IN U.~,. $21.95 IN CANADA $26.95 Sheri S. Tepper has brought her rich and brilliant imagination to such critically acclaimed novels as Beauty and Grass and the powerful and provocative ,~'ideshow. Now Tepper returns with a work of epic scope, unparalleled imagination, and sweeping adventure unlike anything she's done before. A PLA~U!~ O~A~!~i~LS West of the land called Artemisia, past mountains, valleys, arroyos, and mesas, atop a sinuous, canyonclimbing road, the Place of Power spreads clawlike at the edge of the chasm. Here are walls to hold out the dragons, ogres, and goblins of the ruined lands. And from here the Witch, Quince Ellel, peers out into a world of faded pageantry, archetypal villages, and gang-filled cities decimated by violence and plague. The scattered remnants of humanity recount legends of the time when most of mankind went to seek a better world. They know that they were left behind, only to face the encroachment of the netherfolk and the terrible, enigmatic creatures called walkers. Yet not even the Witch knows the stunning truth behind the myth and prophecy that fuel her terrible ambitionmand she is determined to capture those who will unlock these deepest secrets. In another part of the countryside, a young girl named Orphan is maturing into a beautiful woman in the enchanted village that is her home. And somewhere nearby, a young man named Abasio Cermit is seeking adventure after running away from his family's small farm. Now, as the terrible walkers scour the countryside, Abasio and Orphan begin separate journeys toward each other and the shared destiny that will change their worm forever. (Continued on back flap) A ?LA~UE OF ANGELœ Other Bantam Books by Sheri S. Tepper AFFER LONG SILENCE THE GATE TO WOMEN'S COUNTRY BEAUTY GRASS RAISING THE STONES SIDESHOW PLA~d~ U E AN ELS BANTAM BOOKS NEW YORK TORONTO LONDON SYDNEY AUCKLAND ^ l,L^c;u~ or ^NGELS A Bantam Spectra Book / October 1993 Spectra and the portrayal of a boxed "s" are trademarks of Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright c 1993 by Sheri S. Tepper Book design by Glen M. Edelstein Map designed by Claudia Carlson No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information address: Bantam Books. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Tepper, Sheri S. A plague of angels / Sheri S. Tepper. p. cm. -- (A Bantam spectra book) ISBN 0-553-09513-7 1. Title. PS3570. E673P58 1993 93-158 813' .54--dc20 CIP Published simultaneously in the United States and Canada Bantam Books are published by Bantam Books, a division of Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, lnc. Its trademark, consisting of the words "Bantam Books" and the portrayal of a rooster, is Registered in U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and in other countries. Marca Registrada. Bantam Books, 1540 Broadway, New York, New York 10036. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA RRH 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 I Michael: And though man plays at being good, yet he does rue the dreadful deadly Godly goods God's angels do. The Michaelmas Play ca. 1465 V~hitberby/' LON~ PLAt N 09 ~k19 L~10 D PLA.C.› 01~ PO~JCR~ c~s ..... ~ the7~urt~l~s wen~ .... .J4ow Oily and~asio wer~ 2~istance from Irantis to -4~trtemesia 4o0 rnil~s a- ~~oonset, just before dawn; swollen moon collapsing into a notch between black mountains; river talking quietly to itself among the stones; pine and horsemint scenting the air as Abasio brushed by them on his way down the farm lane. Big Blue whickered softly from the corral, more a question than a good-bye, but for that brief moment Abasio longed to be back on his bed on the back porch, curled under his light blanket in the morning cool. It was the same home-longing that had stopped him a year ago at the valley road and last winter when he got as far as Wise Rocks Farm. This time the doubts and longings didn't sneak up on him, didn't send him scurrying back to the farm before anyone found out he was gone. This time wasn't practice, it was real. Besides, he could always come back. Ma had come back. She'd run off to Fantis when she wasn't much older than he, been picked up and sold as a conk to somebody or other, she never would say who, but she'd come back. Grandpa said yes, she had, but she 2 Sheri S. Tepper wasn't the same. Abasio couldn't imagine her any different. She was just Ma, quiet and busy, sometimes clucking after him like a mother hen and sometimes going off into the woods and losing herself. She always came home eventually, sometimes grabbing him, holding him close, and crying, "Abasio, oh, Abasio, don't ever leave me! Stay here where it's safe!" It was safe, no question about that. Every day was like every other day. There were critters to feed, there were fields to sow or harvest, there were crops to store, there were repairs to be made to this thing or that thing. Once every twenty days or so, they'd load the wagon with wool or grain or root crops and drive into Whitherby to trade for sugar or salt or lantern oil. Once or twice a year there'd be trouble with a troll, or they'd sight a dragon hovering over the western mountains. In the cloudy mirror beside the washbasin on the back porch Abasio saw his face slowly changing, getting solider and bonier, with soft hairs sprouting on his chin and lip. His body was changing too. He could feel life roiling and surging inside him, beating at his skin from inside, like some wild thing wanting to get out. He felt like the gullies in spring when the snow-melt came bashing down the mountains, eating furious holes in the banks and running off in all directions. If he went on feeding the chickens, harnessing the horses, putting out porridge for the goblins, letting life boil away like the water in the gullies, then like them he'd dry up, and his whole life would be gone. The decision had been some time amaking. When he'd been a kid, maybe nine or ten, he'd figured adventure could come to him on the farm. In stories it did. A Hero from some archetypal village could come by and recruit him as a squire. A dragon could come, or a giant, for him to slay, which he'd do cleverly, surprising everybody. He really expected something like that to happen. Every day he sort of looked for it, but years went by, and no dragon appeared closer than the distant peaks, no giant came anywhere near, and the only Hero he saw was the one in the archetypal village over the high ridge, and then only when Abasio climbed up there to peer down at the villagers and wonder about them. He finally had to admit that adventure wasn't going to come to him. He had to find it. So he was going, early in the morning while Ma and Grandpa were asleep. It was cowardly, he admitted that, even sneaky. But giving them a chance to argue with him would only make everyone unhappy. No matter what they said, he had to see all the stuff the truckers talked about: festivals, games in the arena, women who danced and sang and flapped their bodies like fish. Young ones, not all gray-haired and anxious, the way they mostly were in farm country. He had a right to see that, and he didn't need to feel guilty about it. He wasn't taking anything that didn't belong to him: his own life, his own body, his own clothes, his own books. Even though Ma'd told him over and over nobody read books in the city, he had to take a few. He'd A PLAGUE OF ANGELS take Big Blue, too, if there were some way to do it, but everyone said there wasn't any place for horses in the city. No place for any animals there, except maybe dogs and rats. The moon was already half-sunk behind the hills when he came to the end of the farm lane. He turned right between the two ruts of the valley road, seeing an occasional glimmer where the bounding waters of the Crystal River dodged back and forth among big rocks, making deeps and shallows and music all at once. He passed between the two abandoned farms north and south of the road, then trudged past Wise Rocks Farm, where the two arms of the mountain flattened out into Long Plain, county-wide and three counties long, so said Grandpa. It was more fiat4and than Abasio had ever seen before, that was certain, dotted with farms and fields and little streams and with several roads running north and south along it, including one highway. The Long Plain highway went north to Fantis, and it even had a lot of pavement left. The sky was gray when he got that far. He'd counted on getting away unseen by anybody, but as he came through the last copse before the plain, he sag' three men approaching from the south, Whitherby direction, one of them leading a donkey. Grandpa had often said that prudent men avoided confrontations, particularly when outnumbered, so Abasio slithered back among the trees and sat on a stump out of sight. He wasn't out of earshot. He could hear every plop of the donkey's hooves and every note of the eerie melody one of the men was whistling. Then both the footsteps and the whistling stopped. "This is your valley, is it not?" asked a powerful baritone voice. "It is, Whistler, it is." The answering voice was higher, older, with an edge of accustomed sadness to it. Abasio surprised himself by thinking the man, whoever he was, had seen some unhappy times. The baritone again. "Sudden Stop and I, we wish you well. T~ake care." A bass rumble of agreement, more thunder than words. The high voice. "That's kind of you and Sudden Stop, and it was kind of you to accompany me this far. I don't imagine much care will be needed hereabouts. Farmers are peaceful folk." Bass and baritone laughter in doubtful duet, words Abasio only partly heard, something to do with there being other things around besides farmers. Footsteps again, two people moving on toward the north, more swiftly now, one man and donkey turning slowly up the hill toward Abasio. Hastily, he got to his feet. He didn't want anyone to think he was lurking, like some villain. At the fringe of the copse they met. "Well now," said the donkey-man. "Aren't you out early." 4 Sheri S. Tepper "Yes, sir," mumbled Abasio, digging one toe into the ground while the old man gave him a looking-over that missed nothing, not his dirty tingemails or the sack he carried or the expression on his face, which any chickeneating dog would have recognized as one of guilty defiance. "Running away to the city, are we," the old man said with a sigh. Sadness in that sigh, but a thread of amusement too. Abasio pulled himself up straight and said firmly, "Going to the city, yes, sir. I'm old enough." "Oh, indeed you are. The average citizen of Fantis is just about your age. About fourteen, I'd say." Abasio was trying to think of a dignified reply when the left-hand pannier on the donkey wobbled, catching his eye. Two tiny hands were holding on to the rim of the basket, and a tousled little head emerged from its depths, the eyes regarding Abasio thoughtfully. He knew at once it was a little girl, though there was no outward evidence to indicate her sex. No hair ribbon. No ruffles. "Man," said the child. "Thinks he is, at any rate," the old man agreed, grinning at Abasio. "Go," said the child, jiggling herself in the basket as though annoyed at this unscheduled stop. "Go!" Without even thinking about it, Abasio stepped forward and lifted the child from the basket. He seldom got to handle children, and he liked them a good deal. They shared many of the interesting qualities of animals, besides being able to talk. "What's your name?" he asked, jiggling her, while the old man regarded him thoughtfully. "Orpn," she said, leaning forward to give him a hug and several wet kisses. "Orpn." "Orphan," clarified the old man. "She's going up there' '--and he pointed up the valley--"to the archetypal village." "I hope you're sure-footed, old man," said Abasio, concern making him sound suddenly older than his years. "That's a break-bone trail. The better road comes in from the north." He looked at the baby girl worriedly. The donkey could no doubt make it without trouble, but still... "Too many people north of here," said the old man. "Too many other things as well." The old man reached for the child, settled her in the pannier, then took Abasio's hand in his own and held it for a moment as though taking his pulse. "You're the Cermit boy, aren't you'?" "How'd you know'?" challenged Abasio, suddenly worried this man might seize him up and carry him back up the valley. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 5 "I knew your grandma," the old man answered. "She was a lovely woman, your grandma." He nodded a polite farewell, then turned to lead his donkey up toward the dawn-lit mountains. Abasio stood a moment looking after the unlikely group before going on his way. The two men called Whistler and Sudden Stop had already moved northward out of sight. He didn't know how long he would have to wait beside the highway for a ride, but one would come along, sooner or later. The sun was well up before one did. Abasio was leaning on the signpost chewing on a grass stem when a trucker finally slowed to a crawl and leaned from the vehicle window. The boiler on the back of the truck sputtered and steamed, and the turbine warbled a few times with loud screeches, like harpies. "Where y'goin'?" the driver called. Abasio gave him a grin full of good-natured insolence and pointed up at the sign he was leaning against. Fantis, it said, on an arrow pointing north. "Goin' to try the city, huh!" The driver beckoned, leaning across the seat to open the door on the other side. Abasio tossed his sack onto the seat before getting in himself, and the books inside hit with a thump that made the driver blink. Abasio stuck out his hand. "I'm Abasio Cermit. Folks call me Basio." "Barefoot Golly," grunted the trucker in return. Abasio looked down at the driver's feet, finding them as advertised. "You got somethin' against shoes?" "Nothin' except they hurt my feet. Always did. Never found a pair yet that felt as good as skin." He put the truck in gear, and they picked up speed as the boiler built up pressure. "What do you do when it snows?" "When it snows here, I'm somewhere else. Maybe down in Low Mesiko." "It doesn't snow there?" The kid dropped his jaw as if he'd never heard any such thing. "Where you from, boy? Don't they teach you any jogaphy?" "1 know where Low Mesiko is. It's way south of manland. I just didn't know it didn't snow there." "Well, it doesn't. Not often, anyhow. Where you from?" "Up there." The kid gestured toward the hills at their left. "Up the valley." "Farm kid, ainchu." It wasn't a question. "St)!" "Hey, no 'fence. Just sayin', you look like a farm kid." "How come?" The driver looked him over, all of him. The kid was no lightweight. Six 6 Sheri S. Tepper one, maybe. Dark skin. Dark curly hair. Eyes full of the old devil. "Oh, hair. Clothes. You'll see when we get to Fantis.""You goin' all the way there?" "All the way. Got a load of batteries from the Place of Power for the battery stores in the market. Got some weapons for Sudden Stop at the Battle Shop--" "Who?" asked Abasio, alertly. "Sudden Stop. He runs the Battle Shops, includin' the one in Fantis. Then, when I'm unloaded, I'll run back empty as far as Whitherby, pick up a load of wool there, and head south around Artemisia to High Mesiko, to the blanket weavers." "Whitherby's where my grandpa sells his wool." Abasio settled back, wondering at the coincidence of almost meeting Sudden Stop and then hearing about him, wondering but not liking to ask about the other man he'd almost met, Whistler. Just knowing who Sudden Stop was made him more than ever curious about who the old man with the donkey might have been. One of the things Grandpa had hammered home, however, was that it was often wisest not to ask questions of people one has just met. So Abasio let his curiosity feed on itself except about things he saw as they went along. After a mile or so, the road came up alongside the highway, where southbound traffic was on one road and northbound traffic on another. It wasn't much smoother than the narrower road had been. Whenever they hit a rough spot, which was every few yards, Abasio grabbed at the handles set into the roof of the truck. "Nobody fixes the roads in manland anymore," said Golly. "Another five years, there won't be any roads, and the trucking brotherhood'11 have to do something else for a living.""No trucks'?" "Maybe the Edge'11 come up with something else. They're part of manland tOO." "How far does manland go, exactly'?" Golly twiddled his toes. "Well, it sort of starts where the forests give out, two, three days' drive east of here. And it includes all the farm country on the prairies, and the farm villages. And it ends up three or four days' drive north, where the badlands are, and three, four days' drive south, at the border of Artemisia." "How far west does it go?" "Don't know as anybody's ever said. These little old foothills along here, they're in manland right enough, but once you get back in the real mountains, they don't call that manland. They call that wilderness!" This more or less accorded with Grandpa's version of matters. Everything east of the mountains, Grandpa said. All the cities and Edges and towns and A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 7 farms as far as a person could go in any direction before running into forests or some other country. Abasio nodded to himself, pleased to have the matter confirmed. Manland was a sizable piece of ground, even though it was mostly open space. They trundled along. After a considerable time they came up a long ridge, and Abasio sat up straight, looking far ahead. "All that sparkle there, what's that?" "Those're the walls around an Edge, boy. Didn't you never hear about Edges?" "I know about Edges! They're where the people went who left the cities, but I didn't know they'd look like that.""It's the morning sun on 'era." Ab~/sio stared at the glistening walls until they dropped over the ridge and he lost sight of them. For a while there was nothing but farms and fields with trees furring the waterways. Then, after a good many miles, they crested a rise and saw the walls again, coming up close on the right, farther away on the left, across the divided highway. Tall they were, and slickly shining, with complicated barricades at the top. No bushes or trees along them, either. Golly pointed upward, saying, "Weapons they call laser cannons up there, and all kinds of alarms. You try and climb that, the guards'll pick you off like an apple out of a tree." Then he looked back at the road and abruptly stood on his brakes, cursing. "Oh, shee-it!" "What?" "Damn goblins!" the trucker growled as they screeched to a halt. "Look at that, will you! They've cut a trench right across the road!" They climbed out, GolJy muttering and hitting the side of the truck angrily. The excavation was two feet wide, four feet deep, straight-edged as a grave across both lanes of the road they were on, with another one to match across the two lanes on the other side of the grassy strip."Shee-it," the driver growled to himself. "What do we do?" Abasio asked, more excited than annoyed. "Do we fill it in?" "We do not!" Golly exploded. "I got other things to do with my time besides fillin' in goblin trenches or defusin' kobold bombs or any of that. My aunt Hettie, but there's more of 'era every time I turn around! You help me get the flaps out." They had to unload several crates of batteries before they could get at the flaps, solidly constructed minibridges that they lugged to the front of the truck and dropped neatly across the trench. When they'd driven across the flaps, they got out and went back to reload. Abasio was bent over the flap, trying to get a good grip on it, when he 8 Sheri S. Tepper suddenly got a sick feeling, as if he were going to throw up. He took a deep, shuddering breath, frightened, wondering what was happening to him, and at that moment Golly put a hand on his shoulder and made a surprised noise, a little whuff of air. There in front of Abasio's eyes were two sets of booted feet, and legs covered with shiny black stuff that looked stiff, like the carapace of a beetle. Golly's hand was pressing Abasio down, so he stayed where he was. A voice said, "You." The voice was windy and hot, as though it came across a desert. "Yessir," said Golly, standing very still. "You travel this road often'?" The words seemed to come from far away. Abasio shut his eyes and concentrated on breathing. The words came out here, but they started somewhere else. "Yessir," said Golly. "All the time." "On your journey today, have you seen anyone along the road?" Golly swallowed audibly. "Him," he said, tapping his finger on Abasio's shoulder. "Just him." Abasio felt his head being lifted. Not by hands, not by anything he could see or feel. It was like somebody had a fishhook set into his scalp and was pulling. He could feel the pain of it, as his eyes traveled up the legs and the stiffly armored black torsos to two identical expressionless faces, and two pairs of hot red eyes. It was the eyes doing it to him. He could feel them like levers, pressed into his flesh, as though their gaze had physical reality. His feeling of nausea increased. He wanted to shake or vomit or yell, but that seemed like a bad idea. The easiest thing was to hold real still, like when you meet a bad dog or come near to stepping on a rattlesnake. "Did you see anyone'?" the windy voice asked. "Yessir," he said, aping Golly's manner. "Two men walking along, goin' toward Fantis--" "With a child? Children?" the voice demanded. Abasio had no particular reason not to mention the old man and the donkey, but this avid question brought back the feel of the toddler in his arms, her lips on his cheek. Though it was no doubt a very risky thing indeed, he decided the questioners didn't need to know about every damn donkey. It took more resolution than he'd ever used before to tell them just what he did. "The two men didn't have any family with them. When I saw them last, they were just two big men walking north along the highway." The effort not to say anything more left him limp and wet all over. Without farewell, the two shiny figures moved away, also northward. Even sweaty and distracted as he was, Abasio noticed they moved faster than men should be able to move. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 9 "Shee~it," murmured Golly, panting as though he'd been holding his breath. "That's all I needed. Damn it to all hell, I went an' peed my pants." He pulled the fabric away from his groin and flapped it, cursing vividly, though in a subdued voice. "Who were they'?" asked Abasio. "People call 'em walkers. Last couple of years, they've been all over the place, asking about babies. Little girls. Anybody seen any little girls that didn't have folks. Any little girls bein' fostered. Hellfire, the way people're dyin' all over, there's always kids bein' fostered. I don't know what they think they're lookin' for," Abasio, who thought he did, kept his mouth shut. "Show you something," whispered Golly. He went over to the place the walkers had stood and peered at the earth, beckoning with one hand toward Abasio. Abasio went over next to him, looking down to see whatever it was. "There," said Golly, stirring the grasses with his foot. At first, Abasio didn't see what it was, but then he noticed the dry black fragments all over Golly's bare toes, the grasses where the two things had been standing, dead and burned right down to their roots. Abasio looked the way they had gone, figuring he'd see footprints. "Nope," whispered Golly. "They move too fast for that. It's just when they stand still a bit. You see places like that, stay away from 'em. You camp on toppa that burned dirt, pretty soon, you don't feel so good." He heaved a heavy sigh, as though deeply troubled, and then the two of them reloaded the flaps. They got back into the truck and went forward at a slow trundle for some little while. Golly seemed of a mind to let the walkers get a long way ahead. Even now they had become small black dots, far down the plain. "What are they? Really?" Abasio murmured. "Boy, I don't know. I try not to think." And Golly began singing to himself, rather tunelessly. For a long time, neither of them said anything more. Finally Golly seemed to get his spirits back, and the truck picked up speed as they rolled past the high walls, past the steel-spiked gates with their guard posts. Through the gates, Abasio could see greenery, trees and lawns and flower gardens, with elegant houses set wide apart, and beyond them the squat, glistening towers where the Edgcrs worked. "What makes those buildings all lit up like that'?" "Science, boy. These folks still got science. Used to be lights like that ever-where, you believe that?" They passed three sets of gates without even a wave from the guards, but as they were approaching the fourth, Golly muttered to himself and reduced speed once more. 10 Sheri S. Tepper "Now if this ain't the end! First goblins, then walkers, and now this!" The next pair of high gates was standing open, serving as a backdrop for a crowd of pale-skinned and brightly dressed people, all so clean-looking, they made Abasio's eyes smart. In the midst of them stood a girl clad in green, her hair a knee-length flow of pure gold, a flower wreath around her head, her feet in crystal slippers. Drawn up outside the gate was a melonshaped carriage, red lacquer and gilt, polished so bright, it reflected the sun like a gemstone, six white horses harnessed to the shaft and a coachman up top with a high plumed hat. "What'?" murmured Abasio, awestruck. The driver shook his head. "She's a Princess, boy. Look at her. A Princess if I ever saw one. They're taking her away from her home in the Edge, off to a archetypal village, I'd say. Poor thing. She's cryin', and they're all pattin' and pettin' of her. Shee-it. This is goin' to take a while." He shut down the engine and twiddled his toes while Basio shook his head at the wonder of it. "There's an archetypal village near our farm. Up over the mountain. I used to climb up the top of the gap and look down into it. There's a Hero there, and an Oracle and a Poet, and a bunch of other archetypes. Do you suppose she's going there'?""Does your village have a palace?" "It has an old castle, mostly fallen-in." "l'd say no, then. No, that Princess isn't for any old fallen-in place. She'll go someplace shiny-new, probably with a Prince already there. Either that, or to an enchanted tower." "Who's the old fallen-in castle for, then?" Golly pursed his lips, thinking. "Oh, I'd say prob'ly a Ghost. Or a Wicked Witch." Abasio shook his head slowly, reflectively, as he settled himself for a considerable wait. "No," he said at last. "There wasn't any Wicked Witch." Somewhere, of course, there had to be a Wicked Witch. South and