SHEILA FINCH
THE NAKED FACE OF GOD
Merik Qintana vaulted over the net, a long, two-handled
bat in his hand. "My
game, Excellent One." Ozal's sun nestled low in rosy clouds on the
horizon, and
a flower-scented breeze touched the xenolinguist's damp brow. At his feet, a
flock of tiny, rainbow-feathered tilitili birds fluttered up from the lawn
surrounding the
gaming court, only to be pulled back by silken cords around
their legs.
"Terrans have too
much magic for me." Jheru, Excellent One of Ozal, answered
languidly, but the tall alien's
narrow, golden eyes were mistrustful.
Assignment as lingster to Jheru's court didn't
include deliberately losing games
to him, in Merik's view. Ozal was a small planet, hardly
important in the
affairs of the Orion Arm, but since Jheru didn't know that, it wasn't wise
to
allow his dislike to show. He said lightly, "Luck, not magic, Excellency."
Jheru, nude
and hairless, built like a child's stick-figure drawing with the
unblinking gaze of a
starved hawk, dropped his own bat carelessly on the ground
and held out a hand. Tilitilis
scattered anxiously out of the way. Merik wiped a
sweaty palm on his hip, then touched the
Excellent One's hand briefly with the
tip of a finger as this world's courtesy dictated.
Jheru stared at something. Following the direction of the Excellent One's gaze,
Merik saw a
small male alien in coarse and shapeless clothing draw back into a
thicket of scarlet
shrubs that lined the perimeter of the garden. Even at a
distance the physical differences
between this male and the Excellent One were
apparent. Jheru, like most of the inhabitants
of Ozal, made six-foot Merik
appear short; the lurker, who seemed to be from a race Merik
had not seen
before, appeared a little over five feet tall, thick-bodied with abundant head
hair.
"Guard!" Jheru said.
Two bald Ozalians with emerald fringes across their naked
shoulders to signify
rank had been lounging watchfully nearby. They loped toward the bushes
where the
small male had been. Even after three years on Ozal, Merik still expected
Ozalians
to fall when they ran, pitching themselves precipitously forward on
over-long, skinny legs,
but somehow, they always managed to avoid calamity.
Jheru strode toward the palace. One of
the guards immediately returned and
followed him; the other had disappeared.
Merik grabbed
his own thin tunic off a bench and pulled it on, still not
comfortable with the Ozalian
habit of nudity. He retrieved Jheru's bat and
tucked it under his arm with his own, then
sprinted after the Excellent One.
Behind him he heard shouting, and he turned to watch a
line of guards run past.
Just as they reached the edge of the gaming court, an infant --
probably one of
the palace servants' offspring --ambled out of a flowerbed directly into
their
path. The guards didn't swerve.
The dust they'd kicked up settled slowly, and Merik
stared at the fallen child,
the flowers it had been picking scattered across the grass. The
frightened
tilitilis panicked and tangled their silk cords; bright feathers drifted down on
the little body. Very few people's lives were worth worrying about in Jheru's
beautiful
city; Merik could be the one the guards trampled next time.
Lingsters were under Guild
injunction not to become involved in a society's
moral or ethical issues. He retrieved the
posies and laid them gently on the
infant's thin chest as a female Ozalian came screeching
down the path.
This was not what he'd imagined he'd be doing when he'd first apprenticed as
a
youth to the Guild of Xenolinguists. He'd idealized the lingster's role as
sacred mediary
between the varied races of the Arm, dedicating his life to the
holiness of words wherever
they arose. "First was the Word and I am its
carrier," the Guild taught its apprentices.
"Through me flows the meaning of the
universe." As a young man, he'd believed in the purity
of the lingster's
mission.
But the reality he found once he left the Mother House was
grittier. A
lingster's work was often dangerous, frequently undervalued by those who
benefited
from it most, and if there was any meaning in the universe, Merik had
yet to find it.
A
flight of milk-white stone steps, delicate as the legs of the Ozalians who
mounted it,
soared gracefully up from the gaming courts to the palace.
Everything the Ozalians built
had this same ethereal beauty, fragile-seeming as
crystal. And just as transparent, he
thought; he found no heart in anything.
Two more weeks, and a Terran ship that called on
Ozal once in three years would
return and take him away to another assignment that would in
turn be little
better than this one. One day soon he'd leave the Guild. Right now, he'd be
grateful just to leave Jheru.
The Excellent One had already vanished up the steps. Merik
hesitated. Twilight
settled over the lush gardens; he could hear the drowsy murmur of the
tethered
birds on the lawn. Soon, the palace cooks would serve the third of four feasts
each
day that Ozalians with their faster metabolism required. He decided to wait
until the last
meal and turned away from the steps.
