Maybe prayer doesn’t matter. Maybe there’s nothing beyond death but oblivion. I hope so! If I could only stop being, stop thinking, stop remembering.
I hope to all the gods of all the universes that death is the end. But I don’t know, and I’m afraid.
Afraid. Judas—Judas—Judas! I betrayed two worlds, and there couldn’t be a hell deeper than the one I live in now. And still I’m afraid.
Why? Why should I care what happens to me? I destroyed Astellar. I destroyed Shirina, whom I loved better than anything in Creation. I destroyed my friends, my comrades—and I have destroyed myself.
And you’re not worth it. Not all the human cattle that breed in the solar system were worth Astellar, and Shirina, and the things we did beyond space and time, together.
Why did I give Missy that locket?
Why did I have to meet Virgie, with her red hair?
Why did I remember? Why did I care? Why did I do what I did?
Why was I ever born?
The Moon That Vanished
1 Down to the Darkling Sea
The stranger was talking about him—the tall stranger who was a long way from his native uplands, who wore plain leather and did not belong in this swamp-coast village. He was asking questions, talking, watching.
David Heath knew that, in the same detached way in which he realized that he was in Kalruna’s dingy Palace of All Possible Delights, that he was very drunk but not nearly drunk enough, that he would never be drunk enough and that presently, when he passed out, he would be tossed over the back railing into the mud, where he might drown or sleep it off as he pleased.
Heath did not care. The dead and the mad do not care. He lay without moving on the native hide-frame cot, the leather mask covering the lower part of his face, and breathed the warm golden vapor that bubbled in a narghile-like bowl beside him. Breathed, and tried to sleep, and could not. He did not close his eyes. Only when he became unconscious would he do that.
There would be a moment he could not avoid, just before his drugged brain slipped over the edge into oblivion, when he would no longer be able to see anything but the haunted darkness of his own mind, and that moment would seem like all eternity. But afterward, for a few hours, he would find peace.
Until then he would watch, from his dark corner, the life that went on in the Palace of All Possible Delights.
Heath rolled his head slightly. By his shoulder, clinging with its hooked claws to the cot frame, a little bright-scaled dragon crouched and met his glance with jewel-red eyes in which there were peculiar sympathy and intelligence. Heath smiled and settled back. A nervous spasm shook him but the drug had relaxed him so that it was not severe and passed off quickly.
No one came near him except the emerald-skinned girl from the deep swamps who replenished his bowl. She was not human and therefore did not mind that he was David Heath. It was as though there were a wall around him beyond which no man stepped or looked.
Except, of course, the stranger.
Heath let his gaze wander. Past the long low bar where the common seamen lay on cushions of moss and skins, drinking the cheap fiery thul. Past the tables, where the captains and the mates sat, playing their endless and complicated dice games. Past the Nahali girl who danced naked in the torchlight, her body glimmering with tiny scales and as sinuous and silent in motion as the body of a snake.
The single huge room was open on three sides to the steaming night. It was there that Heath’s gaze went at last. Outside, to the darkness and the sea, because they had been his life and he loved them.
Darkness on Venus is not like the darkness of Earth or Mars. The planet is hungry for light and will not let it go. The face of Venus never sees the sun but even at night the hope and the memory of it are there, trapped in the eternal clouds.
The air is the color of indigo and it carries its own pale glow. Heath lay watching how the slow hot wind made drifts of light among the liha-trees, touched the muddy harbor beaches with a wavering gleam and blended into the restless phosphorescence of the Sea of Morning Opals. Half a mile south the river Omaz flowed silently down, still tainted with the reek of the Deep Swamps.
Sea and sky—the life of David Heath and his destruction.
The heavy vapor swirled in Heath’s brain. His breathing slowed and deepened. His lids grew heavy.
Heath closed his eyes.
An expression of excitement, of yearning, crossed his face, mingled with a vague unease. His muscles tensed. He began to whimper, very softly, the sound muffled by the leather mask.