west of the Long Plain and the area known as manland, west of the land called Artemisia, past mountains and valleys, arroyos and mesas, at the top of a sinuous, canyon-climbing road, the Place of Power spread fingerlike at the eastern edge of a massive tableland where carved chasms fell away between the fingers, changeable under each shifting cloud or turn of season, now light, now dark, turning from rose to amber to gray in an instant, and in an instant rose again. Thunderheads often massed behind the towering rimrock, great cliffs of cloud spitting lightning and ruminous with A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 11 thunder. Whether from this ominous backdrop or for some more consequential reason, the Place was considered to be strange and threatening, perhaps even dangerous. Some said that parts of it might be evil. They meant the Dome, a building squatting on the eastmost canyon rim, bulging ominously upon that prominence like a lopped and swollen head. Everyone knew the misshapen Dome had at one time been an observatory, used by astronomers, creatures of night, who had peered through its slitted eye nearsightedly into the heavens. Many thought the building was still used by creatures of darkness, though for purposes less benign, for now it was the Witch who went there, the Witch and her minions, shedding shadow behind them as a dog sheds hair, dropping a dander of malevolence to itch those who dwelt in the Place. The Witch's given name was Quince Ellel, The Ellel, head of the Ellel clan. Quince Ellel had a longtime though unwilling servant named Qualary Finch. Although Qualary was not the only person to think of Quince Ellel as the Witch, no one called her that out loud. When Qualary spoke to her or of her, she said "Madam Domer" in tones of absolute subservience and groveling respect. Each morning, while others in the Place were having breakfast or talking with friends or engaged in other ordinary pursuits, Qualary Finch was standing immobile on the high, spidery platform beneath the rusty Dome, holding open a heavy leather-bound book, while the Witch, robed in black and masked in gold, read the words of her quotidian litany. "'Hunagor is gone,'" she chanted in a harsh metallic voice, lingering over the words. "'And Werra is gone .... '" Hunagor had died fifty years or more before, and Werra had been gone for at least two decades, but this made no difference to the Witch. Hunagor and Werra had been residents of Gaddi House, and the Witch hated all present and former residents of Gaddi House. "And always will," laughing Berkli had remarked, not caring who heard him. "Ellel will not be happy until Gaddi House is rubble, then she'll dance on the shards." Berkli was The Berkli, head of his clan as Ellel was head of hers. Ellel had not been amused by his comment. When Ellel spoke of Hunagor and Wcrra dying, her voice pealed like dissonant bells, an enjt)yment Qualary perceived but did not question. Qualary had learned painfully not to react to anything Ellel did or felt, not by so much as a tremor. At home she'd held a stone weight at arm's length for hours, practicing, so she wouldn't let the heavy book quiver. "'Heavy as cobble, heavv as lead, let the book wobble, I'll end up dead.'" So she told herself mentally, quoting one of her many "Rhymes for trying times." Her only chance of remain. ing unscathed was to remain unseen, unnoticed, taken for granted like a chest or 12 Sheri S. Tepper a chair. While the Witch's words fell in descending echoes among the blotched arches below, Qualary stood like furniture, utterly still. "'... their heritage has been ended,'" the Witch cried triumphantly, speaking still of Hunagor and Werra, "Amen," chanted the minions from the floor far below, the words coming as a hot wind, as a burning and stinking exhalation. Qualary bit the insides of her cheeks, steeling herself against that heat, that smell. The first few times she had been dragged up here, the Witch's voice hissing obscenities, the Witch's fingers twisted deep into Qualary's hair, that hot stink had surprised her. She'd been only thirteen then, but now, twenty years later, she still bore the scars of Ellel's initial chastisement. Now, even when the robed figure turned from the book to lean over the railing, peering downward, Qualary remained rigid, for she knew what lay below and had no desire to see it. Down there was a mosaic floor, set with the signs of the Zodiac and the orbits of the planets. The designs were shattered now, the tesserae scattered. Even if they'd been whole, Qualary couldn't have seen them through the serried ranks of Ellel's myrmidons, thousands of them, arranged in lines like necklaces, their complicated helmets mere beads of black or gold or red, so thickly gathered they completely hid the floor. They were not things of this time at all. They were utterly foreign to this age, creatures of an almost forgotten era, found in a vast and ancient cavern far underground, laid up like cordwood as they had been stored long ago against some unimaginable future need. The Witch's father had found them. They had been his. Now they were hers. Her father had never used the things eff~ctively, so said the Witch. Not that she said this to Qualary. She didn't talk to Qualary, She talked very little to anyone, but she sometimes murmured to herself when Qualary could hear. The Witch drew back from the narrow rail and ran her finger down the page until she found her place once more. An illuminator had been brought all the way from Low Mesiko to letter this book, to make these words gleam with gold and bright ink. Qualary sometimes wondered about that, about the Witch's going to all that trouble when she had written the words hersell' and knew them by heart. The Witch needed no page, no writing, no servant to hold the book. Except that the gold and the bright ink and the motionless servant were part of the Witch's aura, her design, her imagined self, her vaunting and voracious ambition. "'Impotence holds the gate of Gaddi House. The time trembles,' "the Witch cried. The lips of the golden mask could not move, but the eyes that glared from the eyeholes shifted and glared, bloodshot and yellowed. Years ago, the A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 13 Witch had shown her face. In recent years, she had shown only the mask. All in all, Qualary preferred the mask. It was inhuman and therefore easier to deal with. When Qualary had seen the person, face to face, she had expected human responses, humane attitudes, and had suffered for it. The echoes still ricocheted from pillar to pillar below. "Time, ime, ime, ime. Trembles, emmles, emmles." Time always trembled, thought Qualary. Something was always breaking apart or unraveling. As for Gaddi House, everyone said there was only one old man living over there: old, old Seoca, doddering his way toward death. And best he get to it, for if he didn't die soon, Ellel would kill him! The Witch wanted desperately to get into Gaddi House. That closed, enigmatic space infuriated her. She assumed there were wonders hidden away in there, and she wanted to get her hands on them. The Witch moved to the rail and leaned over once more. "'The days of Seoca are numbered!'" The words were almost a scream, far too loud for this enclosed space. The golden fortress of Gaddi House was only a few hundred yards away, on the rim of the mesa. Perhaps Ellel wanted the old man to hear her. "Amen," her creatures chanted once more, the sound of their voices surging toward the high balcony like the rush of a boiling, inexorable wave. Qualary heidi her breath. Sometimes she woke in the night, dreaming of drowning in those voices, in that smell. The Witch's voice rose in an impassioned howl." 'What was false shall be true, what was true shall be false. Destiny calls the people of the Dome to stand upon the power of the place, to renew the might of man, to bring progress upon the earth!'" "Amen," her creatures said for the third time, as they had been programmed to do. Qualary believed that Ellel valued the creatures most because they would always do precisely what they were programmed to do. Unlike creatures of flesh. Unlike ht~man beings. Unlike Qualary herself, as the Witch frequently pointed out, who had to be repeatedly disciplined to assure she did what was required. The third Amen had been the final response. Silence gathered. "Go," Ellel murmured, the whisper as clear as the ritual cries had been. The creatures rose silently and departed as silently. Their feet made no sound as they crossed the cracked pave, ebon and gold and bloodred strings of them flowing like beaded serpents, slithering out among the arches. They spiraled and eddied as they departed. Even Qualary could not keep her eyes from them. They were like oil on swirling water. The patterns were different every time. Besides, they were going away. The only tolerable thing about them was when the3' went away. 14 Sheri S. Tepper The Witch stood watching until only a few were left, those retained for the day's duties. Ignoring Qualary, she sat upon the automatic lift chair and swirled her way along the spiraling track, past the little mezzanine with its information console, around the cylindrical walls to the floor. Left behind upon the balcony, Qualary wrapped the book and put it away, then plodded slowly downward, careful step by careful step, holding tight to the railing. The track wasn't made for feet, but Ellel didn't care about that. Ellel was quite capable of telling Qualary to fly, then beating her when she didn't immediately sprout wings. Halfway down the long spiral, Qualary heard the creatures below as they greeted their mistress. "Ellel, Empress," they chanted together in their metallic, uninflected voices. "My faithful followers," the Witch returned the greeting in a voice not unlike their own. "Have you found me the child'.)" Far northeast of the Place, Abasio and Golly trundled quite slowly past the last of the Edge, where the walls bent away east and west to make a circle around the city, then across a strip of wasteland along the shallow river and up onto the bridge that crossed it. Though Abasio had kept an eye out for the walkers, he hadn't seen them. Either they'd moved faster than the truck, or they'd turned off somewhere. When they got right up on the top of the bridge, Golly stopped his truck again and just sat there, twiddling his toes against the pedals, thinking. "Whatso?" asked Abasio, impatiently. It had been a day for delays! "Well, boy, before we go on in, I was just considerin'. Did your folks tell you about IDDIs?" Abasio flushed and muttered, "My ma did." "Well then," said Barefoot Golly. "Well then, you think on what she told you, boy. Just you think on it." He went on twiddling his toes, moving not an inch. "You mean now?" Abasio asked, incredulously. "1 do mean now. Just you sit there and think what she told you." Though considerably annoyed, Abasio cast his mind back to the time Ma'd told him about IDDIs. It had been about a year ago, summertime, like now. They'd eaten their supper outside under the willow tree, and there in the dusk with the stars pricking out overhead, Abasio, who was even then thinking about running off, had asked his ma why she'd come back from the city. "I was pregnant with you," she'd said. "And it's not good for babies there. Sure not good for women." Then she'd looked him straight in the face, using the dusk as a kind of A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 15 veil to hide her blushes, and she'd told him about IDDIs, slowly, painfully, as though she had to force each word out against her will. Abasio hadn't known where to look, or what to say. He hadn't known even whether to believe her! Maybe it was just horrible talk, to scare him, to make him stay home. But Grandpa nodded the whole time she talked, and when she'd finished, he'd said, "Believe her, boy. Every word she says is true." Then he'd pointed eastward, where Orion was heaving himself up over the horizon, the huntsman of the heavens. "I've always believed our kinfolk went to the stars partly to escape the IDDIs. No IDDIs among our brothers on B,etelgeuse. They were smart to get away, smart to go." Abasio had been hearing about mankind going to the stars since he was a tiny baby, but he'd rather talk about that than what Ma was talking about! "When did they go, Grandpa?" "Oh, in my great-great-grandpa's time, boy. A hundred years, maybe a hundred fifty." "Why didn't they take us with them, Grandpa?" "We weren't born yet. Some people chose not to go, and we're descended from those folks." Abasio wished he had been born then. If he'd been born then, he'd have chosen to go! There'd have been no problem with seeking adventure. Going to the stars was adventure, all right! Still, Grandpa said the important thing was that men had gone. He puffed out his chest when he said that. Whenever Abasio thought about it, it made him puff up like a cockerel, too, just to think that men had gone. Men like him. Even though he hadn't gone with them, he still owned the stars sort of by proxy. If men had gone to the stars, there was nothing they couldn't do! So now, sitting on the bridge beside Barefoot Golly, he felt a familiar confusion: danger and sex all mixed up in his adventure. So it was too late to go to the stars, but it wasn't too late to see the world. But Ma had warned him, and Grandpa had warned him, and now here was this trucker warning him. He, Abasio, was no fool. They didn't need to keep telling him the same thing over and over. He knew about IDDIs! '~AII right, I thought on it," Abasio growled. "I thought on everything Ma said about it." Golly gave him such a speculative look that Abasio thought he might have to come right out and tell what he knew about IDDIs, but after a minute the tracker grunted and let the truck roll down the incline of the bridge toward the city. Despite Abasio's attempt at nonchalance, his first view of Fantis came as a shock. At the foot of the bridge were half-fallen buildings, walls that went nowhere, exposed floors teetering over cracked and littered streets, surfaces fi d g in $~ C~ hi d~ 16 Sheri S. Tepper painted in gaudy colors and contorted patterns, steel grills over doors and windows, a wildly disintegrated scene that Abasio's eyes took in but his brain refused to interpret. Nothing seemed to connect to anything else. He felt his bowels clench and grab, not quite letting go but almost. The truck stopped at the side of a virtually intact building, and Barefoot Golly got out, waving at somebody inside. "Is this it?" Abasio asked in a voice that didn't sound like his own. It was nothing, nothing like he'd thought it would be! "This is it, boy," Barefoot told him, giving him a look up and down and then heaving a sort of sigh. He moved in on Abasio, coming very close, talking quietly so nobody could hear what he was saying but Abasio himself. "Look past my shoulder, boy. You see those men down there at the comer. There's some in green, and some in other colors, you see?"Abasio saw. "Those are what you call recruitment teams. Any young ones come to Fantis, male or female, they got to go that way to get on into town. This's all neutral territory along here, but if you don't have a pass, you've got to hook up with somebody. Try and stay away from the Greens, Abasio Cermit. That's all I'll say to you, but it's meant in friendship. Try to stay away from them." Then he was gone, and there were men swarming over the truck, unloading the cases of batteries and the heavy weapons boxes with BATTLE SHOP all over them in big black letters. Abasio took a deep breath and started for the corner. When the green-clad men with the long green-dyed braids came toward him, he moved quickly and got himself among some other men, nearest to two with high purple hair crests and purple tattoos all over their hands. "New to the city, boy?" "Come meet the family, boy." A quick glance over his shoulder showed him the Greens snarling and showing their teeth like farm dogs, so he said yes quick. The two purple men put him into a flashily painted vehicle that spouted black smoke as they drove past streets painted in blue and green and red before getting to a street where all the paint was purple. "Purple House!" one of his guides said unnecessarily. It was four stories of decaying brick with snaky designs in lavender and wine and deep violet covering it from broken sidewalk to curly shingled roof."Whatso?" called a guard from the front stoop. "This here's Basio," announced one of his guides. "Come to have supper with us." "Welcome to Purple House." The guard smiled around his gap teeth. "You enjoy yourself now." (œ A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 17 It wasn't what Abasio expected at all. Not that he was exactly sure what he expected. Sometimes when Ma described the city she said one thing, another time she'd say something else. What it really was, this first night, was him, Basio, sitting on the floor on a mattress while people brought him food and gave him stuff to drink he'd never had before. On the mattress beside him was a girl wearing, so far as he could tell, only two scarfs, one around her top and the other one sort of between her legs."What's your name'?" he asked her. She shook her head, opened her mouth as if she were trying to say something, only no words came out. The man on the other side of her said something to her, low and hard, and the girl grabbed on to Abasio as if she were drowning and he were a log that'd keep her afloat. She still didn't say anything. "You like her'?" the man on the other side of him asked. "Sure," Basio said, his tongue so thick and his lips so unmanageable, he was scarcely able to get the word out. "Sure. She's fine." He'd thought a city girl would be more fun, somehow, and she didn't seem to be able to talk, but otherwise... she was fine. "She's yours, for tonight," the man whispered. "Enjoy." Later he and the girl were in a little room together, only she scuttled away from him and crouched in a corner like a whipped pup."I'm not... not gonna hurt you," he said. "I ain't never," she wept. "I ain't never. They had no right!" "What you talking about'?" "My daddy had to sell me," she wept. "And they bought me. To raise up tots for the Purples. But I ain't never, and I'm scared." Abasio whispered to her he hadn't never, either, but he'd watched dogs and cats and sheep, and there didn't seem to be much to it. He was right, there wasn't. It didn't take him anywhere near as much time as it did dogs, not any of the times he did it. By the third or fourth time, she even quit crying about it and just let him. It was pretty much how he'd thought it would be. Some of the books he'd read said it was like a miracle or marvel or wonder, but it wasn't like that. It wasn't all that different from doing it himself, because she just shut her eyes and held her breath and waited for it to be over. Next day they were still half-asleep when the two Purples showed up again to drag him out to see the arena and the market and all the homegrounds of the Purple Stars and Blue Shadows and Green Knives and Renegades. At first, all Abasio could see was the dirt. Dead animals. Sometimes dead people. Puddles of stuff in the streets and alleys, stuff he didn't want to step in even though he had his boots on. Turds everywhere, where dogs or people had just squatted and let go, and on the turds masses of flies that rose up in 18 Sheri S. Tepper clouds and stuck to his lips and around his eyes until he thought he'd have a fit getting rid of them. The Purples he was with didn't seem to notice. They just brushed the flies away, not even stopping whatever it was they were saying. They were full ot' stories about the Purples, the battles they'd fought, the victories they'd won over the Renegades and the Blue Shadows and the Green Knives. "You gotta watch out for the Greens," they told him. "They torture prisoners. Their Chief, Wally Skins, he likes doin' it." "Why do they call him that?" Abasio wanted to know. "'Cause he wears prisoner skins. Fresh ones, usually." "Who's... in charge of the Purples?" "Soniff, he's warlord. Old Chief Purple, he got him so much money he bought him a place out in the Edge. Said he was retirin' from the binness and Soniff should take over." "Jus' 'til Old Chief's boy Kerf grows up," said the other, with a snigger. "Little Kerr." "Watch your mouth," warned the first, turning Abasio's attention away from this remark by pointing out the sights. "That there's the Battle Shop, Basio. Man named Sudden Stop, he runs it, and he runs the shows at the arena too. He's got the best weapons, new ones all the time." Abasio blinked. Twice on the road, and now here, he'd heard that name. Three times is meant, the old adage ran, so he took a good look. The Battle Shop was big and fairly clean. It had glass windows without any bars over them and enough weapons piled up inside to wage a pretty good war. After a few days, Abasio had to admit Grandpa and Ma had been right about a lot of things. At the farm there'd been a windmill to pump water right to the house, but here in the city the only water came from the watermen's water-truck that arrived every few days and pumped the tank on the roof full, just enough for cooking and pot washing and the like. Dirty clothes went to the neighborhood laundry, and people went to the neighborhood baths. Both of them had water piped in from the river, and filters to clean it, with slave teams stoking the boilers and walking the treadmills to keep the water moving. When Purple women went to the baths, Purples went along to guard them. Purples escorted the tots to and from school, too, keeping the kids from getting too close to dead bodies and from being stolen by other gangs. The first day Abasio was on escort duty he got jumped by Blue Shadows. It made him so mad, he didn't even have time to be scared. When he came to himself, there were two Blue Shadows on the sidewalk and two more A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 19 running and his fellow escorts clapping him on the back, crowing like cocks. That night they asked Abasio if he'd like to join the Purple Stars. Basio had his doubts, but he wasn't silly enough to be disrespectful and refuse the honor. People who were disrespectful didn't last any time at all. His fight against the Blues got counted as First Fight. They showed him the Book of the Purples and gave him a copy to memorize; they added his name to the roll of honor on the wall; they pricked the first of his tattoos onto his hands; then everybody got buzzed. Two days after that, he was on his way out back to the privy, when he heard a sound from one of the back rooms. He'd been past that room a hundred times before, but the door had always been shut. This time it was open, so he looked in: three beds with men on them, a hag washing bloody rags in a basin. The hag looked up at him. "You don't want to come in here,." she whispered. Abasio's memory was trying to tell him something while he stood there stupidly with his mouth open. Wounds were treated upstairs. He'd seen knife cuts being sewn up and bones being set up there. They had a special hag to do all that, one who'd had lessons from a real doctor."What's wrong with them?" he asked the hag. "You don't want to know," said one of the men. He had great black lumps sticking way out from his neck. His mouth bled. He had no teeth. When he spoke, the blood in his mouth made a shiny red bubble on his lips. He looked old, but Abasio knew he wasn't. The hag shooed Abasio out, muttering at him, "Fool boy. Why you think they gave you that new little girl? Why you think, stupid?" He was on his way back from the privy before he realized what he'd seen. It was what Ma had warned him about, what the trucker had tried to tell him. "Those men in the back room, they got IDDIs?" he asked one of the men he'd been on escort with. "They goin' to die?" He thought he knew, but he wanted verification. The reality of what he had seen was nothing he'd ever imagined, and he had to be sure. "Yeah, well," the man said, looking over Abasio's shoulder at nothing. "Maybe they been here in the house too long." The next day the door was open and the room was empty and stinking ~iih some strong chemical smell. Ma had seen men die like that. She'd told him so, or tried to. Dying like that was what she'd run away from. Men dying like that, and kids, and women too. If the mother or father had it, babies even, born with an IDDI-an immune deficiency disease, Grandpa said. It hadn't meant much to Abasio until now. Now, having seen, it was all different. Having seen and having Sheri S. Tepper heard what the hag muttered at him: Why you think, fool boy? Why you think they gave you a nea, girl? ~ g'~r[ ,~txo hadn't, ever. A girl they thought probably wasn't infected. Why, fool boy? So she'd get pregnant with a healthy baby, he answered himself. So the baby wouldn't die before it was born, the way IDDI babies often did. So the Purples could raise up some healthy tots, to make them strong. The girl they'd given him got pregnant right away, so they took her upstairs to women's quarters and she wasn't available anymore. Though she'd been his first, Basio decided she was going to be his only. No point seeking adventure if all it did was get you dead! The other Purples laughed at him. They called him Basio the Cat, because when the gang went to the songhouses, Basio would go along, but he wouldn't get his feet wet, though they weren't talking about his feet. They were talking about cock-hole. "Cuckle," they said, "What good's a man without cuckle and chuckle." Or fuck and luck. Or screwin' and doin'. "Short life and wild!" they cried. "Cuckle and chuckle until you buckle!" and "Nobody lives forever!" No matter how they said it, Abasio wouldn't. Sometimes he woke up sweating, hearing that voice through its bubble of blood: "You don't want to know." No, he didn't want to know. He wanted more than cuckle and chuckle. Something more. A lot more, though he didn't know exactly what that might be. Young Kerr, the Old Chief's son, was younger than Abasio by a couple of years, but he already had a woman of his own, one Elrick-Ann, a virgin girl from the Cranked-Up gang, bought for Kerr by his daddy when the boy was only ten. As far as anybody knew, she was a virgin still and was likely, so some of the Purples whispered to each other, to remain that way forever. Whatever her sexual status, Elrick-Ann was that impossibility among conks, a popular woman. She never flirted with any man, but she was sisterly toward them all. She listened to their troubles and offered good advice if they wanted it. She supervised the hags in the kitchen and made them produce food that was tasty and looked nice. Most gangets' women stayed all their lives in the