Complete Fiction (Jerry eBooks)

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Complete Fiction (Jerry eBooks) Page 56

by Robert Abernathy


  “We need a little rest out of the cold,” said Var. “And food, if you can spare it. We’re pursued.”

  “Yes, yes. You shall have what I can give you. Make yourselves comfortable, and in one minute. . . . Pursued, eh? A pity. I see the world is as bad as it was when I was last in it.”

  Hot food and drink were before them almost at once. The Watcher regarded them with compassion as their eyes brightened and some of the shadow of weariness lifted from them. “You have stolen your enemy’s daughter, no doubt, young man? Such things happened when I was young.”

  Warming to the old man now, Var sketched his and Neena’s history briefly. “We should have been safe among my people by now. And before very long, I’m sure, I would have performed some deed which Groz would recognize as a worthy exploit, and would thus have healed the feud between our families. But our flight was found out too soon. They cut us off and forced us into the mountains, and now they are only a few hours behind us.”

  “A pity, indeed. I would like to help you—but, you understand, I am the Mountain Watcher. I must be above feuds and families.”

  Var nodded somberly, thinking that an old recluse would in any case be able to do little for them against Groz and his violent kinsfolk.

  “And what will you do now?”

  Var grinned mirthlessly. “We haven’t much choice, since they’re overtaking us. I have only one idea left: we can go where Groz may fear to follow us.”

  “To the mountain, you mean.”

  “And into it, if need be.”

  The Watcher was broodingly silent; his eyes shifted to Neena, where she nestled by Var’s side. He asked, “And you—are you willing to follow your lover in this?”

  Neena returned his gaze without flinching; then she looked sidelong at Var, and her lips curled with a proud and tender mockery. “Follow? Why, I will lead, if his courage should fail him.”

  THE OLD MAN said, “It is no part of my duty to dissuade you from this thing. You are free persons. But I must be sure that you know what you are doing. That is the second part of the law the First Watcher made: to guard lest the unwary and the ignorant should bring harm on themselves and on all men.”

  “We know the stories,” Var said brusquely. “In the hollow heart of their mountain the Ryzgas sleep, as they chose to do when their world crumbled. But if they are wakened, the mountain will tremble, and the Ryzgas will come forth.”

  “Do you believe that?”

  “As one believes stories.”

  “It is true,” said the Watcher heavily. “In my youth I penetrated farther into the mountain than anyone before, farther even than did the First Watcher. I did not see the sleepers, nor will any man until they come again, but I met their sentries, the sentinel machines that guard them now as they have for two thousand years. When I had gone that far, the mountain began to shake, the force that is in the Earth rumbled below, and I returned in time.” Now for the first time Var sensed the power in the old man’s look, the power of four hundred years’ wisdom. Var stared down at his hands.

  “The Ryzgas also were men,” said the Watcher. “But they were such a race as the world has not seen before or since. There were tyrannies before the Ryzgas, there was lust for power, and atrocious cruelty; but such tyranny, power, and cruelty as theirs, had never been known. They ruled the Earth for four generations, and the Earth was too little for them. They laid the world waste, stripped it of metals and fuels and bored to its heart for energy, poisoned its seas and its air with the fume of their works, wrung its peoples dry for their labor . . . and in each of those four generations they launched a ship of space. They were great and evil as no other people has been, because they wanted the stars.

  “Because of them we must build with dreams instead of iron, and our only fire is that of the Sun, and even now, two thousand years later, the Earth is still slowly recovering from the pangs and poison of that age. If you turn up the sod in the plain where the wild herds graze, you will find numberless fragments of rusted or corroded metal, bits of glass and strange plastic substances, debris of artifacts still showing the marks of their shaping—the scattered wreckage of the things they made. And we—we too are a remnant, the descendants of the few out of all humanity that survived when the Ryzgas’ world went down in flame and thunder.

  “In the last generation of their power the Ryzgas knew by their science that the race of man would endure them no longer. They made ready their weapons, they mined the cities and the factories for destruction, making sure that their works and their knowledge would perish with them. Meanwhile they redoubled the yoke and the punishments, hastening the completion of the last of the starships.

