Spellsinger 02 - The Hour of the Gate

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by Foster, Alan Dean;


  Jon-Tom tried to analyze the almost nonexistent inflection.

  Was the Weaver irritated, or curious, or both?

  "no one can cross the mountains." A pair of arms gestured

  toward the towering peaks that loomed above them.

  "We did not come over the mountains," said Clothahump,

  "but through them." He nodded toward the river. "We came

  on this watercourse through the Earth's Throat."

  The spider's head bobbed from side to side. "that is not

  possible."

  "Then how the hell do you think we got here?" Talea said

  challengingly, bravery and bluster overcoming common sense.

  "it may be that..." The spider hesitated, the whispery

  tones little louder than the Breeze wafting across the ship.

  Then faint, breathy puffs came from that arachnoid throat. It

  was a laughter that sounded like the wind that gets lost in

  thick trees and idles around until it blows itself out.

  "ah, sarcasm, a trait of the soft-bodied, i believe, what do

  you wish here on the scuttleteau?"

  Jon-Tom felt himself drawn to the side by Caz while the

  wizard and Weaver talked. The rabbit gestured toward the

  sky.

  The other five Weavers now hung directly above the boat

  from short individual cables. It was obvious they could be on

  the deck in seconds. They carried cleverly designed knives

  and bolas that could be easily manipulated by the double

  flexible claws tipping each limb.

  "They've been quiet enough thus far," said Caz, "but

  should our learned leader's conversation grow less than ac-

  commodating, we should anticipate confronting more than

  one of them." His hand slid suggestively over the knife slung

  at his own hip, beneath the fine jacket.

  Jon-Tom nodded acknowledgment. They separated and

  casually apprised the others of the quintet dangling ominously

  over their heads.

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  THE HOUR OF THE GATE

  When Clothahump had finished, the spider moved back

  against the railing and regarded them intently. At least, that

  was the impression Jon-Tom received. It was difficult to tell

  not only how he was seeing them mentally, but physically as

  well. With four eyes, two small ones and two much larger

  ones mounted higher on his head, the Weaver would be hard

  to surprise.

  "you have come a long way without being sure of the

  nature of your eventual reception, to what purpose? you have

  talked much and said little, the mark of a diplomat but not

  necessarily of a friend, why then are you here?"

  Above, the Weaver's companions swayed gently in the

  breeze and caressed their weapons.

  "I'm sorry, but we can't tell you that," said Clothahump

  boldly. Jon-Tom moved to make certain his back was against

  the mast. "Our information is of such vital importance to the

  Weavers that it can only be related to the highest local

  authority."

  "nothing a warmlander can say is of any importance to the

  weavers." Again came that distant, whistling laugh, blowing

  arrogantly across the deck.

  "Nilontfwml" roared Clothahump in his most impressive

  sorceral tone. Vibrations rattled the boat. Whitecaps snapped

  on the crests of sudden waves, and there was a distant rumble

  of thunder. The five watchers in the net overhead bounced

  nervously on their organic tethers while the Weaver in the

  boat stiffened against the rail.

  Clothahump lowered his arms. One had to stare hard at the

  inoffensive-appearing little turtle with the absurd spectacles to

  believe that voice had truly issued from that hard-shelled

  body.

  "By my annointment as Sorcerer-Majestic of the Last

  Circle, by the brow of EIrath-Vune now long dust, by all the

  oaths that bind all the practitioners of True Magic back to the

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  Alan Dean Foster

  beginnings of divination, I swear to you that what I have to

  say is vital to the survival of Weaver as well as warmlander,

  and that it can be imparted only to the Grand Webmistress

  herself!"

  That pronouncement appeared to shake their visitor as

  badly as had the totally unexpected demonstration of wizardly

  power.

  "most impressive in word and action," the spider husked.

  "that you are truly a wizard cannot be denied." He recovered

  some "octupul" poise and executed a short little bow, crossing

  all four upper limbs across his chest.

  "forgive my hesitation and suspicions and accept my

  apologies should i have offended you. my name is ananthos."

  "Are you in charge of the river guards, then?" Plor

  indicated the five remaining armed Weavers still drifting in

  the wind overhead.

  The spider turned his head toward her, and she fought hard

  not to shudder, "your meaning is obscure, female human, we

  do not 'guard' the bridge, there are not any who would harm

  it, and none until now come out of the hole into which the

  river dies."

  "Then why are you here at all? Why the bridge?" Jon-Tom

  didn't try to conceal his puzzlement.

  "this is," and the Weaver gestured with one limb at the

  network of silken cables and its watchful inhabitants, "a

  lifesaving grid. it was erected here to protect those young and

  ignorant weavers who are fond of playing in the river lamayad

  and who sometimes tend to drift too close to the hole which

  kills the water, were they to vanish within they would be

  forever lost.

  "did you think then we were soldiers? there is no need for

  soldiers on the scuttleteau. we have no enemies."

