will take
care of the rest. It is much the same with his salves and lotions, his
powders and pills and capsules, his compounds and nostrums. Chemicals
mixed with herbs and natural oils which sting and smell and titivate
and which, together with time, will either kill or cure."
"Unlike your own wares," said the historian dryly, "which only kill."
"Which protect," corrected the dealer. "Which are a precaution
against a time of need." To Bochner, he said, "I noticed the way in
which you twisted the woman's hand. Her rings?"
"I've seen rings like those before," said Bochner. "And I know how
spiteful such a woman can be. There are those with faces marred by acid
thrown by such as her. I wanted to keep mine intact."
"And your life and that of your lady?" Threnond glanced at Gale
Andrei. "I must show you my wares. If nothing else, they will be of
interest to a man like yourself, and the rings make appreciated gifts.
Later, perhaps?"
"Later." Bochner looked at the cards. "Are we still playing?"
"You might be, I'm not." Charl Zeda leaned back in his chair,
stretching. "A wise man knows when his luck has deserted him."
"Or when it rides with him?"
"True," admitted the mercenary. "Like that time on Tchang when the
charge of my laser had bled and I only had an automatic gun and a score
of cartridges between me and what I knew was extinction. When I ran
into an enemy patrol, I tried to open fire and the damned thing jammed
solid. I thought I was dead for sure, but what I didn't know was that
peace had been signed shortly before and, had I hit anyone, I'd have
been impaled for breaking the truce. That was good luck and I tried to
ride it by buying that damned mine. I thought I finally had it made;
just work a little, dig out some metal, hire some men to dig out more
and I'd live easy the rest of my life. But I was cheated. Even so, I
was still lucky. If I hadn't bought the mine I'd have been with my old
company when they got themselves wiped out with flames in the
Hitach-Lentil war on Loom." He sat, brooding, his seamed face sagging,
suddenly old. "Flamers," he whispered. "A hell of a way to go."
Men screaming, their clothing a mass of flame, skin bursting into a
mass of oozing blisters, blood smoking as it spouted from ruptured
veins. Eyes gone. Feet destroyed. Lungs gone. Hands turned into shreds
of brittle, yet still living, bone. Feet destroyed. Faces.
Unsteadily he rose and crossed the room toward the spigots, the
water, the basic which provided a liquid diet, the weak wine which, too
slowly, could bring a blessed oblivion.
The recording had ended; the thin, keening notes accompanied by the
muffled beat of drums had died into silence and now only the smoke
remained. Jumoke drew it deeply into his lungs, savoring its bite, the
euphoria it would give, the forgetfulness. And yet, some things refused
to die; the touch of a hand, a smile, the feel of warm, lovely flesh.
A whispered word, a promise implied if not spoken, a yearning which was
like a pain.
Was a pain. One which tore at his heart and stung his eyes with
unshed tears; which closed about the innermost core of his being so
that, in his mind, he cried out for the universe to hear.
Dilys—
I love you! I love you!
And would always love her. Would always want her with a need which
went beyond sane logic and calculated reason. His woman. His life.
The smoke curled about his face, fumes rising from the can before
which he squatted, chemical heat releasing the vapors from exotic
compounds, a mist which should have brought a roseate glow. One
destroyed now by the pounding, the echo of drums, the voice which rose
then exploded as Allain burst into the cabin.
"Jumoke! Are you crazy? The Old Man would kill you if he saw you
like this."
The Old Man? Which old man? Who was talking and why? Questions which
shattered like broken glass as the steward grabbed him, lifted him,
thrust his head beneath a faucet and let a mist of water spray over
head and neck as he snuffed the can. Glass which became reality to the
sting of astringent odors as Allain thrust something beneath his nose,
became pain as the man slapped his face, turned into anger at his
cursing.
"That's enough!"
"Like hell it is! You know what you're doing? It's my neck too,
remember. You dumb bastard, I've a mind to—"
"I said that's enough!" Jumoke straightened, water dewing his face,
vanishing as he used the towel Allain handed to him. "What's the
matter? Trouble?"
"You're due to go on duty."
"So soon?"
"You should have reported ten minutes ago. Varn sent me to get you."
Allain glanced at the can with its gaudy label and insidious contents.
"I'll tell him you overslept if he should ask, and you'd better tell
him the same. But if you try a stupid thing like this again, I'll break
both your arms. You'd better believe that."
"I want no favors from you."
"You're getting them, just the same." Stepping closer, Allain said
quietly, "Get a grip on yourself, man. You can't act like this in the
Rift and you know it. Still less, in the Quillian Sector. If yon want
to commit suicide, then wait until after we've
landed."
Jumoke said coldly, "You forget yourself. I'm the navigator and
you're nothing but a damned steward."
"I'm a partner, and even if I wasn't I wouldn't let a friend make
such a fool of himself. What is it, man? Can't you get her out of your
mind?"
He knew, of course, as Gresham had known and Egulus must know. How
could they have remained ignorant when his happiness had illuminated
the ship? When his world had been complete and he had been free of the
pain which rode him now. The loss. The yearning. The endless, empty
yearning.
Damn her!
Damn her all to hell!
And damn Dumarest with her!
Egulus stared hard at him as Jumoke entered the control room. The
captain looked tired, eyes betraying the strain he was under, the need
to remain constantly alert, which was the price of survival for any
officer traversing the Rift.
"You're late."
"I know, Varn. I'm sorry. I overslept."
Egulus accepted the lie, though his nostrils twitched as the
navigator passed him to take his place in the main chair. A captain
needed to know what went on in his vessel and Egulus was no fool, but
there was a time to be hard and a time to compromise. And now, more
than ever, he needed the navigator.
"We're running into a lot of distortion," he said. "Those suns are
playing up and space is a mess. Nodes and vortexes all over the place.
We'd best cut shifts so as to remain alert. I'll send Allain up with
something to help."
Drugs to wash away the fatigue and the residue of the vapors.
Chemicals to steal time from the need to sleep, a debt which would have
to be paid for later but which would buy them a higher margin of
safety. A common practice in dangerous areas of space.
"I'll be all right."
"Did I suggest otherwise?"
"You don't have to worry about me, Varn." Jumoke turned to meet the
captain's eyes. "Go and get some rest now."
"Yes," said Egulus. "Yes, I guess you're right. Rest is what I need."
Rest and more crew, so as to lessen the burden, and the sense to
quit the game while he was still ahead. While he still had his life. A
familiar thought, and one he treasured like an old friend, but one he
would never listen to when the danger was past. As the others, whose
bodies drifted in the Rift, hadn't listened. Captains who had gambled
once too often. Ships which had crumpled like paper bags when caught in
the invisible jaws of the monster which lurked always just beyond the
hull.
Alone, Jumoke checked the instruments, eyes moving with the ease of
long practice from dial to meter, from digital readout to the shades of
color seething behind graduated scales. Sensors which, even now, were
questing space around and ahead. Probes which checked the local
stresses and warned of opposed potentials. Electronic eyes which guided
the hurtling vessel through the vagaries of the plus-C universe through
which it moved, powered and protected by the shimmering haze of its
Erhaft field.
A touch and a meter swung to optimum, a minor adjustment and a dial
settled from its nervous twitching. Things done even as Jumoke
breathed, actions taken without the hampering need for conscious
thought. A game he played to beat the computer which would have made
the necessary correction had the variation grown dangerously wild.
The control room was dimly lit, the glow of telltales like colorful,
watching eyes, the soft susurration of the air-circulators, the
breathing of a thing alive. It was easy to imagine the room as being a
womb, the ship as a living thing. A temptation to give it
anthropomorphic attributes. A woman with the computer for a brain and
the engines for a heart. The sensors, stalked and staring eyes. The
probes, reaching hands. The crew, the seed carried in her belly.
Would he give her a child?
The thought was like the thrust of a knife into his guts, a blade
which turned and dragged and spilled his life so that he doubled and
felt the vomit rise in his throat.
Not that! Dear God, not that!
Because that would be the end and the death of all hope that she
would come back to him, to rest at his side as she had done so often
before, to let his hands rove over her soft and tender body, touching,
fondling, caressing, lingering on the swell of breasts and the curve of
thighs, the softness between them, the moist wonder which had once been
his.
Madness. The whine of a child. He knew it, and knowing it, could do
nothing about it, for what else was a man obsessed but a crying child?
One who wanted more than could be given—and yet he asked so little. The
opportunity to love, to worship, to share.
A hope which had died even as he voiced it.
Leaning back, he saw her face painted against the screens, the
incredible splendor of the universe they portrayed; the stars and
clouds, the sheets of luminescence and curtains of radiance. The fuzz
of distant nebulae, the splinters and pulses and flares. Loveliness to
match her own. A coldness she shared.
"No, Jumoke." He had cringed to the iron resolve of her tone. "No."
"But, Dilys, where's the harm? We've known each other for so long
and you know I love you. Why let a stranger ruin what we have between
us?"
"Had," she corrected. "We've nothing now, Jumoke."
"I—we, for God's sake, Dilys! Must I beg? All right, I'm begging. I
need you. Please!"
"No." Then, looking at him, she had softened a little. "We shared
something, yes, but that was all. It was a physical thing, a
convenience, if you like. We both needed release and each could give it
to the other. But now you ask too much."
"Dilys—"
"I'm not a whore!"
"Did I say you were? But on Aclyte and Nyard women take multiple
husbands. They are shared by the men. Do I ask for so much?"
"You ask too much."
"But—" He had sought for words with which to win her. A phrase to
buy happiness. "Dumarest is just a man, as I am. What makes him so
different?"
"I love him." She had reached out then, and touched his cheek, her
fingers burning even as they felt like ice. "I love him, Jumoke. I love
him!"
The face vanished and he sank into hell.
He would never win her back. Never again feel the pride he had
known. Never again the happiness. She had taken them from him and given
them to another. Dumarest. Jumoke lifted his
hands and looked at them, clenched, the skin taut over the knuckles.
Dumarest, Dumarest and Dilys— he wished both were dead.
"Now!" Gale Andrei turned a switch and the salon bloomed with light.
"The Garden of Emdale," she said. "It is one of my favorites."
Which was why she carried the recording with her—much of what she
did and said was obvious, a trait Bochner had noted and assessed as a
part of her facade. One of apparent childish exuberance, probably
adopted to match her innocent face. But there was nothing innocent
about her as he now knew. Within the slight figure burned a mature
passion but both it and her body had left him curiously unsatisfied. A
trophy won, a symbolical kill made, yet there had been small joy in the
victory. Like swatting a fly, it had been too easy. An act performed
from boredom, and as an aid to his assumed character. A prop he wished
he had done without.
But, in other ways, the woman had skill.
"It's beautiful!" The dancer was entranced. She spun, arms extended,
the transformation of the salon giving her an elfin grace. "Beautiful!"
Even Charl Zeda had to agree, his voice gruff as he added to her
praise. "It's fantastic! My dear, allow me to congratulate you. To
honor you in the accustomed manner."
She turned her lips from his kiss, allowing him only to touch her
cheek and, watching, Bochner could sense her tension, the repugnance
she felt towards the old mercenary. Would she have reacted the same if
Dumarest had offered his salutation?
Bochner glanced to where he stood behind the table, his back to the
wall. The sight pleased him; the stance was that of a cautious man.
Only when he had marked his prey did the hunter allow himself to study
the hologram which had been created by the projector and the woman's
art.
Gale had chosen well. On all sides stood a profusion of flowers
touched with a multitude of hues, reds and greens and blues merging
with violets and scarlets and purples and all degrees of the shades
between. Alone, that would have been impressive, but the blooms were in
motion, kissed by an unfelt breeze, their cups the targets for
wide-winged insects which flashed and shimmered, to hang poised to
flash again in metallic gleams which entranced the eye as their drone
excited the ear.
And, almost, he could smell the flowers.
They filled his vision, numbing his eyes with their form and
brilliance, a poem in color augmented by the insects so that it was
hard not just to sit and stare and let the tide of beauty roll over him
and become one with the moment. He became aware that the salon was
silent aside from the thin hum of the insects. Almost, it could have
been filled with the dead. Then he saw the historian, the man's eyes
enormous in his pallid face, a creature stunned and enamored by
loveliness beyond all his previous experience.
Quietly, Bochner moved from the salon, heading down the passage,
past the cabin he occupied, past the one shared by the mercenary and
historian, the one in which Andrei slept when she chose to rest alone,
the one hired by the dancer, that which formed the steward's office to
halt at the door which gave onto Dumarest's quarters. It swung open as
he manipulated the lock, and he stepped inside to stand as his eyes
searched the compartment.
Here? Would it be here? The thing Dumarest owned which made him so
valuable to the Cyclan that they had hired him to hunt him down.
He saw nothing but the usual furnishings; the bed, the cabinet, the
washbowl with its spray faucet. A chair stood against the bulkhead and
a small boxlike container rested to the side of the bed, close to the
head. It held a door, which he opened. Behind lay gray plastic
clothing, neatly folded, high boots of matching color, a knife.
Bochner lifted it and straightened as he examined the weapon.
It was a tool designed for service, the blade nine-inches long,
curved, the reverse side sweeping in a sharper curve so as to form a
vicious, needle-point. The guard was smooth on the inside, rough on the
outside with a pattern of engraved lines, a means of catching an
opposed blade. The hilt was shaped, wrapped with plastic, topped with a
rounded pommel. Bochner examined it, twisting it, finding it firm and
noting the thin line of weld lying in the junction of pommel and hilt.
He balanced it in his palm, feeling the distribution of weight, the
heft. A good blade, he decided. One deadly in an experienced hand.
Along the edge, the light splintered to form a cloudlike haze—the sign
of sharpness, of keenness so well achieved that it equaled that of a
surgeon's scalpel.
"You! What are you doing here?" The woman was sharp. Bochner turned
as she entered the cabin, the knife poised in his hand. "That isn't
yours," Dilys accused. "What are you doing with it?"
"I was curious."
"Curious enough to break into another's cabin?"
"The door was open," he lied. "I glanced in as I passed and saw this
knife. I am a hunter and have an interest in weapons. An interest which
overcame my discretion, I'm afraid. I couldn't resist examining it.
Earl's?"
"Yes."
"As I thought. Dumarest is the kind of man who would know how to use
it. The kind of man I have a need of." He saw the flicker of interest
in her eyes and, replacing the knife, he closed the door of the boxlike
cabinet. Now, if he could get them both out of the cabin, the door
relocked and Dilys so intrigued that she would fail to mention the
incident to her lover, he would have won. "After you, my dear."
Impelled by his hand, she stepped outside and watched as he closed
the door. He was fortunate, the panel had a spring lock. The game won,
then, but the victory was nothing. It would be better if she warned
Dumarest—a quarry on its guard made for better sport. And yet, only a
fool made a stalk more difficult than it needed to be.
She said, "What did you mean when you said you needed a man like
Earl?"
The bait had been nibbled, gently he tightened the line.
"In my work. As you probably know, I am associated with a consortium
of speculators interested in expanding into wider fields. We cater to
those who like to hunt, and are always in need of men who have both
knowledge and experience in the field. Someone to arrange for various
safaris. To guide and guard our customers, not all of whom are as
knowledgeable as we would like." His smile and gesture made clear his
meaning. "Dumarest would be ideal. He is a man who inspires confidence
and seems to have an innate caution and an awareness of what needs to
be done when it needs to be done. A perfect hunter, guide, guardian and
teacher. On Persing, he—but what is the use?"
"Persing?"
"Yes. A world we are opening up for exploitation. It has magnificent
hills ideal for breeding predators and good cover for those who have a
wish to hunt them. A stalk, properly managed, could take days. We need
a manager, someone to oversee the workers, to maintain the beasts, to
decide on the hunts. In short, someone to take full charge. There is a
house of thirty rooms, the use of a raft, servants and the remuneration
is generous. That isn't taking into account the usual gifts made by
satisfied clients. And there is always the prospect of promotion."
"Which are…"
"Very good. As I told you, we are expanding and there is room for a
good man to climb high and reach the top. Frankly, I'd like Earl to be
that man, but I guess to hope for that is to hope for too much. Well,
that's the way it goes." Then, casually, he added, "Of course, he would
need to be married before we could consider him for the position."
"Married?"
"It makes for stability. A man with a wife and children is more
likely to stay than one who hasn't. You can see our point of view? To
furnish a large house, to make all the arrangements and then, because
of some passing fancy, to be let down—" His shrug was eloquent. "You
are close?"
He would have been a fool not to have known it but she could
appreciate his delicacy.
"We are friends, yes."
"He is a lucky man. Shall we join the others?"
Bochner took her arm, aware of her presence as he had never felt the
presence of another of her sex. Not simply because of her femininity,
which was strong, or her size, which was unusual, but because of
something to do with his own conditioning. The natural reaction of a
man who had felt superior, both in height and ability, to all others
for the majority of his life. It did not please him to feel dwarfed.
Yet, he maintained his smile. The woman was just another game,
another hunt. To bend her to his will, to manipulate, to delude, to
misguide, to dangle the lure of golden promises—all were part of the
sport.
As they walked down the passage, he said, "One thing, my dear, a
matter of confidence. I would not like Earl to know how eager I am to
obtain his services. A business precaution, you understand. It would be
best if he knew nothing of what I told you." Than, casually, he added,
"Has he ever spoken of leaving the
Entil?."