  “From the memories that the old Watchers have left here, and from the memories of dead men that still echo in the air, I have gathered a picture of that world’s end. I will show it to you. . . .”

  VAR AND NEENA stared, unstirring, with wide vacant eyes, while the old man wove a dream around them, and the bright ice-cave faded from their vision, and they saw—

  Black starless night, a sky of rolling smoke above the greatest city that was ever built. Only the angry light of fires relieved the city’s darkness—that, and the blue-white lightning flashes that silhouetted the naked skeletons of buildings and were followed by thunder and a shaking of the earth.

  Along lightless streets, half choked with rubble and with the dead, poured a mad, hating horde. The recurrent flashes lit scarred faces, naked bodies blackened and maimed from the hell of the workshops where the Ryzgas’ might had been forged, eyes that stared white and half sightless from the glare of the furnaces, gnarled hands that now at long last clutched the weapons of the last rebellion—a rebellion without hope of new life on a world gutted and smoldering from the fulfilment of the Ryzgas’ dream, without slogans other than a cry for blood.

  Before them death waited around the citadel where the masters still fought. All round, from the lowest and most poisonous levels of the shattered city, the slaves swarmed up in their millions. And the lightning blazed, and the city howled and screamed and burned.

  Then, unbelievably, the thunder fell silent, and the silence swept outward like a wave, from ruined street to street. The mouths that had shouted their wrath were speechless, and the rage-blinded eyes were lifted in sudden awe. From the center, over the citadel, an immense white globe soared upward, rising swiftly without sound.

  They had never seen its like, but they knew. It was the last starship, and it was leaving.

  It poised motionless. For an instant the burning city lay mute; then the millions found voice. Some roared ferocious threats and curses; others cried desolately—wait!

  Then the whole city, the dark tumuli of its buildings and its leaping fires and tormented faces, and the black sky over it, seemed to twist and swim, like a scene under water when a great fish sweeps past, and the ship was gone.

  The stunned paralysis fell apart in fury. Flame towered over the citadel. The hordes ran and shrieked again toward the central inferno, and the city burned and burned. . . .

  VAR BLINKED dazedly in the shadowless glow of the ice-cave. His arm tightened about Neena till she gasped. He was momentarily uncertain that he and she were real and here, such had been the force of the dream, a vision of such scope and reality as Var had never seen—no, lived through—before. With deep respect now he gazed upon the bent old man who was the Mountain Watcher.

  “Some of the Ryzgas took flight to the stars, and some perished on Earth. But there was a group of them who believed that their time to rule would come again. These raised a black mountain from the Earth’s heart, and in hollows within it cast themselves into deathless sleep, their deathless and lifeless sentinels round them, to wait till someone dare arouse them, or until their chosen time—no one knows surely.

  “I have told you the story you know, and have shown you a glimpse of the old time, because I must make sure that you do not approach the mountain in ignorance. Our world is unwise and sometimes evil, full of arrogance
, folly, and passion that are in the nature of man. Yet it is a happy world, compared to that the Ryzgas made and will make again.”

  The Watcher eyed them speculatively. “Before all,” he said finally, “this is a world where you are free to risk wakening the old tyrants, if in your own judgment your great need renders the chance worth taking.”

  Neena pressed her face against Var’s shoulder, hiding her eyes. In her mind as it groped for his there was a confusion of horror and pity. Var looked grimly at the Watcher, and would have spoken; but the Watcher seemed suddenly a very long way off, and Var could no longer feel his own limbs, his face was a numb mask. Dully he heard the old man say, “You are tired. Best sleep until morning.”

  Var strove to cry out that there was no time, that Groz was near and that sleep was for infants and the aged, but his intention sank and drowned under wave upon wave of unconquerable languor. The bright cave swam and dissolved; his eyelids closed.

  VAR WOKE. Daylight glimmered through the ice of the cave mouth. He had been unconscious, helpless, for hours! At the thought of that, panic gripped him. He had not slept since childhood, and he had forgotten how it was.

