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THEY WERE A MAGNIFICENT sight, those many cones pointing their
skyscraping noses upward and their spreading landing struts sinking into the soft earth!
Their white eternum metal gleamed in the sun, dazzling the spectator who happened to catch
their radiance full in the eyes. They were glorious, embodying all the vast wisdom and
skill of the greatest civilization of the Galaxy.
No wonder, thought Green, that I dance and howl while these
people look at me if I'm mad, and Amra, tears in her eyes, shakes her head and says
something to herself. What can they know of the meaning of those splendors?
What, indeed?
"Hey," shouted Green, "Hey! Here I am! An
Earthman! Maybe I look like one of these barbarians, with my long hair and bushy beard and
dirty skin, but I'm not. I'm Alan Green, an Earthman!"
Of course, they couldn't have heard him at that distance,
even if somebody had been standing beneath the spaceships to hear him. But he howled with
sheer exuberance, not worrying about wasting his breath and making himself hoarse.
Finally Amra interrupted him.
"What is the matter, Alan? Have you been bitten by the
Green Bird of Happiness, which sometimes flies over these plains? Or has the White Bird of
Terror nipped you while you slept last night upon the open deck?"
Green paused and looked steadily at her. Could he tell her
the truth, now he was so near salvation? It was not that he was worried about her or the
others stopping him from making contact with the expedition. Nothing could stop him now,
he was sure of that.
It was just that he hesitated to tell her that he would be
leaving her. The idea of hurting her was agony to him.
He started to speak in English, caught himself, and switched
to her language. "Those vessels--they have brought my people from across the space
between the stars. I came to this world in just such a vessel, a spaceroller, you might
say. My ship crashed, and I was forced to descend upon this--your--world. Then, I heard
that another ship had landed near Estorya and that King Raussmig had put the crew in
prison and was going to sacrifice them during the Festival of the Sun's Eye. I had little
time to get to Estorya before that happened, so I talked Miran into taking me. That was
why I left you, that..."
He trailed off because he did not understand the expression
upon her face. It was not the great hurt he'd expected, nor the wild fury he thought might
result from his explanation. If anything, she looked pitying.
"Why, Alan, whatever are you talking about?"
He pointed at the line of spaceships.
"They're from Terra, my home planet."
"I don't understand what you mean by your home
planet," she replied still pityingly. "But those are not spaceships. Those are
the towers built by the Estoryans a thousand years ago."
"Wha-what do you mean?"
Stunned, he looked at them again. If those weren't
star-ships he'd eat the yacht's canvas. Yes, and the wheels, too.
Under the swift wind, the 'roller swept closer and closer
while he stood behind Amra and thought that he'd break into little pieces if his tension
didn't find some release.
Finally it did find an outlet. Tears welled in his eyes, and
he choked. His breast seemed as if it would swell up and burst.
How cleverly the ancient builders had fashioned those
towers! The landing struts, the big fins, the long sweeping lines ending in the pointed
nose, all must have been built with a spaceship as a model. There was no escaping such a
conclusion; coincidence couldn't explain it.
Amra said, "Don't cry, Alan. Your people will think you
weak. Captains don't weep."
"This captain does," he replied, and he turned and
walked the length of the yacht to the stern and leaned over the taffrail where no one
could see him as he shook with sobs.
Presently he felt a hand upon his.
"Alan," she said gently. "Tell me the truth.
If those had been ships on which you could leave this world and travel into the skies,
would you have taken me along? Were you still thinking that I was not--not good enough for
you?"
"Let's not talk about it now," he said. "I
can't. Besides, there are too many people listening. Later, when everybody's asleep."
"All right, Alan."
She released his hand and left him alone, knowing that that
was what he wanted. Mentally, he thanked her for it, because he knew what it was costing
her to exercise restraint. At any other time, in a like situation, she would have thrown
something at him.