Immediately, the world went dark around him. Something
thick and foul-smelling
dropped over his head and shoulders, tightening against him as his
arms were
bound to his sides. The bats slid uselessly out of his fingers. Under the sack
it was totally dark. He felt himself yanked off his feet and carried bent at the
waist over
a shoulder. He kicked hard and was rewarded for his trouble by a
sharp slash on his bare
calves.
"Insha dya," a gruff voice said.
"Ny'e' dya, tol" another replied.
"I demand to be
released!"
Not recognizing the language of his kidnappers, he used the High Tongue of
Jheru's
people. Most races on Ozal spoke it as a second language if not a first.
There was no
reaction from whoever carried him so urgently away. They were
moving fast now; he was aware
of the swift passage of cool air over his legs.
"Dya, dya, n'tik!" the gruff voice said.
"If you'd wanted a lingster, you could've tried asking!"
He choked as his mouth filled with
stinking fibers from the sack over his head.
He kicked angrily against his kidnapper again.
For the second time the stick
slashed painfully across his calves. He didn't try it again.
Pain engulfed him. His legs were numb, his arms burned, his head ached from the
bouncing it
endured in this upside down position. They seemed to be moving
uphill over rough terrain;
he felt the sting of wiry branches against his legs,
the scrape of rock. It got rapidly
colder. Several times he was aware of being
handed off from one kidnapper to another,
traded like a sack of potatoes, but
his abductors' pace hardly slackened, and he couldn't
tell how many of them
there were.
Then his captors halted abruptly, allowing him to slide to
the ground. Muscles
cramped and fire raged through his veins. His mind raced. There was no
motive
that he could see for anyone to kidnap a lingster whose services could be easily
engaged.
He had no wealth, Jheru certainly wouldn't ransom him, and the Guild
never responded to the
demands of terrorists or blackmailers.
Hands fumbled with his bonds, and suddenly his arms
were free. Blood rushed back
in a stinging tide. The sack was removed and he could see that
he'd been brought
to a place of great boulders. The night air was very cold at this
altitude, and
he shivered in his thin tunic.
Three short, stocky males bent over him, their
faces shiny with sweat in the
moonlight. They were breathing hard, but otherwise showed
little sign of strain.
"I -- not -- harm." The speaker used Ozal's High Tongue, haltingly.
Merik blinked up at the small alien he'd seen by the gaming court, middle-aged,
with a
wide, flat-nosed face covered in pale, downy hair, and narrow, slanting
eyes.
"B'ni gev cha,
tol?" a second male said.
The first alien murmured a reply and the other went away. "I not
harm," he said
again.
"Like hell!" Merik said, sitting up. "You --"
The small male held up
his hand, silencing him. "Not harm!"
"You've got the wrong man, you understand? Wrong man!"
The alien frowned in confusion. "I -- want -- You work."
"Damn you! Go through regular
channels like everybody else."
The alien's grasp of the High Tongue appeared sketchy. Then
he grinned,
revealing chipped and stained teeth. He tapped his chest. "Zov." He squinted at
Merik to see if he understood. "Name. Zov." He pointed at the lingster and
tilted his head,
waiting for an answer.
Merik sighed, then stood up and touched his own chest in the widely
recognized
gesture of naming. "My name is Merik Qintana."
The alien touched his brow in
salute.
Merik copied the gesture. "What do you need a lingster for?" When the small male
frowned, he tapped his chest again. "Me. Lingster."
"Ah. Lingster. You help."
The third
alien spoke. "Py' ani, tol. Py' ani na.t"
"Come." Zov touched Merik's arm.
Tol, an
honorific, he thought. In spite of his seething anger, he had already
begun cataloging
variations of tone and pitch in the alien's speech, isolating
phonemes and marking the
frequency of their repetition. He allowed them to lead
him into the mouth of a cave.
Zov
strode ahead of him down a dark passageway. Merik followed more cautiously.
They stopped at
a place where the walls opened abruptly into a good-sized cave.
Welcome warmth met him from
a fire burning in a stone-ringed hearth, its
flickering light striking sparks from exposed
veins of metal in the rock
overhead. Over the flames, meat hung from a spit which a
near-naked child turned
slowly. The aroma of roasting flesh reminded him he'd skipped a
meal.
A circle of about forty figures in furs and rough woven cloth squatted around
the
fire, their shadows leaping on the cave walls. They spoke together in the
same guttural,
staccato language Zov had used, but conversation stopped when the
speakers saw the human.
