Collected Fiction

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Collected Fiction Page 498

by Henry Kuttner


  The whole mass of the thing was sliding into the stream now.

  “Come on,” Raft Said. “Can you make it?”

  He seized Craddock’s arm as they ran for the archway, the water sucking like glue around their feet.

  On their right the entire bank seemed to be giving way and dropping toward them in hungry, malignant pile that could afford to take its time.

  Craddock’s weakness hampered them. The water parted reluctantly under their splashing feet. It was like running through semiliquid rubber, with the great, slow, yellow thing rolling its bulk forward to intercept their way.

  The mouth of the tunnel opened before them, and the nerve-networks that acted as sentries made a quick, concerted, abortive motion to stop them, as if the whole valley answered a single brain, as perhaps it did. But Craddock slashed weakly at them with the knife, and when the blade had severed two or three the rest shrank and folded down out of harm’s way as the two men plunged through.

  “They’ve—stopped,” Craddock panted, glancing back. “They won’t—follow outside, I guess.”

  “Keep going,” Raft urged him grimly. “No use taking chances now.”

  They stumbled on, out of the gloom at last into the cool green light from the leafy vault, far overhead, that roofed Paititi. It was like finding sanctuary.

  But not quite. A quarter of a mile away, rounding one of the giant trees, a little column was moving steadily toward them. Raft groaned.

  “Darum’s soldiers. That looks like—yeah, it’s Vann, all right. Come on, Craddock. Maybe we can make it.”

  “I—I can’t.” The older man staggered as he tried to keep up with Raft’s quick strides. “Go on ahead. Don’t mind about me.”

  Raft halted and shrugged. “They’d have caught us anyway. We’ll wait, I guess. And fight it out.” He touched the butt of the revolver, and watched that glittering column draw nearer.

  Finally, the column deployed, showing two score of soldiers, wary, armed men who spread out to surround their prisoners. Vann’s scarred, hard face was impassive.

  “You’re captives.” he said. “There’ll be time for a duel later, if you want, but the king needs you both now. So you are Brian Raft, after all, eh? And this man is Craddock?” He stared curiously.

  “What does Darum intend to do?” Raft asked. “Cut my throat?”

  “No,” Vann said. “Not yet, at least. Where is Parror?”

  “Gone. I don’t know where.”

  “We’ll find him.” Vann issued swift orders. Half of the group broke up, spreading out into the forest.

  “Now we’ll go back to Doirada Castle. Meanwhile, you can tell me, Raft, what lies in the Garden of Kharn. I’d have entered it to carry out my orders, but not with any pleasure. What devils lair in Kharn?”

  “I’ll tell you later,” Raft said wearily. He let the revolver drop back into his pocket. “Right now, I’m too tired to care. Let’s go back to Doirada.”

  CHAPTER XII

  Power of Science

  QUIETLY they stood before the king, waiting, in the dim-lit room where Yrann’s harp had sung. But it was brighter now. The veiled woman was not around. In her place Janissa sat on a cushioned couch near the dais. She had looked at Raft once, given him a cryptic smile, and turned back to watch Darum, who squatted cross-legged amid his silks.

  Darum watched Raft out of hooded eyes.

  “You think I am going to kill you,” he said. “Why? Don’t trouble to answer. I can read that much in your face. Because you tried to kill me, with that knife Vann took from you. Also because you stole my amulet.”

  Raft attempted to speak, but the king lifted his hand.

  “Wait. Your race is not as mine. I see no great evil in your attempt at murder. You’d have succeeded had you deserved to succeed. Since you didn’t—” He nodded “—It is over and done with. What is past is past. Tomorrow you may try again, or I may, and succeed. And I will take back the amulet too. Meanwhile, Janissa has told me a great deal.”

  “When I found you’d escaped, Brian—I told Darum,” the girl said. “I knew you’d gone after Parr or.”

  “Yes,” the king said silkily. “And I wanted Parror. He goes too far, I think. After all, I rule in Paititi, not Parror.”