After he had calmed down somewhat he returned to the helm
and took over from Miran. From then on he was too busy to think much about his
disappointment. He had to report to the port officer and tell his story, which took hours,
for the officer called in the others to hear his amazing tale. And they questioned Miran
and Amra. Green anxiously listened to the merchant's account, fearful that the fellow
would disclose his suspicions that Green was not what he claimed to be. If Miran had any
such intentions, however, he was saving them for their arrival in Estorya itself.
The officers all agreed that they had heard many wonderful
stories from sailors but never anything to match this. They insisted upon giving a banquet
for Miran and Green. The result was that Green got a much-needed and desired bath, hair
cut and shave. But he also had to endure a long feast in which he had to stuff himself to
keep from offending his hosts and also was forced to enter a drinking contest with some of
the younger blades of the post. His Vigilante could handle enormous amounts of food and
alcohol, so that Green appeared to the soldiers to be something of a superman. At midnight
the last officer had dropped his head upon the table, dead drunk, and Green was able to
get up and go to his yacht.
Unfortunately he had to carry the fat merchant out on his
shoulders. Outside the banquet room he found a few rickshaw boys standing around a fire,
huddled together, waiting for a customer so drunk he wouldn't fear thieves or ghosts. He
gave one of them a coin and told him to deliver Miran to the yacht.
"What about yourself, honored sir? Don't you wish to
ride home, too?"
"Later," said Green, looking up past the fort and
at the hills behind it. "I intend to take a walk to clear my head."
Before the rickshaw men could question him further he
plunged into the darkness and began striding swiftly toward the highest peak upon the
island.
Two hours later he suddenly appeared in the
moonlight-drenched windbreak, walked past the many vessels tied down for the night and
crawled aboard his own yacht. A glance around the deck convinced him that everybody was
sleeping. He stepped softly past the prostrate forms and lay down by Amra. Face up, his
hands behind his head, he stared at the moon, a thoughtful expression upon his face.
Amra whispered, "Alan, I thought you were going to talk
to me tonight."
He stiffened but did not turn his head to look at her.
"I was, but the officers kept us up late. Didn't Miran
get here?"
"Yes, about five minutes before you did."
He rose on one elbow and looked searchingly at her. "What?"
"Is there anything strange about that?"
"Only that he was so drunk he'd passed out and was
snoring like a pig. The fat son of an izzot! He must have been faking! And he must
have..."
"Must have what?"
Green shrugged. "I don't know."
He couldn't tell her that Miran must have followed him up
into the hills. And that if he had the fellow must have seen some very disturbing things.
He stood up and gazed intently at the dark forms stretched
out here and there. Miran was sleeping upon a blanket behind the helm. Or was pretending
to do so.
Should he kill him? If Miran turned him in to the
authorities in Estorya...
He sat down again and fingered his dagger.
Amra must have guessed his thoughts, for she said, "Why
do you want to kill him?"
"You know why. Because he could have me burned."
She sucked her breath in with a hiss.
"Alan, it can't be true! You can't be a demon!"
To him the accusation was so ridiculous that he didn't
bother to answer. He should have known better, because he was well aware of how seriously
these people took such things. However, he was thinking so furiously about what he could
do to forestall Miran, that he completely forgot about her. Not until he heard her muffled
sobs did he come out of his reverie. Surprised, he said, "Don't worry. They're not
going to burn me."
"No, they're not," she said, choking on every
other word. "I don't care if you are a demon. I love you, and I'd go to hell
for you or with you!"
It took him a few seconds to understand that she did believe
he was a demon and that it made no difference to her. Or, rather, she was
determined to ignore the difference. What a sacrifice of her natural feelings she must
have made for him! She, like everybody upon this world, had been trained from childhood to
develop a fierce disgust and horror of devils and to be always upon her guard for them
when they appeared in human form. What an abyss she had to cross in order to conquer her
deep revulsion! In a way, her feat was greater than crossing the chasm between the stars.
"Amra," he said, deeply touched, and he bent down
to kiss her.
To his surprise she turned her face away.
"You know my lips don't belch fire, like the devils' in
the legends," he said, half-jestingly, half-pityingly. "Nor will I suck your
soul into my mouth."
