by John Norman
A cry of horror escaped my lips and I rushed forward.
Tears burst from my eyes. I could not restrain a moan as I fell to my knees beside the shattered fragments of the egg. It was done, gone, ended My mission had failed! The Priest-Kings would diet This world, and perhaps my other, dear Earth, would now fall to the mysterious Others, whoever or whatever they might be. It was done, gone, ended, dead, dead, hopeless, gone, dead.
I was scarcely aware of the brief whimpering of the Paravaci as, twisting and turning on the rug, biting at it, holding his arm, his flesh turning orange from ost venom, he writhed and died.
Kamchak walked to him and tore away the mask. I saw the contorted, now-orange, twisted, agonized face. Already it was like coloured paper and peeling, as though lit and burned from the inside. There were drops of blood and sweat on it.
I heard Harold say, “It is Tolnus.”
“Of course,” said Kamchak. “It had to have been the Ubar of the Paravaci for who else could have sent their riders against the Tuchuk wagons, who else could have promised a mercenary tarnsman half the bosk and gold and women and wagons of the Paravaci?”
I was only dimly aware of their conversation. I recalled Tolnus, for he had been one of the four Ubars of the Wagon Peoples, whom I, unknowing, had met when first I came to the Plains of Turia, to the Land of the Wagon Peoples.
Kamchak bent to the figure and, opening his garments, tore from his neck the almost priceless collar of jewels which the man had worn.
He threw this to one of his men. “Give this to the Paravaci,” he said, “that they may buy back some of their bosk and women from the Kataii and the Kassars.”
I was only partly cognizant of these things, for I was overcome with grief, kneeling in Saphrar’s audience hall before the shards of the shattered golden sphere.
I was conscious of Kamchak now standing near to me, and behind him Harold.
Unabashed I wept.
It was not only that I had failed, that what I had fought for had now vanished, become ashes not only that the war of Priest-Kings, in which I had played a prominent part, fought long before over such matters, had now become fruitless, meaningless that my friend Misk’s life and its purpose would now be shattered even that this world and perhaps Earth itself might now, undefended, fall in time to the mysterious Others but that what lay in the egg itself, the innocent victim of intrigues which had lasted centuries and might perhaps being worlds into conflict, was dead it had done nothing to warrant such a fate; the child, so to speak, of Priest-Kings, what could have become the Mother, was now dead.
I shook with sobs, not caring.
I heard, vaguely, someone say, “Saphrar and Ha-Keel have fled.”
Near me Kamchak said, quietly, “Release the sleen. Let them hunt.”
I heard the chains loosened and the two sleen bounded from the room, eyes blazing.
I would not have cared to have been Saphrar of Turia.
“Be strong, Warrior of Ko-ro-ba,” said Kamchak, kindly.
“You do not understand, my friend,” I wept, “you do not understand.”
The Tuchuks stood about, in their black leather. The sleen keeper stood nearby, the chain leashes loose in his hands. In the background there stood the slaves with their pans of gold.
I became aware of a strong odour, of rottenness, exuding from the shattered thing which lay before me.
“It smells,” Harold was saying. He knelt down near the fragments, disgust on his face, fingering the stiff, leathery ruptured egg, some of the golden pieces broken from it. He was rubbing one of them between his thumb and forefinger.
My head down, I cared for nothing.
“Have you examined the golden sphere carefully?” Kamchak was asking.
“I never had the opportunity,” I said.
“You might do so now,” said Kamchak.
I shook my head negatively.
“Look,” said Harold, thrusting his hand under my face. I saw that his thumb and forefinger were marked with a golden stain.
I gazed at his hand, not comprehending.
“It is dye,” he said.
“Dye?” I asked.
Harold got up and went to the shattered, stiff shard of the egg. From it, wet, wrinkled. rotted, dead for perhaps months or years, he drew forth the body of an unborn tharlarion.
“I told you,” said Kamchak, kindly, “the egg was worthless.”