  "Then a revelation is in store," muttered Clothahump so

  low the Weaver did not hear him.

  "the bridge is to help protect infants," ananthos finished.

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  THE HOUR Or THE GATE

  "Now don't that soothe a beatin' 'eart!" Mudge whispered

  disbelievingly to Jon-Tom. "A fearsome lookin' lot like this

  and 'e says they've no soldiers. Wot a fine pack o' allies

  they'll make, eh?"

  "They've got weapons," his companion argued, "and

  they look like they know how to use them." He raised his

  voice and addressed the Weaver. "If this is nothing more than

  a station for rescuing wayward children, then why do you and

  your companions carry weapons?"

  Ananthos gestured at the surrounding forest, "to protect

  ourselves, of course, even great fighters may be overwhelmed

  by a single large and powerful foe. there are beasts on the

  scuttleteau that would devour all on this craft and the craft

  itself in a single gulp. because we do not maintain an army to

  confront nonexistent enemies does not mean we are fleet-

  limbed cowards who run instead of fight, or did you think we

  were all eggsuckers?" He bared his respectable fangs.

  "the confident and strong have no need of an army. each

  weaver is an army unto itself."

  "It is about armies and fighting that we come," said

  Clothahump, "and about such matters that we must speak to

  the Webmistress."

  Ananthos appeared
as upset as a spider could possibly be.

  "to bring warmlanders into the capital is a great responsibili-

  ty. by rights of history and legend i should turn you around

  and send you back into the hole from whence you emerged.

  and yet"—he struggled with the conflict between prescribed

  duty and personal feelings and thoughts—"i cannot dismiss

  the fact that you have made an impossible journey for reasons

  i am not equipped to debate, if it is of the importance you

  insist, i would fail did i not escort you to the capital, but to

  see the grand webmistress herself..."

  He turned away from them, whether from embarrassment

  or indecision or both they could not tell.

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  Alan Dean Foster

  "Why don't you," said Caz helpfully, "take us int

  protective custody, convey us to the capital under guard, an

  turn us over to your superiors?"

  Ananthos looked back at him, his head bobbing in that od_

  side-to-side motion that was half nod and half shake. He

  spoke in a whispery, grateful hush.

  "you have some understanding of what it means to be

  responsible to someone placed higher than oneself, warmlander

  of the big ears."

  "I've been in that uncomfortable situation before, yes,"

  Caz admitted drolly, polishing his monocle.

  "i bow to your excellent suggestion."

  144

  IX

  He leaned back and called breathily upward, "arethos,

  imedshud! intob coom." Two of the watchful Weavers dropped

  to the deck, their spinnerets snipping off the cables trailing

  from their abdomens. They studied the warmlanders with

  interest.

  "these will accompany us on the journey, for i can hardly

  claim to have you in restriction, as your tall white friend has

  suggested, all by myself, yet i am charged with the watchfiuness

  on this bridge and cannot leave it deserted, so three of us will

  accompany you and three remain here.

  "we shall proceed upstream, a day's journey from here,

  the river lamayad splits, several days further it splits again.

  against that divide, set against the breath, is our capital, my

  home."

  He added wamingly, "what happens then is no longer my

  responsibility, i can make no promises as to the nature of your

  reception, for i am low in the hierarchy, most low, for all that

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  Alan Dean Foster

  no weaver lies in the mud and none soars above the others.

  our hierarchy is a convenience and necessary to governing,

  and that is all.

  "as to an audience with the grand webmistress..." his

  voice trailed away meaningfully.

  "Diplomacy moves best when it moves cautiously," said

  Caz, "and not in dangerous leaps."

  "For now it will be more than enough if you see us to the

  capital, Ananthos," Clothahump assured him.

  The spider seemed greatly relieved, "then my thoughts are

  clear, i am neither helping nor hindering you, merely refer-

  ring you to those in the position to do so." He turned and

  ceremoniously detached the cable holding the bow of the

  motionless boat.

  Bribbens had remained by his oar during the discussion.

  Now he leaned gently on it as once again the wind began to

  fill the sail. The boat turned neatly on its axis as the cry of

  "ware the boom!" rang out from the steersman. Soon they

  had passed beneath the intricate webwork spanning the river

  and were once again traveling upstream.

  "i've never seen a warmlander." Ananthos was standing

  quite close to Jen-Tom, "most interesting biology." Despite

  ten thousand years of primitive fears, Jon-Tom did not pull

  away when the spider reached out to him.

  Ananthos extended a double-clawed leg. It was covered

  with bristly hairs. The delicate silk scarves of green and

  turquoise enveloping the limb mitigated its menacing appear-

  ance. The finger-sized claws touched the man's cheek, pressed

  lightly, and traveled down the face to the neck before with-

  drawing. Somehow Jon-Tom kept from flinching. He concen-

  trated on those brightly colored eyes studying him.