"You have already done that," she said, still not
facing him.
"Oh, Amra!"
"Yes, you have! Else why should I follow you when you
deserted me to run away on the Bird? And why should I still want to follow you, to
be with you, even if those towers had turned out to be your what-do-you-call-'em? and you
had sailed away into the skies on them? Why would any decent human woman want to do that?
Tell me!"
She, too, rose on an elbow, her face now turned to him. He
scarcely recognized her, her features were so twisted and her skin was so livid.
"A hundred times during this voyage I've wished you
would die. Why? Because then I wouldn't have to think about the time to come when you
would leave this world forever, leave me forever! But when you were in danger, then
I almost died, too, and I knew I didn't really wish your death. It was just wounded pride
on my part. And I couldn't face the moment of your departure! Or the fact that you must
come from a superior race, a people more like gods than demons!
"Oh, I didn't know what to think! Whether you were a
devil, or a god, or just a man who was somehow more of a man than any I knew. I could
ignore such things as your wounds healing up faster than they should and scar tissues
disappearing. But I couldn't ignore your knowledge that Aga would be killed if she touched
that wall in the room on the cannibals' island. Nor the fact that your teeth grew back in
after they were knocked out during the escape from the island. Nor your too obvious
interest in those two demons held prisoner in Estorya. Or..."
"Not so loud, Amra," he interrupted. "You'll
wake everybody up."
"All right, all right. Better to keep quiet and pretend
to be stupid. But I can't, I'm not built that way. So... what are you going to do,
Alan?"
"Do? Do?" he repeated miserably. "Why,
somehow or other I'm going to free those two poor devils and escape in their
spaceship."
"Devils? Then they are demons!"
"Oh, no, that was just a manner of speaking. I said
poor devils because of what they must have gone through in that barbarous prison. They
might as well have been in the hands of the cannibals as at the mercy of the priests of
this wretched planet."
"Yes, that's what you really think of us, isn't it?
That we're all murderous, dirty and stinking savages."
"Oh, not all of you," he replied. "You're
not, Amra. By any standards, you're a wonderful woman."
"Then why can't..?"
She bit her lip and turned away from him. She would not
humble herself by asking him to take her with him. It was up to him to make the offer.
Green did not know what to say, though he knew that it was
necessary to say something at once.
He just could not make up his mind as to how she would fit
into Earth civilization.
How could he teach her that if somebody whom you didn't like
differed with you, you just didn't try to tear them apart? Or that if the person you hated
was too powerful for you to settle matters with personally you didn't resort to
professional assassins?
How could he teach her to love the same things he did, the
music and literature of his own culture? Her roots were in an entirely different culture.
She couldn't possibly understand what he understood, thrill to that which thrilled him,
catch the subtleties that he caught, see what lay behind the nuances of his civilization.
She'd be a stranger in a world not made for her.
Of course, he thought, there were plenty of women upon Earth
and her star-colonies who didn't share his culture, even if they'd been brought up in it.
But their case was simply a matter of taste. And they could still share a certain amount
with him, just because they'd breathed the same atmosphere and talked the same words as
he. Not that he would have cared to live with them, because he wouldn't. But Amra,
desirable in so many ways, just would not understand what was taking place around her or
in the minds of those she would have to live with.
He looked down at Amra. Her back was turned, and she seemed
to be breathing the easy breath of deep sleep. Though he doubted very much that she could
be sleeping, he decided to accept things as they looked. He wouldn't answer her now,
though he knew that when morning came her eyes would be asking the same question, even if
she didn't voice it.
At least, he thought, she'd been diverted from her curiosity
about what he'd been doing that night. That was something. He didn't want anybody to know
about that. Not until the time for action came!
Provided, that is, that he could do anything even then. He'd
discovered certain things tonight that could mean his salvation if he could utilize them.
That was the rub, as some poet or other had once said.
Wondering just who had originated that saying, he fell
asleep. Woolgathering had always been a favorite occupation of his when people left him
alone to do it. That was the rub. They didn't.
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