women's quarters on the roof, but Elrick-Ann buzzed around Purple House like a bee, always busy with something. Even the other women liked her, and that was an unheard-of thing, œor about all the amusement the women had besides going to the baths was fighting with each other. To Abasio, Elrick-Ann took the place ol: ama, or maybe an older sister. He told her how he felt about 1DDls, and she told him being scared was real sensible if a man cared about living. Elrick-Ann suggested Abasio make it his business to find amusements for Kerf, because that would get him in A PLAGUE OF ANGELS good with Soniff and keep him away from the whoring and drugging, which was mostly where the IDDIs came from. When the young Chingero brothers, TeClar and CummyNup, were recruited for the gang, Elrick-Ann told Basio to look out for them and them to look out for him, because a man lived longer with somebody watching his back. When he told Elrick-Ann how much he liked books, how he'd brought books with him but couldn't read them because the Purples didn't respect people who read or who used unusual words, Elrick-Ann suggested he move out of Purple House and find a place of his own. "Purples don' have to live in the house, Basio," she whispered, looking around to be sure they weren't overheard. "Not if they've got some other place. No reason you shouldn' do stuff you like. I even got me this idea 'bout a place for you." The place was a solid old shack on top of a tenement a few blocks away, where he could keep the books he bought secretly in the market and read the night away if he liked, or as much of it as he was able to find lantern fuel for. Kerosene was scarce, and torches were too smoky to read by. All the caring wasn't one way. When Elrick-Ann confessed one lonely night that Kerf would probably never be a normal man, but that she wasn't a normal woman, either, having been born without the right organs to make babies, so the doctors said, Abasio hugged her and told her he was sorry. "Is okay," she whispered. "With Keff, I'm safe. My daddy figured so. Nobody'11 bother me so long as I belong to Kerf." Abasio respected Elrick-Ann. When she told him, four years after he came to Fantis, that it was time he went home to tell his ma he was all right, that he owed his ma that much, he paid attention to what she said, borrowed a horse from the Patrol Post outside the city, and went. Ma wasn't there. Somehow he'd never thought of her not being there. The old man, much thinner and grayer, wouldn't say where she'd gone. When Abasio asked, he only shook his head, and he didn't invite him to stay, not even for a visit. In the end, Abasio came back to Fantis because it was the easiest thing to do. "l thought you might stay there," whispered Elrick-Ann. He hadn't intended to tell anyone about it, but he told Elrick-Ann, and he cried tears, and Elrick-Ann patted his shoulder and told him he'd just left it too long, she should have mentioned it to him sooner. "Don't tell anybody about me going," he begged. "She was always scared somebody from the city would come looking for her. If they knew about the farm, they might hunt for her." EMck-Ann said she wouldn't tell. When she said it, she really meant to keep her word. Sheri S. Tepper In the archetypal village over the ridge from the Cermit Farm, she who had been old Cermit's daughter and Abasio's mother--though she no longer remembered that fact--dwelt in a cave beside the waterfall. Her new name was Drowned Woman, and she was visited, time and again, as today, by a girl-child about six years ol'd who was known as Orphan."Tell me a story," the girl begged. "Come sit on my lap," said Drowned Woman. "You're all wet," Orphan objected. "So I am," Drowned Woman agreed. "I'11 put on something dry, how's that." Orphan put her thumb in her mouth to pass the time it would take Drowned Woman to find dry clothes. Oracle said Orphan was too old to suck her thumb, that six-year-olds were virtually grown up. Orphan didn't suck it in front of Oracle, only with Drowned Woman, who didn't care, or when she was in her own hovel, about to fall asleep. It was comforting. Sometimes she needed comforting. Drowned Woman found something reasonably dry, and when she sat down beside the fire, she patted her lap invitingly. Orphan took her thumb out of her mouth and crawled into the waiting lap. Drowned Woman's lap was bony. Oracle's lap was more cushiony, but Oracle was grumpier than Drowned Woman. "What story do you want'? 'Sleeping Beauty"? 'Three Bears'?" "Not one of those. I want an Artemisia story." Drowned Woman looked doubtful, "1 don't know many Artemisian sto- ries. Only the ones I've heard from Oracle.""The Bear Coyote one." Drowned Woman settled herself. "I think 1 remember that one. Let's see. Long and long ago...""How long ago'?" "Before you were born, or I was born, or our parents or our grandparents. Way back then. Coyote and Bear were married once, you know, when Bear was a woman, but this story comes after that, after Bear changed into a furry thing, with big teeth. Well, Coyote and Bear were walking along in the woods, and they saw a whole bunch of men hiding in the trees, with bows and arrows and throwing sticks and ropes, waiting to kill Bear and Coyote when they came along." "And Coyote said to Bear, 'Way-oh.'" "Right. Coyote said to Bear, 'Way-oh, there's men in the trees and men in the rocks and men in the bushes and men in the reeds along the stream, A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 23 and they want our hides to keep them warm, but we want our hides for ourselves!' And Bear said, 'Way-oh, let's go up this rock and through that cave and go the long way round.'""So they did!" "So they did. But the next day it was the same thing, and the day after that, and Bear and Coyote got tired of always having to go the long way round, just to keep their hides for themselves. "So, one day, Coyote said, 'Let's ask our big brother the Water Sprinkler to send a huge flood, to wash all the men away.'" Orphan said eagerly, "And Bear said, 'If the flood washes all the men away, what's to keep it from washing us?'" Drowned Woman agreed. "Exactly. So Coyote said, 'Let's go to the Sun and ask him to send a great fire to burn all the men up.'""But Bear thought he might get burned too." "Yes, he did. And after that, Coyote said, 'Let's go to our sister, Cold Woman, and ask her to send ice and cold to freeze all the men to death.' But Bear said, 'I have to sleep through the winters now, and that's cold enough. What's to keep me from freezing when the men freeze?'""So, finally..." said Orphan, expectantly. "So, finally, Coyote said, 'Let's go to the Woman Who Changes Everything, and let's ask her to make monsters to eat the men so they won't bother us anymore.' And Bear said, 'But if the monsters eat all the men, they'll still be hungry, and then they'll probably start eating us.' "'Not if the Changing Woman won't let them,' said Coyote." Drowned Woman's voice trailed away. "I've forgotten the rest," she said fretfully. "It's something about the monsters, but I've forgotten what it is." Drowned Woman did forget things sometimes. Orphan snuggled more deeply into Drowned Woman's lap, trying to think of a story Drowned Woman couldn't forget. "Tell the story about when I got here," she said. "You remember that one." "Well, yes. It happened four years ago, one summer day when the villagers saw a little man coming down the mountain leading a donkey. And when he got to the market square, he opened one of the baskets on the donkey, and a guardian-angel came out and perched on the edge--" "But people didn't know it was a guardian-angel," Orphan interrupted. "No, none of the villagers had ever seen a guardian-angel, so they didn't know, but there it was, on the basket. And when the little man got down into the village, into the market square, he turned round and round and cried out in a loud, loud voice, 'My name is Herkimer-Lurkimer, and I've brought you your Orphan.'" I II 24 Sheri S. Tepper "So what did people do'?" Orphan asked. She liked this part. "So Hero went down to the square, and Oracle went down to the square, and Poet went, and Bastard went--" "No, no!" cried Orphan, outraged. "Bastard didn't go. Bastard didn't get here until later!" "Sorry. You're quite right. Bastard didn't go. And of course, I didn't, either, because I didn't come until a few days later. But Fool went, and Faithful Sidekick--" "Faithful Sidekick got eaten last year." "Quite right. He got eaten last year by a monster--" "An ogre," said Orphan with a shiver. She remembered a huge shagginess, with teeth, a thing that roared and smelled dreadful. She buried her face in Drowned Woman's side. "Ogres are dreadful because they eat us up." She shivered. Drowned Woman pulled her face away and kissed it. "But that ogre is gone now." "And it won't come back!" "No. It won't come back because Hero hunted it down and killed it. Now, where was I'? Oh, yes. Everyone who was in the village went down to the square, and the little man opened the other basket and took out--" "Me!" cried Orphan. "Exactly right. You were two years old, more or less. Then HerkimerLurkimer handed you to Oracle, and Oracle almost dropped you because she had never had a baby and had no idea which end was up.""But you did." "When I got here, seemingly I did, though I don't remember how 1 knew. Even Oracle knew you were hungry and wet and needed tending to. Even Herkimer-Lurkimer knew that, for the other pannier was full of food and diapers." "And I stayed with you for a long time!" "Until you could go to the privies by yourself, exactly. Then I took you up to the Orphan's Hovel, which is where the Orphan is supposed to live. And you've lived there ever since, among all of us villagers.""But specially you and Oracle." "Especially me and Oracle. And we look after you, seeing you get the things you need, and between the two of us, we feed you, and everything ~s--" "Just fine," said Orphan, bringing the story to its customary close. "Except I'd rather live here than in the hovel." Drowned Woman hugged the child, smiling. "Well, Bastards can live anywhere at all, but Oracles have to live in caverns and Heroes have to live A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 25 out under the stars and Misers have to live in dirty old houses crammed full of stuff and Orphans have to live in hovels. That's how things are." "And Princesses in palaces and Virgins in bowers and Milkmaids among the cows," chanted Orphan. "Because we're archetypes. That's what Oracle says." "Oracle is quite right. We're archetypes, and we have to act typically. Otherwise, we'd be sent back into the world that has no room for us." Drowned Woman lifted Orphan out of her lap, set her on her feet, brushed the cloud of dark hair out of her eyes, and tugged her tattered smock down straight. "Now, pretty girl, you're having supper with Oracle tonight, aren't you'?" "Yes." "Well, then. You get along up to the cavern before Oracle eats it all up." "All right." Orphan yawned. She'd spent most of the day swimming with the Water Babies, and the rest of it climbing the rocky gorge along the stream above the pool, looking for wildflowers to make Drowned Woman a crown, so she was tired. She smoothed down her smock, gave Drowned Woman a parting hug, and left the cave. As she came out, her guardian-angel flew down to her shoulder and nibbled on her ear with its long, sharp beak. Walking up the path from the pool, she admired the fall, like glass slivers falling, and the pool making little jiggles that were part water and part light. Sometimes things were so pretty, she got all shivery inside. As soon as she got to the cavern, she'd ask Oracle for a story, right away! If she did that, maybe Oracle would forget to put ashes on her face, and she could stay pretty too. No such luck. First thing in the cavern, there was Oracle con~ing with ashes on her fingers, swiping at Orphan's cheeks and forehead, at her arms. "You're clean, again," she said in an annoyed voice. "Drowned Woman has a fire. She has ashes. Why doesn't she dirty you?" "Because she likes me better when l'm clean!" cried Orphan rebelliously. "Orphans aren't clean," asserted Oracle. "And I don't know how many times I have to point that out. Every time I get you properly dirtied and your hair draggled, Drowned Woman washes you and combs you, and you don't even remotely resemble an Orphan!" "My smock has a hole in it," said Orphan, tears in her eyes. "1 don't have any shoes!" "There, there, child. I didn't mean to yell. It's just... you're not typical." Oracle turned her large self around and began stirring something in the pot over the fire, looking grumpy and dissatisfied, the way she usually did. Orphan sat down and watched the firelight through her tears. When she 26 Sheri S. Tepper squinched her eyelids, it made a blurry brightness that danced across the piles of books at the back of the cavern and made slender licky shadows around the pillars and half pillars as it glanced way back into corners and reflected from lots of little twin moons glowing there. Squirrels' eyes, maybe. Or bats. Or maybe something else, wandered in from outside. It had been gnomes once, because Orphan had seen the gnome-man and his wife and their baby, tiny as a peach pit, all warming themselves by the fire. But not monsters, because Oracle wouldn't let them. When she got tired of making visions with her tears, Orphan wiped her eyes, sneaking a glance from under her lashes. Usually, if she cried right away, then Oracle was nice to her for the rest of the visit."I asked Hero to teach me to fight," she said. Oracle gave her a surprised look. "You're not old enough." "He says I am, but at first he said he wouldn't teach a girl. He said it wasn't--wasn't becoming for women to fight." "According to Hero's lights, I'm sure that's true. According to Hero, most of what he does is in defense of womanhood." Oracle snorted a tiny snort and shook her head. "He said violence is unfeminine and women's kinfolk should protect them, and I told him since l'm an Orphan, I don't have any kinfolk, and he said he'd protect me, and I said he might not be around when I need protecting. He sort of grumped, but he said he'd teach me." Oracle stared blindly at the wall. Orphan was too young to have reasoned this out so well. Orphan was too young to come up with a lot of the things she came up with. "That was kind of him. Will you need weapons?" "He says no. For the first years, it's just exercises. Jumping and spinning and kicking, like that. He says I'm very well coordinated and have a good spatial sense. He says my feet are already nice and hard from going barefoot all the time. And I'm not a scaredy-cat." Oracle humphed to herself and went on stirring. A rustling noise overhead ended in a plop on the sand, and there was Orphan's squirrel, climbing onto Orphan's knee. Oracle's Pusscat saw him and came over to sit on the other side and lick his black whiskers. Pusscat had designs on the squirrel, so Oracle said, but Orphan protected him. "Bastard invited me to his house. He wants to read to me," said Orphan. Oracle stopped stirring and gave her a serious look. "You stay away from Bastard. He can read to himself." Orphan found a nut in her pocket and ~ished it out for Squirrel. "I told him you would say that because he's dangerous, to females especially, and he said a lot of dirty words." Now there it was again. Oracle could not remember ever having said that particular thing about Bastard, and yet Orphan knew it was true. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 27 "That's typical." Oracle spooned the contents of the pot into two bowls, added a chunk of bread, and handed one such assemblage to Orphan. "Will you tell me a story tonight?" Orphan begged, seeing it as a propitious time. "What kind of story?" asked Oracle, her face softening. "What story would you like, child?" ~'The end of the Artemisian story about Bear and Coyote. Drowned Woman started to tell me, but she forgot the ending." "Which story about Bear and Coyote'? The one where they get married'?" "No. The one where they ask Changing Woman to make monsters, to kill the people, so they can keep their hides. Drowned Woman only got as far as Changing Woman crying because men were her children too." "Oh. Well, Changing Woman told Coyote and Bear she didn't need to make monsters to kill men, because when her sons, the Hero Twins, had killed most of the monsters, they'd left certain ones alive, and their names were Sa, that is Old Age, and Hakaz, that is Cold. But Coyote said men had become too clever for Sa and Hakaz, that worse monsters were needed. "'But it was through me the worst monsters were slain,' Changing Woman cried. 'My sons slew the bad monsters so that man could live.' "'Now men are killing everything! Don't other things need to live too?' cried Coyote." "And Changing Woman was sad," said Orphan. "Oh, indeed she was. For though Coyote and Bear were her children~ men were her children too. And at last she said she would do another thing so Coyote and Bear could keep their hides. At the beginning of time on this world, men and animals had talked the same language, so Changing Woman said she would make them speak the same language again.""And she did!" cried Orphan. "She did indeed. And Bear and Coyote told the hunters to leave them alone, and the hunters were so surprised, they did! You can still hear Coyote out on the prairie at night, telling all his family how clever he was to talk to man." "Hero says man started killing them again, though." "Well, yes. But that was another age. Another time." Oracle gave the po~ a final stir. "If Changing Woman's sons got rid of all the monsters when the world began, why do we have monsters now'?" Orphan asked. Oracle stared into the darkness, her eyes half shut, her mouth pursed. After a long time, she said, "Same reason, Orphan. This is a different age, another time." 28 Sheri S. Teppcr In the Place of Power, two shiny black creatures came unseen by a secret way, quick as snakes through tunneled stone, deep beneath the Dome, then upward to the place where the Witch lived. To them she had no human name but only a coded impulse, a unique mastery, a key that fit their particular lock. She was the reason they had brought the six-year-old child they carried with them, the child who cried for her aunty as she had ever since they had taken her. "Where did you find her?" the Witch asked. "South. Almost to Artemisia," said one of the creatures. "Come here, girl," the Witch said, setting aside her mask. And she, the child, seeing a human face, even one like this, was foolishly glad, for she thought people were kinder than the creatures that had brought her here. "Go look again," said the Witch. "This is likely not the right one." Obediently, the beetle-black creatures returned to their seeking, and the woman drew the child through doors and down hallways, deep into her apartments. "What's that?" the child screamed hysterically. "What's that!" "It's only a chair," she said, putting the child into it and strapping her there. "What's that?" the child screamed again. "Don't do that! Don't!" The woman did not answer, but merely lowered the helmet, down and down until it hid the child's eyes. "Now," said the Witch. "Now, let's see!" For a brief time the child went on crying. ~j~Huthevillage there had always been a Miser's ouse, back of Wicked Stepmother's ,H, ouse, st below the ruined castle, but there d been no Miser in it for a long time. Then one day, groaning over the notch in the ridge, came one truck and another one and one more yet, all of them making a racketyclack and smoke from the boilers on the back, with the men in them red-faced and yelling, boistering. roistering, asking where was Miser's House. Three truckloads of stuff they put in Miser's House, piles and stacks of paper, and teetering towers of boxes, and lumpy sacks of this and that, and old falling-apart furniture, going back and forth, up and down, cursing and spitting and laughing and yelling. When the trucks were empty, they went away and a little vehicle came, rattling and smoking, to bring Miser himself. He was thin and papery with a voice like cards being shuffled. He scuttled like Orphan's squirrel, quick, quick, out of the truck, into the house, then one side of his white, wrinkly face showed at a window behind a tattered 3O Sheri S. Tepper curtain like a mouse peering from a hole. Miser's lips always trembled as though about to say something, but they very seldom did."What's he scared of?" Orphan had asked Oracle. "Everything," said Oracle. "But mostly that someone will steal something from him." Orphan hadn't seen anything going into the house that was worth taking out of it, but as Oracle said, that was typical. As it turned out, Orphan was about the only one Miser wasn't afraid of. Every now and then she'd go sit on his porch and sing to him, because she thought he might be lonely. She sang "Big Bad Ogre Had a Farm," and "Eensy Weensy Wivern," and "This Old Troll." Miser would peek at her from the corner of the window, and after a while from the comer of the door, and later yet, from the open door. "'This Old Troll, he played eight, he played nick-nack with his fate. With a nick-nack, paddy-whack, throw the imp a bone, this Old Troll came trolling home .... ' "she finished up with a long note. "Very nice," whispered Miser, easing the door a crack. "Poet says men went to the stars," she told him. "I want to know about ~t." "True," said Miser. "Yes. They did. Rats. Deserting a sinking ship." Through the open door Orphan could see Miser's hallway and stairs, both piled with boxes on the sides leaving only a narrow trail between, all the edges softened by velvety dust, the banisters draped in cobwebs that trailed lumpy pennants of dead flies. She wondered once again how Miser could stay so rusty black and papery white living in all that dust, but it didn't seem to stick to him any more than spiderweb did to spiders. Oracle said it was his natural milieu. He swam in it, like a fish in water. "Can you tell me about it'?" she asked. She wouldn't have asked if she wasn't so curious because Miser wasn't a good storyteller. He pinched his words as Oracle said he did his pennies. "Men went," he said reluctantly. "That's all." "How?" she demanded. "When'?" He sighed, a rusty sigh. He went away from the door, and after a time he scraped back, dragging a rickety chair along behind him that he set inside the door, close enough that he could close it quickly if a thief came along. "Long time ago," he whispered, "men were profligate." "What's profligate?" Orphan asked. "Wasteful. 'Waste not, want not,' that's the motto, but men forgot it!" His voice actually rose beyond a whisper for a moment, then sank back and started over again. "They used up their inheritance. They didn't save things. They didn't take care--take care of things." He gestured at the hallway behind him. "You have to take care of things, Orphan." He panted and bit his lip. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 31 "How did they go? On ships?" "They built a station up in space, a great wheel that rolled and rolled, between earth and the moon. They mined the moon for minerals. They took hold of the sun for power. They built sky ships, and they went away. To the stars..." His voice trailed off. Then he said, "That's all," got up from the chair, and shut the door. Just as Orphan was about to leave, the door cracked open a little, and Miser's nose came through the crack. "And they should have taken their awful walkers with them!" Orphan had no time to ask what awful walkers were, for the door was shut tight. Later that day, she found Oracle and Bastard and Ingenue and two or three others sitting in the park, so she asked about awful walkers. "Walkers?" Oracle mused, pausing in her crocheting. She was making a coverlet for Orphan, who had only two raggedy blankets to her name. "I've nove~' heard of walkers, awful or otherwise." ".~.laybe those damned impudent things," spat Bastard, who had been leaning back with his hands behind his head, taking the sun. "Arrogant creatures. Stopped me when I was coming here for the first time! Asking qt~cstions!" Oracle raised her head and asked, "What were they like?" '~l.ike each other!" Bastard growled, rubbing his fingers across the red ,cars on his forehead where the letters B and R were branded. "Like as lwins! Wearing black helmets. I told the driver to go through them or over ll~cl~. but he wouldn't. Coward!" ~'How many of them?" asked Oracle. '"l-we. Driver told me they always go by twos." Oracle asked no more questions then. Later, however, when Hero returned tr,.~~n his most recent stint of rescuing maidens or killing monsters, she asked t~i~n about walkers. "Oh, yes," Hero replied, applying oil to the muscles in his arms and ~lcxing them slowly back and forth, one-two, one-two. "I've met them. ..\lways the same, striding by twos throughout the world, helmeted in black, with voices like fire. They say they are looking for a girl-child. At first it was for a toddler; later, year by year, for older children. They ask if I am aware of any children being fostered, or of any adopted, and 1 tell them no, I am not aware of any such. My quests seldom include children." (Iracle believed Here's awareness pretty much stopped at Here's skin, which in this case was probably fortunate. "What do they do if they find such a child?" she asked in a studiedly offhanded tone. ~I have heard they take them away," said Hero, with equal but genuine uninterest. 