"No."
"But he surely doesn't intend to remain for long?"
"I—I don't know."
He caught the note of doubt, the inner worry which she must strive
to conceal, and felt increased amusement. How simple some people were.
How transparent was a woman in love.
"It must be in his mind," said Bochner. "A world he would like to
make his home. One he may have mentioned to you. Aaras, perhaps, or
Vien." Both were on the edge of the Sector, though still within the
Rift. Logical places for a man like Dumarest to make a change. "Swenna,
perhaps?"
"No," she said, a little too quickly. "The only world he's mentioned
is Earth."
"Earth?"
"He was joking, of course."
"Of course." Bochner yielded precedence as they reached the door
leading to the salon. "After you, my dear."
Allain came toward her as she stepped inside. He looked like a ghost
in a living garden; walking through the tumult of flowers, the glint of
metallic wings adding extra eyes to the tension of his face. He caught
her arm and drew her from the salon.
"Jumoke—have you seen him?"
"No." She sensed his urgency. "Is something wrong?"
"Yarn wants him. The instruments are acting all to hell, and he's
worried. Jumoke could be responsible. He—"
"Jumoke commit sabotage? That's impossible!"
"Once, yes, but now I'm not so sure." The steward was bitter. "He's
been eating smoke and God alone knows what other things. The man's
half-crazed and not even seeing straight. I've tried to cover for him,
but now he's gone too far. Have you seen him? I've checked the salon
but he isn't there. His cabin?"
"Maybe." She made her decision. "I'll look—he'll answer for me."
Answer, if he was inside and read more into her call than was
intended, but that was a problem to be settled later. Now, with the
ship in potential risk, there was no time for worry about personal
commitments. As a crew, all had to stick and operate together.
But he wasn't inside. The door remained closed and, when she opened
it with the master key, the cabin was empty aside from the acrid taint
of drugged vapors.
"Smoke," said Allain, grimly. "He must have hidden some away. I
thought I'd found every can."
"The instruments," she said. "Just what is the situation?"
"Bad. Yarn's doing his best, but Jumoke is the navigator. We're
off course as it is, and surrounded by trouble. At the best, days have
been added to the journey. The worst—" He didn't need to complete the
sentence. "Where the hell is he?"
A jerk gave the answer. A slight movement of the deck beneath their
feet, a twitch of the hull, a movement of the fabric itself, as if the
ship had shrugged within its skin.
Yarn Egulus felt it and reared in his chair, his face ghastly in the
subdued light of the telltales. The historian felt it and shrugged,
happy in his ignorance. Gale Andrei pursed her lips as the hologram
shook a little, then steadied to its former beauty. Bochner felt it and
guessed. Dumarest felt it and knew.
As did the dancer who halted the undulating movements of her arms,
the complex pattern she wove among the blaze of flowers to stand, mouth
open, the scarlet smear of a bloom casting the semblance of blood over
her throat and chest, a blotch which quivered as she screamed.
"The ship! My God, the ship! The field is down!"
Chapter Seven
Jumoke lay where he had died, looking very small now, a limp figure
with burned and blackened hands and a face which had one cheek pressed
hard against the bulk of the generator which he had ruined. A face
still tormented by the devils which had possessed him, one unrelaxed by
the peace he had hoped to gain.
"The bastard!" Allain was bitter. "If he wanted to die, why take us
with him?"
"He was crazy," said Dilys. "You said so yourself."
"And who sent him that way?" The steward's anger was the product of
fear. "You could have given in to him. Let him have you and kept him
sane."
"I'm not property. The ship doesn't own me."
"Where would have been the harm? You went with him before and you
knew how he felt. You could have lied, promised, given him hope. Damn
it, a kiss could have saved us!"
"That's enough," said Dumarest. "Dilys isn't at fault. If anyone is
to blame, it's you. You knew he was eating smoke. Why didn't you stop
him?"
"I tried."
"Like hell you tried!" Dilys flared with a sudden rage. "Did you
report it to Yarn? Did you tell anyone? Did you take precautions
against something like this happening?" She gestured to the body, the
machine. "Damn you, Allain. Damn you!"
Dumarest caught her lifted hand before she could send its palm
against the steward's cheek. For a moment, she struggled with him and
he felt the strength of her, the fear and anger which powered the
muscles beneath the skin, then, abruptly, she was against him, her face
pressed against his own, a dampness on her cheek.
"Earl! Oh, Earl!"
He held her, waiting for the moment to pass, knowing that until it
did, nothing constructive could be done. When she finally straightened,
he said, "How bad is the damage? Can it be fixed?"
"I don't know. I'll have to check."
"Then get on with it." Stopping, Dumarest gripped the body and swung
it to one side. "Allain, you'd better get back to the passengers. Give
them tranquilizers if they need them, and any lies which can give them
comfort. We've had a temporary breakdown which will take a little while
to fix. In the meantime, they can enjoy the hospitality of the ship.
Break out some spirits and strong wines. Euphoriants, too, and get that
woman to play more of her recordings."
"They aren't stupid, Earl. They know what it means once the field is
down."
As they all knew—knowledge which gave no peace of mind. Once the
shimmering haze of the Erhaft field was down the ship dropped to below
light speed, to drift in the immensity between the stars, to be
vulnerable to any wandering scrap of debris which might cross their
path—motes which could penetrate the hull and larger fragments which
would vent their kinetic energy in a fury which would turn metal into
vapor. And there were other dangers, less tangible, but more to be
feared. The impact of invisible energies which could twist and distort
the vessel and all within it, forces which were thick in the area they
now traversed.
"Dilys?"
"I'm working as fast as I can, Earl." She was at the generator,
tools spread in orderly confusion around her, hands grimed, as was her
face, her hair. She had stripped off her blouse and wore nothing above
the waist but the fabric confining her breasts. They, and the flesh of
back and shoulders, glistened with perspiration. "He'd loosed the
covers," she said. "Lifted them and put something inside. A scrap of
wire which he used to short out the coils."
"So?"
"Like Allain said, the poor devil was crazed. He must have wanted to
attract my attention in some way."
"He wanted to die."
"Perhaps not, Earl. He didn't know too much about generators. He
needn't have meant to do much damage."
"He wanted to die and take us with him." To Dumarest it was obvious
and he wondered why she would want to think of excuses for her
ex-lover. Because of that, perhaps, a reluctance to think ill of
someone who had been so close. "Is there anything I can do to help?"
For answer, she shook her head. He had done enough, dragging the
dead body into the hold and cycling it through the lock. Dead meat, fit
only to be dumped into the void, but once it had been a man and one she
could have saved had she been less harsh. Allain had been right. A kiss
could have saved them all.
A kiss, and a little less carelessness on her part.
Had she not left the engine room untended. Hadn't wandered down the
passage to enter Dumarest's cabin and waste time talking to Bochner.
Hadn't become enamored of the picture he had painted, the house and
prospects, the position he'd mentioned. The one dependent on marriage.
Would Earl have married her to make himself eligible?
Was he a man who could be bought?
Questions which now had no meaning. Looking into the interior of the
generator, she could see the damage which Jumoke had caused; delicate
installations now seared and blacked, insulation charred, surfaces
which should have gleamed like mirrors now dulled with the impact of
heat, stained by condensed vapors. Things which could be repaired, and
would be repaired if given the time, but the main problem was within
the triple helixes. Each set at right angles to the other, things of
delicate fabrication, matched to within five decimal places of
similarity. How badly had they been distorted?
It would take instruments to tell. Tests and calibrations, and more
tests with the instruments she had at hand and the knowledge she had
acquired. But, to retune them was another matter. To match them so they
would restore the field, was a matter of luck and skill and time. Luck,
in that they weren't too badly damaged. Skill, to sense and adjust and
manipulate and balance. Time, in which to work.
Time!
Egulus shook his head when Dumarest made his report.
"We haven't the time, Earl. That bastard did a good job on us. He
worked on the instruments before heading for the generator. I guess he
wanted to get us in any way he could."
The captain was being generous—Jumoke had only been interested in
killing the engineer and her new lover.
"Radio?"
"Out. I don't mean we just can't get messages in the Quillian
Sector. That's bad enough, but at least we might have been lucky. No.
The crazy idiot took care of that. Busted it all to hell and the spare
unit with it. I guess we should be thankful he didn't wreck the screens
while he was at it."
A small advantage, and of dubious merit. Had the screens been
wrecked they would have been "blind" but as it was, they could see the
cold hostility of the universe in which they now drifted helplessly.
See the flare of a nearby sun and the ugly corona around it, the
leaping prominences, the blotches of roiling vapors which gave it a
pocked appearance as if it were a thing alive and horribly diseased.
"We're heading towards it," said Egulus, "and without power we're
going to hit it. Jumoke's last gift to his friends and partners." His
hands closed as if he could feel a throat. "I was too gentle," he said
bitterly. "I smelled the stink of that smoke but never thought he would
be such a fool. To lose his head over a woman!"
"That's all you noticed? The smoke?"
"He was tense and withdrawn, but that's normal when in the Rift. To
make a living, we have to take chances and always something can go
wrong. It's worse in the Quillian Sector, but you know about that. We
make profits but we earn them." He ended bleakly. "Greed. It's killed
more men than anything else. The temptation to make an easy profit. To
take that one extra chance."
"Kumetat?"
"We didn't have to go there. I was going to give it a miss this time
and hit it on the way back in. Only there was a cargo, and how could I
refuse?"
An odd cargo for a desert world, Dumarest remembered, but odd things
were carried at times. And he'd had no choice but to stay with the
Entil.
The worlds at which it had touched had been too backward for plentiful
shipping. Too undeveloped for a man to earn the price of another
passage. Bad worlds on which to be stranded. Hard planets to easily
leave. Impossible places on which to hide.
"And if we hadn't got that cargo?"
"We'd be on Tullon by now. At least, that's where we were headed
until we touched at Kumetat. They had an urgent delivery for Mucianus.
A good world. One on the rim of the Sector and close to the edge of the
Rift. We could have stayed awhile, a day or two, maybe. There's always
a choice of cargoes." He ended bitterly, "Now it looks as if we're
going to roast in hell."
The Garden of Emdale had gone, the bright colors vanished, the
flowers, the darting insects, all had disappeared. They had been
followed by the chill mistiness of the Chephron Gorge, with its
souring walls and looming masses, its blurred details and rocks stained
and weathered with time and climate so as to give the appearance of
ranked and leering skulls. Other recordings had followed, and now she
sat engulfed by the glittering magic of the Elg Cavern. A place of
winking points of variegated hue as crystals caught and reflected a
mote of light, amplifying it, splintering it into a hundred component
parts, distorting it, filling the salon with a snowstorm of sparkles,
of eye-catching joy.
But now they gave her no pleasure. Nothing now could give her
pleasure. She was filled with the knowledge that she was to die.
What had she said to Bochner?
An end. An extinction. The total erasure of a personal universe. The
termination of existence.
And he had called it a form of beauty!
She looked to where she had seen him last, but failed to spot him in
the flickering showers of brilliance. At the table, perhaps? Talking to
Threnond about his wares? A stupidity, if he was—how could there be
interest now in instruments of death? Better to buy some of Fele
Roster's compounds. They, at least, could bring sweet dreams and
illusions and a release from the fear of death.
And she was afraid.
God, she was afraid!
"Here!" The mercenary loomed beside her, his scarred face grotesque
in the splintering glitters. He lifted the bottle in his hand and she
could smell the alcohol on his breath. "Have a drink," he urged. "The
steward's been generous. The best, and all free."
"No."
"Drugs then? He—"
"No," she said again, and then added, "Please, I'd rather sit alone."
"In the salon?" His tone was dry and she realized that he was far
less drunk then he seemed. "Haven't you a cabin?"
"Chart, you're an opportunist." The dancer had joined them, her eyes
glittering, mouth twisted in a smile. "But she's too young for you."
"I was offering her a drink."
"And asking for payment, eh?" She gave a harlot's laugh. "Reminding
her that time is short and not to be wasted. Asking about her cabin.
Hinting that one more experience can do her no harm and do you a lot of
good. Why her? Can't I give as much as she can?"
He said flatly, "You've a dirty mouth."
"To match your dirty hands! Mercenaries! Scum! Killers of women and
children! Murderers!" The slap of an open hand preceded her scream of
anger. "Bastard! You hit me! I'll—"
A scuffle, a muffled sound, and the mercenary swore before he
collapsed, his eyes vague, the bottle falling to spill its contents on
the floor. The dancer picked it up, laughing, lost in her drugged
euphoria. She had used the wrong ring, the man would recover and be
none the worse for his experience, but if he struck her again she would
make no mistake. A dart in his throat or one in his eye. One for the
uppity young bitch who played with light. And the third?
The third she would save for herself.
Allain said, "They're getting restless, Earl. I've given them drink
and drugs but they know there's little hope. People act oddly when they
know they're going to die. Some try to cram everything into the last
few days. Some just sit and look at their hands. Some pray. Some even
commit suicide. Can you understand that? They kill themselves because
they are certain they are going to die."
"Everyone has to die."
"That's what I mean. Why anticipate it?" The steward shrugged with
strained bravado. His face was a little too tense, his eyes a little
too bright, but he had a responsibility and recognized it. And some of
the hope he disseminated among the passengers had stuck. Death was
something which happened to others. Always it happened to others. "The
generator?"
"Nothing, as yet."
"Maybe if I helped?"
"You can't help." Dumarest, understanding, was patient. "It's all up
to Dilys."
She'd worked like a machine, drugs giving her a temporary reprieve
from the need to sleep, other compounds robbing tissue and nerve to
provide a chemical strength. Now, she took the steaming cup Dumarest
handed to her and gulped at the protein-rich fluid, sickly sweet with
glucose and laced with vitamins. A second cup of basic followed the
first. She waved aside a third.
"No more, Earl. You'll have me as fat as a pig."
"You need the energy. It's been a long time."
"Yes." She set down the container and glanced at the bulk of the
generator. Dark rings of fatigue circled her eyes and her hands held a
slight tremble. She looked at them, splaying the fingers, examining her
cracked nails, the tips stained with acid, torn with abrasives. "How
long, Earl? Five days?"
"Seven." A week, during which time she hadn't slept and had rarely
eaten. The food he had given her was the prelude to the exhausted sleep
which would follow. "Here." Dumarest handed her a glass filled with a
smoky amber fluid. "Brandy, and Allain tells me it's the best. From his
own private stock." He added, "He has reserved another bottle—one with
poison."
The final drink, but one which she knew he wouldn't share. Death,
when it came, would be met by Dumarest with open eyes. He would fight
it as he had fought it all his life. Facing impossible odds because, no
matter how high they were against him, there was always the chance
that, somehow, he could win.
Lifting the glass, she said, "You'll join me?"
"In a toast, yes." Dumarest raised a second glass. "To success!"
"I can't guarantee that. Let us drink to hope."
"To success," he insisted. "Nothing else will do."
A fact she knew too well, and she drank, slowly, feeling the warmth
of the spirit sting her mouth and throat and trace a warm path to her
stomach. Conscious, too, of the fatigue which dulled her mind and made
every muscle an aching irritation. Had she done all that needed to be
done? The cleaning? The coils? The connections? The adjustments? Had a
tool been overlooked? A scrap of wire? A shred of metal, or a fragment
of insulation? Work had slowed as the hours had passed and it was easy
to overlook the obvious when tired.
"Dilys?" She jerked, aware that she had been dozing, on the edge of
sleep. Dumarest said, "If you've finished your drink, let's find out
how good an engineer you are."
The drink—the remains rested in her glass and she emptied it with a
single swallow. A silent toast to the oblivion which could be waiting
at the turn of a switch. A silent prayer to the gods of chance on whose
laps they now all rested. Dumarest was right, they could use nothing
less than success.
Had she achieved it?
There was only one way to find out.
She took a step forward and swayed, and felt the edge of the
workbench press hard against her spine as she moved back against it.
She sagged, welcoming the support, shaking her head as Dumarest came
toward her.
"No, Earl, I can't. I'm beat You do it. Everything's set— just throw
the switches."
She watched as he obeyed, hearing the generator hum into life,
feeling a success which blazed through her so powerfully that she
straightened and smiled her triumph; a smile which died as the hum
faltered, to steady, to falter again.
"I've failed," she smiled dully. "I tried but I wasn't good enough.
The damned generator isn't going to last."
The place held the memory of summer flowers, of fields graced with
blossoms harvested by smiling girls, to be taken and treated and
condensed into vials of concentrated joy. Traces of perfume which held
the stamp of the one who had worn it Dilys, lying now on her bed, her
face flaccid, the curves of her figure like those of an erotic dream.
Dumarest tightened the restraints, which held her in broad bands of
yielding webbing to her cot. Extra thicknesses of mattresses lay
beneath her and he had arranged further padding so as to cocoon her
within the restraints. Her condition made his task easy; drugged, deep
in exhausted unconsciousness, she had barely stirred as he'd worked.
A woman who had burned herself out. Who had done her best and
discovered it wasn't good enough. An added ingredient to Jumoke's
revenge.
Outside the cabin Dumarest paused, looking along the passage. Allain
emerged from a door, curses following him fading as he closed the
panel. The dancer spitting her venom.
"She's drunk," the steward explained, "but not drunk enough. God,
what a hag!"
