Lilith: A Snake in The Grass
Page 22
I looked at the two in confusion. “What the hell are you two talking about?” I wanted to know. “Where were you during the battle, Father?”
He laughed. “Picking up the pieces. We needed besils. So while Sumiko and her witchy friends got the riders, I was able to grab control of six of them.”
O’Higgins nodded. “That’s what this was all about That’s why I permitted Artur to find the village in the first place. I’d hoped for more, though—at least a dozen.”
“You’d’ve had a dozen if you hadn’t fried or smacked down some,” Bronz responded. “That was an amazing sight. Sumiko, I really underestimated you. Even when you told me last night I still couldn’t believe that what you said was true, not in that way. Accumulated broadcasted Warden power! Incredible!”
She shrugged. “There’s nothing in the rules against it. The Wardens don’t really know the difference between a human cell, a plant cell, and a copper molecule, except that their genetic code or whatever they use for one acts on what they’re in to keep it that way. If we can ‘talk,’ so to speak, to the Warden organism inside anything and tell it to do something it doesn’t like to do—reprogram it, as it were—we can tell it to do other things, too. It’s just like a computer, Augie. You can program it to do anything if you can figure out how.”
“You’re too modest,” he replied sincerely, obviously not just flattering her. “It’s a monumental discovery. Something entirely new, entirely different. It’ll do for Lilith what the Industrial Revolution did for primitive man!”
She gave what I can only describe as a derisive snigger. “Perhaps,” she responded, “if I decide to give it to people, and if it can be handled and managed on a planetary scale.”
I was awestruck by the implications, which made Bronz’s arguments against social revolution on Lilith obsolete. “But you have the means here to destroy the hierarchy! The pawns can have the power to run then-own affairs!”
She sniffed. “And what makes you think they’ll do the job any better than the ones doing it now? Maybe worse.”
I shrugged off her cynicism as darker thoughts intruded. “He’ll be back, you know. Artur, I mean. With a hell of a force. What are you going to do?”
“Nothing, dear boy,” she responded. “Absolutely nothing. That surprises you? Well, would you believe that this place can’t even be detected unless I wish it? Oh, they’ll come back, of course. Maybe even with a couple of knights or even the old Duke himself. They’ll fly around and around and they’ll comb the ground with troops and they’ll simply not see us. It will drive them mad, but they can land right in the middle of the heath out there and they won’t see the village. How do you think we survived this long?”
Bronz himself shook his head in amazement “Sumiko, the consolidation of Warden power I’m willing to accept, since my mind can at least explain it, but that’s impossible!”
She laughed wickedly and tweaked his cheek. “Augie, you’re a fine little fellow even if you are everything I can’t stand, but keep believing that, won’t you? It’ll make life a lot simpler.”
“But how, Sumiko?” he demanded to know. “How?”
She just smiled and said, “Well, the only thing I can tell you that’ll get you thinking is that the Warden organism is in every single molecule of every cell in your body, the brain included. I haven’t discovered any miracle formula here, Augie! All I did was sit down with the little beastie and learn how to talk to it properly.”
“Father Bronz!” Ti shouted; he turned, then lit up as he saw her. She ran to him and gave him a big hug, which he returned, smiling. “Well, well, well!” he responded. “So we have our little Ti back with us once again!”
“And that points up the urgency of our getting a move on,” Sumiko put in. “I’m going to go check the casualties and see what can be done. You air better get some rest—the defenses are already all reset. We have a long night’s ride ahead of us, the first of many, and everybody should be well-rested.”
Bronz stared at her. “We?”
She nodded. “I’ve been meaning for some time to find out what those old fools at Moab know that maybe I don’t,” she told us. “I think that now the cat’s out of the bag about us here I had better find out all I can. Besides, I better be along to see that there are no relapses.” -
I glanced over at Father Bronz. “You’re coming too, I hope. I’m not sure I want to face ten days with just the witches for protection.”