The little dragon cocked its head and watched, still as a carven image.
Heath’s body, half naked in a native kilt, began to twitch, then to move in spasmodic jerks. The expression of unease deepened, changed gradually to one of pure horror. The cords in his throat stood out like wires as he tried to cry out and could not. Sweat gathered in great beads on his skin.
Suddenly the little dragon raised its wings and voiced a hissing scream.
Heath’s nightmare world rocked around him, riven with loud sounds. He was mad with fear, he was dying, vast striding shapes thronged toward him out of a shining mist. His body was shaken, cracking, frail bones bursting into powder, his heart tearing out of him, his brain a part of the mist, shining, burning. He tore the mask from his face and cried out a name, Ethne!, and sat up—and his eyes were wide open, blind and deep.
Somewhere, far off, he heard thunder. The thunder spoke. It called his name. A new face pushed in past the phantoms of his dream. It swelled and blotted out the others. The face of the stranger from the High Plateaus. He saw every line of it, painted in fire upon his brain.
The square jaw, hard mouth, nose curved like a falcon’s beak, the scars wealed, white against white skin, eyes like moonstones, only hot, bright—the long silver hair piled high in the intricate tribal knot and secured with a warrior’s golden chains.
Hands shook him, slapped his face. The little dragon went on screaming and flapping, tethered by a short thong to the head of Heath’s cot so that it could not tear out the eyes of the stranger.
Heath caught his breath in a long shuddering sob and sprang.
He would have killed the man who had robbed him of his little time of peace. He tried, in deadly silence, while the seamen and the masters and the mates and the dancing girls watched, not moving, sidelong out of their frightened, hateful eyes. But the Uplander was a big man, bigger than Heath in his best days had ever been. And presently Heath lay panting on the cot, a sick man, a man who was slowly dying and had no strength left.
The stranger spoke. “It is said that you found the Moonfire.”
Heath stared at him with his dazed, drugged eyes and did not answer.
“It is said that you are David Heath the Earthman, captain of the Ethne.”
Still Heath did not answer. The rusty torchlight flickered over him, painting highlight and shadow. He had always been a lean, wiry man. Now he was emaciated, the bones of his face showing terribly ridged and curved under the drawn skin. His black hair and unkempt beard were shot through with white.
The Uplander studied Heath deliberately, contemptuously. He said, “I think they lie.”
Heath laughed. It was not a nice laugh.
“Few men have ever reached the Moonfire,” the Venusian said. “They were the strong ones, the men without fear.”
After a long while Heath whispered, “They were fools.”
He was not speaking to the Uplander. He had forgotten him. His dark mad gaze was fixed on something only he could see.
“Their ships are rotting in the weed beds of the Upper Seas. The little dragons have picked their bones.” Heath’s voice was slow, harsh and toneless, wandering. “Beyond the Sea of Morning Opals, beyond the weeds and the Guardians, through the Dragon’s Throat and still beyond—I’ve seen it, rising out of the mists, out of the Ocean-That-Is-Not-Water.”
A tremor shook him, twisting the gaunt bones of his body. He lifted his head, like a man straining to
breathe, and the running torchlight brought his face clear of the shadows. In all the huge room there was not a sound, not a rustle, except for a small sharp gasp that ran through every mouth and then was silent.
“The gods know where they are now, the strong brave men who went through the Moonfire. The gods know what they are now. Not human if they live at all.”
He stopped. A deep slow shudder went through him. He dropped his head. “I was only in the fringe of it. Only a little way.”
In the utter quiet the Uplander laughed. He said, “I think you lie.”
Heath did not raise his head nor move.
The Venusian leaned over him, speaking loudly, so that even across the distance of drugs and madness the Earthman should hear.
“You’re like the others, the few who have come back. But they never lived a season out. They died or killed themselves. How long have you lived?”
Presently he grasped the Earthman’s shoulder and shook it roughly. “How long have you lived?” he shouted and the little dragon screamed, struggling against its thong.