  “For a while,” Raft said quietly. “If he starts the Flame, and it gets out of control, you won’t rule anything.”

  “So he learned Craddock’s secret.” Darum sighed. “He is outlawed now. Every man’s hand is against him. And I have guarded the unseen road so he cannot enter it. I do not think he will reach the Flame.”

  “Parror is clever,” Janissa said.

  Craddock broke in.

  “He’ll need instruments. I know that much. It’ll take time.”

  Darum shrugged.

  “I am no scientist. I know only that there is danger both ways. If the Flame fades below a danger level—well, Janissa? What then?”

  “We will become as the cavern-beasts,” she told him. “We will degenerate as the First Race did.”

  “But when that day will come none can say. In our lifetime, or our children’s, or perhaps not even then. And if Parror tries to rouse the Flame, and fails to check it, that will mean immediate destruction.”

  “He doesn’t think so,” Craddock said. “He’s sure he can control the Flame.”

  “But can he?” Darum leaned forward. “That is what I seek to know. Can he—surely?”

  “I wish I knew,” Craddock said. “Parror got certain memories out of my mind, but they were mere superficial memories, not knowledge. I don’t even know what most of the symbols I wrote down for him meant. I didn’t know thirty years ago, when I translated part of the record.”

  “The record that was destroyed when the Flame wakened,” Darum said. “A secret only Parror and you know now?”

  “I don’t know,” Craddock said. “It was dragged out of my mind by hypnosis. I wasn’t conscious most of the time. I’ve only the vaguest idea what Parror intends to do.”

  “Well, the first step is to capture Parror, so he won’t rouse the Flame,” Darum said practically. “I hope my guards will find him soon. Meanwhile, how am I to deal with you two?”

  “Why not just let us go?” Raft said slowly. “Simians are too curious. Your race would try to enter Paititi. Two species, both dominant, cannot live together successfully.”

  “Why not?” Raft asked. “There’s the possibility of mutual benefit.”

  “Our minds are too unlike.”

  “I think you underestimate Parror, Darum,” Janissa said. “He’s clever, and he has more knowledge than I. There are—powers connected with the Flame that not even I understand. But Parror understands them. Also, I have heard legends of a secret way to reach the cave where Curupuri burns.”

  “He must not reach the Flame!” Darum said.

  Raft glanced at Janissa, and drew courage from her steady gaze. “Suppose he does, though. In spite of everything. That means that he’ll waken the Flame. If he makes a mistake, nothing can save Paititi. Right?” The king nodded.

  “True.”

  “All right,” Raft said. “Here’s an answer. Forestall him.”

  DARUM jerked his head up to stare. “Waken the Flame ourselves?”

  “Why not?” Raft asked. “We’ve got the science of two cultures here in this room, which gives us an edge on Parror. Janissa knows the Flame. She’s its hereditary guardian. I know biochemistry, and Craddock isn’t a layman. And you must have technicians here.”

  “We do.”

  “Well, then, what’s to prevent us from making the device ourselves?”

  “The question of possible failure,” Darum said. “The First Race never tested their machine. They waited too long. There is absolutely no way of foretelling whether it would actually control the Flame. Trial and error is the only way, and one error means destruction.”

  “There is a way,” Raft said.

  Janissa breathed a question.

  Haft took out the amulet. See
ing it, the king’s eyes narrowed.

  “You know what this is, Darum. It holds a spark of Flame. It is the Flame, but too tiny to be very dangerous. Why not use this as the control? If this spark from the Flame itself can be stimulated, and leashed, you’d know the machine was successful.”

  Darum shrugged.

  “Parror may have the same idea.” Raft continued. “I hope so. But in case he doesn’t, we’ll have the jump on him, and know definitely whether the device the First Ones planned is safe.”

  Darum hesitated.

  “Perhaps that is true.”

  Raft talked fast. “If this works, it’ll remove the menace of the Flame forever. It’ll mean complete control of that source of energy. The threat of degeneration will be removed from Paititi completely. Suppose we do fail—well simply be right back here where we stand now, won’t we?”