32 Sheri S. Tepper He had heard the truth. Whenever the walkers found dark-haired, darkeyed little girls who were adopted or being fostered, they took them, deaf to protestations, unmoved by tears, leaving the protesters alive or dead, depending on whether they had contented themselves with screams and tears or whether they had tried to keep their children by force. None of these girlchildren ever returned, and yet it seemed none of them had been the right one, for in years following, the walkers were searching still. So much Oracle learned by questioning this one and that one, as time went on. Following his abortive visit home, Abasio fell into habit as into a pit. Though he had not forsaken the idea of adventure, days spun into seasons and seasons into years while he did nothing at all about it. The fact was, he was too comfortable as he was. He had his rooftop shack, his books, his meals at Purple House or at a songhouse, his forays on behalf of Young Kerr, He did almost exactly what he wanted to at any hour on any day. He had a wide assortment of acquaintances among truckers and travelers, many of whom spun flavorful tales that both amused and intrigued him. Over the years, he had made himself useful to Soniff as well, and Soniff used Abasio for all manner of errands to do with attending to business. "Got to attend to business," Soniff told him. "Got to make sure the little shop guy pays his dues regular and doesn't get hassled by some other gang once he does. Got to be sure your drug shipments are coming in regular. Got to pick up the brothel receipts every day and make sure new whores-new faces, anyhow--are coming in from next-city-north and old faces are sent on to next-city-south." He sent Abasio to Echinot, next-city-north, to straighten out a problem, which he did in timely fashion, seeing nothing new or different in Echinot to make him stick around. So far, experience had taught him one city was almost exactly like another. Late in the afternoon he caught a ride back with a water-trucker, not realizing until they were on the highway that the man was buzzed out of his skull and likely to kill them both. Abasio was trying, with no success, to get the driver to stop when two black-clad figures stepped from the borrow pit along the road, flashed across the pave like dark lightning, and laid hands on the vehicle. The truck stopped running, as though commanded to do so, and slid to a stop, half into the pit. "Get out," commanded one of them, or both in unison, the command coming from some unimaginable distance. Abasio got out, but the trucker, who was simply too far gone to understand A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 33 ~ :I ~as happening, stared blearily through the glass as though wondering ~ the truck had stopped. (ict out," the voices said once more. x:~~ :tction on the part of the trucker. With growing apprehension, Abasio : ~t'cd from foot to foot, wanting to pull the man out, uncertain whether he ~ctttl try. He was given no opportunity. One of the walkers reached into the truck and pulled the man out. Abasio saw the trucker rising at the end of the a'alker's arm, straight up, that heavy man held at arm's length as though he weighed nothing, nothing at all, then the walker's hand let go and the trucker x~cnt on rising in an arc, impossibly rising, like an arrow shot from a bow. "t t:~ve you seen a dark-haired girl about thirteen'?" the other walker asked Ab,~,i,~, c{~ming close to him and glaring with its red eyes, drawing Abasio's ey~~ d{~a n, away from that arc in the air he'd been trying to follow to its end. Abasio gulped. Yes, he had. He'd seen girls like that in Fantis, various places. And in Echinot too. He said where, painfully. As he spoke, spit ran out of his mouth and down his chin. He didn't even try to wipe it away. "Girls without families," said the walker. Abasio said he didn't know if they had families or not. He hadn't spoken to them. He'd just seen them, one place and another.The walkers turned and went away. Abasio stood heaving for a few moments before slowly, unwillingly walking across the road and out into the prairie land beyond, trudging along in the same line the trucker had been thrown, keeping on even when he was certain he'd gone too far, way too far. He finally told himself he'd take another dozen paces, and on the tenth one he found what was left of the trucker smashed onto a rock outcropping. Abasio turned aside to empty his stomach, noisily and messily. He drove the truck on into Fantis himself. All the way there, he kept going over and over the incident in his mind, how he'd kit, what he'd heard and smelled while it was going on. He told himself he should have either been more scared or less! He should have been more scared because of what the creatures could do. He should have been less scared because they didn't look menacing. It was almost as though the walkers themselves had controlled exactly how terrified he was; as though they'd decided just how much to frighten him, enough to make him answer fully and at once, but not so much as to make him fall down in a fit. Could it be some kind of ray they broadcast'? Some smell they had, maybe. Pheromones. Grandpa used to talk about pheromones. Could there be a smell you didn't even know you were smelling that would make you weak and 34 Sheri S. Tepper trembly and sick to your stomach? Or a sound you didn't know you were hearing? And if they could do that--was there anything they couldn't do? He left the truck at a truckers' hostel, telling the people there what had happened and where they could find what was left of the trucker. He wanted to talk to someone about it, and he briefly considered discussing it with Elrick-Ann. He decided not to. Better to keep such matters to himself. Orphan was walking in the woods one day when she found a baby griffin. She was shuffling along, kicking up clouds of last year's oak leaves, when the guardian-angel began whistling in her ear, shifting its weight from one side to the other, fluttering its wings and generally making a nuisance of itself. When Orphan looked to see what had upset the angel, she saw the baby griffin, half-buried in leaves at the foot of a tree. It was all crouched down, trying to hide its pinky-bronze body under its little wings that were hardly sprouted yet, and when she picked it up it tried to bite her with its tiny soft beak that couldn't even pinch. The angel froze against Orphan's neck, making no noise at all. Orphan sat down and put the griffin in her lap. "Where's your mama?" she asked the baby. "What are you doing down here all by yourself?" The baby quit struggling and crouched again, making a tired little noise. Orphan took off her knit hat that Drowned Woman had made for her and stretched it around the baby to keep it warm while she looked around. She stood back from the nearest tree and looked it all up and down, seeing if there was a nest. Then she did the next tree to that, and the next half-dozen, but there wasn't a nest anywhere. She thought of taking the baby home, then sighed, knowing what Oracle or Hero, either one, would say about that. Orphan fetched all kinds of animals home, all the time, but none of the people in the village were what she'd call supportive. Orphan knew perfectly well what the animals wanted and what to do for them if they were hungry or hurt. They were like kinfolk, so she told herself, feeling it to be so, but none of the other villagers understood that. The guardian-angel fluttered off through the trees and landed on a rock outcropping, where it sat and whistled at her, over and over, quirrup, quirrup, quirrup, meaning "Come over here and look," the way it did when it heard grubs under bark or found wild raspberries. When she got there, the angel flew up the wall a little way, and when Orphan stepped back to see where it was, she saw the griffin nest, or at least she saw the neatly arranged sticks sticking out of a small cave about halfway up the rock wall. Griffins built neat nests, according to Hero. Like little log cabins turned upside down. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 35 ~'You crawlcot all the way over there, didn't you'?" she asked the baby. "All the way over under those trees." She could certainly see why it had g0n› in that direction. All the other directions were more or less straight up, which is the way she would have to go if she was going to take the griffin back to its mother. She briefly considered asking Hero to do it, setting the idea aside almost at once. Hero wasn't sentimental about baby things. Certainly not about baby monsters. If he climbed up there, he would probably kill the other hatchlings, if there were more, and the parents, too, if he could find them. No. If this baby was going to be returned to its home, Orphan would have to do it herself. The hat would serve as a carrier if she tied it around her waist with her belt, which she did. She had no shoes to take off, but she did hike her smock up between her legs and stick it through the belt in front. These preparations quickly accomplished, she started up the wall, reciting to herseft Hero's instructions for removing oneself from pits, chasms, and crevasses. "Three points in contact before you let go of the fourth. Keep your eyes on where you're going. Don't look down. Don't worry about how far up you have to go. Just worry about the next grip up, the next step up." There were plenty of handholds, though some of them were slimed with one thing or another. She only slipped twice, neither time very badly. The baby began to whimper when she was almost there, which is no doubt why the big one reached the nest almost at the same moment Orphan did. The first Orphan knew of it was when she looked up to find her view of the rock wall blocked by a pair of fully expanded, scaly wings, the sun glinting off an open beak that was unmistakably stabbing at her. "I'm bringing it back!" shouted Orphan, more angry than frightened. "By the wind's knees, monster, l'm bringing home your child!" The beak slammed shut like the door to a vault. Orphan climbed over the ledge into the cave, where she untied her belt and unfolded the hat, disclosing the baby~ which she hurriedly placed in the nest before standing back to await whatever would happen next. The baby cried. The mother nuzzled. Or maybe it was the father. Orphan had no idea which. Obviously, the two could talk to one another, because what was going on was not mere baby-parent babble. It was a conversation. If Orphan had to attach words to it, it would go something like, "How did you get down there in the first place? .... Mama, I was just climbing on the nest walls." "How many times do I have to tell you, don't climb on the nest walls! You could have been killed!" And would have been if Hero had found it, thought Orphan as she sat down to catch her breath and to consider how she was going to get down. 36 Sheri S. Tepper Even Hero admitted that going up was often easier, since one's eyes were at one's top end. The Griffin had to ask twice before Orphan realized the question was aimed at her. "I ask again, what is your name'?" "Orphan," said Orphan, turning to see the large Griffin's eyes fixed on her with a fierce bronze glare. She dropped into one of the defensive positions Hero had taught her. "Not eating you," said the Griffin. "No need for apprehension." Orphan slowly straightened up. "Is Orphan your name? Or is that merely what you are called?" Orphan shook herself. "I don't know," she mumbled. "Were you merely born? Or were you created for a purpose?" Orphan could only stare, wide-eyed. The Griffin nodded to itself, talked to the little one a moment more, then grasped Orphan quickly and firmly by both shoulders and stepped out into the air. A moment later, breathless, Orphan was released at the bottom of the wall. "Griffins live long," said the Griffin, thrusting down with its great wings. "I will remember you.." When the Griffin had flown up to the cave once more, the guardian-angel came out of hiding and sat on Orphan's shoulder, chortling in a puzzledpleased fashion. "Fine lot of good you were," grumped Orphan, turning about to go back to the village. "Fine lot." When she got back to the village, she wanted to tell someone what had happened, so, spying Poet ensconced on the doorstep of the Creative Artist's House, she decided to tell him. Before she could get there, however, a high reedy voice called from inside the house. "Your lunch is ready, John. Wipe your feet when you come in." The Poet's Spinster Sister. All the time she'd been in the village, Orphan had never heard her say anything but "Your meal's ready, John. Wipe your feet when you come in." So Poet was at lunch, and there was no one else around to tell, and when night came, Oracle said she was in no mood to be pestemd. "Well, tell me this, at least," begged Orphan. "Was I merely born, Oracle'? Or was I created for a purpose'?" "Eat your soup," said Oracle, with a frown. "And don't ask questions it would take an Oracle to answer." "But you are an--" "Eat your soup!" Seasons came and went, and though at first Orphan remembered the Griffin clearly, as time went by, the incident became fuzzy. Stories and dreams and A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 37 actual happenings got mixed up in her mind, and sometimes she wasn't sure whether she actually remembered events or had been told about them or had dreamed them. Griffin got all mixed up with Changing Woman and Coyote anti Bear and the dream Orphan kept having of the house in the woods with the three tall chairs. In the dream, she was tired and wanted to sit down, but she couldn't climb onto any of the chairs. They were too high, too far. 'fhcre were no handholds, no place to put her feet. In the dream she tried each of the chairs in turn, but all of them were huge and gray and carved all over with fearsome creatures. Whenever she had the dream, she would wake up with her heart pounding, sitting straight up in her narrow bed, clutching her raggedy blankets around her, only to hear her guardian-angel whistling and chortling from the head of the bed. Oracle had taught Orphan to read and write when she was tiny. By the time she was seven, she had read quite difficult things with long words, and by the time she was fourteen, she had read all the books in Oracle's cavern-at least, those that were at all interesting--and had started over. Orphan was delighted, therefore, when a new inhabitant moved into the village, one who had among his belongings shelf after shelf of books. His name, so said Oracle, was Burned Man. His people came and went for days, stowing wagonloads of his belongings into the house next to Orphan's Hovel, which was known as Martyr's House, and when they went away at last, leaving him behind, they cried. It took a little while to get used to Burned Man's appearance, which was dreadful, but Orphan, who managed it at first for the sake of the books, found she could ignore how he looked a good deal of the time. Burned Man taught her arithmetic and algebra and geography, she seated on the bottom porch step of his house, he seated a step behind her where she wouldn't have to look at him, marking maps and equations in the dust with a long pointy stick. During geography lessons, he spoke of the great forests to the east, seas of trees that stretched all the way to the eastern ocean, speckled with warrior tribes. West over the mountains lay the desert, and beyond that the western sea, the Faulty Sea, with towns along its shores. South lay Artemisia, then High and Low Mesiko and the land bridge to a whole other continent full of huge snakes and alligators and birds as tall as men. He talked of the traders who moved among these peoples and places. Mostly, however, he talked of manland, so called because the men who lived in the cities and Edges and farms shared a language and, more or less, an economic system. Mostly, he dwelt upon the cities and the gangs who ran them. 38 Sheri S. Tepper "You make city people sound just awful," Orphan complained. "They don't sound very civilized." "Some of them aren't," he had mused. "The wall between civilized and natural man is a flimsy one. Natural is born in our bones. Civilization is received from our parents and passed on to our children, as a gift. If we don't have it to give, our children don't get it." "Why doesn't somebody give it to the cities, then'?" He didn't speak for a long time. She sneaked a look at him, a quick one. It was very uncomfortable to look at Burned Man for long. About the time she decided he wasn't going to say anything more, he did. "Perhaps one reason for children being born little," he said painfully, "is so their parents can teach them to control themselves while they're small enough to be controlled. If a person grows up without controls, it's very hard to civilize him. Like trying to stop a truck without a brake.""Like Bastard," said Orphan. "Exactly like Bastard. The cities are full of people like Bastard. No way to stop them at all." There was another long silence. "But why are they that way?" Orphan persisted. "Think of it this way," he whispered to her. "Imagine that people are tiny. Imagine that they can live on the surface of a cube." She shut her eyes and imagined it. "All right. I'm pretending." "Imagine the cube is a foot each way. There are six square feet, one to each side of the cube. And there's one cubic foot inside, right?"She pictured this without difficulty. "Right." "Imagine one more thing. Imagine one of these little persons can live on each square foot of outside, one person can live in each cubic foot of inside. How many outside to how many inside?" "Six," she said. "Six outside to one inside." "Now, if you make the cube bigger, the number of units inside increases faster than the number of units outside. Can you see that'?" It took her a little time, but she did see it. "Since this has something to do with people being civilized, I suppose you mean a little cube is like a family. And a bigger one is like a city. ls that it'?" Burned Man laughed his uncomfortable laugh. "You're right. Both cube and family have an outside and an inside. Outsiders know of the world, they're experienced, they've learned what works. Insiders haven't. They have only wants and urges. In a family, if Grandma, Grandpa, Mama, Papa, Older Brother, Uncle are all working to civilize one child, the child can hardly escape, can he?" Burned Man laughed, the way he sometimes did, all breath and no ha ha. "Even if there are two or three working to civilize one, it works out. But if there is only one to civilize each one, or one to A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 39 civilize two, or three, or if the insiders grow up never learning what works and have children of their own..." Orphan shook her head at him. "You're getting upset." He breathed heavily. "You're right." "You shouldn't get upset. It's not good for you." Oracle had told her as n~ch. "Stop thinking about cities." He made a funny noise, not quite like a chuckle. More painful, somehow. ~'l'li try." Orphan tried to help. "When men went to the stars, they should have taken everybody." He started to say something more, then stopped. Orphan waited. Suddenly he stood up and went into his house, shutting the door firmly behind him. Orphan stayed on the porch steps until she was sure he wasn't coming back. When she got back to her hovel, she found Oracle waiting for her. "What was Burned Man going on about?" Oracle asked her softly. Orphan quoted Burned Man as best she could, concluding: '~He said the cities were too big to be civilized by anybody." Oracle sighed. "Poor man! I wish he'd understood that before." ~'Before what?" Oracle hummed and jittered. "Well, Orphan... before he burned himself. He thought immolating himself would make someone do something." Orphan felt unaccountably angry at this, for it made no sense. "He burned himself! Why did he do that?" Oracle patted her, calming her down. "Burned Man was an Edger." "What's an Edger?" "Someone who lives in an Edge. That is, not in the city itself, but in the protected Edge, which has retained much of what the cities lost long ago. Technology. Law. Arts and sciences. The Edges, so ! am told, are blessed places where a remnant of true humanity has saved itself. The Edges, so I am told, are damned because the people there turned their backs on those in need when they fled the cities. Whichever, or perhaps both, Burned Man was an Edger, and he was also what is called a reformer, you understand'? He saw suffering in the cities and wished to alleviate it.""He told me about that," Orphan said. "He tried to help and couldn't. He tried to get other people interested, but they weren't. Finally, he went to the Council Building of the Edge where he lived, he sat down on the steps, poured fuel on himself, and set himself alight. He left a letter of protest saying he hoped his horrible death would draw attention to the problem and something would be done." Tears seeped down Orphan's cheeks. "Poor Burned Man," she whispered. "He went on living, and nobody did anything." Oracle shrugged. "What was there to do? As you said, it was too large 40 Sheri S. Tepper a problem to have an acceptable solution. Some fires cannot be put out, they must consume themselves. Some knots cannot be untied; they must be cut. But people can't accept that. Burned Man couldn't. Poor man. He's an archetypal Martyr, a walking accusation, an uncomfortable neighbor. So they sent him here." "Are all of us here uncomfortable people?" asked Orphan. "Most of us." "Including me?" Oracle looked into her eyes, stroked her cheek, said tenderly, "I imagine so, child. I imagine so." "I tell you one thing," said Orphan angrily. "Before I'd go burn myself, I'd be sure it would do some good." People came and went in the archetypal village. Glutton came one spring, but died of overeating by fall. Poet died, and in his place came a Painter with an irascible little wife of faded beauty who sounded almost exactly like Poet's Spinster Sister. Conspirator came fi)r a time, then disappeared under mysterious circumstances. Sycophant arrived and pitched his tent next to that of Hero, just in time to be eaten by a huge stinky troll that came down from the hills. The troll had finished Sycophant and was about to start on Gossip when Hero returned from somewhere all out of breath and killed it dead. Orphan didn't sleep well for a long time after that. Everyone got older, even Ingenue, who went on saying she was nineteen just as she always had. Every now and then Oracle asked Hero about the walkers, being as casual about it as she could manage, and he said they still stalked the roads of the world, asking the same question they had asked for years. "Have you seen a dark-haired girl, a fosterling perhaps. A girl of seventeen'? A girl of eighteen'?" Lately, Bastard had made a habit of hiding where Orphan couldn't see him, then whispering to her in a voice out of nightmare. Sometimes he was in the trees along the path or outside her window. "There are other villages," he whispered in the dark night, his voice like a ring of smoke, circling, infiltrating. "There are villages where the Hero is the Fool, where the Oracle is the Idiot, where the Bastard is the Hero." Orphan sat on the stool beside her fireplace and tried to pay no attention. "There are villages where time turns back on itself and the old wonders A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 41 rise again,'~ he whispered. "Where man is the lord of creation and woman his willing servant. Where pain is pleasure, Orphan." She turned, seeing him peeking at her at the window corner. His eyes had red sparks in them, like the eyes of an animal at the edge of firelight. His teeth showed between his lips, very white. "There are villages where my kind and your kind are allies," he said to her. "Maybe, even... lovers." Orphan got up and ran out the door, toward Oracle's cavern, where she'd feel safe. Behind her she could hear Bastard's soft laughter, a clinging sound, a sucking sound, making her think of the bats in Oracle's cavern, who made that same sound as they digested the blood they had drunk in their nightly forays. One time she saw Bastard talking with Fool. Bastard never talked with Fool, no one did, really, and Fool never listened to anyone. Usually, he just stood beside his gate, looking up the road, crying "Mama, Mama." Now there was something evil in the line of Bastard's back, something horrid in Fool's fascination. Neither of them had seen her. She stopped around the corner of Fool's shack, where she could hear without being seen. Bastard chortled. "Oh, she was young, just the age I like 'em. She had long hair, down to her sweet little ass. She kind of twitched, the way they do, walking along. And I said to myself, 'I'm going to have a piece of that or know the reason why!'" Fool repeated the words after him: "...piece of that." Orphan poked her head around the corner of the house to see Fool rocking to and fro, petting himself between the legs. He did that sometimes. In fact, he did that a lot of the time. Bastard said, "I asked around until I found out where I could find her. I take what I want!" "Take what I want! Take! What I want!" Fool giggled and bounced. Then he became very still and took his hands away from himself. "Mama said no," he said to Bastard in a strangled-sounding voice. "Mama said no." Bastard poked him and laughed. "Ah, well, but your Mama didn't know this girl. So that night, I went in through her window with a knife..." "Through her window," Fool cried with a sidewise glance, licking his sloppy lips. "With a knife." "Just to keep her quiet and respectful." Bastard laughed his sucking laughter. "I like women who are respectful!" Orphan felt her shoulder seized firmly in a large, hard hand. "What filth are you listening to?" Oracle demanded in a whisper. 