SERVANTS OF THE WANKH



CHAPTER ONE
   Two THOUSAND MILES east of Pera, over the heart of the Dead Steppe, the 
sky-raft faltered, flew smoothly for a moment, then jerked and bucked in a most 
ominous fashion. Adam Reith looked aft in dismay, then ran to the control 
belvedere. Lifting the voluted bronze housing, he peered here and there among 
the scrolls, floral hatchings, grinning imp faces which almost mischievously 
camouflaged the engine.* He was joined by the Dirdirman Ankhe at afram Anacho.
   Reith asked, "Do you know what's wrong?"
   Anacho pinched up his pale nostrils, muttered something about an "antiquated 
Chasch farrago" and "insane expedition to begin with." Reith, accustomed to the 
Dirdirman's foibles, realized that he was too vain to admit ignorance, too 
disdainful to avow knowledge so crass.
   The raft shuddered again. Simultaneously from a four-pronged case of black 
wood to the side of the engine compartment came small rasping noises. Anacho 
gave it a lordly rap with his knuckles. The groaning and shuddering ceased. 
"Corrosion," said Anacho. "Electromorphic action across a hundred years or 
longer. I believe this to be a copy of the unsuccessful Heizakim Bursa, which 
the Dirdir abandoned two hundred years ago."
   "Can we make repairs?"
   "How should I know such things? I would hardly dare touch it.
   They stood listening. The engine sighed on without further pause. At last 
Reith lowered the housing. The two returned forward.
   Traz lay curled on a settee after standing a night watch. On the green 
crush-cushioned seat under the ornate bow lantern sat the Flower of Cath, one 
leg tucked beneath the other, head on her forearms, staring eastward toward 
Cath. So had she huddled for hours, hair blowing in the wind, speaking no word 
to anyone. Reith found her conduct perplexing. At Pera she had yearned for Cath; 
she could talk of nothing else but the ease and grace of Blue Jade Palace, of 
her father's gratitude if Reith would only bring her home. She had described 
wonderful balls, extravaganzas, water-parties, masques according to the turn of 
the "round." ("Round? What did she mean by 'round'?" asked Reith. Ylin-Ylan, the 
Flower of Cath, laughed excitedly. "It's just the way things are, and how they 
become! Everybody must know and the clever ones anticipate; that's why they're 
clever! It's all such fun!") Now that the journey to Cath was actually underway 
the Flower's mood had altered. She had become pensive, remote, and evaded all 
questions as to the source of her abstraction. Reith shrugged and turned away. 
Their intimacy was at an end: all for the best, or so he told himself. Still, 
the question nagged at him: why? His purpose in flying to Cath was twofold: 
first, to fulfill his promise to the girl; secondly, to find, or so he hoped, a 
technical basis to permit the construction of a spaceboat, no matter how small 
or crude. If he could rely upon the cooperation of the Blue Jade Lord, so much 
the better. Indeed, such sponsorship was a necessity.
   The route to Cath lay across the Dead Steppe, south under the Ojzanalai 
Mountains, northeast along the Lok Lu Steppe, across the Zhaarken or the Wild 
Waste, over Achenkin Strait to the city Nerv, then south down the coast of 
Charchan to Cath. For the raft to fail at any stage of the journey short of Nerv 
meant disaster. As if to emphasize the point, the raft gave a single small jerk, 
then once more flew smoothly.
   The day passed. Below rolled the Dead Steppe, dun and gray in the wan light 
of Carina 4269. At sunset they crossed the great Yatl River and all night flew 
under the pink moon Az and the blue moon Braz. In the morning low hills showed 
to the north, which ultimately would swell and thrust high to become the 
Ojzanalais.
   At midmorning they landed at a small lake to refill water tanks. Traz was 
uneasy. "Green Chasch are near." He pointed to a forest a mile south. "They hide 
there, watching us."
   Before the tanks were full, a band of forty Green Chasch on leap-horses 
lunged from the forest. Ylin-Ylan was perversely slow in boarding the raft. 
Reith hustled her aboard; Anacho thrust over the lift-arm-perhaps too hurriedly. 
The engine sputtered; the raft pitched and lurched.
   Reith ran aft, flung up the housing, pounded the black case. The sputtering 
stopped; the raft lifted only yards ahead of the bounding warriors and their 
ten-foot swords. The leap-horses slid to a halt, the warriors aimed catapults 
and the air streamed with long iron bolts. But the raft was five hundred feet 
high; one or two of the bolts bumped into the hull at the height of their 
trajectory and fell away.
   The raft, shuddering spasmodically, moved off to the east. The Green Chasch 
set off in pursuit; the raft, sputtering, pitching, yawing, and occasionally 
dropping its bow in a sickening fashion gradually left them behind.
   The motion became intolerable. Reith jarred the black case again and again 
without significant effect. "We've got to make repairs," he told Anacho.
   "We can try. First we must land."
   "On the steppe? With the Green Chasch behind us?"
   "We can't stay aloft."
   Traz pointed north, to a spine of hills terminating in a set of isolated 
buttes. "Best that we land on one of those flat-topped peaks."
   Anacho nudged the raft around to the north, provoking an even more alarming 
wobble; the bow began to gyrate like an eccentric toy.
   "Hang on!" Reith cried out.
   "I doubt if we can reach that first hill," muttered Anacho.
   "Try for the next one!" yelled Traz. Reith saw that the second of the buttes, 
with sheer vertical walls, was clearly superior to the first-if the raft would 
stay in the air that long.
   Anacho cut speed to a mere drift. The raft wallowed across the intervening 
space to the second butte, and grounded. The absence of motion was like silence 
after noise.
   The travelers descended from the raft, muscles stiff from tension. Reith 
looked around the horizon in disgust: hard to imagine a more desolate spot than 
this, four hundred feet above the center of the Dead Steppe. So much for his 
hope of an easy passage to Cath.
   Traz, going to the edge of the butte, peered over the cliff. "We may not even 
be able to get down."
   The survival kit which Reith had salvaged from the wrecked scout boat 
included a pellet gun, an energy cell, an electronic telescope, a knife, 
antiseptics, a mirror, a thousand feet of strong cord. "We can get down," said 
Reith. "I'd prefer to fly." He turned to Anacho, who stood glumly considering 
the sky-raft. "Do you think we can make repairs?"
   Anacho rubbed his long white hands together in distaste. "You must realize 
that I have no such training in these matters."
   "Show me what's wrong," said Reith. "I can probably fix it."
   Anacho's droll face grew even longer. Reith was the living refutation of his 
most cherished axioms. According to orthodox Dirdir doctrine, Dirdir and 
Dirdirmen had evolved together in a primeval egg on the Dirdir homeworld Sibol; 
the only true men were Dirdirmen; all others were freaks. Anacho found it hard 
to reconcile Reith's competence with his preconceptions, and his attitude was a 
curious composite of envious disapproval, grudging admiration, unwilling 
loyalty. Now, rather than allow Reith to excel him in yet another aspect, he 
hurried to the stern of the skyraft and thrust his long pale clown's face under 
the housing.
   The surface of the butte was scoured clean of vegetation, with here and there 
little channels half-full of coarse sand. Ylin-Ylan wandered moodily across the 
butte. She wore the gray steppe dwellers' trousers and blouse, with a black 
velvet vest; her black slippers were probably the first to walk the rough gray 
rock, thought Reith ... Traz stood looking to the west. Reith joined him at the 
edge of the butte. He studied the dismal steppe, but saw nothing.
   "The Green Chasch," said Traz. "They know we're here."
   Reith once more scanned the steppe, from the low black hills in the north to 
the haze of the south. He could see no flicker of movement, no plume of dust. He 
brought out his scanscope, a binocular photo-multiplier, and probed the 
gray-brown murk. Presently he saw bounding black specks, like fleas. "They're 
out there, for a fact."
   Traz nodded without great interest. Reith grinned, amused as always by the 
boy's somber wisdom. He went to the sky-raft. "How go the repairs?"
   Anacho's response was an irritated motion of arms and shoulders. "Look for 
yourself."
   Reith came forward, peered down at the black case, which Anacho had opened, 
to reveal an intricacy of small components. "Corrosion and sheer age are at 
fault," said Anacho. "I hope to introduce new metal here and here." He pointed. 
"It is a notable problem without tools and proper facilities."
   "We won't leave tonight then?"
   "Perhaps by tomorrow noon."
   Reith walked around the periphery of the butte, a distance of three or four 
hundred yards, and was somewhat reassured. Everywhere the walls were vertical, 
with fins of rock at the base creating crevices, and grottos. There seemed no 
easy method to scale the walls, and he doubted if the Green Chasch would go to 
vast trouble for the trivial pleasure of slaughtering a few men.
   The old brown sun hung low in the west; the shadows of Reith and Traz and 
Ylin-Ylan stretched long across the top of the butte. The girl turned away from 
her contemplation of the east. She watched Traz and Reith for a moment, then 
slowly, almost reluctantly, crossed the sandstone surface and joined them. "What 
are you looking at?"
   Reith pointed. The Green Chasch on their leap-horses were visible now to the 
naked eye: dark motes hopping and bounding in bone-jarring leaps.
   Ylin-Ylan drew her breath. "Are they coming for us?"
   "I imagine so."
   "Can we fight them off? What of our weapons?"
   "We have sandblasts* on the raft. If they climbed the cliffs after dark they 
might do some damage. During daylight we don't need to worry."
   Ylin-Ylan's lips quivered. She spoke in an almost inaudible voice. "If I 
return to Cath, I will hide in the farthest grotto of the Blue Jade garden and 
never again appear. If ever I return."
   Reith put his arm around her waist; she was stiff and unyielding. "Of course 
you'll return, and pick up your life where it left off."
   "No. Someone else may be Flower of Cath; she is welcome ... So long as she 
chooses other than Ylin-Ylan for her bouquet."
   The girl's pessimism puzzled Reith. Her previous trials she had borne with 
stoicism; now, with fair prospects of returning home, she had become morose. 
Reith heaved a deep sigh and turned away.
   The Green Chasch were no more than a mile distant. Reith and Traz drew back 
to attract no notice in the event that the Chasch were unaware of their 
presence. The hope was soon dispelled. The Green Chasch bounded up to the base 
of the butte, then, dismounting from their horses, stood looking up the cliff 
face. Reith, peering over the side, counted forty of the creatures. They were 
seven and eight feet tall, massive and thick-limbed, with pangolin-scales of 
metallic green. Under the jut of their crania their faces were small, and, to 
Reith's eyes, like the magnified visage of a feral insect. They wore leather 
aprons and shoulder harness; their weapons were swords which, like all the 
swords of the Tschai, seemed long and unwieldy, and these, eight and ten feet 
long, even more so. Some of them armed their catapults; Reith ducked back to 
avoid the flight of bolts. He looked around the butte for boulders to drop over 
the side, but found none.
   Certain of the Chasch rode around the butte, examining the walls. Traz ran 
around the periphery, keeping watch.
   All returned to the main group, where they muttered and grumbled together. 
Reith thought that they showed no great zest for the business of scaling the 
wall. Setting up camp, they tethered their leap-horses, thrust chunks of a dark 
sticky substance into the pale maws. They built three fires, over which they 
boiled chunks of the same substance they had fed the leap-horses, and at last 
hulking down into toad-shaped mounds, joylessly devoured the contents of their 
cauldrons. The sun dimmed behind the western haze and disappeared. Umber 
twilight fell over the steppe. Anacho came away from the raft and peered down at 
the Green Chasch. "Lesser Zants," he pronounced. "Notice the protuberances to 
each side of the head? They are thus distinguished from the Great Zants and 
other hordes. These are of no great consequence."
   "They look consequential enough to me," said Reith.
   Traz made a sudden motion, pointed. In one of the crevices, between two vanes 
of rock, stood a tall dark shadow. "Phung!"
   Reith looked through the scanscope and saw the shadow to be a Phung indeed. 
From where it had come he could not guess.
   It was over eight feet in height, in its soft black hat and black cloak, like 
a giant grasshopper in magisterial vestments.
   Reith studied the face, watching the slow working of chitinous plates around 
the blunt lower section of the face. It watched the Green Chasch with brooding 
detachment, though they crouched over their pots not ten yards away.
   "A mad thing," whispered Traz, his eyes glittering. "Look, now it plays 
tricks!"
   The Phung reached down its long thin arms, raised a small boulder which it 
heaved high into the air. The rock dropped among the Chasch, falling squarely 
upon a hulking back.
   The Green Chasch sprang up, to glare toward the top of the butte. The Phung 
stood quietly, lost among the shadows. The Chasch which had been struck lay flat 
on its face, making convulsive swimming motions with arms and legs.
   The Phung craftily lifted another great rock, once more heaved it high, but 
this time the Chasch saw the movement. Venting squeals of fury they seized their 
swords and flung themselves forward. The Phung took a stately step aside, then 
leaping in a great flutter of cloak snatched a sword, which it wielded as if it 
were a toothpick, hacking, dancing, whirling, cutting wildly, apparently without 
aim or direction. The Chasch scattered; some lay on the ground, and the Phung 
jumped here and there, slashing and slicing, without discrimination, the Green 
Chasch, the fire, the air, like a mechanical toy running out of control.
   Crouching and shifting, the Green Chasch hulked forward. They chopped, cut; 
the Phung threw away the sword as if it were hot, and was hacked into pieces. 
The head spun off the torso, landed on the ground ten feet from one of the 
fires, with the soft black hat still in place. Reith watched it through the 
scanscope. The head seemed conscious, untroubled. The eyes watched the fire; the 
mouth parts worked slowly.
   "It will live for days, until it dries out," said Traz huskily. "Gradually it 
will go stiff."
   The Chasch paid the creature no further heed, but at once made ready their 
leap-horses. They loaded their gear and five minutes later had trooped off into 
the darkness. The head of the Phung mused upon the play of the flames.
   For a period the men squatted by the edge of the precipice, looking across 
the steppe. Traz and Anacho fell into an argument regarding the nature of the 
Phung, Traz declaring them to be products of unnatural union between Pnumekin 
and the corpses of Pnume. "The seed waxes in the decay like a barkworm, and 
finally breaks out through the skin as a young Phung, not greatly different from 
a bald night-hound."
   "Sheer idiocy, lad!" said Anacho with easy condescension. "They surely breed 
like Pnume: a startling process itself, if what I hear is correct."
   Traz, no less proud than the Dirdirman, became taut. "How do you speak with 
such assurance? Have you observed the process? Have you seen a Phung with 
others, or guarding a cub?" He lowered his lip in a sneer. "No! They go singly, 
too mad to breed!"
   Anacho made a finger-fluttering gesture of fastidious didacticism. "Rarely 
are Pnume seen in groups; rarely do we see a Pnume alone, for that matter. Yet 
they flourish in their peculiar fashion. Brash generalizations are suspect. The 
truth is that after many long years on Tschai we still know little of either 
Phung or Pnume."
   Traz gave an inarticulate growl, too wise not to concede the conviction of 
Anacho's logic, too proud to abandon abjectly his point of view. And Anacho, in 
his turn, made no attempt to push a superficial advantage home. In time, thought 
Reith, the two might even learn to respect each other.
   In the morning Anacho again tinkered with the engine, while the others 
shivered in the cold airs seeping down from the north. Traz gloomily predicted 
rain, and presently a high overcast began to form, and fog eased over the tops 
of the hills to the north.
   Anacho finally threw down the tools in boredom and disgust. "I have done what 
I can. The raft will fly, but not far."
   "How far, in your opinion?" asked Reith, aware that Ylin-Ylan had turned to 
listen. "To Cath?"
   Anacho flapped up his hands, fluttering his fingers in an unknowable Dirdir 
gesticulation. "To Cath, by your projected route: impossible. The engine is 
falling to dust."
   Ylin-Ylan looked away, studied her clenched hands.
   "Flying south, we might reach Coad on the Dawn Zher," Anacho went on, "and 
there take passage across the Draschade. Such a route is longer and slower-but 
conceivably we will arrive in Cath."
   "It seems that we have no choice," said Reith.



CHAPTER TWO
   FOR A PERIOD they followed the southward course of the vast Nabiga River, 
traveling only a few feet above the surface, where the repulsion plates suffered 
the least strain. The Nabiga swept off to the west, demarcating the Dead Steppe 
from the Aman Steppe, and the raft continued south across an inhospitable region 
of dim forests, bogs, and morasses; and a day later returned to the steppe. On 
one occasion they saw a caravan in the distance: a line of high-wheeled carts 
and trundling house-wagons; another time they came upon a band of nomads wearing 
red feather fetishes on their shoulders, who bounded frantically across the 
steppe to intercept them, and were only gradually outdistanced.
   Late in the afternoon they painfully climbed above a huddle of brown and 
black hills. The raft jerked and yawed; the black case emitted ominous rasping 
sounds. Reith flew low, sometimes brushing through the tops of black tree-ferns. 
Sliding across the ridge the raft blundered at head-height through an encampment 
of capering creatures in voluminous white robes, apparently men. They dodged and 
fell to the ground, then screaming in outrage fired muskets after the raft, the 
erratic course of which presented a shifting target.
   All night they flew over dense forest, and morning revealed more of the same: 
a black, green, and brown carpet cloaking the Aman Steppe to the limit of 
vision, though Traz declared the steppe ended at the hills, that below them now 
was the Great Daduz Forest. Anacho condescendingly took issue, and displaying a 
chart tapped various topographic indications with his long white fingers to 
prove his point.
   Traz's square face became stubborn and sullen. "This is Great Daduz Forest; 
twice when I carried Onmale among the Emblems,* I led the tribe here for herbs 
and dyes."
   Anacho put away the chart. "It is all one," he remarked. "Steppe or forest, 
it must be traversed." At a sound from the engine he looked critically aft. "I 
believe that we will reach the outskirts of Coad, not a mile farther, and when 
we raise the housing we shall find only a heap of rust."
   "But we will reach Coad?" Ylin-Ylan asked in a colorless voice.
   "So I believe. Only two hundred miles remain."
   Ylin-Ylan seemed momentarily cheerful. "How different than before," she said. 
"When I came to Coad a captive of the priestesses!" The thought seemed to 
depress her and once more she became pensive.
   Night approached. Coad still lay a hundred miles distant. The forest had 
thinned to a stand of immense black and gold trees, with intervening areas of 
turf, on which grazed squat six-legged beasts, bristling with bony tusks and 
horns. Landing for the night was hardly feasible and Reith did not care to 
arrive at Coad until morning, in which opinion Anacho concurred. They halted the 
motion of the raft, tied to the top of a tree and hovered on the repulsors 
through the night.
   After the evening meal the Flower of Cath went to her cabin behind the 
saloon; Traz, after studying the sky and listening to the sounds of beasts 
below, wrapped himself in his robe and stretched out on one of the settees.
   Reith leaned against the rail watching the pink moon Az reach the zenith just 
as the blue moon Braz rose behind the foliage of a far tall tree.
   Anacho came to join him. "So then, what are your thoughts as to the morrow?"
   "I know nothing of Coad. I suppose we inquire as to transportation across the 
Draschade."
   "You still intend to accompany the woman to Cath?"
   "Certainly," said Reith, mildly surprised.
   Anacho hissed through his teeth. "You need only put the Cath woman on a ship; 
you need not go yourself."
   "True. But I don't care to remain in Coad."
   "Why not? It is a city which even Dirdirmen visit from time to time. If you 
have money anything is for sale in Coad."
   "A spaceship?"
   "Hardly ... It seems that you persist in your obsession."
   Reith laughed. "Call it whatever you like."
   "I admit to perplexity," Anacho went on. "The likeliest explanation, and one 
which I urge you to accept, is that you are amnesiac, and have subconsciously 
fabricated a fable to account for your own existence. Which of course you 
fervently believe to be true."
   "Reasonable," Reith agreed.
   "One or two odd circumstances remain," Anacho continued thoughtfully. "The 
remarkable devices you carry: your electronic telescope, your energy-weapon, 
other oddments. I cannot identify the workmanship, though it is equivalent to 
that of good Dirdir equipment. I suppose it to be home-planet Wankh; am I 
correct?"
   "As an amnesiac, how would I know?"
   Anacho gave a wry chuckle. "And you still intend to go to Cath?"
   "Of course. What about you?"
   Anacho shrugged. "One place is as good as another, from my point of view. But 
I doubt if you realize what awaits you in Cath."
   "I know nothing of Cath," said Reith, "other than what I have heard. The 
people are apparently civilized."
   Anacho gave a patronizing shrug. "They are Yao: a fervent race addicted to 
ritual and extravaganza, prone to excesses of temperament. You may find the 
intricacies of Cath society difficult to cope with."
   Reith frowned. "I hope it won't be necessary. The girl has vouched for her 
father's gratitude, which should simplify matters."
   "Formally the gratitude will exist. I am sure of this."
   "'Formally'? Not actually?"
   "The fact that you and the girl have formed an erotic accommodation is of 
course a complication."
   Reith smiled sourly. "The 'erotic accommodation' has long since run its 
course." He looked back toward the deck-house. "Frankly, I don't understand the 
girl. She actually seems disturbed by the prospect of returning home."
   Anacho peered through the dark. "Are you so naive? Clearly she dreads the 
moment when she must sponsor the three of us before the society of Cath. She 
would be overjoyed if you sent her home alone."
   Reith gave a bitter laugh. "At Pera she sang a different tune. She begged 
that we return to Cath."
   "Then the possibility was remote. Now she must deal with reality."
   "But this is absurdity! Traz is as he is. You are a Dirdirman, for which you 
are not to blame-"
   "No difficulties in either of these cases," stated the Dirdirman with an 
elegant flourish of the fingers. "Our roles are immutable. Your case is 
different; and it might be best for all if you sent the girl home on a cog."
   Reith stood looking out over the sea of moonlit treetops. The opinion, 
assuming its validity, was far from lucid, and also presented a dilemma. To 
avoid Cath was to relinquish his best possibility of building a spaceboat. The 
only alternative then would be to steal a spaceship, from the Dirdir, or Wankh, 
or, least appealing of all, from the Blue Chasch: all in all, a nerve-tingling 
prospect. Reith asked, "Why should I be less acceptable than you or Traz? 
Because of the 'erotic accommodation'?"
   "Naturally not. The Yao concern themselves with systematics rather than 
deeds. I am surprised to find you so undiscerning."
   "Blame it on my amnesia," said Reith.
   Anacho shrugged. "In the first place-possibly due to your 'amnesia' you have 
no quality, no role, no place in the Cath 'round.' As a nondescript, you 
constitute a distraction, a zizylbeast in a ballroom. Secondly, and more 
poignant, is your point of view, which is not fashionable in contemporary Cath."
   "By this you mean my 'obsession'?"
   "Unfortunately," said Anacho, "it is similar to an hysteria which 
distinguished a previous cycle of the 'round.' A hundred and fifty years* ago, a 
coterie of Dirdirmen were expelled from the academies at Eliasir and Anismna for 
the crime of promulgating fantasy. They brought their espousements to Cath, and 
stimulated a tendentious vogue: the Society of Yearning Refluxives, or the 
'cult.' The articles of faith defied established fact. It was asserted that all 
men, Dirdirmen and sub-men alike, were immigrants from a far planet in the 
constellation Clari: a paradise where the hopes of humanity have been realized. 
Enthusiasm for the 'cult' galvanized Cath; a radio transmitter was constructed 
and signals were projected toward Clari. Somewhere, the activity was resented; 
someone launched torpedoes which devastated Settra and Ballisidre. The Dirdir 
are commonly held responsible, but this is absurd; why should they trouble 
themselves? I assure you that they are much too distant, too uninterested.
   "Regardless of agency, the deed was done. Settra and Ballisidre were laid 
low, the 'cult' was discredited; the Dirdirmen were expelled; the 'round' swung 
back to orthodoxy. Now even to mention the 'cult' is considered vulgarity, and 
so we arrive at your case. Clearly you have encountered and assimilated 'cult' 
dogma; it now manifests itself in your attitudes, your acts, your goals. You 
seem unable to distinguish fact from fancy. To speak bluntly, you are so 
disoriented in this regard as to suggest psychic disorder."
   Reith closed his mouth on a wild laugh; it would only reinforce Anacho's 
doubts as to his sanity. A dozen remarks rose to his tongue; he restrained them 
all. At last he said, "All else aside, I appreciate your candor."
   "Not at all," said the Dirdirman serenely. "I imagine that I have clarified 
the nature of the girl's apprehension."
   The Dirdirman blinked up at the pink moon Az. "So long as she was outside the 
'round' at Pera and elsewhere, she made sympathetic allowances. But now return 
to Cath is imminent..." He said no more, and presently went to his couch in the 
saloon.
   Reith went to the forward pulpit under the great bow lantern. A cool draft of 
air fanned his face; the raft drifted idly about the treetop. From the ground 
came a furtive crackle of footsteps. Reith listened; they halted, then resumed 
and diminished off under the trees. Reith looked up into the sky where pink Az, 
blue Braz careened. He looked back at the deck-house where slept his comrades: a 
boy of the Emblem nomads, a clown-faced man evolved toward a race of gaunt 
aliens; a beautiful girl of the Yao, who thought him mad. Below sounded a new 
pad of footsteps. Perhaps he was mad indeed ...
   By morning Reith had recovered his equanimity, and was even able to find 
grotesque humor in the situation. No good reason to change his plans suggested 
itself, and the sky-raft limped south as before. The forest dwindled to scrub, 
and gave way to isolated plantings and cattle-runs, field huts, lookout towers 
against the approach of nomads, an occasional rutted road. The raft displayed an 
ever more aggravated instability, with an annoying tendency for the stern to 
sag. At mid-morning a range of low hills loomed ahead, and the raft refused to 
climb the few hundred feet necessary to clear the ridge. By the sheerest luck a 
cleft appeared through which the raft wobbled with ten feet to spare.
   Ahead lay the Dwan Zher and Coad: a compact town with a look of settled 
antiquity. The houses were built of weathered timber, with enormous high-peaked 
roofs and a multitude of skew gables, eccentric ridges, dormers, tall chimneys. 
A dozen ships rode to moorings; as many more were docked across from a row of 
factors' offices. At the north of town was the caravan terminus, beside a large 
compound surrounded by hostelries, taverns, warehouses. The compound seemed a 
convenient spot to set down the raft; Reith doubted if it could have held itself 
in the air another ten miles.
   The raft dropped stern first; the repulsors gave a labored whine and went 
silent with a meaningful finality. "That's that," said Reith. "I'm glad we've 
arrived."
   The group took up their meager luggage, alighted and left the raft where it 
had landed.
   At the edge of the compound Anacho made inquiries of a dung merchant and 
received directions to the Grand Continental, the best of the town's hostelries.
   Coad was a busy town. Along the crooked streets, in and out of the 
ale-colored sunlight, moved men and women of many casts and colors: Yellow 
Islanders and Black Islanders, Horasin bark-merchants muffled in gray robes; 
Caucasoids such as Traz from the Aman Steppe; Dirdirmen and Dirdirmen hybrids; 
dwarfish Sieps from the eastern slopes of the Ozanalai who played music in the 
streets; a few flat-faced white men from the far south of Kislovan. The natives, 
or Tans, were an affable fox faced people, with wide polished cheekbones, 
pointed chins, russet or dark brown hair cut in a ledge across the ears and 
foreheads. Their usual garments were knee-length breeches, embroidered vest, a 
round black pie-plate hat. Palanquins were numerous, carried by short gnarled 
men with oddly long noses and stringy black hair: apparently a race to 
themselves; Reith saw them in no other occupation. Later he learned them to be 
natives of Grenie at the head of the Dwan Zher.
   On a balcony Reith thought he glimpsed a Dirdir, but he could not be certain. 
Once Traz grabbed his elbow and pointed to a pair of thin men in loose black 
trousers, black capes with tall collars all but enveloping their faces, soft 
cylindrical black hats with wide brims: caricatures of mystery and intrigue. 
"Pnumekin!" hissed Traz in a something between shock and outrage. "Look at them! 
They walk among other men without a look aside, and their minds full of strange 
thinking!"
   They arrived at the hostelry, a rambling edifice of three stories, with a 
cafe on the front veranda, a restaurant in a great tall covered arbor to the 
rear and balconies overlooking the street. A clerk at a wicket took their money, 
distributed fanciful keys of black iron as large as their hands and instructed 
them to their rooms.
   "We have traveled a great dusty distance," said Anacho. "We require baths, 
with good quality unguents, fresh linen, and then we will dine."
   "It shall be as you order."
   An hour later, clean and refreshed, the four met in the downstairs lobby. 
Here they were accosted by a black-haired blackeyed man with a pinched 
melancholy face. He spoke in a gentle voice. "You are newly arrived at Coad?"
   Anacho, instantly suspicious, drew himself back. "Not altogether. We are 
well-known and have no needs."
   "I represent the Slave-taker's Guild, and this is my fair appraisal of your 
group. The girl is valuable, the boy less so. Dirdirmen are generally considered 
worthless except in clerical or administrative servitude, for which we have no 
demand. You would be rated a winkle-gatherer or a nut-huller, of no great value. 
This man, whatever he is, appears capable of toil, and would sell for the 
standard rate. Considering all, your insurance will be ten sequins a week."
   "Insurance against what?" demanded Reith.
   "Against being taken and sold," murmured the agent. "There is a heavy demand 
for competent workers. But for ten sequins a week," he declared triumphantly, 
"you may walk the streets of Coad night and day, secure as though the demon 
Harasthy rode your shoulders! Should you be sequestered by an unauthorized 
dealer the Guild will instantly order your free release."
   Reith stood back, half-amused, half-disgusted. Anacho spoke in his most nasal 
voice: "Show me your credentials."
   " 'Credentials'?" asked the man, his chin sagging.
   "Show us a document, a blazon, a patent. What? You have none? Do you take us 
for fools? Be off with you!"
   The man walked somberly away. Reith asked, "Was he in truth a fraud?"
   "One never knows, but the line must be drawn somewhere. Let us eat; I have a 
good appetite after weeks of steamed pulses and pilgrim plant."
   They took seats in the dining room: actually a vast airy arbor with a glass 
ceiling admitting a pale ivory light. Black vines climbed the walls; in the 
corners were purple and pale-blue ferns. The day was mild; the end of the room 
opened to a view of the Dwan Zher and a wind curled bank of cumulus at the 
horizon.
   The room was half-full; perhaps two dozen people dined from platters and 
bowls of black wood and red earthenware, talking in low voices, watching the 
folk at other tables with covert curiosity. Traz looked uneasily here and there, 
eyebrows raised in disapproval of so much luxury: undoubtedly his first 
encounter with what must seem a set of faddish and overcomplicated niceties, 
reflected Reith.
   He noticed Ylin-Ylan staring across the room, as if astonished by what she 
saw. Almost immediately she averted her eyes, as if uncomfortable or 
embarrassed. Reith followed her gaze, but saw nothing out of the ordinary. He 
thought better of inquiring the cause of her perturbation, not wishing to risk a 
cool stare. And Reith grinned uncomfortably. What a situation: almost as if she 
were cultivating an active dislike for him! Perfectly comprehensible, of course, 
if Anacho's explanations were correct. His puzzlement regarding the girl's 
agitation was now resolved by the sardonic Dirdirman.
   "Observe the fellow at the far table," murmured Anacho. "He in the green and 
purple coat."
   Turning his head, Reith saw a handsome young bravo with carefully arranged 
hair and a rich mustache of a startling gold. He wore elegant garments, somewhat 
rumpled and well-used: a jacket of soft leather strips, dyed alternately green 
and purple, breeches of pleated yellow cloth, buckled at knee and ankle with 
brooches in the shape of fantastic insects. A square cap of soft fur, fringed 
with two-inch pendants of gold beads, slanted across his head; an extravagant 
garde-nez of gold filigree clung to the ridge of his nose. Anacho muttered, 
"Watch him now. He will notice us, he will see the girl."
   "But who is he?"
   Anacho gave his fingertips an irritated twitch. "His name? I do not know. His 
status: high, in his own opinion at least. He is a Yao cavalier."
   Reith turned his attention to Ylin-Ylan, who watched the young man from the 
corner of her eye. Miraculous how her mood had altered! She had become alive and 
aware, though obviously twitching with nervousness and uncertainty. She flicked 
a glance toward Reith, and flushed to find his eyes on her. Bending her head she 
busied herself with the appetizers: dishes of gray grapes, biscuits, smoked 
sea-insects, pickled fern-pod. Reith watched the cavalier, who was 
unenthusiastically dining upon a black seed-bun and a dish of pickles, his gaze 
off across the sea. He gave a sad shrug, as if discouraged by his thoughts, and 
shifted his position. He saw the Flower of Cath, who feigned the most artless 
absorption in her food. The cavalier leaned forward in astonishment. He jumped 
to his feet with such exuberance as nearly to overturn the table. In three long 
strides he was across the room and down on one knee with a sweeping salute which 
brushed his cap across Traz's face. "Blue Jade Princess! Your servant Dordoho. 
My goals are won."
   The Flower bowed her head with an exact modicum of restraint and pleased 
surprise. Reith admired her aplomb. "Pleasant," she murmured, "in a far land to 
chance upon a cavalier of Cath."
   "'Chance' is not the word! I am one of a dozen who went forth to seek you, to 
win the boon proclaimed by your father and for the honor of both our palaces. By 
the wattles of the Pnume's First Devil, it has been given to me to find you!"
   Anacho spoke in his blandest voice. "You have searched extensively, then?"
   Dordoho stood erect, made a cursory inspection of Anacho, Reith, and Traz, 
and performed three precise nods. The Flower made a gay little motion, as if the 
three were casual companions at a picnic. "My loyal henchmen; all have been of 
incalculable help to me. But for them I doubt if I would be alive."
   "In that case," declared the cavalier, "they may ever rely upon the patronage 
of Dordolio, Gold, and Carnelian. They shall use my fieldname Alutrin Stargold." 
He performed a salute which included all three, then snapped his finger at the 
serving woman. "A chair, if you please. I will dine at this table."
   The serving woman somewhat unceremoniously pushed a chair into place; 
Dordolio seated himself and gave his attention to the Flower. "But what of your 
adventures? I assume them to be harrowing. Still you appear as fresh as 
ever-decidedly unharrowed."
   The Flower laughed. "In these steppe-dweller's garments? I have not yet been 
able to change. I must buy dozens of sheer necessities before I dare let you 
look at me."
   Dordolio, glancing at her gray garments, made a negligent gesture. "I had 
noticed nothing. You are as ever. But, if you wish, we will shop together; the 
bazaars of Coad are fascinating."
   "Of course! Tell me of yourself. My father issued a behest, you say?"
   "He did indeed, and swore a boon. The most gallant responded. We followed 
your trail to Spang where we learned who had taken you: Priestesses of the 
Female Mystery. Many gave you up for lost, but not I. My perseverance has been 
rewarded! In triumph we will return to Settra!"
   Ylin-Ylan turned a somewhat cryptic smile toward Reith. "I am of course 
anxious to return home. What luck to find you here in Coad!"
   "Remarkable luck," said Reith dryly. "We arrived only an hour ago from Pera."
   "Pera? I do not know the place."
   "It lies at the far west of the Dead Steppe."
   Dordolio gave an opaque stare, then once more he addressed himself to the 
Flower. "What hardships you must have suffered! But now you walk under the aegis 
of Dordolio! We return at once to Settra."
   The meal proceeded, Dordolio and Ylin-Ylan conversing with great vivacity. 
Traz, preoccupied with the unfamiliar table implements, turned them dour 
glances, as if he suspected their ridicule. Anacho paid them no heed; Reith ate 
in silence. Finally Dordolio sat back in his chair. "Now, as to the 
practicalities: the packet Yazilissa is at mooring, and shortly departs for 
Vervodei. A melancholy task to take leave of your comrades, good fellows all, 
I'm sure, but we must arrange our passage home."
   Reith spoke in an even voice. "All of us, so it happens, are bound for Cath."
   Dordolio presented his blank questioning stare, as if Reith spoke an 
incomprehensible language.
   He rose, helped Ylin-Ylan to her feet; the two went to saunter on the terrace 
beyond the arbour. The serving woman brought the score. "Five sequins, if you 
please, for five meals."
   "Five?"
   "The Yao ate at your table."
   Reith paid over five sequins from his wallet. Anacho watched in amusement. 
"The Yao's presence is actually an advantage; you will avoid attention upon your 
arrival at Settra."
   "Perhaps," said Reith. "On the other hand, I had hoped for the gratitude of 
the girl's father. I need all the friends I can find."
   "Events sometimes display a vitality of their own," observed Anacho. "The 
Dirdir teleologists have interesting remarks to make on the subject. I recall an 
analysis of coincidences-this, incidentally, not by a Dirdir but by a Dirdirman 
Immaculate..." As Anacho spoke on, Traz went out on the terrace to survey the 
roofs of Coad; Dordolio and Ylin-Ylan walked slowly past, ignoring his presence. 
Seething with indignation Traz returned to Reith and Anacho. "The Yao dandy 
urges her to dismiss us. She refers to us as nomads-rude but honest and 
dependable."
   "No matter," said Reith. "Her destiny is not ours."
   "But you have practically made it so! We might have remained in Pera, or 
taken ourselves to the Fortunate Isles; instead-" He threw up his arms in 
disgust.
   "Events are not occurring as I expected," Reith admitted. "Still, who knows? 
It may be for the best. Anacho thinks so, at any rate. Would you please ask her 
to step over here?"
   Traz went off on his errand, to return at once. "She and the Yao are off to 
buy what they call suitable garments! What a farce! I have worn steppe-dwellers' 
clothes all my life! The garments are suitable and useful."
   "Of course," said Reith. "Well, let them do as they wish. Perhaps we also 
might make a change in our appearance."
   Toward the dock area was the bazaar; here Reith, Anacho and Traz fitted 
themselves out in garments of somewhat less crude cut and material: shirts of 
soft light linen, short-sleeved vests, loose black breeches buckling at the 
ankle; shoes of supple gray leather.
   The docks were but a few steps away; they continued on to inspect the 
shipping, and the Yazilissa immediately engaged their attention: a three masted 
ship over a hundred feet long, with passenger accommodations in a tall 
many-windowed after-house, and in a row of 'tween-decks cabins along the waist. 
Cargo booms hung over the docks; bales of goods were hoisted aloft, swung up, 
over and into the holds.
   Climbing the gangplank, they found the supercargo who verified that the 
Yazilissa sailed in three days, touching at ports in
   Grenie and Horasin, then faring by way of Pag Choda, the Islands of Cloud, 
Tusa Tula at Cape Gaiz on the western thrust of Kachan, to Vervodei in Cath: a 
voyage of sixty or seventy days.
   Inquiring as to accommodations, Reith learned that all first class staterooms 
were booked as far as Tusa Tula, and all but one of the 'tween-decks cabins. 
There was, however, unlimited deckclass accommodation, which according to the 
supercargo was not uncomfortable except during the equatorial rains. He admitted 
these to be frequent.
   "Not satisfactory," said Reith. "At the minimum we would want four 
second-class cabins."
   "Unfortunately I can't oblige you unless cancellations come in, which is 
always possible."
   "Very well; I am Adam Reith. You may reach me at the Grand Continental 
Hotel."
   The supercargo stared at him in surprise. "'Adam Reith'? You and your group 
are already on the passenger list."
   "I'm afraid not," said Reith. "We only arrived in Coad this morning."
   "But only an hour ago, perhaps less, a pair of Yao came aboard, a cavalier 
and a noblewoman. They took accommodation in the name of 'Adam Reith'; the grand 
suite in the after-house-that is to say, two staterooms with a private 
saloon-and deck passage for three. I requested a deposit; they stated that Adam 
Reith would come aboard to pay the passage fee, which is two thousand three 
hundred sequins. Are you Adam Reith?"
   "I am Adam Reith, but I plan to pay no two thousand three hundred sequins. So 
far as I am concerned, cancel the booking."
   "What sort of tomfoolery is this?" demanded the supercargo. "I have no 
inclination for such frivolity."
   "I have even less desire to cross the Draschade Ocean in the rain," said 
Reith. "If you want recourse, seek out the Yao."
   "A pointless exercise," growled the supercargo. "Well then, so be it. If you 
will be happy with something less than luxury, try aboard the Vargaz: the cog 
yonder. She's departing in a day or so for Cath, and no doubt can find room for 
you."
   "Thank you for your help." Reith and his companions walked down the dock to 
the Vargaz: a short high-pooped round-hulled ship with a long bowsprit, sharply 
aslant. The two masts supported a pair of lateen yards with sails hanging limp 
while crewmen sewed on patches of new canvas.
   Reith inspected the cog dubiously, then shrugged and went aboard. In the 
shadow of the after-house two men sat at a table littered with papers, 
ink-sticks, seals, ribbons and a jug of wine. The most imposing of these was a 
burly man, naked from the waist up, save for a heavy growth of coarse black hair 
on his chest. His skin was brown, his features small and hard in a round 
immobile face. The other man was thin, almost frail, wearing a loose gown of 
white and a yellow vest the color of his skin. A long mustache drooped sadly 
beside his mouth; he wore a scimitar at his waist. Ostensibly a pair of sinister 
ruffians, thought Reith. "Yes, sir, what do you wish?" asked the burly man.
   "Transportation to Cath in as much comfort as possible," said Reith.
   "Little enough to ask." The man heaved himself to his feet. "I will show you 
what is available."
   Reith eventually paid a deposit on two small cabins for Anacho and Ylin-Ylan, 
a larger stateroom which he would share with Traz. The quarters were neither 
airy, spacious nor over-clean, but Reith thought that they might have been 
worse.
   "When do you sail?" he asked the burly man.
   "Tomorrow noon on the flood. By preference, be aboard by midmorning; I run a 
punctual ship."
   The three returned through the crooked streets of Coad to the hotel. Neither 
the Flower nor Dordolio were on the premises. Late in the afternoon they 
returned in a palanquin, followed by three porters laden with bundles. Dordolio 
alighted, helped Ylin-Ylan forth; they entered the hotel followed by the porters 
and the chief bearer of the palanquin.
   Ylin-Ylan wore a graceful gown of dark green silk, with a dark blue bodice. A 
charming little cap of crystal-frosted net constrained her hair. Seeing Reith 
she hesitated, turned to Dordolio and spoke a few words. Dordolio pulled at his 
extraordinary gold mustache, sauntered to where Reith sat with Anacho and Traz.
   "All is well," said Dordolio. "I have taken passage for all aboard the 
Yazilissa, a ship of excellent reputation."
   "I fear you have incurred an unnecessary expense," said Reith politely. "I 
have made other arrangements."
   Dordolio stood back, nonplussed. "But you should have consulted me!"
   "I can't imagine why," said Reith.
   "On what ship do you sail?" demanded Dordolio.
   "The cog Vargaz."
   "The Vargaz? Bah! A floating pigpen. I would not wish to sail on the Vargaz."
   "You do not need to do so, if you are sailing on the Yazilissa."
   Dordolio tugged at his mustache. "The Blue Jade Princess likewise prefers to 
travel aboard the Yazilissa, the best accommodation available."
   "You are a bountiful man," said Reith, "to take luxurious passage for so 
large a group."
   "In point of fact, I did only what I could," admitted Dordolio. "Since you 
are in charge of the group's funds the supercargo will render an account to 
you."
   "By no means," said Reith. "I remind you that I have already taken passage 
aboard the Vargaz."
   Dordolio hissed petulantly through his teeth. "This is an insufferable 
situation."
   The porters and the palanquin carrier drew near, and bowed before Reith. 
"Permit us to tender our accounts."
   Reith raised his eyebrows. Was there no limit to Dordolio's insouciance? "Of 
course, why should you not? Naturally to those who commanded your services." He 
rose to his feet. He went to Ylin-Ylan's room, knocked on the rattan door. There 
was the sound of movement within; she looked forth through a peep lens. The 
upper panel of the door slid back a trifle.
   Reith asked, "May I come in?"
   "But I'm dressing."
   "This has made no difference before."
   The door opened; Ylin-Ylan stood somewhat sullenly aside. Reith entered. 
Bundles were everywhere, some opened to reveal garments and leathers, gauze 
slippers, embroidered bodices, filigree headwear. Reith looked around in 
astonishment. "Your friend is extravagantly generous."
   The Flower started to speak, then bit her lips. "These few things are 
necessities for the voyage home. I do not care to arrive at Vervodei like a 
scullery maid." She spoke with a haughtiness Reith had never before heard. "They 
are to be reckoned as traveling expenses. Please keep an account and my father 
will settle affairs to your satisfaction."
   "You put me in a hard position," said Reith, "where inevitably I lose my 
dignity. If I pay, I'm a lout and a fool; if I don't, I'm a heartless 
pinchpenny. It seems that you might have handled the situation more tactfully."
   "The question of tact did not arise," said the Flower. "I desired the 
articles. I ordered them to be brought here."
   Reith grimaced. "I won't argue the subject. I came to tell you this: I have 
engaged passage to Cath aboard the cog Vargaz, which leaves tomorrow. It is a 
plain simple ship; you will need plain simple garments."
   The Flower stared at him in puzzlement. "But the Noble Gold and Carnelian 
took passage aboard the Yazilissa!"
   "If he chooses to travel aboard the Yazilissa, he of course may do so, if he 
can settle for his passage. I have just notified him that I will pay neither for 
his palanquin rides, nor his passage to Cath, nor "-Reith gestured toward the 
parcels-"for the finery which he evidently urged you to select."
   Ylin-Ylan flushed angrily. "I had never expected to find you niggardly."
   "The alternative is worse. Dordolio-"
   "That is his friend name," said Ylin-Ylan in an undertone. "Best that you use 
his field name, or the formal address: Noble Gold and Carnelian."
   "Whatever the situation, the cog Vargaz sails tomorrow. You may be aboard or 
remain in Coad as you choose."
   Reith returned to the foyer. The porters and palanquin carrier had departed. 
Dordolio stood on the front veranda. The jeweled ornaments which had buckled his 
breeches at the knees were no longer to be seen.