"You've put her in restraints?"
"I tried, but she fought like a wildcat. Well, to hell with her."
"Try again later," said Dumarest. "If she's drunk, she isn't
responsible. The rest?"
"Warned and as ready as they'll ever be. Now I'm going to look after
myself." The steward hesitated. "Do you think we'll make it?"
"If the generator holds out, yes."
"And if it doesn't?" Allain answered his own question. "We burn, we
drift, we starve. If we're lucky, we die quick."
"Or we live," said Dumarest. "Luck comes in two kinds."
"Sure, that's what I mean. With good luck we go out easy—with bad we
linger. Well, to hell with it. I'm going to hit the bottle."
He headed for his own cabin as Dumarest moved on. As he entered the
control room, Egulus said, "Dilys?"
"Still out. I wrapped her well."
"The others?" The captain shrugged as he heard the report.
"Passengers! At times they act as if they're crazy. Well, they've had
their warning. My main concern now is with the
Entil."
A crippled ship, now heading towards an isolated world. Taking his
place in the navigator's chair, Dumarest could see it in the screens, a
mottled ball of green and ocher, patched with expanses of dingy white,
streaked with smears of dusty black.
"That's Hyrcanus, as far as I can make out." said Egulus. "But right
or wrong, it's the only chance we have. We make it or burn." He glanced
at the sun, which blazed with awesome splendor. "But if the
generator holds, we've a chance."
One which grew as the ball of the planet swelled larger, colors
breaking into a blurred jumble, the instruments in the control room
clicking as they relayed information.
Closer, and the ship began to shudder a little as opposed gravities
fought for supremacy. A slight shift told of a dying vortex, spewed
from some flaring sun. A peculiar turning sensation as it passed
through an area of intra-dimensional instability. The normal hazards to
be expected within the Rift.
Another which was not.
Egulus swore as the ship died beneath his hands. "The generator!
It's dead!"
Strained beyond endurance by the impact of external forces, the
interior now a mass of fused and molten rubbish, the Erhaft field gone,
and this time never to be replaced.
And the world was close.
Close!
Dumarest said, "The directional vents, are they working?"
"Yes, thank God."
"Then skip! Skip!"
The only chance they had and one which the captain had already
assessed. Now, as they fell towards the mass of the planet below,
Egulus proved his skill. In order to kill their velocity and to prevent
being burned by the atmosphere, he had to maintain height while
remaining within orbit. To use the air-blanket as a boy would a pond.
To send the ship skimming over it as if it were a flung stone,
touching, bouncing, touching again.
The hull turned red as air blasted over it with a thin, high scream,
a scream echoed from somewhere within the vessel. Both screams died as
Egulus operated the vents, lifting the ship a fraction, letting it
hurtle on to drop again, to glow as it had before, to lift and pray and
curse as dials showed red and alarm bells shrilled their warning.
"Kill that damned noise!"
Sweat dripped from Dumarest's face as he hit the switches. The hull
screamed again as the bells fell silent, the shriek maintained as the
air grew hotter, became stifled, became a searing torment.
"Up! Up, damn you!"
"I can't! I—" Egulus hit the controls, feeding extra power into the
vents, praying ever as he worked, prayers which sounded like curses as,
slowly, the screaming died and, velocity killed, the
Entil
fell towards the surface below.
Dumarest watched as the ground streamed past on the screens. They
needed a flat and even expanse, covered with soft dirt, sand, snow,
stunted vegetation, even ice. A place on which to skid for miles until
they came to a halt and, even then, such a landing would be close to a
miracle.
"Nothing." Egulus snarled his anger. "The damned place is a
nightmare!"
Hills, crevasses, chasms, stony wilderness with boulders like
waiting teeth, trees resting on the edges of precipices, plains marked
with undulating serrations like the teeth of saws.
"Water," said Dumarest. "We need water."
It showed ahead and a little to one side, a long narrow inlet which
opened to the grayness of a sea. A strand, and it was below and before
them, choppy waves bearing patches of kelp and whiteness caused by
spume thrown from upthrust rocks. Then they were over it.
"Down," yelled Dumarest. "Down, man, down!"
They were going too fast, but ahead he had caught the loom of
mountains standing etched against the sky. Pillars of stone too high
for them to surmount and too widespread to avoid. The choice between
hitting them and plunging into the sea was no choice at all.
No choice, but a gamble, and one Egulus took as he had when entering
the atmosphere. The
Entil tilted a little, headed downwards,
hit the water to bounce as it had when meeting the atmosphere. Steam
rose, created by the impact of hot metal, the vapor forming a cushion
between the water and the hull.
Bouncing, skipping, as the mountains came closer. As the vessel
creaked and shuddered and blood ran from ears and noses, as soft flesh
suffered from the savage buffeting.
To hit for the last time. To sink. To hit bottom, to lift a little,
to settle again and come to a final rest.
After an eternity, Varn Egulus said, "No water. The hull remained
intact." He sounded as if he couldn't believe it.
"Luck," said Dumarest.
"For us, maybe." The captain wiped the back of his hand over his
face and looked at the blood. "For the others?"
Chapter Eight
The historian was dead—torn from his restraints to be flung against
the hull, to roast, to die screaming in his pain. The dancer was dead,
lying wrapped in her cocoon, hands lifted, the ugly blotches of
disintegration marring throat and torso. Craters made by the darts from
the ring she had carelessly continued to wear, fired by the involuntary
contractions of her finger. An irony she seemed to appreciate as she
stared upwards with blind eyes, her mouth twisted in the rictus of a
smile. The steward was dead, lying in a crumpled heap, a bottle
miraculously unbroken in his hand. The special bottle, which was to
have been saved to the very last. One he had taken by mistake, perhaps,
but his lips bore no smile. Unlike the dancer, he failed to appreciate
the jest.
The rest were alive, bruised but otherwise unhurt aside from Charl
Zeda. He sucked in his breath, sweat breaking out in globules on his
seamed face, as Dumarest used leverage to ease the mercenary's badly
dislocated shoulder back into position.
"That's better." Gently he tested the joint. "I was a fool, moved at
the wrong time and got caught by one of the decelerations. How's the
ship?" He frowned at the answer. "Under the surface, no generator, no
power to lift—how the hell are we to get out?"
A question repeated by Gale Andrei when, later, they had gathered in
the salon.
"We can get out," said Dumarest. "All we need to do is to cycle
through the airlock in the cargo hold. But there are other
considerations."
"Such as?"
"What to do once we are on the surface," said Leo Bochner quickly.
He sat at the girl's side, his hand touching her own. "We could be a
long way from shore and, without navigation aids, may not be able to
tell in which direction it lies. Can you swim?"
"A little. Why?"
"A little, you say. How far is that? A mile? Ten? A score? Fifty?"
Bochner shook his head. "A little isn't enough. We could be more than a
hundred miles from land. Captain?"
"I don't know," admitted Egulus. "We came down fast and had other
things to think about. Earl saw mountains ahead, but we were high at
the time and they would be below the horizon now. In any case, they
were far from close."
"And we must have traveled after we hit the ocean." Fele Roster
pursed his lips, his eyes thoughtful. "How deep are we?"
"We hit bottom." Egulus shrugged at the other's expression. "I'm not
sure how deep, the external gauge was burned, but from the time we took
to descend, I'd say about four or five hundred feet."
"Deep," said Bochner. "Too deep for us to rise to the surface
without difficulty."
"It would be impossible without protection," said Gale Andrei. "If
we tried it we'd litter the surface with our bodies."
"Or provide food for the fish." Shan Threnond looked at his hands,
the rings he had replaced gleaming in the light. "The fish and other
things. Are you sure this world is Hyrcanus, Captain?"
"As near as I can figure, yes. You know it?"
"I've heard rumors." The dealer in death sucked at his lips,
splinters of light darting from his rings to be reflected in little
gleams from his eyes. "If they are to be believed, a wise man would do
well to avoid this place."
"I've heard about it, too," rumbled Charl Zeda. He moved carefully
in his chair, easing his sore shoulder. "A strange and savage world
filled with unexpected perils. The mountains hold a peculiar form of
life, and the seas are not as peaceful as they could be. The air,
too—but every tavern is full of such whispers. If a man believed them
all, he would never find the courage to travel."
"But if we are on Hyrcanus," said Threnond, "we had better think
twice before trusting ourselves to the water. Even with what protection
we can arrange, we'd stand small chance against what it could contain."
"If the rumors are true." Bochner shook his head. "Tales to frighten
children. Stories spun by men while sitting half-drunk, in firelight.
Yarns to interest women and to earn the price of another bottle.
Stories about mythical worlds and beasts and treasures waiting to be
found. You must have heard them, Earl?"
"Yes," said Dumarest. "Often."
"And never been tempted to investigate? To try and find Jackpot,
say, with its fields of precious gems. Or Avalon with its scented
breezes and singing flowers, with its food trees and wine streams and
youth-restoring berries. Or Bonanza, with its veins of rich ores
running like rainbows through the mountains. Never even tried to find
Earth?"
Earth—the only world he had mentioned which he hadn't given a tinsel
shine. And had his voice changed a little as he spoke the name? A
coincidence? Perhaps, but Dumarest mistrusted coincidences.
"Earth," he said. "You know it?"
"Only as a legend, my friend. A name. One among a dozen. Shall I
tell you of others? Of—"
"For God's sake!" Gale Andrei snapped her irritation. "To talk such
rubbish at a time like this! What are we going to do? Are we to just
sit here and wait? Will rescue come? Can it? Can we leave the ship? Can
we reach land if we do?"
"Steady," said Bochner. "Steady."
"You—"
Her hand lifted, swung at his face, halted as he blocked it, the
sound of slapped flesh sounding loud as his own fingers left red welts
on her cheek. As she recoiled, eyes wide with shocked disbelief, he
said, "I suggest you control yourself, my dear. And never attempt to
strike me again."
"Was that necessary?" Dilys Edhessa glared her anger. "You spoke of
terrors to be found on this world—must we add to them? Or do you
consider it the height of courage to strike a defenseless woman?"
"A reaction. I—"
"Forgot yourself? Would you like to strike me?" She came toward him,
overwhelming, eyes cold with her rage. "Try it," she invited. "Just try
it—and I'll break your arm."
"You think you could do that?" He rose to face her, body tense,
poised, hands lifted as if to strike or parry as the need arose. The
stance of a man accustomed to facing danger. That of the hunter he
professed to be—or that of the fighter he had taken pains to hide.
Dumarest said, "Haven't we enough trouble as it is? Sit down, man.
Dilys, what have you to report?"
For a moment she hesitated, then, as Bochner sat, she said, "The
generator's out, as you know, and can't be repaired. We have power
enough to run the life support systems until we starve. We can recycle
air and get water enough, but food is limited. Why, Earl? You knew all
this."
"The other's didn't, or may have forgotten."
"So?" The last of her anger vanished with her shrug. "All right, I'm
sorry. I should have managed to control myself. But I can't stand a man
who hits women."
"Or a woman who kills men?" Dumarest met her eyes. "She could have a
poisoned needle attached to her finger," he explained. "Or a lethal
paste set beneath a sharpened nail. Like Bochner, I, too would have
taken precautions had she slapped at my face."
"And slapped her back?"
"It's one way to teach a lesson." He changed the subject. "Have you
anything which could be adapted to give underwater protection? Masks,
air tanks, suits?"
"Tanks, yes," she said. "Masks could be made and we could use
padding to protect bodies. And, of course, we have the emergency sacs."
The last resort, should a vessel be destroyed while in space, but
only the insanely optimistic would ever use them. Transparent membranes
containing air and other supplies which could maintain life for awhile;
bubbles drifting in the void with those inside them, hoping against
hope that some nearby vessel would hear their radio beacon and come to
the rescue. The wise chose to die with their ship.
"The sacs!" The mercenary lifted his head like a dog smelling food.
"The beacon—don't you have one fitted to the
Entil?"
"Or a radio?" Roster added his suggestion. "We are on a listed world
and it must have a field and people of some kind. We could contact
them. Ask for rescue."
At a price which would leave them stripped of all assets but, dead,
they would have lost everything anyway.
Zeda mistook Egulus's hesitation. "The radio, man! Are you afraid of
losing your vessel as salvage?"
"It's lost anyway," said the captain. "But the radio's useless."
"And the beacon?"
Jumoke had overlooked it, as had Dumarest and the captain, both
assuming the navigator had done his worst. Dilys sucked in her breath
as she drew it from its housing; a small, compact piece of electronic
wizardry which operated only when the generator failed and the field
collapsed, sending a coded electronic "shout" which, even in the Rift,
could be heard by a ship which was close, or by a nearby world. Even in
the Quillian Sector.
And the thing had operated twice.
"A line," said Dilys. "If anyone heard both signals they could draw
a line, extend it, and know just where we are."
"They won't be able to see us," said Egulus. "They could come
looking and pass right over us."
But they would keep looking. A ship in distress was a fortune in
salvage. Add to that the price of cargo, rescue fees and rewards, and
no captain of a hungry trader would give up too soon.
And neither, Dumarest knew, would others who must be searching for
him.
He said, "What now?"
"We wait." Bochner joined the discussion. "We sit and wait until
someone comes to help us. Why not? We have air and food and water. We
have wine and certain other comforts." He glanced at Gale Andrei. "So
why risk death outside?"
"Perhaps we could rig up a new radio?" suggested Charl Zeda. "I've
some experience in electronics and, with the emergency beacon intact,
we have a viable base on which to build. And it doesn't have to be an
ultra-radio—all we want is something which can contact someone locally
and serve to guide them to us. You'll help me, Shan?"
"You need help?"
"For the assembly, yes." The mercenary gestured at his damaged
shoulder. "I'm not too good at fine work at the best of times, and
you're accustomed to handling delicate fabrications. If we could use
the facilities in the engine room?"
"Sure," said Dilys. "Why not? I'll even—" She broke off with a catch
of breath. "What—what's that? What the hell's happening?"
The ship had
moved.
It rolled a little, lifting to settle again, bumping to rest, to
roll once more as, from the hull, came an ugly grating. A sound as if
something hard had dragged over the metal. As the sound faded into
silence, Gale said, "God, what's that?"
The screens answered her. In them loomed the shape of madness,
scaled, tentacular, spines tipped with barbs, mouths lined with rows of
savage teeth. A monstrous creature of the depths attracted by the shock
of their landing, now busy investigating the intruder into its realm.
And it was big. Big.
"It's like a mountain," whispered Fele Roster. With the others, he
stood crammed into the control room and his whisper was an automatic
defense mechanism; what the thing couldn't hear it couldn't be aware
of. "A living mountain."
One which spread in formless confusion, fogging at the edge of
visibility, coils writhing in seemingly endless profusion, tentacles
filing its watery world. The
Entil rolled like an egg in its
grip, its bottom lifting to bang against the rocky bottom, to send
metallic verberations echoing from the stricken metal, gongs to herald
doom.
"The hull." Threnond's voice, while controlled, betrayed his strain.
"How thick is it?"
"God knows." Egulus was somber. "We lost a lot of metal by
vaporization as we came down. Half the thickness, and maybe more." He
remembered the streaming incandescence which had accompanied them
during their desperate journey through the atmosphere. Glowing gases
born of disrupted molecules, the metal of the hull converted to light
and heat by the friction of their descent. "But it'll hold."
A conviction Dumarest didn't share. He examined the screens and the
thing they revealed, following lines, guessing as to size and mass. The
ship, engulfed, would be small in comparison. The thing could lift it
and slam it down until it broke. Or it could wait, maintaining the
pressure of its grip until the hull yielded.
"We could seal the various compartments," said Gale Andrei. "But no,
we have no way of telling which will go first."
"We could."—Dilys broke off, then appealed to the one man she felt
confident had the answer which could save their lives. "Earl—what
should we do?"
Dumarest made no comment, looking at the ulterior of the vessel,
moving from the control room to the greater spaciousness of the salon.
Space ships were not built to operate as submarines. Strength of hull
was not as important in the void as it would have been at great depths,
but the fabric itself was strong to endure the strains and stresses of
electronic storms and the warping effect of the Erhaft field. Strength,
which meant weight. Struts and stanchions fitted on a geometric pattern
so as to make the entire vessel an integrated unit. The immediate
danger wasn't in crushing, but in the weakened hull plates yielding to
admit the rush of water. A flood which would drown them like rats in a
trap.
"Earl?"
"We can wait," he said. "Hope that the thing will tire and leave us
before it manages to crack us open. But that's a gamble I prefer not to
take."
"Why not?"
"Sound." Dumarest looked at Bochner, wondering why he had asked the
question. Surely a hunter would know? "We move and hit things and talk.
Vibrations transmitted through the fabric to the hull where that thing
can sense them. It must know we aren't inanimate and, if it follows the
usual pattern, it will be unwilling to give up its search for food."
"True." Bochner nodded. "What then?"
"We can try to sneak out and hope it won't follow us because we're
so relatively small. You recommend that?"
"No. A thing that size will have attendant predators; scavengers
living on its discards. They'd take care of us if the big beast didn't."
Gale Andrei said bitterly, "So that's it. We can't wait and we can't
leave. Brilliant!"
"And defeatist." Bochner didnt look at her as he spoke. "There is an
alternative."
"What?"
