An Evil Guest

Home > Literature > An Evil Guest > Page 29
An Evil Guest Page 29

by Gene Wolfe


  For several dozen steps, Cassie considered that. At last she said, “I’m so lost... What do you mean, Wally?”

  “The Navy’s been hunting for my gold for two years. I told you about that.”

  She nodded.

  “They’re good men, and they’ve been working hard. It’s pretty mean of me, when you come to think of it, to keep them flying around with nothing to report. I’ve decided to let them find some.”

  “Do you know,” Cassie asked, “you look exactly like a little boy with both hands in the cookie jar?”

  Reis chuckled. “You see right through me.”

  “Maybe I do. The police found some stolen goods, right? In the trunk of your guy’s car?”

  “Exactly. We know, you see, where the Storm King’s sunken city is. We’ve known for a year at least, and Kandy’s been afraid I’d try to blow it up ever since we found it.”

  “Does he like the Storm King?”

  “No. He’s afraid of him. He fears him even more than he fears me. With good reason, I’d say.” For a few steps Reis was silent. “I’ve killed some people, Cassie. Killed them myself, I mean. A good many more have been killed at my order. I think I had good reasons in every case. The Storm King may think the same thing, though I don’t believe he does.”

  “What does he think, Bill? Do you know?”

  Reis shrugged. “Ever lived on a farm?”

  “No. I’d like to try it someday.”

  “I haven’t either, but I stayed on one for a while as a young man. A company dinner was almost always chicken. Real free-range chicken. The farmer’s wife would catch one and wring its neck. It didn’t bother her. They were just chickens.”

  “I think I’ve got it.”

  “I’ve wandered way off the point, but I’ll get back now. Today we start dropping gold bars into R’lyeh. We’ll be dropping one a day, mostly. Sometimes two. Sometimes none. That will depend on what other uses I may have for the gold. The Storm King has people down there. Hundreds. A thousand, maybe.”

  Remembering, Cassie nodded.

  “He may not know about the gold for a while, but they certainly will in a day or two. They’ll collect them, and keep them together.”

  “The radiation... ?”

  Reis grinned. “Long before the radiation, the Navy. I don’t know how much gold they’ll have to have at that depth before the Navy picks it up. It could be twenty bars. It could five. But they’ll pick it up, and when they do, they’ll go after it. My guess is that they’ll send down robot submersibles. They have some good ones, designed for underwater rescue and salvage.”

  Cassie asked, “The kind with operators somewhere else?”

  “Exactly. The operators will be in ships on the surface, but they’ll see the images transmitted by vid cameras on the submersibles. Those images will be of the Storm King’s sunken city, lit by the powerful lights the submersibles carry.” Reis grinned again. “Which one do you think will be the most surprised?”

  “I don’t know, but the Storm King...”

  “Will find that he has a much more dangerous enemy than I am.”

  THE squared coral blocks, when they found them, led them to an image, also of coral: a squat, wide-mouthed king or deity remarkable only for its size and the ruin wrought by weathering.

  “I don’t like him,” Cassie said.

  “I don’t think you’re supposed to,” Reis told her. “You’re supposed to fear him and like me.”

  They kissed; and soon after, on the beach and half in the surf, they did a great deal more.

  ABOARD the hopper that would return them to Takanga Ha’i, Cassie asked, “Are you going to marry me, Bill?”

  He looked pleasantly surprised. “If you’ll have me, darling. Yes. As soon as we can arrange whatever kind of wedding you want, and I’ll give you a rock so big nobody will believe it’s real.”

  He gulped, and though Cassie could not hear the gulp, she saw his throat move before he said, “I was about to tell you I didn’t know what you wanted from marriage. But I do. You told me. You want love. You’ll get it — shaken down, pressed down, and overflowing. I would die for you, Cassie. I really would.”

  “Don’t talk like that. Don’t even think like that.” She shivered. “Put your arms around me.”

  He did. “I don’t do this as much as I’d like to. I don’t want to embarrass you in public.”

  “I like it. I don’t care whether they envy my rock. It’ll have to be in some bank most of the time anyway. I want them to envy my man, and they will.”

