Roadmarks

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Roadmarks Page 4

by Roger Zelazny


  He reached the door, cursed when he discovered it to be heavy and windowless, eased it open a crack, looked out. Farther, then ...

  "Nothing," he said. "No talking now till this is all over—unless it's a warning. I wish I'd remembered the earplug lead."

  "You'll ficth my thpeaker thoon?"

  "There's a place up the Road that can probably do it while I'm getting a new windshield. Don't worry."

  He swung the door open and dashed toward the shelter of the trees, about fifteen meters distant. When he reached them, he swung around the nearest and crouched in the shadows at its base. He remained motionless for several moments, breathing through his opened mouth.

  Nothing. No shots, shouts or sounds of movement He crawled back into the stand of trees, his fingertips brushing the way before him. Finally, he turned to his right and made his way around the rear of the hostel, still crawling. Leila's room remained dark. He could smell the burnt mattress ticking.

  He advanced until he had a full view of the parking lot. No additional vehicles seemed present in the light of the quarter-moon and a scattering of stars. He remained within the wood, however, heading toward the point where his attacker had fallen.

  When he reached the spot, he discovered that the covered body still lay there, its shroud weighted down with stones. He crouched beside it, pistol in hand, and regarded his truck. Five minutes passed. Ten...

  He advanced. He circled the truck, inspecting it, then entered on the driver's side. He placed his book in a slot beneath the dashboard, then inserted his ignition key.

  "Thtop! Don't turn the key!"

  "Why not?"

  "I am trickling a minimal charge through the thythtem. There ith rethithtanth that doethn't belong."

  "A bomb?"

  "Perhapth."

  Cursing, Red stepped out and opened the hood. He produced his flashlight and began an inspection. After a time, he slammed the hood and climbed back in, still

  cursing. ^ "Wath it a bomb?

  "Yes."

  He started the engine.

  "What did you do with it?"

  "Chucked it back into the woods."

  He put the truck into gear, backed up, turned and headed out of the lot, stopping only to top off the tank.

  Two

  He had left his vehicle at a roadstop several days distant, yet worlds away. He was excessively tall and thin, with a great shock of dark hair above his high forehead, and he seemed garishly garbed for the mountains of Abyssinia. He wore purple khaki trousers and a purple shirt; even his boots and belt were of dyed purple leather; ditto his large backpack. Several amethyst rings adorned his abnormally long fingers. As he hiked along the rocky trail, apparently oblivious to the chill wind, it seemed he could almost be a young Romantic poet off on a Wanderjahr, save that the nineteenth century was eight hundred years in the future. Hollow eyes burning in his near-emaciated face, he searched for obscure landmarks and found them. He had not rested the entire day, even taking his rations as he walked. Now, though, he paused, for two distant peaks had finally come into line and the end of his journey was in sight.

  Several hundred meters ahead, the trail widened, forming a large, flat bank which ran backward into a recess in the mountainside. He moved again, heading in that direction. When he reached the level area, he advanced into the recess. Walls of rock towered on either hand as he moved through the defile.

  At length, passing through a wooden gate, he emerged into a small valley. Cows munched the grasses within it There was a pool at its farther end. Nearer, a corral stood beside one of several cave mouths. Seated before that entranceway was a short, baldheaded black man. He was enormously fat, and his thick fingers caressed the turning clay on a treadle-operated potter's wheel.

  He looked up, regarding the stranger who greeted

  him in Arabic. "... And peace be with you," he replied in that

  language. "Come and refresh yourself." The purple-clad stranger approached.

  "Thank you." He dropped his pack and squatted across from the

  potter.

  "My name is John," he said.

  "... And I am Mondamay, the potter. Excuse me. I am not being rude, but I cannot desert the pot at this point. It will take me several more minutes to be assured it will grow properly. I will fetch you food and drink immediately then."

  "Take your time," said the other, smiling. "It is a pleasure to watch the great Mondamay at his work."