I staggered to my feet, standing now and looking down at the shattered fragments of the egg. I stooped down and picked up one of the stiff shards and rubbed it, seeing the golden stain now left on my fingertips.
“It is not the egg of Priest-Kings,” said Kamchak. “Do you truly think we would permit enemies to know the whereabouts of such a thing?”
I looked at Kamchak, tears in my eyes.
Suddenly, far off, we heard a weird scream, high, wavering, and the shrill howls of frustrated sleen.
“It is ended,” said Kamchak. “It is ended.”
He turned in the direction from which the scream had come. Slowly, not hurrying, in his boots he tramped across the rug, toward the sound. He stopped once beside the twisted, hideous body of Tolnus of the Paravaci. “it is too bad,” he said, “I would have preferred to stake him out In the path of the bosk.” Then, saying no more, Kamchak, the rest of us following, left the room, guiding ourselves by the distant, frustrated howls of disappointed Sleen.
We came together to the brink of the Yellow Pool of Turia. At its marbled edge, hissing and quivering with rage, throwing their heads now and again upward and howling in frustrated fury were the two, tawny hunting sleen, their maddened round eyes blazing on the pathetic figure of Saphrar of Turia, blubbering and whimpering, sobbing, reaching out, his fingers scratching the air as though he would climb it, for the graceful, decorative vines that hung above the pool, more than twenty feet above his head.
He struggled to move in the glistening, resprung, sparkling substance of the Yellow Pool, but could not change his place.
The fat hands with the scarlet fingernails seemed suddenly to be drawn and thin, clutching. The merchant was covered with sweat. He was surrounded by the luminous, white spheres that floated under the surface about him, perhaps watching, perhaps somehow recording his position in virtue of pressure waves in the medium. The golden droplets which Saphrar wore in place of eyebrows fed unnoticed into the fluid that humped itself thickening itself about him. Beneath the surface we could see places where his robes had been eaten away and the skin was turning white beneath the surface, the juices of the pool etching their way into his body, taking its protein and nutriment into its own, digesting it.
Saphrar took a step deeper into the pool and the pool permitted this, and he now stood with the fluids level with his chest
“Lower the vines!” begged Saphrar.
No one moved.
Saphrar threw back his head like a dog and howled in pain. He began to scratch and tear at his body, as if mad.
Len, tears bursting from his eyes, he held out his hands to Kamchak of the Tuchuks.
“Please” he cried.
“Remember Kutaituchik,” said Kamchak.
Saphrar screamed in agony and moving beneath the yellow glistening surface of the pool I saw several of the filamentous fibres encircle his legs and begin to draw him deeper into the pool and beneath the surface.
Then Saphrar, merchant of Turia, struggled, pounding against the caked material near to him, to prevent his being drawn under. The eyes were bulging perhaps a quarter of an inch from the little round head and the mouth, with its two golden teeth, now emptied of ost venom, seemed to be screaming but there was no sound.
“The egg,” Kamchak informed him, “was the egg of a tharlarion it was worthless.”
The fluid now had reached Saphrar’s chin and his head was back to try and keep his nose and mouth over the surface.
His head shook with horror.
“Please!” he cried once more, the syllable lost in the bubbling yellow mass
that reached into his mouth.
“Remember Kutaituchik,” said Kamchak, and the filamentous fibres about the merchant’s legs and ankles drew him slowly downward. Some bubbles broke the surface. Then the merchant’s hands, still extended as though to grasp the vines overhead, with their scarlet fingernails, the robes eaten away from the flesh, disappeared beneath the sparkling, glistening surface.
We stood silently there for a time, until Kamchak saw small, white bones, like bleached driftwood, rocking on the sparkling, now watery surface, being moved bit by bit, almost as if by tides, to the edge of the pool, where I gathered attendants would normally collect and discard them.
“Bring a torch,” said Kamchak.
He looked down into the sparkling, glistening living fluid of the Yellow Pool of Turia.
“It was Saphrar of Turia,” said Kamchak to me, “who first introduced Kutaituchik to the strings of kanda.” He added, “it was twice he killed my father.”