CHAPTER THREE
   THE COG VARGAZ, broad of beam, with high narrow prow, a cutaway midships, a 
lofty stern-castle, wallowed comfortably at its mooring against the dock. Like 
all else of Tschai, the cog's aspects were exaggerated, with every quality 
dramatized. The curve of the hull was florid, the bowsprit prodded at the sky, 
the sails were raffishly patched.
   The Flower of Cath silently accompanied Reith, Traz and Anacho the Dirdirman 
aboard the Vargaz, with a porter bringing her luggage on a hand-truck.
   Half an hour later Dordolio appeared on the dock. He appraised the Vargaz a 
moment or two, then strolled up the gangplank. He spoke briefly with the 
captain, tossed a purse upon the table. The captain frowned up sidewise from 
under bushy black eyebrows, thinking his own thoughts. He opened the purse, 
counted the sequins and found an insufficiency, which he pointed out. Dordolio 
wearily reached into his pouch, found the required sum, and the captain jerked 
his thumb toward the sterncastle.
   Dordolio pulled at his mustache, raised his eyes toward the sky. He went to 
the gangplank, signaled a pair of porters who conveyed aboard his luggage. Then, 
with a formal bow toward the Flower of Cath, he went to stand at the far rail, 
looking moodily off across the Dwan Zher.
   Five other passengers came aboard: a small fat merchant in a somber gray 
caftan and tall cylindrical hat; a man of the Isle of Cloud, with his spouse and 
two daughters: fresh fragile girls with pale skins and orange hair.
   An hour before noon the Vargaz hoisted sails, cast off lines, and sheered 
away from the dock. The roofs of Coad became dark brown prisms laid along the 
hillside. The crew trimmed sails, coiled down lines, then unshipped a clumsy 
blast-cannon, which they dragged up to the foredeck.
   Reith asked Anacho, "Who do they fear? Pirates?"
   "A precaution. So long as a cannon is seen, pirates keep their distance. We 
have nothing to fear; they are seldom seen on the Draschade. A greater hazard is 
the victualing. The captain appears a man accustomed to good living, an 
optimistic sign."
   The cog moved easily through the hazy afternoon. The Dawn Zher was calm and 
showed a pearly luster. The coastline faded away to the north; there were no 
ships to be seen. Sunset came: a wan display of dove-brown and umber, and with 
it a cool breeze which sent the water chuckling around the bluff bow.
   The evening meal was simple but palatable: slices of dry spiced meat, a salad 
of raw vegetables, insect paste, pickles, soft white wine from a green glass 
demijohn. The passengers ate in wary silence; on Tschai strangers were objects 
of instinctive suspicion. The captain had no such inhibitions. He ate and drank 
with gusto and regaled the company with witticisms, reminiscences of previous 
voyages, jocular guesses regarding each passenger's purpose in making the 
voyage: a performance which gradually thawed the atmosphere. Ylin-Ylan ate 
little. She appraised the two orange-haired girls and became gloomily aware of 
their appealing fragility. Dordolio sat somewhat apart, paying little heed to 
the captain's conversation, but from time to time looking sidewise toward the 
two girls and preening his mustache. After the meal he conducted Ylin-Ylan 
forward to the bow where they watched phosphorescent sea-eels streaking away 
from the oncoming bow. The others sat on benches along the high quarterdeck, 
conducting guarded conversations while pink Az and blue Braz rose, one 
immediately behind the other, to send a pair of trails across the water.
   One by one the passengers drifted off to their cabins, and presently the ship 
was left to the helmsman and the lookout.
   Days drifted past: cool mornings with a pearly smoke clinging to the sea; 
noons with Carina 4269 burning at the zenith; ale-colored afternoons; quiet 
nights.
   The Vargaz touched briefly at two small ports along the coast of Horasin: 
villages submerged in the foliage of giant gray-green trees. The Vargaz 
discharged hides and metal implements, took aboard bales of nuts, lumps of 
jellied fruit, butts of a beautiful rose and black timber.
   Departing Horasin the Vargaz veered out into the Draschade Ocean, steering 
dead east along the equator both to take advantage of the counter-current and to 
avoid unfavorable weather patterns to north and south.
   Winds were fickle; the Vargaz wallowed lazily across almost imperceptible 
swells.
   The passengers amused themselves in their various ways. The orange-haired 
girls Heizari and Edwe played quoits, and teased Traz until he also joined the 
game.
   Reith introduced the group to shuffleboard, which was taken up with 
enthusiasm. Palo Barba, the father of the girls, declared himself an instructor 
of swordsmanship; he and Dordolio fenced an hour or so each day, Dordolio 
stripped to the waist, a black ribbon confining his hair. Dordolio performed 
with foot-stamping bravura and staccato exclamations. Palo Barba fenced less 
flamboyantly, but with great emphasis upon traditional postures. Reith 
occasionally watched the two at their bouts, and on one occasion accepted Palo 
Barba's invitation to fence. Reith found the foils somewhat long and 
over-flexible, but conducted himself without discredit. He noticed Dordolio 
making critical observations to Ylin-Ylan, and later Traz, who had overhead, 
informed him that Dordolio had pronounced his technique naive and eccentric.
   Reith shrugged and grinned. Dordolio was a man Reith found impossible to take 
seriously.
   Twice other sails were spied in the distance; on one occasion a long black 
motor-galley changed course in a sinister fashion.
   Reith inspected the vessel through his scanscope. A dozen tall yellow skinned 
men wearing complicated black turbans stood looking toward the Vargaz. Reith 
reported as much to the captain, who made a casual glance. "Pirates. They won't 
bother us: too much risk."
   The galley passed a mile to the south, then turned and disappeared into the 
southwest.
   Two days later an island appeared ahead: a mountainous hump with foreshore 
cloaked under tall trees. "Gozed," said the captain, in response to Reith's 
inquiry. "We'll put in for a day or so. You've never touched at Gozed?"
   "Never."
   "You have a surprise in store. Or then, on the other hand" here the captain 
gave Reith a careful inspection-"perhaps you don't. I can't say, since the 
customs of your own land are unknown to me. And unknown to yourself perhaps? I 
understand you to be an amnesiac."
   Reith made a deprecatory gesture. "I never dispute other people's opinions of 
myself."
   "In itself, a bizarre custom," declared the captain. "Try as I may, I cannot 
decide the land of your birth. You are a sort strange to me."
   "I am a wanderer," said Reith. "A nomad, if you like."
   "For a wanderer, you are at times strangely ignorant. Well then, ahead lies 
Gozed."
   The island bulked large against the sky. Looking through the scanscope Reith 
could see an area along the foreshore where the trees had been defoliated and 
trimmed to the condition of crooked poles, each supporting one, two or three 
round huts. The ground below was barren gray sand, clear of refuse and raked 
smooth. Anacho the Dirdirman inspected the village through the scanscope. "About 
what I expected."
   "You are acquainted with Gozed? The captain made quite a mystery of the 
place."
   "No mystery. The folk of the island are highly religious; they worship the 
sea-scorpions native to the waters around the island. They are as large or 
larger than a man, or so I am told."
   "Why then are the huts so high in the air?"
   "At night the scorpions come up from the sea to spawn, which they accomplish 
by stinging eggs into a host animal, often a woman left down on the beach for 
that purpose. The eggs hatch, the 'Mother of the Gods' is devoured by the 
larvae. In the last stages, when pain and religious ecstasy produce a curious 
psychological state in the 'Mother; she runs down the beach and flings herself 
into the sea."
   "An unsettling religion."
   The Dirdirman admitted as much. "Still it appears to suit the folk of Gozed. 
They could change anytime they chose. Sub-men are notoriously susceptible to 
aberrations of this sort."
   Reith could not restrain a grin, and Anacho examined him with surprise. "May 
I inquire the source of your amusement?"
   "It occurs to me that the relationship of Dirdirmen to Dirdir is not unlike 
that of the Gozed toward their scorpions."
   "I fail to see the analogy," Anacho declared rather stiffly.
   "Simplicity itself: both are victims to non-human beings who use men for 
their particular needs."
   "Bah!" muttered Anacho. "In many ways you are the most wrongheaded man 
alive." He walked abruptly aft, to stand staring out over the sea. Pressures 
were working in Anacho's subconscious, thought Reith, causing him uneasiness.
   The Vargaz nosed cautiously in toward the beach, swung behind a jut of 
barnacle-encrusted rock and dropped anchor. The captain went ashore in a 
pinnace; the passengers saw him talking to a group of sternfaced men, 
white-skinned, totally naked save for sandals and fillets holding down their 
long iron-colored hair.
   Agreement was reached; the captain returned to the Vargaz. A half hour later 
a pair of lighters came out to the boat. A boom was rigged; bales of fiber and 
coils of rope were brought aboard, other bales and crates were lowered to the 
lighters. Two hours after arriving at Gozed the Vargaz backed sail, hoisted 
anchor and set off across the Draschade.
   After the evening meal the passengers sat on the deck forward of the 
sterncastle with a lantern swinging overhead, and the talk veered to the people 
of Gozed and their religion. Val Dal Barba, wife of Palo Barba, mother of 
Heizari and Edwe, thought the ritual unjust.
   "Why are there only 'Mothers of Gods'? Why shouldn't those flintfaced men go 
down on the beach and become 'Fathers of Gods'?"
   The captain chuckled. "It seems as if the honors are reserved for the 
ladies."
   "It would never be thus in Murgen," declared the merchant warmly. "We pay 
sizable tithes to the priests; they take all responsibility for appeasing Bisme; 
we have no further inconvenience."
   "A system as sensible as any," agreed Pal Barba. "This year we subscribe to 
the Pansogmatic Gnosis, and the religion has much virtue to it."
   "I like it much better than Tutelanics," said Edwe. "You merely recite the 
litany and then you are done for the day."
   "Tutelanics was a dreadful bore," Heizari concurred. "All that memorizing! 
And remember that dreadful Convocation of Souls, where the priests were so 
familiar? I like Pansogmatic Gnosis much better."
   Dordolio gave an indulgent laugh. "You prefer not to become intense. I myself 
incline in this direction. Yao doctrine, of course, is to some extent a 
syncresis; or, better to say, in the course of the 'round' all aspects of the 
Ineffable are given opportunity to manifest themselves, so that, as we move with 
the cycle, we experience all theopathy."
   Anacho, still smarting from Reith's comparisons, looked across the deck. 
"Well then, what of Adam Reith, the erudite ethnologist? What theosophical 
insights can he contribute?"
   "None," said Reith. "Very few, at any rate. It occurs to me that the man and 
his religion are one and the same thing. The unknown exists. Each man projects 
on the blankness the shape of his own particular world-view. He endows his 
creation with his personal volitions and attitudes. The religious man stating 
his case is in essence explaining himself. When a fanatic is contradicted he 
feels a threat to his own existence; he reacts violently."
   "Interesting!" declared the fat merchant. "And the atheist?"
   "He projects no image upon the blank whatever. The cosmic mysteries he 
accepts as things in themselves; he feels no need to hang a more or less human 
mask upon them. Otherwise, the correlation between a man and the shape into 
which he molds the unknown for greater ease of manipulation is exact."
   The captain raised his goblet of wine against the light of the lantern, 
tossed it down his throat. "Perhaps you're right, but no one will ever change 
himself on this account. I have known a multitude of peoples. I have walked 
under Dirdir spires, through Blue Chasch gardens and Wankh castles. I know these 
folk and their changeling men. I have traveled to six continents of Tschai; I 
have befriended a thousand men, caressed a thousand women, killed a thousand 
enemies; I know the Yao, the Binth, the Walalukians, the Shemolei on one hand; 
on the other the steppe nomads, the marshmen, the islanders, the cannibals of 
Rakh and Kislovan; I see differences; I see identities. All try to extract a 
maximum advantage from existence, and finally all die. None seems the better for 
it. My own god? Good old Vargaz! Of course! As Adam Reith insists, it is myself. 
When Vargaz groans through the storm waves, I shudder and grind my teeth. When 
we glide the dark water under the pink and blue moons, I play the lute, I wear a 
red ribbon around my forehead, I drink wine. I and Vargaz serve each other and 
the day Vargaz sinks into the deep, I sink with her."
   "Bravo!" cried Palo Barba, the swordsman, who had also drunk much wine. "Do 
you know, this is my creed as well?" He snatched up a sword, held it high so 
that lantern-light played up and down its spine. "What the Vargaz is to the 
captain, the sword is to me!"
   "Father!" cried his orange-haired daughter Edwe. "And all the time we thought 
you a sensible Pansogmatist!"
   "Please put down the steel," urged Val Dal Barba, "before you become excited 
and cut someone's ear off."
   "What? Me? A veteran swordsman? How can you imagine such a thing? Well then, 
as you wish. I'll trade the steel for another goblet of wine."
   The talk proceeded. Dordolio swaggered across the deck to stand near Reith. 
Presently he said, in a voice of facetious condescension, "A surprise to find a 
nomad so accomplished in disquisition, so apt in subtle distinctions."
   Reith grinned at Traz. "Nomads are not necessarily buffoons."
   "You perplex me," Dordolio declared. "Exactly which is your native steppe? 
What was your tribe?"
   "My steppe is far away; my tribe is scattered in every direction."
   Dordolio pulled thoughtfully at his mustache. "The Dirdirman believes you to 
be an amnesiac. According to the Blue Jade Princess you have implied yourself to 
be a man from another world. The nomad boy, who knows you best, says nothing. I 
admit to what may be an obtrusive curiosity."
   "The quality signifies an active mind," said Reith.
   "Yes, Yes. Let me put what I freely acknowledge to be an absurd question." 
Dordolio examined Reith cautiously sidewise. "Do you consider yourself to be the 
native of another world?"
   Reith laughed and groped for an answer. He said: "Four possible conditions 
exist. If I were indeed from another world I could answer either yes or no. If I 
were not from another world I could answer yes or no. The first case leads to 
inconvenience. The second diminishes my self-respect. The third case is 
insanity. The fourth represents the only situation you would not consider an 
abnormality. The question, hence, as you admit it, is absurd."
   Dordolio tugged angrily at his mustache. "Are you, by any farfetched chance, 
a member of the 'cult'?"
   "Probably not. Which 'cult' is this?"
   "The Yearning Refluxives who rode up the cycle to destroy our two gorgeous 
cities."
   "But I understood that an unknown agency torpedoed the cities."
   "No matter; the 'cult' instigated the attack; they are the cause."
   Reith shook his head. "Incomprehensible! An enemy destroys your cities; your 
bitterness is directed not against the cruel enemy but against a possibly 
sincere and thoughtful group of your own people. A displaced emotion, or so it 
seems."
   Dordolio gave Reith a cold inspection. "Your analyses at times border upon 
the mordant."
   Reith laughed. "Let it pass. I know nothing of your 'cult.' As for my place 
of origin, I prefer to be amnesiac."
   "A curious lapse, when otherwise you seem so emphatic in your opinions."
   "I wonder why you trouble to press the point," Reith mused. "For instance, 
what would you say if I claimed origin from a far world?"
   Dordolio pursed his lips, blinked up at the lantern. "I had not taken my 
thoughts quite so far. Well, we will not pursue the subject. A frightening idea, 
to begin with: an ancient world of men!"
   "'Frightening'? How so?"
   Dordolio gave an uneasy laugh. "There is a dark side to humanity, which is 
like a stone pressed into the mold. The upper side, exposed to sun and air, is 
clean; tilt it and look below, at the muck and scurrying insects ... We of Yao 
know this well; nothing will put an end to awaile. But enough of such talk!" 
Dordolio gave his shoulders a jerk and a shake, and resumed his somewhat 
condescending tone of voice. "You are resolved to come to Cath; what will you do 
there?"
   "I don't know. I must exist somewhere; why not in Cath?"
   "Not too simple for a stranger," said Dordolio. "Affiliation with a palace is 
difficult."
   "Odd that you should say that! The Flower of Cath declares that her father 
will welcome us to Blue Jade Palace."
   "He would necessarily show formal courtesy, but you could no more take up 
residence at the Blue Jade Palace than you could on the bottom of the Draschade, 
merely because a fish invited you to swim."
   "What would prevent me?"
   Dordolio shrugged. "No man cares to make a fool of himself. Deportment is the 
definition of life. What does a nomad know of deportment?"
   Reith had nothing to say to this. "A thousand details go into the conduct of 
a cavalier," stated Dordolio. "At the academy we learn degrees of address, 
signals, language configuration, in which I admit a deficiency. We take 
instruction in sword address and principles of dueling, genealogy, heraldry; we 
learn the niceties of costume and a hundred other details. Perhaps you consider 
these matters over-arbitrary?"
   Anacho the Dirdirman, standing nearby, chose to reply. "'Trivial' is a word 
more apt."
   Reith expected an icy retort, at the least a glare, but Dordolio gave only an 
indifferent shrug. "Well, then, is your life more significant? Or that of the 
merchant, or the swordsman? Never forget the Yao are a pessimistic race! Awaile 
is always a threat; we are perhaps more somber than we seem. Recognizing the 
essential pointlessness of existence, we exalt the small flicker of vitality at 
our command; we extract the fullest and most distinctive flavor from every 
incident, by insisting upon an appropriate formality. Trivality? Decadence? Who 
can do better?"
   "All very well," said Reith. "But why be satisfied with pessimism? Why not 
expand your horizons? Further, it seems that you accept the destruction of your 
cities with a surprising nonchalance. Vengeance is not the most noble activity, 
but submissiveness is worse."
   "Bah," muttered Dordolio. "How could a barbarian understand the disaster and 
its aftermath? The Refluxives in vast numbers took refuge in awaile; the acts 
and the expiations kept our land in a ferment. There was no energy for anything 
else. Were you of good caste, I would cut your heart out for daring so gross an 
imputation."
   Reith laughed. "Since my low caste protects me from retribution, let me ask 
another question: what is awaile?"
   Dordolio threw his hands in the air. "An amnesiac as well as a barbarian! I 
have no conversation for such as you! Ask the Dirdirman; he is glib enough." And 
Dordolio strode off in a rage.
   "An unreasonable display of emotion," mused Reith. "I wonder what my 
imputation was?"
   "Shame," said Anacho. "The Yao are as sensitive to shame as an eyeball to 
grit. Mysterious enemies destroy their cities; they suspect the Dirdir but dare 
no recourse, and must cope with helpless rage and shame. It is their typical 
attribute and predisposes them to awaile."
   "And this is?"
   "Murder. The afflicted person-one who feels shame-kills as many persons as he 
is able, of any sex, age or degree of relationship. Then, when he is able to 
kill no more, he submits and becomes apathetic. His punishment is dreadful and 
highly dramatic, and enlightens the entire population, who crowd the place of 
punishment. Each execution has its particular flavor and style and is 
essentially a dramatic pageant of pain, possibly enjoyed even by the victim. The 
institution permeates the life of Cath. The Dirdir on this basis consider all 
sub-men mad."
   Reith grunted. "So then, if we visit Cath, we risk insensate murder."
   "Small risk. After all, the acts are not ordinary events." Anacho looked 
around the deck. "But it seems that the hour is late." He bade Reith goodnight 
and stalked off to his bunk.
   Reith remained by the rail, looking out over the water. After the 
bloodletting at Pera, Cath had seemed a haven, a civilized environment where 
just possibly he might contrive to patch together a spaceboat. The prospect 
seemed ever more remote.
   Someone came to stand beside him: Heizari, the older of Palo Barbar's 
orange-haired daughters. "You seem so melancholy. What troubles you?"
   Reith looked down into the pale oval of the girl's face: an arch impudent 
face, at this moment alive with innocent-or not so innocent? coquetry. Reith 
restrained the first words that rose to his lips. The girl was unquestionably 
appealing. "How is it you are not in bed with your sister Edwe?"
   "Oh, simple! She is not in bed either. She sits with your friend Traz on the 
quarterdeck, beguiling and provoking, teasing and tormenting. She is much more 
of a flirt than I"
   Poor Traz, thought Reith. He asked, "What of your father and mother? Are they 
not concerned?"
   "What's it to them? When they were young, they dallied as ardently as any; is 
that not their right?"
   "I suppose so. Customs vary, as you know."
   "What of you? What are the customs of your people?"
   "Ambiguous and rather complicated," said Reith. "There's a great deal of 
variation."
   "This is the case with Cloud Islanders," said Heizari, leaning somewhat 
closer. "We are by no means automatically amorous. But on occasions a certain 
mood comes over a person, which I believe to be the consequence of natural law."
   "No argument there," Reith obeyed his impulse and kissed the piquant face. 
"Still, I don't care to antagonize your father, natural law or not. He is an 
expert swordsman."
   "Have no fears on that score. If you require assurance, doubtless he is still 
awake."
   "I don't know quite what I'd ask him," said Reith. "Well then, all things 
considered..." The two strolled forward and climbed the carved steps to the 
forepeak, and stood looking south across the sea. Az hung low in the west laying 
a line of amethyst prisms along the water. An orange haired girl, a purple moon, 
a fairytale cog on a remote ocean: would he trade it all to be back on Earth? 
The answer had to be yes. And yet, why deny the attractions of the moment? Reith 
kissed the girl somewhat more fervently than before and now from the shadow of 
the anchor windlass, a person hitherto invisible jumped erect and departed in 
desperate haste. In the slanting moonlight Reith recognized Ylin-Ylan, the 
Flower of Cath ... His ardor was quenched; he looked miserably aft. And yet, why 
feel guilt? She had long since made it clear that the one-time relationship was 
at an end. Reith turned back to the orange-haired Heizari.