"Ty,"a 'cha." Zov indicated the tribe around the fire. The alien shrugged off a
heavy fur
outer garment he'd been wearing; under it, a thick metallic collar
gleamed in the
firelight. "First, eat!"
The tribe shuffled around, making space for Merik, who sat
cross-legged on the
stone floor beside them in a wave of sour sweat, animal skin, rancid
fat and
rotting teeth; he kept his breathing shallow. Nobody spoke, but he caught their
openly
curious glances.
A young female cut meat from the turning carcass and held it out on the
point of
a knife to Zov. Then she carved a second chunk and offered it shyly to Merik,
thin
bracelets clinking on her wrist. His gaze moved from the female's ornaments
to Zov's collar
piece to the gleaming veins in the cave roof. The tribe wasn't
so primitive that its
members didn't know how to work silver when they found it.
Now a young male moved the spit
out of the flame, and an old female pulled the
juvenile onto her lap and fed him morsels of
meat. The young female squatted at
Merik's feet, and he glanced down at her. She was small
and plump, with a round
face, silky as a ripe peach, and slanted eyes that were all black
pupil, a vivid
contrast to the bald, spindly females of Jheru's race. But she paid for this
comeliness, he noticed, by an increased susceptibility to parasites. As he
watched, small
red-shelled bug-like creatures crawled along the part in her
hair.
The tribe picked up the
conversation. Merik listened, automatically scanning
this new language for the particular
patterns of deep structures created by its
biogrammar.
"You," Zov said, his mouth full of
meat. "Help. You help. Yes?"
He wasn't ready to forgive his treatment yet. "Maybe. Depends
what you want me
to do, tol."
There was an intake of breath from the circle, and for a
moment Merik thought
he'd misread the word's meaning. Then in the silence that followed, he
became
aware of newcomers at the back of the circle. Two burly males in greasy furs set
down
a wrinkled old male they'd been carrying. The old one wore what appeared to
be scraps and
tatters from more than one animal's pelt; stringy gray hair fell
forward over his face, and
his sunken eyes blazed with such ferocity Merik's
first thought was the old alien was
insane.
One of the females shuffled aside to make room, but the old alien remained
standing
leaning shakily on a staff, staring at Merik. The young female got up
hastily and fetched a
slab of meat for the newcomer. The old male grabbed at her
arm, and she settled docilely at
his feet. No one spoke.
Shaman, Merit guessed; the tribe's magician. Every aboriginal tribe
he'd ever
encountered in the Arm seemed to have one. Sometimes more than one. Loony old
men
or women who thought they had access to the wisdom of the universe. They
could be
dangerous, and they usually resented lingsters.
Zov waved an arm at the silent group who
hurriedly scrambled up from the stone
floor and disappeared in the shadows at the back of
the cave. The shaman whacked
at the young female with his staff, urging her after the
others; she skipped out
of his reach, bracelets tinkling. As his arm moved, the shaman's
tattered sleeve
fell back, and Merik saw the track of long scars in the lightly furred skin
below his elbow.
Zov peered at the lingster through the fire's glow as if he were lip
reading.
"You talk with other. Not Ty'a'cha. You talk for?"
"Talk for," Merik repeated.
Might as well indulge them, keep them friendly.
"That's what lingsters do, tol." The
outline of the problem began to reveal
itself. Zov might be a primitive, but he obviously
understood that lingsters
translated things. "The Ty'a'cha want to make peace with an
enemy?"
Zov frowned intently, catching up. "Very bad enemy!" he observed.
On a planet like
this there might be hundreds of tongues, each used by a tiny
handful of speakers. He hadn't
realized Zov's language existed before today, and
the language spoken by Zov's enemy was
probably equally unknown. Achieving an
interface between two languages neither of which the
lingster knew in advance
took time. And interface required the use of the specific drugs in
a lingster's
fieldpack--which he hadn't had with him when he'd been abducted. But he knew
the
world's other cultures, the linguistic families. He could handle it.
"Enemy kill
Ty'a'cha. Many, many! Females. Babies --" Zov broke off, obviously
overcome with the
enormity of this enemy's evil. "You--" He pointed to his right
ear. "You?"
The old male with
the scarred arms spat deliberately into the fire, his mad eyes
never leaving Merik's face.
"I hear," Merik said. "I understand."
Ozal was a bloody world, he thought, the memory of
the trampled child rising in
his mind. He was sick of it. There was no reason to hope these
people were any
less barbaric in their customs than the Excellent One. The sparkle of
silver in
the cave's roof drew his eyes again. Technically, he was under contract to Jheru
at the moment, but he might be persuaded to work a little on the side -- if the
Ty'a'cha
were prepared to reward him sufficiently for taking the risk.