"We lighten the ship," said Dumarest. "We cut free and dump
everything we can. The more we feed through the locks the greater our
buoyancy will be. Once that thing out there releases its grip, we'll
shoot up to the surface like a bubble."
"Simple," she said bitterly. "You make it sound all so damned
simple. But how are you going to make that thing out there let us go?"
The air stank of burning, of hot metal which had vented acrid vapors
and coated the ulterior of the ship with noxious patinas. Bright stubs
showed where lastorches had burned away installations, their energy
adding to the trapped heat so that a coating of moisture dewed the
hull. An omen Dumarest chose to ignore.
He stood in the control room, now such by courtesy only, the chairs
gone, the instruments, the delicate components which had cost high but
which had been discarded as so much unwanted scrap. Only the screens
remained alive, and the communication link to the engine room.
"Now?" Egulus eased the collar of his uniform. His hands were
burned, sore, grimed, as was his face and hair, but despite the heat,
he clung to the symbols of his rank. He was a captain and intended to
remain one. "Earl?"
"A moment." Dumarest spoke into the intercom. "Dilys, have Bochner
vent the last of the material through port four." He waited then,
"Good. It's still clear. Now have Allain's body out in the final load
and stand by for release."
The final load and a hell of a way to treat the dead, thought
Egulus.
To use them as bait. As a diversion. As a bribe to the thing out there
which still held them fast. The dancer and historian didn't
matter—those who hugged dirt belong to it, but Allain had spent too
many years in space to be denied the clean expanse of the universe for
his final resting place.
Well—such things happened. "You think it will work?"
"On its own? Probably not." Dumarest didn't take his eyes from the
screen. "I noticed a reaction when we dumped out the stores. A tentacle
went to investigate. It didn't return to take up its old position. I
think we've confused it a little, but not enough to frighten it."
"Can such a thing feel fear?"
"Concern as to its survival, certainly. All living things must feel
that." Dumarest spoke into the intercom. "Dilys, how is the potential?
Optimum? Good. Maintain and stand by to discharge." To the captain, he
said, "Check that everyone is insulated. No contact with metal of any
kind."
Checking took less than a minute. With the interior of the ship now
an almost empty shell, it was easy to spot those who waited.
"All clear and set, Earl."
Dumarest nodded, checked that he stood on a thick pad of wadded
insulation, and said, "Right, Dilys. Give the word to Bochner. As soon
as he's cycled out the load, hit the switches."
He stood, waiting, feeling the slight vibration of the cycling port,
seeing the creature outside shift a little, a coil rippling as it
moved, a gaping mouth snapping, a tentacle reaching to where the dead
were floating up towards the surface.
Meat and blood and bone. Protein for the beast and for its attendant
scavengers. Food they couldn't resist.
The coils moved faster then. As Dilys hit the switches, they jerked
as if touched by redhot steel.
Current fed from the engines turned the hull into a searing,
charring inferno. Tough skin and gristle burned, crisped, shed a sickly
green ooze. Sparks flashed, as steam bubbled from the points of
contact, lighting the screen with transient glimmers. More sparks
flashed from within the ship itself. Streamers of manmade lightning,
which added to the stench with its reek of ozone, sent tingles to jerk
at nerve and muscle even through the wadded insulation.
The
Entil lifted.
It rose, tilted, moved to halt again as, in a savage paroxysm, the
tentacles gripped in self destructive fury.
"Dilys!"
The power flow was at optimum, higher and it would threaten the
source of its own creation, but as metal yielded, Dumarest knew the
risk had to be taken.
"Maximum, Dilys! Feed every erg you can raise into the hull!"
A plate had bulged inward, another followed, water edging a crack,
turning into a fine jet which sent spray lifting, to fall like rain.
Rain which acted as a conductor for the electronic power so that arcs
flashed and metal turned molten at the points of impact.
"Earl, for God's sake!" Egulus caught at his arm. "We're not going
to make it!"
A statement punctuated by Gale Andrei's scream as Fele Roster,
staggering, fell to touch the bare metal of the hull— to turn into a
pillar of smoking flesh, blood and charred bone.
A sacrifice which toppled to fall and lie sprawled on the floor as
the ship lanced upwards.
To reach the surface and to rise above it. To hang suspended for a
brief moment before crashing down. To sink and rise again and to roll
sickeningly in the grip of cross currents and a screaming wind.
"We've got to get out!" Charl Zeda, his face gray with pain, stood
in the opening of the control room. "Water's coming in."
Not enough to provide an immediate threat, but enough to send a
shallow lake surging over the deck. Dilys came wading through it. Power
was cut, the ship dark except for the pale glow of emergencies, shadows
which held both real and imagined terrors.
"Earl?"
"We've got to abandon the ship." He staggered as the vessel rolled,
landing hard against the hull, hearing the others shout and thresh in
the water. "Get the emergency supplies and what extra clothing you
reserved. The caskets—" He grunted as the ship rolled again. "I'll
handle those with Bochner. Take care of the others, Captain. Keep them
together."
Bochner was waiting at the main lock. Like Dumarest, be had changed
into more serviceable clothing, thick materials, quilted and set with
metal protection. He smiled at the tall figure in gray, his eyes
flashing, noting the boots, the knife.
"A chance, Earl. The creature could be down there waiting for us."
"We've no choice."
"True, and if we stay too long we'll sink for the last time. But,
honestly now, did you anticipate the need to abandon the ship?"
Dumarest said, "On the way down I noticed the wind. Without a keel,
we were bound to roll with the impact. We have no rudder, no sails,
nothing to enable us to steer a course. We could drift for months if we
hadn't been broached."
"And now we have no choice at all." The hunter shrugged. "Well, so
often it happens in life. The path one must follow is seldom the one
offering the greatest delights. The caskets first?"
They slid from the port into the waves, the boxes sealed, bobbing,
parting to the thrust of the wind. It droned over the sea, catching the
leaden water, dashing waves against the wallowing hull. Bundles
followed, all tightly wrapped and fitted with empty containers to
ensure they would float. Then the survivors, Yarn Egulus first.
He dived, surfaced, climbed on one of the caskets. Ropes had been
attached and he gathered others to draw the containers close together.
Then Threnond, together with the mercenary, the latter sinking, to
rise blowing and puffing, to sink again as his sore shoulder hampered
his progress.
Beside him, something broke the water.
"Earl!" Dilys was beside him, her fingers digging into his arm.
"That thing!"
A long, narrow shape, which glided like an oiled dart toward the
struggling man. One with a long, needlelike jaw which gaped to reveal
the flash of pointed teeth. The mercenary saw it, threshed, yelled as
it swung in and away. Blood rose to stain the water with a carmine
flood.
"Charl!" Threnond yelled from the safety of a casket. "Charl!"
He shouted at the wind.
"My God!" Gale lifted a trembling hand to her lips as she stared at
where the mercenary had vanished. "What happened to him?"
"He's dead." Bochner was coldly dispassionate. "That predator must
have got his leg. Those jaws could have severed the limb, and if they
did, it would account for the amount of blood. Only ripped arteries
could have produced so much so fast."
Dilys shuddered.
"But we are left with a problem," continued the hunter. "The blood
will have attracted others and we have still to leave the ship." He
glanced to where the caskets bobbed, together now in the form of a
crude raft. "And our means of escape is moving further away."
Too far. Driven by the wind, the distance was increasing and those
aboard had no way to return.
"We need a line." Dumarest turned, found an end of wire hanging from
a conduit and ripped it from its housing. Lashing one end around his
waist, he threw the other at Bochner. "Hold this. Give me slack. When
it's fast to the raft, pull!"
"Earl!" Dilys stepped toward him, hands outstretched to hold him
back. "No! You can't!"
She was too late. Even as she spoke he dived, hitting the water
cleanly, vanishing to reappear swimming strongly through the waves. He
had covered half the distance to the raft when the shape appeared.
The predator returned, or another just like it. A creature hungry
for
the kill.
Dumarest heard Bochner's warning shout and dived as it closed in,
reaching for his boot, his knife. Steel glimmered in the water as he
turned, eyes searching the gloom, seeing the long, slender body lance
toward him, the jaws gaping, the expanse of the mottled belly as the
creature closed in. A kick, and he moved aside just in time, the
lower jaw rasping against his hip as, twisting, he plunged the blade
into the exposed stomach, dragging back the steel in a long, deep cut
which spilled blood and intestines in a fuming cloud.
The blade clamped between his teeth, Dumarest kicked himself to the
surface and covered the rest of the distance to the caskets. Egulus
reached down and hauled him to safety as water threshed and jaws
snapped at the water where he had been.
"The line." Dumarest handed it to the captain. "Fasten it and pull.
Hurry!"
It tightened, humming like a bowstring as the distance lessened
between the ship and the crude raft. They touched as the
Entil
rolled, settled deeper as they watched, rolled again with a slow,
deliberate movement.
"Jump!" Dumarest reached out to the open port as it swung down
toward the waves. "Jump, damn you!"
Gale landed beside him, slipped and almost fell back into the water,
steadied as his hands closed about her arms. Bochner thrust Dilys
forward and she landed with surprising lightness for her size. The
hunter followed, standing poised as the wind carried them away from the
foundering vessel, watching as it tilted, the nose lifting, lowering,
bubbles rising around it as, with sudden abruptness, it sank beneath
the surface.
"Close." Egulus looked at the ring of spreading froth. "The hull
must have given way after I'd left."
"It did." Bochner drew air deep into his lungs. His face was wet
with spray and the wind turned his hair into a living crest. "Another
few
minutes and we'd have been food for the fish. Well, Earl, what now?"
"We lash everything tight, set up a sail and run before the wind.
Dumarest looked at the sky, the seething spume rising from the waves,
the clouds massed low on the horizon. The sun was a smeared copper
ball, ringed with a lambent
corona and blotched with ebon markings. The air held an acrid metallic
taint and, low on the horizon, he could see the dancing flicker of
lightning. "And we'd better do it before the storm breaks.
Chapter Nine
The weather peaked at dusk, a hammer of wind racing over the ocean,
lifting waves, filling the air with a screaming fury as lightning
danced a jagged saraband. Filigrees of eye-searing brilliance reached
from water to sky, the roar of thunder a savage accompaniment to the
voice of the wind.
Lying huddled in her casket, Dilys Edhessa imagined herself to be
dead and in hell.
It was ridiculous even to hope that anything could live through such
a storm, and so the fact that she could breathe and hear and feel was
nothing but an illusion—a part of the punishment meted out to those who
had strayed from the path, or so the Elder had so often told her when
she had attended the Place of Contemplation when a child.
A long time ago now, but she had never forgotten and now it was all
present in sharp clarity; the old, musty building, the smell of hay and
manure, the dampness, the hard benches, the cold impact of the floor
against her knees. The dimness. The enigmatic shapes. The monotonous
drone of the Elder, who stood fiercely proud of his power and authority
and urged them all to be humble and obedient and true servants of the
Revealed Truth. A bad time, and one she remembered only in nightmares.
But she was dead and not asleep, so why should she be dreaming of the
harsh time of childhood?
"Dilys!"
She felt the touch and stirred and looked up into Dumarest's face.
And that, too, seemed a dream because he was leaning over her,, head
thrust into a narrow opening, water running down his hair and face and,
behind him, the night blazed with unrestrained violence.
"Dilys!" His hand reached out to slap her cheek. "Wake up, girl!
Wake up!"
"Earl?" Water gushed through the opening and she gasped in sudden
shock. Abruptly awake, she became aware of the heaving of her chest,
the pounding of her heart. "I was asleep, I think. Dreaming. I—"
"You were dying." His voice was harsh with anger. "You kept the lid
sealed too long and were breathing your own carbon dioxide."
A mistake both Egulus and Threnond had made as they shared a casket,
but which Bochner had not. He had helped to check the lashings and
adjust the tattered fabric used as a sail. He had even laughed into the
fury of the storm.
"An experience to remember, my friend. At least, the weather is
keeping the predators below. Now, if we can remain afloat—"
If the caskets held and the lashing kept them together. If the
lightning missed and no rocks waited to rip them open with jagged
teeth. If they could run before the wind and not drown or suffocate in
their containers then, possibly, they might survive to drift in calm
waters. But not yet.
Dilys gasped as Dumarest eased himself into the casket beside her.
His clothing was glistening with water and his hands bore thin, ugly
welts from the stranded wire used to lash the caskets together. When
they were settled close, she said, "Is everything all right?"
"So far, yes."
"You were out there a long time."
Almost too long. He remembered her pallor, the waxen appearance of
her face which had given her the likeness of a corpse. A big woman,
she needed a lot of oxygen to maintain the fires of her body. He had
warned her to keep the lid cracked so as to admit air but she had
forgotten, or had been already numbed by inhaling the waste product of
her lungs.
Now, shivering, she said, "The water's cold, Earl. So very cold."
"It'll be warm soon."
"I was dreaming," she said, "of when I was young. I came from a
stern culture, Earl. Did I tell you that? A farming community which
tried to follow the Revealed Truth. We used no machinery of any kind.
Nothing but natural fertilizers. No energy other than that provided by
natural means—muscles and the use of ropes and levers. Of pulleys and
wheels."
"Machinery."
"No, Earl. Such things were not considered to be that. We used no
artificial means of power, but we had a windmill and a water wheel
and…" She nodded, almost asleep, then jerked in his arms, gasping.
"They killed a man. Stoned him to death. They tied him up by the wrists
to a post and stood close and threw stones at him until he stopped
screaming. Stopped moving. It was horrible!"
Another pause. Water blasted through the narrow crack and drenched
her face and hair, and lightning blazed to hurl brilliance through the
transparent lid. In its glare her lips looked black and her hair silver.
"Why?" Dumarest shook her. "Why did they kill him?"
"What?" She gasped again, her breasts pressing against his body,
eyes blinking as they tried to focus. "The man? Why, he'd devised a
system of mirrors to reflect the rays of the sun so as to heat water in
a boiler and so produce steam. With it, he turned a painted wheel set
with bright crystal. A toy to amuse the children, Earl. A toy—and they
killed him because of it."
"For making a machine?"
"Yes," she said dully. "For making a machine."
"And the windmill and water wheel?"
"Were allowed under the Revealed Truth. The wind blew and the water
flowed, but the sun did not boil water and to force it to do that was
acting against the creed. It was to invite the seeds of destruction to
cast down the race again."
Dumarest said quietly, "From terror, they fled to find new places on
which to expiate their sins. Only when cleansed will the race of Man be
again united."
The creed of the Original People—was Dilys one? Had she originated
in a commune of the sect? Had the "Revealed Truth" she had mentioned
contained the belief that all men had originated on one world and that
world had been possibly Earth?
Terror—Terra.
An easy enough transition from one to the other and if she knew, she
might, in her present state of mental fog induced by too high a
percentage of carbon dioxide, be induced to betray the closely guarded
secret.
"Earl?" She stared at him in puzzlement. "What did you say?"
"Nothing. It doesn't matter." A hope to be discarded along with so
many others. More than one commune had turned their backs on machinery,
and she had obviously been born into one. But, in that case, how had
she become an engineer?
"The man who was stoned was my brother," she said, when he asked. "I
had to do what I could to avenge him."
By leaving the community and doing the one thing they would have
hated most for her to do; to embrace the vileness they condemned. To
become a servant of the machine.
"Earl?"
"Nothing." He eased his arm around her, cushioning her against his
body, against the punishing slap of the waves. "Go to sleep, now."
"You'll stay with me?" Like a child, she needed reassurance. "You'll
take care of me?"
"Yes."
"You promise? Earl, you promise?"
"I promise."
She sighed and settled and fell asleep, with her lips parted and the
soft mounds of her breasts rising to press against him like small,
insistent hands. Lying beside her, he watched the glare of lightning
tracing pictures in the sky. Spume thrown by the wind dashed against
the lid like rain. Droplets which clung and quivered to the thrust of
wave's, which ran and formed patterns illuminated by the stroboscopic
effect of the lightning.
Faces. Hair the color of flame, of ebon, of silver and of rich, warm
brown earth. Eyes which held longing and tenderness, fear, anger and
hate. A scarlet shape which advanced with extended hands ready to take
and hold and bend the universe to its will. A ruby monster, squatting
like a spider at the heart of a web of intrigue.
The fifteen units of the affinity twin.
Kalin's gift, and one which the Cyclan would spare no effort to
recover. The discovery made in one of their secret laboratories,
stolen, passed on, now his alone. The knowledge of the sequence in
which the fifteen units must be assembled to be viable.
A secret which could give them the galaxy.
Thunder roared and the casket tilted, a fresh wave dashing over the
lid so that when the lightning next flared, the images had changed. But
the sequence would never be lost until Dumarest was dead, or his mind
so damaged as to be virtually destroyed.
The affinity twin—an artificial symbiont which, when injected into
the bloodstream, moved to the base of the cortex, to nestle there, to
take over control of the entire nervous and sensory apparatus of the
body. An intruder, which would act as an organic relay, creating an
affinity between the dominant half and the subject-host. An affinity
which was a literal cojoining so that, in effect, the dominant half
became the host, seeing, feeling, hearing, using all the motor and
sensory apparatus.
An old and dying man could become young again in a new and virile
body. A cripple become whole. A beggar become a ruler. A crone look
into the mirror and see a beauty. And all would keep their new shapes
until they died, or their own body failed.