CHAPTER FOUR
   THE MORNING DAWNED without wind. The sun rose into a bird's egg sky: beige 
and dove-gray around the horizon, pale gray-blue at the zenith.
   The morning meal, as usual, was coarse bread, salt fish, preserved fruit, and 
acrid tea. The company sat in silence, each occupied with morning thoughts.
   The Flower of Cath was late. She slipped quietly into the saloon and took her 
place with a polite smile to left and right, and ate in a kind of reverie. 
Dordolio watched her with perplexity.
   The captain looked in from the deck. "A day of calm. Tonight clouds and 
thunder. Tomorrow? No way of knowing. Unusual weather!"
   Reith irritably forced himself to his usual conduct. No cause for misgivings: 
he had not changed; Ylin-Ylan had changed. Even at the most intense stage of 
their relationship she had at all times kept part of herself secret: a persona 
represented by another of her many names? Reith forced her from his mind.
   Ylin-Ylan wasted no time in the saloon, but went out on deck, where she was 
joined by Dordolio. They leaned on the rail, Ylin-Ylan speaking with great 
urgency, Dordolio pulling his mustache and occasionally interposing a word or 
two.
   A seaman on the quarterdeck gave a sudden call and pointed across the water. 
Jumping up on the hatch Reith saw a dark floating shape, with a head and narrow 
shoulders, disturbingly manlike; the creature surged, disappeared below the 
surface. Reith turned to Anacho. "What was that?"
   "A Pnume."
   "So far from land?"
   "Why not? They are the same sort as the Phung. Who holds a Phung to account 
for his deeds?"
   "But what does it do out here, in mid-ocean?"
   "Perhaps it floats by night on the surface, watching the moons swing by."
   The morning passed. Traz and the two girls played quoits. The merchant mused 
through a leather-bound book. Palo Barba and Dordolio fenced for a period. 
Dordolio was as usual flamboyant, whistling his steel through the air, stamping 
his feet, flourishing his arms.
   Palo Barba presently tired of the sport. Dordolio stood twitching his blade. 
Ylin-Ylan came to sit on the hatch. Dordolio turned to Reith. "Come, nomad, take 
up the foil; show me the skills of your native steppe."
   Reith instantly became wary. "They are very few; additionally I am out of 
practice. Perhaps another day."
   "Come, come," cried Dordolio, eyes glittering. "I have heard reports of your 
adroitness. You must not refuse to demonstrate your technique."
   "You must excuse me; I am disinclined."
   "Yes, Adam Reith!" called Ylin-Ylan. "Fence! You will disappoint us all!"
   Reith turned his head, examined the Flower for a long moment. Her face, 
pinched and wan and quivering with emotion, was not the face of the girl he had 
known in Pera. In some fashion, change had come; he looked into the face of a 
stranger.
   Reith turned his attention to Dordolio, who evidently had been incited by the 
Flower of Cath. Whatever they planned was not to his advantage.
   Palo Barba intervened. "Come," he told Dordolio. "Let the man rest, I will 
play another set of passes, and give you all the exercise you require."
   "But I wish to engage this fellow," declared Dordolio. "His attitudes are 
exasperating; I feel that he needs to be chastened."
   "If you intend to pick a quarrel," said Palo Barba coldly, "that of course is 
your affair."
   "No quarrel," declared Dordolio in a brassy, somewhat nasal voice. "A 
demonstration, let us say. The fellow seems to equate the caste of Cath with 
common ruck. A significant difference exists, as I wish to make clear."
   Reith wearily rose to his feet. "Very well. What do you have in mind for your 
demonstration?"
   "Foils, swords, as you wish. Since you are ignorant of chivalrous address, 
there shall be none; a simple 'go' must suffice."
   "And 'stop'?"
   Dordolio grinned through his mustache. "As circumstances dictate."
   "Very well." He turned to Palo Barba. "Allow me to look over your weapons, if 
you please."
   Palo Barba opened his box. Reith selected a pair of short light blades.
   Dordolio stared, eyebrows arched high in distaste. "Child's weapons, for the 
training of boys!"
   Reith hefted one of the blades, twitched it through the air. "This suits me 
well enough. If you are dissatisfied, use whatever blade you like."
   Dordolio grudgingly took up the light blade. "It has no life; it is without 
movement or backsnap--"
   Reith lifted his sword, tilted Dordolio's hat down over his eyes. "But 
responsive and serviceable, as you see."
   Dordolio removed the hat without comment, shot the cuffs of his white silk 
blouse. "Are you ready?"
   "Whenever you are."
   Dordolio raised his sword in a preposterous salute, bowed right and left to 
the spectators. Reith drew back. "I thought you planned to forgo the 
ceremonies."
   Dordolio merely drew back the corners of his mouth, to show his teeth, and 
performed one of his foot-stamping assaults. Reith parried without difficulty, 
feinted Dordolio out of position and swung down at one of the clasps which 
supported Dordolio's breeches.
   Dordolio jumped back, then attacked once more, the snarl replaced by a 
sinister grin. He stormed Reith's defense, picking here and there, resting, 
probing; Reith reacted sluggishly. Dordolio feinted, drew Reith's blade aside, 
lunged. Reith had already jumped away; Dordolio's blade met empty air. Reith 
hacked down hard at the clasp, breaking it loose.
   Dordolio drew back with a frown. Reith stepped forward, struck down at the 
other clasp, and Dordolio's breeches grew loose about the waist.
   Dordolio retreated, red in the face. He cast down the sword. "These 
ridiculous playthings! Take up a real sword!"
   "Use any sword you prefer. I will remain with this one. But, first, I suggest 
that you take steps to support your trousers; you will embarrass both of us."
   Dordolio bowed, with icy good grace. He went somewhat apart, tied his 
breeches to his belt with thongs. "I am ready. Since you insist, and since my 
purposes are punitive, I will use the weapon with which I am familiar."
   "As you like."
   Dordolio took up his long supple blade, flourished it around his head so that 
it sang in the air, then, nodding to Reith, came to the attack. The flexible tip 
swung in from right and left; Reith slid it away, and casually, almost as if by 
accident, tapped Dordolio's cheek with the flat of his blade.
   Dordolio blinked, and launched a furious prancing attack. Reith gave ground; 
Dordolio followed, stamping, lunging, cutting, striking from all sides. Reith 
parried, and tapped Dordolio's other cheek. He then drew back. "I find myself 
winded; perhaps you have had enough exercise for the day?"
   Dordolio stood glaring, nostrils distended, chest rising and falling. He 
turned away, gazed out to sea. He heaved a deep sigh, and turned back. "Yes," he 
said in a dull voice. "We have exercised enough." He looked down at his jeweled 
rapier, and for a moment appeared ready to cast it into the sea. Instead, he 
thrust it into his sheath, bowed to Reith. "Your swordplay is excellent. I am 
indebted for the demonstration."
   Palo Barba came forward. "Well spoken, a true cavalier of Cath! Enough of 
blades and metal; let us take a goblet of morning wine."
   Dordolio bowed. "Presently." He went off to his cabin. The Flower of Cath sat 
as if carved from stone.
   Heizari brought Reith a goblet of wine. "I have a wonderful idea."
   "Which is?"
   "You must leave the ship at Wyness, come to Orchard Hill and assist my 
father's fencing academy. An easy life, without worries or fear."
   "The prospect is pleasant," said Reith. "I wish I could ... but I have other 
responsibilities."
   "Put them aside! Are responsibilities so important when one has a single life 
to live? But don't answer." She put her hand on Reith's mouth. "I know what you 
will say. You are a strange man, Adam Reith, so grim and so easy all at once."
   "I don't seem strange to myself. Tschai is strange; I'm quite ordinary."
   "Of course not!" laughed Heizari. "Tschai is-" She made a vague gesture. 
"Sometimes it is terrible ... but strange? I know no other place." She rose to 
her feet. "Well then, I will pour you more wine and perhaps I will drink as 
well. On so quiet a day what else is there to do?"
   The captain passing near, halted. "Enjoy the calm while you can; winds are 
coming. Look to the north."
   On the horizon a bank of black clouds; the sea below glimmered like copper. 
Even as they watched a breath of air came across the sea, a curiously cool waft. 
The sails of the Vargaz flapped; the rigging creaked.
   From the cabin came Dordolio. He had changed his garments; now he wore a suit 
of somber maroon, black velvet shoes, a billed hat of black velvet. He looked 
for Ylin-Ylan; where was she? Far forward on the forepeak, she leaned on the 
rail, looking off to sea. Dordolio hesitated, then slowly turned away. Palo 
Barba handed him a goblet of wine; Dordolio silently took a seat under the great 
brass lantern.
   The bank of clouds rolled south, giving off flashes of purple light, and 
presently the low grumble of thunder reached the Vargaz.
   The lateen sails were furled; the cog moved sluggishly on a small square 
storm sail.
   Sunset was an eerie scene, the dark brown sun shining under the black clouds. 
The Flower of Cath came from the stern-castle: stark naked she stood, looking up 
and down the decks, into the amazed faces of the passengers.
   She held a dart pistol in one hand, a dagger in the other. Her face was set 
in a peculiar fixed smile; Reith, who had known the face under a host of 
circumstances, would never have recognized it. Dordolio, giving an inarticulate 
bellow, ran forward.
   The Flower of Cath aimed the pistol at him; Dordolio dodged; the dart sang 
past his head. She searched the deck; she spied Heizari, and stepped forward, 
pistol at the ready; Heizari cried out in fear, ran behind the mainmast. 
Lightning sprang from cloud to cloud; in the purple glare Dordolio sprang upon 
the Flower; she slashed him with the dagger; Dordolio staggered back with blood 
squirting from his neck. The Flower aimed the dart-gun, Dordolio rolled over 
behind the hatch. Heizari ran forward to the forecastle; the Flower pursued. A 
crewman emerged from the forecastle-to stand petrified. The Flower stabbed up 
into his astounded face; the man tumbled backward, down the companionway.
   Heizari stood behind the foremast. Lightning spattered across the sky; 
thunder came almost at once.
   The Flower stabbed deftly around the mast; the orange-haired girl clutched 
her side, tottered forth with a wondering face. The Flower aimed the dart gun 
but Palo Barba was there to knock it clattering to the deck. The Flower cut at 
him, cut at Reith who was trying to seize her, ran up the ladder to the 
forepeak, climbed out on the sprit.
   The cog rose to the waves; the sprit reared and plunged. The sun sank into 
the ocean; the Flower turned to watch it, hanging to the forestay with one arm.
   Reith called to her, "Come back, come back!"
   She turned, looked at him, her face remote. "Derl!" called Reith. 
"Ylin-Ylan!" The girl gave no signal she had heard. Reith called her other 
names: "Blue Jade Flower!" Then her court name: "Shar Zarin!"
   She only gave him a regretful smile.
   Reith sought to coax her. He used her child name: "Zozi ... Zozi ... come 
back here."
   The girl's face changed. She pulled herself closer to the stay, hugging it.
   "Zozi! Won't you talk to me? Come here, there's a good girl."
   But her mind was far away, off where the sun was setting.
   Reith called her secret name: "L'lae! Come, come here! Ktan calls you, 
L'lae!"
   Again she shook her head, never taking her eyes from the sea.
   Reith called the final name though it felt strange to his lips: her love 
name. He called, but thunder drowned the sound of his voice, and the girl did 
not hear. The sun was a small segment, swimming with antique colors. The Flower 
stepped from the sprit, and dropped into a hissing surge of spume. For an 
instant Reith thought he saw the spiral of her dark hair, and then she was gone.
   Later, in the evening, with the Vargaz pitching up the great slopes and 
wallowing in a rush down into the troughs, Reith put a question to Ankhe at 
afram Anacho, the Dirdirman. "Had she simply lost her reason? Or was that 
awaile?"
   "It was awaile. The refuge from shame."
   "But-" Reith started to speak, but could only make an inarticulate gesture.
   "You gave attendance to the Cloud Isle girl. Her champion made a fool of 
himself. Humiliation lay across the future. She would have killed us all had she 
been able."
   "I find it incomprehensible," muttered Reith.
   "Naturally. You are not Yao. For the Blue Jade Princess, the pressure was too 
great. She is lucky. In Settra she would have been punished at a dramatic public 
torturing."
   Reith groped his way out on deck. The brass lantern creaked as it swung. 
Reith looked out over the blowing sea. Somewhere far away and deep, a white body 
floated in the dark.



CHAPTER FIVE
   FREAKISH WINDS BLEW throughout the night: gusts, breaths, blasts, whispers. 
Dawn brought an abrupt calm, and the sun found the Vargaz wallowing in a 
confused sea.
   At noon a terrible squall sent the ship scudding south like a toy, the bluff 
bow battering the sea to froth. The passengers kept to the saloon, or to the 
trunk deck. Heizari, bandaged and pale, kept to the cabin she shared with Edwe. 
Reith sat with her for an hour. She could speak of nothing but her terrible 
experience. "But why should she do so dreadful a deed?"
   "Apparently the Yao are prone to such acts."
   "I have heard as much; but even insanity has a reason."
   "The Dirdirman says she was overwhelmed by shame."
   "What folly! A person as beautiful as she? What could she have done to affect 
her so?"
   "I wouldn't care to speculate," muttered Reith.
   The squalls became gigantic hills lofting the Vargaz high, heaving the round 
hull bubbling and singing down the long slopes. Finally one morning the sun 
shone down from a dove-brown sky clean of clouds. The seas persisted a day 
longer, then gradually lessened, and the cog set all sail before a fair breeze 
from the west.
   Three days later a dim black island loomed in the south, which the captain 
declared to be the haunt of corsairs; he kept a sharp lookout from the masthead 
until the island had merged into the murk of evening.
   The days passed without distinguishing characteristic: curiously antiseptic 
days overshadowed by the uncertainty of the future. Reith became edgy and 
nervous. How long ago had been the events at Pera: a time so innocent and 
uncomplicated! At that time, Cath had seemed a haven of civilized security, with 
Reith certain that the Blue Jade Lord through gratitude would facilitate his 
plans. What a callow hope!
   The cog approached the coast of Kachan, where the captain hoped to ride 
north-flowing currents up into the Parapan.
   One morning, coming on deck, Reith found a remarkable island standing off the 
starboard beam: a place of no great extent, less than a quarter-mile in 
diameter, surrounded at the water's edge by a wall of black glass a hundred feet 
high. Beyond rose a dozen massive buildings of various heights and graceless 
proportion.
   Anacho the Dirdirman came to stand beside him, narrow shoulders hunched, long 
face dour. "There you see the stronghold of an evil race: the Wankh."
   "'Evil'? Because they are at war with the Dirdir?"
   "Because they will not end the war. What benefit to either Dirdir or Wankh is 
such a confrontation? The Dirdir offer disengagement; the Wankh refuse. A harsh 
inscrutable people!"
   "Naturally, I know nothing of the issues," said Reith. "Why the wall around 
the island?"
   "To daunt the Pnume, who infest Tschai like rats. The Wankh are not a 
companionable folk. In fact-look down yonder below the surface."
   Reith, peering into the water, saw gliding beside the ship at a depth of ten 
or fifteen feet a dark man-like shape, with a metal structure fixed across its 
mid-body, moving without motion of its own. The figure twisted, slanted away and 
vanished into the murk.
   "An amphibious race, the Wankh, with electric jets for their underwater 
sport."
   Reith once more raised the scanscope. The Wankh towers, like the walls, were 
black glass. Round windows were discs blacker than black; balconies of frail 
twisted crystal became walkways to far structures. Reith spied movement: a pair 
of Wankh? Looking more closely he saw the creatures to be men-Wankhmen, beyond 
all doubt, with flour-white skins and black pelts close to somewhat flat scalps. 
Their faces seemed smooth, with still, saturnine features; they wore what 
appeared to be one-piece black garments, with wide black leather belts, on which 
hung small implements, tools, instruments. As they moved into the building, they 
looked out at the Vargaz and for an instant Reith saw full into their faces. He 
jerked the scanscope from his eyes.
   Anacho eyed him askance. "What is the trouble?"
   "I saw two Wankhmen ... Even you, weird mutated freak that you are, seem 
ordinary by comparison."
   Anacho gave a sardonic chuckle. "They are in fact not dissimilar to the 
typical sub-man."
   Reith made no argument; in the first place he could not define the exact 
quality he had seen behind the still white faces. He looked again, but the 
Wankhmen had disappeared. Dordolio had come out on deck and now stared in 
fascination at the scanscope. "What instrument is that?"
   "An electronic optical device," said Reith without emphasis.
   "I've never seen its like." He looked at Anacho. "Is it a Dirdir machine?"
   Anacho made a quizzical dissent. "I think not."
   Dordolio gave Reith a puzzled glance. "Is it Chasch or Wankh?" He veered at 
the engraved escutcheon. "What writing is this?"
   Anacho shrugged. "Nothing I can read."
   Dordolio asked Reith: "Can you read it?"
   "Yes, I believe so." Impelled by a sudden mischievous urge, Reith read:
   "Federal Space Agency
   Tool and Instrument Division
   Mark XI Photomultiplying Binocular Telescope
   1x-1000x
   Nonprojective, inoperable in total darkness. BAF-1303-K-29023 Use Type D5 
energy slug only. In poor light, engage color compensator switch. Do not look at 
sun or high-intensity illumination; if automatic light-gate fails, damage to the 
eyes may result."
   Dordolio stared. "What language is that?"
   "One of the many human dialects," said Reith.
   "But from what region? Men everywhere on Tschai, to my understanding, speak 
the same language."
   "Rather than embarrass you both," said Reith. "I prefer to say nothing. 
Continue to think of me as an amnesiac."
   "Do you take us for fools?" growled Dordolio. "Are we children to have our 
questions answered with flippant evasions?"
   "Sometimes," said Anacho, speaking into the air, "it is the part of wisdom to 
maintain a myth. Too much knowledge can become a burden."
   Dordolio gnawed at his mustache. From the corner of his eye he glanced at the 
scanscope, then swung abruptly away.
   Ahead three more islands had appeared, rising sharply from the sea, each with 
its wall and core of eccentric black buildings. A shadow lay on the horizon 
beyond: the mainland of Kachan.
   During the afternoon the shadow took on density and detail, to become a hulk 
of mountains rising from the sea. The Vargaz coasted north, almost in the shadow 
of the mountains, with black dip-winged kites swooping around the masts, 
emitting mournful hoots and clashing their mandibles. Late in the afternoon the 
mountains fell away to reveal a landlocked bay. A nondescript town occupied the 
south shore; from a promontory to the north rose a Wankh fortress, like a growth 
of undisciplined black crystals. A spaceport occupied the flat land to the east, 
where a number of spaceships of various styles and sizes were visible.
   Through the scanscope, Reith studied the landscape and the mountainside 
sloping down to the spacefield from the east. Interesting, mused Reith, 
interesting indeed.
   The captain, coming past, identified the port as Ao Hidis, one of the 
important Wankh centers. "I had no intent of faring south so far, but since 
we're here, I'll try to sell my leathers and the Grenie woods; then I'll take on 
Wankh chemicals for Cath. A word of warning for those of you who intend to 
roister ashore. There are two towns here: Ao Hidis proper, which is Man-town, 
and an unpronounceable sound which is Wankh-town. In Man-town are several kinds 
of people, including Lokhars, but mainly Blacks and Purples. They do not mingle; 
they recognize their own kind only. In the streets you may walk without fear, 
you may buy at any shop or booth with an open front. Do not enter any closed 
shop or tavern, either Black or Purple; you'll likely not come out.
   There are no public brothels. If you buy from a Black booth, do not stop at a 
Purple booth with your goods; you will be resented and perhaps insulted, or, in 
certain cases, attacked. The opposite holds true. As for Wankh-town, there is 
nothing to do except stare at the Wankh, to which you are welcome, for they do 
not seem to object. All considered, a dull port, with little amusement ashore."
   The Vargaz eased alongside a wharf flying a small purple pennon. "I 
patronized Purple on my last visit," the captain told Reith who had come up to 
the quarterdeck. "They gave good service at a fair price; I see no reason to 
change."
   The Vargaz was moored by Purple longshoremen: roundfaced, roundheaded men 
with a plum-colored cast to their complexion. From the neighboring Black dock 
Blacks looked on with aloof hostility. These were physiognomically similar to 
the Purples, but with gray skins oddly mottled with black.
   "No one knows the cause," the Captain said, in regard to the color disparity. 
"The same mother may produce one Purple child and one Black. Some blame diet; 
others drugs; others hold that disease attacks a color-gland in the mother's 
egg. But Black and Purple they are born; and each calls the other pariah. When 
Black and Purple breed, the union is sterile, or so it is said. The notion 
horrifies each race; they would as soon couple with nighthounds."
   "What of the Dirdirman?" asked Reith. "Is he likely to be molested?"
   "Bah. The Wankh take no notice of such trivia. The Blue Chasch are known for 
sadistic malice. Dirdir stringencies are unpredictable. But in my experience the 
Wankh are the most indifferent and remote people of Tschai, and seldom trouble 
with men. Perhaps they do their evil in secret like Pnume; no one knows. The 
Wankhmen are a different sort, cold as ghouls, and it is not wise to cross them. 
Well then, we are docked. Are you going ashore? Remember my warnings; Ao Hidis 
is a harsh city. Ignore both Black and Purple; talk to no one; interfere with 
nothing. Last visit I lost a seaman who bought a shawl at a Black shop, then 
drank wine at a Purple booth. He staggered aboard the ship with foam coming from 
his nose."
   Anacho chose to remain aboard the Vargaz. Reith went ashore with Traz. 
Crossing the dock they found themselves on a wide street paved with slabs of 
mica-schist. To either side were houses built crudely of stone and timber, 
surrounded by rubbish. A few motor vehicles of a type Reith had not previously 
seen moved along the street; Reith assumed them to be of Wankh manufacture.
   Around the shore to the north rose the Wankh towers. In this direction also 
lay the spaceport.
   There seemed to be no public conveyances; Reith and Traz set off on foot. The 
huts gave way to somewhat more pretentious dwellings, and then they came to a 
square surrounded on all sides by shops and booths. Half of the folk were Black, 
half Purple; neither took notice of the other. Blacks patronized Blacks; Purple 
shops and booths served Purples. Blacks and Purples jostled each other, without 
acknowledgment or apology. Detestation hung in the air like a reek.
   Reith and Traz crossed the square, continued north along a road paved with 
concrete, and presently came to a fence of tall glass rods surrounding the 
spacefield. Reith halted, surveyed the lie of the land.
   "I am not naturally a thief," he told Traz. "But notice the little spaceboat! 
I would gladly confiscate that from its present owner."
   "It is a Wankh boat," Traz pointed out pessimistically. "You would not know 
how to control it."
   Reith nodded. "True. But if I had time-a week or so-I could learn. Spacecraft 
are necessarily similar."
   "Think of the practicalities!" Traz admonished him.
   Reith concealed a grin. Traz occasionally reverted to the stern personality 
of Onmale, the near-vital emblem which Traz had worn at the time of their first 
meeting. Traz shook his head dubiously. "Are valuable vehicles left unattended, 
ready to fly off into the sky? Unlikely!"
   "No one seems to be aboard the small ship," argued Reith. "Even the 
freighters seem to be empty. Why should there be vigilance? Who would wish to 
steal them, except a person like myself?"
   "Well then, what if you managed to enter the ship?" Traz demanded. "Before 
you could understand how to operate the machinery, you would be found and 
killed."
   "No question but that the project is risky," agreed Reith.
   They returned to the port, and the Vargaz, when once more they were aboard, 
seemed a haven of normalcy.
   Cargo was discharged and loaded all during the night. In the morning with all 
passengers and crew members aboard, the Vargaz threw off moorings, hoisted sail 
and glided back out into the Draschade Ocean.
   The Vargaz sailed north under the bleak Kachan coast. On the first day a 
dozen Wankh keeps appeared ahead, passed abeam and were left in the haze astern. 
On the second day the Vargaz passed in front of three great fjords. From the 
last of these a motor galley plunged forth, wake churning up astern. The captain 
immediately sent two men to man the blast-cannon. The galley cut through the 
swells to pass behind the cog; the captain instantly put about and brought the 
cannon to bear once more. The galley swung away and off to sea, with the jeers 
and hoots from the men aboard coming faintly across the water.
   A week later Dragan, first of the Isles of Cloud, appeared on the port beam. 
On the following day the cog put into Wyness; here Palo Barba, his spouse, and 
his orange-haired daughters disembarked. Traz looked wistfully after them. Edwe 
turned and waved; then the family was lost to sight among the yellow silks and 
white linen cloaks of the dockside crowd.
   Two days the cog lay at Wyness, unloading cargo, taking on stores and fitting 
new sails; then the lines were thrown off and the cog put to sea.
   With a brisk wind from the west the Vargaz drove through the chop of the 
Parapan. A day passed and a night and another day, and the atmosphere aboard the 
Vargaz became suspenseful, with all hands looking east, trying to locate the 
loom of Charchan. Evening came; the sun sank into a sad welter of brown and gray 
and murky orange. The evening meal was a platter of dried fruit and pickled 
fish, which no one ate, preferring to stand by the rail. The night drew on; the 
wind lessened; one by one the passengers retired to their cabins. Reith remained 
on deck, musing upon the circumstances of his life. Time passed. From the 
quarterdeck came a grumble of orders; the main yard creaked down the mast and 
the Vargaz lost way. Reith went back to the rail. Through the dark glimmered a 
shine of far lights: the coast of Cath.