42 Sheri S. Tepper "Bastard's talking about raping someone," Orphan replied, rubbing her shoulder. "No doubt," said Oracle, pulling her around the back of Fool's shack and away toward the cavern. "What did you think the R branded on his forehead was for--reformer?" "No," grunted Orphan. "I know what it's for. Oracle, it wasn't what he was saying. It's that he's talking to Fool."Oracle frowned and nodded. Orphan went on. "Fool doesn't usually talk with anyone. He just stands at the gate of his house, staring up the road." Oracle sighed. "That's the way his mother went, after she left him here years ago. At first he stood there at the gate and howled, day and night. Finally, I told him if he howled, his mother would die and never come to him, but if he would be a good quiet boy, his mother would come fetch him, eventually." "Will she come back?" asked Orphan. Oracle shook her head. "Only metaphorically. She had an IDDI. It's why she brought him here." Orphan didn't need to ask what IDDIs were. Oracle had been disgustingly specific and boringly historic about sexual diseases, going over and over them until Orphan could have listed them and all their causes and symptoms in her sleep. Since IDDIs were what killed most people, it wasn't surprising that Fool's mother had died from one. Orphan shook her head and said, "That's too bad. I wish Fool could be happy. I wish something nice could happen to him." Oracle sighed. "Sometimes there are no nice things, only bearable things. There are no acceptable solutions to some problems." Orphan knew that. Oracle had told her often enough. Seasons came and went; snowfall and summer sun. Oracle asked the farmer, when he came to deliver milk, whether he had ever encountered walkers. Oh, yes, he said. They were wandering the world asking the same question they always asked. "Have you seen an orphan girl of nineteen'? Of twenty?" /~basio was lounging around Purple House ~/ f' '~øel;es,afwtehemnøøt~;dfeoeloirngbabnøg;eddo~;dnreaSn; one of the kid-Purples came in with blood running down his face and arm, one eye rapidly swelling shut and a bad cut on his shoulder. "They took Elrick-Ann," the kid cried in a voice that squeaked. "They took the Young Chief's woman!" Everybody sitting around was up, shouting, everybody asking questions so loudly, no one could hear the answers. Abasio yelled at them, his voice bellowing over theirs: "You all shut up and let me ask the questions!" "Tha's right," piped up TeClar Chingero. "You lissen to Basio." "Now," he said. "One of you go get the medic-hag. One of you go get some hot water from the kitchen. The rest a you sit down and hush." There was some toing and froing, then the medic-hag Sheri S. Tepper had the worst of the bleeding stopped and was busy setting stitches into the boy's shoulder while he bit his lips and tried not to yell. "What happened?" Abasio asked, keeping his voice steady and calm. "We was doin' escort duty," the boy muttered between clenched teeth. "Five of us, takin' some of the women to the baths. We got to the comer, you know, where the odds-shop is. And these Greens came bustin' out, ten of 'em, maybe more--" "You're positive Greens?" Abasio asked, puzzled. The word was, Old Chief Purple paid off Wally Skins to keep the Greens at a distance until Kerr was old enough to be a good Chief, which meant--so said the smart mouths-never. "Sure it was Greens!" the boy shouted. "I'm not color bline. They was wearin' colors, they had green braids, they was yellin' war cries. There was two of them to ever one of us, and some of 'em grab Elrick-Ann an' make off down that alley while the rest keep us busy. We was down all over the place, you know, cut up some. I think Little Tmck's dead. When we kine of got it together, I tole the others t'go on, and I came back to report." Abasio didn't like the smell of it. "Was Carmina with you?" Carmina was Soniff's woman, and she was eight months pregnant. Why take Elrick-Ann when they could have Carmina, who'd bring a big ransom? Pregnant women always did. Asking the question might not be smart. Abasio looked for Soniff, but he wasn't around. "|'11 tell the Young Chief," he said. "You all wait here." Young Chief Purple was asleep. He sat up in his bed, staring bleary-eyed from his smooth round face, not meeting Abasio's eyes."Oh, those rotten Greens," he said. His voice was usually petulant and never strong, but to Abasio's ear it seemed more than usually nervous. Young Chief stroked the few scanty hairs on his upper lip, hiding his mouth. "I can arrange a rescue," Abasio offered, somewhat disconcerted by the Young Chief's manner. Young Chief usually greeted bad news with screams of rage or hysteria. This calm was uncharacteristic. "We can be there in half an hour," he continued softly. "No, no. We wait for the ransom deman'," Young Chief mumbled, still looking everywhere but at Abasio. "They be makin' a ransom deman'. No doubt." "No doubt," agreed Abasio, narrow-eyed. "Poor Elrick-Ann." "Wha'?" Young Chief asked, with a darting glance at Abasio. "Oh, yeah, yeah. Poor Elrick-Ann." His voice lacked conviction. Abasio waited, forcing himself to be calm. The ransom demand arrived A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 45 twelve hours later. Abasio read it before taking it to the Young Chief. It was for a ridiculous amount--a golden crow. A stupid amount, one that seemed calculated to arouse fury rather than permit payment, "They crazy, askin' this," said Young Chief after he'd glanced at the demand. "Too much?" asked Abasio, even though he knew it was. "Too much even for a pregnant woman, and she not pregnant." Which was restating the smelly part of the case from Abasio's point of view. Why had the Greens taken Elrick-Ann at all?"You want me to negotiate?" "Nab. Wait till they come down with they ransom. Jus' wait." Abasio had no intention of waiting, though he gave every appearance of doing so. He knew the Greens' reputation. He could imagine all too clearly what was happening to Elrick-Ann. He rounded up TeClar and CummyNup and swore them to secrecy. "You my men?" he demanded. TeClar said, "We your men, Basio. Our mama, she say you save us more'n once, so we got to do what you say. An' Elrick-Ann, she our friend too." CummyNup asked, "What we gone do, Basio?" "We're going to be audacious," Abasio told them. "What that mean?" "That means we're going to do something nobody would expect." They waited until it got dark, along about suppertime, when all the Greens would probably be downstairs. Abasio strapped every knife he owned to various parts of his anatomy and hung two guns at his waist. TeClar and CummyNup had bags full of smoke bombs and noisemakers. They sneaked into the alley half a block down and across from Green House, and while the Chingeros stirred up a racket that brought the Greens swarming out like hornets from a nest, Abasio shinnied up a drainpipe and got through a back window at Green House. The room he got into was empty, so were the next two, and in the third one he found what was left of Elrick-Ann. She was still breathing, though he couldn't imagine why. Looking at her made him so sick, he didn't try to think about what he was doing. He just wrapped her in a sheet from the bed, slung her over his shoulder, shinnied back down the pipe, and sneaked back to Purple House, picking up the Chingcros en route, as planned. After some confused talk, they decided to leave her on the Purple doorstep for TeClar to find with a convincing display or' surprise. TeClar was good at that. Nobody had any idea how she got there, least of all Elrick-Ann herself, who had stayed conveniently unconscious throughout. She was taken upstairs to the women's quarters while the younger men stood around in chattering clusters, wondering who'd brought 46 Sheri S. Tepper her back, and why, and Abasio added spurious conjectures of his own. Strangely, Young Chief was absent from the house and so were most of the older Purples, including Soniff. The fact that the Greens had been so easily suckered firmed up Abasio's opinion that they hadn't expected a rescue attempt. They hadn't even set a guard on her. And the fact that they'd cut her up meant they hadn't planned to ransom her, either. Which meant--which meant that somebody, the Young Chief or somebody, had paid the Greens to make off with Elrick-Ann. Why? Abasio didn't have to wonder long. Less than an hour later, the Young Chief came in, smiling all over his fat little face, surrounded by his usual entourage of elders and bringing a new conk he'd just bought from the Bloodrun gang. Sybbis, her name was. Sybbis, bought not leased. She was younger than Elrick~Ann was by a good bit and certainly more... Abasio groped for a word to describe Sybbis. He didn't find one. Mostly, he had a feeling, men didn't try to describe Sybbis. They just looked at her with their mouths open. The minute she got inside the house, she took off the full robes women wore in the streets, and after that, everyone could see just what she was like. Having seen, everyone was most congratulatory to the Young Chief, including Abasio. Nobody was so tactless as to mention that Elrick-Ann was back, though Soniff eventually found out from Carmina. Once he knew, he should have declared war on the Greens. At the very least, he should have sent a few retaliation teams. Tally teams were sent out on the least excuse, because that's how kid-gangers earned their reputations. Soniff didn't even do that, and the rumor was, the Old Chief told him not to. "Why Soniff not sendin' tallies?" TeClar whispered to Abasio. "Why the Old Chief not lettin' him?" "You know what's good for you, you don't ask," Abasio whispered back. Everyone knew why, but nobody was saying. Elrick-Ann had been leased from the Cranked-Ups, so much a year for life. If she were dead, the Young Chief wouldn't have owed another black-penny on her. If the Greens had killed her, it would have been the Greens' debt to pay, and the CrankedUps probably wouldn't have attacked the Greens because of their reputation. No cost to the Purples, and Young Chief rid of Elrick-Ann. A smart plan. So smart, the Old Chief had probably thought it up. Maybe she'd still die. It would be best, all around, if she did. Abasio knew that now. He should have killed her there in that room, killed her to put her out of pain, but he shouldn't have brought her back. Not the way she was. It was too late to think about it now. He'd just have to hope that she died, A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 47 preferably without ever coming to and seeing what it was the Greens had done to her. "Were vou always an Oracle'?" Orphan asked. Oracle stared into the flames and slowly stirred the pot that was sending up aromatic little puffs of steam. "You mean, was I always called Oracle?" "Were you somebody else, before?" Oracle nodded, putting the lid back on the pot and seating herself in her rocking chair. "Will you tell me about it?" "It's a long, dull story, child." "The meat isn't tender yet. And it's raining. So why not tell me?" There was no good reason why not. Oracle settled herself in the rocking chair, leaned back her head, and told the story: "Oracle was a child once," she said. "Her name was Seraphina. "She lived far west of here on the hills beside the Faulty Sea, where the ocean had flowed in to fill a great fault in the land. From the hills where Seraphina's people lived, they could look across to the Caliph Islands, the treasure islands where the Caliph's gold was buried. Long ago, a great city stood there, but it was all fallen down. '~lnland from Seraphina's home the mounded hills breasted the horizons, blotched with brush, grown up with grass, sun-scorched and dry for most of every year. Some days the sun glinted from the growth as from burnished metal, like the hot hard light of her father's forge where he labored at the anvil, hammering red iron into horseshoes or candlesticks or tall, fancy gates. Some nights she dreamed of the forge light, the huff of the bellows, the clangor of the iron, waking with her heart pounding like the blows of the hammer, full of terrible apprehension at that burning, terrible light. She spoke of it to her mother, her father, but they told her hush, hush, it was only a dream. "Sometimes she dreamed other things. One night she saw where gold was buried in the old city. By morning, she was all in a fever of excitement to go there and find it. She begged and begged, father, uncles, nothing would do but they take her at once. She told them she'd seen gold in the ruins. "So they went in a boat to the Caliph Islands, and when they set foot upon the shore, she went straight to the place in the tumbled city where the gold was, as she had dreamed it. But there were other things there, things she hadn't dreamed, skulls that grinned at her when she uncovered them, the eyeholes gleaming with buttery metal, chains and rings and bracelets, ú ,% %heri S. ~repper uncorroded by the burying earth. And when she saw the skulls, they spoke to her, telling her things she couldn't bear to hear. silent. But her father, who had hushed her often enough, would have none of her silence now. Fool-child, he called her, always screaming and whining. The bones wouldn't hurt her, the bones wouldn't kill her--why couldn't she ~,. ~w,.d,~ ~:t'o', ~svn~ettinrgø: ~,_.-onrc 'u'ow , '~re x.xrnmcmrfie6, z.xn~e 'tdh 'cridge hqetse where gold will be found, for Uncle wants to go digging. "She was an obedient child. She shut her eyes and summoned the image of gold: A white building, all tumbled down. If you stand on the tallest hill, facing the Faulty Sea, with the bridge across the sea to the left and the broken tower to the right... "'Not clear enough. Make her go with me!' Netse demanded. "And at this she screamed and fell and foamed at the mouth, for she couldn't bear to go again among the bones. Father and uncles didn't know what it was like, remembering what all those bones had felt and thought when the world fell, the howls of pain, the maimed bodies, the crushed skulls. Seraphina thrashed and foamed at the mouth and went on howling until they sent Uncle away and let her lie by herself in her room, lulled by the sounds of the waves." "Was it beautiful there?" asked Orphan. "Oh, yes. It was beautiful there," said Oracle. "It was home." "And she... you didn't see bones all the time!" "Not all the time, no, but she did see them and she did see other things. Seraphina thought it strange that her father and her uncle believed her dreams of gold but denied her dreams of shaking and fire and death. They wanted to believe in gold. They didn't want to believe she saw the other things." "What did she see?" "She saw a little fire in the canyon bottom, a thin wraith of smoke in the dusk, a wind that would come with morning, dispersing the smoke so that no one would know it was there, then a larger fire in the dark hours, an earthquake in the night, a holocaust that would come with dawn of the second day, a firestorm driven on a fierce wind that shifted in every direction, up every canyon, down every hill. "She tried to tell them, but no one would listen but Aunt Lolly, and even she laughed. "'When will all this happen?' Aunt Lolly asked. "Seraphina didn't know when. Maybe soon. Maybe later. But Fathcr would still be alive, for Seraphina saw him die in the fire. Others in the town would be alive as well, for she saw them burning as well. Then, after that, she saw villages of stilt houses being built over the sea, where the recurrent fires couldn't get at them. Little houses with bottoms like boats, so they'd A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 49 float when the earth shook. She had begged her father to build such a house, live in such a fashion .... "'Nonsense,' her father had said. 'There are far too many of us to live like that.' ~'And Seraphina knew he was right. There were too many men to live in such a sensible fashion. Men had to live dangerously because they were so many. Lives are cheap when men are many." "What happened?" begged Orphan, after a long silence. "It was not long," Oracle said, "before people heard about Seraphina's talent for seeing gold. People outside the family; people outside the town! They came demanding to know where treasure was. They bothered Father at the forge, they woke the family at night, knocking at the windows. Some begged and some threatened. Father said he could do without the gold easier than he could put up with such a fool-child, so he named her Oracle and sent her away, across the sunny hills and the baked desert, over the high mountains to an archetypal village, where distance veiled the images and she seldom dreamed of tire." "Did Seraphina's town really burn down?" asked Orphan. "Oh, yes," said Oracle in a distant voice. "Just as she had seen it happening." ~'What happened to the people?" "Most of those not crushed by the shaking burned in the fire." "Her family? Her father and uncles'?" "Gone. All but her aunt Lolly. When she smelled the little smoke, she remembered what Seraphina had said and got out in time. It was she who sent word here, to me, to Oracle, telling me what had happened. She needn't have done. I already knew. Just as I knew when they built the first of the little boat-bottomed houses, out over the sea." "l'm sorry about your family," said Orphan. Oracle smiled a weary smile with sadness in it. "Sorry-ness has no part in it, child. I did what I could do. My people believed what they wanted to believe. Just as every seeker who comes to me for a prophecy believes what he wants to believe and never one jot else." In Purple House, days and days went by, but Elrick-Ann didn't die. She regained consciousness, and the hags gave her drugs for the pain. When she saw what they'd done to her, she begged for them to kill her, but nobody had the right to lay hands on her but Kerf; he wouldn't do it; she couldn't do it by herself. Gradually her wounds healed, leaving hideous scars behind them. She had no duties any longer. She was not Keff's woman any longer. She 50 Sheri S. Tepper was not welcome in the house where anyone could see her. She was just there, hidden away in the women's quartcrs, with nobody going near her for fear of Kerr, imprisoned, virtually alone, and with no other place to go. Abasio fretted over it, waited for a propitious moment when Soniff was relaxed, and suggested the Young Chief award Elrick-Ann a pension, just as he would any disabled gang member. "Why would he do that'?" Soniff asked lazily. "To save talk," Abasio answered in a careless voice. "Wouldn't do to have the young ones thinkin' people disrespect the Purples." "Why would people disrespect the Purples'?" Soniff sat up, frowning. "Well," drawled Abasio, "we didn't go to war over her. We didn't send tallies. Greens musta disrespected us quite a bit, takin' her, doin' that to her. She's a Crank girl, and they might disrespect us, too, considerin' all the talk that's goin' round." Soniff frowned, but he saw the point. A pension was cheaper than any of the alternatives. Soniff sent Abasio to the Cranks to settle them down so far as the Purples were concerned. Though Abasio started out cool enough, his anger ruined his diplomacy. He couldn't forget what had happened to ElrickAnn. He found himself saying too much, describing tot) much, and then he had to blame somebody. He couldn't come right out and blame Soniff and Little Purp, so he had to lay it on the Greens. When he left the CrankedUps' homeground, it was with the strong feeling the Cranks were going to fight the Greens over Elrick-Ann. Things took off faster than he expected. That same night when he left Purple House to go to his own place, all the talk on the street was that the Cranks had challenged the Greens for that same night, a war that would be shown on the public amusement screen. Instead of going home, Abasio went to the entertainment district to see what the odds-shops were predicting. They were giving five to one on the Greens, which was more or less the way Abasio would have called it himself. He decided to stick around and see how it came out. "Where's this war gonna be?" he asked the odds-shop man. The man shrugged. "Out east, toward the bridge." It was probably as good a place as any. Plenty of open ground; plenty of wreckage around for cover. Of course, there were some occupied buildings out there, too, but while the war was going on, the inhabitants would bottle themselves up inside. Abasio paid a silver mouse for a seat in the screen room and sat himself down among the crowd of bertors who were jabbering and yelling at one another while a Whisper-High commercial filled the screen. Whisper-High was known as a woman's drug. Men's drugs were advertised mostly at the arena and in the songhouses. "There they are!" somebody shouted. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 51 And there they were on a stretch of open ground littered with old car bodies and tumbled walls, lit by bonfires. In the foreground, Greens capering, black and orange in the firelight, legs raised, backs bent, storeping out their war dance, howling out their war cries: hoo-wah, hoo-wah. Wally Skins bending and shuffling, scalps bobbing on his belt and headdress. In the background the Cranks were setting off red and yellow flares, Crank colors, leaping high in a dance of their own. It went on awhile. It always went on awhile, working the men up to it. Then finally, the two gangs drew into formation for the attack, after which things got confusing: smoke and men running, this way, that way, men down, men up again. No question, the Cranks were getting the worst of it. They were outnumbered, and Wally Skins had better weapons. The word on the street was, he'd spent the whole Green war chest on Sudden Stop's fanciest weapons. '~Where those Cranks goin'?" somebody said. "They runnin' into that buildin'! There's people livin' in that buildin'!" "Scared, I guess," snorted somebody else. "Want to hide where Wally Skins won't come after 'era." ~~What's he doin'?" asked the first voice. *~He's--he's fixin' to burn that tenement," said the second in awe. "He's really fixin' to burn the Cranks out .... " And there it was on the screen, Wally Skins manning a big, complicated flame gun and the building going up like a bonfire while the screen peeked into every window where the grandmas were, and the mamas, and the little kids. watching them as they came jumping out of windows and off the roof, listening to them as they burned and screamed. Words marched across the bottom of the screen: "Odds-shop pool for minutes to insurance cancellation." Abasio went to the counter and bought himself a ticket on fifteen minutes. Fourteen and a half minutes later, the words said, "Insurers announce cancellation. Winners fourteen and fifteen." Abasio went to pick up his winnings. A silver rat, which was nothing to bc sneezed at. "He's dead," said a bearded bettot, shaking his head. "Who's dead'?" asked Abasio. "Wally Skins is as good as dead. Ten to one, he's in the debt-arena by next week. Ten to one they'll make the Greens fight the Survivors! Wally Skins went way too far this time." Abasio shook his head. It could happen. The Greens would have to pay the damages, insurance or no insurance. Their slaves, tots, conks, and hags could be sold at auction, but that wouldn't bring nearly enough, so the Greens would be summoned into the debt-arena, where half the ticket sales went toward payback. Even matched against average fighters, most gangs only a. h n s( C h S( S{ d~ 52 Sheri S. Tepper lasted four or five bouts in the arena. Matched against Survivors, the Greens would be lucky to last one time. Somebody was set on making an example of the Greens. When Abasio got outside, the whole city smelled of smoke, and the first person he saw was TeClar. "I gotta message for you, Basio. Kerf, he tole me you should go to purple House, quick." "Now what does he want?" "It not him. It's that Sybbis. She's goin' to a ark-type village to consult a Or-a-cle, an' Kerr, he knows you go to the country sometimes, he wants you along. You be guide and fight off the trolls.~' TeClar almost broke himself up laughing at this idea. But then, TeClar had been born in the city and had never seen a troll. Though it was early morning in the village, the Water Babies were already playing under the waterfall, their infant voices heard everywhere in the village, raised either in joy or in complaint, as shrill as treble bells. Orphan, still abed, pulled the blankets over her head, made a nose-hole to breathe through, and tried to go on sleeping. She'd been cleaning Burned Man's House until long after dark and felt much aggrieved at this earlymorning racket. Every morning it was something! If it wasn't the Water Babies, it was Hero, clanging his sword on his shield and declaiming in the village square. If it wasn't him, it was Fool, standing by his fence calling "Mama, Mama" in his cracked voice, or Oracle chanting versicles into the predawn silence. Each of them seemed determined to break the night-still with some particular vehemence of his or her own, let lesser folk lie wakeful if they would. Another peal of infant laughter! Orphan sat up, ready to rage at the world! Silence. Silence more unnerving than the noise. She cocked her head and listened. Nothing. Babies suddenly quiet. No clangor of swords. No chanting voices. No Bastard shouting imprecations at this one or that one. Only the waterfall muttering to itself as it always did. Only the subliminal crackle of psychic flames from the Burned Man's House. ,~ "What's happening?" Orphan asked sleepily. "Somebody coming," said the guardian-angel from its perch by the doorpost. "Horses over the hill, the hill, galope, galope, galope." Orphan sighed. It was a conspiracy. On days she got up early, nothing much happened. On days she wanted to sleep, something always interrupted. (( A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 53 As though the universe had her in its sights and aimed to keep her always on the verge of exhaustion. She rolled off her cot to land half-squatting beside the hearth where she stirred up the coals, threw on a sparse handful of dry twigs, and swung the kettle over the resultant blaze. Out back she pumped a gush of icy water for her morning ablutions, scrubbed her teeth with her fingers dipped in wood ash, and pulled a comb through her hair. Inside once more, she dragged the cleanest of her three smocks over her head, thereby reminded it was washtime again. Everything she owned was dirty, not ritually dirty but really dirty. Sweaty. Stinky. Everything but her underwear. Oracle had given her the silky chemise and panties last spring as her twentieth birthday present. Or eighteenth arrival-day present, actually, since no one knew when her birthday was. The garn~ents were still in their original box in the back of the cupboard, too precious to be worn. Orphan was saving the underwear for--for special. Back in the hovel she set out her tea chest along with her new cup, a chipped one Bastard had thrown away. Breakfast would be tea and a wrinkled last-yearns applcot yet again. The applcot tree outside her door was laden with fruit, but it was yet inedible, hard little orbs of so dark a green as to be almost black. Lunch she would--well, skip, and supper... maybe Oracle 'w~a',:~ invite her to "Somebody, galope, galope," remarked the guardian-angel. "Well, whoT' she asked impatiently, dipping her fingers in the cold ashes at the edge of the fire to mark her face and rubbing a little into her hair for good measure. The guardian-angel, didn't say. It merely turned its head so that one eye could stare at her while the other looked down the dusty street toward the notch in the hills where the road came through from the lands beyond. Orphan went to her crooked door to see for herself. A glittering there, moving nearer. Dawn light reflected on something shiny, quite a lot of it. Too many people to be from faraway, and farmers didn't travel like that, which meant it was probably some businessman from an Edge or some gang-lord from a city, probably come to consult the Oracle. As though to verify this, Oracle came striding from her cave, tattered robes swirling around her dirty ankles, to stand in the middle of Main Street staring northward toward the sparkles. "Oh, woe," Oracle cried, lifting her arms prophetically. "Oh, woe." The effect of her dramatic posture was somewhat diminished by the gather of giggling Water Babies who came dripping from the pool all by themselves. Drowned Woman was probably still asleep. Bastard slammed open several windows in rapid succession. Burned Man came out of his house and screamed something unintelligible but agonized. 