  He came to his feet in one quick movement, realizing in that action that sleep had refreshed his mind and body—realizing also that a footstep had wakened him. Across the cave he faced a young man who watched him coolly with dark piercing eyes that were familiar though he did not know the face.

  Neena sat up and stifled a cry of fright. Var growled, “Who are you? Where’s the Watcher?”

  The other flashed white teeth in a smile. “I’m the Watcher,” he answered. “Often I become a youth at morning, and relax into age as the day passes. A foolish amusement, no doubt, but amusements are few here.”

  “You made us fall asleep. Groz will be on us—”

  “Groz and his people could not detect your thoughts as you slept. They were all night chasing elusive dreams on the high ridges, miles away.”

  Var passed a hand across bewildered eyes. Neena said softly, “Thank you, Watcher.”

  “Don’t thank me. I take no sides in your valley feuds. But now you are rested, your minds are clear. Do you still mean to go on to the Ryzga mountain?”

  Not looking at the Watcher, Var muttered unsteadily, “We have no alternative.”

  There was a liquid tinkling as the ice-curtain collapsed; the fresh breeze of morning swept into the cave. The youth beckoned to them, and they followed him outside.

  The glacial slope on which the cavern opened faced toward the mountain. It rose black and forbidding in the dawn as it had by sunset. To right and left of it, the grand cliffs, ocher and red, were lit splendidly by the morning sun, but the mountain of the Ryzgas drank in the light and gave nothing back.

  Below their feet the slope fell away into an opaque sea of fog, filling a mile-wide gorge. There was a sound of turbulent water, of a river dashed from rock to rock in its struggle toward the plain, but the curling fog hid everything.

  “You have an alternative,” said the Watcher crisply. The two took their eyes from the black mountain and gazed at him in sudden hope, but his face was unsmiling. “It is this. You, Var, can flee up the canyon to the north, by a way I will show you, disguising your thoughts and masking your presence as well as you are able, while the girl goes in the other direction, southward, without seeking to conceal herself. Your pursuers will be deceived and follow her, and by the time they catch her it will be too late for them to overtake Var.”

  That possibility had not occurred to them at all. Var and Neena looked at one another. Then by common consent they blended their minds into one.

  They thought, in the warm intimacy of unreserved understanding: “It would work: I-you would make the sacrifice of shame and mockery—yet these can be borne—that I-you might be saved from death—which is alone irreparable. . . . But to become I and you again—that cannot be borne.”

  They said in unison, “No. Not that.”

  The Watcher’s face did not change. He said gravely, “Very well. I will give you what knowledge I have that may help you when you enter the Ryzga mountain.”

  Quickly, he impressed on them what he had learned of the structure of the mountain and of its guardian machines. Var closed his eyes, a little dizzied by the rapid flood of detail.

  “You are ready to go,” said the Watcher. He spoke aloud, and his voice was cracked and harsh. Var opened his eyes in surprise, and saw that the Watcher had become again the hoary ancient of last night.

  Var felt a twinge of unfamiliar emotion; only by its echo in Neena’s mind did he recognize it as a sense of guilt. He said stiffly, “You don’t blame us?”

  “You have taken life in your own hands,” rasped the Watcher. “Who does that needs no blessing and feels no curse. Go!”

  THEY GROPED through the fog above blank abysses that hid the snarling river, crept hand in hand, sharing their strength, across unstable dream bridges from crag to crag. Groz and his pack, in their numbers, would cross the gorge more surely and swiftly. When Var and Neena set foot at last on the cindery slope of the great volcanic cone, they sensed that the pursuit already halved their lead.

  They stood high on the side of the Ryzga mountain, and gazed at the doorway. It was an opaque yet penetrable well of darkness, opening into the face of a lava cliff, closed only by an intangible curtain—so little had the Ryzgas feared those who might assail them in their sleep.