CHAPTER SIX
   DAWN REVEALED A low-lying shore, black against the sepia sky. The mainsail 
was hoisted to the morning breeze; the Vargaz moved into the harbor of Vervodei.
   The sun rose to reveal the face of the sleeping city. To the north tall 
flatfaced buildings overlooked the harbor, to the south were wharves and 
warehouses.
   The Vargaz dropped anchor; the sails rattled down the mast. A pinnace rowed 
out with lines and the Vargaz was heaved sternfirst against a dock. Port 
officials came aboard, consulted with the captain, exchanged salutes with 
Dordolio and departed. The voyage was at an end.
   Reith bade the captain goodbye and with Traz and Anacho went ashore. As they 
stood on the dock Dordolio approached. He spoke in an offhand voice. "I now take 
my leave of you, since I depart immediately for Settra."
   Wary and wondering as to Dordolio's motives, Reith asked: "The Blue Jade 
Palace is at Settra?"
   "Yes, of course." Dordolio pulled at his mustache. "You need not concern 
yourself in this regard; I will convey all necessary news to the Blue Jade 
Lord."
   "Still, there is much that you do not know," said Reith. "In fact, nearly 
everything."
   "Your information will be of no great consolation," said Dordoho stiffly.
   "Perhaps not. But surely he will be interested."
   Dordolio shook his head in sad exasperation. "Quixotic! You know nothing of 
the ceremonies! Do you expect simply to walk up to the Lord and blurt out your 
tale? Crassness. And your clothes: unsuitable! Not to mention the marmoreal 
Dirdirman and the nomad lad."
   "We must trust to the courtesy and tolerance of the Blue Jade Lord," said 
Reith.
   "Bah," muttered Dordolio. "You have no shame." But still he delayed, frowning 
off up the street. He said, "You definitely plan to visit Settra then?"
   "Yes, of course."
   "Accept my advice. Tonight stop at one of the local inns-the Dulvan yonder is 
adequate-then tomorrow or the next day visit a reputable haberdasher and put 
yourself into his hands. Then, suitably clothed, come to Settra. The Travelers' 
Inn on the Oval will furnish you suitable accommodation. Under these 
circumstances, perhaps you will do me a service. I seem to have misplaced my 
funds, and I would be obliged to you for the loan of a hundred sequins to take 
me to Settra."
   "Certainly," said Reith. "But let us all go to Settra together."
   Dordolio made a petulant gesture. "I am in haste. Your preparations will 
consume time."
   "Not at all," said Reith. "We are ready at this moment. Lead the way."
   Dordoho scanned Reith from head to toe, in vast distaste. "The least I can 
do, for our mutual comfort, is to see you into respectable clothes. Come along 
then." He set off along the esplanade toward the center of town. Reith, Traz and 
Anacho followed, Traz seething with indignation. "Why do we suffer his 
arrogance?"
   "The Yao are mercurial folk," said Anacho. "Pointless to become disturbed."
   Away from the docks the city took on its own character. Wide, somewhat stark, 
streets ran between flat-faced buildings of glazed brick under steep roofs of 
brown tile. Everywhere a state of genteel dilapidation was evident. The activity 
of Coad was absent; the few folk abroad carried themselves with self-effacing 
reserve. Some wore complicated suits, white linen shirts, cravats tied in 
complex knots and bows. Others, apparently of lesser status, wore loose breeches 
of green or tan, jackets and blouses of various subdued colors.
   Dordoho led the way to a large open-fronted shop, in which several dozen men 
and women sat sewing garments. Signaling to the three following him, Dordoho 
entered the shop. Reith, Anacho, and Traz entered and waited while Dordoho spoke 
energetically to the bald old proprietor.
   Dordolio came to confer with Reith. "I have described your needs; the 
clothier will fit you from his stock, at no large expense."
   Three pale young men appeared, wheeling racks of finished garments. The 
proprietor made swift selection, laid them before Reith, Traz, and Anacho. 
"These I believe will suit the gentlemen. If they would care to change 
immediately, the dressing rooms are at hand "
   Reith inspected the garments critically. The cloth seemed a trifle coarse; 
the colors were somewhat raw. Reith glanced at Anacho, whose reflective smile 
reinforced his own assumptions. Reith said to Dordolio: "Your own clothes are 
the worse for wear. Why not try on this suit?"
   Dordolio stood back with eyebrows raised high. "I am satisfied with what I 
wear."
   Reith put down the garments. "These are not suitable," he told the clothier. 
"Show me your catalog, or whatever you work from."
   "As you wish, sir."
   Reith, with Anacho watching gravely, looked through a hundred or so color 
sketches. He pointed to a conservatively cut suit of dark blue. "What of this?"
   Dordoho made an impatient sound. "The garments a wealthy vegetable grower 
might wear to an intimate funeral."
   Reith indicated another costume. "What of this?"
   "Even less appropriate: the lounge clothes of an elderly philosopher at his 
country estate."
   "Hm. Well then," Reith told the clothier, "show me the clothes a somewhat 
younger philosopher of impeccable good taste would wear on a casual visit to the 
city."
   Dordolio gave a snort. He started to speak but thought better of it and 
turned away. The clothier gave order to his assistants. Reith looked at Anacho 
with an appraising frown. "For this gentleman, the traveling costume of a 
high-caste dignitary." And for Traz: "A young gentleman's casual dress."
   New garments appeared, conspicuously different from those ordered out by 
Dordolio. The three changed; the clothier made small adjustments while Dordolio 
stood to the side, pulling at his mustache. At last he could no longer restrain 
a comment. "Handsome garments, of course. But are they appropriate? You will 
puzzle folk when your conduct belies your appearance."
   Anacho spoke scornfully. "Would you have us visit Settra dressed like 
bumpkins? The clothes you selected hardly carried a flattering association."
   "What does it matter?" cried Dordolio in a brassy voice. "A fugitive 
Dirdirman, a nomad boy, a mysterious nonesuch: is it not absurd to trick such 
folk out in noblemen's costume?"
   Reith laughed; Anacho fluttered his fingers; Traz turned Dordolio a glance of 
infinite disgust. Reith paid the account.
   "Now then," muttered Dordolio, "to the airport. Since you demand the best, we 
shall charter an air-car."
   "Not so fast," said Reith. "As usual you miscalculate. There must be another, 
less ostentatious, means to reach Settra."
   "Naturally," said Dordolio with a sneer. "But folk who dress like lords 
should act like lords."
   "We are modest lords," said Reith. He spoke to the clothier. "How do you 
usually travel to Settra?"
   "I am a man with no great regard or 'place' ;* I ride the public wheelway."
   Reith turned back to Dordolio. "If you plan to travel by private air-car, 
this is where we part."
   "Gladly; if you will advance me five hundred sequins."
   Reith shook his head. "I think not."
   "Then I also must travel by wheelway."
   As they strode up the street Dordolio became somewhat more cordial. "You will 
find that the Yao set great store by consistency, and a harmony of attributes. 
You are dressed as persons of quality, no doubt you will conduct yourselves in 
consonance. Affairs will adjust themselves."
   At the wheelway depot Dordoho bespoke first class accommodation from the 
clerk; a short while later a long car trundled up to the platform, riding a 
wedge-shaped concrete slot on two great wheels. The four entered a compartment, 
seated themselves on red plush chairs. With a lurch and a grind, the car left 
the station and trundled off into the Cath countryside.
   Reith found the car intriguing and somewhat of a puzzle. The motors were 
small, powerful, of sophisticated design; why was the car itself so awkwardly 
built? The wheels-when the car reached top speed, perhaps seventy miles an 
hour-rode on cushions of trapped air, at times with silken smoothness, until the 
wheels came to breaks in the slot, whereupon the car jerked and vibrated 
abominably. The Yao, reflected Reith, seemed to be good theoreticians but poor 
engineers.
   The car rumbled across an ancient cultivated countryside, more civilized than 
any Reith had yet seen on Tschai. A haze hung in the air, tinting the sunlight 
antique yellow; shadows were blacker than black. In and out of forests rolled 
the car, beside orchards of gnarled black-leaved trees, past parks and manors, 
ruined stone walls, villages in which only half the houses seemed tenanted. 
After climbing to an upland moor, the car struck east over marshes and bogs, to 
outcrops of rotting limestone. No human being was in sight, though several times 
Reith thought to discern ruined castles in the distance.
   "Ghost country," said Dordolio. "This is Audan Moor; have you heard of it?"
   "Never," said Reith.
   "A desolate region, as you can see. The haunt of outlaws, even an occasional 
Phung. After dark the night-hounds bell..."
   Down from Audan Moor rolled the wheelway car, into a countryside of great 
charm. Everywhere were ponds and watercourses, overlooked by towering black, 
brown and rust-colored trees. On small islands stood tall houses with 
high-pitched gables and elaborate balconies. Dordolio pointed off to the east. 
"See yonder, the great manse in front of the forest? Gold and Carnelian: the 
palace of my connections. Behind but you cannot see-is Halmeur, an outer 
district of Settra."
   The car swung through a forest and came out into a region of scattered 
farmsteads with the domes and spires of Settra on the sky ahead. A few minutes 
later the car entered a depot and rolled to a halt. The passengers alighted, and 
walked to a terrace. Here Dordolio said: "Now I must leave you. Across the Oval 
you will find the Travelers' Inn, to which I recommend you and where I will send 
a messenger with the sum of my debt." He paused and cleared his throat. "If a 
freak of destiny brings us together in another setting-for instance, you have 
evinced a somewhat unrealistic ambition to make yourself acquainted with the 
Blue Jade Lord-it might serve our mutual purposes were we not to recognize each 
other."
   "I can think of no reason for wanting to do so," said Reith politely.
   Dordolio glanced at him sharply, then made a formal salute. "I wish you good 
fortune." He walked off across the square, his strides lengthening as he went.
   Reith turned to Traz and Anacho. "You two go to the Travelers' Inn, arrange 
for accommodations. I'm off to the Blue jade Palace. With any luck I'll arrive 
before Dordolio, who seems in a peculiar state of haste."
   He walked to a line of motorized tricycles, climbed aboard the first in line. 
"The Blue Jade Palace, with all speed," he told the driver.
   The mechanism spun off to the south, past buildings of glazed brick and dim 
glass panes, then into a district of small timber cottages, then past a great 
outdoor market, a scene as brisk and variegated as any Reith had observed in 
Cath. Turning aside, the motor-buggy nosed across an ancient stone bridge, 
through a portal in a stone wall into a large circular plaza. Around the 
periphery were booths, for the most part unoccupied and barren of goods; at the 
center a short ramp led up to a circular platform, at the back of which rose a 
bank of seats. A rectangular frame occupied the front of the platform, of 
dimensions which Reith found morbidly suggestive.
   "What is this place?" he asked the driver, who gave him a glance of mild 
wonder.
   "The Circle, site of Pathetic Communion, as you can see. You are a stranger 
in Settra?"
   "Yes."
   The driver consulted a yellow cardboard schedule. "The next event is 
Ivensday, when a nineteen-score comes to clarify his horrible desperation. 
Nineteen! The most since the twenty-two of Agate Crystal's Lord Wis."
   "You mean he killed nineteen?"
   "Of course; what else? Four were children, but still a feat these days when 
folk are wary of awaile. All Settra will come to the expiation. If you're still 
in town you could hardly do more for your own soul's profit."
   "Probably so. How far to Blue Jade Palace?"
   "Through Dalmere and we're almost there."
   "I'm in a hurry," said Reith. "As fast as possible."
   "Indeed sir, but if I wreck or injure, I'll feel extraordinary shame, to my 
soul's sickness, and I would not care to risk despondency."
   "Understandable."
   The motor-buggy spun along a wide boulevard, dodging and veering to avoid 
potholes. Enormous trees, black-trunked with brown and purple-green foliage, 
overhung the way; to either side, shrouded in dark gardens, were mansions of the 
most extraordinary architecture. The driver pointed. "Yonder on the hill: Blue 
Jade Palace. Which entrance do you favor, sir?" He inspected Reith quizzically.
   "Drive to the front," said Reith. "Where else?"
   "As you say, your lordship. Although most of the fronters don't arrive in 
three-wheel motor-buggies."
   Up the driveway rolled the vehicle, and under a porte cochere the buggy 
halted. Paying the fare, Reith alighted upon a silken cloth laid under his feet 
by a pair of bowing footmen. Reith walked briskly through an open arch into a 
room paneled with mirrors. A myriad prisms of crystal hung tinkling on silver 
chains. A majordomo wearing russet velvet livery bowed deeply. "Your lordship is 
at home. Will you rest or take a cordial, though my Lord Cizante impatiently 
awaits the privilege of greeting you."
   "I will see him at once; I am Adam Reith."
   "Lord of which realm?"
   "Tell Lord Cizante that I bring important information."
   The majordomo looked at Reith uncertainly, his face twisting through a dozen 
subtle emotions. Reith understood that already he had committed gaucheries. No 
matter, he thought, the Blue Jade Lord will have to make allowance.
   The majordomo signaled, a trifle less obsequiously than before. "Be good 
enough to come this way."
   Reith was taken into a small court murmuring to a waterfall of luminous green 
liquid.
   Two minutes passed. A young man in green knickers and an elegant waistcoat 
appeared. His face was wax pale, as if he never saw sunlight; his eyes were 
somber and brooding; under a loose four-corner cap of soft green velvet his hair 
was jet black: a man richly handsome, by some extraordinary means contriving to 
seem both effete and competent. He examined Reith with critical interest, and 
spoke in a dry voice. "Sir, you claim to have information for the Blue Jade 
Lord?"
   "Yes. Are you he?"
   "I am his aide. You may impart your information to me with assurance."
   "I have news relating to the fate of his daughter," said Reith. "I prefer to 
speak to the Blue Jade Lord directly."
   The aide made a curious mincing motion and disappeared. Presently he 
returned. "Your name, sir?"
   "Adam Reith."
   "Follow me, if you will."
   He took Reith into a wainscoted room enameled a brownish ivory, lit by a 
dozen luminous prisms. At the far end stood a frail frowning man in an 
extravagant eight-piece suit of black and purple silk. His face was round, dark 
hair grew down his forehead in an elflock; his eyes were dark, far apart, and 
his tendency was to glance sidelong. The face, thought Reith, of a secretive 
suspicious man. He examined Reith with a compression of the lips.
   "Lord Cizante," said the aide, "I bring you the gentleman Adam Reith, 
heretofore unknown, who, chancing past, was pleased to learn that you were in 
the vicinity."
   There was an expectant silence. Reith understood that the circumstances 
demanded a ritual response. He said, "I am pleased, naturally, to find Lord 
Cizante in residence. I have only this hour arrived from Kotan."
   Cizante's mouth tightened, and Reith knew that once again he had made a 
graceless remark.
   Cizante spoke in a crisp voice. "Indeed. You have news regarding the Lady 
Shar Zarin?"
   This was the Flower's court name. Reith responded in a voice as cool as 
Cizante's own. "Yes. I can give you a detailed account of her experiences, and 
her unfortunate death."
   The Blue Jade Lord looked toward the ceiling and spoke without lowering his 
eyes. "You evidently claim the boon?"
   The majordomo entered the room, whispered to the aide, who discreetly 
murmured to Lord Cizante.
   "Curious!" declared Cizante. "One of the Gold and Carnelian scions, a certain 
Dordolio, likewise comes to claim the boon."
   "Send him away," said Reith. "His knowledge of the matter is superficial, as 
you will learn."
   "My daughter is dead?"
   "I am sorry to say that she drowned herself, after an attack of psychic 
malaise."
   The Lord's eyebrows rose more sharply than before. "She gave way to awaile?"
   "I would suppose so."
   "When and where did this take place?"
   "Three weeks ago, aboard the cog Vargaz, halfway across the Draschade."
   Lord Cizante dropped into a chair. Reith waited for an invitation to do 
likewise, but thought better of seating himself. Lord Cizante spoke in a dry 
voice: "Evidently she had suffered deep humiliation."
   "I couldn't say. I helped her escape from the Priestesses of the Female 
Mystery; thereafter she was secure and under my protection. She was anxious to 
return to Cath and urged me to accompany her, assuring me of your friendship and 
gratitude. But as soon as we started eastward she became gloomy, and, as I say, 
halfway across the Draschade she threw herself overboard."
   While Reith spoke Cizante's face had shifted through phases and degrees of 
various emotions. "So now," he said in a clipped voice, "with my daughter dead, 
after circumstances I do not care to imagine, you come hurrying here to claim 
the boon."
   Reith said coldly, "I knew then and know nothing now of this 'boon.' I came 
to Cath for several reasons, the least important of which was to make myself 
known to you. I find you indisposed to what I consider civilized standards of 
courtesy and I will now leave." Reith gave a curt nod and started for the door. 
He turned back. "If you wish to learn further details regarding your daughter, 
consult Dordoho, whom we found stranded at Coad."
   Reith left the room. The Lord's sibilant murmur reached his ears: "You are an 
uncouth fellow."
   In the hall waited the majordomo, who greeted Reith with the faintest of 
smiles. He indicated a rather dim passageway painted red and blue. "This way, 
sir."
   Reith paid him no heed. Crossing into the grand foyer, he left the way he had 
come.



CHAPTER SEVEN
   REITH WALKED BACK toward the Oval, pondering the city Settra and the curious 
temperament of its people. He was forced to admit that the scheme to build a 
small spaceboat, which in far-off Pera had appeared at least feasible, now 
seemed impractical. He had expected gratitude and friendship from the Blue Jade 
Lord; he had encountered hostility. As to the technical abilities of the Yao, he 
was inclined to pessimism, and he fell to appraising the vehicles which passed 
along the street. They appeared to function satisfactorily, though giving the 
impression that flair and elegance, rather than efficiency, had been first in 
the minds of the designers. Energy derived from the ubiquitious power cells 
produced by the Dirdir; the coupling was not altogether quiet: an indication, so 
Reith considered, of careless or incompetent engineering. No two were alike; 
each seemed an individual construction.
   Almost certainly, reflected Reith, the Yao technology was inadequate to his 
purposes. Without access to standard components, maxima-minima sets, integrated 
circuit blocks, structural forms, computers, Fourier analyzers, macro-gauss 
generators, a thousand other instruments, tools, gauges, standards, not to 
mention clever and dedicated technical personnel, the construction of even the 
crudest spaceboat became a stupendous task, impossible in a single lifetime ... 
He came to a small circular park, shadowed under tall psillas with shaggy black 
bark and leaves of russet paper. At the center rose a massive monument. A dozen 
male figures, each carrying an instrument or tool, danced in a dreadful ritual 
grace around a female form, who stood with arms raised high, upturned face 
twisted in some overpowering emotion. Reith could not identify her expression. 
Exultation? Agony? Grief? Beatification? Whatever the case, the monument was 
disturbing, and rasped at a dark corner of his mind like a mouse in the 
woodwork. The monument seemed very old, thousands of years? Reith could not be 
sure. A small girl and a somewhat younger boy came past. They paused first to 
study Reith; then gave fascinated attention to the gliding figures and their 
macabre instruments. Reith, in a somber mood, continued on his way and presently 
came to the Travelers' Inn. Neither Traz nor the Dirdirman were on the premises. 
They had, however, hired accommodations: a suite of four rooms overlooking the 
Oval.
   Reith bathed, changed his linen. When he went down to the foyer, twilight had 
come to the Oval, which was now lit by a ring of great luminous globes in a 
variety of pastel colors. Traz and Anacho appeared on the other side of the 
Oval. Reith watched them with a wry grin. They were basically alien, like cat 
and dog; yet, when circumstances threw them together, they conducted themselves 
with cautious good-fellowship.
   Anacho and Traz, so it developed, had chanced upon an area known as "the 
Mall," where cavaliers settled affairs of honor. In the course of the afternoon 
the two had watched three bouts: near-bloodless affairs, Traz reported with a 
sniff of scorn. "The ceremonies exhaust their energy," said Anacho. "After the 
addresses and the punctilio there is little time for fighting."
   "The Yao, if anything, are more peculiar than the Dirdirman," said Reith.
   "Ha ha! I dispute that! You know a single Dirdirman. I can show you a 
thousand and confuse you totally. But come; the refectory is around the corner. 
If nothing else, the Yao cuisine is satisfactory."
   The three dined in a wide room hung with tapestries. As usual Reith could not 
identify what he ate, and did not care to learn. There was yellow broth, faintly 
sweet, with floating flakes of pickled bark; slices of pale meat layered with 
flower petals; a celery-like vegetable crusted with crumbs of a fiery-hot spice; 
cakes flavored with musk and resin; black berries with a flavor of the swamp; 
clear white wine which tingled the mouth.
   In an adjacent tavern the three took after-dinner liquors. The clientele 
included many non-Yao folk, who seemed to use the place as a rendezvous. One of 
these, a tall old man in a leather bonnet, somewhat the worse for drink, peered 
into Reith's face. "But I'm wrong, for a fact. I thought you a Vect of Holangar; 
then I asked myself, where are his tongs? And I said, no, it is just another of 
the anomes who creep into Travelers' Inn for a sight of their own kind."
   "I'd like a sight of my own kind," said Reith. "Nothing would please me 
more."
   "Yes, isn't this the case? What sort are you, then? I can't put a name to 
your face."
   "A wanderer from far lands."
   "No farther than mine, which is the far coast of Vord, where Cape Dread holds 
back the Schanizade. I have seen sights, I tell you! Raids on Arkady! Battles 
with sea-folk! I remember an occasion when we drove into the mountains and 
destroyed the bandits ... I was a young man then and a great soldier; now I toil 
for the ease of the Yao, and earn my own ease thereby, and it is not so hard a 
life."
   "I should suppose not. You are a technician?"
   "Nothing so grand. I inspect wheels at the car yard."
   "Many foreign technicians are at work in Settra?"
   "True. Cath is comfortable enough, if you can overlook the vagaries of the 
Yao."
   "What about Wankhmen? Are there any such in Settra?"
   "At work? Never. When I sojourned at Ao Zalil, to the east of Lake Falas, I 
saw how it went. The Wankhmen will not even work for the Wankh; they have 
sufficient exertion pronouncing the Wankh chimes. Though usually they play the 
chords on remarkable little instruments."
   "Who works in the Wankh shops? Blacks and Purples?"
   "Bah! One might be forced to handle an article the other had touched. 
Back-country Lokhars for the most part work in the shops. For ten or twenty 
years, or longer, they toil, then they return to their villages rich men. 
Wankhmen at work in the shops? What a joke! They are as proud as Dirdirman 
Immaculates! I see a Dirdirman beside you tonight."
   "Yes, he is my comrade."
   "Odd to find a Dirdirman so common!" marveled the old man. "I have seen only 
three previously and all treated me like dirt." He drained his goblet, set it 
down with a rap. "Now I must leave; I bid all good evening, Dirdirman as well."
   The old man departed. With almost the same swing of the door a pale 
black-haired young man dressed unobtrusively in dark blue broadcloth entered the 
tavern. Somewhere, thought Reith, he had seen this young man, and recently.. . 
Where? The man walked slowly, almost absentmindedly, along the passage beside 
the wall. He went to the serving counter, was poured a goblet of sharp syrup. As 
he turned away his gaze met that of Reith's. He nodded politely and after a 
moment's hesitation approached. Reith now recognized him for Cizante's pallid 
young aide.
   "Good evening," said the young man. "Perhaps you recognize me? I am Helsse of 
Isan, a Blue jade connection. I believe that we met today."
   "I had a few words with your master, true enough."
   Helsse sipped from his goblet, made a fastidious grimace, placed the goblet 
on the bar. "Let's move to a more secluded place, where we can talk."
   Reith spoke to Traz and Anacho, then turned back to Helsse. "Lead the way."
   Helsse glanced casually toward the front entrance but chose to leave through 
the restaurant. As they departed Reith glimpsed a man thrusting into the tavern, 
to glare wildly around the room: Dordolio.
   Helsse appeared not to notice. "Nearby is a little cabaret, not overly 
genteel, but as good as anywhere else for our talk."
   The cabaret was a low-ceilinged room, lit by red and blue lamps with 
blue-painted booths around the periphery. A number of musicians sat on a 
platform, two of whom played small gongs and drum, while a male dancer strode 
sinuously this way and that. Helsse selected a booth near the door, as far as 
possible from the musicians; the two seated themselves on blue cushions. Helsse 
ordered two drams of "Wildwood Tincture" which were presently brought to the 
table.
   The dancer departed, the musicians undertook a new selection, with 
instruments similar to oboe, flute, cello, and a kettledrum. Reith listened for 
a moment, puzzled by the plaintive scraping, the thumps of the kettledrum, the 
sudden excited trills of the flute.
   Helsse leaned solicitously forward. "You are unfamiliar with Yao music? I 
thought as much. This is one of the traditional forms: a lament."
   "It could never be mistaken for a cheerful composition."
   "A question of degree." Helsse went on to list a series of musical forms, of 
decreasing optimism. "I do not mean to imply that the Yao are a dour folk; you 
need only attend one of the season balls to appreciate this."
   "I doubt if I will be invited," said Reith.
   The orchestra embarked upon another selection, a series of passionate 
phrases, taken up by each instrument at varying instants, to terminate in a wild 
sustained quaver. By some cross sensoral stimulus, Reith thought of the monument 
in the circular park. "The music bears some connection with your ritual of 
expiation?"
   Helsse smiled distantly. "I have heard it said that the spirit of Pathetic 
Communion permeates the Yao psyche."
   "Interesting." Reith waited. Helsse had not brought him here to discuss 
music.
   "I trust that the events of this afternoon caused you no inconvenience?" 
asked Helsse.
   "None whatever, other than irritation."
   "You did not expect the boon?"
   "I knew nothing of it. I expected ordinary courtesy, certainly. My reception 
by Lord Cizante, in retrospect, seems remarkable."
   Helsse nodded sagely. "He is a remarkable man. But now he finds himself in an 
awkward position. Immediately upon your departure the cavalier Dordoho presented 
himself to denounce you as an interloper, and to demand the boon for himself. To 
be quite candid, such a proceeding, on Dordolio's terms, would embarrass Lord 
Cizante, when one takes all into consideration. You perhaps would not be aware 
that Blue Jade and Gold-Carnelian are rival houses. Lord Cizante suspects that 
Dordolio would use the boon to humiliate Blue Jade, with what consequences no 
one can foresee."
   Reith asked: "Exactly what was the boon promised by Cizante?"
   "Emotion overcame his reserve," said Helsse. "He declared: 'Whoever returns 
me my daughter or so much as brings me news, let him ask and I will fulfill as 
best I can.' Strong language, as you see, uttered only for the ears of Blue 
Jade, but the news circulated."
   "It appears," said Reith, "that I do Cizante a favor by accepting his 
bounty."
   "This is what we wish to ascertain," said Helsse carefully. "Dordolio has 
made a number of scurrilous statements in regard to you. He declares you a 
superstitious barbarian intent on reviving the 'cult.' If you demanded that Lord 
Cizante convert his palace into a temple and himself join the 'cult,' he might 
well prefer Dordolio's terms."
   "Even though I appeared first on the scene?"
   "Dordolio claims trickery, and is violently angry. But all this to the side, 
what might you demand of Lord Cizante, in light of the circumstances?"
   Reith considered. Unfortunately, he could not afford the prideful luxury of 
refusal. "I'm not sure. I could use some unprejudiced advice, but I don't know 
where to find it."
   "Try me," suggested Helsse.
   "You are hardly unprejudiced."
   "Much more than you might think."
   Reith studied the pale handsome face, the still black eyes. A puzzling man 
was Helsse, the more so for his impersonality, neither cordial nor cold. He 
spoke with ostensible candor but permitted no inadvertent or unconscious signals 
to advertise the state of his inner self.
   The orchestra had dispersed. To the platform came a somewhat obese man in a 
long maroon robe. Behind him sat a woman with long black hair plucking a lute. 
The man produced an ululating wail: half-words which Reith was unable to 
comprehend. "Another traditional melody?" he inquired.
   Helsse shrugged. "A special mode of singing. It is not altogether without 
value. If everyone belabored themselves thusly, there would be far less awaile.'
   Reith listened. "Judge me harshly, all," moaned the singer. "I have performed 
a terrible crime; it is because of my despair."
   "Offhand," said Reith, "it seems absurd to discuss my best advantage over 
Lord Cizante with Cizante's aide."
   "Ah, but your best advantage is not necessarily Lord Cizante's disadvantage," 
said Helsse. "With Dordolio the case is different."
   "Lord Cizante showed me no great courtesy," mused Reith. "I am not anxious to 
do him a favor. On the other hand, I do not care to assist Dordolio, who calls 
me a superstitious barbarian."
   "Lord Cizante was perhaps shocked by your news," suggested Helsse. "As for 
Dordolio's charge, it is obviously inaccurate and need no longer be considered."
   Reith grinned. "Dordolio has known me a month; can you dispute him on the 
basis of such short acquaintance?"
   If he had hoped to discomfit Helsse, he was unsuccessful. Helsse's smile was 
bland. "I am usually correct in my appraisals."
   "Suppose that I were to make a set of apparently wild assertions: that Tschai 
was flat, that the tenets of the 'cult' were correct, that men could live 
underwater-what would become of your opinion?"
   Helsse considered soberly. "Each case is different. If you told me Tschai was 
flat, I would certainly revise my judgment. If you argued the creed of the 
'cult,' I would suspend a decision and listen to your remarks, for here is a 
matter of opinion and no evidence exists, at least to my knowledge. If you 
insisted that men could live underwater I might be inclined to accept the 
statement as a working premise. After all, the Pnume submerge, as do the Wankh; 
why not men, perhaps with special equipment?"
   "Tschai is not flat," said Reith. "Men are able to live underwater for short 
periods using artificial gills. I know nothing of the 'cult' or its doctrines."
   Helsse sipped from his goblet of essence. The singer had departed; a dance 
troupe now came forth: men in black leggings and sleeves, nude from upper thigh 
to rib cage. Reith stared in fascination for a moment or two, then looked away.
   "Traditional dances," explained Helsse, "relating to Pathetic Communion. This 
is 'Precursory Movement of the Ministrants toward the Expiator."'
   "The 'ministrants' are torturers?"
   "They are those who provide latitude for absolute expiation. Many become 
popular heroes because of their passionate techniques." Helsse rose to his feet. 
"Come. You have implied at least a mild interest in the 'cult.' As it happens, I 
know the location of their meeting place, which is not far from here. If you are 
interested, I will take you there."
   "If the visit is not contrary to the laws of Cath."
   "No fear of that. Cath has no laws, only customs, which seems to suit the Yao 
well enough."
   "Peculiar," said Reith. "Killing is not proscribed?"
   "It offends custom, at least under certain circumstances. However, the 
professional assassins of the Guild and the Service Company work without public 
reproach. In general the folk of Cath do what they see fit and suffer more or 
less opprobrium. So you may visit the 'cult' and incur, at the worse, 
invective."
   Reith rose to his feet. "Very well; lead the way."
   They walked across the Oval, through a winding alley into a dim avenue. The 
eccentric silhouettes of the houses opposite leaned across the sky, where Az and 
Braz both ranged. Helsse rapped at a door displaying a pale blue phosphor. The 
two men waited in silence. The door opened a crack; a long-nosed face peered 
forth.
   "Visitors," said Helsse. "May we come in?"
   "You are associates? I must inform you that here is the district center for 
the Society of Yearning Refluxives."
   "We are not associates. This gentleman is an outlander who wishes to learn 
something of the 'cult."'
   "He is welcome and yourself as well, since you seem to have no concern for 
'place.' "
   "None whatever."
   "Which marks you either the highest of the high or the lowest of the low. 
Enter then. We have little entertainment to offer-convictions, a few theories, 
fewer facts." The Refluxive swept aside a curtain. "Enter."
   Helsse and Reith stepped into a large low room. To one side, forlorn in so 
much vacant space, two men and two women sat drinking tea from iron pots.
   The Refluxive made a half-obsequious, half-sardonic gesture. "Here we are; 
stare yourself full at the dreadful 'cult.' Have you ever seen anything less 
obstreperous?"
   "The 'cult,"' said Helsse, somewhat sententiously, "is despised not for the 
look of its meeting halls, but for its provocative assumptions."
   "'Assumptions' bah!" declared the Refluxive in a voice of peevish complaint. 
"The others persecute us but we are the chosen in knowledge."
   Reith asked: "What, precisely, do you know?"
   "We know that men are strangers to Tschai."
   "How can you know this?" demanded Helsse. "Human history fades into murk."
   "It is an intuitive Truth. We are equally certain that someday the Human Magi 
will call their seed back Home! And then what joy! Home is a world of bounty, 
with air that rejoices in the lungs, like the sweetest Iphthal wine! On Home are 
golden mountains crowned with opals and forests of dreams! Death is a strange 
accident, not a fate; all men wander with joy and peace for company, with 
delicious viands everywhere for the eating!"
   "A delightful vision," said Helsse, "but do you not consider it somewhat 
conjectural? Or more properly, institutional dogma?"
   "Possibly so," declared the stubborn Refluxive. "Still, dogma is not 
necessarily falsehood. These are revealed truths, and behold: the revealed image 
of Home!" He pointed to a world globe three feet in diameter hanging at 
eye-level.
   Reith went to inspect the globe, tilting his head this way and that, trying 
to identify outline of sea and shore, finding here a haunting familiarity, there 
utter disparity. Helsse came to stand beside him. "What does it look like to 
you?" His voice was light and careless.
   "Nothing in particular."
   Helsse gave a soft grunt of mingled relief and perhaps disappointment, or so 
it seemed to Reith.
   One of the women lifted her obese body from the bench and came forward. "Why 
not join the Society?" she wheedled. "We need new faces, new blood, to augment 
the vast new tide. Won't you help us make contact with Home?"
   Reith laughed. "Is there a practical method?"
   "To be sure! Telepathy! Indeed, we have no other recourse."
   "Why not a spaceship?"
   The woman seemed bewildered, and looked sharply to see if Reith was serious. 
"Where could we lay our hands on a spaceship?"
   "They are nowhere to be bought? Even a small one?"
   "I have never heard of such a case."
   "Nor I," was Helsse's dry comment.
   "Where would we fare?" demanded the woman, half truculently. "Home is 
situated in the constellation Clari, but space is vast; we would drift forever."
   "The problems are large," Reith agreed. "Still, assuming that your premise is 
correct-"
   " 'Assume'? 'Premise'?" demanded the fat woman in a shocked voice. 
'Revelation,' rather."
   "Possibly so. But mysticism is not a practical approach to space travel. Let 
us suppose that by one means or another, you find yourself in command of a 
spaceship, then you might very easily verify the basis of your belief. Simply 
fly into the constellation Clari, halting at appropriate intervals to monitor 
the area for radio signals. Sooner or later, if the world Home exists, a 
suitable instrument will detect the signals."
   "Interesting," said Helsse. "You assume that such a world, if it exists, is 
sufficiently advanced to propagate these signals?"
   Reith shrugged. "Since we're assuming the world, why not assume the signals?"
   Helsse had nothing to say. The Refluxive declared, "Ingenious but 
superficial! How, for instance, would we obtain a spaceship?"
   "With sufficient funds and technical competence you could build a small 
vessel."
   "To begin with," said the Refluxive, "we have no such funds."
   "The least of the difficulties, or so I would think," murmured Helsse.
   "The second possibility is to buy a small boat from one of the spacefaring 
peoples: the Dirdir, the Wankh, or perhaps even the Blue Chasch."
   "Again a question of sequins," said the Refluxive. "How much would a 
spaceboat cost?"
   Reith looked at Helsse, who pursed his lips. "Half a million sequins, should 
anyone be willing to sell, which I doubt."
   "The third possibility is the most direct," said Reith. "Confiscation, pure 
and simple."
   "Confiscation? From whom? Though members of the 'cult' we are not yet 
lunatics."
   The fat woman gave a sniff of disapproval. "The man is a wild romantic."
   The Refluxive said gently, "We would gladly accept you as an associate, but 
you must discover orthodox methodology. Classes in thought control and 
projective telepathy are offered twice a week, on Ilsday and Azday. If you care 
to attend-"
   "I'm afraid that this is impossible," said Reith. "But your program is 
interesting and I hope it brings fruitful returns."
   Helsse made a courteous sign; the two departed.
   They walked along the quiet avenue in silence. Then Helsse inquired: "What is 
your opinion now?"
   "The situation speaks for itself," said Reith.
   "You are convinced then that their doctrine is implausible?"
   "I would not go quite so far. Scientists have undoubtedly found biological 
links between Pnume, Phung, night-hounds, and other indigenous creatures. Blue 
Chasch, Green Chasch, and Old Chasch are similarly related, as are all the races 
of man. But Pnume, Wankh, Chasch, Dirdir, and Man are biologically distinct. 
What does this suggest to you?"
   "I agree that the circumstances are puzzling. Have you any explanation?"
   "I feel that more facts are needed. Perhaps the Refluxives will become adept 
telepathists, and surprise us all."
   Helsse walked along in silence. They turned a corner. Reith pulled Helsse to 
a halt. "Quiet!" He waited.
   The shuffle of footsteps sounded; a dark shape rounded the corner. Reith 
seized the figure, spun it around, applied an arm and neck lock. Helsse made one 
or two tentative motions; Reith, trusting no one, kept him in his field of 
vision. "Make a light," said Reith. "Let's see whom we have. Or what."
   Helsse brought forth a glow-bulb, held it up. The captive squirmed, kicked, 
lurched; Reith tightened his grip and felt the snap of a bone, but the figure, 
sagging, toppled Reith off balance. From the unseen face came a hiss of triumph; 
it snatched itself free. Then, to a flicker of metal, it gave a gasp of pain.
   Helsse held up his glow-bulb, disengaged his dagger from the back of the 
twitching shape, while Reith stood by, mouth twisted in disapproval. "You are 
quick with your blade."
   Helsse shrugged. "His kind carry stings." He turned the body over with his 
foot; a small tinkle sounded as a glass sliver fell against the stone.
   The two peered curiously into the white face, half-shrouded under the brim of 
an extravagantly wide black hat.
   "He hats himself like a Pnumekin," said Helsse, "and he is pale as a ghost."
   "Or a Wankhman," said Reith.
   "But I think he is something different from either; what, I could not say. 
Perhaps a hybrid, a mingling, which, so it is said, makes the best personnel for 
spy work."
   Reith dislodged the hat, to reveal a stark bald pate. The face was 
fine-boned, somewhat loosely-muscled; the nose was thin and limber and 
terminated in a lump. The eyes, half-open, seemed to be black. Bending close, 
Reith thought that the scalp had been shaven.
   Helsse looked uneasily up and down the street. "Come, we must hurry away, 
before the patrol finds us and issues an information."
   "Not so fast," said Reith. "No one is near. Hold the light; stand yonder, 
where you can see along the street." Helsse reluctantly obeyed and Reith was 
able to watch him sidelong as he searched the corpse. The garments had a queer 
musky odor; Reith's stomach jerked as he felt here and there. From an inner 
pocket of the cloak he took a clip of paper. At the belt hung a soft leather 
pouch, which he detached.
   "Come!" hissed Helsse. "We must not be discovered, we would lose all 
'place."'
   They proceeded back to the Oval and across to the Travelers' Inn. In the 
arcade before the entrance they paused. "The evening was interesting," said 
Reith. "I learned a great deal."
   "I wish I could say the same," said Helsse. "What did you take from the dead 
man?"
   Reith displayed the pouch, which contained a handful of sequins. He brought 
forth the clip of paper, and the two examined it in the light streaming out of 
the inn, to find rows of a peculiar writing: a series of rectangles, variously 
shaded and marked.
   Helsse looked at Reith. "Do you recognize this script?"
   "No."
   Helsse gave a short sharp bark of laughter. "It is Wankh."
   "Hm. What would be the significance of this?"
   "Simply more mystery. Settra is a hive of intrigue. Spies are everywhere."
   "And spy devices? Microphones? Eye-cells?"
   "It is safe to assume as much."
   "Then it would be safe to assume that the Refluxive's hall is monitored ... 
Perhaps I was too free with advice."
   "If the dead man were the monitor, your words are now lost. But allow me to 
take custody of the notes. I will have them translated; there is a colony of 
Lokhars nearby and some of them have a smattering of Wankh."
   "We will go together," said Reith. "Will tomorrow suit you?"
   "Well enough," said Helsse glumly. He looked off across the Oval. "Finally 
then: what must I tell Lord Cizante as to the boon?"
   "I don't know," said Reith. "I'll have an answer tomorrow."
   "The situation may be clarified even sooner," said Helsse. "Here is 
Dordolio."
   Reith swung around, to find Dordolio striding toward him, followed by two 
suave cavaliers. Dordolio was clearly in a fury. He halted a yard in front of 
Reith and, thrusting forth his head, blurted: "With your vicious tricks, you 
have ruined me! Have you no shame?" He took off his hat, hurled it into Reith's 
face. Reith stepped aside, the hat went wheeling off into the Oval.
   Dordolio shook his finger in Reith's face; Reith backed away a step. "Your 
death is assured," bellowed Dordolio. "But not by the honor of my sword! 
Low-caste assassins will drown you in cattle excrement! Twenty pariahs will drub 
your corpse! A cur will drag your head along the street by the tongue!"
   Reith managed a painful grin. "Cizante will arrange the same for you, at my 
request. It's as good a boon as any."
   "Cizante, bah! A wicked parvenu, a moping invert. Blue Jade shall be nothing; 
the fall of that palace will culminate the 'round'!"
   Helsse came slightly forward. "Before you enlarge upon your remarkable 
assertions, be advised that I represent the House of Blue Jade, and that I will 
be impelled to report to his Excellency Lord Cizante the substance of your 
comments."
   "Do not bore me with triviality!" stormed Dordolio. He furiously motioned to 
Reith. "Fetch my hat, or tomorrow expect the first of the Twelve Touches!"
   "A small concession," said Reith, "if it ensures your departure." He picked 
up Dordoho's hat, shook it once or twice, handed it to him. "Your hat, which you 
threw across the square." He stepped around Dordolio, entered the foyer of the 
inn. Dordoho gave a somewhat subdued caw of laughter, slapped his hat against 
his thigh, and, signaling his comrades, walked away.
   In the foyer of the inn Reith asked Helsse, "What are the 'Twelve Touches'?"
   "At intervals-perhaps a day, perhaps two days-an assassin will tap the victim 
with a twig. The twelfth touch is fatal; the man dies. By accumulated poison, by 
a single final dose, or by morbid suggestion, only the Assassins' Guild knows. 
And now I must return to Blue Jade. Lord Cizante will be interested in my 
report."
   "What do you intend to tell him?"
   Helsse only laughed. "You, the most secretive of men, asking me that! Still, 
Cizante will hear that you have agreed to accept a boon, that you probably will 
soon be departing Cath-"
   "I said nothing of this!"
   "It will still be an element of my report."