  “He’s right,” Janissa said breathlessly. “It’s a chance, Darum. The only one, if Parror outwits us. And it may mean safety for Paititi forever.”

  Darum did not speak for a long moment. Then he nodded slowly.

  “I agree, then. Janissa, this is in your hands. And now leave me. We will talk later.”

  The girl led them out. Behind them the lights dimmed, and, as Raft moved along the passage that led from the king’s chamber, he heard a murmuring of faint music.

  Yrann. Should he have warned the king against her? Perhaps. But he doubted whether Darum would have believed him. He shelved the thought for future reference.

  Meanwhile Craddock was pulling at his arm.

  “Brian.”

  “Well?”

  “I didn’t want to queer the pitch, but—” His voice lowered “—you forgot one thing.

  I can’t remember what Parror dragged out of my mind. He forced it out with his gadget, but I was in a trance. I don’t remember now.”

  Janissa had overheard even Craddock’s soft whisper.

  “It is well you didn’t mention that to Darum,” she said. “But I think the problem can be solved. I don’t know what device Parror used. Nevertheless, when a gate has been opened once, it opens more easily the next time. I have some knowledge of the mind, Craddock, and possibly we can succeed.”

  “We’ll get it out of you,” Raft said. “If it means a course in psychonamics!”

  It did, almost. Raft had used medical hypnosis himself, and could help Janissa, who otherwise might have been hindered by the alienage of minds, the more than racial difference between Craddock’s thought-patterns and her own. But with Raft as mentor, the secret wisdom was slowly, painfully pulled into the light.

  They did not sleep. Some drug like benzedrine, Raft guessed, kept them alert and stimulated for their long sessions. There was technical equipment in the castle, and there were scientists as well, though their knowledge lay chiefly in the realm of the psychic. Many allied sciences were represented among the cat-people. Surgery was highly developed, as was biology.

  IT WAS Craddock’s subconscious they were probing, and it was like fishing in a teeming pool. Too often they caught the wrong fish, till they learned the right sort of bait to use. But finally symbols began to take form on the pad that was always ready to Craddock’s hand. He scribbled a line—hesitated, corrected himself—and, step by step, pieced out the record he had read only once, thirty years before, but which his subconscious mind had never forgotten.

  “If Parror hadn’t opened the way, we’d never be able to do this,” Janissa said later as she was standing on a balcony with Raft, taking a well-earned breathing-space after a particularly arduous session. Before them the slow cloud of mist hung like an enormous tower.

  Raft looked at her. He remembered his half-mocking question of long ago, whether two species could mingle. But logic did not seem so important now. The warm, living presence of Janissa was more vital.

  Till lately he had not known her, really. She had been a paradoxical, fascinating girl who had revealed few of the traits that make humanity human. But now, since they had been working together, he had come to understand her more, and to know that he would never be able to understand her fully.

  That sweetly curved, softly malicious little face, with its hint of diablerie, its lovely, feline strangeness, was more attractive than he dared admit to himself. The aquamarine, shadowed eyes were turned up to his . . .

  Eyes of Bast, whose velvet aloofness guards the night of Egypt Yet she could be playful too, gay as a kitten might be, and with the same endearing charm.

  Now as he stood there, something hidden and secret flashed between them. There was no need for a physical embrace. It was subtler than that. But, briefly, it seemed as though a veil had been lifted, a veil that hung between two beings who had been alien.

  His hand stole out and touched hers. They looked out across Doirada Gulf, to the colossal columns of giant trees that supported the sky of Paititi.

  He thought, Only here in this lost land beyond space and time, could I have found Janissa.

  They were silent. Speech was not necessary. Hand in hand they stood, lost in the warm, comforting awareness of each other’s presence, until Craddock’s voice called them back to the work of harnessing the Flame.

  What could harness such a tremendous force, a power which burned in the heart of the spiral nebulae and kindled giant suns? The chain that bound Fenris-wolf? What was the Flame?

