father's elder brother, Piers}'
   'Uncle Piers? Vaguely - bit of a black sheep, wasn't
   he?'
   'Yes, you could say that - he was on Ingram's side
   during the Winter Coup, helping organise support in the
   trapper towns and further out, but his heavy-handed
   methods backfired on him and he supposedly met a grisly
   end away in the north. Anyway, he had a favourite
   saying - "Screw negotiations, break out the ammo" -
   which I suspect these Brolturans would identify heavily
   with.' She was silent a moment. 'I worry about the three
   of you so much, because I fear that it will all get much
   worse before it gets better. Ian is a soldier and Ned is a
   doctor, so danger will come searching for one of them ...'
   'Mum, you shouldna worry so much, and especially
   not about me - all I do is rattle about with my stone
   carvings and dusty potsherds.' Aye, and a mysterious,
   underground chamber built by a vanished race, proba-
   bly Forerunner. 'But we'll also be looking out for each
   other, and Uncle Theo.'
   'Ah, I spoke to him this morning - he said that he
   was on the trail of those who killed the Brolturan
   ambassador but he was too late to stop it. He's so angry,
   at himself too. Oh look, I've talked long enough. I
   should let you get on with your work . . . oh, I meant to
   ask if your friend Ms Macreadie is still working at your
   site.'
   'No, she's away back up to Nivyesta, Mum. She
   really only was here for that official visit a couple of
   days ago.'
   'Right, of course. Well, goodbye, dear.'
   After their farewells, Greg put his comm away and
   headed along the passage, burdened by guilt, knowing
   he should be in touch with his mother more often, actu-
   ally making the call rather than leaving it to her or, in
   this case, Ian.
   Perhaps I'm just not a very good son, he thought
   gloomily as he walked down into the room of pillars.
   Chel and Listener Weynl were out on the chamber's
   patterned floor, at roughly the spot where Greg had lost
   his boots the day before. Barefooted, they were crouch-
   ing down in the cold golden light of a lamp sitting on
   the boundary wall, a short strap anchoring it to a shoul-
   der pack. Warily, Greg approached the gap and sat on
   the wall, legs kept safely away from the floor patterns.
   Chel glanced up and smiled. 'Friend Gregori, good to
   see you.' He was wearing the headband over his new
   eyes and seemed more relaxed and rested than last time.
   Then Weynl straightened and gave him a measured
   look.
   'May I address you as "Scholar", Mr Cameron?' the
   Listener said. 'It feels far more appropriate considering
   all that you have done for the Uvovo, all the clues ycu
   have found, culminating in this amazing discovery.'
   'I would be honoured to accept the title, Listener,' he
   said. 'Is there a ceremony involved?'
   'Yes - it consists of a day and a half of meditation in
   a vodrun, followed by individual visits to your family
   and friends to sing the Song of New Leaves. However,
   there is no vodrun within easy travel and the pressure of
   events allows little enough time for even the most vital
   of tasks.'
   Greg hesitated, not expecting the seriousness in
   WeynPs words and his demeanour. Even Chel's smile
   was sombre.
   'By events, do you mean this diplomatic row with
   the Brolturans? Once we catch those murdering mani-
   acs, we'll get back to negotiations and it'll all blow over.
   And anyway, what bearing does that have on our work
   here?'
   'Do you remember what I told you yesterday about
   this place, Gregori?' Chel said.
   'You said that it was built a hundred millennia ago by
   a race, no, an alliance of races called the Great Ancients.
   And I said, well now, that sounds similar to these
   Forerunners I've been hearing about in the news and on
   the vee, who were supposedly wiped out in a cataclysmic
   war about a hundred thousand years ago.' Greg smiled.
   'And I said, so what did this big chamber actually do,
   what was it for, and you said that you'd get Listener
   Weynl to explain it to me ... and here we all are. I
   assume that it has something to do with my dazzling
   experience yesterday.'
   Weynl nodded. 'A defence - the well has a vigilant
   Sentinel, watching tirelessly, guarding against anything
   that might be considered a threat.'
   'Like my boots?'
   'The Sentinel is very wary of unnatural or processed
   materials,' Weynl said. 'You'll notice that our feet are
   bare. If you take off your footwear you can join us - it's
   quite safe.'
   Greg held up his hands. 'Once was plenty, thank you.
   So, what are you doing, and how does it relate to what
   this place is for?'
   Chel looked up from the pattern grooves, which were
   gleaming where he had touched them, although Greg
   noticed that the radiance faded when he lifted his fingers
   away.
   'We're trying to rouse the Sentinel,' Chel said. 'Then
   hopefully speak with it.'
   'Speak with it and warn it,' added Weynl. 'The Great
   Ancients built this place and others like it on a hundred
   other planets, wells of power to counter the terrible
   might of the Enemy; numberless in their vast hordes,
   they sought to smother and strangle all who opposed
   them, but the wells could reach out into the starry black-
   ness, drag them down and swallow them, sending them
   down into the darkness below the darkness, the empti-
   ness within the emptiness.'
