A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows

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A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows Page 9

by Anderson, Poul


  made forest. Wings cruised on high, maybe upbearing brains that thought,

  maybe simple beasts of prey. Faint through the hull sounded a yowl of

  wind.

  "Very well," Kossara said grimly. "I'll ask the question you want me to

  ask. Why are we here? Aren't you supposed to report in at Thursday

  Landing?"

  "I exercised a special dispensation I have," Flandry said. "The

  Residency doesn't yet know we've come. In fact, unless my right hand has

  lost its cunning, nobody does."

  At least I get a human startlement out of her. He liked seeing

  expressions cross her face, like clouds and sunbeams on a gusty spring

  day. "You see," he explained, "if subversive activities are going on,

  there's bound to be a spy or two around Imperial headquarters. News of

  your return would be just about impossible to suppress. And since you're

  in the custody of a Naval officer, it'd alarm the outfit we're after.

  "Whereas, if you suddenly reappear by yourself, right in this hotspot,

  you'll surprise them. They won't have time to get suspicious, I trust.

  They'll make you welcome--"

  "Why should they?" Kossara interrupted. "They'll wonder how I got back."

  "Ah, no. Because they won't know you were ever gone."

  She stared. Flandry explained: "Your companions died. If rebel observers

  learned that you lived, they learned nothing else. No matter how

  idiotically my colleagues behaved toward you, I'm sure they followed

  doctrine and let out no further information. You vanished into their

  building, and that was that. You were brought from there to the

  spaceship in a sealed vehicle, weren't you? ... Yes, I knew it ... The

  Corpsmen had no reason to announce you'd been condemned and deported,

  therefore they did not.

  "Accordingly, the rest of the gang--human if any are left on Diomedes,

  and most certainly a lot of natives--have no reason to suppose you

  haven't just been held incommunicado. In fact, that would be a much more

  logical thing to do than shipping you off to Terra for purchase by any

  blabbermouth."

  She frowned, less in dislike of him than from being caught up,

  willy-nilly, by the intellectual problem which his planned deception

  presented. "But wasn't it a special team that caught and, and processed

  me? They may well have left the planet by now."

  "If so, you can say they gave you in charge of the Intelligence agents

  stationed here semi-permanently. In fact, that's the safest thing for

  you to maintain in any event, and quite plausible. We'll work out a

  detailed story for you. I have an outline already, subject to your

  criticism. You wheedled a measure of freedom for yourself. That's

  plausible too, if you don't mind pretending you became the mistress of a

  bored, lonely commander. At last you managed to steal an aircar. I can

  supply that; we have two in the hold, one a standard civilian

  convertible we can set for Diomedean conditions. You fled back here,

  having enough memories left to know this is where your chances are best

  of being found by your organization."

  She tensed again, and stretched the words out: "What will you do

  meanwhile?"

  Flandry shrugged. "Not having had your preventive-medical treatment, I'm

  limited in my scope. Let's consult. Tentatively, I've considered making

  an appearance in a persona I've used before, a harmlessly mad

  Cosmenosist missionary prospecting for customers on yet another globe.

  However, I may do best to stay put aboard ship, following your

  adventures till the time looks ripe for whatever sort of action seems

  indicated."

  Her starkness deepened. "How will you keep track of me?"

  From his pocket Flandry took a ring. On its gold band sparkled what

  resembled a sapphire. "Wear this. If anybody asks, say you got it from

  your jailer-lover. It's actually a portable transmitter, same as your

  bracelet was on Terra but with its own power source."

  "That little bit of a thing?" She sounded incredulous. "Needing no

  electronic network around? Reaching beyond line-of-sight? And not

  detectable by those I spy on?"

  Flandry nodded. "It has all those admirable qualities."

  "I can't believe that."

  "I'm not at liberty to describe the principle. Anyway, nobody ever told

  me. I've indulged in idle speculations about modulated neutrino

  emission, but they're doubtless wildly wrong. What I do know is that the

  thing works." Flandry paused. "Kossara, I'm sorry, but under any

  circumstances ... before I can release you, before I can even land you

  again on a prime world like Terra, you'll have to have wiped from your

  memory the fact that such gadgets exist. The job will be painless and

  very carefully done."

  He held out the ring. She half reached for it, withdrew her hand,

  flickered her glance about till it came to rest on his, and asked most

  softly: "Why do you think I'll help you?"

  "To earn your liberty," he answered. Each sentence wrenched at him.

  "Defect, and you're outlaw. What chance would you have of getting home?

  The orbital watch, the surface hunt would be doubled. If you weren't

  caught, you'd starve to death after you used up your human-type food.