Heath moaned. “Through all hell,” he whispered. “Forever.”
“Three seasons,” said the Venusian. “Three seasons, and part of a fourth.” He took his hand away from Heath and stepped back. “You never saw the Moonfire. You knew the custom, how the men who break the taboo must be treated until the punishment of the gods is finished.”
He kicked the bowl, breaking it, and the bubbling golden fluid spilled out across the floor in a pool of heady fragrance. “You wanted that, and you knew how to get it, for the rest of your sodden life.”
A low growl of anger rose in the Palace of All Possible Delights.
Heath’s blurred vision made out the squat fat bulk of Kalruna approaching. Even in the depths of his agony he laughed, weakly. For more than three seasons Kalruna had obeyed the traditional law. He had fed and made drunk the pariah who was sacred to the anger of the gods—the gods who guarded so jealously the secret of the Moonfire. Now Kalruna was full of doubt and very angry.
Heath began to laugh aloud. The effects of his uncompleted jag were making him reckless and hysterical. He sat up on the cot and laughed in their faces.
“I was only in the fringe,” he said. “I’m not a god. I’m not even a man any more. But I can show you if you want to be shown.”
He pulled himself to his feet, and as he did so, in a motion as automatic as breathing, he loosed the little dragon and set it on his naked shoulder. He stood swaying a moment and then began to walk out across the room, slowly, uncertainly, but with his head stubbornly erect. The crowd drew apart to make a path for him and he walked along it in the silence, clothed in his few sad rags of dignity, until he came to the railing and stopped.
“Put out the torches,” he said. “All but one.”
Kalruna said hesitantly, “There’s no need. I believe you.”
There was fear in the place now—fear, and fascination. Every man glanced sideways, looking for escape, but no one went away.
Heath said again, “Put out the torches.”
The tall stranger reached out and doused the nearest one in its bucket, and presently in all that vast room there was darkness, except for one torch far in the back.
Heath stood braced against the rail, staring out into the hot indigo night.
The mists rose thick from the Sea of Morning Opals. They crept up out of the mud, and breathed in clouds from the swamps. The slow wind pushed them in long rolling drifts, blue-white and glimmering against the darker night.
Heath looked hungrily into the mists. His head was thrown back, his whole body strained upward and presently he raised his arms in a gesture of terrible longing.
“Ethne,” he whispered. “Ethne.”
Almost imperceptibly, a change came over him. The weakness, the look of the sodden wreck, left him. He stood firm and straight, and the muscles rose coiled and beautiful on the long lean frame of his bones, alive with the tension of strength.
His face had altered even more. There was a look of power on it. The dark eyes burned with deep fires, glowing with a light that was more than human, until it seemed that his whole head was crowned with a strange nimbus.
For one short moment, the face of David Heath was the face of a god.
“Ethne,” he said.
And she came.
Out of the blue darkness, out of the mist, drifting tenuous and lovely toward the Earthman. Her body was made from the glowing air, the soft drops of the mist, shaped and colored by the force that was in Heath. She was young, not more than nineteen, with the rosy tint of Earth’s sun still in her cheeks, her eyes wide and bright as a child’s, her body slim with the sweet angularity of youth.
The first time I saw her, when she stepped down the loading ramp for her first look at Venus and the wind took her hair and played with it and she walked light and eager as a colt on a spring morning. Light and merry always, even walking to her death.
The shadowy figure smiled and held out her arms. Her face was the face of a woman who has found love and all the world along with it.
Closer and closer she drifted to Heath and the Earthman stretched out his hands to touch her.
And in one swift instant, she was gone.
Heath fell forward against the rail. He stayed there a long time. There was no god in him now, no strength. He was like a flame suddenly burned out and dead, the ashes collapsing upon themselves. His eyes were closed and tears ran out from under the lashes.
In the steaming darkness of the room no one moved.
Heath spoke once. “I couldn’t go far enough,” he said, “into the Moonfire.”