54 Sheri S. Tepper From the far end of the street, Fool tumbled from his ramshackle shanty to cry, "Somebody coming," and strike out wildly with his slap-stick, cracketycrack, batty-bat. "Maybe Mama!" Whoever it might be, it wasn't his mama, Orphan was sure of that. By now, everyone could see it was a procession: one high-somebody gang-lord carried in a chair by sullen slaves (rent-a-slaves, Bastard sneered to Burned Man, pointing out the tattoos), he with his cockscomb hair dyed purple and bracelets halfway to his pudgy shoulders, followed by several other purple-crested highsomebodies, older men, riding horseback and making hard work of it, then a closed litter, with a few young gangets bringing up the rear. The youngsters were the source of all the glitter, for their leather jackets were covered with shiny studs and they carried brightly plated weapons. Orphan thought they were fire-squirt guns, though they might be bullet-shooters. Except for blade and bow, Hero's choice, she knew very little about weapons. The gang-lord clippy-clopped down the village street, shouted his slaves into a stumbling halt, then just sat there, staring at Burned Man and the Water Babies, his mouth making a moist round hole in his plump, hairless face. Oracle gestured impatiently and pushed through the throng until she stood at the visitor's side. "Why do you come, ome, ome, ome," she said in her echo voice, the one that sounded as though it came from a limitless cavern, far far underground. Orphan almost snorted. She could do that voice too. Almost anyone could if they practiced. The smooth-faced gang-lord seemed impressed, but one of the older men answered: "We have come to consult the archetypal Oracle." "Yeah, the Oracle," affirmed the gang-lord in a childish tenor with a squeak in the tail of it. Three oldish men from among the high-somebodies stood nearest him, watching him as a magpie watches a cat. This is the son of somebody important, Orphan thought with sudden insight. Either that, or he's a puppet, set up by those old men. Men like him didn't command men like that, so somebody else was pulling the strings somewhere. That was what Hero would say, at any rate.Oracle was making her usual pronouncement: "I am the archetypal Oracle, whose words are a window into the future, whose visions are the truth of tomorrow! If you will come into my cavern..." She bowed the gang-lord the way he was to go, but it wasn't he who went. Instead, the door of the litter opened and a purple-gowned woman stepl~d out. She wore shackles on her ankles, but the chains were only a few links long, not even joined, two tinkles of gold that didn't impede her progress as she minced after the Oracle toward the gaping darkness of the cavern. Interesting, Orphan thought as she sidled around the comer of her hovel to the stone outcropping that crowned the Oracle's cavern. According to A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 55 Burned Man, gangers' women were close-kept and much-controlled in the cities. Certainly it was rare for a city female to visit the village, and rarer yet for one to consult the Oracle. Now what would this one be wanting? The best way to find out was the listening hole she'd discovered some years back, a snaky crevice that went all the way through to the cavern from the ledge behind Orphan's Hovel. Kneeling at its outer orifice, she could hear everything Oracle said as clearly as if she were standing next to the tripod. Orphan scrabbled over a bench of rough stone and knelt, her ear close to the hole, eyes half-closed. The first sounds were ritual ones: gongs and bells. Orphan caught a whiff of incense, then heard Oracle grunting as she heaved herself up on the tripod. If Oracle kept putting on weight, pretty soon she'd need a stouter tripod. "What ask ye of the Oracle, acle, acle, acle," her voice demanded, the echo going all the way back into the mountain. The woman spoke in a petulant treble that sounded much rehearsed, the words unfamiliar, or pronounced in an unfamiliar way: "I ask if I, Sybbis of the Bloodrun gang, gold-bought conk--concubine of the gang-lord Young Chief Purple, will bear the lord a son." Orphan could almost see the pouted ruby lips forming around the words, the sidelong glance beneath lids so heavily lashed, they looked like underbrash, the heavy ringlets falling at either side of her face, the breasts that jounced and bobbed like fruit on a bough. Sybbis was what Bastard would call doable. Burned Man would say she was an archetypal Helen, from some 01d myth. Both of them would mean the same thing: Sybbis was sexy. Orphan plucked at the smock over her own modest chest and sighed. Biology, as Burned Man sometimes remarked, was both bewildering and immoderate. More gongs and bells, another whiff of fragrant resin. A long silence while a filmy wisp of smoke seeped from the listening hole. Finally Oracle's voice: "Shall the applcot tree be blamed that she bears no.fruit When the Maker-of-trees has adorned her with flowers That bloom all undisturbed." Silence again. Orphan almost giggled, stopping herself only just in time with a hand clamped over her mouth. "I don' unnerstan'," the concubine replied in her pouty voice. Oracle snorted. "I think you do. If you do not, the advisers to the ganglord no doubt will." "Howdja know 'bout them?" the concubine asked. Oracle snorted again. "You gonna tell all them wha' you role me?" the little voice persisted in a calculating tone. 56 Sheri S. Tepper "Of course not. You're the one prophesied for." More gongs and bells, more smoke out the listening hole. Orphan got to the edge of the outcropping just in time to see the concubine mincing back toward her litter. The gang-lord squeaked a command, and his slaves started, a nervous movement that made the chair sway and dip before steadying. When Oracle came from the cave, the gang-lord commanded his chair directly at her, as though to trample her, but Oracle stayed rooted like a tree. Unflappable, Oracle. "D'ju say wha' I wan', woman'?" the gang-lord demanded in his squeaky tenor. "The words are not mine, Young Chief Purple. They come as they will." Oracle waved a dismissive hand. "Of course, they must be paid for by someone." The gang-lord gestured toward one of his advisers and turned his slaves away, lashing at them with his whip and screaming in aggrieved fashion. One of the old men bowed and muttered something to Oracle, probably an apology, as he presented a purse. It was then, just then, that one of the younger men, the youngest one riding a horse, turned in his saddle and caught sight of Orphan. His face changed in a way Orphan could not quite describe, except to tell herself that his eyes opened like windows; at first opaque, they became suddenly clear, fixed on her own with a force like gravity. She felt herself falling toward his eyes, flying into his gaze like a diving bird. He was extremely handsome, her senses told her, though some reluctant mind-part denied this. What was he, after all, but a purple-crested savage? One of those whom Burned Man would have given his life to civilize'? His hands disfigured with tattoos, his open vest showing a massive brown chest between its laces, his knees gripping the horse he rode as though they had grown there. A savage, of course, but his eyes stayed fixed to hers, even when someone shouted in his ear, jerking him around to begin the ride out of the valley once more. She knew him. She was certain she knew him. Well, how could she know him'? He was ten years older than she, at least. He had never been here before, so much she was sure of. All well and good, but she knew him nonetheless. She felt their mutual gaze fall away as though it had been a physical thing, now unfastened, felt it drop like a rope, like a heavy chain, something she had had hold of b~t had now lost among the leafy clutter at her feet. Her eyes searched for it, wanting to pick it up and reattach it. Then she raised her eyes to search for him, but he was lost somewhere among the others. "Well now," she said to herself, almost panicky at her feelings of loss when there had been nothing to lose. "Well now, forget this business of A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 57 looks and burning eyes and think what's happened here." So she did, telling it off laboriously: A gang-lord came, and he paid for a pronouncement, and no doubt he will regret the payment when the concubine tells him her blossom lacks a workable bee! The gang-lord, though young, was either infertile or impotent, most likely impotent from the looks of him. Surely he knew that. What had he been hoping for, a miracle'? So she told herself, keeping her mind away from that other thing, that wondrous recognition she had no words for at all. Whatever the gang-lord had hoped for, away he went with what he'd received, the slaves plodding along under the weight of the litter; the purplecrested men glumly slumped in their saddles, no doubt bored to tears... Except for one man, that one man, he, he alone turning to peer back at Orphan once more, their eyes meeting again, as though drawn by some force outside themselves, as though they would never have enough of looking, enough of seeing. Then the trees came between them, and he was gone. She felt his eyes still. It was a cable of gold, reaching from somewhere inside her into the distance where the road went. She felt her face. It was flushed and hot, as though she had been bending over the fire where that cable was forged. The villagers stared after the visitors, murmuring to one another. Orphan thought they must have seen what had happened to her, but they seemed not to have done so. The world could be on fire, still they would mutter and clack like chickens, seeing nothing but the corn between their toes. And so, thought Orphan, another morning. And so, she thought trembling, a morning like no other. "I take it no son for the gang-lord," said Burned Man, who had come out onto his porch to observe the proceedings. "Not from his loins, no," Oracle replied. "How did you know what she asked?" "I know the cities," said Burned Man with a painful shrug, "at least as well as any Edger knows them. In the cities a high price is paid for virgin girls who have no sign of disease, for it is believed they will produce healthy tots, no matter what sickness the ganger himself may carry. Tots are desired for the strengthening of the gangs. The young gang-lord will be very angry when he learns what you said." Orphan took all her will to pull herself together, turned her back on the Bastard, who was approaching from his house, and said firmly, "The conk won't tell him. She'll make up something interesting. Then she'll find some way to get pregnant by someone else and convince the lord it's his. That's what she'll do." Bastard arrived in time to hear the end of this remark. 58 Sheri S. Tepper "Such an imaginative young woman," he sneered, with a tentative clutch at Orphan's backside. "So opinionated, for one who knows so little of life." Orphan moved away from his groping hand with a feeling of revulsion. Despite Oracle's prophecy and Hero's threat, Bastard continued to be free, both with his hands and his nighttime whispers. "Getting pregnant by someone other than the gang-lord would be difficult," mused Burned Man, moving toward his porch railing. "She probably shares women's quarters, and they're usual}y we~~ guarded." "Nonetheless, that's what she'll do," said Orphan stubbornly, knowing it was so. Sometimes she knew these things. It wasn't the way Oracle knew them, seeing them in a vision. It was just knowing, the way she knew two and two made four. They just did. "Listen to her," said Bastard with an unpleasant sneer in Orphan's direction. "Sounding all grown up, which, of course, she is. You know, Orphan, you're getting a little old for your archetype. A little big for your ú.. parities." "There've been Orphans older than she is," objected Oracle in a troubled voice. "Older and uglier," agreed Burned Man, with a gallant bow in Orphan's direction and a smile that would have been charming had he had any lips. "Very little older," Bastard insisted. "What are you, girl? Twenty-one? Twenty-two?" Orphan shrugged, aware of a sudden apprehension. "No," she almost shouted. "Nineteen. At most." Bastard sneered. "You sound like Ingenue. But let's count it up. You were a toddler when I came, and I've been here what? Seventeen, eighteen years?" He grinned at her, a flesh-eating grin. "Watch it, woman. Any day now, they'll be sending us a new Orphan, and then what'11 you do?" "Stop cleaning house for you," Orphan said vehemently. "That's the first thing." It was some satisfaction, seeing his face as he turned and stalked away. Let him think about doing his own work! Last time it had taken her four days to get his house clean. Piles of stuff all over everything, wherever he'd dropped them! Compared to him, Miser was neat! Lately, she'd been doing entirely too much housekeeping. There wasn't a wide choice of employment in the village, and archetypes who had no wherewithal coming in--like Orphan--had to earn from those who didx-like Bastard, who had remittances from his family, or Oracle, who had money from her fees, or even Burned Man and Drowned Woman, who had Martyr's and Suicide's pensions from their families. Orphan had nothing at all. "Poor as a churchmouse," she reminded herself, eyes fixed on Bastard's A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 59 departing back. "As a gnawed bone. As a handful of ashes. As a knacker's horse." Enough of that. Orphan gestured toward the chairs by her door as she said to Oracle, "Have a cup of tea with me." Though the fire had burned to ashes, the kettle still steamed. Orphan rinsed out the pot with hot water, measured in the tea, then filled the pot to let it brew while she fetched her other cup. It was cracked, but it would hold tea if you squeezed it while you were drinking. Outside the door, Oracle leaned back in one of the two rickety chairs watching Bastard as he walked away. "Hateful though he is, Bastard's right about one thing." Orphan, who was desperately trying to keep her mind off the young man on the horse by making a mental shopping list for the next time Peddler came, did not ask what Bastard was right about. She emerged from the door to see Oracle unfolding a napkin on the rickety table between the chairs, a napkin holding half a dozen buttery scones. "I tucked them in my pocket before all that fuss this morning," mumbled Oracle. "I thought you might be hungry." "I'm always hungry," Orphan admitted as she grabbed a scone. "I can't remember a time I wasn't hungry. Except that feast, that time, when the warlord from that coastal gang paid you in gold because you foresaw a great naval victory, and you paid Huntsman to bring us a whole pig. I actually got stuffed that time." "Ah, yes." Oracle licked her lips at the lubricious memory. Roast pig. Fat crackling over the flames. Everybody loved it but Burned Man, who couldn't stand the smell of meat roasting, and who could blame him for that? "Too bad the victory I foresaw was for the other side." "You said you foresaw a great victory. It was his own fault that he assumed you meant it for him." Ruminatively, Orphan bit into another scone. Despite being crumbly they were wonderfully filling. "Where was Hero this morning, while all that was going on'?" Oracle wondered, looking down toward Hero's tent, still closed tight, with its banners hanging limp in the morning still. "I heard his horse go clopping by in the early hours of the morning. He's still asleep, I suppose, though he often wakes me with his morning declamations." As though in response, Hero's high peaked tent bulged feraciously and produced Hero himself, who yawned, stretched, then strode to the center of the marketplace, where he rattled his sword on his shield and declaimed in a deep voice: "Look upon the worM's Hero, rescuer of maidens, restorer of kingdoms, 60 Sheri S. Tepper remedy of dragons. Queens and priestesses regard me with favor. The sun admits my glory, and the moon my integrity." "No false modesty there," murmured Oracle. "Bassos don't need modesty," remarked Orphan. "Any more than pcacocks do." "True," Oracle acknowledged as Hero went on: "My power comes from purity of purpose. Only the wicked die at m~' intention; I am unstained by their deaths. I am goodness's executio~er, honesO,"s hangman. I am the blameless warrior who descends into the pit of evil and emerges unscathed. 1 take no account of law, but I put my upon the scales of justice and bring the balance. I am the restoration qf righteousness. "1 am malehess incorruptible who takes celibacy as a wife. I am he who honors all women but knows none. I am the preserver of innocence, the champion of virtue, the paradigm of purity. In me is all chastity, my heart is the house of decorum. "Yea, though I seek eorruption, I am incorruptible; though my weapo~s are bloodied, my soul is unstained." He clanged his sword three times on his shield, strode around behind the tent, got on his horse, and rode slowly up the village street, gravely saluting Oracle and Orphan as he passed. When he had gone, Oracle shook her head in amusement. "Like a big archetypal Boy Scout." "He's sort of in love with himself," said Orphan. "That's what I just said," said Oracle. "He has to love himself; he's not allowed to love anyone else." "Hero says he loves honor." "Yes, well, some love honor, some love the ideal, and some love God. But it's always one's own honor, one's own ideal, and one's own God, isn't it. There's a certain narcissism there." Orphan was stubborn about it. "He's been very nice to me. He taught me a lot of things." Oracle frowned at herself. "He has been nice to you, and I shouldn't criticize him. He's typical, God knows, which is what he's supposed to be. Besides, I didn't come to discuss Hero. I baked the scones to lure you into a time of quiet talk, and we must talk. It can't be put off any longer. Bastard uttered a truth this morning: You are old for an Orphan." Orphan banged her fist on the step, not wanting to hear any more a~out it. "Damn it, Oracle!""It's true!" "Well, hell, then I'll be the Spinster Sister!" A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 61 "We already have an Artist's Wife, which is practically the same thing. And you're too pretty and loquacious, besides." "Pretty!" Orphan's jaw dropped. What did the woman mean, pretty? "Try though I may to make you look waiflike, it doesn't take! Whenever you wash yourself, your hair shines like polished ebony, your skin is smooth and sweet! Orphans are supposed to be pale and washed-out-looking, but you're a lovely brown when you've had a little sun. Orphans are supposed to slouch, and you've never mastered the slouch. Your features are interesting." Oracle stared at her, taking inventory. "Nice straight nose, wide mouth, fringy lashes. Your eyes are a lovely nut-brown and big enough for any two young women. All in all, you're an attractive, shapely person who has become more un-Orphanish with every passing season!" She glared angrily, as though Orphan had failed in some simple but important task. "Was that why one of those purple men was staring at me all the time he was here'?" Orphan asked, her face growing hot. Oracle turned toward her, staring in her own right. "Who.'? When?" Orphan swallowed deeply. "When the concubine came. One of the men-he kept staring at me." "Perhaps it was only curiosity," said Oracle, half-doubtfully. "No doubt that was it. Because you don't really look like an Orphan.""I'll be something else." "My point is, there's nothing else you can be." Which was probably true enough. The village afforded little opportunity. There weren't many vacancies she might fill. The ruined castle waited for any member of a Royal Family, but there hadn't been anyone in it for a generation or more. Privately, Orphan thought it fit only for an archetypal Ghost. Both the Temple and the Parsonage were empty, but Orphan didn't aspire to either priesthood or preacherdom. Ingenue was old for her job, but Orphan didn't know how to flirt or giggle. Oracle went on doggedly, "The matter worries me enough that I'd like to offer you a prediction." Orphan looked up from under her lashes. "What prediction'?" '~Yours. In the cavern. You should be entitled to a prediction." "l can't pay you. Never in a million years." '~1 know I'm not supposed to predict without a fee, but l can set whatever fee 1 like. I~ll set this fee at--this cup of tea!""A prediction for me! What will it say?" "Child, how the hell do I know? I never know until the time comes. I'm no phony soothsayer, no carnival trickster! I'm Oracle! I've told you my history! How they sent me here from my home by the Faulty Sea because 62 Sheri S. Tepper I'm Oracle. I light the fire and burn the incense, I sound the gong, I mount the tripod--all that because it's customary--but whether I do it or not, the words come. They come out of nothing, or out of the smoke, out of the echoes, out of goodness knows where. I don't make them up, and 1 don't know what they'll be until I hear them pouring from my own lips!""I thought--" "No matter what you thought. Never mind. I'd never have ended up here if I weren't the genuine article. Look around you, girl! The Bastard is really a Bastard, isn't he? And Burned Man? Can you look at him and think he's a phony?" He wasn't, of course. "And remember when the ogre came down out of the hills, eating this one and that one--wasn't he monstrous? And when Hero killed him, wasn't he the quintessential Hero? Wasn't the Faithful Sidekick exactly what he should be?" "It was too bad about him," sighed Orphan. Though it had been a long time ago, she could still remember. "So it follows that our Orphan must be the genuine article," Oracle went on, not to be sidetracked into sentiment. Orphan shrugged. "How would I know, Oracle? All anybody knows is some little man dumped me off a donkey and said, 'Here's your Orphan.'" Oracle got to her feet and shook herself. "Well, child, you can do as you like about the prediction, but if I were you, considering that I'm giving it away practically for free, I'd take advantage of the offer."Orphan stared at her feet and didn't answer. "Another day, another duller," said the guardian-angel. "Hush," she murmured, not really hearing. "Be still, angel." "Well?" demanded Oracle. "Oh, all right!" Orphan grumped, getting herself out of the chair and following Oracle as she strode back toward the cavern. The air smelled of dust and resin and crushed herbs, all with an overlay of Hero's horse. The path to the cavern went through several small caves littered with stuff people had dropped or thrown away in anger or despair. Clockworks and bedsprings and petitions written on scrolls. Mostly prayers that the petitioner wouldn't die of IDDIs. "You ought to clean this place up," grumped Orphan, staring at the sandy floor, which was covered with bare footprints and sandal prints and even donkey prints where Woodcutter had led his beast down into the Cavern ,of Prophecy. The way got darker the farther they went, and she stopped at last, unable to see where she was going. "One moment," murmured Oracle. "The fire's gone out." Darkness drew away from a tiny flame, which became a torch, which A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 63 became a fire in the pit. Familiar light flickered across the rising pillars and half pillars of rock, the hanging forest of stony branches and twigs. Orphan found it comforting and warm, even the pairs of eyes peering from the comers. "Stand there," said Oracle, pointing to a low circular podium near the fire, "where the petitioner stands." Orphan moved into the circle while Oracle threw incense on the fire, whanged the gong a couple of times, then heaved herself onto the thick leather pad atop the tripod. Smoke blew into her face. Her eyes rolled back. "What question do you bring to the Oracle?" she cried in a strangled voice. Orphan shook her head, puzzled. What question? Where she had come from? Where she was going next? What she should be doing? What would happen to her? "What question should I ask?" she blurted. Oracle's eyes snapped open, white, no see-parts showing, just blind ivory orbs, like somebody dead. She trembled and stretched her arms into the darkness. Her voice came from some far-off, echoey place: "Ask one only child. Ask two who made her. Ask three thrones that tower, Gnawed by four to make them fall. Find five champions, And six set upon salvation, And answer seven questions in the place of power." Orphan heard the words as though through a heavy fog. Only one of them was clear, the word thrones, which rang in her head like a mighty bell. The other words she heard, remembered, but that one permeated her, shook her, she shuddered with the sound of it, the pictures it evoked in her mind: inchoate, terrible, yet as seductive as the smell of food when she was hungry. A need. An appetite. Oracle panted. The smoke rose around her like a blown veil, and she began to cough, the pupils of her eyes sliding down out of her head and coming to rest at the center of her eyeballs with an almost audible clang. ~'Damn!" she gasped, struggling down from the tripod. "All this fragrance is getting too much for me." She coughed again. "How did you like it?" "I--it did something in my head," said Orphan fearfully, her eyes wide. "I should hope so," snapped Oracle. "Prophecies should do that." "I mean something strange," she cried. "Like somebody calling me, Oracle." "Well now?" Oracle sat down with a thump. "I didn't understand it. Don't. Understand it." 64 Sheri S. Tepper "I didn't expect you to. If you understood it right off, it wouldn't be worth much, would it?" "I didn't understand it at all. And I don't know why I feel this way. As though I should be... going off somewhere. Right now. At once!" "I thought parts of it were unusually clear," grunted Oracle." 