Power of incredible potential locked in the arrangement of fifteen
units.
The Cyclan knew it, and knew how to use it. They would place the
mind of a cyber into the body of every ruler and person of influence,
and all would dance to their dictates. But before they could hope for
that power, they had to find the order of assembly. They were trying.
They would continue to try, but mathematics was against them. The
possible combinations ran into millions, and it took time to assemble
and test them all. Too much time. Millenia would be needed to check
them all.
Time the Cyclan wanted to save.
Time he could save them. Time… time… time…
Dumarest woke, gasping, reaching up and lifting the lid, relishing
the cool breeze clearing the stale air from the casket. It was a new
day and the storm had passed, the container drifting on an even plane
in the water, barely rocking to the slap of waves. Easing himself from
the woman's arms, he threw back the lid and rose, breathing deeply the
clear, crisp air.
"Earl!" Leo Bochner was up and sitting on the casket he shared with
Gale Andrei. "I was just about to call you."
"Why?"
"Look around. We're in trouble."
The sail was still with them, a tattered fragment flapping against
the mast they had fashioned from welded pipe. The buoyancy containers
rode snug in their frayed lashings, but of the four caskets they had
started with only three remained. One had vanished during the night.
With it had gone their water and food.
Shen Threnond adjusted the sheet of plastic and, as it bellied with
the wind, said, "Once, on Sante, I saw a man who had fasted for thirty
days. It was a show at a carnival and I think he was doing it for a
bet. If he lasted for thirty-seven days he would have beaten the
record."
Egulus said, "Did he?"
"I don't know. I moved on before the period ended but I am sure he
did. He seemed fit enough when I saw him. A little spare, perhaps, but
fit."
"Going without a few meals doesn't hurt anyone." Bochner looked up
from his work. "I've starved for days at a time when on a stalk, and
gained because of it. Hunger sharpens the senses and cleanses the body.
Of course, some can do without better than others."
Gale Andrei snapped, "Meaning me, I suppose. Hell, can't you talk
about anything but food? I'm starving!"
"Not starving," he corrected. "You just want to eat. You're not even
really hungry yet. It's just that your stomach is accustomed to be
filled at regular intervals and has started to complain. Just be
patient. In a few days, it will pass."
Less than that. They had drifted for two days since the storm had
ended, but food wasn't the major problem. Thirst would kill them long
before they could starve.
Dumarest spread the flotation container he had cut open, set it with
others and glanced at Bochner.
"Finished yet?"
"Almost." The hunter, too, had a knife, a heavy bladed instrument
with a serrated back which could saw through bone. With it, he had cut
thin metal into strips and had rolled them into a spiral tube. Plastic
cut from a sheet had sealed the joins. "Here."
Taking it, Dumarest set one end into a water-filled container set
within the ring of curved metal plates. The other end he sealed within
a plastic bag, which he suspended in the sea.
"Some distillery." Dilys shook her head as she studied it. "Where
did
you get the idea of using focused sunlight to heat the boiler?"
"From you."
"You did?" She blinked, not remembering. "Well, even if it
works, the output will be low."
But better than nothing, and it gave them something to do. Egulus
and Gale could attend it while Threnond busied himself with his radio.
And Dilys, as engineer, had been put in charge of the raft itself.
Now, looking over the ocean, she said, "How long can we last, Earl?
I mean really last I can take the truth even if others can't."
By the movement of her eyes, he knew she meant the other woman.
"We can last as long as we want to."
"On hope?"
"On work. On resolve. You know what keeps people alive? The desire
to live. The determination. Too many give up too quickly. They defeat
themselves. They wait for help and when none arrives, they give up."
Dumarest pointed at the sea. "Look at it. A place full of water and
food."
"Food?"
"Fish, girl. Fish."
"If we can catch them. But water?"
"In the fish." He smiled at her blank expression. "Didnt you know
that? A fish is full of drinkable water. All you need to do is catch
one, cut it open, scrape it to a pulp and eat it."
"Is that all?" She remembered the thing which had almost killed him
and which had killed Charl Zeda. "And if it has other ideas?"
"We change its mind." He dropped his hand on her shoulder. "Make me
a line and hooks—you'll have to use wire and what metal is available.
And something for bait. Bright rag, or something shiny might do to
snare our first catch. After that, we can use the body for bait."
Bochner shook his head as he came close. Then, at Dumarest's side,
he said softly, "Spacers—what do they know about basic survival? And if
you think catching fish is so easy, why all the work on the distillery?"
"You tell me."
"Insurance. You alone, or with one other, could survive with
comparative ease. But six of us? No, Earl, not while we're all cramped
on this raft. Small fish won't have enough water content to satisfy us
all, and if we attract larger specimens, then it will be us, not they,
who will provide the repast." Bochner glanced at the sun. "Hot," he
mused. "We're going to sweat. A matter of days, I think. Even with
fish, a matter of days. Then the trouble will start."
The quarrels, the stealing, the fighting, the apathy and, perhaps,
the murders. Certainly the deaths. Who would be the first to go?
Threnond was old, but his frame was tough, and in his time he had lived
hard. Bochner glanced to where he sat in one of the caskets, busy with
his radio. Egulus? Also tough, but with a different form of hardness.
Space weakened a man for survival in the wild. Dilys? She was big and
so would lose more water because of her larger surface area, but she
would have a good reserve of fat and Dumarest would certainly help her
all he could. Gale Andrei? Small, compact, light-boned but with scant
fat, and accustomed to civilized ease. Already, she had begun to
complain. She would be the first to die.
They would all die unless they reached shore soon, or help arrived,
and to hope for that was to believe in miracles. Caradoc was on
Mucianus, waiting for the
Entil to arrive. Trusting in the
traps and snares, the arranged cargoes which were to have guided it
there, himself to see that Dumarest was on it when it did. A good plan
negated by a fool. How long would the cyber wait? Not long, Bochner
knew, then Caradoc would go hunting. With luck, he would discover the
emergency signals from the
Entil. With his trained skill, he
might even be able to determine which world they had reached.
And then?
Bochner smiled and stretched his legs and watched Dumarest at his
work. The quarry, tracked and now ready at hand, the stalk over and the
sport ended before it had really begun. A disappointment. But a
question remained: Why did the Cyclan want Dumarest so badly? What did
he know or possess which made him so valuable?
To discover that would be to engage in a hunt of another kind and
the reward, once the kill was made, could be incredible.
It was taking too long.
Death should not come on slow, creeping feet, but be mercifully
swift so that, at the end, there was no pain, not even the anticipation
of hurt but a sudden, devastating extinction. There shouldn't be
endless days in which the sun burned like a furnace in a mottled sky,
and heat radiated from the water, the caskets, the sail itself as it
flapped against the mast. Only the nights were kind, the heavens
blazing with a luminous splendor reflected in the ocean, the image
broken, at times, by leaping shapes, ripples spreading to
reach to infinity.
Gale Andrei looked at it, her back against the mast, salt crusting
her hair from where she had plunged her head into the sea. Salt which
stung her lips and eyes, creating tears which added to the illusion.
Light, winking and shimmering, forming patterns which changed,
turning sea and sky into a mirrored image, an intricate chiaroscuro of
silver and black which swelled to embrace her, to engulf her, to
swallow her in its insatiable mouth. Death wore beauty as a garment.
But death came accompanied by pain. Thirst consumed her, a fire which
could not be quenched. Her lips were cracked, her throat constricted,
every cell and fiber yearning for water. Pools, baths, rivers into
which she could plunge. Waterfalls and cascades of icy coldness. Long
drinks in dew-adorned glasses, tart and heavy with the chill of ice.
She needed to drink. She had to drink—and if death followed, then it
was worth the price.
Lying on the casket, stripped, body glistening with perspiration,
Bochner saw her move and said nothing. On another, Dilys, restless,
lifted herself on one elbow; a near-naked shape occluding the stars.
Wakened by her movement, Dumarest whispered, "Dilys?"
"It's Gale. She—" Her voice rose to a shout. "No, you fool! No!"
Dumarest heard the splash as he rose. Like the others, he was naked
but for shorts, hard white flesh gleaming in the starlight, silver
droplets lifting as he plunged after the girl who now floated in the
sea. Bochner caught him as he reached the edge of the raft. "No!"
"The girl—"
"She's mad. Thirst-crazed. Gulping down sea water even as she bathes
in it." He grunted as Dumarest pushed him aside. "No, you fool! The
predators—"
They had followed for days, eager for the prey they sensed would
inevitably be theirs. Long shapes which glided, breaking water at
times, never coming too close to risk capture, ignoring the baited
hooks which had only caught their natural prey sheltering under the
raft. Now, as the girl thrashed in wild abandon, they closed in.
Dumarest saw them as he stood, knife in hand, eyes calculating time
and distance. A moment, then he dived, hitting the water in a shallow
curve, reaching the girl to grab her by the hair, to drag back her
face, to slam his knife-weighted fist hard against her jaw. As he
headed back to the edge of the raft, the first predator struck.
Dazed, half-stunned by the blow which had forestalled her
anticipated resistance, the girl felt the rasp of scales against her
thighs and screamed.
"Earl!" Bochner stood on the edge of the raft, hand extended.
"Quickly, you fool! Quickly!"
"The girl—"
"To hell with her." The hunter snarled his impatience. "Save
yourself, man. Hurry!"
He snarled again as Dumarest ignored the instruction and dived in
turn. He hit the water like an eel, twisting, body curved, hand and
knife extended as, again, the predator attacked. Blood foamed from the
creature, to fog the water and dull the gleam of starlight. More blood
followed as the girl screamed. Dumarest released her, slashed at an
arrowing shape, felt the impact of his blade on skin and flesh.
"Gale!"
She drifted to one side, face down, hair spread, cradled in the
water as beneath her something rose to tear, to sink again.
"Earl!" Bochner thrashed at the water, then headed toward the raft.
"Quick, man. The girl's dead. Save yourself!"
Move while the girl provided a distraction. Reach the raft while her
body was being torn into shreds. To grip outstretched hands and to
climb to safety. To slump, conscious of weakness, of the price exertion
needed to be paid.
"Earl!" Dilys was beside him, her face anxious as she stared at his
thigh, the raw patch where the skin had been rasped
and which now oozed blood. "You're hurt!"
"I'll live."
"Gale—"
"Is dead." Hadn't she seen? "We can't help her now, but we can help
ourselves. Let's get some of those fish!"
Crazed by the blood, the flesh, the fish were easy prey to the
nooses, the lines and hooks, the stabbing blades. Before they
dispersed, three of them jerked in one of the caskets adding their
blood to the saline in which they died. Food and water for those who
survived—the gift Gale Andrei had bought with her life.
"She was crazed," said Bochner dispassionately. "I guessed she'd be
the first to go. I knew she was near the edge, but didn't think she was
about to break."
"You should have stopped her."
"Going into the sea? How?" The hunter stared at Dilys. "She was gone
before I knew it, and once in the water what could I have done?"
"What Earl did. Gone in after her."
"And got myself killed as he almost did?" Bochner pointed to the
wound. "If I hadn't gone in after him when I did, that leg wouldn't be
scraped, it'd be gone. He'd be dead now, if it hadn't been for me."
A claim Dumarest didn't bother to dispute, but why had the man dived
into the sea to help him and not the girl?
Egulus said, "I think the wind is rising. Look at the sail."
It billowed from the mast, snapping, suddenly taut, and the captain
went to adjust one of the guy ropes. When it was to his satisfaction he
stood, looking upwards, starlight limning his face, his eyes. An aged
and haggard face. A pair of yearning eyes.
Dumarest could understand why. Up there, in the vast immensities of
space, ships lanced from world to world, eating distance with the power
of their drives, while down where the captain stood, they inched along
over endless water on a bleak journey to an unknown destination.
He said quietly, "It won't be long before you're back up there,
Captain."
"As what?" Egulus didn't lower his eyes. "A steward? A handler? What
chance have I of ever getting another ship of my own?"
"The big lines?"
"Don't want or trust men who've been free traders. We're too
independent, and not used to wearing the reins. Once a mans had a ship
of his own—" Egulus sighed and looked down and became suddenly brusque.
"To hell with it! Let's get busy on these damned fish before the sun
rises to bake our bones!"
The next day they saw land.
Chapter Ten
It loomed on the horizon, a smudge against the harsh clarity of the
sky, a blur which gradually gained resolution. A high peak, flanked by
lesser hills, all joined by a series of slopes which ran down to a
shore of black, volcanic sand, toothed with rocks against which the sea
lashed in foaming irritation.
In pools, they found limpets and mollusks which provided a mouthful
of moist nourishment—the fish they had caught had been consumed in the
three days they had waited to be carried to land. Edging the shore,
vegetation rose in a dull, green wall, boles darkly brown against the
sand, the leaves spined and serrated like the blades of vicious spears.
"There could be a break," suggested Egulus. "If we follow the coast,
we could find a river or something."
"We need water, food and shelter," said Dumarest. "We won't find
them by hugging the shore."
"But can we move through that tangle?" Dilys touched a leaf, moved
it to one side, looked at the web of branches waiting in the gloom.
"We'll be cut to shreds."
"Not if we take precautions." Dumarest glanced at the raft. It held
materials which could be fashioned into forms of protection. "We've got
clothing and can use extra padding. Get ready, now. Wear all you can,
and make sure you protect face and hands." His voice hardened as only
Bochner made a move. "Do it, damn you! If you hope to live, get to
work!"
Bochner had his quilted and protected garb, as Dumarest had his own
clothing. With thick gloves, crudely shaped but serviceable, and with
heads enclosed in metal cans cut with slits to provide vision, they
moved to take the lead. The vegetation was stubborn, falling slowly
beneath their knives, the metal edges blunting and showing the stains
of acid.
"We need lasers," grumbled the hunter. "Heavy duty weapons to burn a
path through this jungle. With knives alone, we haven't a chance."
"It should thin further within." Dumarest rasped the side of a stone
over his blade. "We'll take turns, me, then you, then me, again. Short
spells and halt to sharpen. A narrow passage will do as long as the
branches are cut to allow progress. We'll halt to rest when we reach a
clearing."
It took three hours during which they hacked and cut and squeezed
past ripping thorns and jagged spines, their padding torn, sweat
running down their bodies, the roar of blood loud in their ears as they
sagged from exhaustion.
Dilys collapsed as they reached the clearing, lying to gasp, to pull
the fabric from head and face, to sprawl, panting like a dog. Threnond
was little better. Egulus leaned back against a mass of branches and
looked upwards. The sky was hidden beneath a roof of greenery.
"Food," he said bitterly. "Water and shelter. Well, I guess we've
found that, at least. The shelter of a grave. We could die in here and
no one would ever be able to find us."
"If anyone is bothering to look." Bochner looked up from where he
sat. "Any luck with the radio yet?"
"I've been sending a distress call for days, now." Threnond looked
at the radio equipment in his hand. It was a jumble of adapted
components, powered by a small energy cell. "If anyone's heard it, they
haven't answered."
"Or you haven't caught it, if they did." Egulus was pessimistic.
"What difference does it make? They'll never find us in here."
"Not here," agreed Dumarest, "but we'd be easy to spot if we were on
the summit of that peak we saw."
"The peak?" Dilys lifted her head. "Earl, that's miles away! We
can't—"
"We can!" He rose and stepped toward her and lifted her upright with
an explosion of violence which gave his face the likeness of a savage
animal. "We can if we try. If we want to. But we won't if we just sit
around moaning that it can't be done. Now, move! On your feet and move!"
The sun passed zenith and headed toward the horizon. An hour before
dusk they found a small stream and bathed, cooling their bodies and
filling their stomachs in turn, as others kept watch; a precaution
Dumarest insisted on and one which Bochner noted. A trait of his
quarry's character—how many would have thought to be so careful at such
a time and in such a seemingly harmless place?
Later, as the shadows closed in, he said, "We need to eat, Earl.
Climbing to that peak will take energy the rest haven't got. Of course,
we could leave them here and send help later."
Or forget them. The simplest way, but he didn't hint at that. The
bait had been enough. He could learn from the way it was taken.
"We could," said Dumarest, "if we find help. If that help is willing
to do as we ask. If it can find them when it tries."
"An old man," said Bochner. "A captain without a ship. A woman."
"People."
"True, but there are so many people." Bochner looked into the
shadows. "With water there could be game. If so, it would follow
trails—need I tell you what is obvious?"
They set snares made of woven wires and waited and caught small,
furred creatures which squeaked and died and were skinned to roast over
a fire created by sparks struck from steel. Daylight provided more food
from the snares which had been set overnight, and again they began to
climb. At dusk, the vegetation had developed into tall trees which
soared like the columns of an ancient cathedral, their upper branches
plumed to hide the sky. Progress was easier, but slowed by the thick
humus which held the damp consistency of mud.
And there was no more game.
Its lack puzzled Bochner.
"There are fruits," he pointed out. "And there should be things to
eat them. There are insects and yet no apparent lifeform adapted to
prey on them. See?"
With his boot he scraped back a portion of the dirt, revealing a
host of scurrying beetles. The fruits, small, hard-skinned, now
rotting, lay where they had fallen.
Dumarest looked at the trees, the immediate area. Life took many
forms, but always it followed certain patterns. The large preyed on the
small and where there was food there was something to eat it. The
animals they had snared and eaten had been rodents, ratlike things with
teeth and jaws adapted
to an omnivorous diet. They had been fairly plentiful further down the
slopes—why not here?