The torch was brought, and the pool seemed to discharge its vapour more rapidly, and the fluids began to churn, and draw away from our edge of the pool. The yellows of the pool began to flicker and the filamentous fibres began to writhe, and the spheres of different colours beneath the surface began to turn and oscillate, and dart in one direction and then the other.
Kamchak took the torch and with his right hand, in a long arc, flung it to the centre of the pool.
Suddenly like an explosion and conflagration the pool erupted into flames and Kamchak and I and Harold and the others shielded our faces and eyes and withdrew before the fury of the fire. The pool began to roar and hiss and bubble and scatter parts of itself, flaming, into the air and again to the walls. Even the vines caught fire. The pool then at drawn under. The eyes were bulging perhaps a quarter of an inch from the little round head and the mouth, with its two golden teeth, now emptied of ost venom, seemed to be screaming but there was no sound.
It tempted to desiccate itself and retreat into its hardened shell-like condition but the fire within the closing shell burst it apart and open and then it was again like a lake of burning oil, with portions of the shell tossed like flaming chips upon it
For better than an hour it burned and then the basin of the pool, now black, in places the marble fused and melted, was empty, save for smears of carbon and grease, and some cracked, blackened bones, and some drops of melted gold, what had been left perhaps of the golden drops which Saphrar of Turia had worn over his eyes, and the two golden teeth, which hall once held the venom of an ost.
“Kutaituchik is avenged,” said Kamchak, and turned from the room.
Harold and I, and the others followed him.
Outside the compound of Saphrar, which was now burning, we mounted kaiila to return to the wagons outside the walls.
A man approached Kamchak. “The tarnsman,” he said, “escaped.” He added, “As you said, we did not fire on him for he did not have with him the merchant, Saphrar of Turia.”
Kamchak nodded. “I have no quarrel with Ha-Reel, the mercenary,” he said. Then Kamchak looked at me. “You, however,” he said, “now that he knows of the stakes in these games, may meet him again. He draws his sword only in the name of gold, but I expect that now, Saphrar dead, those who employed the merchant may need new agents for their work and that they will pay the price of a sword such as that of Ha-keel” Kamchak grinned at me, the first time since the death of Kutaituchik. “It is said,” remarked Kamchak, “that the sword of Ha-Keel is scarcely less swift and cunning than that of Pa-Kur, the Master of Assassin”
“Pa-Kur is dead,” I said. “He died in the siege of Ar.”
“Was the body recovered?” asked Kamchak.
“No,” I said.
Kamchak smiled. “I think, Tarl Cabot,” he said. “you would never make a Tuchuk.”
“Why is that?” I asked.
“You are too innocent,” he said, “too trusting.”
“Long ago,” said Harold, nearby, “I gave up expecting more of a Koroban.”
I smiled. “Pa-Kur,” I said, “defeated in personal combat on the high roof of the Cylinder of Justice in Ar, turned and to avoid capture threw himself over the ledge. I do not think he could fly.”
“Was the body recovered?” Kamchak asked again.
“No,” I said. “But what does it matter?”
“It would matter to a Tuchuk,” said Kamchak.
“You Tuchuks are indeed a suspicion lot,” I remarked.
“What would have happened to the body?” asked Harold, and it seemed he was serious.
“I-suppose,” I said, “it was torn to pieces by the crowds below or lost with the other dead. Many things could have happened to it.”
“It seems then,” said Kamchak, “that he is dead.”
“Surely,” I said.
“Let us hope so,” said Kamchak, “For your sake.”
We turned the kaiila from the courtyard of the burning House of Saphrar and, abreast, rode from that place. We rode without speaking but Kamchak, for the first time in weeks, whistled a tune. Once he turned to Harold. “I think in a few days we might hunt tumits,” he remarked.
“I would enjoy that,” remarked Harold.
“Perhaps you will join us?” inquired Kamchak.
“I think,” I said, “I shall leave the Wagons soon for I have failed in my mission on behalf of Priest-Kings.”
