The street, indifferently lighted here, with the moons casting enough light to see sufficiently well not to trip over the first corpse on the doorstep, showed blank and empty. The link slaves had run. The guards had fought among themselves. I may be cynical, but I felt sorrow over that.
Fully prepared to make my own opening, Chido saved me the gambit.
“Warm work, dom,” he said in his shrill voice.
“Aye,” said this man, swirling his black cape about him, “for a tavern fight.”
“Do you hate us so much then?” Rees spoke heavily.
“It were better you did not ask that question, Numim.”
Walking up, I said, “Do you have a bed for the night, dom?”
“No. I am but newly arrived.”
I could believe that.
“I have rooms,” I said. “You would be welcome.”
Rees stared at me. I hated to hurt him, but I fancied he would remember our words in the voller. No explanation was possible.
The man from the Savanti hesitated only a moment, then said, “I am grateful, dom.”
“As for me, I am for home,” said Rees.
“And I,” piped up Chido. “I will walk with you.”
Rees did not say good night or Remberee. I was grateful for that. What I was about to do would betray Hamun ham Farthytu, and I had spent a lot of time and pain building up that young man.
When Rees and Chido had gone we walked the other way. We had gone perhaps six paces when I heard the shouts and I yelled, “Run!”
He ran without question. The Savanti train well.
We eluded the watch and the patrols and so walked to my old inn, the Kyr Nath and the Fifi. Absences in time of war are a common occurrence, and Nulty had seen to payment for the rooms. How was he faring in Paline Valley? We went up to my room and I closed the door. The man from the Savanti unclasped his cape and threw it swirling on the bed. I looked at him.
He smiled. He was apim, of course, with thick fair hair and a square-set face, exceedingly grim as to the set of the jaw. I liked the brightness of his eye and the laugh lines at the corners of his mouth. Strongly built, as, of course, he must be, he looked like what he was, a powerful, professional fighting man.
I said, “Happy Swinging. And how are things in Aphrasöe?”
Before I had even finished, that superb, deadly Savanti blade had flashed from the scabbard and the point pricked my throat.
“Speak, rast! What do you know of Aphrasöe? Speak quickly and speak the truth — or you are a dead man!”
Of a Savapim and the Savanti
Could I take this man? A fighting man trained by the Savanti, in as ferocious form as I had seen a man on a hair-trigger of violence? And, moreover, a man armed with that Savanti sword which is, I truly believe, the most perfect sword on the face of Kregen, not excepting the fantastic Krozair longsword? Could I take him?
“Hurry, rast! My patience wears thin! Speak up!”
I jerked my head back. I saw — a mere glance in passing — a drop of my blood on the gleaming blade he had so thoroughly cleaned on dead men’s clothes.
He took that as a signal of treachery and drove in instantly.
I had only a rapier and main-gauche. There was scarcely time to explain to him that I was not in the habit of speaking up with a sword at my throat — not, that is, unless absolutely no other course lay open. The other course here was starkly plain. I could get my fool self killed.
I skipped back and the main-gauche came out of its scabbard seemingly of its own volition; his blade screeched against it. The following rapier thrust — the rapier had leaped into my hand, out of the scabbard, and pointed at him as though alive — passed through thin air. He danced away.
“You fight well. But I think you are a dead man.”
Could I possibly face a man armed with a Savanti sword? I had never done so before except in practice in Aphrasöe, and that, clearly, was a different kettle of fish.
“Damn!” I burst out. “You’re a bunch of rogues in Aphrasöe these days! Can’t a fellow wish you Happy Swinging without a sword at his throat?”
“Tell me what you know of Aphrasöe and I will not slay you.”
“And if you don’t speak civilly I’ll have to teach you a lesson! Do you know Maspero?”
“Yes.” The brand gleamed in the lamplight as he let it drop a fraction.
“He was my tutor.”
“You
are a Savapim?”
I had never heard the word before. It must mean a man who was an agent of the Savanti. Boldly, then, lying in my teeth, I said, “Of course, you damned great onker! What is your name?”
“Oh, no. You tell me your name, onker.”