He chuckled. “Sure. I intended to, in any event. It’s been a great many years since I was at Moab, and my curiosity is aroused. But don’t expect miracles down there. They know more about the Warden organisms than anybody except maybe Sumiko—now that I’ve seen her in action—but they are not selfless scientists. There have been some, uh, unfortunate changes over the years down there.”
Chapter Eighteen
Moab Keep
The worst part of the journey was riding the besils themselves. The creatures were ugly, they stank, and they oozed a really nasty gluelike ichor when under stress—not to mention occasionally giving out with one of those earsplitting shrieks that seemed to come from somewhere deep within them. We were all inexperienced riders, too, and the sensation was much like getting whipped in all directions at once, that apparently seamless, fluid motion of theirs feeling quite different if you were actually on a besil back.
Still, the creatures were selectively bred types, born and raised for this sort of work, and they seemed never to tire. They were also easy to care for, since they foraged for themselves in the jungle below, eating almost anything that wouldn’t eat them first, plant or animal. Being large animals, though, they ate often, and that slowed us down. They needed three times their considerable weight per day to keep going at any reasonable pace.
Still, the kilometers passed swiftly beneath us, although I saw less of the countryside than I would have liked. In order to maintain security, and to avoid meeting a lot of possibly bad company, we headed almost due east to the coast and skirted it, somewhat out from land, heading in for an encampment only when and where the wild reached the sea and gave us cover. The ocean was dotted with numerous uninhabited islands, but none provided the large amount of food our besils required, so some risk was necessary.
Our witches afforded us some protection, of course. I suspect that was the only reason we encountered so little in the way of other traffic on the way south. But though we could take care of individuals who might chance upon us we had nothing like the massed force to withstand an assault of the type Artur had mounted on the witch village. Sumiko couldn’t even take her full “core” coven, since the most we could safely fit on and strap into a besil saddle was two, and Ti and I had one, O’Higgins and Bronz each had one of their own, and the other three held two of the aproned witches apiece. We had no control over the besils ourselves, either; Bronz and O’Higgins did the driving for all of us.
Days were spent in foraging, resting, and checking bearings. It was not a totally friendly group, with the witches paying little mind or heed to Ti or me and Father Bronz devoting most of his time, apparently without success, to trying to discover the nature of Sumiko O’Higgins’s remarkable discoveries about the Warden organism.
I confess I was never really sure about the witch queen. A genius, certainly, with the single-mindedness to set herself impossible problems and then work - them out. A pragmatist, too, who was putting her discoveries to use building up some sort of superior army—for what it was hard to say. Discussing the plants and animals of Lilith, the Warden organism, and some rather odd ideas about the relationships between plant and animal biochemistry, she was as expert and as dry as a university professor. But whenever you started feeling that her Satanism was a sham, a device to accomplish some kind of psychological goal with her followers, or simply a means to an end, she would drop into a discussion of it with an unmistakable fervor and sincerity. Ti and I talked about her at length, and both of us were convinced that either she was one of the truly great actr
esses of all times or she really believed that junk.
I was able to pump Father Bronz a bit more on her, although he admitted his own knowledge was sketchy. She was the daughter of scientists, experts in the biological aspects of terraforming, and from what little we could gather, was something of an experiment herself, having been genetically manipulated in some way in an attempt to produce a superior being, an alternative to the civilized worlds for a rougher, frontier life. They had certainly produced someone unique, but I wondered what the psychological effects of growing up knowing you were just experiment 77-A in Mommy and Daddy’s lab might be. Exactly what the crime was that got her sent to Lilith was unknown, but it was of truly major proportions and left inside her a legacy of hatred and revenge directed toward the civilized worlds. In point of fact, she was the quintessential Lord of the Diamond personality I’d come to expect, yet she disdained even that. To her, Marek Kreegan and the Confederacy were two sides of the same coin.