  He hugged her, very gently.

  “Can I tell you what kind of wedding I want?”

  “Yes. Tell me.”

  “Nothing complicated. I’ve been married twice already. You know that.”

  Reis nodded. “So have I.”

  “But I want a bridal gown. Pastel green. White is for virgins, and I’m not trying to fool anybody. Aren’t there preachers on the big island? Missionaries?”

  “Yes. Half a dozen, probably.”

  “Well, one of them can perform the ceremony. I want it to be in the city somewhere. I mean Kololahi. A place where there’s a wide green lawn, and a white building in the background. I want King Kanoa there, and hundreds of our people. Would that be all right?”

  “Absolutely. They’ll be delighted.”

  “And I’d like you to fly in a few of my friends from Kingsport. India and Ebony for sure. Tiny, and Dr. Chase. Sharon Bench. Of course you can invite your own friends and family.”

  Reis nodded, his face serious. “You don’t have any family do you, Cassie?”

  She shook her head. “It was just Mom and me. That was all the family I ever had, and she’s dead now.”

  “I’m sorry.”

  “So am I. But it’s not like she died yesterday, or even last year. I’m used to it.”

  “I — I have a son from a previous marriage. May he come? Would that bother you? He’s sixteen.”

  She smiled. “Of course not! He should come, and I want to meet him.”

  Reis kissed her.

  THAT evening, Hiapo asked leave to speak with her. She agreed and made him sit down in her little drawing room. “Something’s bothering you.” Her tone was as kind as she could make it. “If you’re afraid I’ll be angry, I won’t be. You’ve got my word.”

  He adjusted his position, his nervousness freakish in so large and stolid a man. Distrustful of her graceful chairs, he was sitting on the floor. “I am not afraid you will be angry, O Queen. I am afraid you will be afraid.”

  “But you think I ought to be told.”

  Hiapo nodded solemnly.

  “My guess is that you’re right there, but wrong about me being afraid. What is it?”

  “The woman die.”

  “The woman I was talking to in the infirmary?”

  “Even so, O Queen. This woman who die. They bury her. Over her is sand and dirt, made smooth like beach.”

  Cassie nodded. “I’ve got it.”

  “This morning, no longer smooth. I say we must look. They do not like, but I dig.”

  Cassie took a deep breath. “She’s gone, right?”

  “You say true, O Queen. They wrap her in — ” Hiapo hesitated. “Sarong of dead.”

  “A plastic sheet.”

  Hiapo nodded. “I find it in grave at bottom, but no woman there is, O Queen.”

  TWO days later, when they were inspecting possible sites in Kololahi, Reis said, “I have good news and I have bad news. The good news is very good. Or at least I think so. The bad news is only a little bit bad, but I admit I’m disappointed. Which would you like to hear first?”

  “The good news, naturally. I’m a good-news girl.”

  “Rian’s coming. That’s my son. Rian Reis.” Reis cleared his throat. “His mother named him.”

  Cassie nodded. “I’d say she did a pretty good job of it.”

  “Thank you. She raised him, and I’ve got to say she did well with that, too. He was very ill as a ch
ild. A defective heart valve was what they said, although I think it was really something else. His mother got your friend Dr. Chase. Chase fixed it, whatever it really was. I’d never heard of him until then.”

  “He’s well now?”

  Reis nodded, smiling. “This is his final year at prep school, and he’s their starting quarterback. Now you’ll ask if I’ve ever seen him play. I have. I’ve seen every game.”

  “My gosh, Bill! Isn’t that dangerous?”

  Reis’s smile became a grin. “I said I’d seen them, which I have. I didn’t say I was seen at them.”

  She kissed him, a fleeting kiss like the touch of a finch’s wing. “Now the bad news. Should I sit down?”

  “That shouldn’t be necessary. I doubt that you’ve ever heard of Harold Klauser.”

  Cassie shook her head.