   Greg stared at the older Listener, not knowing what
   to say, feeling oddly embarrassed, but he knew that he
   could not dissemble.
   'Listener Weynl, I've heard the Saga of the Ancient
   Roots and I've read the transcript - I'm sorry but it's a
   legend, a myth. All societies and cultures have stories
   like this in the bedrock of their prehistory ...'
   But Weynl was smiling at him, not quite in pity, more
   like tolerant amusement.
   'Friend Gregori,' said Chel. 'This is not a matter of
   faith for the Uvovo - we know it to be true, as true as
   the War of the Long Night.'
   'Chel, you've seen our work . . .'
   'Gregori, you saw what happened here yesterday -
   you were blinded for several minutes by the forces that
   came up out of the pattern.'
   'I'll concede that this is a technological artefact from
   some vanished civilisation,' he said. 'But there's not a
   shred of evidence to connect this place to the Uvovo
   myths.'
   'Scholar Cameron,' said Weynl. 'I tell you in all hon-
   esty that this chamber is the reason why the Hegemony
   is so interested in Umara. They know of this place and
   they want it - its powers would make them invincible.'
   It was an amazing statement and lent a growing sense
   of unreality to an already bizarre situation. But Weynl
   said it w
ith such steady conviction that Greg took a
   mental step backwards - could it be true, he wondered.
   It explained several coincidences, yet for all that it was a
   tantalising conjecture his ingrained scepticism demanded
   empirical evidence.
   'How may we convince you, friend Gregori?' said
   Chel.
   'Proof,' he said. 'Show me undeniable proof that it's
   all connected - Segrana, this chamber, the Forerunner
   Catastrophe, the Uvovo - and I'll ... well, I'll know
   better.'
   'If we can persuade the Sentinel to speak,' Weynl said,
   'would that suffice?'
   'That would certainly get my attention, aye.'
   Smiling, the Listener looked at Chel, who nodded. As
   Greg watched, the Uvovo crouched down, examining
   the incised stone, muttering to each other as they ran
   fingertips along the lines of the patterns. Silver threads
   shone in their wake and he noticed that each Uvovo
   was delineating a cluster of lines, symbols and curves
   distinct and separate while just a few feet apart. After
   working on them for a few minutes, first Weynl then
   Chel rose and took three paces out towards the middle
   of the floor, crouched down and again scribed out glow-
   ing patterns on the stone. Their squatting forms
   appeared dim and shadowy a few yards from the lamp,
   but the patterns gleamed like mercury.
   Chel stood and came back over to the nearer pair,
   crouched and began tracing a line from one pattern clus-
   ter to the other, while Weynl did the same at his end.
   When the links were made, the pattern pairs brightened
   suddenly then faded - the Uvovo grinned at each other
   and nodded. Then Weynl bent down and began to scribe
   a bright thread from his patterns back to Chel's. Just
   before the end he paused, smiled up at Chel and Greg,
   then closed the gap.
   All four pattern clusters brightened significantly and
   the wall at the opposite side was now just visible. Like
   the last time Greg felt a change in the air, which
   became neither warmer nor cooler, with no change in
   humidity or odour or even pressure. It was as if
   abruptly something was present in the chamber, some-
   thing impassive. . .
   TUUL-RAAN-SHAYH
   Greg jumped as a massive voice spoke. It came from
   all around, and while it was not overly loud there was a
   deep, resonant timbre to it which made the hairs on his
   arms tingle.
   Chel and Weynl looked stunned and uncertain. The
   Listener started calling out greetings in the Uvovo
   tongue while Chel whispered suggestions. Greg how-
   ever felt sure that those three words were not from the
   Uvovo language.
   SHUUL-TANN-RAYH
   'Do you know what that means?' Greg said.
   The two Uvovo glanced at each other before Weynl
   spoke.
   'I cannot be sure, Scholar Cameron. At first I thought
   it was an ancient dialect of our tongue, or even a high
   idiom used by senior Listeners, yet there is no recognis-
   able sense to these ... sounds . . .'
   'But did you notice with the second announcement
   that the initial consonants shifted?' Greg said, a nasty
   suspicion forming in his thoughts. 'If it shifts again . . .'
   RUUL-SHAAN-TAYH
   'Right,' he said. 'I think we should get out of here,
   actually ...'
   'But why, friend Gregori?' said Chel.
   'Remember the tests you and I went through?' he
   said as he got to his feet. 'Remember what happened to
   my boots?'
   Chel smiled. 'I really don't think that we're in danger.
   Gregori.'
   'How do you know?'
   'I have been using my new senses to study the well
   and what lies beneath it, and I can tell you that the flow
   of powers is very different from before.'