His conscience pricked. Long
ago, he wouldn't have thought that way, when he'd
been young and the profession had been
all of his philosophy and his religion.
Now he knew better. Lingstering was just a skill,
an art of talking which he was
good at. And why not get paid well for it?
"Come!" Zov rose
up from the floor.
Instantly, the two burly males reappeared from the shadows and lifted
the old
shaman as if he were unable to walk by himself. Merik followed Zov and the
others
down a passage that became increasingly narrow. Nobody seemed to have
thought there was a
need for a torch. Ahead of him, Zov's footsteps echoed
confidently on the stone. Merik
moved cautiously, feeling his way. Then Zov
halted abruptly and Merik -working from the
cessation of sound rather than being
able to see -caught himself just in time to avoid
stepping on Zov's heels. It
was colder here, almost freezing.
"See!" Zov commanded.
And oddly
enough, after a few seconds Merik did. There was a diffuse light in
the cave they'd come
to; he glanced at the high ceiling, trying to find its
source. There was a peculiar smell
in here too, iron and something earthily
pungent he couldn't identify but felt he ought to.
Then he recognized the glow
of bioluminescence coming from the walls which appeared to be
marked in
patterns.
Not patterns. He stepped closer, and his breath caught. The rock walls
were
covered with outline drawings of Ozalian animals. He saw long-necked garii
running at
full tilt across an imaginary veldt, tomti rearing to strike, their
tails lashing in fury,
huge meklemek beasts stepping ponderously in line like an
advancing wave of marauders.
There were birds in flight, game animals fleeing
the advance of unseen hunters, and
fantastic creatures that never existed on
this or any other planet Merik had ever seen. The
drawings covered almost every
surface, the artists making use of the natural bosses and
concavities that
occurred in the rock walls. The colors ranged from bright red through
coppery
brown to charcoal black, and each line glowed in the dark cave.
He became aware he
was holding his breath and let it come whistling out. Whoever
the artists were who'd drawn
these creatures, they were hardly primitives.
"Good talk," Zov said. "Fathers. Enemies."
Talk had been a noun that time, not a verb. Merik turned to the Ty'a'cha
headman. "They're
marvelous," he said.
Zov shook a finger at Merik. "Not more. You talk!"
The shaman said
something then in a high-pitched, rapid voice and Zov reacted
angrily. Leaning on his
staff, the old male raised an arm, his shredded furs
swaying. He pointed at the walls, then
at Zov, then turned to glare at Merik.
There was something proprietary in the shaman's
gesturing, as if the wall art
were his and he resented the lingster seeing it.
Merik looked
at the walls again. The drawings were some kind of magical
conversation, apparently. But
about what? If they followed a pattern found
elsewhere in the Arm -- even on prehistoric
Earth itself -they were invocations
to food animals to surrender to the hunt, or else they
were charms to keep the
pictured predators away. Yet Zov had displayed them in the context
of talking to
enemies.
Something glittered -- a small spark Merik caught out of the corner
of his eye
-- and suddenly apprehensive, he turned toward the shaman in time to catch him
fumbling a blade into the sleeve of his robe. Then the shaman sank cross-legged
to the
ground in the dim glow of the fantastic drawings.
Zov left the cavern. The two males who'd
carried the old man shoved Merik,
urging him to follow.
Back in the first cave, one of them
tended to the fire that had burned low in
their absence; then they both withdrew. Merik sat
hugging his knees next to Zov
who squatted on his haunches, silver collar glittering. Above
him, the firelight
struck answering sparks from the ore striping the cave's roof.
"Gurja not
want -- not give -- power," Zov observed. "Gurja not trust. I trust."
Merik needed time to
gather samples of the Ty'a'cha language; the microchip
every lingster carried in his brain
was mostly useless without a computer to
link with. For now they'd have to make do with
Zov's halting knowledge of the
High Tongue.
Zov spoke again. "Old talk -- fathers. Not like
now Big enemy now. Gurja not
know. I know!"
Gurja must be the disapproving shaman, Merik
guessed.
"You talk. Then -- all good."
"No, tol, that's not how it works."
But Zov waved the
objection away and plunged on through the thickets of the High
Tongue. Merik listened in
silence, his imagination filling in what the headman
didn't have words to express, piecing
meanings together with snippets of history
and gossip he'd overheard in Jheru's city. There
was a new enemy who threatened
the Ty'a'cha; this enemy didn't want the tribe's game, or
its females, he wanted
its subservience or its complete destruction, and the tribe was
losing the
battle.
"Jheru," Merik said as Zov paused.
Zov grunted. "Very bad enemy."