  "You have heard of me?"

  "Who has not heard of your pots—turned to perfection, fired with an amazing glaze?"

  Mondamay remained without expression.

  "You are kind," he observed.

  After a time, Mondamay stopped the wheel and rose to his feet.

  "Excuse me," he said.

  He moved with a peculiar, shuffling gait. John, his long fingers dipping into a purple pocket, watched the potter's back as he went.

  Mondamay entered the cave. Several minutes later, he returned bearing a covered tray.

  "I bring you bread and cheese and milk," he said.

  "Excuse me if I do not partake of them with you, as I have just eaten."

  He bent, graceful for all his bulk, to place the tray before the stranger.

  "I will slay a goat for your dinner—" he began. John's left hand was a blur. His incredibly long fingers dug into the area beneath the other's right shoulder blade. There they penetrated, tearing away a huge flap. His right hand, holding a small crystalline key, was already plunging toward the exposed metallic surface. The key entered a socket there. He turned it.

  Mondamay became immobile. A series of sharp clicks occurred somewhere within his stooped form. John withdrew his hand, moved back.

  "You are no longer Mondamay the potter," he said. "You have been partially activated, by me. Assume a standing position now."

  A soft whirring, accompanied by occasional crackling noises, emerged from the figure before him. Slowly it straightened; then it grew motionless once again. "Now remove your human disguise." The figure before him raised its hands slowly to the back of its head. They remained there for a moment, then drew apart and forward, stripping the dark pseudo-flesh from what came to be revealed as a metallic, stepped pyramid set about with numerous lenses. Then the hands moved to what appeared to be the neck, pressed there, pulled downward. Metal. More metal was revealed. And cables, and quartz windows behind which tiny lights flickered, and plates and nozzles and grids...

  Within two minutes, all of the false flesh had been stripped away, and the one who had been known as Mondamay stood gleaming, flashing and crackling before the tall man.

  "Give me access to Unit One," the man ordered. Cash register-like, a narrow metal drawer extruded itself from the automaton's chest. John leaned forward,

  his amethyst rings flashing, and made adjustments upon the controls contained within it. "Why are you doing this to me?" Mondamay asked

  "You are now fully activated and must obey me. Is that not correct?"

  "Yes, it is. Why have you done this to me?"

  "Deaccess Unit One, straighten up and go stand where you were when I arrived."

  Mondamay obeyed. The man seated himself and began eating.

  "Why have I activated you?" John said after a few moments. "Because," he answered himself, "I am, at the moment, the only man in the world who knows what you are."

  "There have been many mistakes concerning me ..."

  "Of that I am certain. I do not know whether there are parallel futures, but I do know that there are many pasts leading up to that time from which I have come. Not all of them are accessible. The sideroads have a way of reverting to wilderness when there are none to travel them. Do you not know that Time is a superhighway with many exits and entrances, main routes and secondary roads, that the maps keep changing, that only a few know how to find the access ramps?"

  "I am aware of this, though I am not one who can find his way along them."

  "How is it that you know?"

  "
You are not the first such traveler I have met."

  "I know that, here in your branch, a hypothesis which intelligent men find laughable in my own branch happens to be quite true: namely, that the Earth was visited long ago by creatures from another civilization, creatures who left various artifacts behind them. I know you are such an artifact. Is it not so?"

  "It is correct."

  "I know, further, that you are a fantastically sophisticated death machine. You were designed to destroy

  anything from a single virus to an entire planet. Is that not correct?"

  "It is so."

  "You were left behind. And with no one to understand your function, you chose to disguise yourself and lead this simple existence. True?"

  "True. How is it that you learned of me and obtained the necessary command key?"

  "My employer knows many things. He taught me the ways of the Road. He told me of you. He provided the key."

  "And now that you have found me and used it, what is it you wish of me?"