Well, at least we were past the sword stage and to the probably more fruitful arguing stage. I did not laugh. I do not laugh easily outside the company of Delia, my children, and a few close friends, as you know.
Anyway, what confounded name should I give? The old and always amusing question popped up again. The Savanti could not have realized I was in the tavern when they had dispatched this man — one of their Savapims — to sort out the quarrel. Unlike the Star Lords, who dumped me down in the middle of a problem of life and death stark naked and weaponless, the Savanti at least equipped their agents with clothes and weapons. The Star Lords are altogether a starker group, starker, darker, and far more deadly.
This fellow could always make a few inquiries here and quickly discover I was the Amak of Paline Valley. Always assuming, of course, that I let him live that long.
So I said: “I am the Amak Hamun ham Farthytu.”
“An Amak! You must have gone through Aphrasöe before my time.”
“You get a thousand years,” I said meaningfully.
“Yes. I am Wolfgang . . .” Then he paused. After a moment he went on, “Wolfgang. That is enough. And where is your sword?”
“Wolfgang?” I said. “My sword is in another place.” And, by Zair, that was true!
“You would not understand Wolfgang. The name is strange to you, I have no doubt.”
If he was about to launch into a garbled explanation that he came from one of the lights in the sky and a place there called Germany, he would be badly trained. He did not.
“Very strange.” I prodded. “Where is your home, then, before you came to Aphrasöe down the River Aph?”
This seemed to reassure him. He did not enlighten me apart from a vague reference to a “distant place.”
“I am from Hamal,” I said. “And my labors are here. You?”
“I cannot understand why you were not used. I am tired lately, I have been very busy.” He grumbled on about the missions which had occupied him while he put the sword up and I found some wine — reasonable stuff Nulty had left, a middling Stuvan — and we drank. The tension lessened. He explained that he had been in so many fights lately that he’d upset his tutor, a man he called Harding, because of the great quantity of deaths he had caused. I wondered, as you may imagine.
“My training taught me that life is sacred.”
“Of course! That is just the point! It is a dispute that cannot be resolved. Kregen must be civilized, as the Savanti decree.” He waxed excited and perhaps the wine did the trick.
‘The doves watch well.” He sat on my bed cradling the wine glass. I kept it hospitably filled. He was talking about the white Savanti dove that had flown over me many times on Kregen to spy on me and report back to the Savanti. “There are so many diffs on this terrible world . . .”
I prodded, for I had not completed the course in Aphrasöe.
“The halflings live here as well as we apims.”
“But have they always? I am considered high in the Savapim. This mission was given to me as an emergency, at the last minute. I should be in Aphrasöe now, happily swinging. But as for the diffs, of course there are many of them, how could it be otherwise? This is not Earth—” He checked himself, put the glass down, and added, “My home.”
“Earth?” I said. “Is that in Havilfar?”
“You would not understand.”
“Maybe not. Tell me about the latest reports in Aphrasöe concerning the diff question. The problem is acute.”
We talked for a while about Aphrasöe, that marvelous city in the lake of the River Aph, and of the pool of baptism in the River Zelph where a dip will confer a thousand years of life, tremendous resistance to disease, and rapid recovery from wounds. I fully demonstrated that I knew what I was talking about, and his guard slipped; he drank a little more. Of course there were many different kinds of halflings, beast-men, men-beasts, on this world. It was an alien world. Would you expect to find men exactly the same as Madison Avenue advertising executives if you penetrated the jungles of Central America, the ice floes of the north? Some idiot might cavil at so many different kinds of men; the variety of nature is so enormous that it is this Earth with only one kind of dominant man that is strange and odd. Here on Kregen one kind of man had not obtained an ascendancy over all the others. And, too, this Wolfgang also believed that many of the species and races had come from other planets, as we had done ourselves, although I did not tell him that.
In an alien setting only the most stupid of blinkered idiots could say that they would not expect to see many different kinds of life. Differences in numbers of arms and legs, in facial and skull structures, are the most common ways in which diffs vary from apims, but they are only the outward show. The most significant differences are those of psychology rather than physiology, of racial outlooks rather than morphology. At least this Wolfgang was not such an onker as to be eternally surprised at the multifarious faces of nature.