"The
worst." No way Zov's tiny tribe could resist Jheru's might for long, with
or without a
lingster. They might be cunning and physically strong, but Jheru
had technology."
Gurja old.
No power left."
A dozen Gurjas wouldn't make much progress with Jheru, Merik thought.
"You
talk," Zov insisted again.
"You pay?" Merik could be equally insistent.
Zov glared at him.
"Ty'a'cha pay!"
"How did you know I was a lingster?"
Zov explained haltingly how he'd lurked
in the city, picking up words and
phrases. He'd seen the coming and going of transport
ships from space, and
seemed to understand what they were. The leader of this tribe, Merik
realized,
saw the advantage of learning modern ways."
And your shaman -- Gurja -- didn't
agree?"
"Holy One not go. Stay with Ty'a'cha. Law of Ty'a'cha."
"If Jheru is willing to talk
to you, tol, then you'll have to go back to the
city."
"No! You talk."
A lingster was a
conduit, a channel, nothing more. He had no power to make
binding treaties. Even if he were
rash enough to try interceding for the
Ty'a'cha with Jheru, the Excellent One would never
agree to the tribe escaping
his rule. The sparkle of silver above his head told Merik that;
if Jheru didn't
suspect its presence already, he soon would.
Zov indicated Merik should roll
himself up in a grubby pelt lying nearby and
sleep, then set the example and was soon
snoring beside the fire. The fur held a
faint musky smell.
Merik lay awake thinking it over.
At the edge of the firelight, one of Zov's
warriors stood guard, a long blade slung over
his back. He needed to stay alert
here. There was no guessing what the tribe might do, but
it would be nothing in
comparison to what Jheru was capable of if he thought his lingster
had betrayed
him. He couldn't fault Zov's desire to move forward out of ignorance into the
modern world, yet he suspected there was a lot here he didn't understand. He
knew he
couldn't achieve everything Zov wanted -- that was impossible -- but he
wouldn't betray the
Ty'a'cha to Jheru, either. Perhaps he could make inevitable
progress a little easier for
the tribe.
And if a little of their silver ended up in his pocket, that would only hasten
the day when he could leave the Guild. There was really nothing to hold him any
longer.
Even what he'd once considered the sacrament of interface between alien
language -- the
dangerous, addictive whirlpool that drew a lingster back again
and again -- had
disappointed him, described, regulated, tamed by those who'd
gone before.
It was still
night-dark in the cave when Merik awoke, though he guessed it must
be dawn. The fire had
burned low and the warrior who'd stood guard last night
was shaking his shoulder. Merik sat
up and discovered that the warm weight
against his back was the young female who'd brought
him meat from the spit. He
was suddenly certain she'd been speaking to him, murmuring into
his ear all
through the night while he slept. He was sure of it, though he didn't remember
a
word she'd said; he wondered what it could mean. A parasite flickered like a
tiny ruby at
her hairline, then vanished; she woke and scratched the place
absently, gazing up at him.
The sooner he got out of here the better. He got to his feet, thought again, and
reached
down for the fur. It would be a long, cold walk back down the mountain.
But the warrior
didn't lead him out to the open air. Merik recognized the narrow
stone corridor they were
following; it led to the cavern he'd been shown last
night. For a second, his skin prickled
and he felt a pulse leap in his throat.
Sensing his hesitation, the alien half-turned.
"Dya!"
He really had no choice. He moved forward again, his eyes adjusting to the dim
cave.
He could see Zov and the humped figure of the shaman murmuring together.
The atmosphere was
pregnant with the sense of momentous things hovering. On the
walls, the luminous paintings
gleamed blood red with the eerie light of fungus.
Zov looked up. Gurja -- as usual --
scowled. Merik thought how feeble the shaman
seemed today, barely alive.
"You talk now," Zov
said. He seemed angry about something. "Gurja say."
Zov had called the rock paintings
"talk," Merik remembered, speculating that the
tribe used mutual art-making in a ritual to
seal friendship among former
enemies, a reconciliation of spirit and imagination that
brought peace. It
wouldn't be unusual. He'd witnessed similar rites elsewhere in the Arm,
and on
Earth, tribes had once celebrated truce with songs and dancing around the fire.
But
no more, Zov had said, and he'd thought the old alien wanted to lead his
tribe out of their
Dark Age into the light of science. The lingster would
replace the shaman as peacemaker.
Yet now they apparently wanted him to paint
pictures before he left. There were many things
here he didn't understand.
"I don't know how, tol," he said mildly. "I'm not an artist."
"Gurja say!" Zov repeated.