  "You said that I am not the first such traveler you have encountered. I know this, for I know the other man's identity. His name is Red Dorakeen, and soon he will be seeking you on this branch. I have need of a very large sum of money, and I will be paid it for killing him. I always prefer working through intermediaries, however—human or mechanical—in matters of violence. You are to be my agent in this matter." .

  "Red Dorakeen is my friend."

  "So I was told. All the less reason for him to suspect you in this. Now—" He rummaged in his pack and withdrew a slim metal case. He opened it and adjusted a pair of knobs. A beeping sound emerged from the

  unit. "He recently had a windshield replaced," John said, setting the case atop a rock. "When this was done, a small broadcast unit was concealed in his vehicle. Now I have but to wait until he enters this branch, and I can track him with this, striking wherever I choose."

  "I do not wish to be your agent in this matter."

  John rose from his meal, crossed the area between them, and struck the pot Mondamay had been turning, squashing it out of shape.

  "Your wishes are not important," he stated. "You have no choice but to obey me."

  "That is true."

  "I order you not to attempt to warn him in any way. Do you understand?"

  "I do."

  "Then do not argue with me about it. You will do as you are told, to the fullest of your ability."

  "I will."

  John returned to the tray and continued eating. "I would like to dissuade you from this," Mondamay stated after a time. "No doubt." "Do you know why your employer wishes him

  killed?"

  "No. That is his affair. It does not concern me."

  "There must be something very special about you, to have warranted your selection for such exotic employment."

  John smiled.

  "He considered me qualified."

  "What do you know of Red Dorakeen?"

  "I know what he looks like. I know that he will probably be coming this way."

  "You are obviously some sort of professional whom your employer has gone to great lengths to recruit. .."

  "Obviously."

  "Have you not wondered why? What is it about your intended victim which requires such consideration?"

  "Oh, he wanted me to handle it because the victim may already be aware that he is being hunted."

  "How did this come about?"

  "Recently, in his personal time-line, there has been one attempt on his life."

  "How is it that it failed?"

  "Crude, poorly managed, I understand."

  "What became of the would-be assassin?"

  The man in purple raised his eyes to glare at Mon-. damay,

  "Red killed him. But I assure you there is no comparison to be made between that person and myself."

  Mondamay remained silent.

  "If you are trying to frighten me, to cause me to feel it could happen to me also, you are wasting your time. There are very few things I fear."

  "That is good," said Mondamay.

  John remained with Mondamay for the better part of a week, breaking fifty-six delicately wrought pots before discovering that this did not disturb his mechanical servant. Even when he ordered the robot to break them personally, he obtained no equivalent of an emotional response, and so gave up on that avenue as a source of pain to his captive. Then, one afternoon, the bleeping machine emitted a sharp buzzing note. John hurried to adjust it, took a reading, and adjusted it further.

  "He is about three hundred kilometers from here," he stated. "As soon as I have bathed and changed my clothing, I will permit you to transport me to him so that this matter may be concluded."

  Mondamay did not reply.

  One

  "Red, that doctor we met back at the repair shop— I'm a little concerned about what he— Hey! Come on! You're not going to stop for a hitchhiker when people are shooting at you!"

  "The new speaker is a little strident."

  He drew off to the side. Suddenly it was raining. The small man with the wild hair and the black suitcase grinned and opened the door.

  "How far are you going?" came a high-pitched voice.

  "About five Cs."

  "Well, that's something, anyway. Nice to get out of the rain."

  He climbed in and slammed the door, balancing the suitcase on his knees.

  "How far are you headed?" Red asked, drawing back onto the highway.

  "Periclean Athens. Jimmy Frazier's the name."

  "Red Dorakeen. You've a long haul ahead. How's your Greek?"

  "Been studying it for two years. Always wanted to make this trip. —I've heard of you."

  "Good or bad?"

  "Both. And in between. You used to run arms till they cracked down, didn't you?"

  Red turned and met the dark eyes which were studying him.

  "It's been said." "Didn't mean to pry." Red shrugged. "No secret, I guess."

