that's left." "Sounds reasonable," Dorion agreed. "All right—let's try ft." They found a position where Dorion was still reasonably out of view from the entry station but could observe fairly clearly not only the station but perhaps a quarter of a mile into whatever colony was coming up as well. It wasn't until they were set and Halagar and Charley were on their way and pretty much beyond recall that Dorion was suddenly struck by the idea that they might not be admitted into the same colony! Well, he knew Masalur very well, and the barrier was a good distance inside the null. If need be, he'd just see which one Halagar went into, go where he was directed, then slip down and back out inside the barrier and call that one back. It was likely, though, to be the same one. This bunch liked crowds. 174 Jack L. Chalker Halagar approached (he entry station slowly but confi- dently. He held Charley tightly and whispered, "I know Dorion or that cat creature or both have probably put checks on my authority, but listen to my orders. You will say not a word, and do nothing, no matter what happens, and if that won't remain a valid command then I will take my knife and slit your tongue and break your legs. And if that cat creature so much as moves from his comfortable pouch I will destroy him. Now, out your hands behind your back." She obeyed, wondering what the hell he was talking about, and was surprised to feel leather straps tying them securely behind her. Jeez! She was blind, stark naked, and a slave. What the hell did he think she could do? Shadowcat remained still, not because he feared the big man, but because of the big man's will and position and what he might do to Charley if anything was pulled. Besides, it was better to find out what me hell the bastard was planning first. The soldiers guarding the gate were Hedum; he'd seen them before in his travels, and they no less impressed him now than they had when he'd first seen them as a young soldier of fortune. Over seven feet tall, with long, spindly- looking arms and legs, a glistening coal-black skin. totally hairless, and all the more intimidating for it. Still, they looked basically human, until you got to the head, which looked like a coal-black sunflower, only the petals were not petals but thick, tubular tentaclelike shapes that were in con- stant motion. Some terminated in eyes, some in hearing or other sensory organs, and two were mouths. Of all tile races of Masalur they were the strangest and also the meanest and most incomprehensible to Akhbreed. Just the sight of them with automatic rifles and a criss-crossed set of ammunition belts across their chest was intimidating. The Hedum also quite literally talked through their nostrils; the effect was eerie, unsettling, and about the most inhuman around. Two flanked the theoretical opening in the shield, and the one on his left stepped forward. "Who are you and why do you come here?" it asked, in that mixture of honking and wheezing that was the way they could manage the Akhbreed speech. "I am Halagar, a mercenary. 1 answered a call for men WAR OF THE MAELSTROM 175 with past military experience and was told that if I got to the Masalur hub border in the next week or so I would find a great deal of work." "An Akhbreed slave girl. Not mine, although responding to my commands at the moment." Eyestalks leveled themselves on her. "She does not look as though she is responding well to your commands," it noted. ' * Still, wait here. I will summon the magician of the gateway.'' The Hedum turned, faced the barrier, and placed both enormous hands on it, one on either side of the theoretical opening. There was a chilling, ringing sound and an almost immediate response from inside a tent in back of the gate. Presently a middle-aged man in black robes appeared—an adept! High power indeed. Klittichom couldn't have too many adepts on his side or he'd not have waited this long nor been this cautious. Adepts were essentially Second Rank them- selves, although not as powerful as full sorcerers—yet. Basi- cally they had the power, but not yet all the skills and experience. Still, they were formidable. The adept stood there, looked at both of them, frowned, then said, "Dismount and walk through. We'll bring your horse through after you." Halagar slid down, then picked Charley off and virtually carried her through. He was not blind to the fact that several more Hedum within the barrier shield were pointing guns right at him. The adept went up to Charley, seemed to examine her top to bottom, then put his finger on the tiny slave ring in her nose and stepped back. "She's bound to Boolean," he noted. "Not by Boolean, but definitely to him." Halagar nodded. "I know. I know of no one capable of removing the spell." "I could, but it would be a lot of trouble and time. However, the fact that she is not bound by him makes for an easier remedy. Has she ever been in his presence?" "As far as I know, no." "Then it's easy. Now tell me why I should bother." Halagar hesitated only a moment. "My name is Halagar, a mercenary most late of Covantian service. I was hired by a two-bit magician named Dorion who's working for Boolean 176 Jack L. Chalker to bring her and another woman to him. The other woman is Boday, wife of Susama. Interested?" "Very. But if you betray them, why should I believe you won't betray us?" "No percentage." Halagar told him. "I know what you're going to do and that will make the whole mission moot anyway, since there's no way I can practically do it from this geographic point and I know it, and since in less than a full week the spell would dissolve of its own accord, wouldn't it? I keep my commissions, but not when they are obviously beyond my ability to perform." The adept smiled. "Now I am very interested. Where is this Boday?" "Not so fast. First, I want that slavery spell transferred to me. Second, I want an officer's rank in your forces, and protection and safe reward at the end, if I serve loyally and honorably and survive." The adept shrugged. "Sounds fair enough. Very well, as a demonstration." He walked over to Charley, who was now livid and suddenly felt no loyalty or attachment to Halagar at all and a very strong urge to warn Dorion. The adept knelt down and made a few passes with his hand, however, and she suddenly stiffened and went into a deep trance. "Fascinating," he said aloud to himself. "She's got a regular bundle of stuff in there. Even demon spells. She's got a familiar, too! Where is it?" "In the saddle roll," Halagar replied, but even as he turned to look at the horse he saw the shape of the cat leap from the bedroll and run like hell through the startled soldiers and out of sight. Attempts by the Hedum to catch him proved more comical than effective, and he was soon well away into the countryside. "Forget it, then," the adept told him. "Just make sure it gets no more of her blood. That's the way to kill them. If it shows