Threnond said, "What's the matter? Are we lost?"
"No."
"How can you tell?" The dealer in items of death was hungry and
irritable and conscious of his overriding fatigue. He set down the
radio and moved off into the shadows clustered between the boles.
"While you decide, I've something to attend to. A natural function—you
understand."
A delicacy he had demonstrated before, but not with such abruptness.
Dumarest took a step after him, halted as Bochner rested a hand on his
arm.
"Let him go, Earl."
"There could be danger."
"Always there is the possibility of danger, my friend. In the wine
you drink, the food you eat, the bed in which you sleep. We are
surrounded by perils, but to guard against them all is beyond the
ability of man. We take what precautions we can and, for the rest we
trust to luck. If our luck is good, we continue to survive. If it is
bad—" he shrugged, "then we cease to have cause to worry."
And no man should be fool enough to burden himself with the welfare
of another—a point Bochner hadn't emphasized but had left in no doubt.
A tenet of his philosophy revealed in the tone of his voice, the
expression of his eyes, the words chosen to illustrate a meaning. When
a man played cards, he betrayed more than he guessed to a skilled
observer and Dumarest had assessed his motivation. The cult of self,
the way of the feline. The law of the beast who has only one instinct,
one drive. To survive at all costs. To live. To continue to exist, for
without personal existence there was nothing.
And yet he had dived into the ocean, risking death to save another.
"Threnond!" Dumarest raised his voice. "Shan? Shan, where are you?"
Silence, broken only by the rustle of feet in the humus as the woman
and Egulus came to join them. A silence which held a sudden, brooding
menace.
"Shan!"
"He can't be far," whispered Dilys. "There was no need for him to go
far."
"Shan!" Dumarest looked up and around, feeling the old, familiar
prickle of impending danger, the primitive warning which had served him
so well before. "Stay together," he said. "Keep watch. Bochner, you
light a fire. Hurry!"
He moved to where a clump of saplings stood between separated trees.
As flame rose from the fire the hunter had built, Dumarest cut down
four of the slender poles, trimmed them, sharpened their ends to form
crude spears.
As Dilys took hers, she said, "Why this, Earl? Trouble?"
"Maybe not. Just hold on to it, in case. Use it to lean on if you
like."
"Sure, just like an—"
She broke off as he lifted a hand, listening. From above and to one
side, falling with a gentle rustle through the leaves, came something
which twisted and turned to land like a flattened snake.
"A belt!" Egidus lunged forward. "By God, it's a belt!"
After it came nightmare.
It dropped with a thin chatter of castanets, veiled, gems flashing
in the firelight, fans and parasols flared and shimmering with a
nacreous sheen. A thing which followed the bole, suspended on a thin
strand, swinging, touching Egulus, who yelled and sprang back and
yelled again as he fell, to roll helpless on loam.
To stare with horror at the mammoth spider dropping towards him.
"Earl! My God! What—"
Dilys spoke to empty air. Dumarest was gone, lunging forward with a
speed which, in the firelight, made him seem little more than a blur.
To halt, spear upraised, butt on the loam beside the fallen captain,
the sharpened point buried deep in the mat of fur covering the spider's
thorax, wood shredding beneath the snap of its mandibles, silk pluming
from the pulsing spinnerets forming clouds of gossamer which drifted
like a mantle to clog his head and arms.
A silken shroud from which he tore himself with desperate energy.
"Earl!" Bochner shouted from where he came running, "Above!"
A hint of movement in the shadows and another monstrous creature
plummeted, to strike and seize and lift its prey to the lair it owned
high in the topmost branches of the trees. Dumarest sprang aside, steel
lifting from his boot, point and edge cutting at the snapping castanets
of the mandibles, stabbing at the gems of the eyes. Ichor dripped on
his hand, and an acrid stench filled his nostrils as hooked limbs tore
shreds from his padding. Limbs which jerked as they were slashed, to
lie severed on the loam, twitching as the body of the creature twisted
on its suspending filament, to attack with mindless ferocity again, to
die as Bochner impaled it with his wooden shaft.
"Back!" The hunter looked up. "Back, Earl! There could be more!"
"Get to the girl!" Dumarest stooped, grabbed the captain by the arms
and dragged him upright to his feet. Bochner hadn't moved. "Damn it,
man! Get to the girl!"
A fraction of hesitation and the hunter obeyed. Dilys stood beside
the fire, eyes wide, spear trembling in her hand as she stared into the
shadows. From above, from all sides, came a thin cluttering, a scrape
and rustle of chiton, the impact of limbs against branches and leaves
as things edged forward through the upper layers of vegetation.
"A nightmare." Egulus looked ill. "A thing from hell itself. It
almost had me. It would have had me but for Earl, Threnond?"
He hadn't been as lucky. Dumarest held out the belt he had
recovered, together with the spears.
"Is it his?"
"I don't know. It could have been." Egulus shivered. "What now?"
"We build up the fire. Gather fuel—go with him, Bochner. Keep guard
while he picks up what he can."
"And me, Earl?"
"You stay here." He looked at the woman. "Keep the fire as high as
you can. Don't move away from it, but don't stay immobile. Move about,
look around, keep watch and if you see anything, scream."
"And that will drive them away?"
"No." He was blunt. "But it may distract them."
"For how long?" She stared into the darkness, her voice high, thin,
verging on hysteria. "All right? And after that, what? Can we stay
awake all the time? Can we hope to beat those things off as we move?
Earl! What the hell can we do?"
"We wait," he said. "We watch and we plan. We keep our heads. Now
tend the fire."
A job which would keep her busy and occupy her mind. Flames rose as
she fed scraps of wood to the coals, leaping tongues of red and orange,
edged with grayish smoke, the light painting the boles around with
shimmers of transient brightness, glows which faded to flare again, to
give the impression of movement, of watching eyes.
"They'll come again," said Bochner. "They've tasted blood and
they'll be eager for more easy prey."
Egulus said, "Threnond—a hell of a way for a man to die. Squatting,
thinking, then something swinging down to—" He broke off, swallowing.
"He didn't even have time to scream. And then what? They lifted him up?
Carried him? Held him in a web like a fly? Thank God, he knew nothing
about it."
"Maybe," said Dumarest.
"He was dead," said Bochner quickly. "He had to be dead. Otherwise
he would have screamed or struggled. We'd have heard something."
"We did."
"His belt falling. What does that mean?"
Dumarest said, "He wore that belt under his clothing, so to fall, it
must have been exposed. Which means he was stripped."
"So where's the rest of his clothing?"
"I don't know," admitted Dumarest. "Maybe it was shredded and
scattered around. Maybe it's up in the trees and the belt fell by
accident."
"If it hadn't, I'd be dead by now," said Egulus. "We could all be
dead." He looked up and around, eyes uneasy, a muscle twitching on one
cheek. "For God's sake, can't we get away from here? Move back down the
slope? Find a clearing or something?"
"Tomorrow, yes."
"Why not now?"
"We're trapped," said Bochner. "If we move away from the fire,
they'll have us. If we try to take it with us, they'll follow. All we
can do is to keep it alight and watch. If we're lucky, they won't
attack in force."
"And if not?"
"We'll be dead." The hunter smiled. "We'll die fighting, but we'll
be dead just the same. A brave finish, you agree? To stand with
companions battling hopeless odds. Sagas have been written about less.
But have hope, friend. Always have hope."
Dumarest said, "They won't attack in force. If that was their habit,
we'd have been overrun long ago. I think it's a matter of
territory—game belongs to the spiders under whose trees it strays. At
the moment, we're at a junction, as it were, and so present a problem.
When the vacancy we made by killing those things is filled, then the
newcomers may attack."
Dilys said, "And if they do?"
"We fight back. We win."
"And leave?"
"Yes," said Dumarest. "After we have found Threnond."
Bochner stirred, not asleep yet not wholly awake, his mind drifting
in a vague region composed of memory and fantasy, constructing regions
of what-might-have-been together with those of what-could-be. Dumarest
was far more complex than he had at first appeared. There were levels
within the man which he was only now beginning to fully appreciate. A
sense of function, of fitness, of instinctive reaction which added new
dimensions to apparent simplicity. Nothing he did could be simple,
always there had to be a complex motivation directed not even on a
conscious level but operating on the subconscious need to ensure
survival. And yet, there were elements which negated that facile
theory. A man driven by the need simply to exist was predictable and so
made poor sport. Threaten, and he would respond in one of certain ways;
he would beg, run, bribe, plead, bargain, even kill. Dumarest would do
all these, if necessary, and yet that was not all. There had to be
more. If not, how had he managed to elude the Cyclan for so long?
And what made them so desperate to find and hold him?
Always it came back to that—the tantalizing promise of fantastic
reward. Not just for the sake of material gain but for the other, far
more intense pleasure of personal achievement. Of running down the most
wily and the most dangerous quarry he had ever known to the final,
bitter end. Not just to make a kill—any fool could destroy—but to win
on all levels so that when the hunt was ended, the stalk consummated,
and he was closing in for the termination, the usual orgasmic pleasure
would be multiplied a hundredfold.
To win.
To pit mind against mind, body against body, skill and cunning and
intelligence against equal attributes and to win. To be proven the
best. To gain in stature by the other's defeat.
To live!
A noise, and he was fully awake, one hand reaching for his knife,
the other for his spear. Against the glow of the fire, the bulk of the
woman showed monstrous; female flesh rendered even more shapeless by
the clothing and padding she wore. For a moment he compared her with
Gale Andrei and her slim boyishness, then dismissed them both. Women,
never important, were now an unwanted complication.
Dumarest stood beyond her, head tilted, eyes searching the heights.
Egulus, lying supine, stirred and coughed—the noise he had heard—and
Bochner lifted himself from the loam to rise and flex his muscles. A
creature of the wild preparing himself for action.
They had, he thought, been lucky. It was close to dawn and the night
had passed without incident. Lying, resting his bones if nothing else,
he had waited on the edge of instant alertness, ready for any attack,
eyes acting as watchful guardians as, apparently, he dreamed. Now, with
the new day, they could move back down the slope, skirt the area, press
on up the hill to the peak.
If the area could be skirted.
If there was no attack.
Standing, he felt his mind flash to an alternate possibility. He and
Dumarest, wandering this world, two hunters living on the land, knowing
and relishing the taste and feel of a primitive existence, sharing and
finding joy in their own, personal world.
A moment, then it was gone and only a semiregretful glow remained.
The main hunt still remained. The stalk, the challenge, the need to
act, to delude, to beat intelligence and caution with the same of his
own.
He said, "Earl? Are we ready to move out?"
"Not yet." Dumarest, Bochner noticed, had removed all the padding
he'd worn. "Strip. I want everything but your own clothing. You too,
Dilys. And you, captain."
"Why?"
"For smoke. Most of the padding is plastic and it'll produce a
thick, black cloud when burned."
"Smoke?" Egulus frowned, then thought he had the answer. "To get rid
of the spiders? Will it work?"
"It might. At least, it will stop them seeing me."
"Seeing you?" Dilys remembered what he had said. "Earl, you're not
going after Threnond!"
"Someone has to."
"But why? He's dead. You said so yourself."
"No, others said that. I'm afraid he could still be alive." Dumarest
stooped and lifted burning sticks from the fire, "If he is, then he's
in the worst land of hell. We can't leave him in it."
He carried the mass of burning wood to the place where the belt had
fallen and she followed him, searching for words, for a reason why he
shouldn't do what he obviously intended to do. Only a madman would want
to climb the tree to face what could lurk above. Threnond was dead—he
had to be dead. How could he possibly be alive?
Bochner knew. He said urgently, "Earl, the risk is too great. Even
if they did sting and poison him, there's nothing you can do. We have
no cure. You'd be throwing your life away for nothing."
Dumarest said, "If you want to help, stand guard while Dilys feeds
the fire. If not, get the hell away from here. Captain?"
"I'm with you, Earl." Egulus came forward, his arms filled with
discarded padding, eyes anxious as he stared into the dying night. "I
don't understand this, but in space we help each other. Threnond wasn't
a spacer, but he'd bought passage and I guess I'm responsible for him,
in a way." He added with simple dignity, "Just tell me what you want me
to do."
"Stand guard, keep watch, take care of anything which might attack."
Dumarest glanced at the bole of the tree, his eyes following it to the
summit. "It's light up there. Dilys, start making smoke."
It billowed from the embers as she fed plastic to the embers, thick,
black, acrid. Rising in a pillar about the bole of the tree, drawn
upwards by the dawn wind blowing over the forest, spreading in odd
vagaries of shape, coils hanging as if solid, to writhe, to drift like
reluctant phantoms, to stain the greenery with fingers of pollution.
In the midst of it, Dumarest climbed upwards like a mechanical doll.
A rope circled the tree, the loop enclosing his body and forming a rest
against which he could strain while his boots found holds on the trunk.
Hands flapping the rope upwards, body moving in synchronization with
feet and support, he was gone before they knew it, a dim shape which
vanished into darkness.
"They'll get him," said Egulus. "He won't be able to see them and
they'll get him before he knows it."
"No." Bochner released his breath in a long sigh. "He knows what
he's doing. The smoke will clear the area."
Of spiders and oxygen, both given time. And the released poisons
could be as fatal to man as arachnids. Why was he risking his life? Why?
High above, Dumarest paused, blinking, conscious of the pain in his
lungs, the constriction. The cloth he had wrapped around his mouth did
little to filter the smoke from the air and it was time to lose even
that protection. A quick move and it was around his throat, the blade
of his knife clamped in his mouth, and again he was climbing up to
where the leaves made an umbrella to trap the smoke as it hid the sky.
The sky and other things.
Something thin and sticky touched his cheek, stinging, as he forged
upwards and tore it free. Another traced a silken path over his sleeve,
more joined it, formed a mesh which parted as he jerked his arm, lifted
to settle on his hair. The smoke protected him, settled vapor
preventing the silk from adhering as designed to do, maintaining the
freedom of motion he needed. A rustle and his hand lifted, caught the
hilt of the knife, slashed as mandibles snapped an inch from his cheek,
slashed again to complete the ruin, then again to send the oozing
creature from its perch to plummet below.
One taken care of—how many others would be waiting?
The things were the size of a small dog, legs doubling the body
area, mandibles capable of closing around a neck. The hooked limbs
could rip and tear flesh from bones, but the most dangerous part was
the venom which would numb and paralyze with immediate effect. One
bite, if it broke the skin, and he would be worse than dead.
A branch interrupted his upward progress and, in a sudden area of
clarity in the smoke, he saw a scuttling shape, silk streaming from its
spinnerets, limbs rasping as it lunged towards him. Chiton broke
beneath the smash of his fist, covering his knuckles with ooze, and a
thrust of his knife drove steel into the main ganglion, cutting and
twisting and severing the muscles leading to the mandibles. Higher, and
the smoke thinned, ebon wreaths tracing smears across the morning,
soiling the first pearly light.
Touching the twinkle of diamond dew, which graced the clouds of
gossamer hanging in delicate veils.
Laying a patina of darkness on the long shape shrouded and bound
with layers of web to branches which crossed and made a platform.
A bier for the, as yet, undead.
Threnond was stung, paralyzed, locked in a mental torment of
helpless awareness. Meat processed for later consumption by the newborn
spiders which would hatch from the eggs festooning his chest and
throat, his stomach, groin and thighs. Doomed to lie immobile while the
hungry mandibles gnawed into his flesh. To know the horror of being
eaten alive.
His eyes were open, glazed, already seats of torment. Targets for
the glare of the rising sun. Blindness would be the first of his many
extra hells.
There was no cure and only one mercy.
Dumarest administered it, then slid down the bole of the tree to
land, coughing, doubled and retching as acrid vapor tore at his lungs.
He heard Bochner cry a warning, then the impact of a sudden weight on
his back, the snap of mandibles at his shoulders, the touch of chiton
against his cheek. A touch which fell away as the hunter smashed the
scrabbling spider to the loam, to thrust his wooden spear into its
thorax, to crush it with his boot as it fretted the shaft.
Another which, crippled, moved slowly back up a tree. A third, which
Egulus killed as Dumarest, fighting for breath, stumbled free of the
smoke.
"So, you found him." Bochner glanced at the red smears where
Dumarest had wiped his knife against his thigh. "And gave him an easy
way out."
"Thank God for that." Egulus glanced uneasily up at the smoke. "I
know what it's about now. Some spiders sting and paralyze, and others
do not—how did you know which kind these are?"
"I didn't." Dumarest straightened, fighting a sudden giddiness. He
had inhaled too much poison. "I just couldn't take the chance."
"He was lucky," said Bochner. "Threnond, I mean. He was damned
lucky."
Dilys said, "Lucky? I thought he was dead."
"He is. That's what I mean." The hunter glanced at Dumarest.
"Sometimes that's what a friend is for—and he had one of the best."
Chapter Eleven
The fire was small, the animal skinned and suspended over it slowly
cooking, the smell tantalizing as it stimulated primitive appetites.
Watching it, Dilys remembered her youth. Would the spit have been
considered a machine? The means of starting the blaze? Vagrant
thoughts, which grew in the dullness of fatigue. Fruits of an
undisciplined mind.