The relationship between Ti and me continued to develop, and I felt things within me that I had never known were there. In some ways it disturbed me— that a man of pure intellect could form such strong emotional attachments seemed somehow an admission of my weakness, an internal accusation that I was human when I had always clung to the notion that I was a superior human being above all those animalistic drives affecting the common herd. She was certainly not the type of woman I had ever thought myself attracted to. Bright, yes, but totally uneducated, highly emotional, and in some sense very vulnerable.
Still, I felt better with her here, awake, laughing and oohing and aahing and having fun like a kid with a new toy. It was as if I’d had a painful hole inside me, one that had been there so long that I wasn’t even aware of it, had considered the ache and emptiness normal and not at all unusual, but now the hole was filled. The relief, the feeling of health and wholeness, was indescribably good. We were complementary in some ways, too—she was my hold, my perspective, on Lilith, where I would live out my, life, and I was her window to a wider and far different universe than she could now comprehend.
It took eleven days to reach Moab, with a little dodging of congested areas, neither pushing ourselves or taking chances. Moab Keep itself was below us now, a huge island in a great, broad tropical bay. Almost on the equator, it was insufferably hot and humid; but, looking down upon it, I could see why it had been selected.
The first manned expedition to Lilith had no idea what it would be getting itself into. It needed a base, one that would provide a good sample of the flora and fauna of Lilith without exposing the group to unknown dangers. The huge island of Moab was their choice, a place large and lush enough to provide a small lab and base for travel to other parts of the world but isolated enough with its high cliff walls and broad expanse of bay all around to be defensible against attack.
Time and knowledge had reshaped it only slightly. You could see cleared areas for agriculture, and lines of fruit trees too straight and regular to be haphazard. On a bluff almost in the center of the island was the headquarters for those who still lived and worked on the island. The hard rock of the bluff itself had been hewn out by the most primitive labor methods to build what was needed, a great rock temple that looked neither crude nor uncomfortable. In fact, it made Zeis’s Castle seem like a small and fragile structure, although Moab had none of the fanciful design of Sir Tiel’s edifice. It was straight, modern, utilitarian, functional—and huge.
Still, Father Bronz had warned us that this was not exactly all it seemed. The science of the founders was still here, for sure, and there was no authoritarian hierarchy such as the other Keeps maintained, but the purpose for the enclave had drastically changed as it became more isolated from the outside world. Today the thousands of men and women below carried on their work in the name of some odd mystical religion that seemed anachronistically out of the dawn of man. In their years of studying Lilith they had come not merely to anthropomorphize it, as Father Bronz tended to do, but actually to regard it as a living, thinking creature, a god now sleeping that would someday awaken.
In other words, here was another nut cult, although one not formed from the history of humanity but rather by the conditions of Lilith itself.
We landed atop the great bluff and immediately attendants came from stairwells to attend to the besils. For a moment I thought we were being attacked, so rapidly did they come forth, but it quickly became obvious that we were on the Moab equivalent of a helipad.
I took note of the appearance of the attendants. Many were of civilized worlds standards, and all had some of the look within them. Many were naked, others lightly dressed, and all seemed young, yet none of them had the look or bearing of pawns. All were neatly groomed and had that scrubbed look.
Father Bronz, the only one of us who had been here before, took the lead, and we followed him to one of the nearby stairwells.
“I have to say that they don’t seem at all worried or even curious about us,” I noted to him. “It’s almost as if we were expected.”
“We probably are,” he replied. “Remember, these people know all we’ve been able to find out about this crazy world. Their grandparents were the original colonists, and they and their children discovered the Warden organism, the Warden powers, the various drugs and potions we all use. They designed and perfected the methods by which anything can be done here.” He glanced over at Sumiko O’Higgins. “They’re unassailable and they know it. Even from you, my dear, I think.”
She just looked at him expressionlessly and didn’t reply. Even though I owed my life and my existence here to her I would never feel comfortable around her and would certainly never completely trust her.