  "no fur at all like the short bewhiskered one, except on

  top. and soft... so soft!" He shuddered, "what a terrible

  fragility to live with."

  146

  THE HOUR OF THE GATE

  "You get used to it," said Jon-Tom. It occurred to him mat

  the spider found him quite repulsive.

  They continued studying each other. "That's beautiful

  silk," the man commented. "Did you make it yourself?"

  "do you mean, did i spin the silk or manufacture the scarf?

  in truth i did neither." He waved a leg at the others, "we

  differ even more in size than you seem to. some of our

  smaller cousins produce far finer silk than a clumsy oaf like

  myself is capable of. they are trained to do so, and others

  carefully weave and pattern their produce." He reached down

  and unwrapped a four-foot turquoise length and handed it to

  Jon-Tom.

  A palmful of feathers was like lead compared to the scarf.

  He could have whispered at it and blown it over the side of

  the boat. The dye was a faint blue, as rich as the finest

  Persian turquoise with darker patches here and there. It was

  the lightest fabric he'd ever caressed. Wearing it would be as

  wearing nothing.

  He moved to hand it back. Ananthos' head bobbed to the

  left. "no. it is a gift." Already he'd refastened two other long

  scarves to compensate for the loss of the turquoise. Jon-Tom

  had a glimpse of the intricate knot-and-clip arrangement that

  held the quasi-sari together.

  "Why?"

  Now the head bobbed down and to me right. He was

  beginning to match head movements to the spider's moods.

  What at first had seemed only a nervous twitching was

  becoming recognizable as a complex, highly stylized group of

  suggestive gestures. The spiders utilized their heads the way

  an Italian used his hands, for speech without speaking.

  "why? because you have something about you, something

  i cannot define, and because you admired it."

  "I'll say we've got something about us," Talea grumbled.

  "An air of chronic insanity."

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  Alan Dean Foster

  Ananthos considered the comment. Again the whispery

  laughter floated like snowflakes across the deck. "ah, humor!

  humor is among the warmlander's richest qualities, perhaps

  the most redeeming one."

  "For all the talk of hostility our legends speak of, you

  seem mighty friendly," she said.

  "it is my duty, soft female," the Weaver replied. His gaze

  went back to Jon-Tom. "please me by accepting the gift."

  Jon-Tom accepted the length of silk. He wrapped it muffler-

  like around his neck, above the indigo shut. It didn't get

  tangled in his cape clasp. In fact, it didn't feel as though it

  was there at all. He did not consider how it might look

  sandwiched between the iridescent green cape and purpled

  shirt.

  "I have nothing to offe
r in return," he said apologetically.

  "No, wait, maybe I do." He unslung his duar. "Do the

  Weavers like music?"

  Ananthos' answer was unexpected. He extended two limbs

  in an unmistakable gesture. Jon-Tom carefully passed over

  the instrument.

  The Weaver resumed his half-sit, half-squat and laid the

  duar across two knees. He had neither hands nor fingers, but

  the eight prehensile claws on the four upper limbs plucked

  with experimental delicacy at the two sets of strings.

  The melody that rose from the duar was light and ethereal,

  alien, atonal, and yet full of almost familiar rhythms. It

  would begin to sound almost normal, then drift off on strange

  tangents. Very few notes contributed to a substantial tune.

  Ananthos' playing reminded Jon-Tom more of samisen music

  than guitar.

  Flor leaned blissfully back against the mast, closed her

  eyes, and soaked up the spare melody. Mudge sprawled

  contentedly on the deck while Caz tried, without success, to

  tap time to the disjointed beat. Nothing soothes xenophobia

  148

  TBB HOUR Or TBE GATE

  so efficiently as music, no matter how strange its rhythms or

  inaudible the words.

  An airy wail rose from Ananthos and his two companions.

  The three-part harmony was bizarre and barely strong enough

  to rise above the breeze. There was nothing ominous in their

  singing, however. The little boat made steady progress against

  the current. In spite of his unshakable devotion to his job,

  even Bribbens was affected. One flippered foot beat on the

  deck in a futile attempt to domesticate the mystical arachnid

  melody.

  It might be, Jon-Tom thought, that they would find no

  allies here, but he was certain they'd already found some

  friends. He fingered the end of the exquisite scarf and

  allowed himself to relax and sink comfortably under the

  soothing spell of the spider's frugal fugue....

  It was early in the morning of the fourth day on the

  Scuttleteau that he was shaken awake. Much too early, he

  mused as his eyes opened confusedly on a still dark sky.

  He rolled over, and for a moment memory lagged shockingly

  behind reality. He started violently at the sight of the furry,

  fanged, many-eyed countenance bending over him.

  "i am sorry," said Ananthos softly, "did i waken you too

  sharply?"

  Jon-Tom couldn't decide if the Weaver was being polite

  and offering a diplomatic way out or if it was an honest

  question. In either case, he was grateful for the understanding

 

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