An icy current of air from some unseen vent feathered across the
back of Merik's
neck and he shivered in spite of the fur around his shoulders. In the deep
silence of the cave, he was aware of his heart beating, his breath sighing the
blood
rushing through his veins.
Zov gestured impatiently with one hand, and Merik saw small
mounds of dark
pigment in bowl-shaped depressions on a rock ledge. He'd have to fake
cooperation
until he could get away. Luckily the Ty'a'cha weren't going to be
sophisticated art
critics.
Gurja half turned toward him, shuffling his feet by rocking his body rather than
lifting them, and now he saw that the shaman was holding a knife. Gurja lifted
the sleeve
of his filthy robe, then drew the blade in a line through the hair on
his forearm. Blood
welled. The shaman watched impassively as it dripped into one
of the stone bowls. After a
moment he seized Merik's arm and -- surprisingly
strong for one who appeared so feeble --
he'd opened a thin line across Merik's
arm before the lingster could resist. Merik's blood
dripped into a second bowl.
Stay calm, Merik thought. These were simple folk and they took
this seriously;
best not to anger them. He would endure it, then he'd get out of here, and
before very long he'd be rid of this brutal world altogether. But watching his
blood pool
in the bowl made him light-headed.
Then the shaman mixed his own blood into the dry pigment
with his fingers, and
indicated that Merik should copy him. Silently, they both stirred the
muddy
paint that resulted while Zov watched, his attitude reverent.
The shaman raised his
blood-smeared fingers and licked, his tongue flickering in
and out like one of the tomti on
the wall.
Zov nudged Merik to do the same.
He hesitated, then lifted his fingers reluctantly
to brush his lips. The mixture
tasted bitter, the iron of his own blood almost lost in
something organic and
pungent. He thought suddenly of toadstools, collected on Earth for a
science
class when he was a young student at the Guild's Mother House, the clammy feel
of
Amanita muscaria's fleshy gills, the instructor's warning of its toxicity. It
had been part
of a lesson making the students aware of the peril of mixing any
other drugs, natural or
manufactured, with the drugs they carried in their
fieldpacks. It was dangerous for him to
continue. He had no idea what the
shaman's substance was or what its effects might be.
Zov
nudged him in the ribs again, harder this time, and Merik identified the
prick of a blade.
The shaman shuffled slowly round to face a blank space on the
rock where he began to trace
a line.
Merik sighed, squinting in the dim light, hoping to find something easy to copy.
Then, as he lifted his fingers to the wall in his turn, a wave of nausea shook
him. His
sight blurred and his head throbbed. The drawings of garii and meklemek
seemed alive,
moving across the stone.
Hallucinogens in the pigment. Like the contents of a lingster's
fieldpack -- but
uncontrolled, unknown. His mind whirled. It felt like going into interface
unprotected, the no man's land between languages, the roaring ground from which
a tribe's
history sprang. He had to get out while there was still time.
A harsh voice like a scream
leapt over the darkness, incandescent and terrifying
--
Merik's concentration shattered.
Unprotected interface was dangerous, chaotic,
like looking into the naked face of God.
Shards of lessons the Guild taught rose
in his mind, fragments of the emergency protocols
designed to protect a lingster
from being swept away.
Step One. Let go of -- Let go --
He
struggled, but he couldn't make himself recall the words that could save his
life. The
native drag was too powerful.
Zov touched his arm, urging him back to work. He stared at
the alien, and for a
moment his mind cleared.
Step One. Let go of fear...
Gurja was using his
nails to work lines into the painted images. Merik could see
the drawings becoming luminous
under the shaman's fingers. He recognized a bird,
a giant raptor stretching enormous wings.
The shaman chanted in a high nasal
whine, something rhythmic, repetitious; his face was
skeletal in the eerie glow
of the fungus. And Merik knew that the talking art Gurja
practiced was not the
art of reconciliation but the art of death to enemies.
A bright fog
swallowed him then, making further thought difficult a fog that now
seemed stitched through
with the unnerving, searing voice he'd heard before.
There was a message here -- an urgent
knowledge he almost grasped, a presence
Then flame seemed to arc across the chip, burning
his brain dry of thought.
Something raced through the interface, and he cowered before it
like prey under
the wings of a raptor. He felt the fabric of his being shredded in the
turbulent
darkness till he screamed in terror. Something opened its jaws to devour him.
He
did the only thing possible for a lingster in jeopardy: he dove in deeper and
surrendered
to the fierce currents of language's birthing ground, risking all in
an attempt to control
from within.
The fog fell abruptly away.
A deserted hilltop. He stood on a narrow path.
Not
deserted-- Something was out there. Something primal, elemental, a power
that howled in
darkness. The One from whom all life, all language sprang.