  Var sent his thoughts probing beyond the curtain, listened intently, head thrown back, to their echoes that returned. The tunnel beyond slanted steeply downward. Var’s hands moved, molding a radiant globe from the feeble sunshine that straggled through the fog-bank. With an abrupt motion he hurled it. The sun-globe vanished, as if the darkness had drunk it up, but though sight did not serve they both sensed that it had passed through to light up the depths beyond. For within the mountain something snapped suddenly alert—something alive yet not living, seeing yet blind. They felt light-sensitive cells tingle in response, felt electric currents sting along buried, long-idle circuits. . . .

  The two stood shivering together.

  The morning wind stirred, freshening, the fog lifted a little, and they heard a great voice crying, “There they are!”

  Var and Neena turned. Far out in the sea of fog, on a dream bridge that they could not see, stood Groz. He shook the staff he carried. It was too far to discern the rage that must contort his features, but the thought he hurled at them was a soundless bellow: “Young fools! I’ve caught you now!”

  Behind Groz the figures of his followers loomed up as striding shadows. Neena’s hand tightened on Var’s. Var sent a thought of defiance: “Go back! Or you’ll drive us to enter the mountain!”

  Groz seemed to hesitate. Then he swung his staff up like a weapon, and for the two on the mountainside the world turned upside down, the mountain’s black shoulder hung inverted above them and the dizzy gulf of sky was beneath. Var fought for footing with his balance gone, feeling Neena reel against him until, summoning all his strength, he broke the grip of the illusion and the world seemed to right itself. The mist billowed again and Groz was out of sight, but they could hear him exhorting his men to haste.

  Neena’s face was deadly pale and her lips trembled, but her urgent whisper said, “Come on!”

  Together they plunged into the curtain of darkness.

  AT VAR’S thought command Neena froze instantly. “Feel that!” he muttered, and she, listening, sensed it too: the infinitesimal trickle of currents behind what appeared to be a blank tunnel wall, a rising potential that seemed to whisper Ready . . . ready. . . .

  The sun-globe floated behind them, casting light before them down the featureless tunnel that sloped always toward the mountain’s heart. Var summoned it, and it drifted ahead, a dozen feet, a little more—

  Between wall and wall a blinding spindle of flame sprang into being, pulsed briefly with radiant energy that pained the eyes, and went out. The immaterial globe of light danced on before t
hem.

  “Forward, before the charge builds up again!” said Var. A few feet further on, they stumbled over a pile of charred bones. Someone else had made it only this far. It was farther than the Watcher had gone into these uncharted regions, and only the utmost alertness of mind and sense had saved them from death in traps like this. But as yet the way was not blocked. . . .

  Then they felt the mountain begin to tremble. A very faint and remote vibration at first, then an increasingly potent shuddering of the floor under their feet and the walls around them. Somewhere far below immense energies were stirring for the first time in centuries. The power that was in the Earth was rising; great wheels commenced to turn, the mechanical servitors of the Ryzgas woke one by one and began to make ready, while their masters yet slept, for the moment of rebirth that might be near at hand.

  From behind, up the tunnel, came a clear involuntary thought of dismay, then a directed thought, echoing and ghostly in the confinement of the dark burrow:

  “Stop!—before you go too far!”

  Var faced that way and thought coldly: “Only if you return and let us go free.”

  In the black reaches of the shaft his will groped for and locked with that of Groz, like the grip of two strong wrestlers. In that grip each knew with finality that the other’s stubbornness matched his own—that neither would yield, though the mountain above them and the world outside should crumble to ruin around them.

  “Follow us, then!”

  They plunged deeper into the mountain. And the shaking of the mountain increased with every step, its vibrations became sound, and its sound was like that of the terrible city which they had seen in the dream. Through the slow-rolling thunder of the hidden machines seemed to echo the death-cries of a billion slaves, the despair of all flesh and blood before their monstrous and inhuman power.

  Without warning, lights went on. Blinking in their glare, Var and Neena saw that fifty paces before them the way opened out into a great rounded room that was likewise ablaze with light. Cautiously they crept forward to the threshold of that chamber at the mountain’s heart.

 

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