We were met at the bottom of the long, winding stone stairs by a woman in flowing pure-white robes. She didn’t look very old, but her billowing hair was snow white and her eyes a deep blue, while her complexion showed that she just about never ventured out into the sunlight. It was an odd appearance, sort of like one of Fattier Bronx’s angels.
“I bid you greetings, Father Bronz, you and your - friends,” she said, her voice soft and musical.
Bronz gave a slight bow. ”My lady, I am happy to see that I am remembered,” he responded somewhat formally. “May I present my companions to you?”
She turned and looked at us, not critically, but not curiously, either. “I already know them all. I am Director Komu. I will see you all to quarters that have already been prepared for you where you may rest and refresh yourselves. Later on today I will arrange for a tour of the Institute, and tomorrow is soon enough to get down to business.”
I looked at her, then at Ti. “Lady Komu, I thank you for your hospitality,” I said, trying to be as politely formal as seemed required here, “but my own young lady here has need of medical assistance. She’s already been feeling particularly sleepy and numb.”
The director went over to Ti and looked at her thoughtfully for a moment, not touching or doing anything we could see. Finally she said, “Yes, I see. Please don’t worry about it—we will fix you up in no time at all.” She turned. “Now, if you will follow me.”
The place inside was, if anything, more impressive than outside. The walls and floors were all tiled in light, micalike panels that seemed slightly translucent and behind which some light source glowed. It wasn’t electrical, of course, but neither was it the kind of localized and flickering light that oil lanterns would give off. In fact the place looked as if it were back in the Outside. I was about to ask about it when Sumiko O’Higgins beat me to it.
“This is most impressive, particularly the lighting,” she noted. “How do you do it?”
“Oh, a simple matter, really,” the director responded airily. “The light source is a lumen distilled from various self-illuminating insects common to Lilith. The power source is somewhat complex, but based very much on. the same principle the insects themselves use to brighten the material. The basis of the power is friction, fed by water power. Whoever told you such things were imposs
ible on Lilith, dear?”
There was no reply to that, and I was beginning to see that I would have to revise my world picture once again. There certainly wasn’t anything in the rules governing Lilith to prohibit a lot of classical power sources; the limitation was that there were very few people who could talk the Warden organism into holding in new shapes of waterwheels and the like.
Our rooms were luxurious, furnished with fine hand-carved wood and a large bed that was as close to a stuffed mattress as I had seen on Lilith. The common baths were similar to those at the Castle, large tile-lined troughs filled with very hot, bubbly water that soothed as well as cleaned. I felt both more human and totally relaxed at the finish, and Ti had quite a time with the first bath she’d ever experienced other than those in pools of rainwater or rivers. She was tired, though, and I just about had to carry her back to the room. She was awake enough to find the bed too soft and strange for her liking and for a while considered sleeping on the floor, which she finally did. As soon as she was asleep, though, I placed her on the satiny sheets and stretched out beside her. I hadn’t realized what sort of tension I’d been under the past almost two weeks, though, and I was soon out cold.
Chapter Nineteen
The Wizards of Moab Keep
We toured the huge Institute, as they called it, as evening fell. Not Ti—she was still tired and her body ! was continuing to fight Dr. Pohn’s handiwork, so I decided to let her sleep. Everyone at the Institute seemed to live well, in Lilith terms. They seemed bright, alive, highly civilized, and happy. We saw the laboratories used by plant and animal experts to study all they could, revealing cleverly fashioned if primitive tools of the trade, including wooden microscopes whose lenses were actually quite good, and to my surprise, even a limited number of metal tools that looked like they’d been manufactured in major factories. I remarked on them, and was reminded that Lords such as Kreegan could actually stabilize a limited amount of alien matter, making it resistant to the Warden organism’s attack. The intra-system shuttlecraft, for example, that had landed me on Lilith and carried me to Zeis Keep was one such example, and a pretty hairy and delicate one at that.