   'Hmm, either you're very trusting,' Greg said, moving
   in the direction of the entrance, 'or very optimistic'
   SHUUL-RAAN TAYH
   'I think that sometimes I am a distrustful optimist,'
   Chel said, while Listener Weynl continued calling out
   greetings in a variety of Uvovo dialects.
   'Well I'm an orthodox sceptic,' Greg said. 'So I'll be
   waiting back at the corridor while you see what hap-
   pens . . .'
   Chel grinned and waved and Greg left the chamber.
   He was near the head of the stairway when the comm in
   his jacket beeped, alerting him to a message. He took it
   out, thumbed the keys, saw it was from Catriona and
   began to read while walking along the entry corridor.
   'Hi Greg,' it began. 'I tried calling you but the node
   hub said you were out of range so I'm sending a corn-
   note instead. Just to let you know that I'm going to try
   something different in my hunt for the Pathmasters - a
   Listener I know suggested I spend a few hours in a
   vodrun chamber, contemplating the mysteries of Segrana
   in the hope that she might see fit to let me in on a few
   Pathmaster secrets. Anyway, by the time you read this
   I'll probably be in the vodrun, especially given the signal
   lag between here and Darien. I guess you're back down
   there in that chamber - wish 1 was there too. Bye.'
   The comnote had been sent nearly half an hour ago
   but had only reached him when he left the chamber and
   came to the corridor. Suddenly anxious, he began keying
   for a return call but before he could put it through, that
   deep, reverberant voice spoke again from below .. .
   HORON
   Reflexively, Greg turned to the stone wall, clamping
   his hands over his eyes. For telescoping moments all
   was dark and silent, no remorseless, hammering light
   pouring into his optic nerves, turning the world into
   white fog. Cautiously, he peered from behind his fingers,
   then lowered his hands - all seemed fine, but just to be
   sure he hurried back to the stairs, pausing halfway
   down.
   'Chel, are you both okay?' he shouted.
   'All is well, Gregori,' came the faint reply. 'No need
   for concern.'
   'Great!' he yelled back, then retraced his steps, wait-
   ing till he reached the window, where the body harness*
   hung, before making the call to Catriona.
   34
   CHEL
   Listener Weynl had been in the middle of an elaborate
   greeting delivered in a whispering hinterland accent
   when that great voice spoke again.
   HORON
   ... and simultaneously the four glowing pattern clus-
   ters went dark, leaving them in the faintly golden light
   of the solitary lamp. It cast their shadows in long black
   paths across the intricately carved surface of the well,
   making all the incised lines, curves and symbols appear
   harshly cut, and the stone look like grainy, corroded
   metal.
   They both stood there for a moment then, to Chel's
   surprise, Weynl began to laugh quietly, his shoulders
   shaking with mirth. Chel found himself starting to smile
   for no apparent reason, and was about to ask what had
   set off this d
isplay of merriment when Greg's voice came
   from far off, probably the main passage.
   'Chel, are you both okay?'
   'All is well, Greg,' he shouted back. 'No need for
   concern.'
   'Great...'
   On hearing Greg's distant yelling, however, Weynl
   went into another bout of hilarity which provoked in
   Chel a slight but growing irritation.
   'Listener, are you well?'
   '. . . I'm . . . sorry, good Scholar ... all this marvel-
   lous construction dedicated to preserving the Great
   Ancients' work and when we awake their Sentinel we
   cannot understand a word.' He smiled. 'But a Human
   shouting from outside we can comprehend quite
   well . . . my apologies, it seemed overwhelming!)
   funny . . .'
   'Understandable, Listener,' he said, feeling disap-
   proval at WeynPs amusement, then wondering why he
   would feel that way. Am I turning into some kind of
   strict, humourless traditionalist? Perhaps I'm the one in
   need of a dose of merrymaking!
   Suddenly, Weynl fell silent and turned to face Chel,
   his eyes wide, mouth open.
   'Foolish I've been, yes, and blind!' He stretched out a
   hand to the well surface. 'The Great Ancients built this
   place, so might it not be expected that their Sentinel
   would speak their language?'
   'Exactly so,' said a sighing, whispery voice from
   nearby. 'Disappointing that you took this long to discern
   it.'
   In the air above the golden-glowing lamp hung the
   tenuous outlines of a vague, hooded figure, its spectral
   contours formed from minute particles of dust hanging
   and glittering in the heat rising from slots in the lamp
   cover.
   'Venerable Pathmaster,' Weynl said, bowing. 'Then
   it is true - the Sentinel speaks only the Great Ancients'
   tongue.'
   'I seem to recall that it was fluent in a great many
   forms of communication, not all of them spoken.
   However, I do remember that it could be slightly irascible
   in temperament. Perhaps I can persuade it to be more
   forthcoming.' The Pathmaster paused. 'Cheluvahar, I see
   the changes Segrana has made in you -1 expect you were
   surprised.'
   Chel almost smiled, imagining how Gregori would
   answer such a comment.
   'Yes, Pathmaster, surprise was indeed one of the emo-
   
 
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