“What mission is that?” inquired Kamchak innocently.
“No find the last egg of Priest-Kings,” I said, perhaps irritably, “and to return it to the Sardar.”
“Why do Priest-Kings not do their own errands?” asked Harold.
“Whey cannot stand the sun,” I said. “They are not as Men and if men saw them they might fear and try to kill them the egg might be destroyed.”
“Someday,” said Harold, “you must speak to me of Priest-Kings.”
“Very well,” I agreed.
“I thought you might be the one,” said Kamchak.
“What one?” I asked.
“The one that the two men who brought the sphere told me might come one day to claim it.”
“The two men,” I said, “are dead their cities warred upon one another and in battle they slew one another.”
“They seemed to me fine warriors,” said Kamchak. “I am sorry to hear it.”
“When did they come to the wagons?” I asked.
“As recently as two years ago,” he said.
“They gave you the egg?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said, “to keep for Priest-Kings.” He added, “It was wise of them, for the Wagon Peoples are among the farthest and most fierce of the Goreans, living free hundreds of pasangs from all cities, save Turia.”
“Do you know where the egg is now?” I asked.
“Of course,” he said.
I began to shake in the saddle of the kaiila, trembling. The reins moved in my hands and the beast shifted nervously.
I reined in the kaiila.
“Do not tell me where it Is,” I said, “or I should feel bound to attempt to seize it and take it to the Sardar.”
“But are you not he who is to come from Priest-Kings to claim the egg?” inquired Kamchak.
“I am he,” I said.
“Then why would you wish to seize it and carry it away?” he asked.
“I have no way to prove that I come from Priest-Kings,” I said. “Why would you believe me?”
“Because,” said Kamchak, “I have come to know you.”
I said nothing.
“I have watched you carefully, Tarl Cabot of the City of Ko-ro-ba,” said he, Kamchak of the Tuchuks. “Once you spared my life, and we held grass and earth together, and from that time, even had you been outlaw and knave, I would have died for you, but still, of course, I could not give you the egg. Then you went with Harold to the city, and so I knew that to seize the egg against such overwhelming odds you were ready to give your life. Such a venture would not in all likelihood have been attempted by one who laboured onl
y for gold. That taught me that it was indeed probable that you were he chosen by Priest-Kings to come for the egg.”
“That is why,” I asked, “you let me go to Turia though you knew the Golden Sphere was worthless”
“Yes,” said Kamchak, “that is why.”
“And why, after that,” I asked, “did you not give me the egg?”
Kamchak smiled. “I needed only one last thing,” said he, “Tarl Cabot.”
“And what was that?” I asked.
“To know that you wanted the egg for Priest-Kings alone, and not for yourself.” Kamchak put out his hand and touched my arm. “That is why,” he said, “I wanted the golden sphere shattered. I would have done it myself had it not been broken, to see what you would have done, to see if you would have been enraged at your loss, or if you would have been overcome with grief, on behalf of Priest-Kings.”
Kamchak smiled gently. “When you wept,” he said, “I knew then that you cared for it, and for Priest-Kings that you had truly come for the egg and that you wanted it for them and not for yourself.”
I looked at him, dumbfounded.
“forgive me,” he said, “if I am cruel for I am a Tuchuk, but though I care much for you I kind to know the truth of these mattes.”
“No forgiveness is necessary,” I said. “In your place, I think I might well have done the same thing.”
Kamchak’s hand closed on mine and we clasped hands.
“Where is the egg?” I asked.
“Where would you think to find it?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” I said. “If I did not know better, I would expect to have found it in the wagon of Kutaituchik the wagon of the Ubar of the Tuchuks.”
“I approve of your conjecture,” he said, “but Kutaituchik, as you know, was not the Ubar of the Tuchuks.”
I gazed at him.
“I am Ubar of the Tuchuks,” he said.
“You mean” I said.
“Yes,” said Kamchak, “the egg has been in my wagon for two years.”
“But I lived in your wagon for months!” I cried.
“Did you not see the egg?” he asked.