  "You've been in a lot of interesting places, I suppose?"

  "Some."

  "And some strange ones?"

  "A few of those, too."

  Frazier combed his hair with his fingers, patted it into

  place, leaned over to glance at himself in the rearvdew mirror, sighed.

  "I haven't run the Road that much myself. Mainly

  between Cleveland in the 1950s and Cleveland in the

  1980s."

  "What do you do?"

  "Tend bar, mostly. Also, I buy stuff in the fifties and sell it in the eighties."

  "Makes sense."

  "Makes money too. —You ever have trouble with hijackers?"

  "None to speak of."

  "You must have some really fancy armaments on this thing."

  "Nothing special."

  "I'd think you'd need them."

  "Shows how wrong you can be."

  "What do you do if you're suddenly up against it?" Red relit his cigar. "Maybe die," he replied. Frazier chuckled. "No. Really," he said.

  Red extended his right arm along the back of the seat.

  "Look, if you are a hijacker, you've caught me between loads."

  "Me? I'm no hijacker."

  "Then stop asking these damn theoretical questions. How the hell should I know what I'd do in some hypothetical situation? I'd respond to circumstances, that's all."

  "Sorry. I got carried away. It's a romantic life you lead. Where are you from, originally?" "I don't know." "What do you mean?"

  "I mean that I can't find my way back. Once it was on the main drag, I think, then it became a byroad probably, then it just disappeared into the misty places which are no longer history. I guess I just waited too long to begin looking. Got occupied. It's not even legend anymore." "What's it called?" "Do you smell something burning?" "Just your cigar." "My cigar; Where the hell is it?" "I don't— Here. It seems to have fallen down the seat behind me." "You get burned?"

  "Burned? Oh, I don't think so. Maybe my jacket, a little."

  Red
accepted the return of his cigar, glanced at the other's back. "You're lucky then. Sorry." "You were saying? ..."

  "Red!" Flowers broke in. "There's a police cruiser headed this way." Frazier started. "What is that?" he said.

  "You should be able to spot it in a minute." Red regarded the mirror. "Why don't they go find an accident?" he mused.

  He glanced at Frazier. "Unless this is some sort of setup."

  "What form of magic?-"

  "... Should be coming into view about now." "Red! Where's that voice coming from?" "Don't bother me! Damn it!"

  "Demons are very untrustworthy!" Frazier said, and he began tracing designs in the air. Fiery shapes flowed from his fingertips and hung before him.

  "Red! What's he up to?" Flowers asked. "My opticalscanners show—"

  Red cut sharply to the right and off onto the shoulder, braking.

  "Stop cluttering my cab with spells!" Red ordered. "You're not from any main-branch C Twenty. What are you trying to pull?"

  The police cruiser cut past and came to a stop before them. It was a gray evening, and snow decked the trees in the forest to the right.

  "I repeat—" Red said, but Frazier had already opened the door and was stepping down.

  "I don't know how you managed this—" Frazier began.

  Red recognized the officer emerging from the police vehicle but did not know his name.

  "—but you have just made a mistake." Frazier regarded the advancing policeman. "So did I, though, come to think of it..." he added.

  The cab's door slammed shut. The truck went into reverse, its tires grinding gravel. Its wheels cut to the left, its engine revved through a long pause while ghostly shapes streaked by. Then it shot onto the highway to flee through a pale day, a golden arch above it.

  "Flowers," Red said, "why did you override?"

  "A cost-benefit analysis of that situation put you in the red. Red. There's a better than sixty-percent chance I just saved your life."

  "But those were real cops."

  "Too bad for them, then."

  "He was that dangerous?"

  "Think about it."

  "I am, and I'm not sure what he was. Wonder where Chadwick got hold of him?" "He's not one of them. He's not part of the game,

  Red "

  "What makes you think that?"

  "He would have been briefed if he were. He didn't even know what I was. Is this Chadwick stupid, to send someone that unprepared?"

 

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