CHAPTER EIGHT
   REITH AWOKE TO Wan sunlight shining through the heavy amber panes of the 
windows. He lay on the unfamiliar couch, collecting the threads of his 
existence. It was difficult not to feel a profound gloom. Cath, where he had 
hoped to find flexibility, enlightenment, and perhaps cooperation, was hardly 
less harsh an environment than the Aman Steppe. It was obvious folly to dream of 
building a spaceboat in Settra.
   Reith sat up on the couch. He had known horror, grief, disillusionment, but 
there had been corresponding moments of triumph and hope, even a few spasmodic 
instants of joy. If he were to die tomorrow-or in twelve days after twelve 
"touches"-he had already lived a miraculous life. Very well then, he would put 
his destiny to the test. Helsse had predicted his departure from Cath; Helsse 
had read the future, or Reith's own personality, more accurately than Reith 
himself.
   Breakfasting with Traz and Anacho he described his adventures of the previous 
evening. Anacho found the circumstances perturbing. "This is an insane society, 
constrained by punctilio as a rotten egg is held by its shell. Whatever your 
aims-and sometimes I think that you are the most flamboyant lunatic of all--they 
will not be achieved here."
   "I agree."
   "Well then," said Traz, "what next?"
   "What I plan is dangerous, perhaps rash folly. But I see no other 
alternative. I intend to ask Cizante for money; this we shall share. Then I 
think it best that we separate. You, Traz, might do worse than to return to 
Wyness, and there make a life for yourself. Perhaps Anacho will do the same. 
Neither of you can profit by coming with me; in fact, I guarantee the reverse."
   Anacho looked off across the square. "Until now you have managed to survive, 
if precariously. I find myself curious as to what you hope to achieve. With your 
permission, I will join your expedition, which I suspect is by no means as 
desperate as you make it out to be."
   "I intend to confiscate a Wankh spaceship from the Ao Hidis spaceport, or 
elsewhere, if it seems more convenient."
   Anacho threw his hands in the air. "I feared no less." He proceeded to state 
a hundred objections which Reith did not trouble to contradict. "All very true; 
I will end my days in a Wankh dungeon or a nighthound's belly; still this is 
what I intend to attempt. I strongly urge that you and Traz make your way to the 
Isles of Cloud and live as best you may."
   "Bah," snorted Anacho. "Why won't you attempt some reasonable exploit, like 
exterminating the Pnume, or teaching the Chasch to sing?"
   "I have other ambitions."
   "Yes, yes, your faraway planet, the home of man. I am tempted to help you, if 
only to demonstrate your lunacy."
   "As for me," said Traz, "I would like to see this far world. I know it 
exists, because I saw the spaceboat in which Adam Reith arrived."
   Anacho inspected the youth with eyebrows raised. "You have not mentioned this 
previously."
   "You never asked."
   "How might such an absurdity enter my mind?"
   "A person who calls facts absurdities will often be surprised," said Traz.
   "But at least he has organized the cosmic relationship into categories, which 
sets him apart from animals and sub-men."
   Reith intervened. "Come now; let's put our energies to work, since you both 
seem bent on suicide. Today we seek information. And here is Helsse, bringing us 
important news, or so it appears from his aspect."
   Helsse approached and gave a polite greeting. "Last night, as you may 
imagine, I had much to report to Lord Cizante. He urges that you make some 
reasonable request, which he will be glad to fulfill. He recommends that we 
destroy the papers taken from the spy and I am inclined to agree. If you 
acquiesce, Lord Cizante may grant further concessions."
   "Of what nature?"
   "He does not specify, but I suspect he has in mind a certain slackening of 
protocol in regard to your presence in Blue Jade Palace."
   "I am more interested in the documents than in Lord Cizante. If he wants to 
see me he can come here to the inn."
   Helsse gave a brittle chuckle. "Your response is no surprise. If you are 
ready I will conduct you to South Ebron where we will find a Lokhar."
   "There are no Yao scholars who read the Wankh language?"
   "Such facility would seem pointless expertise."
   "Until someone wanted a document translated."
   Helsse gave an indifferent twitch. "At this play of the 'round,' 
Utilitarianism is an alien philosophy. Lord Cizante, for instance, would find 
your arguments not only incomprehensible but disgusting."
   "We shall never argue the matter," said Reith equably.
   Helsse had come in an extremely elegant equipage: a blue carriage with six 
scarlet wheels and a profusion of golden festoons. The interior was like a 
luxurious drawing room, with gray-green wainscoting, a pale gray carpet, an 
arched ceiling covered with green silk. The chairs were deeply upholstered; to 
the side, under the windows of pale green glass, a buffet offered trays of 
sweetmeats. Helsse ushered his guests into the car with the utmost politeness; 
today he wore a suit of pale green and gray, as if to blend himself into the 
decor of the carriage.
   When all were seated, he touched a button to close the door and retract the 
steps. Reith observed, "Lord Cizante, while deriding utilitarianism as a 
doctrine, apparently does not flout its applications."
   "You refer to the door-closing mechanism? He is not aware that it exists. 
Someone is always at hand to touch the button for him. Like others of his class 
he touches objects only in play or pleasure. You find this odd? No matter. You 
must accept the Yao gentry as you find them."
   "Evidently you do not regard yourself as a member of the Yao gentry."
   Helsse laughed. "More tactful might be the conjecture that I enjoy what I am 
doing." He spoke into a mesh. "To the South Ebron Mercade."
   The carriage eased into motion. Helsse poured goblets of syrup and proffered 
sweetmeats. "You are about to visit our commercial district; the source of our 
wealth, in fact, though it is considered vulgar to discuss it."
   "Strange," mused Anacho. "Dirdir, at the highest level, are never so 
hoity-toity."
   "They are a different race," said Helsse. "Superior? I am not convinced. The 
Wankh would never agree, should they trouble to examine the concept."
   Anacho gave a contemptuous shrug but said no more.
   The carriage rolled through a market area: the Mercade, then into a district 
of small dwellings, in a wonderful diversity of style. At a cluster of squat 
brick towers the carriage halted. Helsse pointed to a nearby garden where sat a 
dozen men of spectacular appearance. They wore white shirts and trousers, their 
hair, long and abundant, was also white; in striking contrast to the lusterless 
black of their skins. "Lokhars," said Helsse. "Migrating mechanics from the 
highlands north of Lake Falas in Central Kislovan. That is not their natural 
coloration; they bleach their hair and dye their skin. Some say the Wankh 
enforced the custom upon them thousands of years ago to differentiate them from 
Wankhmen, who of course are white-skinned and black-haired. In any event, they 
come and go, working where they gain the highest return, for they are a 
remarkably avaricious folk. Some, after laboring in the Wankh shops, have 
migrated north to Cath; a few of these know a chime or two of Wankh-talk and 
occasionally can puzzle out the sense of Wankh documents. Notice the old man 
yonder playing with the child; he is reckoned as adept in Wankh as any. He will 
demand a large sum for his efforts, and in order to forestall even more 
exorbitant demands in the future I must haggle with him. If you will be good 
enough to wait, I will go to make the arrangements."
   "A moment," said Reith. "At a conscious level I am convinced of your 
integrity, but I can't control my instinctive suspicions. Let us make the 
arrangement together."
   "As you wish," said Helsse graciously. "I will send the chauffeur for the 
man." He spoke into the mesh.
   Anacho murmured, "If the arrangements were already made, the qualms of a 
trusting person might easily be drugged."
   Helsse nodded judiciously. "I believe I can assuage your anxieties."
   A moment later the old man sauntered up to the carriage.
   "Inside, if you please," said Helsse.
   The old man poked his white-maned face through the door. "My time is 
valuable; what do you want of me?"
   "A matter for your profit."
   "Profit, eh? I can at least listen." He entered the carriage, and seated 
himself with a comfortable grunt. The air took on the odor of a spicy, slightly 
rancid pomade. Helsse stood in front of him. With a side glance toward Reith he 
said, "Our arrangement is canceled. Do not heed my instructions."
   " 'Arrangement'? 'Instructions'? What are you talking about? You must mistake 
me for another. I am Zarfo Detwiler."
   Helsse made an easy gesture. "It's all one. We want you to translate a Wankh 
document for us, the guide to a treasure hoard. Translate correctly, you shall 
share the booty."
   "No, no, none of that." Zarfo Detwiler waved a black finger. "I'll share the 
booty with pleasure; additionally I want a hundred sequins, and no 
recriminations if I fail to satisfy you."
   "No recriminations, agreed. But a hundred sequins for possibly nothing? 
Ridiculous. Here: five sequins and eat your fill of the expensive sweetmeats."
   "That last I'll do anyway; am I not your invited guest?" Zarfo Detwiler 
popped a handful of dainties into his mouth. "You must think me a moon-calf to 
offer but five sequins. Only three persons in Settra can so much as tell you 
which side of a Wankh ideogram is up. I alone can read meaning, by virtue of 
thirty toilsome years in the Ao Hidis machine shops."
   The haggling proceeded; Zarfo Detwiler eventually agreed to fifty sequins and 
a tenth share of the assumptive spoils. Helsse signaled Reith, who produced the 
documents.
   Zarfo Detwiler took the papers, squinted, frowned, ran his fingers through 
his white mane. He looked up and spoke somewhat ponderously: "I will instruct 
you in Wankh communication at no charge. The Wankh are a peculiar folk, totally 
unique. Their brain works in pulses. They see in pulses and think in pulses. 
Their speech comes in a pulse, a chime of many vibrations which carries all the 
meaning of a sentence. Each ideogram is equivalent to a chime, which is to say, 
a whole unit of meaning. For this reason, to read Wankh is as much a matter of 
divination as logic; one must enunciate an entire meaning with each ideogram. 
Even the Wankhmen are not always accurate. Now this matter you have here-let me 
see. This first chimehm. Notice this comb? It usually signifies an equivalence, 
an identity. A square of this texture shading off to the right sometimes means 
'truth' or 'verified perception' or 'situation' or perhaps 'present condition of 
the cosmos.' These marks-I don't know. This bit of shading-I think it's a person 
talking. Since it's at the bottom, the base tone in the chord, it would seem 
that-yes, this trifle here indicates positive volition. These marks--hm. Yes, 
these are organizers, which specify the order and emphasis of the other 
elements. I can't understand them; I can only guess at the total sense. 
Something like 'I wish to report that conditions are identical or unchanged' or 
'A person is anxious to specify that the cosmos is stable.' Something of the 
sort. Are you sure that this is information regarding treasure?"
   "It was sold to us on this basis."
   "Hm." Zarfo pulled at his long black nose. "Let me see. This second symbol: 
notice this shading and this bit of an angle? One is 'vision'; the other is 
'negation.' I can't read the organizers, but it might mean 'blindness' or 
'invisibility...' "
   Zarfo continued his lucubrations, poring over each ideogram, occasionally 
tracing out a fragment of meaning, more often confessing failure, and becoming 
ever more restive. "You have been gulled," he said at last. "I'm certain there 
is no mention of money or treasure. I believe this is no more than a commercial 
report. It seems to say, as close as I can fathom: 'I wish to state that 
conditions are the same.' Something about peculiar wishes, or hopes, or 
volitions. 'I will presently see the dominant man, the leader of our group.' 
Something unknown. 'The leader is not helpful,' or perhaps 'stays aloof.' 'The 
leader slowly changes, or metamorphoses, to the enemy.' Or perhaps, 'The leader 
slowly changes to become like the enemy.' Change of some sort-I can't 
understand. 'I request more money.' Something about arrival of a newcomer or 
stranger 'of utmost importance.' That's about all."
   Reith thought to sense an almost imperceptible relaxation in Helsse's manner.
   "No great illumination," said Helsse briskly. "Well, you have done your best. 
Here is your twenty sequins."
   "'Twenty sequins'!" roared Zarfo Detwiler. "The price agreed was fifty! How 
can I buy my bit of meadowland if I am constantly cheated?"
   "Oh very well, if you choose to be niggardly."
   "Niggardly, indeed! Next time read the message yourself."
   "I could do as well, for all the help you've given us."
   "You were duped. That is no guide to treasure."
   "Apparently not. Well then, good day to you."
   Reith followed Zarfo from the carriage. He looked back in at Helsse. "I'll 
remain here, for a word or two with this gentleman."
   Helsse was not pleased. "We must discuss another matter. It is necessary that 
the Blue Jade Lord receives information."
   "This afternoon I will have a definite answer for you."
   Helsse gave a curt nod. "As you wish."
   The carriage departed, leaving Reith and the Lokhar standing in the street. 
Reith said, "Is there a tavern nearby? Perhaps we can chat over a bottle."
   "I am a Lokhar," snorted the black-skinned old man. "I do not addle my brains 
and drain my pockets with drink; not before noon, at any rate. However you may 
buy me a fine Zam sausage, or a clut of headcheese."
   "With pleasure."
   Zarfo led the way to a food shop; the two men took their purchases to a table 
on the street.
   "I am amazed by your ability to read the ideograms," said Reith. "Where did 
you learn?"
   "At Ao Hidis. I worked as a die cutter beside an old Lokhar who was a true 
genius. He taught me to recognize a few chimes, and showed me where the shadings 
matched intensity vibrations, where sonority equated with shape, where the 
various chord components matched texture and gradation. Both the chimes and the 
ideograms are regular and rational, once the eye and the ear are tuned. But the 
tuning is difficult." Zarfo took a great bite of sausage. "Needless to say, the 
Wankhmen discourage such learning; if they suspect a Lokhar of diligent study, 
he is discharged. Oh, they are a crafty lot! They jealously guard their role as 
intercessors between the Wankh and the world of men. A devious folk! The women 
are strangely beautiful, like black pearls, but cruel and cold, and not prone to 
dalliance."
   "The Wankh pay well?"
   "Like everyone else, as little as possible. But we are forced to concede. If 
labor costs rose, they would take slaves, or train Blacks and Purples, one or 
the other. We would then lose employment and perhaps our freedom as well. So we 
strive without too much complaint, and seek more profitable employment elsewhere 
once we are skilled."
   "It is highly likely," said Reith, "that the Yao Helsse, in the gray and 
green suit, will ask what we discussed. He may even offer you money."
   Zarfo bit off a chunk of sausage. "I shall naturally tell all, if I am paid 
enough."
   "In that case," said Reith, "our conversation must deal in pleasantries, 
profitless to both of us."
   Zarfo chewed thoughtfully. "How much profit had you in mind?"
   "I don't care to specify, since you would only ask Helsse for more, or try to 
extract the same from both of us."
   Zarfo sighed dismally. "You have a sorry opinion of the Lokhar. Our word is 
our bond; once we strike a bargain we do not deviate."
   The haggling continued on a more or less cordial level until for the sum of 
twenty sequins Zarfo agreed to guard the privacy of the conversation as fiercely 
as he might the hiding place of his money, and the sum was paid over.
   "Back to the Wankh message for a moment," said Reith. "There were references 
to a 'leader.' Were there hints or clues by which to identify him?"
   Zarfo pursed his lips. "A wolf-tone indicating high-level gentry; another 
honorific brevet which might signify something like 'a person of the excellent 
sort' or 'in your own image,' 'of your sort.' It is very difficult. A Wankh 
reading the ideogram would understand a chime, which then would stimulate a 
visual image complete in essential details. The Wankh would be furnished a 
mental image of the person, but for someone like myself there are only crude 
outlines. I can tell no more."
   "You work in Settra?"
   "Alas. A man of my years and impoverished: isn't it a pity?
   But I near my goal, and then back to Smargash, in Lokhara, for a bit of 
meadow, a young wife, a comfortable chair by the hearth."
   "You worked in the space shops at Ao Hidis?"
   "Yes, indeed; I transferred from the tool works to the space shops, where I 
repaired and installed air purifiers."
   "Lokhar mechanics must be very skillful, then."
   "Oh, indeed."
   "Certain mechanics specialize upon the installation of, say, controls and 
instruments?"
   "Naturally. Complex trades, both."
   "Have such mechanics immigrated to Settra?"
   Zarfo gave Reith a calculating glance. "How much is the information worth to 
you?"
   "Control your avarice," said Reith. "No more money today. Another sausage, if 
you like."
   "Later, perhaps. Now as to the mechanics: in Smargash are dozens, hundreds, 
retired after lifetimes of toil."
   "Could they be tempted to join in a dangerous venture?"
   "No doubt, if the danger were scant and the profit high. What do you 
propose?"
   Reith threw caution to the winds. "Assume that someone wished to confiscate a 
Wankh spaceship and fly it to an unspecified destination: how many specialists 
would be required, and how much would it cost to hire them?"
   Zarfo, to Reith's relief, did not stare in bewilderment or shock. He gnawed 
for a moment at the last of the sausage. Then, after a belch, he said, "I 
believe that you are asking if I consider the exploit feasible. It has often 
been discussed in a jocular manner, and for a fact the ships are not stringently 
guarded. The project is feasible. But why should you want a spaceship? ,I do not 
care to visit the Dirdir on Sibol or test the infinity of the universe."
   "I can't discuss the destination."
   "Well then, how much money do you offer?"
   "My plans have not progressed to that stage. What do you consider a suitable 
fee?"
   "To risk life and freedom? I would not stir for less than fifty thousand 
sequins."
   Reith rose to his feet. "You have your fifty sequins; I have my information. 
I trust you to keep my secret."
   Zarfo sat sprawled back in his chair. "Now then, not so fast. After all I am 
old and my life is not worth so much after all. Thirty thousand? Twenty? Ten?"
   "The figure starts to become practical. How much of a crew will we need?"
   "Four or five more, possibly six. You envision a long voyage?"
   "As soon as we are in space, I will reveal our destination. Ten thousand 
sequins is only a preliminary payment. Those who go with me will return with 
wealth beyond their dreams."
   Zarfo rose to his feet. "When do you propose to leave?"
   "As soon as possible. Another matter: Settra is overrun with spies; it's 
important that we attract no attention."
   Zarfo gave a hoarse laugh. "So this morning you approach me in a vast 
carriage, worth thousands of sequins. A man watches us even now."
   "I've been noticing him. But he seems too obvious to be a spy. Well, then, 
where shall we meet, and when?"
   "Upon the stroke of midmorning tomorrow, at the stall of Upas the spice 
merchant in the Cercade. Be certain you are not followed ... That fellow yonder 
I believe to be an assassin, from the style of his garments."
   The man at this moment approached their table. "You are Adam Reith?"
   "Yes."
   "I regret to say that the Security Assassination Company has accepted a 
contract made out in your name: the Death of the Twelve Touches. I will now 
administer the first inoculation. Will you be so good as to bare your arm? I 
will merely prick you with this splint."
   Reith backed away. "I'll do nothing of the sort."
   "Depart!" Zarfo Detwiler told the assassin. "This man is worth ten thousand 
sequins to me alive; dead, nothing."
   The assassin ignored Zarfo. To Reith he said, "Please do not make an 
undignified display. The process then becomes protracted and painful for us all. 
So then-"
   Zarfo roared: "Stand away; have I not warned you?" He snatched up a chair and 
struck the assassin to the ground. Zarfo was not yet satisfied. He picked up the 
splint, jabbed it into the back of the man's thigh, through the rust-ocher 
corduroy of his trousers. "Halt!" wailed the assassin. "That is Inoculation 
Number One!"
   Zarfo seized a handful of splints from the splayed-open wallet. "And here," 
he roared, "are numbers Two to Twelve!" And with a foot on the man's neck he 
thrust the handful into the twitching buttocks. "There you are, you knave! Do 
you want the next episode, Numbers Thirteen to Twenty-four?"
   "No, no, let me be; I am a dead man now!"
   "If not, you're a cheat as well as an assassin!"
   Passersby had halted to watch. A portly woman in pink silk rushed forward. 
"You hairy black villain, what are you doing to that poor assassin? He is only a 
workman at his trade!"
   Zarfo picked up the assassin's work sheet, looked down the list. "Hm. It 
appears that your husband is next on his list."
   The woman looked with startled eyes after the assassin now tottering off down 
the street.
   "Time we were leaving," said Reith.
   They walked through back alleys to a small shed, screened from the street by 
a lattice of woven withe. "It is the neighborhood corpsehouse," said Zarfo. "No 
one will bother us here."
   Reith entered, looked gingerly around the black benches on one of which lay 
the hulk of a small animal.
   "Now then," said Zarfo, "who is your enemy?"
   "I suspect a certain Dordolio," said Reith. "I can't be sure."
   Zarfo scrutinized the work sheet. "Well, we shall see. 'Adam Reith, the 
Travelers' Inn-Contract Number Two-three-o-five, Style Eighteen; prepaid.' Dated 
today, surcharged 'Rush.' Prepaid, eh? Well then, let us try a ruse. Back to my 
cottage."
   He took Reith to one of the brick towers, entered by an arched doorway. On a 
table rested a telephone. Zarfo lifted the instrument with cautious fingers. 
"Connect me with the Security Assassination Company."
   A grave voice spoke. "We are here to serve your needs."
   "I refer to Contract Number Two-three-o-five," said Zarfo, "relating to a 
certain Adam Reith. I can't find the estimate and I wish to pay the charges."
   "A moment, my lord."
   The voice presently returned. "The contract was prepaid, my lord; and was 
scheduled for execution this morning."
   "Prepaid? Impossible. I did not prepay. What is the name on the receipt?"
   "The name is Helsse Izam. I'm sure there is no mistake, sir."
   "Perhaps not. I'll discuss the matter with the person involved."
   "Thank you, sir, for your custom."



CHAPTER NINE
   REITH RETURNED TO the Travelers' Inn, and with a certain trepidation, entered 
the foyer where he found Traz. "What has occurred, if anything?"
   Traz, the most lucid and decisive of individuals, was less deft when it came 
to communicating a mood. "The Yao-Helsse, is that his name? became silent after 
you left the carriage. Perhaps he found us strange company. He told us that 
tonight we would dine with the Blue Jade Lord, that he would come early to 
instruct us in decorum. Then he drove off in the carriage."
   A perplexing sequence of events, reflected Reith. An interesting point: the 
contract had specified Twelve Touches. If his death were urgently required, a 
knife, a bullet, an energy bolt would serve the purpose. But the first of twelve 
injections? A device to stimulate haste?
   "Many things are happening," he told Traz. "Events I don't pretend to 
understand."
   "The sooner we leave Settra the better," gloomed Traz.
   "Agreed."
   Anacho the Dirdirman appeared, freshly barbered and splendid in a new 
high-collared black jacket, pale blue trousers, scarlet ankle-high slippers with 
modish upturned toes. Reith took the two to a secluded alcove and described the 
events of the day. "So now we need only money, which I hope to extract from 
Cizante tonight."
   The hours of the afternoon passed slowly. At last Helsse appeared, wearing a 
modish suit of canary yellow velvet. He gave polite greetings to the group. "You 
are enjoying your visit to Cath?"
   "Indeed yes," said Reith. "I have never felt so relaxed."
   Helsse maintained his aplomb. "Excellent. Now, in regard to this evening, 
Lord Cizante suspects that you and your friends might find a formal dinner 
somewhat tedious. He recommends rather a casual and unstructured tiffin, at a 
time to suit your convenience: now, if you so desire."
   "We are ready," said Reith. "But, to anticipate any misunderstanding, please 
remember that we insist upon a dignified reception. We do not intend to slink 
into the palace by a back entrance."
   Helsse made an easy gesture. "For a casual occasion, casual protocol. That's 
our rule."
   "I will be specific," said Reith. "Our 'place' demands that we use the front 
entrance. If Lord Cizante objects, then he must meet us elsewhere: perhaps at 
the tavern around the Oval."
   Helsse uttered an incredulous laugh. "He would as soon don a buffoon's cap 
and cut capers in Merrymaker's Round!" He shook his head dolefully. "To avoid 
difficulties we will use the front entrance; after all what difference does it 
make?"
   Reith laughed. "Especially since Cizante has ordered us brought in by the 
scullery and will assume that this is how we entered ... Well, it's a fair 
compromise. Let's go."
   The trip to Blue Jade Palace was made in a sleek black landau. At Helsse's 
instructions it drove up to the formal portal. Helsse alighted, and with a 
thoughtful glance along the faade of the palace, conducted the three outlanders 
through the main portal and into the great foyer. He muttered a few words to a 
footman, then ushered the three up a flight of shallow stairs, into a small 
green and gold salon overlooking the courtyard.
   Lord Cizante was nowhere to be seen.
   "Please be seated," said Helsse affably. "Lord Cizante will be with you 
shortly." He gave a jerk of the head and departed the chamber.
   Several minutes passed, then Lord Cizante appeared. He wore a long white 
gown, white slippers, a black skullcap. His face was petulant and brooding; he 
looked from face to face. "Which is the man to whom I spoke before?"
   Helsse muttered in his ear; he turned to face Reith. "I see. Well then, make 
yourself easy. Helsse, you have ordered a suitable refreshment?"
   "Indeed, your Excellency."
   A footman rolled in a buffet and offered trays of sweet wafers, saltbarks, 
cubes of spiced meat, decanters of wine, flagons of essence. Reith accepted 
wine; Traz a goblet of syrup. Anacho took green essences; Lord Cizante selected 
a stick of incense and walked back and forth, jerking it through the air. "I 
have negative news for you," he said abruptly. "I have decided to withdraw all 
proffers and undertakings. In short, you may expect no boon."
   Reith sipped the wine and gave himself time to think. "You are honoring 
Dordolio's claim?"
   "I cannot elaborate upon the matter. The statement may be interpreted in its 
most general sense."
   "I have no claim upon you," said Reith. "I came here yesterday only to convey 
the news of your daughter."
   Lord Cizante held the incense stick under his nostrils. "The circumstances no 
longer interest me."
   Anacho emitted a somewhat startling caw of laughter. "Understandable! To 
acknowledge them would force you to honor your pledge!"
   "Not at all," said Lord Cizante. "I spoke only for the attention of Blue Jade 
personnel."
   "Ha ha! Who will believe that, now that you have hired assassins against my 
friend?"
   Lord Cizante held the incense still and poised. "Assassins? What of this?"
   "Your aide"-Reith indicated Helsse--"took out a Type Eighteen contract 
against me. I intend to warn Dordolio; your penury carries a vicious sting."
   Lord Cizante turned a frowning glance upon Helsse. "What of this?"
   Helsse stood with black eyebrows fretfully raised. "I endeavored only to 
fulfill my function."
   "Misplaced zeal! Would you make Blue Jade a laughing stock? If this sordid 
tale gains circulation..." His voice suddenly trailed off. Helsse gave a shrug, 
and poured himself a goblet of wine.
   Reith rose to his feet. "Our business appears to be at an end."
   "A moment," said Lord Cizante curtly. "Let me consider ... You realize that 
this so-called assassination is a mare's-nest?"
   Reith slowly shook his head. "You have blown hot and cold too often; I am 
totally skeptical."
   Lord Cizante swung on his heel. The incense stick fell to the rug, where it 
began to smolder. Reith picked it up, placed it on the tray. "Why do you do 
that?" asked Helsse in sardonic wonder.
   "You must supply your own answer."
   Lord Cizante strode back into the room. He gestured to Helsse, took him into 
the corner, muttered a moment, and once again departed.
   Helsse turned to Reith. "Lord Cizante has empowered me to pay over to you a 
sum of ten thousand sequins on condition that you depart Cath instantly, 
returning to Kotan by the first cog out of Vervodei."
   "Lord Cizante's impertinence is amazing," said Reith.
   Anacho asked casually, "How high will he go?"
   "He specified no precise sum," Helsse admitted. "He is interested only in 
your departure, which he will facilitate in every detail."
   "A million sequins, then," said Anacho. "If we must acquiesce to this 
undignified scheme, we might as well sell ourselves dear."
   "Much too dear," said Helsse. "Twenty thousand sequins is more reasonable."
   "Not reasonable enough," said Reith. "We need more, much more."
   Helsse surveyed the three in silence. He said at last: "To avoid wasting time 
I will announce the maximum sum Lord Cizante cares to pay. It is fifty thousand 
sequins, which I personally consider generous, and transportation to Vervodei."
   "We accept," said Reith. "Needless to say, you must cancel the contract with 
the Security Company."
   Helsse smiled a small tremulous smile. "I have already received my 
instructions in this regard. And when will you depart Settra?"
   "In a day or so."
   With fifty strips of purple-celled sequins, the three left Blue Jade Palace, 
and climbed into the waiting black landau. Helsse did not accompany them.
   The landau wheeled east through the cinnamon dusk, under luminants which as 
yet cast no illumination. Off in the parks, palaces and town houses showed 
clusters of blurred lights, and in one great garden a fete was in progress.
   The landau rumbled across a carved wooden bridge hung with lanterns, to enter 
a district of crowded timber buildings, with tearooms and cafes jutting over the 
street. They passed through an area of bleak half-deserted tenements, and at 
last came into the Oval.
   Reith descended from the landau. Traz sprang past and threw himself on a dark 
silent figure. At the glint of metal Reith ducked to the ground, but failed to 
escape a violent purple-white flash. A hot blow pounded his head; he lay 
half-stunned, while Traz struggled with the assailant. Anacho stepped forward, 
pointed his sting. Out sprang the thin shaft, piercing the man's shoulder. The 
gun clattered to the cobbles.
   Reith picked himself up, stood weaving. The side of his head smarted as if by 
a scald; the smell of ozone and burnt hair filled his nostrils. He tottered over 
to where Traz held the hooded figure in an armlock while Anacho removed his 
wallet and dagger. The man wore a half-hood; Reith raised it, revealing, to his 
astonishment, the face of the Yearning Refluxive to whom he had spoken the night 
before.
   People here and there about the Oval, at first cautious of the struggle, now 
started to approach. There came the shrill hoot of the patrol whistle. The 
Refluxive struggled to free himself. "Release me; they'll make me a terrible 
example!"
   "Why did you try to kill me?" demanded Reith.
   "Need you ask? Let me go, I beg you!"
   "Why should I? You just tried to murder me! Let them take you."
   "No! The association will suffer!"
   "Well then-why did you try to kill me?"
   "Because you are dangerous! You would divide us! Already there is dissension! 
A few weak souls have no faith; they want to find a spaceship and go off on a 
journey! Folly! The only way is the orthodox way! You are a danger; I thought it 
best to expunge your dissidence."
   Reith took a deep breath of exasperation. The patrol was almost upon them. He 
said: "Tomorrow we leave Settra; you've had your trouble for nothing." He gave 
the man a shove which sent him staggering and crying for the pain in his 
shoulder. "Be thankful we are merciful men!"
   The Refluxive disappeared in the darkness. The patrol ran up: tall men in 
striped suits of red and black holding staffs terminating in incandescent tips. 
"What is the trouble?"
   "A thief," said Reith. "He tried to rob us, then ran off behind the 
buildings."
   The patrol departed; Reith, Anacho, and Traz went into the inn. As they 
supped Reith told of his arrangements with Zarfo Detwiler. "Tomorrow, if all 
goes well, we depart Settra."
   "By no means too soon," remarked Anacho sourly.
   "True. Already I've been spied on by the Wankh, persecuted by the gentry, 
shot at by the 'cult.' My nerves won't allow much more."
   A boy wearing dark red livery came up to their table. "Adam Reith?"
   "Who wants him?" Reith asked warily.
   "I have a message."
   "Give it here." Reith tore apart the folded paper, puzzled out the sense of 
the florid symbols:
   The Security Company sends greetings. Be it known that, since you, Adam 
Reith, have attacked an authorized employee in the innocent pursuit of his 
duties, spoiling his equipment and inflicting pain and inconvenience, we demand 
a retributive fee of eighteen thousand sequins. If the sum is not immediately 
paid at our main office, you will be killed by a combination of several 
processes. Your prompt cooperation will be appreciated. Please do not depart 
Settra or seek to deny us in any way, as in that case the penalties must be 
amplified.
   Reith flung the letter down on the table. "Dordolio, the Wankh, Lord Cizante, 
and Helsse, the 'cult,' the Security Company: who is left?"
   Traz commented: "Tomorrow may hardly be soon enough."