'Ask one only child' and 'ask two who made her' are easy enough. You're supposed to ask who you are and who your parents were. Those questions are universal. Everyone wants to know who he or she is; everyone wants to know who his parents were. That's our anchor in time. Also, it tells you you have no siblings, which is interesting." "All right," said Orphan fretfully. "Who am I, and who were they?" "I haven't any idea." "You said I was supposed to ask!" "You are! But don't ask me. I've already given you your bargain-rate prophecy, the answer to your question. Your question was, what question should you ask, and I've told you." Orphan felt a familiar black wave of despair rise up inside her, one she knew well, one she kept afloat on only by resolutely ignoring it. She cried, "I hadn't thought about who I am! No matter what you prophesy, that doesn't change what I am, does it'?" Oracle sighed deeply. "Hush, child, hush. Some roles are permanent, like Oracle or Bastard. But Orphan is a temporary role, like Baby or Student, or Young Lover, or Bride. One outgrows those archetypes. One should, at any rate. ' ' "I didn't mean to sound ungrateful," Orphan managed to say. "But... if there's no room for me here, no answers here, it means..." It meant terror, was what it meant. It meant letting the waiting blackness beyond the notch in the hills well up and drown her. It meant answering the call, the voice she heard in her head, going to some unknown place, to do some unknown and totally strange thing. Oracle turned her face away, hiding her expression. "Yes, it means going out there somewhere." She gestured at the road, leading away over the mountain. "That's where the answers to most things are. Out in the world. ~' Orphan's jaw was rigid, her hands were clenched tightly. This whole subject was one she had learned to avoid ever since she'd been old enough to think. She'd learned not to think about it. She'd taught herself not to think about it, but now... with this summons ricocheting about in her head. Like people calling her. Not "Orphan," but some other name. Her real true~,ame. Whatever that was. She could not deal with this matter of her own identity and existence. She had no picture of herself as a person. She was only Orphan, only what she A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 65 had been raised to be. Any other way led to panic and horror and dreams in the night that made her wake up in terror. Oracle put an arm around her. "Don't be disconsolate, child. We must all leave the nest sooner or later to make our home elsewhere." "But you've warned me about going out into the world!" she cried in panic. "There are monsters! The mountains are full of them! Look at all tho.sc people who came with the concubine, just for protection against trolls and ogres and dragons. People traveling alone don't have a chance. Then them're the cities! Burned Man warned me about cities." "It will be difficult, but you can avoid monsters, and you can stay out of the cities." Orphan felt herself snarling. "I'd need money." '~1~11 give you what you need," said Oracle. "Everyone who comes for a prediction pays me in silver rats or golden sparrows. I've a case of coin back in the cavern, with nothing whatsoever to spend it on." "It all sounds thrilling, Oracle. I can't wait." Orphan wept, tears streaming down her face. Oracle got a certain look on her face, as though she wanted to say one thing but had to say another. Orphan knew that expression. "You know something," she said, wiping angrily at her face. "That's what's brought this whole business up this morning. You know something." Oracle looked at her feet. "A little vision," she said uneasily. ~Vision of what?" "Of your being here when a new Orphan comes. Of your being-~disposed of, to make room." She threw up her hands. "Child, do think about it. If the time comes, it'll be easier if you've thought about it. And while you're at it~ think of a name for yourself. You can't go out into the world calling yourself Orphan." Orphan tried to think up a name for herself and failed. She tried to think about going, but her mind veered away from the idea, refusing to consider it. Why not wait until the time'? Wait until the new Orphan arrived. Then she'd worry about it. Except then it might be too late. Then they might just take her out of the village, not give her time to--time to decide anything. Time to pack, even. Ludicrous! What did she have to pack'? Three smocks, two blankets, a coverlet, and two towels, one of them with holes. Two cups, one cracked, one chipped. She couldn't take the tea chest or the cot or the kettle. They'd been here in the Orphan's Hovel from the beginning. She wouldn't go. She wouldn't consider it. She'd make this tocsin inside 66 Sheri S. Tepper her head go away. She'd ignore it. She wouldn't listen to it. Nothing would change. She would go on just as she always had. So she told herself. So she tried to make happen. It did no good. At night she dreamed and wakened, dreamed and wakened, each time with the horrid feeling that someone she knew and loved was calling her name and she was refusing to answer! CHAPTER 4 ~nder the Dome at the Place of Power, upon the small mezzanine halfway up the cylindrical interior, a corroded console was set crookedly into the wall and connected by a tangle of cables to complicated receptors far below. Into these receptors, information flowed automatically, much of it from great distances, causing numbers to flicker upon the console if anyone cared to observe them. So many thousands of walkers present beneath the Dome. So many assigned for duty elsewhere. So many people born, died, killed here, there, everywhere. So many acres under cultivation. So many farm animals bred and born. So many animals, formerly thought to be extinct. So many creatures sighted, formerkv thought to be mythi~'al .... It was Jobo Berkli's habit to consult this console at least once every three or four days, out of curiosity if nothing else. He was careful to do it when Ellel wasn't about, not that there was anything wrong about his being there. He was The Berkli, head of his clan just as she was The Ellel, head of hers. Even though the Dome itself 68 Sheri S. Tepper had become known as Ellel territory, she had never said a word about his not reading the console if he liked. It was just that he found her presence intensely and increasingly disturbing. With every passing day, she became more strange and discomforting. Despite that, he felt it was important to know what was happening out in the world, away from the Place of Power. Also, as a purely personal idiosyncrasy, he needed to know precisely how many walkers there were actually in or near the Place. They gave him the horrors. He pretended otherwise to Ellel. It was never wise to let Ellel if one was frightened or embarrassed or upset, but nonetheless, the walkers sometimes terrified Berkli into complete immobility. Knowing how many there were helped. Then he knew how frightened to get, whether he could risk wandering about behind his well-practiced mask of mocking unconcern, or whether it was wiser to lock himself in his rooms for a few days. So now he examined the number flickering upon the console with a good deal of interest. Ellel wanted a certain number for "security," and Fashimir Ander, The Ander, wanted some set aside for "settlement." Ellel said "security" meant protection against the monsters who roamed the canyons and forests outside the wall, which had some sense to it. "Settlement," however, at least in Berkli's opinion, was ridiculous! Fifty years ago Fashimir Andels g~ar,66~66'~ hal x~a~'~e6 ~, ~ ~he ~'nv,~or, w,:,r,rcs. ~'~'te~ he 6'~e6, 'the notion had been forgotten for decades (an appropriate neglect, to Berkli's mind), only to reemerge recently when Fashimir had remarked: "Since the shuttle will be finished soon, and so long as we're going to the space station anyway, we'll flit on over to the moon and reestablish the settlements, as my grandfather suggested long ago." Berkli had not been paying attention--he couldn't bear to usually, because when one listened to Ander, one simply couldn't keep a straight face--and it was only the insouciant arrogance of that "flit on over" that caught his awareness. Then, when Ellel had responded with enthusiasm, Berkli had realized what was going on and reacted with an explosion of choked breath that covered hysterical laughter. He still giggled every time he thought about flitting on over to the moon, yet another one of the Ander-Ellel series that had begun when they were children: I'm going to be Queen of the earth someday. You be Queen, and l'll be King. We'll finish the shuttle and go to the space station. We'll flit on over to the moon. It was all part of the Ellel-Ander style. Dramatic. Ritualized. Egocentric, with either of themselves at the center of the stage. Witness the way Ander dressed! Witness this new conceit of Ellel's,c,,going always robed and masked, unseen except for her glittering eyes! Though it was not Berkli's style to be confrontational, when he had heard those words, .flit on over to the moon, he had put aside his usual pose of teasing uninterest to ask: A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 69 "How are you going to flit on over anywhere when you don't have a guidance system?" ~We'11 get it," Ellel had asserted with the absolute conviction that she tl~td displayed since her father disappeared, the tone of pure purpose that always made the hair on Berkli's neck stand up. "We'll find the person we need, and we'll get it." She had turned her eyeholes on him then, those two shadowed caverns she hid behind, watching him like a dragon from a lair. He had only kept himself from trembling with some effort. She did that to him. She had an .,~nswer for everything. She had even managed to come up with a reason for moon settlements: "As security against a sneak attack from space." Neither she nor Ander had said who was going to mount such an attack. Mutated members of the human race? Their own earth people, back from Orion or Alpha Centauri or wherever it was they'd gone? Some wild tribe from Low Mesiko who had reinvented space travel? Some previously unperceived alien presence? Moon monsters? Little green men? Ellel seldom felt it necessary to identify a threat specifically. Her paranoia had room for enemies unlimited. "Some inimical force!" she had cried, not bothering to name it. Of course, Ellel and Ander were right about one thing: Ellel's walkers could succeed on the moon where humans evidently hadn't. Walkers could assuredly survive there, forever if need be. And one had to admit the effort to put them there was no more useless than nine-tenths of the things men did now or had done once. '~in my opinion," he murmured to himself now, with a moue of self mockery. "Only in my humble opinion." He heaved a self-conscious sigh and returned to his examination of the console. Whatever the ostensible reason for having walkers in the Place, there were too damned many of them. Berkli stumbled over them every time he turned around. He pressed a button and other numbers flickered by, receiving only a glance. Estimated population here and there, number ~ff square miles under cultivation, number of square miles in desert, in wasteland, and so on and so on. Reforestation. Fisheries. Animal herds. Precipitation. For generations the Four Families, the Ellels and Anders and Berklis and Mittys, had been collecting information about the world at large, including places and peoples over whom they had little influence and no control. Not that Ellel didn't try to control them. She was always threatening war or withdrawal of trade. So far, Jobo Berkli and Osvald Mitty--The Mitty-had been able to dissuade her. The Families needed imported food and fiber and ores and lumber far more than manlanders or Artemisians or tribesmen needed manufactured goods. Convincing Ander of that was getting more and 70 Sheri S. Tepper more difficult, and convincing Ellel of anything was impossible. She had always preferred to prevail by force rather than by diplomacy, and Ander trailed after her like a puppy. Even though the figures were worthless in a utilitarian sense, Berkli enjoyed following the trends. Eventually, when the Four Families got around to rebuilding civilization, as Ellel was determined they would, the data might be used for something. 'G'~œc'~a~r, tccJtS, :tt 'w'odc'u tr~Adrr,/dty ~trc rdlcd~ -~dno' fi enfi up at~empilng 't'ne rebuilding, and her idea of civilization did not accord with Berkli's definition. She'd been a tyrant even as a child. He remembered himself at age twenty coming upon her at age eight, playing she was Empress of Earth and re;~dying herself to behead several of her playmates. She'd been furious with Bcrkli for taking her sword away, sharp as a razor it had been, and God knew where she'd found that! At the time Berkli had thought it was the game of a lonely child who hadn't been properly socialized. Later, he'd realized it wasn't ;~ game at all. At least, Berkli giggled to himself, she'd learned not to use a real knife on other Family members where anyone could see her. Not that it was funny, it wasn't. Just that one had to laugh, or one would be sick! The memory spoiled the morning for him. He wouldn't bother with the rest of the figures. Instead, he shut down the console and went through ~ narrow door that led to the spiderweb balcony running around the outside of the Dome. The view was splendid. He could see the entire Place of Power, together with the surrounding countryside. Or chasmside, as it were. North of the Dome was the golden bulk of Gaddi House, looming at the very rim of the canyon, impenetrable and enigmatic, just as it had been when the Ellels had first arrived. After their arduous journey, they'd expected welcome, at the very least. Wasn't the Place derelict, and weren't the people there in need of succor'? Not according to Gaddi House, which had met the arrival with total equanimity, not to say uninterest. Gaddi House had not even opened its gates. Despite that huge bulk standing there, virtually empty so far as anyone could tell, the Ellels had been forced to camp under the dilapidated Dome until they'd built homes for themselves. As had the Berklis and the Anders and the Mittys, each in their turn. It was during those times that the newcomers began referring to themselves as Domers, while calling those who lived in and around the great cube of Gaddi House "those damned snooty Gaddirs." Snooty, because taciturn. Or often, just plain silent. The Gaddir hal~' of saying nothing, and that in the fewest possible words, was infuriating, and though the other three families had become more or less accepting of Gaddir silence, the Ellels continued to be enraged by it. While the Domers chattered A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 7! and rumored and whispered, loquacious as magpies, the Gaddirs merely smiled and nodded and refused to confirm or deny anything. Of the three original families in Gaddi House, there were now only a few feeble oldsters left, said the Domers. Maybe only one, said the Domers. Gaddi House had no purpose, said the Domers. The reason Gaddirs wouldn't say what went on inside was because nothing went on inside, said the Domers. Meantime, the Gaddirs took no notice of all this conjecture but merely went on about their inscrutable business. Gaddi House might be virtually unoccupied, Gaddi House might be only a monstrous vacancy, but it remained n}ysteriously and impenetrably closed to non-Gaddirs, for all that. When Berkli tired of looking at Gaddi House, he turned his attention to the silo, which had held a quarter-finished shuttle when the Four Families arrived, and now, after lifetimes of effort, held one that was virtually complete. The original plans had been followed, the original specifications adhered to, except in one case, and except for that case, the bird was almost ready to fly. Berkli supposed it was exciting, if one cared about that kind of thing. Extending from the base of the silo south and west was a Domer clutter o1' storage depots, foundries, factories, shops, greenhouses, stables, barns, ;~nd residences, all of which, down to the least tool shed, were contained within a massive and well-guarded wall. The Four Families had seen to the building of the wall, designed as much to keep the residents in (so Berkli often accused) as to keep the monsters out. Outside the main gates was the marketplace, a level, graveled area where local farmers brought their produce ;~nd truckers brought their imports and Artemisians brought whatever they th~~ught appropriate to trade for whatever they had decided they needed. Berkli rather admired the Artemisians, not least because Ellel disliked them. Artemisians were relentless in their application of common sense, eschewing sentimentalism, refusing to be moved by eloquence or ceremony, disregarding lineage and pride therein, making no claim of nationhood. They might be wrong, so they admitted even to themselves, but they were damned well going to live as good sense demanded, in accordance with the needs of earth itself, of which the people of Artemisia--or any humans--were only a part. Ellel had no respect for this point of view. In Ellel's worldview, humans were the apex of creation, Ellels were the apex of humanity, and she herself was at the very peak of Elleldom. It was her intention to "civilize" the Artemisians. She'd probably end up killing every last one of them in the attempt. When Berkli tired of looking at the Place, he considered the scenery for a while, finding it as always marvelous but unrevealing. Anything could be 72 Sheri S. Tepper hiding out there, anything at all! From time to time, so the guards said, trolls came howling out of the canyons to prowl along the base of the wall. From time to time minotaurs bellowed there, or giants and ogres came from the canyons to scratch at the stones. No assault by monsters had ever succeeded in breaching the wall, and as though the monsters knew it to be impossible, no one had ever seen them really try. Berkli turned and turned again, finding the view as usual. The world had not changed in the past few days. The world changed little, if at all. $/gfif~tg, D'~;; l~rU~n~t/co rt'~ ~n~LLanfil~, ~ra› fil t'/~C efta/r, arid lec iC carry him around the curve of the wall in a slow spiral downward. The ramp turned lazily, a long curving drop, like a swerving seed blown from a tall tree. Once at floor level he strolled toward the residential annex where he had his own apartments. Considering the number of walkers about, he would stay sequestered for a few days! "Berkli!" he was hailed. He turned to greet the colleague who had crept silently up behind him: Fashimir Ander, his velvet slippers soundless on the floor, his dark hair waxed into complicated coils, his silken draperies wafting gently on the air. "Ander," Berkli greeted him in a carefully neutral voice. He hadn't seen The Ander for some days. All the Anders spent a good deal of time among themselves, disappearing periodically into familial retreat. "Was there any significant information on the console this morning'?" Ander asked. Berkli frowned impatiently. Had there been significant information? Some of the population figures had seemed a little low. That might be significant, but he decided against mentioning it. Why let himself in for an argument! If he said something was important, Ander would simply run to Ellel with it. Berkli decided upon diversion. "There was nothing about this Gaddir girl The Ellel is looking for, if that's what you mean. Have you considered that whole business may be based on false hope?" "What is false will be true," Ander said, almost indifferently. "That much is doctrine." Berkli snorted, truly amused. "Oh, fi~r our forefathers' sake, Ander! Ellel made it doctrine. Let's not fall into the trap of believing our own propaganda! She's the one who made up the ceremony. I admit, we've picked a few things we want to change and said so, but we said them. We said agriculture could use a boost, and },,e said certain areas should be resettied, and we said population should be increased to support a higher level of technology. ~hey weren't the words of God." Though Ellel would make them words of God, herself as deity, given hall' a chance. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 73 "Ellel is frequently right," Ander said stiffly. "And she's convinced she'll find the Gaddir child. When she does, what will you say then?" Berkli grinned to hide what he actually felt, a cold hollow behind his breastbone. "What could I say'? I'd bow down before you both; I'd admit defeat. Until that unlikely day, however, allow me to believe this Gaddir offspring is pure mythology." "When the old Gaddir, Werra, was alive, I myself heard him say--" Berkli forced himself to interrupt. "As you yourself recorded the incident, what Werra said was Delphic at best! 'Gaddir girls, particularly those without family, often display a patterning talent useful in steering the heavens.' Now that could mean a number of things, Fashimir. Some of them metaphysical!" "You forget. Werra was asked specifically if such a Gaddir child had been born recently." "And he didn't answer." Ander made a face, the superior Ander face, lips pursed, eyes narrowed. "If the answer had been no, he would have answered. Think, Berkli! The very fact he didn't answer tells us there is such a child. Gaddirs don't tell lies, we know that. Besides, later he was asked, by no less a person than Jark Ellel the Third, Quince's father, if such a hypothetical girl could provide a guidance system for the shuttle. Jark knew it would save us a generation, at least, if we didn't have to build a system. And what did Werra say? He said hypothetically yes, she could." "He said it unwillingly! Only when pressed!" "It's the very unwillingness that makes us believe it! It's all of a piece. Call it myth if you like." Ander nodded, slipped a fan from his sleeve, and fluttered it purposefully. "Such stories are often based in truth." "They are as often based in wishful thinking," Berkli muttered. He raised a hand in farewell and turned once more toward the annex, only to hear the sluff-sluff-sluff of Ander's slippered feet restlessly following him."How long now?" Ander called. Berkli turned, trying to control himself but failing. He threw up his hands in exasperation. "Ander, damn it, what is it with you and Ellel? Why ask me how long it will be? Ask the engineer in charge! Or ask Mitty. He's the only one with any technical knowledge." Ander smiled serenely. What Berkli said was untrue. Ellel had considerable technical knowledge, so she assured him, knowledge hard won by solitary struggle with old books, ancient records. No one except Ander knew of her capability, so she whispered, and he must keep her secret. "You were seen talking to the engineer yesterday. How long did he say it will be?" Berkli snarled, "According to Dever, the damned thing is almost finished. A few days or weeks, and it'll be done! But as there's still a great gaping 74 Sheri S. Tepper hole where the guidance system is supposed to sit, and as building a guidance system is going to take years more, it doesn't matter whether the rest of the shuttle is finished now or later!" Ander withdrew the fan from his sleeve once more, flipped it open, and ruffled the air before his long nose, pinching the nostrils slightly to show his annoyance. "Very little matters to you, Berkli." Unable to maintain the calm he knew was wiser, Berkli let his anger show. "Well, the shuttle doesn't matter unless you can make it go somewhere. And Ellel's damned orphan doesn't matter because she'll never be found!" He turned his back upon Ander, stomping off toward the shining hallway that led to his own quarters, unable to resist one last taunt. "Because she doesn't exist!" Orphan was unable to regain the peace of mind she remembered in her childhood. Though Oracle continued to be generous with her buttered scones, Orphan lost weight and began to show dark circles around her eyes. She was not sleeping well. The dreams awoke her more and more frequently. She noticed Oracle looking at her with concern and heard Burned Man fretting over her, though others in the village seemed to notice nothing amiss. Until one afternoon Orphan heard Fool howling like a dog, "Mama, Mama, Mama's dead!" She looked out her window in time to see Bastard walking back from the Fool's shack, a white ape's grin showing below the red glitter of his eyes. Orphan went to get Oracle and found her outside her cavern holding her head in her hands. "Bastard told Fool his mother's dead," Oracle muttered deep in her throat, like a growl. "Why did Bastard do that'?" asked Orphan. "Bastard did it because he's a bastard," said Oracle. "He's angry at me for preventing his getting at you, angry at you for being out of reach, and angry at Hero for telling him what would happen if he tried it anyhow." "What'11 we do!" Orphan cried, putting her hands over her ears to shut out Fool's howling. "We'll tell him his mother waits for him in heaven, I suppose." "Is that a lie'?" "It's what we tell fools and children." She sighed. "Postulating a heaven gives man an out for having been unable to retain the paradise he was given here on earth. What else can I do?" z Oracle had become so accustomed to Fool, she had not realized how big and strong a man he was. Only his awkwardness saved her, for at first he A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 75 would not let her speak. When she tried to speak of his mother, he struck at her, shrieking "Mama, Mama, Mama!" She murmured, and murmured, over and over and over. At last he listened to her. At last he quieted. When she went back to him later in the day, he said, "Mama gone." He said it, however, almost gloatingly, almost with satisfaction. "Mama gone. Mama said no, but Mama gone." He hunkered down beside the fence, looking at Oracle out of the corner of his eye as she walked wearily away. He stayed there, once in a while looking over at Bastard's House and whispering to himself. "Mama said no, no, no, but Mama gorier" Fool said. '~I take what I want?" Fool said. "Through her window, with a knife," Fool said, looking first at Bastard's House, then at Orphan's, his tongue feeling its way between his laxly parted lips. Orphan overheard him. His words went into her mind like a key into a lock, little doors opened, little cuckoos came out, fragments of this and that suddenly added up to more than their sum. She went to Oracle, though sadly, and told Oracle what she thought. Oracle put her hand to her forehead, shut her eyes for a moment, then agreed, also sadly, before going to Hero with the story. Hero was waiting when Fool tried to climb through Orphan's window with his knife. Bastard must have given him the knife, for Fool had never had one that sharp. None of them felt it was really Fool's fault. After Hero and the village Smith had buried Fool, Hero went to Bastard's House to settle the matter, only to find Bastard gone. Bastard had fled the village, as he had no doubt planned to do all along, hoping to leave wreck and tragedy as a monument behind him. Oracle was proven right once again: There were no acceptable solutions to some problems. It was only one day later that Orphan was wakened in the predawn hour by Oracle, who shook her and mumbled urgently into her ear. "Get up, girl. Get up. Your time's run out. Oh, lag-about woman, your time's run out! I've seen it in the smoke: Bastard talking and talking. It's what he went to do; he's done it. He's told someone. They know you're here, and now they're coming!""Wha... when?" "Now. With the sun. Here. While you've dallied, I've been busy. I've sewn you a coat and bought you a pair of boots. Silver rats and silver mice in the linings of the pockets. Golden sparrows in the soles of the boots. It will make for heavy walking, but you've no choice at all!" The things thrust at her were a pair of high-cuffed boots that came above her ankle and a new coat, a flow of gray wool, warm and whole. 