Leaning back against a rock, she looked at the vast expanse of the
sea far below. Light shimmered from the water in brief splinters of
flashing brilliance, sparkles which caught the eye to vanish even as
they were born, to flash again in a coruscating pattern of hypnotic
attraction. A floor to match the sweeping bowl of the sky in which the
sun hung like a watching, malefic eye.
And, suddenly, she was afraid.
All her life she had been confined. The village had been small and
always there had been walls. Even later, when she had run away to the
town to study, there had been close restraints; the cramped room she
shared with others, the lecture halls, the classrooms, the workshops
and, later, the interiors of ships, the engine rooms she had made her
world. And now, agoraphobia gripped her so that she wanted to cringe
and hide from the threat of the vast, open spaces.
"Dilys?" Dumarest was beside her. "Is anything wrong?"
Had she cried out in her sudden terror? Had he sensed her need? No
matter, he was close and she felt a warm reassurance. Impulsively, she
reached out to take his hand.
"Earl! Earl, I—"
"Should be watching the fire," he said quickly. "If you let the meat
burn, I'll beat you."
He was joking, turning the subject from intense emotion, and yet she
sensed that it was not wholly a jest. If the need arose he would beat
her. Strike her, as he had killed Threnond. From need. From mercy.
Could she have done the same?
Could Egulus?
They came from different worlds, she thought. To them, the hull was
the natural boundary, the hum of engines the voice of the wind, the
glow of lights the shine of the sun. Planets were places to be visited
and left without delay. Worlds were names in an almanac. Here, on the
dirt, they were like stranded fish.
And she was tired. Tired!
They had dropped down the slope until clear of the trees, then
turned to the left where Dumarest had spotted a long ridge running up
the foothills. A relatively safe path a few miles away, the distance
trebled by the undulations of the terrain, trebled again by the
difficulty of progress. A time of stumbling on, of drinking when they
found water, eating when they had food. Days which had passed into
nights and nights which had turned pale and become days again. How
many? She had forgotten.
"You're tired," said Dumarest, "but it won't be long now. We're
almost at the summit of the peak. Tomorrow we'll be able to see what's
on the other side." Then, when she made no comment, he added, "Watch
the meat, girl. Game is scarce up here."
Game and fruits and even leaves succulent enough to chew. He looked
back down the slope as he left the girl, frowning as he judged their
progress. It was too slow. Hardship had weakened them but here, facing
the sea, was a bad place to linger. Over the crest would be shelter and
the possibility of larger game.
Egulus sat with the radio on his lap, Bochner beside him. The
captain was busy checking the mechanism, fingers deft as he traced
circuits and tested connections.
"It's crude, Earl." He looked up as Dumarest's shadow fell over the
mechanism. "Threnond had to use what was available, but he had limited
knowledge of electronics. I'm trying to alter the circuits a little to
boost the emissions."
"It's still working?"
"Yes. I've tested the energy cell and it's viable. The thing is, I'm
not too sure of the emissions. It should be sending on the general
planetary band if it's to be any good at all, but there's no way of
telling."
"Ships and field installations operate on a wide-band spectrum,"
said Dumarest. "They might not recognize it as a message at first, but
they'll hear and investigate."
"By adjusting the receptors," agreed the captain. "If the operator
on duty isn't a fool, or thinking of something else, or is willing to
take the time and use the power. On any normal world I wouldn't be so
anxious, but this is Hyrcanus."
"What difference does it make?" Bochner scowled. "There's a field,
isn't there? A town of sorts? People!"
"Yes, but we have that, too." Egulus jerked his head at the sun.
"And we're in the Quillian Sector. Space is full of noise. From here,
you send word by courier and get it the same way. Close in, they can
hear us but we don't know in which direction the field could be lying.
It could even be on the other side of the planet."
"If it is?"
Egulus shrugged. "Luck," he said. "It's a matter of luck. They could
pick up our transmission or it need never reach them."
And, even if it was heard, it could be ignored.
Dumarest said, "Can you increase the power? Send out an overall
blast?"
"Maybe." The captain frowned, thinking. "If I can rig the circuits,
yes. Threnond used the emergency alarm as a base and the capacitors are
an integral part. He bypassed them, but they can be reincorporated. But
if we do that, Earl, we'll be taking a chance. The power won't last."
"How long?"
Again the captain frowned. "I can't be sure. We've used up a lot
during the journey. About three strong emissions, I'd say. Maybe one or
two weak ones, then finish."
"A gamble," said Bochner. "If they don't hear us we'll have to make
our own way." His teeth flashed in a smile as he thought about it.
"Back to the beginnings, Earl. To hunt and trap and make do as best we
can. It won't be too bad. We've skill and adaptability and we've a
woman."
"Savages." Egulus looked at the radio. "I was on an expedition once.
We'd heard about a ship which had been wrecked in the mountains of
Glechen. We didn't find it but we found what could have been the
survivors. They couldn't read, spoke in grunts, were covered in scabs
and practiced cannibalism. Fifty years, maybe less, and they were back
in the dirt."
"They were soft." Bochner echoed his contempt. "If a man is anything
at all he'll find a way to make out, no matter what his environment.
That's what life is all about, isn't it? To take what is and make it
what you want it to be. Right, Earl?"
"Save the power." Dumarest ignored the question as he looked at
Egulus. "Adjust the radio, but don't use it until we reach the summit."
To the hunter, he said, "Well eat and move on. You go ahead and scout
If you find anything of interest, just leave it. No private hunts. No
risks."
Bochner said flatly, "Are you giving me orders?"
Dumarest caught the tone, saw the sudden tension, the stance which
betrayed anger barely controlled. A reaction to fatigue too long
denied, of nerves worn, yet masked by a casual facade. Of a maniacal
pride which, even now, had to challenge the hint of another's authority.
He said mildly, "No, I'm not giving you orders. You stay with the
others, if you want I'll go ahead and scout."
"You think I'm tired?"
"I don't know what you are." Dumarest met the eyes, wild, wide, the
irises edged with white. "But me, I'm bushed."
The admission brought the reaction he'd expected. Bochner relaxed,
smiling, armored in his conviction of superiority.
"Hell, Earl," he said. "I'm bushed, too—a little. You go ahead and
rest."
They reached the summit as darkness began to edge the horizon and
the light of the dying sun threw streamers of red and gold, orange and
amber against the vault of the sky. A spectacle which would have
entranced Gale Andrei, but she, dead, had no eyes to see and they were
too exhausted to do more than slump and stare at what lay beyond the
peaks edging the shore.
A rolling savannah of bush and scrub, interspersed with clumps of
trees now touched with the golden promise of the fading light. A stream
which meandered toward a river which must wind on a slow and torturous
path to the sea some distance to one side. Clouds, like smoke in the
far distance, and beyond them, the soaring loom of mountains, their
summits touched with perpetual white.
"Nothing!" Dily's voiced her disappointment. "Earl, there's nothing!"
Game trails, which his eye could see even in the dusk. Places which
could conceal, timber which could make huts and fires, brush adaptable
to protective stockades, and water which could be navigated, given
craft which strong hands and sharp stones could build. A world in which
men could live given the determination. But she saw nothing.
"No houses," she said dully. "No roads. No animals. No signs of
life. A wilderness. It's a damned wilderness!"
"Easy." Dumarest caught her by the arm, his fingers relaying a warm
comfort. "Just take it easy. Ask Bochner to start a fire and make some
sort of a camp." It would give them both something to do. "Find some
rocks and make sure they aren't harboring snakes. The night will bring
wind, so bear that in mind. Come now!" He smiled and lifted up her
chin. "Look on the bright side. There could be swamps or desert down
there. Salt flats or marsh. Remember that place you spoke of on Swenna?
Your land? Is it so different?"
"No," she admitted. "I guess not."
"Then why the disappointment? It should be like coming home."
But on Swenna there would be a town and neighbors, and even if they
weren't close, they would be there and within contact range. Now she
felt as if no one else but themselves existed on this entire planet.
That they had crashed to live as best they might, to live and die
without ever seeing the civilization she had known. The ships and towns
and busy places. The markets and communes and the sound of eager voices.
Bochner said, "Gather fuel, woman. Get it while there is still light
to see. And watch for snakes and things which could bite." His smile
was ugly, that of a predator enjoying the moment before the kill. "Come
now, move!"
The tone of command, which she had heard so often as a child and had
never learned to like. For a moment she faced him, tempted to challenge
his assumption that she would obey, to take him, hold him, use her
hands to crush out his life. A moment only, then she recognized the
weakness which made her less than the hunter. Sometimes, at rare
intervals, she could overcome it, but always there had to be the
stimulus. Now it was easier to turn and move off to gather dried
grasses and broken twigs, patches of moss and windblown debris which
would burn.
Egulus said, "Here, Earl? It's as high as we're going to get unless
we head for those mountains."
"Here." Dumarest looked at the sun, the sea bathed in washes of
color, swaths of warm and enticing hue which matched and augmented the
splendor of the sky. "But not yet. Wait until its well after dark. We
don't want to fight the sun more than we have to."
"After dark," agreed the captain. "We've three good, strong bursts,
Earl. Shall I send them out quickly, one after the other, or space them
out?"
"Space them through the night. Send the last at dawn. Wait, then use
what power is left to do what you can."
"And if we get no response?" Egulus sucked at his lips as Dumarest
made no answer. "Maybe I can pick up something by switching to
reception. No luck so far, but the hills could have blocked the signal.
At least we might get a line as to the whereabouts of the field."
And if not they could, perhaps, see ships coming in to land. Others
leaving—if they were on the right hemisphere.
Darkness brought a chill wind, which caught at the fire and sent the
flames dancing to paint the area in shifting patterns of light. From
the shadowed savannah, something cried out with a harsh, grating sound
quickly ended. A beast falling to the claws and fangs of a predator or
the mating call of an animal in heat. It was not repeated and Dumarest,
standing watch, guessed the former to be the most likely explanation.
He turned as Bochner came towards him. The hunter looked at the cold
gleam of the knife lifted towards him and smiled.
"I could have killed you, Earl, had I wanted."
"Perhaps."
"You imply doubt. There is no doubt. I could have been on you before
you knew it. A move. A single blow and you would be dead, now." The
hunter drew in his breath, released it with a soft inhalation. "My
friend, I am a practical man and know you are, also. What if rescue
does not arrive?"
"We live."
"Of course, but how? I mean in what manner? Three men and only one
woman—you recognize the problem? The captain, I think, can be left out
of the equation, but there is still you and me. Frankly, the need of a
woman is, to me, only a minor irritation, but there is a question of
principle. Of precedence. You understand?"
Dumarest remembered the cry he had heard—death sending its warning.
Was he listening to another? Had he received it?
Against the glow of the fire the hunter's face was in shadow, the
light which delineated his stance masking his expression, but there
were things the shadows couldn't hide. The scent which came from him;
the odor born of released adrenalin, of pulsing blood, of muscular
tension and glandular secretions all designed to lift and hold the body
to a fighting pitch. Odors Dumarest had smelled before when facing men
in the arena. The stench which came through oil and sweat and which
usually held the taint of fear. A taint now absent.
Bochner said again, "You understand?"
"Yes," said Dumarest. "I understand."
"And the woman?"
"Will make her own choice."
"I don't think so."
Dumarest looked at the shape limned in the firelight, the shadowed
face in which reflected starlight betrayed the eyes. "I can't agree."
"So?"
"I think that as you're so wakeful you can take over the watch.
Arguments can wait until later." He added dryly, "And don't worry, I
won't creep up on you in the dark."
Dawn came with splinters of light and a wind which dropped as the
day grew older. Dilys, refreshed by her sleep, tried to wash her face
and hair in the dew which assuaged their thirst. Too little
and too hard to collect, tantalizing rather than satisfying. When she
complained, Dumarest waved at the savannah.
"We're too high for water up here. It's all running to lower levels."
"Why can't we wait down there?"
"Smoke." He looked at the fire. "Down lower it will be masked
against the hills. Up here, it can be seen for miles."
The obvious, which she had overlooked. Irritably, she began to pile
the remaining fuel on the embers.
"Save that until later," advised Dumarest, "until the morning winds
have died. And if we're going to keep it fed, we'll need more fuel."
They descended to find it, dropping down the landward slope to
gather and haul ferns and branches, twigs, roots, dried stems and
saplings to be piled beside the fire. Dumarest downed a scurrying shape
with his thrown knife and Bochner tried to emulate the feat. His blade
pierced a leg and sent the rodent, screaming, to bite at the steel.
Screams which died as he broke the creature's neck, but he was not
pleased. Dumarest had killed clean at twice the distance.
"A dangerous man, that," said Egulus when, later, he watched with
Dumarest beside the fire. Fed with the remaining scraps of available
plastic, it threw an ebon column into the sky. "I saw his face when he
realized you had bested him. He can't stand to be beaten at anything.
I've known men like that before. I suppose, in a way, I was one myself.
What I wanted, I had to get. I did, too-but that's over now. The
Entil
is gone."
"What do you know of him?"
"Leo Bochner?" The captain shrugged. "Nothing. He wanted passage and
could pay for it. What else was there for me to know? You must have
learned more about him than I did?"
A man who had boarded with expensive equipment; weapons and items of
price, to be expected from a successful hunter and the representative
of a wealthy consortium. His luggage was gone now, dumped with the rest
of the jettisoned weight, and he had not protested. That, in itself,
was unusual. In Dumarest's experience, the wealthy hated to lose their
possessions; few were realistic enough to accept the necessity for
sacrifice.
He said, "Anything on the radio?"
"Nothing." Egulus picked it up and tripped a switch. "I've been
saving power. It's on to receive now. I—" He broke off, grunting with
surprise. "I think—yes, by God! A signal!"
Dumarest listened to the sharp series of blips, the silence, the
blips again.
As the following silence dragged he said, "Direction?"
"Hard to tell with precision." Egulus scowled at the instrument.
"From land, though. Somewhere over there."
His hand pointed over the savannah, aimed above the heads of Bochner
and Dilys as they searched for edible grasses lower down the slope.
Looking at her, the captain shook his head.
"Jumoke was a fool, Earl. He had no patience. I told him that your
association with Dilys wouldn't last but he refused to listen. He even
wanted to share. The bastard!" His hands tightened on the radio. "The
crazy bastard! The work of a lifetime thrown away because he became
obsessed with a woman!"
"It's over." Dumarest could appreciate the man's anger. "It's all in
the past now, Captain."
"Yes." Egulus looked at his hands and eased their pressure. "Yes,
Earl, but the woman is still with us. She still could be a source of
trouble. You and Bochner—if she favors him, will you let her go?"
"I don't own her."
"Maybe she wishes you did. Maybe she'd want you to fight over her.
You and Bochner like a couple of rutting dogs, with her watching and
willing to mate with the one who wins." Egulus ended bitterly, "You and
Bochner—I don't count."
Dumarest said quietly, "You're wrong, Yarn. You and she have more in
common than you think. You belong to the same world. Before Jumoke—were
you close?"
"Yes."
"And she left you for the navigator?"
"She's her own master, Earl. You know how it is in space. We have
our own customs and a captain has to respect them. And we were all
partners, don't forget. Each of us technically equal to the other—hell,
why waste time talking about it!"
"Check the radio," said Dumarest. "See if there are any further
signals."
He added more fuel to the fire as the captain obeyed, damp leaves,
mosses and green twigs which thickened the column of smoke into a
brown-gray pillar against the sky. Turning, he stared toward the
distant range of mountains. They were too far for him to make out other
than general detail, but there could be mines and men working them and
passes leading to farms beyond. Even a lone prospector, sending in a
report, could have accounted for the signals.
An hour later they spotted the raft.
Chapter Twelve
Dilys watched as it came towards them, conscious of a tremendous
relief. Soon, now, she would be on her way to houses and people. To the
field and ships and the warm comfort and security of familiar things.
"They've come!" Her voice carried gladness. "They've come to rescue
us!"
Egulus said, "They must have picked up our signals and come to
investigate."
He was more cautious than the girl, and with reason. Investigation
did not assume rescue; that implied payment and they had little to
offer. A caution Dumarest shared.
"Spread out," he said. "Bochner, you take the left and I'll take the
right. If they move against us, don't hesitate to act."
Orders which, for once, the hunter didn't object to obeying. He took
up his position, looking at the advancing raft, head tilted, eyes
narrowed.
"Small," he commented. "It could belong to a lone prospector or
hunter."
"It's seen us," said Dilys. "It's heading directly toward the smoke."
Words spoken for reassurance—it had been obvious from the first that
the raft was making for the peak on which they stood. Dumarest watched
as it lowered its line of flight. Small, as Bochner had said, a hollow
shell fitted with controls at one end, a rail around the body which
would hold a padded seat. If there was a protective canopy, it was
folded back. The body holding the antigrav units was equipped with
landing skids, and the sound of the engine powering the units was a
soft humming purr.
It would be holding one man at least, the driver. Then, as he caught
a blur of movement, Dumarest revised his figures. Two men, including
the driver. The head he had seen toward the rear of the craft could not
have belonged to the man at the controls.
"Two men." Bochner had also spotted the movement. "Either that's all
there are or the rest are lying low. In which case, we could have a
problem."
"Earl?" Dilys had heard and looked questioningly at Dumarest. "What
does he mean?"
"Nothing. Just wave and call out."