CHAPTER TEN
   THE FOLLOWING MORNING Reith communicated with Blue Jade Palace by means of 
the queer Yao telephones, and was allowed to speak to Helsse. "You have 
naturally canceled the contract with the Security Company?"
   "The contract has been canceled. I understand that they have decided to take 
independent action, which of course you must deal with as you see fit."
   "Exactly," said Reith. "We are leaving Settra at once and we accept Lord 
Cizante's offer of assistance."
   Helsse made a noncommittal sound. "What are your plans?"
   "Essentially, to escape Settra with our lives."
   "I will arrive shortly and take you to an outlying wheelway station. At 
Vervodei ships leave daily for all quarters and no doubt you will be able to 
make a convenient departure."
   "We will be ready at noon, or before."
   Reith set out on foot for the Cercade, taking all precautions, and arrived at 
the rendezvous with fair assurance that he had not been followed. Zarfo stood 
waiting, his white hair confined in a bonnet as black as his face. He 
immediately led the way to the cellar of an ale house. They sat at a stone 
table; Zarfo signaled the pot-boy and they were presently served heavy stone 
mugs of a bitter earthy ale.
   Zarfo came quickly to business. "Before I disrupt my life by so much as a 
twitch, show me the color of your money."
   Without words Reith threw down ten strips of winking purple sequins.
   "Aha!" gloated Zarfo Detwiler. "This is true beauty! Is it to be mine? I will 
take custody of it at once, and guard it from all harm."
   "Who will guard you?" asked Reith.
   "Tish, tush, lad," scoffed Zarfo. "If comrades can't trust comrades in a cool 
ale-cellar, how will it go under adversity?"
   Reith returned the money to his wallet. "Adversity is here now. The assassins 
are disturbed by the affair of yesterday. Instead of taking revenge upon you, 
they have threatened me."
   "Yes, they are an unreasonable lot. If they demand money, defy them. A man 
can always fight for his life."
   "I've been warned not to leave Settra until such a time as they choose to 
kill me. Nevertheless, I propose to depart, and as soon as possible."
   "Shrewd." Zarfo quaffed ale and set the mug down with a thud. "But how will 
you evade the assassins? Naturally they ponder your every move."
   Reith jerked around at a noise, only to find the pot-boy at hand to refill 
Zarfo's mug. Zarfo pulled at his long black nose to conceal a grin. "The 
assassins are pertinacious, but we shall outwit them, one way or another. Return 
to your hotel and make all ready. At noon I will join you and we shall see what 
we shall see."
   "Noon? So late?"
   "What difference an hour or two? I must wind up my affairs."
   Reith returned to the inn, where Helsse had already arrived in the black 
landau. The atmosphere was strained and taut; at the sight of Reith, Helsse 
jumped to his feet. "Time is short; we have been waiting! Come; we have only 
enough time to catch the first afternoon car for Vervodei!"
   Reith asked: "Won't the assassins be expecting just this? It seems an 
unimaginative plan."
   Helsse gave an irritable shrug. "Do you have a better idea?"
   "I'd like to work one out."
   Anacho asked, "Does Lord Cizante keep an air-car?"
   "It is not in operation."
   "Are any others available?"
   "For a purpose of this sort? I should think not."
   Five minutes passed. Helsse said mildly, "The longer we wait, the less time 
remains to you." He pointed out of the window. "See the two men in the round 
hats? They wait for you to come forth. Now we cannot even use the car."
   "Go out and tell them to go away," suggested Reith.
   Helsse laughed. "Not I."
   Another half an hour went by. Zarfo swaggered into the foyer. He saluted the 
group with a wave of the hand. "Are all ready?"
   Reith pointed to the assassins standing to the side of the Oval. "They are 
waiting for us."
   "Detestable creatures," said Zarfo. "Only in Cath would they be tolerated." 
He looked sidelong at Helsse. "Why is he here?"
   Reith explained the circumstances; Zarfo looked out upon the Oval. "The black 
car with the silver and blue crest-is that the vehicle in question? If so, 
nothing is simpler. We shall ride off in the car."
   "Not feasible," said Helsse.
   "Why not?" asked Reith.
   "Lord Cizante does not care to become involved in this matter, nor do I. At 
the very least, the Company would include me in the contract."
   Reith laughed bitterly. "When you contracted with them in the first place? 
Out to the car, and drive us away from this city of madmen!"
   After a moment of incredulous disdain, Helsse gave a curt nod. "As you wish."
   The group left the inn and walked to the car. The assassins came forward. "I 
believe that you, sir, are Adam Reith?"
   "What of it?"
   "May we inquire your destination?"
   "The Blue Jade Palace."
   "Correct," said Helsse tonelessly.
   "You understand our regulations and schedule of penalties?"
   "Yes, of course."
   The assassins muttered together, then one said: "In this case we think it 
advisable to accompany you."
   "There is no room," said Helsse in a cool voice.
   The assassins paid no heed. One started to enter the landau. Zarfo pulled him 
back. The assassin looked over his shoulder. "Have a care; I am a guildsman."
   "And I am a Lokhar." Zarfo struck him a great clout, sending him sprawling. 
The second assassin stood astounded, then snatched forth a gun. Anacho's sting 
snapped forth, to penetrate his chest. The first assassin tried to crawl away; 
Zarfo gave him a tremendous kick under the chin; he fell flat and limp. "Into 
the car," said Zarfo. "It is time to leave."
   "What a fiasco," whispered Helsse. "I am ruined."
   "Away from Settra!" cried Zarfo. "By the least obvious route!"
   The landau rolled along narrow streets, into a narrow lane, and presently out 
into the countryside.
   "Where are you taking us?" demanded Reith.
   "Vervodei."
   "Ridiculous!" snorted Zarfo. "Drive east into the back country. We must make 
our way to the Jinga River and fare downstream to Kabasas on the Parapan."
   Helsse tried a voice of calm reason. "To the east is wilderness. The car will 
stop. We have no spare energy cells."
   "No difference!"
   "Not to you. But how will I return to Settra?"
   "Is this your plan, after what has happened?"
   Helsse muttered something under his breath. "I am a marked man. They will 
demand fifty thousand sequins, which I cannot pay-all through your insane 
manipulations."
   "Whatever you like. But continue east, until the car stops or the road gives 
out-whichever first."
   Helsse made a gesture of fateful despair.
   The road led through a weirdly beautiful flatland with slow streams and ponds 
to either side. Trees with drooping black limbs trailed tobacco-brown foliage 
into the water. Reith kept a lookout to the rear, but discovered no sign of 
pursuit. Settra became one with the murk of distance.
   Helsse no longer seemed to be sulking, but watched the road ahead with an 
expression that almost seemed anticipation. Reith became suddenly suspicious. 
"Stop a moment."
   Helsse looked around. "Stop? Why?"
   "What lies ahead?"
   "The mountains."
   "Why is the road in such good repair? There seems to be no great traffic."
   "Ho!" crowed Zarfo. "The mountain camp for insane folk! It must lie ahead!"
   Helsse contrived a sickly grin. "You told me to drive you to the end of the 
road; you did not stipulate that I should avoid taking you to the asylum."
   "I do so now," said Reith. "Please, no more innocent errors of this sort."
   Helsse compressed his lips and once more began to brood. At a crossroad he 
swung south. The ground began to rise. Reith asked, "Where does the road lead?"
   "To the old quicksilver mines, to mountain retreats, a few peasant holdings."
   Into a forest hung with black moss rolled the car, and the road slanted up 
even more steeply. The sun passed behind a cloud, the forest became dark and 
dank, then gave way to a foggy meadow.
   Helsse glanced at an indicator. "An hour more of energy."
   Reith indicated the thrust of mountains ahead. "What lies beyond?"
   "Wilderness. The Hoch Har tribes. Black Mountain Lake, source of the Jinga. 
The route is neither safe nor convenient. It is, however, an exit from Cath."
   Across the meadow they drove. Thick-trunked trees rose at intervals with 
leaves like shelves of yellow fungus.
   The road began to fail, and in places was blocked by fallen boughs. The ridge 
loomed above, a great rocky jut.
   At an abandoned mine the road ended. Simultaneously the power index reached 
zero. The car halted with a thud and a bump; there was silence except for a sigh 
of wind.
   The group alighted with their meager possessions. The fog had dissipated; the 
sun shone cool through a high overcast, washing the landscape in honey-colored 
light.
   Reith surveyed the mountainside, tracing a path to the ridge. He turned to 
Helsse. "Well, which is it to be? Kabasas, or back to Settra?"
   "Settra, naturally." He looked disconsolately at the car.
   "Afoot?"
   "Better than afoot to Kabasas."
   "What of the assassins?"
   "I must take my chances."
   Reith brought out his scanscope and studied the way they had come. "There 
seems no sign of pursuit; you-" He halted, surprised by the expression on 
Helsse's face.
   "What is that object?" demanded Helsse.
   Reith explained.
   "Dordolio spoke accurately," said Helsse in a wondering voice. "He was 
telling the truth!"
   Half-amused, half-annoyed, Reith said, "I don't know what Dordoho told you, 
other than that we were barbarians. Goodbye, then, and my regards to Lord 
Cizante."
   "Wait a moment," said Helsse, staring indecisively west toward Settra. 
"Kabasas may be safer, after all. The assassins would be sure to consider me an 
auxiliary to your offense." He turned, assessed the bulk of the mountain, heaved 
a gloomy sigh. "Total insanity, of course."
   "Needless to say, we are not here by our own volition," returned Reith. 
"Well, we might as well start."
   They climbed the tailings dump in front of the mine, peered into the tunnel, 
from which issued an ooze of reddish slime. A set of footprints led into the 
tunnel. They were about human size, the shape of a bowling pin or a gourd; two 
inches ahead of the narrow forward end were three indentations as of toes. 
Looking down at the marks Reith felt the hairs rise at the nape of his neck. He 
listened, but no sounds came from the tunnel. He asked Traz, "What sort of 
prints are these?"
   "An unshod Phung, possibly-a small one. More likely a Pnume. The prints are 
fresh. It watched our approach."
   "Come along; let's leave," muttered Reith.
   An hour later they reached the ridge and halted to gaze out over the 
panorama. The land to the west lay drowned in late afternoon murk, with Settra 
showing as a discolored spot, like a bruise. Far to the east glimmered Black 
Mountain Lake.
   The travelers spent an eerie night at the edge of the forest, starting up at 
far noises; a thin uncanny screaming, a rap-rap-rap, like blows against a block 
of hard wood, the crafty hooting of nighthounds.
   Dawn came at last. The group made a glum breakfast on pods from a pilgrim 
plant, then proceeded down over a basalt palisade to the floor of a wooded 
valley. Ahead lay the Black Mountain Lake, calm and still. A fishing boat inched 
across the water and presently disappeared behind a jut of rock. "Hoch Har," 
said Helsse. "Ancient enemies of the Yao. Now they remain behind the mountains."
   Traz pointed. "A path."
   Reith looked. "I see no path."
   "Nevertheless it is there, and I smell wood smoke, from a distance of three 
miles."
   Five minutes later Traz made a sudden gesture. "Several men are approaching."
   Reith listened; he could hear nothing. But presently three men appeared on 
the trail ahead: very tall men with thick waists, thin arms and legs, wearing 
skirts of a dirty white fiber and short capes of the same stuff. They stopped 
short at the sight of the travelers, then turned and retreated along the trail, 
looking anxiously back over their shoulders.
   After a quarter-mile the trail left the jungle, and angled off across the 
swampy foreshore of the lake. The Hoch Har village stood on stilts over the 
water, terminating in a float to which a dozen plank boats were tied. On the 
shore a score of men stood in attitudes of nervous truculence, striding back and 
forth, bushknives and long spring-bows at the ready.
   The travelers approached.
   The tallest and heaviest of Hoch Hars called out in a ridiculously shrill 
voice: "Who are you?"
   "Travelers on the way to Kabasas."
   The Hoch Hars stared incredulously, then peered back up the trail toward the 
mountains. "Where is the rest of your band?"
   "There is no band; we are alone. Can you sell us a boat and some food?"
   The Hoch Hars put aside their weapons. "Food is hard to come by," groaned the 
first man. "Boats are our dearest possessions. What can you offer us in 
exchange?"
   "Only a few sequins."
   "What good are sequins when we must visit Cath to spend them?"
   Helsse muttered in Reith's ear. Reith said to the Hoch Hars, "Very well then, 
we shall continue. I understand that there are other villages around the lake."
   "What? Would you deal with petty thieves and cheats? It is all those folks 
are. Well, to save you from your own folly, we will strain ourselves to work out 
some sort of arrangement."
   In the end Reith paid two hundred sequins for a boat in fair condition and 
what the Hoch Har chief gruffly claimed to be sufficient provisions to take them 
all the way to Kabasas: crates of dried fish, sacks of tubers, rolls of 
pepper-bark, fresh and preserved fruit. Another thirty sequins secured the 
services, as a guide, of a certain Tsutso, a moon-faced young man somewhat 
portly, with an affable big-toothed smile. Tsutso declared the first stages of 
their journey to be the most precarious: "First, the rapids; then the Great 
Slant, after which the voyage becomes no more than drifting downstream to 
Kabasas."
   At noon, with the small sail set, the boat departed the Hoch Har village, and 
through the long afternoon sailed the dark water south toward a pair of bluffs 
which marked the outlet of the lake and the head of the Jinga River. At sunset 
the boat passed between the bluffs, each crowned by a tumble of ruins, black on 
the brown-ash sky. Under the bluff to the right was a small cove with a beach; 
here Reith wanted to camp for the night but Tsutso would not hear of it. "The 
castles are haunted. At midnight the ghosts of old Tschai walk the pavings. Do 
you want us all put under a taint?"
   "So long as the ghosts keep to the castle, what's to prevent us from using 
the cove?"
   Tsutso gave Reith a wondering look, and held the boat to midstream between 
the opposing ruins. A mile downstream the Jinga split around a rocky islet, to 
which Tsutso took the boat. "Here nothing from the forest can molest us."
   The travelers supped, laid themselves down around the campfire and were 
troubled by no more than soft whistles and trills from the forest, and once, far 
in the distance, the mournful call of the night-hounds.
   On the next day they passed across ten miles of violent rapids, during which 
Tsutso ten times over earned his fee, in Reith's estimation. Meanwhile the 
forest dwindled to clumps of thorn; the banks became barren, and presently a 
strange sound made itself heard from ahead: a sibilant all-pervading roar. "The 
Slant," explained Tsutso. The river disappeared at a brink a hundred yards 
ahead. Before Reith or the others could protest, the boat had pitched over the 
verge.
   Tsutso said, "Everyone alert; here is the Slant. Hold to the middle!"
   The roar of water almost overwhelmed his voice. The boat was sliding into a 
dark gorge; with amazing velocity the rock walls passed astern. The river itself 
was a trembling black surface, lined with foam static in relation to the boat. 
The travelers crouched as low as possible, ignoring Tsutso's condescending grin. 
For minutes they dashed down the race, finally plunged into a field of foam and 
froth, then floated smoothly out into still water.
   The walls rose sheer a thousand feet: brown sandstone pocked with balls of 
black starbush. Tsutso steered the boat to a fringe of shingle. "Here I leave 
you."
   "Here? At the bottom of this canyon?" Reith asked in wonder.
   Tsutso pointed to a trail winding up the slope. "Five miles away is the 
village."
   "In that case," said Reith, "goodbye and many thanks."
   Tsutso made an indulgent gesture. "It is nothing in particular. Hoch Hars are 
generous folk, except where the Yao are concerned. Had you been Yao, all might 
not have gone so well."
   Reith looked toward Helsse, who said nothing. "The Yao are your enemies?"
   "Our ancient persecutors, who destroyed the Hoch Har empire. Now they keep to 
their side of the mountain, which is well for them, as we can smell out a Yao 
like a bad fish." He jumped nimbly ashore. "The swamps lie ahead. Unless you 
lose yourselves or arouse the swamp people you are as good as at Kabasas." With 
a final wave he started up the path.
   The boat drifted through sepia gloom, the sky a watered silk ribbon high 
above. The afternoon passed, with the walls of the chasm gradually opening out. 
At sunset the travelers camped on a small beach, to pass a night in eerie 
silence.
   The next day the river emerged into a wide valley overgrown with tall yellow 
grass. The hills retreated; the vegetation along the shore became thick and 
dense, and alive with small creatures, half-spider, half-monkey, which whined 
and yelped and spurted jets of noxious fluid toward the boat. Other streams made 
confluence; the Jinga became broad and placid. On the following day trees of 
remarkable stature appeared along the shore, raising a variety of silhouettes 
against the smoke-brown sky, and by noon the boat floated with jungle to either 
side. The sail hung limp; the air was dank with odors of wet wood and decay. The 
hopping tree-creatures kept to the high branches; through the dimness below 
drifted gauze-moths, insects hanging on pale bubbles, bird-like creatures which 
seemed to swim on four soft wings. Once the travelers heard heavy groaning and 
trampling sounds, another time a ferocious hissing and again a set of strident 
shrieks, from sources invisible.
   By slow degrees the Jinga broadened to become a placid flood, flowing around 
dozens of small islands, each overgrown with fronds, plumes, fan-shaped 
dendrons. Once, from the corner of his eye, Reith glimpsed what seemed to be a 
canoe carrying three youths wearing peacock-tail headdresses, but when he turned 
to look he saw only an island, and was never sure what in fact he had seen. 
Later in the day a sinuous twenty-foot beast swam after them, but fifty feet 
from the boat it seemed to lose interest and submerged.
   At sundown the travelers made camp on the beach of a small island. Half an 
hour later Traz became uneasy and, nudging Reith, pointed to the underbrush. 
They heard a stealthy rustling and presently sensed a clammy odor. An instant 
later the beast which had swum after them lunged forth screaming. Reith fired 
one of his explosive pellets into the very maw of the beast; with its head blown 
off it careened in a circle, using a peculiar prancing gait, finally floundering 
in the water to sink.
   The group gingerly resumed their seats around the campfire. Helsse watched 
Reith return the handgun to his pouch, and could no longer restrain his 
curiosity. "Where, may I ask, did you obtain your weapon?"
   "I have learned," said Reith, "that candor makes problems. Your friend 
Dordolio thinks me a lunatic; Anacho the Dirdirman prefers the term 'amnesiac.' 
So-think whatever you like."
   Helsse murmured, as if for his own ears: "What strange tales we all could 
tell, if candor indeed were the rule."
   Zarfo guffawed. "Candor? Who needs it? I'll tell strange tales as long as 
someone will listen."
   "No doubt," said Helsse, "but persons with desperate goals must hold their 
secrets close."
   Traz, who disliked Helsse, looked sideways with something like a sneer. "Who 
could this be? I have neither secrets nor desperate goals."
   "It must be the Dirdirman," said Zarfo with a sly wink.
   Anacho shook his head. "Secrets? No. Only reticences. Desperate goals? I 
travel with Adam Reith since I have nothing better to do. I am an outcast among 
the sub-men. I have no goals whatever, except survival."
   Zarfo said, "I have a secret: the location of my poor hoard of sequins. My 
goals? Equally modest: an acre or two of river meadow south of Smargash, a cabin 
under the tayberry trees, a polite maiden to boil my tea. I recommend them to 
you."
   Helsse, looking into the campfire, smiled faintly. "My every thought, 
willy-nilly, is a secret. As for my goals-if I return to Settra and somehow can 
appease the Security Company, I'll be well content."
   Reith looked up to where clouds were clotting out the stars. "I'll be content 
to stay dry tonight."
   The group carried the boat ashore, turned it over and, with the sail, made a 
shelter. Rain began to fall, extinguishing the campfire and sending puddles of 
water under the boat.
   Dawn finally arrived: a blear of rain and umber gloom. At noon, with the 
clouds breaking apart, the travelers once more floated the boat, loaded the 
provisions and set off to the south.
   The Jinga widened until the shores were no more than dark marks. The 
afternoon passed; sunset was a vast chaos of black, gold, and brown. Drifting 
through the gloom, the travelers sought for a place to land. Mud flats lined the 
shore, but at last, as purple-brown dusk became night, a sandy bluff appeared 
under which the travelers landed for the night.
   On the following day they entered the swamps. The Jinga, dividing into a 
dozen channels, moved sluggishly among islands of reeds, and the travelers 
passed a cramped night in the boat. Toward evening of the day following they 
came upon a canted dyke of gray schist which, rising and falling, created a 
chain of rocky islands across the swamp. At some immensely remote time, one or 
another people of old Tschai had used the islands to support a causeway, long 
toppled to a crumble of black concrete. On the largest of the islands the 
travelers camped, dining on the dried fish and musty lentils provided by the 
Hoch Hars.
   Traz was restless. He made a circuit of the island, clambered to the highest 
jut, looked back and forth along the line of the ancient bridge. Reith, 
disturbed by Traz's apprehension, joined him. "What do you see?"
   "Nothing."
   Reith looked all around. The water reflected the dusky mauve of the sky, the 
hulks of the nearby islands. They returned to the campfire, and Reith set sentry 
watches. He awoke at dawn and instantly wondered why he had not been called. 
Then he noticed that the boat was gone. He shook Traz, who had stood the first 
watch. "Last night, whom did you call?"
   "Helsse."
   "He did not call me. And the boat is missing."
   "And Helsse as well," said Traz.
   Reith saw this to be the case.
   Traz pointed to the next island, forty yards across the water. "There is the 
boat. Helsse went for a midnight row."
   Going down to the water's edge Reith called: "Helsse! Helsse!"
   No response. Helsse was not visible.
   Reith considered the distance to the boat. The water was smooth and opaque as 
slate. Reith shook his head. The boat so near, so obvious: bait? From his pouch 
he took the hank of cord, originally a component of his survival kit, and tied a 
stone to one end. He heaved the stone at the boat. It fell short. Reith dragged 
it back through the water. For an instant the line went taut and quivered to the 
presence of something strong and vital.
   Reith grimaced. He heaved the stone again, and now it wedged inside the boat. 
He pulled; the boat came back across the water.
   With Traz, Reith returned to the neighboring island, to find no trace of 
Helsse. But under a jut of rock they found a hole slanting down into the island. 
Traz put his head close to the opening, listened, sniffed, and motioned Reith to 
do the same. Reith caught a faint clammy odor, like that of earthworms. In a 
subdued voice he called down into the hole: "Helsse!" and once again, louder: 
"Helsse!" To no effect.
   They returned to their companions. "It seems that the Pnume play jokes," said 
Reith in a subdued voice.
   They ate a silent breakfast, waited an indecisive fidgeting hour. Then slowly 
they loaded the boat and departed the island. Reith looked back through the 
scanscope until the island no longer could be seen.