  They did not know. But men do not know what electricity is, either. Yet they can tame it with insulated wires. What was needed here was insulation, but not only that. There must also be a means of stimulating the Flame. A safe way.

  That was not easy to find. First the last fragments of the lost record had to be taken from Craddock’s mind. Time after time hypnosis probed into his memories, and gradually the cryptic symbols made longer lines on the recording pad. Janissa could read those symbols for her own language was founded upon it, as her own civilization was built on the earlier culture of the vanished First Race. Also technicians were helpful.

  For there were semantic difficulties. Raft knew the Indio dialect thoroughly, but he did not know the intricacies of Janissa’s more highly developed language. There were symbols she could not explain to him. Then a chemist, perhaps, would sketch charts, electro-chemical hookups, or atomic patterns, until the answer clicked in Raft’s mind.

  He was no technician, though, and could not have built the device alone. Nor could Janissa. But his different background of human science was invaluable in casting light from another angle on the problem. There was the matter of the amulet, for example, “When you turn the stone, it slows down metabolism,” Raft pointed out. “Tha: means the radiation is blocked at a variable rave. What blocks it? Something opaque the vibration, eh?”

  “The metal?” a physicist hazarded It’s an alloy of chromite. Vanadium, perhaps. We’ll have it tested.”

  For, though the last secrets of the records in Craddock’s memory had been discovered by now, there were still gaps. In the days of the First Race, different elements had existed in the valley, elements which were now exhausted.

  THEY found that the truth lay not only in the material of the amulet’s setting, but in the intricate interlocking of alloys a very tiny machine powered by the mi-reed radiation of the energy-source itself the spark in the crystal. That crystal was simply quartz, but how the radiant atom had been put into it Raft couldn’t guess.

  The secret, then, lay in a complicated arrangement of various alloys that seemed to block the energy-output of the spark. Part of this knowledge they gleaned from Craddock’s hypnotically-stimulated memories: the rest they found by simple analysis. There was, finally, a dead end.

  For they knew what elements they needed, and some of them no longer existed in Paititi.

  Then the practical value of an alien culture was demonstrated. Raft thought of the possibility first. He had brought considerable equipment to Paititi in his rucksack, medical supplies, concentrated food in little tins, and there were his personal belongings, as well as Craddock’s.

/>   His watch yielded platinum, which was vital. There was tin to be found in the rucksack, and the firearms were taken apart to provide a treasure of necessary metals.

  The laboratories of the technicians swiftly analyzed the loot, broke it down, and formed new alloys. Given the raw material, they could, at last, work out the equation.

  The machine, when finished, was not large. Specifications had clearly indicated its proportions. It stood on a tripod, coming approximately to Raft’s chest, a surprisingly simple device of crystal, metal, and hollow tubes.

  The integral part of it was the fuse, which floated free in a mercury bath atop the gadget. This was the safety, the innocuous-seeming footlong tube that had the power to control the tremendous radiations the rest of the machine was built to stimulate.

  “Parror’s bound to fail,” Raft said. “Those special alloys—they don’t exist in Paititi. He can’: possibly make the safety control, and without it he’d know the experiment would be too dangerous.”

  Janissa was less certain.

  “Parror has a blind confidence in himself. He might try to substitute other materials. The sooner we test this, Brian, the better I’ll feel.”

  But the test was not spectacular. The thing was handled by remote control, to minimize the danger. Even with the tiny spark of energy in the amulet, there was peril.

  Raft used a scanning glass to examine the amulet, five hundred feet away on the mossy plain. He looked briefly around the crowd that surrounded him—Craddock, Janissa, the technician and, with a silent prayer, turned on the power. Nothing happened. Machine and amulet remained as they had been.

  “Doesn’t it power the spark?” Janissa breathed.

  “It ought to stimulate it,” Raft said, and moved the needle on his rheostat device. He moved it too far. From the amulet a spear of light shot straight up, and simultaneously the moss for a hundred feet around sprang into—life! It writhed and crawled visibly, the ordinary progress of growth, accelerated incredibly by the radiation of the stimulated spark.

 

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