  “He was my predecessor as American ambassador to Woldercan, and he stayed on for a month after I got there to show me the ropes. I don’t have many friends, Cassie. Wealthy men rarely do. Harold Klauser’s my closest friend, though, and very close indeed. He wanted to come, but his doctors say he shouldn’t risk the trip.”

  “We could vid it, and send him the card.”

  “You’re right. I should have thought of that myself, and I’m surprised you did.”

  Cassie grinned. “Showbiz. Remember?”

  Later that day, they were shown the broad lawn of the New Zealand consulate, a close-cut carpet of green running down to a rock-strewn beach and the clean, blue Pacific.

  THE STORM — AND THE CALM

  Hearing stealthy noises as she composed herself for sleep, Cassie opened her eyes, sat up, and found a woman on either side of her bed. To her right, the assassin’s large, pale eyes seemed luminous in the dim light; a faint smile played around her mouth.

  On the other side, the dead woman stood erect and motionless, her face a mask, her eyes two darker stains upon that mask.

  “Mate in three moves.” The assassin tittered. “I’ve come to tell you the game’s as good as over. That it is over in the intellectual sense. It’s over, dear, darling, sweet, plump Queen Cassie, and you’ll be a widow before you’re ever a bride.”

  Cassie stared. “How did you get in here?”

  “How could you keep me out?”

  From the other side of the big bed, the dead woman whispered, “I unlocked her chain.”

  Cassie turned to look at her. “Why?”

  “A witness. I must write my report.”

  The assassin tittered.

  “I don’t understand.”

  “When I’ve written it, I will have peace.”

  The assassin said, “We are the halves, Cassie dearest. Together we make a whole. I’m the hunted, she’s the hunter. I’m the vixen, she’s the bitch baying on my trail. Without a fox she’s just a pet, one who’d soon be replaced by a poodle like you. Without a hound, what glory would I have in the court of the Storm King?”

  The dead woman said, “We’re going to steal Reis’s hopper. We’ll return to the Bay Area.”

  The assassin tittered again. “I to San Francisco, she to Oakland. But first, we visited you. You don’t have to offer refreshments.”

  “Really? I’m sure you’d like a nice glass of blood.”

  The dead woman said, “You’re my sister. You’ve seen what I saw. You felt what I felt. Please find my grave, in Oakland or Orinda. I may not be in it, but I’d like you to lay flowers there.”

  “She’ll die, too!” The assassin snarled.

  “You will live. Lay the flowers.”

  “I will,” Cassie whispered. “I promise.”

  “We’ve won!” The assassin’s hand, small and thin, grasped Cassie’s shoulder. “Listen! What do you hear?”

  Cassie did. “The wind. Only the wind.” Although her windows were closed, it seemed to her that her drapes were stirring.

  “Yes, the wind!” There was no giggle or titter now, but the wild, unnatural laughter of a thoroughly bad child. “Come out on the terrace. Tell us what you see.”

  The dead woman was already pulling down the sheet. Cassie rose and found her slippers. The dead woman and the assassin held her robe. She recalled it long afterward, and nothing in all their strange interview seemed stranger than that.

  When the terrace door opened, the song of the wind filled her bedroom; the wind itself ballooned her robe and knocked over something in another room.

  Outside, she felt she had gone blind. She struggled to keep her feet, while her robe snapped behind her like a banner. The assassin and the dead woman who had been Pat Gomez had vanished into the howling night.

  She was putting on her shoes when the lights went out. Her watch swore that it was day; no daylight came, only the crashing of waves not far enough below.

  A window blew in, showering the room with broken glass.

  She fled into the hall and ran toward the only light she saw. Hiapo held it, a clumsy lantern in which the flame of a fat candle flickered and smoked. He said, “You are dressed, O Queen. That is well.”

  “Why should I be dressed?”

  “We would dress you.” He whistled, abrupt and shrill. Two women came and took her arms. When she protested, he said, “These are needful, O Queen. These are needful. You must go with us.”

  She had recognized one of the women and whispered, “What is this, Iulani?”

  “Justice, O Queen. You bring the judgment of the Sky Gods.”

  Only that, of all her questions, evoked an answer.