He dragged himself upright after a while and went toward the steps, supporting himself against the rail, feeling his way like a blind man. He went down the four steps of hewn logs and the mud of the path rose warm around his ankles. He passed between the rows of mud-and-wattle huts, a broken scarecrow of a man plodding through the night of an alien world.
He turned, down the side path that led to the anchorage. His feet slipped into the deeper mud at the side and he fell, face down. He tried once to get up, then lay still, already sinking into the black, rich ooze. The little dragon rode on his shoulder, pecking at him, screaming, but he did not hear.
He did not know it when the tall stranger from the High Plateaus picked him out of the mud a few seconds later, dragon and all, and carried him away, down to the darkling sea.
2 The Emerald Sail
A woman’s voice said, “Give me the cup.”
Heath felt his head being lifted, and then the black, stinging taste of Venusian coffee slid like liquid fire down his throat. He made his usual waking fight against fear and reality, gasped and opened his eyes.
He lay in his own bunk, in his own cabin, aboard the Ethne. Across from him, crouched on a carven chest, the tall Venusian sat, his head bowed under the low scarlet arch of the deck above. Beside Heath, looking down at him, was a woman.
It was still night. The mud that clung to Heath’s body was still wet. They must have worked hard, he thought, to bring him to.
The little dragon flopped down to its perch on Heath’s shoulder. He stroked its scaly neck and lay watching his visitors.
The man said, “Can you talk now?”
Heath shrugged. His eyes were on the woman. She was tall but not too tall, young but not too young. Her body was everything a woman’s body ought to be, of its type, which was wide-shouldered and leggy, and she had a fine free way of moving it. She wore a short tunic of undyed spider silk, which exactly matched the soft curling hair that fell down her back—a bright, true silver with little peacock glints of color in it.
Her face was one that no man would forget in a hurry. It was a face shaped warmly and generously for all the womanly things—passion and laughter and tenderness. But something had happened to it. Something had given it a bitter sulky look. There were resentment in it and deep anger and hardness—and yet, with all that, it was somehow a pathetically eag
er face with lost and frightened eyes.
Heath remembered vaguely a day when he would have liked to solve the riddle of that contradictory face. A day long ago, before Ethne came.
He said, speaking to both of them, “Who are you and what do you want with me?”
He looked now directly at the man and it was a look of sheer black hatred. “Didn’t you have enough fun with me at Kalruna’s?”
“I had to be sure of you,” the stranger said. “Sure that you had not lied about the Moonfire.”
He leaned forward, his eyes narrowed and piercing. He did not sit easily. His body was curved like a bent bow. In the light of the hanging lantern his scarred, handsome face showed a ripple of little muscles under the skin. A man in a hurry, Heath thought, a man with a sharp goad pricking his flanks.
“And what was that to you?” said Heath.
It was a foolish question. Already Heath knew what was coming. His whole being drew in upon itself, retreated.
The stranger did not answer directly. Instead he said, “You know the cult that calls itself guardian of the Mysteries of the Moon.”
“The oldest cult on Venus and one of the strongest. One of the strangest, too, on a moonless planet,” Heath said slowly to no one in particular. “The Moonfire is their symbol of godhead.”
The woman laughed without mirth. “Although,” she said, “they’ve never seen it.”
The stranger went on, “All Venus knows about you, David Heath. The word travels. The priests know too—the Children of the Moon. They have a special interest in you.”
Heath waited. He did not speak.
“You belong to the gods for their own vengeance,” the stranger said. “But the vengeance hasn’t come. Perhaps because you’re an Earthman and therefore less obedient to the gods of Venus. Anyway, the Children of the Moon are tired of waiting. The longer you live the more men may be tempted to blasphemy, the less faith there will be in the ability of the gods to punish men for their sins.” His voice had a biting edge of sarcasm. “So,” he finished, “the Children of the Moon are coming to see to it that you die.”
The Best of Leigh Brackett Page 14