  "And consider Dennitza. Your kin, your friends, small children in the

  millions, the past and present and future of your whole world. Should

  they be set at stake, in an era of planet-smasher weapons, for a

  political point at best, the vainglory of a few aristocrats at worst?

  You know better, Kossara."

  She stood still for a long while before she took the ring from him and

  put it on her bridal finger.

  "Given the support of a dense atmosphere," said a text, "the evolution

  of large flying organisms was profuse. At last a particular species

  became fully intelligent.

  "Typical of higher animals on Diomedes, it was migratory. Homeothermic,

  bisexual, viviparous, it originally followed the same reproductive

  pattern as its less developed cousins, and in most cultures still does.

  In fall a flock moves to the tropics, where it spends the winter. The

  exertion during so long a flight causes hormonal changes which stimulate

  the gonads. Upon arrival, there is an orgy of mating. In spring the

  flock returns home. Females give birth shortly before the next

  migration, and infants are carried by their parents. Mothers lactate

  like Terran mammals, and while they do, will not get pregnant. In their

  second year the young can fly independently, they have been weaned,

  their mothers are again ready to breed.

  "This round formed the basis of a civilization centered on the islands

  around the Sea of Achan. The natives built towns, which they left every

  fall and reentered every spring. Here they carried on sedentary

  occupations, stoneworking, ceramics, carpentry, a limited amount of

  agriculture. The real foundation of their economy was, however, herding

  and hunting. Except for necessary spurts of activity, in their homelands

  they were an easygoing folk, indolent, artistic, ceremonious,

  matrilineal--since paternity was never certain--and loosely organized

  into what they called the
Great Flock of Lannach.

  "But elsewhere a different practice developed. Dwelling on large

  oceangoing rafts, fishers and seaweed harvesters, the Fleet of Drak'ho

  ceased migrating. Oars, sails, nets, windlasses, construction and

  maintenance work kept the body constantly exercised; year-round

  sexuality, season-free reproduction, was a direct consequence.

  Patriarchal monogamy ensued. The distances traveled annually were much

  less than for the Flock, and home was always nearby. It was possible to

  accumulate heavy paraphernalia, stores, machines, books. While

  civilization thus became more wealthy and complex than anywhere ashore,

  the old democratic organization gave way to authoritarian aristocracy.

  "Histories roughly parallel to these have taken place elsewhere on the

  globe. But Lannach and Drak'ho remain the most advanced, populous,

  materially well-off representatives of these two strongly contrasted

  life-orderings. When they first made contact, they regarded each other

  with mutual horror. A measure of tolerance and cooperation evolved,

  encouraged by offplanet traders who naturally preferred peaceful

  conditions. Yet rivalry persisted, sporadically flaring into war, and of

  late has gained new dimensions.

  "At the heart of the dilemma is this: that Lannachska culture cannot

  assimilate high-energy technology, in any important measure, and

  survive.

  "The Drak'ho people have their difficulties, but no impossible choices.

  Few of them today are sailors. However, fixed abodes ashore are not

  altogether different from houses on rafts aforetime. Regular hours of

  work are a tradition, labor is still considered honorable, mechanical

  skills and a generally technophilic attitude are in the social

  atmosphere which members inhale from birth. Though machinery has lifted

  off most Drak'hoans the toil that once gave them a humanlike libido,

  they maintain it by systematic exercise (or, in increasingly many cases,

  by drugs), since the nuclear family continues to be the building block

  of their civilization.

  "As producers, merchants, engineers, industrialists, even occasional

  spacefarers, they flourish, and are on the whole well content.

  "But the cosmos of Lannach is crumbling. Either the Great Flock must

  remain primitive, poor, powerless, prey to storm and famine, pirates and

  pestilence, or it must modernize--with all that that implies, including

  earning the cost of the capital goods required. How shall a folk do this

  who spend half their lives migrating, mating, or living off nature's

  summertime bounty? Yet not only is their whole polity founded upon that

  immemorial cycle. Religion, morality, tradition, identity itself are.

  Imagine a group of humans, long resident in an unchanged part of Terra,

  devout churchgoers, for whom the price of progress was that they destroy

  every relic of the past, embrace atheism, and become homosexuals who

  reproduce by ectogenesis. For many if not all Lannachska, the situation

  is nearly that extreme.

  "In endless variations around the planet, the same dream is being

  played. But precisely because the Great Flock has changed more than

  other nations of its kind, it feels the hurt most keenly, is most

  divided against itself and embittered vat the outside universe.

  "No wonder if revolutionary solutions are sought. Economic, social,

  spiritual secession, a return to the ways of the ancestors; shouts of

  protest against 'discrimination,' demands for 'justice,' help, subsidy,

  special consideration of every kind; political secession, no more taxes

  to the planetary peace authority or the Imperium; seizure of power over

  the whole sphere, establishment of a sovereign autarky--these are among

  the less unreasonable ideas afloat.