And suppose the Star Lords
had
scoured the galaxy to find different forms of life and placed them all here arbitrarily? What was their purpose? Why did they use me, Dray Prescot? One day, I promised myself, one day I’d find out.
Wouldn’t a Pachak, with his tail hand, think an apim a most crippled mortal? Wouldn’t a Djang, with his four powerful arms, think an apim practically armless? Who is to say who differs from whom?
The closed mind is always the most frightening horror in any world.
“Anyway,” said this Savapim, who came from Germany on a spot of dirt circling a spot of light all but invisible from Kregen, “I am tired and it is late. Tomorrow I must continue my task. I envy you resident Savapims.” He glanced at me sharply. “Although, if you are doing your job properly, why was I needed here at all?”
“There are many fresh diffs in Ruathytu just now,” I said diplomatically.
He could sleep in Nulty’s room. I saw to his wants, and he stretched out. “As I say,” he said, yawning, “we now believe that the distribution of diffs and flora and fauna has clearly been carried out deliberately. And with a lot of snarl-ups. Has it been done to plan or arbitrarily? Has the initial distribution been completed, or is it a continuous process? And how long ago was it begun?” He yawned again. “And is evolution taking care of those species placed down in locales not suitable for them?”
I nodded. “I think that must be so.”
Wolfgang licked his lips as I went to the door.
“It’s all a puzzle.” His voice softened and slurred. “Thank you for your hospitality. I welcome it. Kregen is a world very hard on the stranger at times. I have found many strange peoples in many places and I have already assumed they must have been placed here; at least it is a strong possibility, and only an idiot would comment adversely on the continuing occurrence of new peoples on a new world.”
I did not point out to him that he was talking to a man who said he came from Havilfar and therefore to whom Kregen would hardly be a new world. As I closed the door he said through a huge and final yawn, “So who the devil
is
putting these damned diffs here on Kregen, anyway?”
And that made me, Dray Prescot, Lord of Strombor and Krozair of Zy, smile. It was a hard, cynical smile. I thought the Star Lords controlled Kregen. I could be wrong, but at least I knew a little more than this Savapim.
The gaining of my information had been extraordinarily painful, that I will admit.
When I awoke in the morning and looked into Nulty’s room, Wolfgang the Savapim was gone.
Pinned by one of my daggers to the wall was a note. I tore it down. The paper — ah, the paper! Savanti paper! Of first quality, beautiful, crisp, white. I had not asked Wolfgang about the Savanti paper and its important function. Now it was too late. The note was brief.
“Lahal Amak: Thank you for the wine and the bed. We will go hunting the graint together, on the plains.”
It was written in that beautiful flowing Kregan script, very pure, and instead of the usual
Remberee
was written
Happy Swinging.
“Happy Swinging to you, too,” I said, and burned the note.
How Rees and Chido assisted the Star Lords
Chido said, “Y’know, old feller, Wees ain’t half cut up about last night.”
“Did he roar?”
“By Krun! He roared like a chunkrah with hoofache!”
“Let us go and take the Baths of the Nine.”
So we went to the best establishment in the Sacred Quarter. The Baths of the Nine are extraordinarily decadent and luxurious in Ruathytu, as you may imagine, and we steamed and soaked. We found Rees moodily stretched on a slab with a Numim girl carefully brushing his glorious golden fur.
“Huh,” he said when he saw us. “You apims and your naked skins! Oil and strigils! Barbarous!”
So we imagined he was back to form, which was a relief.
“Anyway, Hamun!” he bellowed. “Who was that Havil-forsaken man?”
“I have no idea,” I said. “He cleared off quickly this morning before I was up. He didn’t speak much.”
“I’ll bet he didn’t.”
We stretched out next to Rees and two Fristle fifis started in on us with oils, unguents, and scrapers. I leaned my head close to Rees in the warm scented room.
Now nine is one of the most sacred numbers on Kregen. I was to perform wonders with the aid of a magic square based on nine, but that remains to be told. So I leaned toward Rees and I said, “The Nine have been asking questions.”
He looked at me blankly.
I said, “Do you know what I’m talking about?”
“No, by Krun! I do not.”