CHAPTER ELEVEN
   THE CHANNELS OF the Jinga came together; the swamp became a jungle. Fronds 
and tendrils hung over the black water; giant moths floated like ghosts. The 
upper strata of the forest were a distinct environment: pink and pale yellow 
ribbons writhed through the air like eels; black-furred globes with six long 
white arms swung nimbly from branch to branch. Once, far off along an avenue of 
vision, Reith saw a cluster of large woven huts high in the branches and a 
little later the boat passed under a bridge of sticks and coarse ropes. Three 
naked people came to cross the bridge as the boat drifted close: frail 
thin-bodied folk with parchment-colored skin. Observing the boat, they halted in 
shock, then raced across the bridge and disappeared into the foliage.
   For a week they sailed and paddled uneventfully, the Jinga growing ever 
wider. One day they passed a canoe from which an old man netted fish; the next 
day they saw a village on the banks; the day after a power-boat throbbed past. 
On the night following they halted at a town and spent the night in a riverside 
inn, standing on stilts over the water.
   Two more days they sailed downstream, to a brisk wind from astern. The Jinga 
was now wide and deep and the wind raised sizable waves. Navigation began to be 
a problem. Coming to another town they saw a river packet headed downstream; 
abandoning the boat they took passage for Kabasas on the Parapan.
   Three days they rode the packet, enjoying the comfort of hammocks and fresh 
food. At noon on the fourth day, with the Jinga so broad that the far shore 
could not be seen, the blue domes of Kabasas appeared on rising land to the 
west.
   Kabasas, like Coad, served as a commercial depot for extensive hinterlands 
and like Coad seemed to seethe with intrigue. Warehouses and sheds faced the 
docks; behind, ranks of arched and colonnaded buildings, of beige, gray, white 
and dark blue plaster, mounted the hills. A wall of each building, for reasons 
never clear to Reith, leaned either inward or out, giving the city a curiously 
irregular appearance by no means dissonant with the conduct of the inhabitants. 
These were a slender alert people, with flowing brown hair, wide cheekbones, 
burning black eyes. The woman were notably handsome and Zarfo cautioned all: "If 
you value your lives, pay no heed to the women! Do not so much as look after 
them, even though they provoke and tease! They play a strange game here in 
Kabasas. At any hint of admiration they set up furious outcry and a hundred 
other women, screaming and cursing, rush up to knife the miscreant."
   "Hmmf," said Reith. "And the men?"
   "They'll save you if they can, and beat the women off, which suits all 
parties very well. Indeed this is the way of courtship. A man desiring a girl 
will set upon her and beat her black and blue. No one would think to interfere. 
If the girl approves, she comes the same way again. When he rushes forth to 
pummel her, she throws herself on his mercy. Such is the painful wooing of the 
Kabs."
   "It seems somewhat awkward," said Reith.
   "Exactly. Awkward and perverse. Such are affairs in Kabasas. During our stay 
you had best rely on my counsel. First, I nominate the Sea Dragon Inn as a base 
of operations."
   "We'll hardly be here that long. Why not go directly to the dock and find a 
ship to take us across the Parapan?"
   Zarfo pulled at his long black nose. "Things are never so easy! And why cheat 
ourselves of a sojourn at the Sea Dragon Inn? ... Perhaps a week or two."
   "You naturally intend to pay for your own accommodations?"
   Zarfo's white eyebrows dipped sharply. "I am as you know a poor man. My every 
sequin represents toil. On a joint venture of this sort openhanded generosity 
should certainly be the rule."
   "Tonight," said Reith, "we stay at the Sea Dragon Inn. Tomorrow we leave 
Kabasas."
   Zarfo gave a dismal grunt. "It is not my place to dispute your wishes. Hmmf. 
As I understand the matter, you plan to arrive at Smargash, recruit a team of 
technicians, then continue to Ao Hidis?"
   "Correct."
   "Discretion then! I suggest that we take ship to Zara across the Parapan and 
up the Ish River. You have not lost your money?"
   "Definitely not."
   "Take good care of it. The thieves of Kabasas are deft; they use thongs which 
reach out thirty feet." Zarfo pointed. "Observe that structure just above the 
beach? The Sea Dragon Inn!"
   The Sea Dragon Inn was indeed a grand establishment, with wide public rooms 
and pleasant sleeping cubicles. The restaurant was decorated to suggest a 
submarine garden, even to the dark grottos where members of a local sect, who 
would not publicly perform the act of deglutition, were served.
   Reith ordered fresh linen from the staff haberdashery and descended to the 
great bath on the low terrace. He scrubbed himself and was sprayed with tonic 
and massaged with handfuls of fragrant moss. Wrapping himself in a gown of white 
linen he returned to his chamber.
   On the couch sat a man in a soiled dark blue suit. Reith stared. Helsse 
looked back at him with an unfathomable expression. He made no move and uttered 
no sound.
   The silence was intense.
   Reith slowly backed from the room, to stand uncertainly on the balcony, heart 
pounding as if he had seen a ghost. Zarfo appeared, swaggering back to his room 
with white hair billowing.
   Reith signaled to him. "Come, I want to show you something." He took Zarfo to 
the door, thrust it ajar, half-expecting to find the room unoccupied. Helsse sat 
as before. Zarfo whispered: "Is he mad? He sits and stares and mocks us but does 
not speak."
   "Helsse," said Reith. "What are you doing here? What happened to you?"
   Helsse rose to his feet. Reith and Zarfo moved involuntarily back. Helsse 
looked at them with the faintest of smiles. He stepped out on the balcony, 
walked slowly to the stairs. He turned his head; Reith and Zarfo saw the pale 
oval of his face; then, like an apparition, he was gone.
   "What is the meaning of all this?" Reith asked in a husky voice.
   Zarfo shook his head, for once subdued. "The Pnume love their pranks."
   "Should we have held him?"
   "He could have stayed, had he wished."
   "But-I doubt if he is sane."
   Zarfo's only response was a hunch-shouldered shrug.
   Reith went to the edge of the balcony, looked out over the town. "The Pnume 
know the very rooms in which we sleep!"
   "A person floating down the Jinga ends up at Kabasas," said Zarfo testily. 
"If he is able, he patronizes the Sea Dragon Inn. This is not an intricate 
deduction. So much for Pnume omniscience."
   On the following day Zarfo went off by himself and presently returned with a 
short man with skin the color of mahogany, walking with a sore-footed swagger as 
if his shoes were too tight. His face was seamed and crooked; small nervous eyes 
looked slantwise past the beak of his nose. "And here," declared Zarfo grandly, 
"I give you Sealord Dobagq Hrostilfe, a person of sagacity, who will arrange 
everything."
   Reith thought that he had never seen a more obvious rascal.
   "Hrostilfe commands the Pibar," explained Zarfo. "For a most reasonable sum 
he will deliver us to our destination, be it the far coast of Vord."
   "How much across the Parapan?" Reith asked.
   "Only five thousand sequins, would you believe it?" exclaimed Zarfo.
   Reith laughed scornfully. He turned to Zarfo: "I need your help no longer. 
You and your friend Hrostilfe can try to swindle someone else."
   "What?" cried Zarfo. "After I risked my life in that infernal chute and 
endured all manner of hardship?"
   But Reith had walked away. Zarfo came after him, somewhat crestfallen. "Adam 
Reith, you have made a serious mistake."
   Reith nodded grimly. "Instead of an honest man I hired you."
   Zarfo swelled up indignantly. "Who dares name me other than honest?"
   "I do. Hrostilfe would rent his boat for a hundred sequins. He gave you a 
price of five hundred. You told him: 'Why should we not both profit? Adam Reith 
is credulous. I'll name a price and anything over a thousand sequins is mine.' 
So, be off with you."
   Zarfo pulled ruefully at his black nose. "You do me vast wrong. I have only 
just come from chiding Hrostilfe, who admitted knavery. He now offers his boat 
at"-Zarfo cleared his throat-"twelve hundred sequins."
   "Not a bice more than three hundred."
   Zarfo threw his hands into the air and stalked away. Not long after Hrostilfe 
himself appeared with the plea that Reith inspect his ship. Reith followed him 
to the Pibar: a jaunty craft forty feet long, powered by electrostatic jet. 
Hrostilfe kept up a halfhectoring, halfplaintive commentary. "A fast seaworthy 
vessel! Your price is absurd. What of my skills, my sea-lore? Do you appreciate 
the cost of energy? The voyage will exhaust a power cell: a hundred sequins 
which I cannot afford. You must pay for energy and additionally for provisions. 
I am a generous man but I cannot subsidize you."
   Reith agreed to pay for energy and a reasonable amount for provisions, but 
not the installation of new water tanks, extra foul-weather gear, good-luck 
fetishes for the prow; furthermore he insisted on departure the following day, 
at which Hrostilfe gave a sour chuckle. "There's one in the eye for the old 
Lokhar. He had counted on swanking it a week or more at the Sea Dragon."
   "He can stay as long as he likes," said Reith, "provided that he pays."
   "Small chance of that," chuckled Hrostilfe. "Well then, what about 
provisions?"
   "Buy them. Show me an itemized tally, which I will check in detail."
   "I need an advance: a hundred sequins."
   "Do you take me for a fool? Remember, tomorrow noon we leave."
   "The Pibar will be ready," said Hrostilfe in a sullen voice.
   Returning to the Sea Dragon Inn, Reith found Anacho on the terrace. Anacho 
pointed to a black-haired shape leaning against the seawall. "There he stands: 
Helsse. I called him by name. It was as if he never heard."
   Helsse turned his head; his face seemed deathly white. For a moment or two he 
watched them, then turned and walked slowly away.
   At noon the travelers embarked on the Pibar. Hrostilfe gave his passengers a 
brisk welcome. Reith looked skeptically here and there, wondering in what 
fashion Hrostilfe thought he had won advantage for himself. "Where are the 
provisions?"
   "In the main saloon."
   Reith examined boxes and crates, checked them against Hrostilfe's tally 
sheet, and was forced to admit that Hrostilfe had secured good merchandise at no 
great price. But why, he wondered, were they not stored forward in the lazaret? 
He tried the door, and found it locked.
   Interesting, thought Reith. He called Hrostilfe: "Best to stow the stores 
forward in the lazaret, before we start pitching to the waves."
   "All in good time!" declared Hrostilfe. "First things first! Now it's 
important that we make the most of the morning current!"
   "But it will only require a moment. Here, open the door; I will do it 
myself."
   Hrostilfe made a waggish gesture. "I am the most finicky of seamen. 
Everything must be done just so."
   Zarfo, who had come into the saloon, gave the lazaret door a speculative 
frown. Reith said, "Very well then, just as you like." Zarfo started to speak 
but catching Reith's gaze, shrugged and held his tongue.
   Hrostilfe nimbly hopped here and there, casting off lines, starting the jet, 
and finally jumping into the control pulpit. The boat surged out to sea.
   Reith spoke to Traz, who went to stand behind Hrostilfe. Bringing forth his 
catapult Traz checked its action, dropped a bolt into the slot, cocked it and 
hung it loosely at his belt.
   Hrostilfe grimaced. "Careful, boy! A foolhardy way to carry your catapult!"
   Traz seemed not to hear.
   Reith, after a word or two with Zarfo and Anacho, went to the foredeck. 
Setting fire to some old rags, he held them in the forward ventilator, so that 
smoke poured down into the lazaret.
   Hrostilfe cried out in anger: "What nonsense is this? Are you trying to set 
us afire?"
   Reith set more rags burning and dropped them into the ventilator. From below 
came a choked cough, then a mutter of voices and a stamping of feet. Hrostilfe 
jerked his hand toward his pouch, but noticed Traz's intent gaze and his ready 
catapult.
   Reith sauntered aft. Traz said, "His weapon is in his pouch."
   Hrostilfe stood rigid with dismay. He made a sudden move but stopped short as 
Traz jerked up the catapult. Reith detached the pouch, handed it to Traz, took 
two daggers and a poniard from various parts of Hrostilfe's person. "Go below," 
said Reith. "Open the door to the lazaret. Instruct your friends to come forth 
one at a time."
   Hrostilfe, gray-faced with fury, hopped below and, after an exchange of 
threats with Reith, opened the door. Six ruffians came forth, to be disarmed by 
Anacho and Zarfo and sent up to the deck where Reith thrust them over the side.
   The lazaret at last was empty of all but smoke. Hrostilfe was hustled up on 
deck, where he became unctuous and over reasonable. "All can be explained! A 
ridiculous misunderstanding!" But Reith refused to listen and Hrostilfe joined 
his fellows over the side, where, after shaking his fist and bellowing 
obscenities at the grinning faces aboard the Pibar, he struck out for the shore.
   "It appears," said Reith, "that we now lack a navigator. In what direction 
lies Zara?"
   Zarfo's manner was very subdued. He pointed a gnarled black finger. "That 
should be our heading." He turned to look aft toward the seven bobbing heads. 
"Incomprehensible to me, the greed of men for money! See to what disasters it 
leads!" And Zarfo gave a sanctimonious cluck of the tongue. "Well then, an 
unfortunate incident, happily in the past. And now we command the Pibar! Ahead: 
Zara, the Ish River, and Smargash!"



CHAPTER TWELVE
   ALL DURING THE first day the Parapan was serene. The second day was brisk 
with the Pibar pitching up and over a short chop. On the third day a black-brown 
cloud loomed out of the west, stabbing the sea with lightning. Wind came in 
massive gusts; for two hours the Pibar heaved and tossed; then the storm passed 
over, and the Pibar drove into clement weather.
   On the fourth day Kachan loomed ahead. Reith steered the Pibar alongside a 
fishing craft and Zarfo asked the direction of Zara. The fisherman, a swarthy 
old man with steel rings in his ears, pointed wordlessly. The Pibar surged 
forward, entering the Ish estuary at sunset. The lights of Zara flickered along 
the western shore, but now, with no reason to put into port, the Pibar continued 
south up the Ish.
   The pink moon Az shone on the water; all night the Pibar drove. Morning found 
them in a rich country with rows of stately keel trees along the banks. Then the 
land began to grow barren, and for a space the river wound through a cluster of 
obsidian spires. On the next day a band of tall men in black cloaks were seen on 
the riverbank. Zarfo identified them as Niss tribesmen. They stood motionless, 
watching the Pibar surge upstream. "Give them a wide berth! They live in holes 
like night-hounds and some say the night-hounds are kinder."
   Late in the afternoon sand dunes closed in upon the river and Zarfo insisted 
that the Pibar be anchored in deep water for the night. "Ahead are sandbars and 
shallows. We would be certain to run aground and undoubtedly the Niss have 
followed. They would grapple the boat and swarm aboard."
   "Won't they attack us if we lay at anchor?"
   "No, they fear deep water and never use boats. At anchor we are as safe as if 
we were already at Smargash."
   The night was clear with both Az and Braz wheeling through the sky of old 
Tschai. On the riverbank the Niss boldly lit their fires and boiled their pots, 
and later started up a wild music of fiddles and drums. For hours the travelers 
sat watching the agile shapes in black cloaks dancing around the fires, kicking, 
jumping, heads up, heads low; swinging, whirling, prancing with arms akimbo.
   In the morning the Niss were nowhere to be seen. The Pibar passed through the 
shallows without incident. Late in the afternoon the travelers came to a 
village, guarded from the Niss by a line of posts to each of which was chained a 
skeleton in a rotting black cloak. Zarfo declared the village to be the feasible 
limit of navigation with Smargash yet three hundred miles south, across a land 
of deserts, mountain pinnacles and chasms. "Now we must travel by caravan, over 
the old Sarsazm Road, to Hamil Zut under the Lokhara Uplands. Tonight I'll make 
inquiry and learn what's to our advantage."
   Zarfo stayed ashore overnight, returning in the morning with the news that by 
dint of the most furious bargaining he had exchanged the Pibar for first class 
passage by caravan to Hamil Zut.
   Reith calculated. Three hundred miles? Two hundred sequins a person, at 
maximum: eight hundred for the four. The Pibar was worth ten thousand, even at a 
sacrifice price. He looked at Zarfo, who ingenuously returned the gaze. "You 
will recall," said Reith, "the ill feeling and dissension at Kabasas?"
   "Of course," declared Zarfo. "To this day I become anguished by the injustice 
of your hints."
   "Here is another hint. How much extra did you demand for the Pibar and 
receive?"
   Zarfo gave an uneasy grimace. "Naturally, I was saving the news to be a glad 
surprise."
   "How much?"
   "Three thousand sequins," muttered Zarfo. "No more, no less. I consider it a 
fair price up here, far from wealth."
   Reith allowed the figure to pass without challenge. "Where is the money?"
   "It will be paid when we go ashore."
   "And when does the caravan leave?"
   "Soon-a day or so. There is a passable inn; we can spend the night ashore."
   "Very well; let us all go now and collect the money."
   Somewhat to Reith's surprise the sack which Zarfo received from the innkeeper 
contained exactly three thousand sequins, and Zarfo gave a sour sneer and, going 
into the tavern, called for a pot of ale.
   Three days later the caravan started south: a file of twelve power wagons, 
four mounted with sandblasts. Sarsazm Road led through awesome scenery: gorges 
and great precipices, the bed of an ancient sea, vistas of distant mountains, 
sighing forests of keel and blackfern. Occasionally Niss were sighted but they 
kept their distance and on the evening of the third day the caravan pulled into 
Hamil Zut, a squalid little town of a hundred mud huts and a dozen taverns.
   In the morning Zarfo engaged pack-beasts, equipment and a pair of guides, and 
the travelers set forth up the trail into the Lokharan highlands.
   "This is wild country," Zarfo warned them. "Dangerous beasts are occasionally 
seen, so be ready with your weapons."
   The trail was steep, the terrain indeed wild. On several occasions they 
sighted Kar Yan, subtle gray beasts slinking through the rocks, sometimes erect 
on two legs, sometimes dropping to all six. Another time they encountered a 
tiger-headed reptile gorging upon a carcass, and were able to pass unmolested.
   On the third day after leaving Hamil Zut, the travelers entered Lokhara, a 
great upland plain; and in the mid-afternoon Smargash appeared ahead. Zarfo now 
told Reith: "It occurs to me, as it must have to you, that yours is a very 
ticklish venture."
   "Agreed."
   "Folk here are not indifferent to the Wankh, and a stranger might easily talk 
to the wrong people."
   So.
   "It might be better for me to select the personnel."
   "Certainly. But leave the question of payment to me."
   "As you wish," growled Zarfo.
   The countryside was now a prosperous well-watered land, populated by peasant 
farms. The men, like Zarfo, were tattooed or dyed black, with a mane of white 
hair. The skins of the women, in contradistinction, were chalky white, and their 
hair was black. Urchins showed white or black hair according to their sex, but 
their skins were uniformly the color of the dirt in which they played.
   A road ran on a riverbank, under majestic old keels. To either side were 
small bungalows, each in its bower of vines and shrubs. Zarfo sighed with vast 
feeling. "Observe me, the transient worker returning to his home. But where is 
my fortune? How may I buy my cottage by the river? Poverty has forced me to 
strange ways; I am thrown in with a stone-hearted zealot, who takes his joy 
thwarting the hopes of a kind old man!"
   Reith paid no heed, and presently they entered Smargash.



CHAPTER THIRTEEN
   REITH SAT IN the parlor of the squat cylindrical cottage he had rented, 
overlooking the Smargash common, where the young folk spent much time dancing.
   Across from him, in wicher chairs, sat five white-haired men of Smargash, a 
group screened from the twenty Zarfo originally had approached. The time was 
middle afternoon; out on the common, dancers skipped and kicked to music of 
concertina, bells and drums.
   Reith explained as much of his program as he dared: not a great deal. "You 
men are here because you can help me in a certain venture. Zarfo Detwiler has 
informed you that a large sum of money is involved; this is true, even if we 
fail. If we succeed, and I believe the chances are favorable, you will earn 
wealth sufficient to satisfy any of you. There is danger, as might be expected, 
but we shall hold it to a minimum. If anyone does not care to consider such a 
venture, now is the time to leave."
   The oldest of the group, one Jag Jaganig, an expert in the overhaul and 
installation of control systems, said, "So far we can't say yes or no. None of 
us would refuse to drag home a sack of sequins, but neither would we care to 
challenge impossibility for a chancy bice."
   "You want more information?" Reith looked from face to face. "This is natural 
enough. But I don't want to take the merely curious into my confidence. If any 
of you are definitely not disposed for a dangerous but by no means desperate 
venture, please identify yourself now."
   There was a slight stir of uneasiness, but no one spoke out.
   Reith waited a moment. "Very well; you must bind yourselves to secrecy."
   The group bound themselves by awful Lokhar oaths. Zarfo, plucking a hair from 
each head, twisted a fiber which he set alight. Each inhaled the smoke. "So we 
are bound, one to all; if one proves false, the others as one will strike him 
down."
   Reith, impressed by the ritual, had no more qualms about speaking to the 
point. "I know the exact location of a source of wealth, at a place not on the 
planet Tschai. We need a spaceship and a crew to operate it. I propose to 
commandeer a spaceship from the Ao Hidis field; you men shall be the crew. To 
demonstrate my sanity and good faith, I will pay to each man on the day of 
departure five thousand sequins. If we try but fail, each man receives another 
five thousand sequins."
   "Each surviving man," grumbled Jag Jaganig.
   Reith went on: "If we succeed, ten thousand sequins will seem like ten bice. 
Essentially, this is the scope of the venture."
   The Lokhars shuffled dubiously in their chairs. Jag Jaganig spoke. "We 
obviously have the basis for an adequate crew here, at least for a Zeno, or a 
Kud, or even one of the small Kadants. But it is no small matter to so affront 
the Wankh."
   "Or worse, the Wankhmen," muttered Zorofim.
   "As I recall," mused Thadzei, "no great vigilance prevailed. The scheme, 
while startling, seems feasible-provided that the ship we board is in operative 
condition."
   "Aha!" exclaimed Belje. "That' provided that' is the key to the entire 
exploit!"
   Zarfo jeered: "Naturally there is risk. Do you expect money for nothing?"
   "I can hope."
   Jag Jaganig inquired: "Assume that the ship is ours. Is further risk 
entailed?"
   "None."
   "Who will navigate?"
   "I will."
   "In what form is this 'wealth'?" demanded Zorofim. "Gems? Sequins? Precious 
metal? Antiques? Essences?"
   "I don't care to go any further into detail, except to guarantee that you 
will not be disappointed."
   The discussion proceeded, with every aspect of the venture subjected to 
attack and analysis. Alternative proposals were considered, argued, rejected. No 
one seemed to regard the risk as overwhelming, nor did anyone doubt the group's 
ability to handle the ship. But none evinced enthusiasm. Jag Jaganig put the 
situation into focus. "We are puzzled," he told Reith. "We do not understand 
your purposes. We are skeptical of boundless treasures."
   Zarfo said, "Here I must speak. Adam Reith has his faults which I won't deny. 
He is stubborn and unwieldy; he is crafty as a zut; he is ruthless when opposed. 
But he is a man of his word. If he declares a treasure to exist for our taking, 
that aspect of the matter is closed."
   After a moment Belje muttered: "Desperate, desperate! Who wants to learn the 
truth of the black boxes?"
   "Desperate, no," countered Thadzei. "Risky, yes, and may demons runoff with 
the black boxes!"
   "I'll take the chance," said Zorofim.
   "I as well," said jag Jaganig. "Who lives forever?"
   Belje finally capitulated and declared himself committed. "When shall we 
leave?"
   "As soon as possible," said Reith. "The longer I wait, the more nervous I 
get."
   "And more the chance of someone else running off with our treasure, hey?" 
exclaimed Zarfo. "That would be a sad case!"
   "Give us three days to arrange our affairs," said Jag Jaganig.
   "And what of the five thousand sequins?" demanded Thadzei. "Why not 
distribute the money now, so that we may have the use of it?"
   Reith hesitated no longer than a tenth of a second. "Since you must trust me, 
I must trust you." He paid to each of the marveling Lokhars fifty purple 
sequins, worth a hundred white sequins each.
   "Excellent!" declared jag Jaganig. "Remember all! Utter discretion! Spies are 
everywhere. In particular I distrust that peculiar stranger at the inn who 
dresses like a Yao."
   "What?" cried Reith. "A young man, black-haired, very elegant.
   "The person precisely. He stares out over the dancing field with never a word 
to say."
   Reith, Zarfo, Anacho and Traz went to the inn. In the dim taproom sat Helsse, 
long legs in tight black twill breeches stretched under the heavy table. 
Brooding, he looked straight ahead and out the doorway to where black-skinned 
white-haired boys and white-skinned blackhaired girls skipped and caracoled in 
the tawny sunlight.
   Reith said: "Helsse!"
   Helsse never shifted his gaze.
   Reith came closer. "Helsse!"
   Helsse slowly turned his head; Reith looked into eyes like lenses of black 
glass.
   "Speak to me," urged Reith. "Helsse! Speak!"
   Helsse opened his mouth, uttered a mournful croak. Reith drew back. Helsse 
watched him incuriously, then returned to his inspection of the dancing field 
and the dim hills beyond.
   Reith joined his comrades to the side where Zarfo poured him a pot of ale. 
"What of the Yao? Is he mad?"
   "I don't know. He might be feigning. Or under hypnotic control. Or drugged."
   Zarfo took a long draft from his pot, wiped the foam from his nose. "The Yao 
might think it a favor were we to cure him."
   "No doubt," said Reith, "but how?"
   "Why not call in a Dugbo practitioner?"
   "What might that be?"
   Zarfo jerked his thumb to the east. "The Dugbo have a camp back of town: 
shiftless folk in rags and tatters, given to thieving and vice, and musicians to 
boot. They worship demons, and their practitioners perform miracles."
   "So you think the Dugbo can cure Helsse?"
   Zarfo drained his pot. "If he is feigning, I assure you he won't feign long."
   Reith shrugged. "We have no better occupation for a day or two.
   "Exactly my way of thinking," said Zarfo.
   The Dugbo practitioner was a spindly little man dressed in brown rags and 
boots of uncured leather. His eyes were a luminous hazel, his russet hair was 
confined in three greasy knobs. On his cheek pale cicatrices worked and jumped 
as he spoke. He did not appear to consider Reith's requirements surprising and 
with clinical curiosity studied Helsse, who sat sardonically indifferent in one 
of the wicker chairs.
   The practitioner approached Helsse, looked into his eyes, inspected his ears, 
and nodded as if a suspicion had been verified. He signaled the fat youth who 
assisted him, then ducking behind Helsse touched him here and there while the 
youth held a bottle of black essence under Helsse's nose. Helsse presently 
became passive and relaxed into the chair. The practitioner set heaps of incense 
alight and fanned the fumes into Helsse's face. Then, while the youth played a 
nose flute the practitioner sang: secret words, close to Helsse's ears. He put a 
wad of clay into Helsse's hand; Helsse furiously began to mold the clay and 
presently set up a mutter.
   The practitioner signaled to Reith. "A simple case of possession. Notice: the 
evil flows from the fingers into the clay. Talk to him if you like. Be gentle 
but command, and he will answer you." "Helsse," said Reith, "describe your 
association with Adam Reith."
In a clear voice Helsse spoke. "Adam Reith came to Settra. There had been rumor 
and speculation, but when he arrived, all was different. By strange chance he 
came to Blue Jade, my personal vantage, and there I saw him first. Dordolio came 
after and in his rage maligned Reith as one of the 'cult': a man who fancied 
himself from the far world Home. I spoke with Adam Reith but learned only 
confusion. To clarify by acquiescence, third of the Ten Techniques, I took him 
to the headquarters of the 'cult' and received contradictions. A courier new to 
Settra followed us. I could not dramatically divert, sixth of the Techniques. 
Adam Reith killed the courier and took a message of unknown importance; he would 
not allow me inspection; I could not comfortably insist. I referred him to a 
Lokhar, again 'clarifying by acquiescence': as it eventuated, the wrong 
technique. The Lokhar read far into the message. I ordered Reith assassinated. 
The attempt was bungled. Reith and his band fled south. I received instructions 
to accompany him and penetrate his motivations. We journeyed east to the Jinga 
River and downstream by boat. On an island-" Helsse gave a gasping cry and sank 
back, rigid and trembling.
   The practitioner waved smoke into Helsse's face and pinched his nose. "Return 
to the 'calm' state, and henceforth, when your nose is pinched, return; this 
shall be an absolute injunction. Now then, answer such questions as are put to 
you."
   Reith asked, "Why do you spy on Adam Reith?"
   "I am obligated to do so; furthermore I enjoy such work."
   "Why are you obligated?"
   "All Wankhmen must serve Destiny."
   "Oho. You are a Wankhman?"
   "Yes."
   And Reith wondered how he could ever have thought otherwise. Tsutso and the 
Hoch Hars had not been deceived: "Had you been Yao, all would not have gone so 
well," so had said Tsutso.
   Reith glanced ruefully at his comrades, then turned back to Helsse. "Why do 
the Wankhmen keep spies in Cath?"
   "They watch the turn of the 'round'; they guard against a renascence of the 
'cult.' "
   "Why?"
   "It is a matter of stasis. Conditions now are optimum. Any change can only be 
for the worse."
   "You accompanied Adam Reith from Settra to an island in the swamps. What 
happened there?"
   Helsse once more croaked and became catatonic. The practitioner tweaked his 
nose.
   Reith asked, "How did you travel to Kabasas?"
   Again Helsse became inert. Reith tweaked his nose. "Tell us why you cannot 
answer the questions?"
   Helsse said nothing. He appeared to be conscious. The practitioner fanned 
smoke in his face; Reith tweaked his nose and, doing so, saw that Helsse's eyes 
looked in separate directions. The practitioner rose to his feet, and began to 
put away his equipment. "That's all. He's dead."
   Reith stared from the practitioner to Helsse and back. "Because of the 
questioning?"
   "The smoke permeates the head. Sometimes the subjects live: often, in fact. 
This one died swiftly; your questions ruptured his sensorium."
   The following evening was clear and windy with puffs of dust racing over the 
vacant dancing field. Through the dusk men in gray cloaks came to the rented 
cottage. Within, lamps were low and windows shrouded; conversations were 
conducted in quiet voices. Zarfo spread an old map out on the table, and pointed 
with a thick black finger. "We can travel to the coast and down, but this is all 
Niss country. We can fare east around the Sharf to Lake Falas: a long route. Or 
we can move south, through the Lost Counties, over the Infnets and down to Ao 
Hidis: the direct and logical route."
   Reith asked, "Sky-rafts aren't available?"
   Belje, the least enthusiastic of the adventurers, shook his head. "Conditions 
are no longer as they were when I was a youth. Then you might have selected 
among half a dozen. Now there are none. Sequins and sky-rafts are both hard to 
come by. So now, in pursuit of the one, we lack the use of the other."
   "How will we travel?"
   "To Blalag we ride by power wagon, where perhaps we can hire some sort of 
conveyance as far as the Infnets. Thereafter, we must go afoot; the old roads 
south have been destroyed and forgotten."