  "There is also Alatanism. The Ythrians, not terribly far away as

  interstellar distances go, have wings. They should sympathize with their

  fellow flyers on Diomedes more than any biped ever can. They have their

  Domain, free alike of Empire and Roidhunate, equally foreign to both.

  Might it not, are its duty and destiny not to welcome Diomedes in?

  "The fact that few Ythrian leaders have even heard of Diomedes, and none

  show the least interest in crusading, is ignored. Mystiques seldom

  respond to facts. They are instruments which can be played on ... "

  Twice had the sun come from the mountains and returned behind them.

  "Goodbye, then," Kossara said.

  Flandry could find no better words than "Goodbye. Good luck," hoarse out

  of the grip upon his gullet.

  She regarded him for a moment, in the entryroom where they stood. "I do

  believe you mean that," she whispered.

  Abruptly she kissed him, a brief brush of lips which exploded in his

  heart. She drew back before he could respond. During another instant she

  poised, upon her face a look of bewilderment at her own action.

  Turning, she twisted the handle on the inner airlock valve. He took a

  following step. "No," she said. "You can't live out there, remember?"

  Her body prepared before she left Dennitza, she closed the portal on

  him. He stopped where he was. Pumps chugged until gauges told him the

  chamber beyond was now full of Diomedean air.

  The outer valve opened. He bent over a viewscreen. Kossara's tiny image

  stepped forth onto the mountainside. A car awaited her. She bounded into

  it and shut its door. A minute later, it rose.

  Flandry sought the control cabin, where were the terminals of his most

  powerful and sensitive devices. The car had vanished above clouds.

  "Pip-ho, Chives," he said tonelessly. A hatch swung wide. His Number Two

  atmospheric vehicle glided from the hold. It looked little different

  from the first, its engine, weapons, and special equipment being

  concealed in the teardrop fuselage. It disappeared more slowly, for the

  Shalmuan pilot wanted to stay unseen by the woman whom he stalked. But

  at last Flandry sat alone.

  She promised she'd help me. What an inexperienced liar she is.

  He felt no surprise when, after a few minutes, Chives' voice jumped at

  him: "Sir! She is descending ... She has landed in the forest beside a

  river. I am observing through a haze by means of an infrared 'scope. Do

  you wish a relay?"

  "Not from that," Flandry said. Too small, too blurry. "From her

  bracelet."

  A screen blossomed in leaves and hasty brown water. Her right hand

  entered. Off the left, which he could not see, she plucked the ring,

  which he glimpsed before she tossed it into the stream.

  "She is running for cover beneath the trees, sir," Chives reported.

  Of course, replied the emptiness in Flandry. She thinks that, via the

  ring, I've seen what she's just done, in the teeth of every pledge she

  gave me. She thinks that now, if she moves fast, she can vanish into the

  woods--make her own way afoot, find her people and not betray them, or

  else die striving.

  Whereas in fact the ring was only intended to lull any fears of

  surveillance she might have after getting rid of it--only a circlet on

  her bridal finger--and Chives has a radio resonator along to activate

  her b
racelet--the slave bracelet I told her would be blind and deaf

  outside of Terra.

  "I do not recommend that I remain airborne, sir," Chives said. "Allow me

  to suggest that, as soon as the young lady has passed beyond observing

  me, I land likewise and follow her on the ground. I will leave a

  low-powered beacon to mark this site. You can flit here by grav-belt and

  retrieve the vehicles, sir. Permit me to remind you to wear proper

  protection against the unsalubrious ambience."

  "Same to you, old egg, and put knobs on yours." Flandry's utterance

  shifted from dull to hard. "I'll repeat your orders. Trail her, and call

  in to the recorder cum relay 'caster I'll leave here, in whatever way

  and at whatever times seem discreet. But 'discretion' is your key word.

  If she appears to be in danger, getting her out of it--whether by

  bringing me in to help or by taking action yourself--that gets absolute

  priority. Understand?"

  "Yes, sir." Did the high, not quite human accent bear a hint of shared

  pain? "Despite regrettable tactical necessities, Donna Vymezal must

  never be considered a mere counter in a game." That's for personnel and

  planets, the anonymous billions--and, savingly, for you and me, eh,

  Chives? "Will you proceed to the Technic settlement when your

  preparations are complete?"

  "Yes," Flandry said. "Soon. I may as well."

  VII

  ---

  Where the equator crossed the eastern shoreline of a continent men

  called Centralia, Thursday Landing was founded. Though fertile by

  Diomedean standards, the country had few permanent residents. Rather,

  migration brought tides of travelers, northward and southward

 

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