up, don't kill it—that'll only cause problems. Trap it and let it starve. They're devoted but generally not very bright. All right." He fumed back to Charley. "Girl, what is your native language?" "English," she responded dully. "All right," he responded in clear but heavily accented English, "now listen to me. I am telling you a secret and you 177 WAR OF THE MAELSTROM will believe it. Now I tell you that Halagar is Boolean. Boolean and Halagar arc the same. He chooses to use the name Halagar for now and so should you, but only you and he and I know that he is really Boolean, your lord and master. You know it, you believe it to be true, and nothing, no one, no evidence, no thing, shall convince you otherwise. He is your lord, your master, and your god and you belong to him and must always obey him. You are his to do with as he wills. When I snap my fingers you will not remember that this has happened but you will suddenly know and realize this as if it were divine revelation and you will believe and act accordingly. Also, your cat familiar is an evil creature, a demon who wants to harm your master. If he tries to contact you, you will shut him out and never seek him out, and you will never let him feed upon you. if it tries to contact you, you will not understand what it is saying nor obey, but you will tell your master. Now . . . three, two, one. . . ." He snapped his fingers, then got up and turned to Halagar. "It won't hold if she actually meets the real Boolean," he told the mercenary, "but in a few more days that won't be a problem. In fact, upon Boolean's demise the spell will be permanently affixed, replacing the original, until your own demise. Now, what about this Boday?" "If we're seen to be safely leaving, in no more than a few hours she will try and walk right in here with Dorion," he told the adept. "And she has the same slave spell Shari has. so she'll be easy to lead away and very cooperative." "I see. Now about how powerful is this Dorion?" Halagar smiled. "I seriously doubt if Master Dorion can successfully palm a card or make a coin vanish. He used to work for Boolean but the old boy exiled him to Yobi in the Kudaan, apparently for incompetence. This was supposed to be how he'd get back in." The adept suddenly reached up and Halagar felt a tug on his hair. "Hey! What—?" The adept took out a pouch and put a lock of the merce- nary's hair inside, then put away his small clippers. "Just a bit of insurance that you will have no second thoughts and wilt stay on our side," he said lightly. "With this, I can curse you anywhere in Akahlar.'' For Charley, sitting there, things became momentarily con- 178 Jack L. Chalker fused and then suddenly there was no confusion at all. When things had been going wrong the Master had suddenly re- vealed himself and his power to her and all was suddenly clear. Now she understood that Halagar was Boolean in dis- guise and thus her true master. It came as a complete shock, like a bolt from the blue, that revealed his power, but now everything was in place. She did not understand what he was doing or why, but it was not her place to do so. Such powerful beings were more than human; she could no more comprehend them or truly question them than a pet could comprehend or question the actions of their owner. In fact, that's just how she felt—like a pet dog, there to serve and obey, unquestioning, dependent, too low to comprehend. Halagar was none too pleased about an adept having a part of him but it was a small price to pay to resolve his future. He came over to her, untied her hands, and saw in her face and demeanor the great change wrought within her. "This will be our secret," he told her, "to be revealed to no one. From now on you are Shan, slave girl of Halagar. That's your only identity and your only loyalty. Now, come—give me your hand. We must ride. We must not be late for their big show." "Yes, Master," she responded, and that was all there was to it. Dorion had been watching from the null, and while he had some bad feelings when they were held up by the adept, seeing them mount up and ride off made him feel relieved. Maybe they were going to make it after all! Boday had used her kit to paint elaborate and colorful designs on her face and upper torso. She certainly looked— different—like some primitive savage, and maybe it would do. Dorion played with a simple by-the-book illusory spell that would make his robe appear to be some uniform, but when he saw the adept he knew that his simple and stock tricks would be of no avail. The hell with it; he would wing it as he was. They mounted up and headed for the gate. The Hedum challenged them as it had challenged the first two, but the adept came out from his tent quickly and bade them come inside. The magician was just beginning to feel confidence returning when the adept said, "Well, brother-in-magic, I thank you for bringing us that which we have long sought." WAR OF TOE MAELSTROM 179 Dorion frowned. "I do not understand, brother." "Sure you do. You are Dorion and this is Boday, mate of the one we have sought for so long. Don't look so shocked or come up with any denials—your comrade betrayed you. And don't try anything unless you wish to test your own powers against mine." Dorion hesitated, but he had too much respect for what it took to get that black robe, and too much understanding of how little power he himself possessed to do it. "No, brother, it's your game." The adept smiled. "Let me make a bit of adjustment in our rather colorful slave here so that she believes me to be her true master, and then we can depart." "Depart—for where?" The adept smiled. "Why, we are going where you wanted to go. To Masalur hub! There we'll watch me final demon- stration of My Lord Klittichom's power and then meet up with some more of my brethren, and then together we will reunite this woman with her lover—an all too brief and sad reunion, I fear. And with those two steps we will erase forever the last hope of the old order in this world." Out in the woods, Shadowcat had no luck in contacting Charley; she had shut him out entirely, even to the visual link, and now, with just she and Halagar on a single horse, it was clear that he could not hope to keep up with them. It was time to think it out. The imp was a minor demon charged and bound to Yobi, who had no true existence in this dimensional level without inhabiting a body. Yobi had placed him inside the cat when Charley had selected it, and since then the imp had main- tained himself through her blood energy while maintaining me cat body in the usual way. Trapped in the body, which he needed to have corporeal existence on this plane, he needed her blood to survive, to replace the type of energy that was part and parcel of the very atmosphere and makeup of the netherhell to which the imp was native. By preying upon locals he might sustain himself for some weeks, but the link was to Chariey and the energy