First was the Word
He would
remember his training and not step out of the path of malevolence, much
as he wanted to. I
am a conduit -- Something seized him -- he was struggling --
gasping -- dying. He would not
give way --
Through ME flows the universe!
The struggle stopped abruptly. He was back in the
silent cave, the bowls were
empty, and Gurja was making more cuts on their arms. Blood
flowed again into dry
pigment. Again they licked their fingers. His lips snagged on nails
that were
ripped and bleeding, yet he felt no pain.
The image of the raptor they were
creating together was huge and menacing; it
spread across the cave wall, glowing as the
paint dried. He felt the power
tugging his mind back to that reality behind the world. He
lost sense of where
his fingers ended and the image began as he drifted in the delirium of
interface. The raptor's wings began to beat. Colors ran together and lines
blurred till all
that remained was a blood-splattered rainbow swirling in a drop
of oil.
Then that too
vanished and he was alone in chaos again, gazing into the unveiled
face of God Itself.
"Gol'zha'ti
na!" The shaman's voice echoed as from a great, stone distance.
Merik's bowels loosened as
he collapsed.
When he regained consciousness, he was lying on furs by the fire, with a
splitting
headache. His throat was raw, his lips stung, his tongue seemed
swollen twice its normal
size, and his fingers hurt as if they'd been thrust
into the flames. Someone held a cup
with brackish water to his lips. His stomach
flared into agony as a drop trickled down and
he doubled over, retching. He
wiped his lips on the back of his hand and found it spotted
with blood. Water
splashed onto his arms; a hand touched his brow, soothing. He opened his
eyes
and saw the rosy young female.
She smiled and got up from her knees. Behind her he saw
Zov standing at the edge
of the firelight, his face solemn.
The cave was full of smoke that
made him cough, but the fire in his stomach
subsided. What was it he'd been dreaming? His
memory was clouded. How long had
he been asleep? Hours? Days? Dim images skittered through
his mind -- toadstools
-- a huge bird stretching its wings --Then nothing.
Zov stepped into
the firelight's glow. "Not the enemy now," be commented.
"Not...enemy?" Merik frowned,
trying to understand.
"Gurja gave his spirit to you. Tongue, too."
"Oh. Gurja." He tried to
think about the words. There was something odd about
them and he ought to recognize what it
was. He nodded and his head throbbed
again. "Gurja --"
"He's dead," Zov said, sounding
satisfied. "His heart stopped."
Then it came to him. The alien wasn't using the High Tongue
anymore.
"Ky'e'cha'ti," he'd said. Yet Merik had understood- not translated- the tribal
language
as if he'd been speaking it all his life. Cha: the folk. And ti: a
diminutive, one of the
folk, he. Ky'e: a state of non-living --
Then the Ty'a'cha language swallowed him and he
couldn't hear it from the
outside any more.
The young female came back with more water. He
took the cup from her with
unsteady hands and sipped. This time he managed to keep a little
down though it
scalded his stomach. As his arm came into view, he saw the long red wounds
where
Gurja's knife had slashed. They were already healing into scars.
Panic struck, cutting
off his breath.
He needed time to think. He was alive, that was something But he might have
done
irreparable damage by ingesting a wild hallucinogen, as powerful as anything the
Guild
used. Lingsters had to fear the unwanted, lingering effects of
non-controlled drug use.
What had he taken? He needed to know to gauge its
effect.
His stomach knotted. How long had
he been senseless? Long enough for cuts to
heal, for the Ty'a'cha language to be whispered
into his unconscious brain and
stored by the chip. How much time left before the ship took
off for Earth?
He struggled to sit up and found he was weaker than he'd realized; his legs
were
unresponsive to his brain's commands. He'd been careless, so sure of his
superiority
over these aborigines that he'd risked everything that mattered. His
head pounded painfully
with the stress.
Something else. He'd nearly lost control in interface. There'd been
something in
the chaos on the other side this time, an alien presence unlike anything he'd
ever encountered; it had almost killed him. Whatever it was he'd wrestled, it
was older
than humanity or the Ty'a'cha. He'd met it on its own ground, but in
doing so had he opened
a chink to let it into this world? Or was he still
delirious and thinking nonsense?
The
female gently blotted sweat off his brow. In his exhaustion, he allowed her
to lower him to
the furs again. He dozed for a while.
Nightmare shapes skittered across the fragmented
landscape of his sleep. A
raptor moved across the dark void, rending it, bringing life into
existence. A
voice rumbled across space --
When he next awoke, Zov was squatting across the
fire from him. The female lay
curled beside him, awake.
"You're feeling better now," Zov
said.
