ing just slightly on the lower pair. And, odder still, they had thin, prehensile tails that did not come out of the spine but out of the point between the vagina and the rectum, about a foot long and ending in a structure that looked like a... well, penis. They were the objects of a lot of attention, and it was good they were not self-conscious about things. Everyone had the same thought: so these were what the Changewind made of the Masalurians. . . . "Folks, these are Modar and Sobroa," Boolean told them. "Don't ask me which is which now, but you'll tell when talking to them- Modar used to be six-two and all male, and Sobroa was about this size and the best-looking female adept I ever came across. They were among the small staff who volunteered to maintain the shield and defenses and remain at their posts." "If our form shocks you," said one, in a strange, two- toned kind of voice, "think of what it was for us to suddenly find ourselves this.) hope you will get used to us, because we have not yet gotten used to us and we learn more every day-1 fear it will be years before we learn everything." "What matters," Boolean told them, "is that Sobroa was a trained healer and a midwife. She has no powers now, but she has delivered a lot of babies and she knows basic first aid and medicine. Modar was my librarian and something of a roman- tic and dreamer on the side. He found and mostly designed this place, and there's nothing about it he doesn't know.'* "Do you like it?" asked the other one, in a voice that was identical to the first yet somehow different in tone and accent. "It's beautiful." Sam responded. "Was this a kind of retreat?" Boolean nodded. "When we had to get away—me or any of the staff—we came here. There's no shipping to speak of WAR OF THE MAELSTROM 295 on this world, and the population is concentrated in the less tropical climate zones for reasons that would be obvious if you saw them. These islands are a thousand miles from anyone and are likely to stay that way, at least for a number of years. Food. water, all the basics almost fall into your lap. But since it's a Masalurian colony, I highly doubt if anybody would look for you here. Anyone here now is welcome to remain here. Charley, you, and Dorion, of course. Just re- member that you are the guests of Sobroa and Modar, they're not your servants. We will be leaving in the morning, and we won't be back until it's done." It was tempting, really tempting, but first Boday, then Crim, talked to Boolean. "Boday has not found her Susama to once more give her up. She will go, and if she can be of help to the last she will ; do so! And if, by miracle of miracles, she survives, she will • immortalize the greatest battle in the history of the cosmos!" , "Just not knowing would drive us nuts," Crim told him. r "Maybe we can do nothing, and maybe we're crazy, but I ;;.' want to be there at the end, and I feel inside that Kira does as well. We already almost died for this." "You both are welcome and may be useful," Boolean told ••••' them. "But, remember, if it's you or the enemy, you'll be • left to the fates. And if it turns out that you can do nothing, ^ then stay out of the way. Now get some sleep." >'. The goodbyes were tearful, with Charley doing a lot of ;[• hugging and kissing and crying and breaking up Sam and J Boday as well, but then it was time. They who would remain V watched the others climb on their enchanted saddles, rise up I;' into the burgeoning sunrise, take one last loop around, and J' then become tiny specks and vanish in the warm light of day. ? Dorion looked at Charley. "You wish you were going with them, don't you?" he asked her. She just smiled and didn't answer. "Well," he sighed, "so do I. May the gods who brought us all to this point be with them still." High in the air over the sparkling blue ocean, Sam felt her breakfast remaining lumped in her throat, but she looked ahead, not back. She hadn't slept much, but she felt very wide awake, very keyed up. My god, it's really happening, she told herself. Here we go! 12 The Citadel at the Edge of Chaos WHEN KUTTICHORN HAD dubbed himself the Horned Demon of the Snows he wasn't just doing it to make himself sound colorful. All her time in Akahlar, Sam had spent in the subtropical or tropical belt, until she'd almost forgotten there was any such thing as winter or that cold meant like the inside of a freezer, not merely a bit of a chill after an intense rain. Their journey northward had turned steadily if slowly colder by degrees as they passed each border or hub. Boolean was able to put in a perspective she could somewhat under- stand by asking her to think of Tubikosa as perhaps northern Australia or New Guinea; Masalur would be somewhere around northeast Africa, maybe Egypt, although with a lot better rainfall. Klittichom, however, had his domain in the equiva- lent of northern Sweden or perhaps even Iceland or Green- land, up near or on the Arctic Circle. It was hard for Sam to think of Akahlar as a planet like Earth—in fact, the planet Earth itself. It was too different, too exotic, without the land or sea or other areas to make any comparisons. The intense pull and hold of the Seat of Proba- bility, like a giant sun on a different and lower dimensional plane, held Akahlar where it was, and had also slowly, over the millennia, pulled the other Earths "nearest" to it down so that they intersected for short periods, one atop the other. The hubs and nulls were the only places where, because the worlds were round, the intersection did not take place, and, as such, they were the only parts of the real world of Akahlar that had been able to develop. Other than the increasing cold, the other thing Sam noticed 296 WAR OF THE MAELSTROM 297 as they travelled northward was that the intersection points, the parts of the colonies that overlapped Akahlar's reality, grew shorter and more irregular, often much longer on one side of a hub than another. Beyond the Arctic and Antarctic Circles, there was virtually no overlap, just ice and snow and occasional nulls to nowhere in patches here and there. It was for this reason, as well as its hostile environment and remote- ness, that Klittichom had chosen it. Almost no one lived there; just about no one wanted to go there. But in the region he had picked there were high volcanic ranges providing unexpected warmth among the glacial ice, and the means to tap geothermal heat and power. In a small valley surrounded by glacier-clad volcanic mountain peaks, he had built not just his home and laboratory but a small city, populated by those who were the outcasts of Akhbreed soci- ety. Here the political malcontents, the magicians with grudges , real or imagined, the disgraced soldiers and criminal classes, could gather with absolute immunity and safety and with a level of comfort and protection that a similar area like the Kudaan Wastes could not provide. Here resided the cream