To act the person in distress and to reveal the fact that she was a
woman. Bait, if those who could be lurking inside the raft were
scavengers; men who would kill for the sake of what they could steal. A
good reason for landing if those within the vehicle were not the honest
rescuers she thought.
The craft dropped lower, slowed, passed over them to swing in a wide
circle over the sea before returning to settle gently on the edge of
the summit.
Two men only, one at the controls, the other sitting in the body of
the raft. A tall man, wearing dull fabrics and a peaked cap. One
Bochner recognized. Caradoc, in disguise.
Oddly, he wasn't surprised.
The cyber glanced at him, then at the others. "Trouble?"
"Yes." Dumarest stepped toward the raft. "Our ship crashed and we're
lucky to be alive. Can you take us to safety?"
"Of course." The smooth, even modulation held no hesitation. "Are
there others besides yourselves?"
"No." Dumarest glanced at the man seated at the controls. Young, his
face devoid of expression, hands resting on his knees. They were slim,
with delicate fingers, the nails neatly rounded. He wore a loose robe
of coarse brown material, the sleeves wide, the garment held by a
cincture at the waist. "How did you know we were here? Did you pick up
our signal?"
"Yes," said Caradoc.
"So we were lucky. A gamble which paid off." Dumarest added
casually, "Did you have to travel far?"
"Twelve hours."
A thousand miles, at the usual touring speed of a raft and the
rotation of Hyrcanus, was fast. They must have started out before the
signal had been sent from the peak.
"A long time," said Dumarest. "It was good of you to take the
trouble. Do you have any other business this way?"
"No."
"So you just picked up our signal and came straight to the rescue?"
Dumarest glanced at the bundle within the raft. "Carrying survival
gear, too, I see."
"An elementary precaution," said Caradoc. "Our action seems to
disturb you. Why?"
Bochner could have told him and he stood, fuming, at the idiocy of
the man. Even a young and inexperienced cyber should be aware that men
did nothing without hope of reward. Certainly not the men living on
worlds such as this. Fuel had to be paid for. The expense of the raft
met. Time and energy expended in another's behalf had to be compensated
for. At the very least, Caradoc should have asked what the party was
prepared to pay for transportation. And Dumarest had been shrewd—that
question as to the signal!
The answer had been as good as a confession.
"Disturb me?" Dumarest smiled and shook his head, lifting his hands
as if to display their emptiness. Neither of the men in the raft were
armed, as far as he could see. Another anomaly—but the wide sleeves of
the robe the driver wore could cover more than wrists and arms. "Just
the reverse. I am more pleased to see you than you can imagine. We are
all pleased to see you. The alternative—" He broke off with a shrug.
"Can you take us all aboard?"
"Unfortunately, that is not possible," said Caradoc. "The distance
to be covered is long and we developed a fault which has lessened our
load capacity. I can take one now, and make arrangements for the rest
to be picked up later. You." He pointed at Dumarest. "I shall take you."
"No!" Bochner stepped forward, fighting to control his anger. The
quarry was his and, he realized, now his only assurance of safety. Once
the cyber had Dumarest, he would have no further use for the hunter.
"Take me with you," he urged. "You can dump the survival gear, if you
have to lighten the raft. Take me, too!"
A message made as plain as he dared if he hoped to maintain his
pretense. And if Caradoc should betray him— what? To face Dumarest with
naked blades? To attack and beat the cyber and his acolyte and,
somehow, hold the quarry for later delivery?
Thoughts which spun and stilled as the cyber said, "That would be
illogical. True, the possibility of an accident is small but,
nevertheless, it exists. Without the survival gear we should be taking
an unnecessary risk."
Dumarest said quickly, "Bochner! Hit them! Now!"
He was at the raft before the hunter had moved, reaching for the
cyber, freezing as the driver whipped his hand into his sleeve and sent
a beam of searing heat to pass a foot before his eyes. Another shot
from the laser fused stone at Bochner's foot, a third sent smoke rising
from crisped and incinerated hair.
"Yvan! Up!"
A touch and the raft had lifted, to hang poised in the air four feet
from the edge of the summit and three above the uppermost level. From
his vantage point Caradoc looked down at the group below.
Dumarest—the man the Cyclan had hunted for so long, now within his
grasp. If Bochner had not spoken he would have been helpless now,
drugged into unconsciousness by the hypogun clipped beneath the rail.
And yet, would he have walked into the trap? Caradoc remembered the
questions, the looks, the final command.
How had he known?
Bochner could have told him, but the hunter was at Dumarest's side,
beating the last of the embers from his hair.
"They shot at us, Earl. Why, for God's sake?"
"The tall man's a cyber. The other is his acolyte. He didn't shoot
to kill."
"I could argue that." Bochner touched his seared hair. "Are you sure
that man's a cyber?"
"I'm sure." The tone, the lack of human curiosity, the failure to
act as normal men would have acted. And the last, cold calculation
which, coupled with his instinctive reaction, left no doubt.
"So, where does that leave us?" Bochner stared at the raft. A jump
and he could reach it, but if the acolyte fired he would be dead when
he did. And the man would fire, and had already shown his skill with
the weapon now carried openly in his hand. "He could kill us, Earl.
Burn us down."
All, but not Dumarest. He could be crippled, laser fire directed
against his knees and elbows to leave him helpless. Injuries
which would leave his brain and the secret it held intact.
Caradoc said, "A bargain, Dumarest I guarantee the safety of the
rest if you will agree to accompany us."
A bargain from which he would gain nothing. Dumarest looked at the
raft, the acolyte standing at the controls, the tall figure of the
cyber at the rear of the vehicle. They were too tense, too alert, for
any plan he might make to have any chance of success.
"I don't know you," he said. "Your name?" He nodded when Caradoc
gave it. "You are young but are obviously clever. You should rise high
and become a power in the Cyclan. My capture alone will assure that."
"You admit defeat?"
"Can I admit anything else?" Dumarest's shrug was visible evidence
of his acceptance of the situation. "But I'm curious as to how you
managed to trace me. It couldn't have been easy."
"A matter of simple application."
"For you, perhaps, but far from simple to anyone else. And after the
Entil was wrecked? How could you have possibly known we would
have reached this planet?" No cyber could be flattered, but Dumarest
knew of the single pleasure they could experience, that of mental
achievement. Caradoc was young, and had already shown a certain
carelessness. If he could be persuaded to talk, to relax a little, and
the acolyte with him—it would be the only chance he would get.
He nodded as the cyber explained; the emergency signals received,
plotted, a line traced to Hyrcanus—work requiring the application of a
dedicated genius made ordinary in the even modulation.
"And then, of course, you picked up our transmission." Dumarest
pursed his lips, a man obviously facing the inevitable, one willing to
end a futile struggle. "Well, I guess that's about it. If you'll bring
the raft in closer, I'll jump aboard."
"No!" Bochner's voice was a snarl of anger. The knife he lifted an
edged splinter of brilliance as he lifted it to rest against Dumarest's
throat. "You take him then you take me, or I'll kill him before your
eyes!"
"Yvan!"
Dumarest spun as the acolyte lifted his laser, turning away from the
threatening steel, his hand dropping to his lifted boot, his own blade
rising, flashing as it lanced through the air, the winking brilliance
of reflected light vanishing as the blade hit and plunged into living
flesh.
As the acolyte fell, screaming, Dumarest sprang forward, throwing
himself into the air as the raft lifted, the tall figure of the cyber
falling, to hang half-suspended over the edge, blood welling from the
charred hole burned in his side.
Dead or injured from the accidental shot, he was powerless to help
or interfere. Dumarest caught at the rail, felt one hand slip, hung by
the other as the vehicle rose into the air. Falling, the acolyte had
hit the controls.
Dumarest glanced down, saw the land now far below, the faces of the
others on the summit small blobs which shrank even as he looked. Wind
from the sea caught his hair and chilled his face, pressing against his
body with invisible hands, adding to the strain on his hand and arm.
Heaving his body upward, he managed to send his free hand to grip the
rail and hung, panting from the effort, his weakened body radiating
messages of exhaustion. He wanted to rest, yet to wait too long was to
invite disaster. Already his muscles ached from the strain of
supporting his weight, the tissues of shoulders and arms a burning pain.
Waiting, he felt the raft tilt to the impact of the wind and heaved,
one leg rising, foot and knee striving to reach and pass over the rail.
An attempt which failed, and fresh pain flooded his arms and back as
they took the strain of his falling weight. Sucking air into his lungs
so as to hyperventilate his blood, he waited, then as the raft tilted,
tried again. Blood roared in his ears and he felt the pounding of his
heart as he heaved once more, the rail slowly coming closer to his
chin, to pass beneath it, to press like a rod of heated iron against
the soft flesh of his throat as he worked to get an elbow over the rail.
When he finally managed to flop into the open body of the raft, he
was trembling and drenched with sweat. Able to do nothing but lie and
breathe and wait for the strength to move. When finally he sat upright,
the peak was a blur on the horizon, the plume of smoke from the fire a
wavering thread against the sky.
The acolyte was dead, lying in a puddle of his own blood, one hand
gripping the blade buried in his chest, sightless eyes staring at the
sun. Dumarest recovered his knife and threw the body over the side. As
it fell, the raft lifted and he adjusted the controls, killing the lift
and sending the vehicle back towards the peak.
Incredibly, Caradoc was still alive.
He breathed in shallow gasps, small bubbles breaking at his lips to
form carmine circles, unconscious from shock and the loss of blood.
Dumarest lifted him from the rail and lay him down beside the bundle in
the body of the raft. The wound was deep, the edges charred and
blackened, but the very fury of the blast had cauterized the flesh,
staunching the wound and sealing it against further loss of blood.
Dumarest looked at the hypogun where it rested against the side just
below the rail. He could guess what it contained. Lifting it, he aimed
at the cyber's flaccid throat and triggered it twice. A double dose of
drugs to send Caradoc into a deeper oblivion.
"Earl!" Dilys came running as he grounded the raft. "Thank God,
you're safe! I saw something fall—I thought it could be you!" She came
to him, face wet with tears. "Oh, Earl!"
Egulus said, "The way you moved! The speed! But what happened? The
cyber—"
"Is dead, I hope." Bochner thrust the captain to one side and
snarled as he saw the limp figure. "Kill him, Earl! Get rid of the
cold-blooded bastard!"
"Why?"
"He was after you, wasn't he? Chased you across space from Ealius?
Wanted to take you and hold you, right?"
"Right," said Dumarest. "But how did you know?"
"What? I—"
"Never mind." Dumarest stooped and lifted the limp body of the
cyber. "Here, take him. Set him down beside the fire. You'd better
cover him up with something. You could find blankets in here."
He lifted the survival kit and threw it after the hunter.
Bochner looked at it. "Am I a nurse?"
"You're the fittest man here, aren't you? The best? You've wanted to
prove it often enough, so prove it now. You can stay behind to look
after the cyber. To take care of your friend."
"You're mad." Bochner took a step toward where Dumarest stood beside
the raft. "Insane. What the hell do you mean—my friend? Do you
think I'm working with Caradoc?"
"Are you?"
"No! And if you want to call me a liar, go ahead!" Bochner crouched,
hands spread, an animal poised to spring. "Talk," he said. "It's just
talk. You've no proof. I've been expecting something like this. An
excuse for you to turn against me. To take the woman for yourself. If
the raft hadn't come, you'd have tried to put your knife in my back.
Now you want to dump me. Leave me on this peak. Well, I've a better
idea. You stay while I take the raft. You act as a nurse to the cyber
while—"
He moved even as he spoke, the words serving as a distraction, one
which Dumarest had recognized. The hunter snarled, his hands slicing
through empty air as Dumarest moved, anticipating the attack. Bochner
turned, snatching at the knife he carried in his belt, grunting as
Dumarest closed in, hand gripping his wrist, his own blade lifted to
catch the sun.
For a long, dragging moment they stood, muscle set against muscle,
bodies locked, poised in a composition which held the somber elements
of death.
Too late, Bochner recognized the trap into which he had been lured.
The weakness Dumarest had admitted, the fatigue, the earlier
withdrawals from confrontation—all designed to deceive. Now he had met
his match. Now he would die.
It waited in the glimmer of the blade, in the edge, the needle point
in the cold stare of the eyes so close to his own. In the bleak
ferocity of those eyes which he had never seen before. In the strength
against which he was helpless. In the determination which closed the
space between the threatening point and his throat.
Closed it until no gap remained.
Pressed until the prick of metal bit into his skin.
"Go ahead," Bochner whispered. "Do it! Do it!"
Death, the supreme hunter, the thing which stalked a man all his
life and, no matter how he should turn or twist, hide or run, was
always victorious in the end. And what matter when the end came? Now,
or in a year, made no difference. A dozen years, even, a score. What
was a lifetime against eternity?
"Now," he breathed again. "Now!"
Strike and have done. To the victor, the spoils. To the winner, the
loot and the fame and the glory. To the loser, only the restfulness of
oblivion.
"No!" Dilys ran forward to catch at Dumarest's arm. "No, Earl! No!
He saved your life!"
Once certainly, perhaps even twice. Dumarest felt again the cold
rasp of chiton against his cheek and remembered how Threnond had died.
Bochner had saved him then—and Caradoc needed a nurse.
"You bastard!" The hunter cried out in his rage as Dumarest shoved
him back off balance. Recovering, he touched his throat and looked at
the blood on his hand. "You cowardly bastard! You lack the guts to kill
me!"
"The Cyclan will do that if you let him die." Dumarest gestured
towards Caradoc. "You wanted a challenge? You've got one."
"To keep him alive up here while you take the raft? And then what?
To carry him on my back over a thousand miles of wilderness?"
"I'll send back help."
"Maybe." Bochner looked at his hands. They were trembling. To be
mocked, and before a woman. To be fooled. To be made to feel
stupid—Dumarest should have killed while he had the chance. "All right,
Earl. This round goes to you. But I won't forget. Damn you, I won't
forget!"
Hyrcanus was small, the town named after the planet, the only town
the world contained. The field was a patch of dirt seared and torn and
dotted with discarded rubbish. The fence was a ring of scrub
delineating the area, but there were ships waiting to leave and cargo
needing to be loaded. From the window of his room in the tavern,
Dumarest could see it all.
As could Dilys, at his side.
"That's the
Shalarius," she said, pointing. "It's bound
for Mucianus. And that's the
Zloth. It's bound for Egremond."
"And that?"
"A private charter I think. Sealed hull, no contact, handler like a
zombie."
Caradoc's vessel, and Dumarest wondered how long it would wait
before sending out a rescue party. Not too long, he guessed, and it
would be well to be far away when the cyber was found.
The woman seemed to be following his thoughts. "Did you mean it,
Earl? About sending back help?"
"Yes."
"But you didn't specify just when." She frowned, thinking, trying to
fill out gaps. "Why did you save him?"
"Bochner?"
"No. The cyber. You could have killed him. Thrown him after the
acolyte. Why didn't you, Earl? He was after you, wasn't he? Chasing
you, as Bochner said. Why leave him alive?"
Dumarest said, dryly, "A thousand miles, Dilys. A long way over
unknown ground, and we weren't fit to begin with. How long do you think
it would have taken?"
"Too long, if we could have made it at all. But what's that lot to
do with it?" She blinked, understanding. "The raft. Caradoc brought us
the raft."
"Yes."
"And saved us from having to walk. Perhaps he even saved our lives.
And you spared his because of that?"
Because of that, and because the man had been hurt, helpless and
dying, perhaps already dead if Bochner had failed to administer aid, or
the wound had proved beyond treatment.
"You're a strange man, Earl." Dilys reached out to touch his hair,
her fingers traveling down over his cheek to linger on his lips. "So
hard and strong, at times, and so gentle at others. I think I sensed it
from the first. It was something I needed. Something I shall always
need. Earl—must it end?"
She read the answer in his eyes.
"Yes, I suppose it must, something else I've known from the
beginning. But it hurts. Poor Jumoke—how it hurts!"
But not for long, and not as badly as she chose to think, at the
moment. A quick, clean cut, with a minimum of pain, leaving a wound
which quickly healed. She would not be left alone.
Dumarest turned from the window as Egulus entered the room. "And
luck?"
"Some." The captain sat down, lifted the bottle standing on the
table and poured himself a glass of wine. Lifting it, he looked at the
murky amber of the local produce and said,
"The
Shalarius can give us all passage if we can pay.
High only, no Low-—the journey is too short for that. On Mucianus,
I've word of a friend who has a ship undergoing repair. I think he
could use an ex-captain."
"And an engineer?"
"I guess so." Egulus looked at the woman then at Dumarest. "But I
thought—"
"I belong with you, Yarn. We share the same world." Her hand fell to
his shoulder to squeeze with a warm intimacy which squared his
shoulders and took years from his face. "We'll get along."
"Without money?"
"We have money." Dumarest reached into his pocket and spread the
table with sparkling glitters. The stones he had taken from Threnond's
belt which the man had used as a repository for his wealth. "These can
be sold to gain enough for our passages."
"Ours?" Egulus looked the question. "Are you coming with us?"
Dumarest shook his head. "No. I'll make my own way."
"On the
Zloth? It's heading back into the Rift."
Back into the region where suns were close and space was a maze of
conflicting energies. Where a ship could hide and a man get lost. To
where once again he could take up his search for Earth.
The End.