  They left the palace for a rough tunnel cut into the living rock of the mountain, and left that for a long, worn stair that mounted up and up, turning and sometime coiling upon itself like a snake — or so it seemed to Cassie. Her little Italian automatic was strapped to her right thigh; had it been back in Kingsport, it could not have been less accessible.

  The wind screamed. She heard it faintly at first, but nearer and louder with each step they mounted, a wind that shrieked in agony like a witch in labor. The devil’s son, she thought, will be born tonight.

  And found herself shouting it, not at the women whose strong hands pinioned her arms but at Hiapo’s broad back. “The devil’s son! Listen to me! The devil’s son is born tonight!”

  If Hiapo heard her, he gave no sign.

  The arch at the top of the stair appeared, fitfully lit at times by vagrant beams that slipped away — swallowed by a night blacker far than any night should be.

  The wind was terrible, alive with cold anger.

  Then her arms were freed. She used them to hold down her skirt, which threatened to climb about her waist. Her hair had become a red mop — or so she thought, and did not care. As she saw now, the fitful beams came from hundreds of big lanterns of pierced tin lanterns held by warriors Hiapo’s size.

  Then Hiapo was gone, and King Kanoa was coming toward her. “You have not been injured, I hope.” King Kanoa’s face was in shadow; his booming voice, which so often held a smile, was not smiling on this black morning. “Are you hurt?”

  “Scared,” Cassie admitted. “Just scared.”

  “You needn’t be. No one here intends you harm.” He took her arm. “I shall protect you. Come with me to the seat of justice.”

  More steps, narrow and steep and lit from below by the flickering beams, steps she surmounted one by one on legs that already ached.

  The seat of justice was of stone; when she was seated upon it — with her arms pinned to its armrests by the two women — her fingers found carvings.

  “This,” King Kanoa told her, “is the ancient throne of my ancestors. It is here that our high king or high queen sits to announce to our assembled nation the justice of the Sky Gods.” His tone was conversational but not light. “At present the only god in our sky is the Storm King. He has raised this typhoon. Do you recall the village where we landed?”

  Cassie managed to say yes, although it was difficult to make herself heard above the wind. “Yes, I do.”

  “It is gone, every stick of it. At
this point I would guess that a hundred such villages have been destroyed and two thousand or more of us drowned.”

  “How terrible!”

  “It is.” He had moved behind her now, but Cassie felt sure he was nodding. “You have a good, loud voice, as is to be expected of an actress. I had hoped this wouldn’t be necessary. Close your mouth, please.”

  She did not, but his powerful hand closed it for her, forcing her chin up until the back of her head was firmly against the high stone back of the throne, then farther until her teeth locked. A moment later, a strip of tape covered her mouth.

  “You can still breathe, I hope. I’ll take that off as soon as this is over. Or you can.”

  Suddenly his voice boomed forth, speaking his own tongue. Clearly, Cassie decided, he had a microphone, and there were loudspeakers below — loudspeakers that had not lost power when the palace had, or to which power had been restored.

  Minutes passed. King Kanoa finished, and was cheered wildly. Several men fired into the air.

  “Let me speak English.” For the second time, his voice thundered from the speakers.

  “There are those here, our high king among them, who do not understand our tongue. They, too, deserve to know.”

  Cassie’s eyes searched for Reis, but did not find him.

  “In righteous anger, the Storm King has raised this typhoon. We, his devout worshippers, perish. We have begged him to mitigate his displeasure, and he has answered us. If we offer our greatest sacrifice, his storm shall abate. Here we do as he asks. Our high king will die for us, his people.”

  Cassie struggled, but could not free her arms from the women’s grip.

  “Bring him forth! Lawe mai Mo’i!”

  Below them, the crowd of huge warriors parted. Reis, a big man, looked small beside them. Very small, Cassie thought, but proud and unafraid. His hands seemed to have been tied behind his back.

  The last of the warriors who accompanied him carried a painted club the size of a softball bat, with a great knob of wood at its head.

  King Kanoa spoke again in his own tongue. Then: “You cannot speak as we, O King, but you may now address those who wait in English speech.”

 

‹ Prev