of the outcasts; not merely Akhbreed but colonials as well, picked up by Klittichom or his agents from their own worlds and brought here to help their master plans. Klittichom's great, dull-red castle, with its menorahlike eight towers, dominated the scene. It was not merely his own home and base, but the workplace for many of the people. Below it, on the valley floor, stretched the comfortable and hyper-insulated houses of the people—heated by geothermal steam which also provided their hot water and even their cooking medium—stretching out on either side of the central greenhouses wherein were raised the best food crops adequate for all their needs. Beyond, the massive herds of reindeer and other arctic animals provided the sources of meat as well as the work animals for the society. Just viewing it from the air, as frigid as it was, the region impressed the hell out of all of them. None, not even Boolean, had seen it before. There were six of them now; all were clad in layer after layer of heavy furs, gloves, you name it, to withstand the bitter cold, but while it was enough to keep them alive and out of harm's way from the elements, it didn't make any of them feel warm or comfortable. 298 Jack L. Chalker Yobi had joined them in the air over Hanahbak, a thousand miles to the southeast, her great lower bulk covered with a tremendous fur cloak. She looked as if she were just floating there, a being who was her own craft, and if she used a saddle or other conveyance they had not seen it. "Is that it? Is that where we have to go?" Sam asked, now used to being able to talk through muffled layers and masks and still have the same power of speech as if they were all sitting together comfortably around a fire inside a snug lodge. "No, I just wanted to take a look at what he'd built," Boolean replied. "I think we're all impressed, although it doesn't really surprise me. He never did anything halfway." "The scale of it surprises and shocks me," Yobi put in. "I had this picture of a frigid castle redoubt in the middle of wastes, not a somewhat grand city. Didn't you say the fellow was from a tropical place?" "He was, but humans are very adaptable," the sorcerer responded. "He could never have accomplished all this in the south, not with all the people and politics and the Guild snooping about. Besides, look at the steam slowly rising from the ground all around. There's plenty of heat available here for almost anything you need. I bet inside those places, even the castle, it's as warm as Masalur. And if you look at the way the heat shimmers go, the odds are you can get from almost anyplace to anyplace using heated underground tun- nels there. Unless you're into skiing or herding reindeer, you might never have to go outside or feel the cold." "Then where is the man himself?" Crim asked. "Not far, but better hidden and independent," Boolean told him. "In fact, I think we'll find a reasonable place to make camp here, and then send you and Boday to check it out for us." "Why not everybody?" Sam asked him. "I think he knows we're near, or coming," the sorcerer responded, "but I don't want to give him any free shots at us. He has monitoring spells all over here to detect people like us, but he feels he has nothing to fear from ordinary, nonmagical people. Not that there won't be some guards, so care will have to be taken, but to present the three of us to him within sight of his headquarters would be to draw targets 299 WAR OF THE MAELSTROM on ourselves and give him a few free shots. No, let's keep him guessing as to our strength and location and true nature." "You don't think he'll panic just by the awareness that we are close?" Yobi asked, concerned. "Not so long as the Storm Princess knows and feels the presence of the child half a hemisphere away, no. He seeks godlike powers, but there is no way he can have godlike omnipotence. I think our little trick with the switch will fool him because it's too subtle and too unprecedented. I know the way his mind works as well as anyone, at least on the surface level." They set up a camp back out of the weather in an old lava tube. The outside was freezing and nasty, but heat radiated from the walls within the tube, creating a frozen waterfall where it broke to the outside and some level of comfort within. Crim surveyed the tube. "Comfortable, but I feel very vulnerable in here," he commented. "If anybody discovers we're here, they could just magically turn the lava back on, or even give us a wall of water, and we'd be through." "That kind of magic is always telegraphed," Yobi assured him. "We have enough to prevent that sort of thing, so relax. More important is the two of you and whether you can really handle those flying saddles without one or another of us propping you up. You'll have to go in low and be very unobtrusive." "Will he not see the spell that makes the saddles fly?" Boday asked her worriedly. "Probably not. It's too minor a spell and there are probably thousands around a place like that. It would be drowned out by the weight of all those already laid on, much as a whisper is drowned by the roar of a crowd. Take care, though. If any of the sentinels that are almost certain to be guarding the place spot you, then all bets are off." Crim looked a bit nervous. "You sure we can do this and be back before sunset? I don't want Kira to come out under these conditions." "1 fear we will be deprived of poor Kira's company, but for perhaps an hour or so, if that," Boolean told him. "It is late spring here and we're close to the Arctic Circle if not slightly past it. If we are, we won't meet her at all, for this jack L. Chalker 300 time of year the sun does not set there. Were we in the Antarctic, we wouldn't see you. Cheer up, my friends. We may be in the jaws of death, but at least for now we are absolutely safe from vampires." Crim and Boday did a bit of practice flying around the peaks and valleys near the cave and both decided that they were pretty confident. "It'll take you about a half hour to get there," Boolean told them, "and spend only as much time as you absolutely need to get the feel of the place, its tangible defenses, looks, and me like. If you are not back here within three hours we will have to assume that you were seen, possibly captured, and we will go immediately. Understand? Boday. 1*11 expect you to be able to sketch it when we get back, with Crim's memory as a check. Temporarily, you'll have to be a realist. Accuracy counts. The odds are, when we go in, we'll only get the one shot. Either we go alt the way, or that's it." She shrugged. "Boday is great at all art. She will do what you wish and better that you dream!" Sam hugged her. "Take care, now. If we're all gonna die in this, don't you be the first." Boday laughed. "The Gods of Chaos have woven our destinies too tightly! Boday has suffered too much to die now before she achieves immortality through the works she has yet