"No thanks to your medicine."
Zov threw back his head, laughing. "You're going to be
as difficult to deal with
as Gurja himself!"
The main thing was to get out of here as soon
as possible. Merik peered through
the flames at the tribe's leader. Forcing his tone to
remain casual, not betray
the rising anxiety he felt, he said, "You'll want me to speak to
Jheru soon."
"Gurja said you didn't understand," Zov said jovially. "You have spoken
already!
The enemy will not live long now."
Take nothing for granted, the Guild taught. Make
no assumptions. It was odd,
thinking of the Guild in this language, as if it was beside the
point.
The female stroked his arm.
Zov glanced at the female. "She belongs to you. The
Chosen Folk pay their
debts."
He moved his arm quickly away and was suddenly aware how badly
he stank. He
stared at the tribe's leader. "How long have I been here?"
Zov shrugged. "One
revolution of the moon -- maybe two."
Ozal's little moon raced around the planet in just
under a Terran week -- He'd
been here at least ten days. He tried desperately to stand, his
fingers
scrabbling for purchase on the rock floor, but his legs refused to move. The
cave
whirled a round hi m and he was failing, falling down a dark tunnel back
into primal void.
After a while, the cave stopped spinning and he saw Zov's face creased in a
huge,
benevolent smile.
"Gurja's magic was worn out," Zov said. "But you have new magic, from
other
worlds in the stars."
"I'm a lingster." He was panting now as if he'd been running.
"Not a magician."
"You talk. That's what lingsters do. You talk and Jheru dies."
"I must go
back --"
"The Holy One goes nowhere. I told you." Zov spread his arms wide as if he were
apologizing. "It's our law."
The young female caressed his cheek with grubby fingers, then
wrapped something
around his shoulders. Looking down, he recognized Gurja's robe of
tattered furs.
The sour smell rose to his nostrils and he felt the answering madness rising
into his throat. Terrified of what he might already have become, he made another
attempt to
get his legs to move.
Again, nothing happened.
He looked down at his useless legs and saw
the new scars on the back of his
knees where the tendons had been cut. His sight went
black. He was the Holy One,
and like Jheru's tilitili birds he wasn't going anywhere ever
again.
"Merciful God!" he whispered.
"The gods are rarely merciful," Zov observed.
The female
settled by his feet, her black eyes liquid. She stroked the scars on
his arm with great
tenderness.
He had to get down to the port and to the ship -- He would crawl, pulling
himself
by his fingers -- or the female would carry him, she was strong like her
tribe --
He knew it
was useless.
"You'll serve us well, Holy One," Zov said.
Take nothing for granted. There
were possibilities everywhere if he could
discover them. Even here. He breathed deeply,
letting go of fear and despair --
And he felt again the presence on the barren hilltop,
heard the ancient voice
that contained everything. "Gol'zha'ti na," Gurja had said of him
when he
returned from that vision: "One with a shaman's power."
He remembered now the
peculiar exultant tone the shaman had used. There'd been
disagreement between the shaman
and the chieftain; Zov had valued a science he
didn't understand over the shaman's familiar
,magic, and that had angered Gurja.
The old laws had been swept: away by Zov's act of
choosing a lingster as the
next shaman. Gurja had lost, but the shaman had nevertheless
been triumphant,
for he'd understood that the power which seized Merik in interface was
more
terrifying than any science.
Merik closed his eyes and the numinous blood-red image of
the giant raptor he'd
created on the cave wall blazed against his inner sight. For a second
more his
thoughts fluttered like a flock of tilitilis-- then doubt fell away.
When he was
young, he'd thought of interface as a sacrament, something holy --
not even guessing the
truth. Did the Guild suspect? In its many secrets, was
this one? He'd gone through the
fire. He'd survived. But what was "he" now? Mad
as old Gurja, perhaps. Or as infinite as
the being he'd met on the mountaintop
of his vision.
After a while, he opened his eyes and
gazed steadily at Zov. A flicker of doubt
ran across the alien's expression, and he took a
step back.
Zov spoke hesitantly. "Perhaps -- If the Holy One thinks? -- A new way of doing
things-- Maybe we could allow the Holy One to go clown the mountain --"
"There is no need
anymore." He didn't recognize his own voice.
Zov shuddered, and the female covered her
mouth with her hands. Merik's fingers
played with her hair absently. A red parasite crawled
across her skull and he
touched it lightly with the tip of his finger. It shriveled to dust
at the
touch. He smiled; Jheru was as good as dead already, and he would kill Zov
whenever
it pleased him. The female he could tolerate for a while longer.
The gods were rarely
merciful, except to one who wrestled them and survived.