CHAPTER FOURTEEN
   FROM SMARGASH TO the old Lokhar capital, Blalag, was a three-day journey 
across a windy wasteland. At Blalag the adventurers took shelter at a dingy inn, 
where they were able to arrange transportation by motorcart to the 
mountain-settlement Derduk, far into the Infnets. The journey occupied the 
better part of two days under uncomfortable conditions. At Derduk the only 
accommodation was a ramshackle cabin which provoked grumbling among the Lokhars. 
But the owner, a garrulous old man, stewed a great cauldron of game and wild 
berries, and the peevishness subsided.
   At Derduk the road south became a disused track. At dawn the now somewhat 
cheerless group of adventurers set forth on foot. All day they traveled through 
a land of rock pinnacles, fields of rubble and scree. At sundown with a chill 
wind sighing through the rocks they came upon a small black tam where they 
passed the night. The next day brought them to the brink of a vast chasm and 
another day was spent finding a route to the bottom. On the sandy floor beside 
the river Desidea, on its way east to Lake Falas, the group camped, to be 
disturbed for much of the night by uncanny hoots and near-human yells, echoing 
and reechoing through the rocks.
   In the morning, rather than attempt the south face of the precipice, they 
followed the Desidea and presently found a cleft which brought them out upon a 
high savannah rolling off into the murk.
   Two days the adventurers marched south, reaching the extreme ramparts of the 
Infnets by twilight of the second day, with a tremendous vista across the lands 
to the south. When night came a sparkle of far lights appeared. "Ao Hidis!" 
cried the Lokhars in mingled relief and apprehension.
   Over the minuscule campfire that night there was much talk of Wankh and 
Wankhmen. The Lokhars were unanimous in their detestation of the Wankhmen: "Even 
the Dirdirmen, for all their erudition and preening, are never so jealous of 
their prerogatives," declared jag Jaganig.
   Anacho gave an airy laugh. "From the Dirdirman point of view Wankhmen are 
scarcely superior to any of the other subraces."
   "Give the rascals credit," said Zarfo, "they understand the Wankh chimes. I 
myself am resourceful and perceptive; still, in twenty-five years, I learned 
only pidgin chords for 'yes,' 'no; 'stop,' 'go; 'right; 'wrong,' 'good,' 'bad.' 
I must admit to their achievement."
   "Bah," muttered Zorofim. "They are born to it; they hear chimes from the 
first instant of their lives; it is no great achievement."
   "One that they make the most of, however," said Belje with something like 
envy in his voice. "Think; they work at nothing, they have no responsibilities, 
but to stand between the Wankh and the world of Tschai, and they live in 
refinement and ease."
   Reith spoke in a puzzled voice. "A man like Helsse now: he was a Wankhman who 
lived as a spy. What did he hope to achieve? What Wankh interests did he 
safeguard in Cath?"
   "Wankh interests-none. But remember, the Wankhmen are opposed to change, 
since any alteration of circumstances can only be to their disadvantage. When a 
Lokhar begins to understand chimes he is sent away. In Cath-who knows what they 
fear?" And Zarfo warmed his hands at the campfire.
   The night passed slowly. At dawn Reith looked toward Ao Hidis through his 
scanscope, but could see little for the mist.
   Surly with tension and lack of sleep the group once more set off to the 
south, keeping to such cover as offered itself.
   The city slowly became distinct; Reith located the dock where the Vargaz had 
discharged-how long ago it seemed! He traced the road which led through the 
market and north past the spacefield. From the heights the city seemed placid, 
lifeless; the black towers of the Wankhmen brooded over the water. On the 
spacefield, plain to be seen, were five spaceships.
   By noon the party reached the ridge above the city. With great care Reith 
studied the spacefield, now directly below, through his scanscope. To the left 
were the repair shops, and nearby a bulk-cargo vessel in a state of obvious 
disrepair, with scaffolds raised beside exposed machinery. Another ship, this 
the closest, at the back of the field, seemed to be an abandoned hulk. The 
condition of the other three vessels was not obvious, but the Lokhars declared 
them all operable. "It is a matter of routine," said Zorofim. "When a ship is 
down for overhaul, it is moved close to the shops. The ships in transit dock 
yonder, in the 'Load Zone."'
   "It would seem then that three ships are potentially suitable for our 
purposes?"
   The Lokhars would not go quite so far.
   "Sometimes minor repairs are done in the 'Load Zone,"' said Belje.
   "Notice," said Thadzei, "the repair cart by the access ramp. It carries 
components, cases, and they must come from one of the three ships in the 'Load 
Zone.' "
   These were two small cargo ships and a passenger vessel. The Lokhars favored 
the cargo ships, with which they felt familiar. In regard to the passenger 
vessel, which Reith considered the most suitable, the Lokhars were in 
disagreement, Zorofim and Thadzei declaring it to be a standard ship in a 
specialized hull; Jag Jaganig and Belje equally certain that this was either a 
new design or an elaborate modification, in either case certain to present 
difficulties.
   All day the group studied the spacefield, watching the activity of the 
workshop and the traffic along the road. During the middle afternoon a black 
air-car drifted down to land beside the passenger vessel, which now obscured the 
view, but it appeared that there was a transfer between ship and air-car. 
Somewhat later Lokhar mechanics brought a case of energy tubes to the ship, 
which according to Zarfo was a sure signal that the ship was preparing for 
departure.
   The sun sank toward the ocean. The men fell silent, studying the ships which, 
hardly more than a quarter-mile distant, seemed tantalizingly accessible. Still 
the question lingered: Which of the three ships in the "Load Zone" offered the 
maximum opportunity for a successful departure? The consensus favored one of the 
cargo ships, only Jag Jaganig preferring the passenger ship.
   Reith's nerves began to crawl. The next few hours would shape his future, and 
far too many variables lay beyond his control. Strange that the ships should be 
guarded so lightly! On the other hand who was apt to attempt the theft of a 
spaceship? Probably not in the last thousand years had such an act occurred, if 
ever.
   Dusk fell over the landscape; the group began to descend the mountainside. 
Floodlights illuminated the ground beside the warehouses, the repair shop, the 
depot in back of the loading zone. The remainder of the field remained in 
greater or less darkness, the ships casting long shadows away from the lights.
   The men scrambled the last few feet down to the base of the hill, crossed a 
path of dank marshland, and came to the edge of the field, and here they waited 
five minutes, watching and listening. The warehouses showed no activity; in the 
shops a few men still worked.
   Reith, Zarfo and Thadzei went forth to reconnoiter. Crouching they ran to the 
abandoned hulk, where they stood in the shadows.
   From the machine shop came the whine of machinery; from the depot a voice 
called something unintelligible. The three waited ten minutes. In the town at 
the back of the spacefield long skeins of light had come into being; across the 
harbor the Wankh towers showed a few glimmers of yellow.
   The machine shop became quiet; the workers appeared to be leaving. Reith, 
Zarfo and Thadzei moved across the field keeping to the long shadows. They 
reached the first of the small cargo ships, where again they halted to look and 
listen: there were no sounds, no alarms. Zarfo and Thadzei went to the entry 
hatch, heaved it open and entered, while Reith with beating heart stood guard 
outside.
   Ten interminable minutes passed. From within came furtive sounds and once or 
twice a glimmer of light, which aroused in Reith an intense nervousness.
   Finally the two Lokhars returned. "No good," grunted Zarfo. "No air, no 
energy. Let's try the other."
   They stole quickly across the bands of light and shadow to the second cargo 
ship; as before Zarfo and Thadzei entered while Reith stood at the port. The 
Lokhars returned almost immediately. "Under repair," Zarfo reported glumly. 
"This is where the component cases come from."
   They turned to look at the passenger vessel. "It's not a standard design," 
Zarfo grumbled. "Still, the instruments and layout may be familiar to us."
   "Let's go aboard and look," said Reith. But now a light flared across the 
field. Reith's first thought was that they had been discovered. But the light 
played toward the passenger vessel. From the direction of the gate came a low 
easy-moving shape. The vehicle stopped beside the passenger vessel; a number of 
dark figures alighted-how many could not be ascertained in the glare. With a 
curiously abrupt and heavy motion, the figures entered the ship.
   "Wankh," muttered Zarfo. "They're going aboard."
   "It would mean that the ship is ready for departure," said Reith. "A chance 
we can't afford to miss!"
   Zarfo demurred. "It's one thing to steal an empty ship, another coping with a 
half dozen Wankh, and Wankhmen as well."
   "How do you know Wankhmen are aboard?"
   "Because of the lights. Wankh project pulses of radiation and observe the 
reflections."
   Behind them came a faint sound. Reith whirled to find Traz. "We became 
worried; you were gone so long."
   "Go back; bring everyone here. If we have opportunity, we'll board the 
passenger ship. It's the only one available."
   Traz vanished into the darkness. Five minutes later the entire group stood in 
the shadow of the cargo ship.
   Half an hour went by. In the passenger ship shapes moved across the lights, 
performing activities beyond the comprehension of the nervous men. In husky 
whispers they debated possible courses of action. Should they try to storm the 
ship now? Almost certainly departure was in the offing. Such action was 
obviously reckless. The group decided to pursue a conservative course and return 
into the mountains to await a more propitious occasion. As they started back, a 
number of Wankh issued from the vessel and lurched to the vehicle, which almost 
immediately left the field. Within the ship lights still glowed. No further 
activity was evident.
   "I'm going to give it a look," said Reith. He ran across the field, followed 
by the others. They mounted the ramp, passed through an embarkation port into 
the ship's main saloon, which was unoccupied. "Everybody to his station," said 
Reith. "Let's take it up!"
   "If we can," grumbled Zorofim.
   Traz cried out a warning: turning, Reith saw that a single Wankh had entered 
the saloon, watching in nonplussed disapproval. It was a black creature somewhat 
larger than a man, with a heavy torso, a squat head from which two black lenses 
flickered at half-second intervals. The legs were short; the feet were played 
webs; it carried no weapons or implements; in fact wore no garment or harness of 
any sort. From a sound organ at the base of the skull came four reverberating 
chimes, which, considering the circumstances, seemed measured and unexcited. 
Reith stepped forward, pointed to a settee, to indicate that it should sit down. 
The Wankh stood motionless, looking after the Lokhars who had gone their various 
ways, checking engines, energy, supplies, oxygen. The Wankh at last seemed to 
understand the events which were taking place. It took a step toward the exit 
port, but Reith barred the way and once again pointed to the settee. The Wankh 
loomed in front of him, the glassy eyes flickering. Once again the chimes 
sounded, more peremptory than before.
   Zarfo returned to the saloon. "The ship is in order. But it's an unfamiliar 
model, as I feared."
   "Can we take it up?"
   "We'll have to make sure we know what we are doing. It may be minutes or 
hours."
   "Then we can't let the Wankh go."
   "Awkward," said Zarfo.
   The Wankh thrust forward; Reith pushed it back and displayed his handgun. The 
Wankh uttered a loud chime. Zarfo made a chirping sound. The Wankh drew back.
   Reith asked: "What did you say?"
   "I just gave the pidgin sound for 'danger.' It seems to understand well 
enough."
   "I wish it would sit down; it makes me nervous standing there."
   "Wankh almost never sit," said Zarfo and went to seal the entrance port.
   Time passed. From various locations about the ship came calls and 
exclamations from the Lokhars. At Reith's direction, Traz stood in the 
observation dome, watching over the field. The Wankh stood stolidly, apparently 
at a loss for action.
   The ship shuddered; the lights flickered, went dim, came on bright once more. 
Zarfo looked into the saloon. "We've got the engines pumping. Now if Thadzei can 
figure out the control configurations-"
   Traz called down: "The car is coming back. The floodlight has just gone on, 
to light the field."
   Thadzei ran through the saloon, jumped up to the control console. He peered 
this way and that, while Zarfo stood by his side urging him to haste. Reith set 
Anacho to guarding the Wankh, Joined Traz in the observation dome. The car was 
slowing to a stop beside the ship.
   Zarfo pointed here and there across the control panel; Thadzei nodded 
doubtfully, thrust at a set of pressure pads. The ship shuddered and heaved; 
Reith felt acceleration underfoot. He was departing Tschai! Thadzei made 
adjustments; the ship pitched. Reith reached for a stanchion; the Wankh stumbled 
and fell upon the settee, where it remained. From elsewhere about the ship came 
full-throated Lokhar curses.
   Reith made his way to the bridge, to stand beside Thadzei, who desperately 
worked the controls, testing first one pad, then another. Reith asked: "Is there 
an automatic pilot?"
   "Bound to be, somewhere. I can't locate the engagement. These are by no means 
standard controls."
   "Do you know what you are doing?"
   "No."
   Reith looked down at the dark face of Tschai. "So long as we are going up and 
not down, we're in good shape."
   "If I had an hour, a single hour," moaned Thadzei, "I could trace out the 
circuits."
   Jag Jaganig came into the saloon to make a querulous protest. Thadzei called 
back: "I'm doing the best I can!"
   "It's not good enough! We'll crash!"
   "Not yet," said Thadzei grimly. "I see a lever I haven't tried." He pulled 
the lever; the ship skidded alarmingly and thrust off at great speed to the 
east. Once more the Lokhars gave a series of anguished cries. Thadzei moved the 
lever back to its original position. The ship came to a trembling stasis. 
Thadzei gave a great tremulous sigh, peering back and forth across the panel. 
"Like none I have ever seen!"
   Reith looked out the port but saw nothing but darkness. Zarfo spoke in a calm 
voice: "Our altitude is not quite a thousand feet ... Now it is nine hundred..."
   Thadzei desperately worked the controls. Once again the ship lurched and fled 
eastward. "Up, up!" screamed Zarfo. "We're diving into the ground!"
   Thadzei brought the ship back to a halt. "Well then, this toggle will surely 
activate the repulsors." He gave it a twitch. From aft came a sinister crackle, 
a muffled explosion. The Lokhars yelled mournfully. Zarfo read the altimeter. 
"Five hundred ... Four hundred ... Three ... Two ... One..."
   Contact: a splash, a bobbing and pitching, then silence. The ship was afloat, 
apparently undamaged, in an unknown body of water. The Parapan? The Schanizade? 
Reith threw up his hands in fatalistic despair. Back once more in Tschai.
   Reith jumped down to the saloon. The Wankh stood like a statue. Whatever its 
emotions, none were evident.
   Reith went aft to the engine room, where Jag Jaganig and Belje looked 
disconsolately at a smoldering panel. "An overload," said Belje. "Circuits and 
nodes are certainly melted."
   "Can we make repairs?"
   Belje made a glum sound. "If tools and parts are aboard."
   "If time is given to us," said Jag Jaganig.
   Reith returned to the saloon. He threw himself down upon a settee and stared 
bleakly at the Wankh. The plan had succeeded ... almost. He leaned back, sodden 
with fatigue. The others must be feeling the same. No useful purpose could be 
served by going longer without rest. He got to his feet, called the group 
together. Two-man watches were set; the others slumped upon settees to sleep as 
best they could.
   The night passed. Az raced across the sky, followed by Braz. Dawn revealed a 
placid expanse which Zarfo identified as Lake Falas. "And never has it served a 
more useful purpose!"
   Reith went out on the top surface of the hull, and searched the horizons 
through his scanscope. Hazy water stretched to south, east and west. To the 
north was a low shore toward which the ship was drifting, propelled by a gentle 
breeze from the south. Reith went back into the ship. The Lokhars had detached a 
panel and were unenthusiastically discussing the damage. Their attitudes gave 
Reith all the information he needed.
   In the saloon he found Anacho and Traz gnawing on spheres of black paste 
encased in a hard white rind which they had taken from a locker. Reith offered 
one of the spheres to the Wankh, who paid no heed. Reith ate the sphere himself, 
finding it similar to cheese. Zarfo presently joined him and verified what Reith 
already had guessed. "Repairs are not feasible. A whole bank of crystals is 
destroyed. There are no spares aboard."
   Reith gave a gloomy nod. "As I expected."
   "What next?" demanded Zarfo.
   "As soon as the wind blows us ashore we disembark and return to Ao Hidis for 
another try."
   Zargo grunted. "What of the Wankh?"
   "We'll have to let him go his own way. I certainly don't plan to murder him."
   "A mistake," sniffed Anacho. "Best kill the repulsive beast."
   "For your information," said Zarfo, "the main Wankh citadel Ao Khaha is 
situated on Lake Falas. It will not be far distant."
   Reith went back out on the foredeck. The first tussocks of the shore were 
only half a mile distant; beyond lay quagmire. To ground at the edge of such a 
morass would be highly inconvenient, and Reith was glad to see that the wind, 
shifting to the east, seemed to be moving the ship slowly to the west, perhaps 
aided by a sluggish current. Turning the scanscope along the shore Reith was 
able to distinguish a set of irregular juts and promontories far to the west.
   From within came the sound of expostulation, followed by the thud of heavy 
footsteps. Out on the foredeck came the Wankh, followed by Anacho and Traz. The 
Wankh fixed Reith for half a second with its flicking vision, long enough to 
register an image, then turned by slow degrees to look around the horizon. 
Before Reith could prevent it, even were he able to do so, the Wankh stepped 
forward, ran with its peculiar lurching gait down the side of the ship and 
plunged into the water. Reith caught a glimpse of wet black hide, then the 
creature was gone into the depths.
   Reith searched the surface for a period but saw no more of the Wankh. An hour 
later, checking the progress of the vessel, he once more turned the scanscope on 
the western shore. To his cold dismay he saw that the shapes he had thought to 
be crags were the black glass towers of an extensive Wankh fortress city. 
Wordlessly Reith examined the swamp to the north with a new interest born of 
desperation.
   Tussocks of white grass protruded like hairy wens from fields of black slime 
and stagnant ponds. Reith went below to seek material for a raft, but found 
nothing. The padding of the settee was welded to the structure and came away in 
shreds and chunks. There was no lifeboat aboard. Reith returned to the deck and 
wondered what his next move should be. The Lokhars joined him: disconsolate 
figures in wheatcolored smocks, wind blowing the white hair back from their 
craggy black faces.
   Reith spoke to Zarfo: "Do you know the place yonder?"
   "It must be Ao Khaha."
   "If we are taken, what can we expect?"
   "Death."
   The morning passed; the sun climbing toward noon dissolved the haze which 
shrouded the horizons, and the towers of Ao Khaha stood distinct.
   The ship was noted. On the water under the city appeared a barge, which 
surged across the water leaving a ribbon of white wake. Reith studied it through 
the scanscope. Wankhmen stood on the deck, perhaps a dozen, curiously alike; 
slender men with death-pale skins, saturnine or, in some instances, ascetic 
features. Reith considered resistance: perhaps a desperate attempt to seize the 
barge? He decided against such a trial, which almost certainly could not 
succeed.
   The Wankhmen scrambled aboard the ship. Ignoring Reith, Traz and Anacho, they 
addressed the Lokhars. "All down to the barge. Do you carry weapons?"
   "No," grunted Zarfo.
   "Quick then." Now they noticed Anacho. "What is this? A Dirdirman?" And they 
gave chuckles of soft surprise. They inspected Reith. "And what sort is that 
one? A motley crew, to be sure! Now then, all down to the barge!"
   The Lokhars went first, hulk-shouldered, knowing what lay ahead. Reith, Traz 
and Anacho followed.
   "All! Stand on the deck, at the gunwales, in a neat line. Turn your backs." 
And the Wankhman brought out their handguns.
   The Lokhars started to obey. Reith had not expected such casual and 
perfunctory slaughter. Furious that he had not resisted from the first he cried 
out: "Should we let them kill us so easily? Let's make a fight of it!"
   The Wankhmen gave sharp orders: "Unless you wish worse, quick! To the 
gunwales!"
   Near the barge the water roiled. A black shape floated lazily to the surface 
and produced four plangent chimes. The Wankhmen stiffened; their faces sagged 
into sneers of annoyance. They waved at their captives. "Back then, into the 
cockpit."
   The barge returned to the great black fortress, the Wankhmen muttering among 
themselves. It passed behind a breakwater, magnetically clamped itself to a 
pier. The prisoners were marshaled ashore and through a portal, into Ao Khaha.



CHAPTER FIFTEEN
   SURFACES OF BLACK glass, stark walls and areas of black concrete, angles, 
blocks, masses: a negation of organic shape. Reith wondered at the architecture; 
it seemed remarkably abstract and severe. Into a cul-de-sac, walled on three 
sides with dark concrete, the captives were taken. "Halt! Remain in place!" came 
the command.
   The prisoners, with no choice, halted and stood in a surly line.
   "Water yourselves at that spigot. Perform evacuation into that trough. Make 
no noise or disturbance." The Wankhmen departed, leaving the prisoners 
unguarded.
   Reith said in a wondering voice, "We haven't even been searched! I still have 
my weapons."
   "It's not far to the portal," said Traz. "Why should we wait here to be 
killed?"
   "We'd never reach the portal," growled Zarfo.
   "So we must stand here like docile animals?"
   "That's what I plan to do," said Belje, with a bitter glance toward Reith. 
"I'll never see Smargash more, but I may escape with my life."
   Zorofim gave a rude laugh. "In the mines?"
   "I know only rumor of the mines."
   "Once a man goes underground he never emerges. There are ambushes and 
terrible tricks by Pnume and Pnumekin. If we are not executed out of hand we 
will go to the mines."
   "All for avarice and mad folly!" lamented Belje. "Adam Reith, you have much 
to answer for!"
   "Quiet, poltroon," said Zarfo without heat. "No one forced you to come. The 
fault is your own. We should abase ourselves before Reith; he trusted our 
knowledge; we showed him ineptitude."
   "All of us did our best," said Reith. "The operation was risky; we failed; 
it's as simple as that ... As for trying to escape from here-I can't believe 
that they'd leave us alone, unguarded, free to walk away."
   Jag Jaganig snorted sadly. "Don't be too sure; to the Wankhmen we are 
animals."
   Reith turned to Traz, whose perceptions at times bewildered him. "Could you 
find your way to the portal?"
   "I don't know. Not directly. There were many turns. The buildings confuse 
me."
   "Then we had best remain here ... There's a bare chance that we can talk our 
way out of the situation."
   The afternoon passed, then the long night, with Az and Braz creating 
fantasies of shapes and shadows. In the chill morning, cantankerous with stiff 
joints and hunger, and increasingly restless because of their captors' 
inattention, even the most fearful of the Lokhars were peering out of the 
cul-de-sac and speculating as to the whereabouts of the portal through the black 
glass wall.
   Reith still counseled patience. "We'd never make it. Our only hope as I see 
it is that the Wankh may decide to be lenient with us."
   "Why should they be lenient?" sneered Thadzei. "Their justice is forthright: 
the same justice we use toward pests."
   Jag Jaganig was no less pessimistic. "We will never see the Wankh. Why else 
do they maintain the Wankhmen, except to stand between themselves and Tschai?"
   "We shall see," said Reith.
   The morning passed. The Lokhars slumped torpidly against a wall. Traz, as 
usual, maintained his equanimity. Contemplating the boy, Reith could not help 
but wonder as to the source of his fortitude. Innate character? Fatalism? Did 
the personality of Onmale, the emblem he had worn so long, still shape his soul?
   But other problems were more immediate. "This delay can't be accidental," 
Reith fretted to Anacho. "There must be a reason. Are they trying to demoralize 
us?"
   Anacho, as peevish as any of the others, said, "There are better ways than 
this."
   "Are they waiting for something to happen? What?"
   Anacho could supply no answers.
   Late in the afternoon three Wankhmen appeared. One of these, wearing thin 
silver greaves and a silver medallion on a chain around his neck, appeared to be 
a person of importance. He surveyed the group with eyebrows lofted in mingled 
disapproval and amusement, as if at naughty children. "Well then," he said 
briskly, "which among you is the leader of this group?"
   Reith came forward with as much dignity as he could summon. "I am."
   "You? Not one of the Lokhars? What did you hope to achieve?"
   "May I ask who adjudicates our offense?" Reith asked.
   The Wankhman was taken aback. "'Adjudication'? What needs to be adjudicated? 
The only point at issue, and a minor one, is your motive."
   "I can't agree with you," said Reith in a reasonable voice. "Our 
transgression was a simple theft; only by sheer accident did we take aloft a 
Wankh."
   "A Wankh! Do you realize his identity? No, of course not. He is a savant of 
the highest level, an Original Master."
   "And he wants to know why we took his spaceship?"
   "What then? It is no concern of yours. You need only transmit the information 
on through me; that is my function."
   "I'll be glad to do so, in his presence, and, I hope, in surroundings more 
appropriate than a back alley."
   "Zff, but you are a cool one. Do you answer to the name of Adam Reith?"
   "I am Adam Reith."
   "And you recently visited Settra in Cath, where you associated with the 
so-called 'Yearning Refluxives'?"
   "Your information is at fault."
   "Be that as it may, we want your reason for stealing a spaceship."
   "Be on hand when I communicate with the Original Master. The matter is 
complex and I am certain he will have questions which cannot be answered 
casually."
   The Wankhman swung away in disgust.
   Zarfo muttered, "You are a cool one indeed! But what do you gain by talking 
to the Wankh?"
   "I don't know. It's worth trying. I suspect that the Wankhmen report only as 
much as suits their purposes."
   "That's understood by everyone but the Wankh."
   "How can it be? Are they innocent? Or remote?"
   "Neither. They have no other sources of information. The Wankhmen make sure 
the situation remains that way. The Wankh have small interest in the affairs of 
Tschai; they're only here to counter the Dirdir threat."
   "Bah," said Anacho. "The Dirdir threat' is a myth; the Expansionists are gone 
thousands of years."
   "Then why are they still feared by the Wankh?" demanded Zarfo.
   "Mutual distrust; what else?"
   "Natural antipathy. The Dirdir are an insufferable race."
   Anacho walked away in a huff. Zarfo laughed. Reith shook his head in mild 
disapproval.
   Zarfo now said, "Take my advice, Adam Reith: don't antagonize the Wankhmen, 
because you can't win but through them. Ingratiate, truckle, fawn-and at least 
they'll bear you no malice."
   "I'm not too proud to truckle," said Reith, "if it would do any good-which it 
won't. Our only hope is to push ahead .... And I've come up with an idea or two 
which may help our case, if we get a chance to talk with the Wankh."
   "You won't defeat the Wankhmen that way," gloomed Zarfo. "They'll tell the 
Wankh only as much as they see fit, and you'll never know the difference."
   "What I'd like to do," said Reith, "is work up to a situation where only the 
truth makes sense and where every other statement is an obvious falsity."
   Zarfo shook his head in puzzlement and walked to the spigot to drink. Reith 
remembered that none of the group had eaten for almost two days; small wonder 
they were listless and irritable.
   Three Wankhmen appeared. The official who previously had spoken to Reith was 
not among them. "Come along. Look sharp, now; form a neat line."
   "Where are we going?" Reith asked, but received no reply.
   The group walked five minutes, through odd-angled streets and irregular 
courts, by acute and obtuse angles, past unexpected juts and occasional clear 
vistas, through deep shadow and the wan shine of Carina 4269. They entered the 
ground floor of a tower, entered an elevator which took them up a hundred feet 
and opened upon a large octagonal hall.
   The chamber was dim; a great lenticular bulge in the roof held water; 
windblown ripples modulated light from the sky and sent it dancing around the 
hall. Tremors of sound were barely audible, sighing chords, complex dissonances; 
sound both more and less than music. The walls were stained and discolored, a 
fact which Reith found peculiar, until looking closer he recognized Wankh 
ideograms, immense and intricately detailed, one to each wall. Each ideogram, 
thought Reith, represented a chime; each chime was the sonic equivalent of a 
visual image. Here, reflected Reith, were highly abstract pictures.
   The chamber was empty. The group waited in silence while the almost unheard 
chords drifted in and out of consciousness, and amber sunlight, refracted and 
broken into shimmers, swam through the room.
   Reith heard Traz gasp in surprise: a rare event. He turned. Traz pointed. 
"Look yonder!"
   Standing in an alcove was Helsse, head bent in an attitude of brooding 
reverie. His guise was new and strange. He wore black Wankhman garments; his 
hair was close-cropped; he looked a person worlds apart from the suave young man 
Reith had encountered in Blue Jade Palace. Reith looked at Zarfo. "You told me 
he was dead!"
   "So he seemed to me! We put him out in the corpse shed, and in the morning he 
was gone. We thought the night-hounds had come for him."
   Reith called: "Helsse! Over here! It's Adam Reith."
   Helsse turned his head, looked at him and Reith wondered how he ever could 
have taken Helsse for anything but a Wankhman. Helsse came slowly across the 
chamber, a half-smile on his face. "So here: the sorry outcome to your 
exploits."
   "The situation is discouraging," Reith agreed. "Can you help us?"
   Helsse raised his eyebrows. "Why should I? I find you personally offensive, 
without humility or ease. You have subjected me to a hundred indignities; your 
pro-'cult' bias is repulsive; the theft of a space vessel with an Original 
aboard makes your request absurd."
   Reith considered him a moment. "May I ask why you are here?"
   "Certainly. To supply information in regard to you and your activities."
   Reith mulled the matter over. "Are we so important?"
   "So it would seem," said Helsse indifferently.
   Four Wankh entered the chamber, and stood by the far wall: four massive black 
shadows. Helsse stood straighter; the other Wankhmen became silent. It was 
apparent, thought Reith, that whatever the total attitude of the Wankhmen toward 
the Wankh might be, that attitude included a great deal of respect.
   The prisoners were urged forward, and ranged in a line before the Wankh. A 
minute passed, during which nothing happened. Then the Wankh exchanged chimes: 
soft muffled sounds at half-second intervals, apparently unintelligible to the 
Wankhmen. Another silence ensued, then the Wankh addressed the Wankhmen, 
producing triads of three quick notes, like xylophone trills, in what seemed to 
be a simplified or elemental usage.
   The oldest Wankhman stepped forward, listened, turned to the prisoners. 
"Which of you is the pirate-master?"
   "None of us," said Reith. "We are not pirates."
   One of the Wankh uttered interrogatory chimes. Reith thought he recognized 
the Original Master. The Wankhman, somewhat grudgingly, brought forth a small 
keyed instrument which he manipulated with astonishing deftness.
   "Tell him further," said Reith, "that we regret the inconvenience we caused 
him. Circumstances compelled us to take him aloft."
   "You are not here to argue," said the Wankhman, "but to render information, 
after which the usual processes will occur."
   Again the Master uttered chimes and was answered. Reith asked: "What is he 
saying, and what did you tell him?"
   The senior Wankhman said, "Speak only when you are directly addressed."
   Helsse came forward, and producing his own instrument, played chimes at 
length. Reith began to feel uneasy and frustrated. Events were ranging far 
beyond his control. "What is Helsse saying?"
   "Silence."
   "At least inform the Wankh that we have a case which we want to present."
   "You will be notified if it becomes necessary for you to testify. The hearing 
is almost at an end."
   "But we haven't had a chance to speak!"
   "Silence! Your persistence is offensive!"
   Reith turned to Zarfo. "Tell the Wankh something! Anything!"
   Zarfo blew out his cheeks. Pointing at the Wankhmen he made chirping sounds. 
The senior Wankhman said sternly: "Quiet, you are interrupting."
   "What did you tell him?" asked Reith.
   "I said, 'Wrong, wrong, wrong.' That's all I know."
   The Master spoke chimes, indicating Reith and Zarfo. The senior Wankhman, 
visibly exasperated, said: "The Wankh want to know where you planned to commit 
your piracies, or, rather, where you planned to take the spaceship."
   "You are not translating correctly," protested Reith. "Did you tell him that 
we are not pirates?"
   Zarfo again made sounds for "Wrong, wrong, wrong!"
   The Wankhman said, "You are obviously pirates, or lunatics." Turning back to 
the Wankh, he played his instrument, misrepresenting, so Reith was sure, what 
had been said. Reith turned to Helsse. "What is he telling them? That we are not 
pirates?"
   Helsse ignored him.
   Zarfo guffawed, to everyone's astonishment. He muttered in Reith's ear: 
"Remember the Dugbo? Pinch Helsse's nose."
   Reith said, "Helsse."
   Helsse turned him an austere gaze. Reith stepped forward, tweaked his nose. 
Helsse seemed to become rigid. "Tell the Wankh that I am a man of Earth, the 
world of human origin," said Reith, "that I took the spaceship only in order to 
return home."
   Helsse woodenly played a set of trills and runs. The other Wankhmen became 
instantly agitated-sufficient proof that Helsse had translated accurately. They 
began to protest, to press forward, to drown out Helsse's chimes, only to be 
brought up short by a great belling sound from the Master.
   Helsse continued, and at last came to an end.
   "Tell them further," said Reith, "that the Wankhmen falsified my remarks, 
that they consistently do so to further their private purposes."
   Helsse played. The other Wankhmen again started a great protest, and again 
were rebuked.
   Reith warmed to his task. He voiced one of his surmises, striking boldly into 
the unknown: "Tell them that the Wankhmen destroyed my spaceship, killing all 
aboard except myself. Tell them that our mission was innocent, that we came 
investigating radio signals broadcast a hundred and fifty Tschai-years ago. At 
this time the Wankhmen destroyed the cities Settra and Ballisidre from which the 
signals emanated, with great loss of life, and all for the same reason: to 
prevent a new situation which might disturb the Wankh-Dirdir stalemate."
   The instant uproar among the Wankhmen convinced Reith that his accusations 
had struck home. Again they were silenced.
   Helsse played the instrument with the air of a man astounded by his own 
actions.
   "Tell them," said Reith, "that the Wankhmen have systematically distorted 
truth. They undoubtedly have prolonged the Dirdir war. Remember, if the war 
ended, the Wankh would return to their home world, and the Wankhmen would be 
thrown upon their own resources."
   Helsse, gray-faced, struggled to drop the instrument, but his fingers refused 
to do his bidding. He played. The other Wankhmen stood in dead silence. This was 
the most telling accusation of all. The senior Wankhman shouted: "The interview 
is at an end! Prisoners, form your line! March!"
   Reith told Helsse: "Request that the Wankh order all the other Wankhmen to 
depart, so that we may communicate without interruption."
   Helsse's face twitched; sweat poured down his face.
   "Translate my message," said Reith.
   Helsse obeyed.
   Silence held the chamber, with the Wankhmen gazing in apprehension toward the 
Wankh.
   The Master uttered two chimes.
   The Wankhmen muttered among themselves. They came to a terrible decision. Out 
came their weapons; they turned them, not upon the prisoners, but upon the four 
Wankh. Reith and Traz sprang forward, followed by the Lokhars. The weapons were 
wrested away.
   The Master uttered two quiet chimes.
   Helsse listened, then slowly turned to Reith. "He commands that you give me 
the weapon you hold."
   Reith relinquished the gun. Helsse turned toward the other three Wankhmen, 
pushed the trigger-button. The three fell dead, their heads shattered.
   The Wankh stood a moment in silence, assessing the situation. Then they 
departed the hall. The erstwhile prisoners remained with Helsse and the corpses. 
Reith took the gun from Helsse's cold fingers, before he thought to use it 
again.
   The chamber began to grow murky with the coming of dusk. Reith studied 
Helsse, wondering how long the hypnotic state would persist. He said, "Take us 
outside the walls."
   "Come."
   Through the black and gray city Helsse took the group, finally to a small 
steel door. Helsse touched a latch; the door swung aside. Beyond, a spine of 
rock led through the dusk to the mainland.
   The group filed through the gap into the open air. Reith turned to Helsse. 
"Ten minutes after I touch your shoulder, resume your normal condition. You will 
remember nothing of what has happened during the last hour. Do you understand?"
   "Yes."
   Reith touched Helsse's shoulder; the group hurried away through the twilight. 
Before a jut of rock hid them from sight Reith looked back. Helsse stood where 
they had left him, looking somewhat wistfully after them.



CHAPTER SIXTEEN
   IN A PATCH of rough forestland the group slumped down in total fatigue, their 
stomachs crawling with hunger. By the light of the two moons Traz searched 
through the undergrowth and found a clump of pilgrim plant, and the group made 
their first meal in two days. Somewhat refreshed, they moved on through the 
night, up a long slope. At the top of the ridge, they turned to look back, 
toward the gloomy silhouette of Ao Khaha on the moonlit sky. For a few minutes 
they stood, each man thinking his own thoughts, then they continued north.
   In the morning over a breakfast of toasted fungus, Reith opened his pouch. 
"The expedition has been a failure. As I promised, each man receives another 
five thousand sequins. Take them now, with my gratitude for your loyalty."
   Zarfo took the purple-glowing pellets gingerly, weighed them in his fingers. 
"Above all I am an honest man, and since this was the structure of the contract, 
I will accept the money."
   Jag Jaganig said: "Let me ask you a question, Adam Reith. You told the Wankh 
that you were a man from a far world, the home of man. Is this correct?"
   "It is what I told the Wankh."
   "You are such a man, from such a planet?"
   "Yes. Even though Anacho the Dirdirman makes a wry face."
   "Tell us something of this planet."
   Reith spoke for an hour, while his comrades sat staring into the fire.
   Anacho at last cleared his throat. "I do not doubt your sincerity. But, as 
you say, the history of Earth is short compared to the history of Tschai. It is 
obvious that far in the past the Dirdir visited Earth and left a colony from 
which all Earthmen are descended."
   "I could prove otherwise," said Reith, "if our venture had been successful 
and we had all journeyed to Earth."
   Anacho poked the fire with a stick. "Interesting ... The Dirdir of course 
would not sell or transfer a spaceship. Such a theft as we perpetrated upon the 
Wankh would be impossible. Still-at the Great Sivishe Spaceyards almost any 
component can be acquired, by purchase or discreet arrangement. One only needs 
sequins, a considerable sum, true."
   "How much?" asked Reith.
   "A hundred thousand sequins would work wonders."
   "No doubt. At the moment I have barely the hundredth part of that."
   Zarfo threw over his five thousand sequins. "Here. It pains me like the loss 
of a leg. But let these be the first coins in the pot."
   Reith returned the money. "At the moment they would only make a forlorn 
rattling sound."
   Thirteen days later the group came down out of the Ifnets to Blalag, where 
they boarded a power wagon and so returned to Smargash.
   For three days Reith, Anacho and Traz ate, slept and watched the young folk 
at their dancing.
   On the evening of the third day Zarfo joined them in the taproom. "All look 
sleek and lazy. Have you heard the news?"
   "What news?"
   "First, I have acquired a delightful property on a bend of the Whisfer River, 
with five fine keels, three psillas and an asponistra, not to mention the 
tayberries. Here I shall end my days-unless you tempt me forth on another mad 
venture. Secondly, two technicians this morning returned to Smargash from Ao 
Hidis. Vast changes are in the wind! The Wankhmen are departing the fortresses; 
they have been driven out and now live in huts with the Blacks and Purples. It 
appears that the Wankh will no longer tolerate their presence."
   Reith chuckled. "At Dadiche we found an alien race exploiting men. At Ao 
Hidis we found men exploiting an alien race. Both conditions are now changed. 
Anacho, would you care to be liberated from your enervating philosophy and 
become a sane man?"
   "I want demonstration, not words. Take me to Earth." "We can hardly walk 
there."
   "At the Great Sivishe Spaceyards are a dozen spaceboats, needing only 
procurement and assembly."
   "Yes, but where are the sequins?"
   "I don't know," said Anacho.
   "Nor I," said Traz.