76 Sheri S. Tepper "My underwear!" cried Orphan. "Well, put it on; it'll keep the wool from scratching. Here's the chemise, and here the pantaloons. Here are trousers and a shirt, with another set for spare, gray like the coat, to fade into the shadows. You can only take what you can wear or carry! Put these things on! Where's your other blanket?" "I don't know!" Orphan cried. "I aired them out on the fence some days ago, and one of them went missing." "Well, take the one, and the coverlet I made for you. Here's a canteen to hang on your belt." So there she was, wearing her chemise and panties under unfamiliar trousers and shirt, the new coat over that, her bedding and spare clothes in a bundle on one shoulder and the guardian-angel on the other, new boots on her feet and a sack thrust into her hand, containing, so Oracle averred, for both angel and woman, including breakfast, for Orphan had no time to eat before she must go. "My animals!" cried Orphan. "Who'll care for my squirrel, and my jay, and--" "I will," grated Oracle. "I promise. Danger comes from that way," she cried, pointing to the northern notch. "So you must go the opposite direction "Nothing there but mountains!" cried Orphan, half-hysterically. "And monsters. That's what Hero says." "So much the better. The men aren't likely to go looking for you there. Take the path down by the pool. Say good-bye to Drowned Woman. She'd never forgive me if you left without doing that." Orphan's feet stumbled along the path as though by themselves. Drowned Woman was waiting at the poolside, her face very pale in the first light. "Oracle thought it would be soon," she whispered. "You're going." "Oracle says--" "I know. She's seen it coming. Creatures striding silent thrc~ugh her dreams, blades in their hands. She hoped it would change. Sometimes things do. But not this time. No. They're bringing another Orphan, and they will make room for it.""Make room'?" Drowned Woman shook her head. "I don't know. But someone's coming, Oracle says. Someone with the authority to clear away one Orphan to make room for another. If you stay, you won't survive it."Orphan shivered. She wanted to cry. "Go, my dear. Go south, over the mountain. Move steadily along. Tl~cre's enough food in that sack to last you for some days. We can't take time to cry over you. There's only time for you to get gone and for us to clear every sign of you out of the hovel." She made a grim line with her lips. "And A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 77 for Oracle and Hero to be sure Bastard left nothing behind that will betray you, for it was he told them you were here! Go now, before it's too late." Orphan turned away and went weeping over the pool on the steppingstones, up along the fall to the top where the canyon led upward into the mountain beside the warbling water, stumbling higher and higher, farther than she'd ever climbed before. The light was barely enough to see the path. Late summer blossoms crushed beneath her feet. The scent made her cry all the harder, but she didn't stop. She had topped a ridge when the sun rose at last, and she turned from this pinnacle to see the village spread out beneath her like a quilt. Far off in the notch was the glimmer of sun on metal, as she'd seen it before. She could not go without seeing what happened! She knelt behind the ~toncs and watched through a crack. Oh, a long procession this, and not a tspical manland one. This had cultic folk in it, dancing and prancing. Drumsnors. Trumpeters. A litter, like last time, only this one held a woman naked t(~ the waist with the traditional white cloth around her head and a baby at her breast. Not only an archetypal Orphan, but an archetypal Wet Nurse as well! Someone had a sense of drama, and the power to indulge it! The procession stopped at the door of Orphan's hovel. Two helmeted creatures threw open the hovel door. Even from the height, Orphan could ~cc the glitter of sun on their complicated helms and on the naked blades tha~ they carried into the hovel and out again. Servants carried baskets inside, the Wet Nurse carried the infant inside, and the strangely helmeted creatures went striding through the village, stopping this one and that one, no doubt ~~~king questions, but searching only one house. Bastard's House. They went through it like a storm, into it and out of it ~ztin, shaking their heads at one another. No, no, they had found nothing. So Oracle and Hero had been right. Bastard had been--what? An informer? But for whom? Even from this height, Orphan knew the two questioners were not merely guardsmen or soldiers or any other thing she might understand by a simple label. Oddmen, she said to herself, making her own name for them. Odd, for they moved with a terrible alacrity, a sinuous grace. They got where they were going too swiftly and returned too quickly. They moved like a snake striking from an unseen crevice, like a jab of sudden lightning from a clear sky. Unexpected. Even though she was watching them, looking right at them, each motion happened unexpectedly, in a direction or with a force that she could not anticipate. It' she had been in the hovel when these men came, she would have been dead or captive by now. Oracle had been right. These oddmen were not guarantors of the safety of the child they escorted; they were killers or abductors sent to clear the way. The child was a mere excuse, a sham. A 78 Sheri S. Tepper feint. A mockery, perhaps, of Herkimer-Lurkimer, to say "See, here's how you install an Orphan, old man!" Someone had told these creatures she was there. They had come for her, particularly. If she had been there when they came... But she hadn't been. She was here. She was here, high above the fall. Because of Oracle, they hadn't found her. Below her, the oddmen returned to the procession, which re-formed itself, turned about snakelike, and went back the way it had come. The sound of drums came like a rattle of gravel on a slope. Trumpets brayed, their triumph tattered by the wind. And she was Orphan no longer. She had been driven out. She wasn't an archetype anymore. She was merely homeless, a wanderer woman, out in the wide world, no place to lay her head. And no idea in the world why those... creatures, those oddmen had wanted her, or wanted her dead. Quince Ellel's father had been Jark Ellel III. Third Jark hadn't been able to beget himself a son to carry on the tradition. Instead, he got him the one girl-child, Quince, whom he had babied and spoiled and called his Princess for as long as it amused him to do so. When it became apparent she was going to be the sum total of his posterity, however, he avowed his disappointment with life, left his daughter with the womenfolk, and moved into the apartment that his own father, Jark II, had ordered built in an annex of the Dome of Reflection. It was a wing where astronomers had worked once, comparing photographs of stars, recording data that came in from elsewhere, wearing out their eyes and their minds looking farther and deeper than anyone had looked before. Jark II had simply cleared the place out, had the space elaborated and complicated, and had then crowded the resultant rooms with handmade furniture and rugs and a hundred rarities from distant lands. To this initial complexity, Jark III had added exotic plants, a tank of brightly colored fish, a cage of flamboyant birds, hand-blown bottles full of fragrances, and a hundred different knickknacks he found on expeditions to buried cities as far away as the lands beyond High Mesiko. A great traveler was Jark III, a great diggerup of ancient things, and a great man to his daughter, Quince. When he had moved to the Dome, she had followed after him like a puppy. like a puppy putting her head where it might encounter his hand, just to feel petted, even though the hand might pinch or buffet or draw away as often as it stroked. She had longed for the touch of his voice, though that voice might curse or tease roughly as often as it called her Princess. She had told A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 79 tales of him to her playmates, tales of wonder, for Jark III was a shining idol so far as she was concerned. Though she was disciplined for telling other lies, she was never even admonished for burnishing Jark's reputation, no matter how much the glitter owed to fabrication. So matters had gone on until Quince Ellel was twentyish, at which time Jark Ill had announced his intention of departing on yet another journey of exploration. Quince had offered to go with him, so much was common knowledge, but he had refused her. That, too, was common knowledge, as was the fact that he had sneaked away in the dark hours with only one or two of his recently discovered walkers as companions. He had gone surreptitiously to spare her the pain of good-byes, so Quince Ellel had said. Whatever he sought to spare, he spared permanently, for he had never returned from the trip. When his absence stretched from one year to two, the Ellel clan had met to declare him officially dead and redistribute the Family offices. Confounding everyone's expectations, daughter Quince had not grieved herself' into a decline but had set about taking the reins of Family power into her own bony hands, managing this with such firmness--not to say vehemence--that she was elected to head the Family over the candidacy of several male cousins. The day following the election she moved into the quarters that had been built by Jark II and occupied by Jark Ill. It was her wish, she said over a discreet glimmer of sentimental tears, that everything in the place be kept precisely as her father and grandfather had arranged it. Thereafter, it was her place. She did not entertain there or welcome visitors there, but she existed there, as a kind of custodian of past glory--or at least, so said Ander, the only member of the Four Families who had ever entered those rooms. Quince's solitude did not exclude servants. One of the first projects conducted by the Four Families after their arrival at the Place of Power had been the "recruitment" among neighboring tribes of persons to do the work the families preferred not to do. Over time these recruits and their offspring were trained to be useful and taught to be civil. Descendants of the original "recruits" were now the gardeners, mechanics, tool makers, engineers, maintenance people, computer programmers, and data analyzers who made up the preponderance of the population. Their numbers included Qualary Finch, who, in addition to her morning duties under the Dome, was also housekeeper for the Witch. On her first day, Qualary had found one of the bright birds dead and had been beaten for it. When she found some of the fish belly up, she was beaten for that as well, and then beaten for moving something an inch from where it had been before, and beaten again for complaining about being beaten. Domer servants were not slaves, so the Domers self-righteously claimed. 80 Sheri S. Tepper They were servants, paid for their labors, and moreover paid quite well. But still, servants could not be allowed to complain. Or quit. Or refuse to do the duty they were assigned. Servants had to know their place. So now, years after those initiatory bludgeonings, Qualary Finch always arrived at the apartments while the Witch was occupied elsewhere, which gave Qualary time to steel herself for the day's duties. Getting into the mood of the place, was how she thought of it. Accustoming herself to junkiness and unattractive clutter. Then, too, some things had to be accomplished in Ellel's absence, such as the removal of dead fish and sick or dead birds, both to be replaced, when possible, with healthy ones. Qualary maintained cages of birds and tanks of fish at her home for just this purpose. Presumably Ellel didn't know of the substitutions. She had never seemed to notice. So long as the cage was alive with movement and song, so long as the tank moved with glittering bodies, that was all Ellel cared about. Qualary had not been beaten over birds or fish for quite some time. Over other things occasionally, but not over birds and fish. One of the doors in the apartment was locked and had been locked as far back as Qualary could remember. It was not wise to be seen cleaning next to -this door, or she might be accused of snooping. Nor could she move anything, for that would be impudence, a claim to refinement that she, a simple maid, could never possess. So Qualary, who had never desired to be refined, who wanted only peace and to be let alone as much as possible, fluffed cushions, dusted windowsills, washed bric-a-brac, and tried not to think about it. The dust was a constant. Other parts of the Dome had filtered air supplies, but this apartment had been blocked off for fear someone might sneak in through the ducts. They were very small ducts, but perhaps the Witch knew of very small creatures who could get through such tiny openings. Sometimes Qualary amused herself by imagining such creatures. She equipped them with huge appetites and incredible teeth and imagined them coming upon the Witch in her sleep and eating her entirely, starting with her feet. Such imagining had gotten her through many an otherwise impossible morning. On a particular day she was on her knees, wiping up the floor, when the Witch came in. "Still at it," came the hard, metallic voice from behind the mask. "You should have finished hours ago." "Sorry, ma'am," murmured Qualary. She had learned this was acceptable verbiage. "I'd get rid of you, except I've just got you broken in," the voice went on, as though to itself. "Maybe I could trade you to Ander. He's got some good servants." Whom Artder treated very well, thought Qualary to herself, busily brush- A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 81 ing. Artder hired very highly trained and qualified people, after which Ander mostly ignored them, which was fine with them. "Let the rest of it go," the voice snapped. "Get up off the floor." Qualary stood obediently, eyes down. Looking into those eyeholes was also impudence. Or arrogance. One or both."This just came Something was thrust into Qualary's hands. Cloth, Not too clean. "Yes, ma'am," she murmured. "Take it down to the labs. Give it to one of Mitty's men, Pelly or Josh, one of them. Tell them I want a genome match to the samples they've got." Qualary bobbed respectfully, picked up her cleaning supplies, backed away, and went out the door, hearing the voice snarling behind her. "Quickly, tell them!" Qualary went swiftly away in the direction of the labs. The Witch hadn't really needed to specify Mitty's men. The people in the labs were mostly Mitty's men. And in the shops. And in any other place involved with technical or scientific matters. Only the Mittys knew about such things. Maybe the Ellels bad known once, or the Berklis or the Anders, but no more. Once out of sight of the doorway, Qualary spread the fabric between her hands and looked at it. A raggedy blanket. What did the Witch want with a raggcdy blanket? Qualary shook her head and sighed. How could any normal person tell what the Witch wanted with anything? In the apartment Quala~ had just left, Ellel moved slowly to the front door, shut it firmly, and locked it. Then the mask bent toward the door, forehead almost touching it, as though listening. After a time, a bony hand reached out, unlocked the door silently, and jerked it open. No one there. No one eavesdropping. The door was shut and locked once more. Then there was a slow search of the cluttered rooms, a careful check behind each door, behind each drapery, in every closet and cupboard. Only when all of these possible hiding places had been eliminated did she go to the inner door, the perpetually locked door, open it, and go down the long corridor beyond and into the very private room. In the opposite wall a tall window filtered green and watery light through a green veil of creeper. As she walked to this window, the hem of her robe raised ankle-high puffs of dust that fell at once into the luxuriant layer blanketing every surface. No pattern could be seen in the thick carpet; the carvings on the paneled wall were softened, and the bewildering wall of draperies around the lofty bed was so encrusted, it might have been carved from sedimentary stone, Only the windowsill was relatively free of dust, its surface abraded as though something had been repeatedly and recently dragged across it. Between the 82 Sheri S. Tepper creeper tendrils, the window stared blankly across the canyons through panes rendered barely translucent by the accumulated filth. Ellel's robed figure leaned on the abraded sill, the eyeholes of the mask stared through a peekhole rubbed through the grime on the glass. "We have her," she whispered in a voice that even Qualary had seldom heard, one that would have horrified her to hear."We have her!" Silence. Outside the tendrils moved gently in the light wind. Cloud shadows skimmed the convoluted canyons like enormous bats. No sound came into this room except when the narrow window was opened. No one could see into this room. "A pair of our walkers brought us a blanket," the voice said conversationally. "The blanket the Gaddir child slept in. It was worthy of a carnival, a circus, so I sent one! A parade. Drummers and dancers and a Wet Nurse. Surely they've got her by now." The answer came as a breathy crepitation, like dried leaves scratching. "Good! That's good, daughter." A long pause, during which not even a breath disturbed the air. "That's my Princess." The Witch turned from the window to stare at the chair beside the bed, a strangely contorted chair that had been clumsily gilded and padded with a velvet cushion. On the arm of the chair was a diadem, one made for a younger and smaller person. On the cushion lay a jeweled scepter. Her toys. Things she had had since she was a child. Soon... soon to be replaced with real ones. She turned back to the window, bony fingers drumming on the sill. So much work yet to do! First the shuttle, then collect what was needed from the space station, then back here. Then the fall of Gaddi House. And of the Berklis. And of the Mittys. Yes, and most of the Anders, too. She had her walkers. She needed no other allies. "Yes, daughter," sighed the whispery voice. No one could have done better, she told herself. Not even a son, if he had had a son. After seeing her hovel occupied by others, Orphan moved resolutely upward and southward among ramified ridges, keeping one distant peak before her, stumbling onward along a rocky defile even after sight of this peak was lost. It was evening when resolution gave way to weariness, and she sagged onto a rounded stone to rest. Abruptly, the sun dropped behind the western peaks and she realized she could not go on. All the sky glowed alike, dusk A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 83 gathered, and there were no directions. Food sack in her hand, she merely sat, staring at stones, thinking nothing. The guardian-angel nibbled on her ear, chuckled at her, and said, "Come on, come on." She was unable to respond. She wanted Oracle. She wanted Drowned Woman. She wanted her squirrel, and her jay, and to be sitting by Oracle's fire, warm and comforted. "Come on!" demanded the guardian-angel yet again. She got up, wandered a few steps farther, then sat down again, blinded by tears. She couldn't move. It wasn't possible. Darkness came, and reality with it: hunger and chill and herself without proper shelter because she'd spent the last of the daylight feeling sorry for herself instead of attending to business. Hero would be ashamed of her, she told herself as she crawled beneath the drooping branches of a nearby spruce, where she wrapped herself in her cloak and blankets, cuddled the angel under her chin, and fell into exhausted slumber. Only to be awakened, breath caught in her throat, by something she heard. The angel stirred alertly at her throat but, unlike itself, made no sound. It came then, a keening hum, as though something moved through the air high above her. The hum was succeeded by silence; the normal sounds of bird and beast and insect stilled. "... Orphan .... "called a voice. She opened her mouth to answer. Her guardian-angel shuddered, putting its beak to her lips, and she changed her mind. Perhaps it was not a good idea to answer. Not until or unless she knew what it was that called her name in the night. Not her name. As Oracle had made clear, she was not Orphan any longer. There was a new Orphan. She was someone else. She didn't know who she was. "... Orphan..." Sweet, that voice. Like a mother calling. Come, dear one. Come, daughter. Sweetheart. come on. Don't hide. Come on, lovely ...."...Orphan..." It was like the call inside her. A summons. A beckoning voice that she should recognize. Or was it the place it was summoning her to that she should recognize? The angel shuddered again, and Orphan held her breath, tears in her eyes. You must answer me, sweetheart. Don't make Mother angry. Don't upset your loving mommy. Dear one. Answer Mother. The tears rolled down her cheeks. She thrust a knuckle into her mouth and bit down on it, hard. Only silence abroad in the night, only silence and 84 Sheri S. Tepper that voice, and somewhere the place the voice wanted her to go. To Mother. To Father. Home. Something moved through the trees nearby. Something large and heavy, at least as large and heavy as a person, though it moved more quickly than a person could have moved in the dark among the trees, among the clutter of branches and twigs, across the stumbling stones. Oddmen, she told herself, knowing it was true. Here were the deadly cre.~,t~c›s, 0J3road. i.~ tb.e a'tgb. t, [xaat'tttg l~or laer~ So Oracle had been right. There was danger. More than mere danger. ".... sweetheart. Daughter. Dear one..." The voice came from the place the other sound had come from, accompanying the sound of movement. Orphan bit her finger until she tasted the salty, metallic tang of blood. A long silence. From somewhere nearby a bird made a sleepy whistle. A cricket began its continuous count of night moments, creaking them off one by one. Something trumpeted hr off, a kind of bellow-roar she hadn't heard before, but still a natural sound, an animal, bull-like noise. It could be an animal. It could also be a minotaur, or a manticore, in which case, might it come this way'? She felt herself growing dizzy and realized she'd been holding her breath. She gasped. Slowly the normal night noises resumed. Eventually, though she tried to stay awake and listen, she slept once more. Morning brought breakfast and determination, after which the day went better. Wherever she might end up, staying where she was was not an option! So she followed a stream up onto the heights, making her way slowly, inspecting each new type of growth or soil as Hero had taught her to do. Here there were oddly burned places scattered across the hillside, almost like footprints, with a smell that made her guardian-angel squawk and flutter away all draggle-winged. She followed it to find an easy path into the next valley. She went downward most of the day, stopping well before dark to find shelter and firewood--both from a huge old tree with many de~d branches fallen around it and a large, nicely smoothed hollow among its roots. According to Hero, places occupied by wolves, bears, or lions usually smelled strongly of animal; places occupied by monsters stank of decay. This one smelled of nothing but mice, moss, and punky wood. Sound came again in the night, this time moving lingeringly, east and west, north and south, as though searching. She heard the voice again, but it was some distance away, a mere murmur. She knew what it was saying because she could feel it. The message came to her via some other organ of sense than her ears; apprehending the actual words wasn't important. The voice wanted her to come home. She wanted to come home. But not with the voice. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 85 She knew it had gone when she felt mousefeet running across her blanketed body and heard the angel making querulous comments above her. Though she lay awake a long time, she neither heard, saw, nor smelled anything else that seemed dangerous. There were not even any ogre howls or griffin shrieks, sounds she had heard many nights from the village. Early the third morning, she came to a farm where a youngish-looking but gray-haired woman offered her food in exchange for a few hours' labor. Orphan was willing enough, accepting the burden of a canvas sack and the scrambling climb in the Farmwife's wake up the hillside to a barren, mucheroded tract of land edged by feathery growths of new trees. The canvas sacks contained more trees, tiny ones only a handspan tall, and the Farmwife showed her how to make a slit in the earth and insert the roots, how to put stones around it to make a catch basin for moisture and prevent its washing out. It took a long time, finding stones and fetching them and making sure they would stay where she put them. After some hours mostly on her knees, her smock tied up between her legs, bedeviled by black, triangular flies that bit like snakes, she followed the Farmwife down the hill and watched as she ~nadc a mysterious tally on the side of a tool shed. "Eight thousand thirty-five," said the woman, with weary pride. "Eight thousand trees?" "When ! have done ten thousand, 1 will be a Sister to Trees," she said. "Will they give you a medal?" '[he Farmwife laughed briefly, almost silently. "Unlikely, child. I must content myself with the title." "Who will give you the title'?" "1, myself. It is a title I must earn for myself, in expiation for the evil done by others. Once I have earned it, I may, if I wish, petition to join a community of Sisters, to live and work with them.""Where do they live?" Orphan asked. '~Here and there. Mostly in the mountains, in this part of the world, though there are Sister Houses among the forests to the east, so I've heard. Tush. l,istcn to me go on and on. Come into the house. I've some ointment to put ~n those deerfly bites you're scratching." At the pump behind the house Orphan washed the dirt off, applied ointment to the fly bites, and was given a substantial meal of apples, cheese, meat, ~tnd biscuits. ~'How have you kept out of the clutches of the monsters?" the Farmwife wanted to know. "And where are you headed?" Orphan shook her head. "I didn't hear any monsters except maybe once," she said, deciding to keep quiet about the other things. "1 came over the mountains from the village, but I don't know where to go from here. Where is the nearest city'?" Sheri S. Tepper ( t f I ( li S ( $ "If you go to the bottom of the valley and turn north, you'll reach Fantis. But I wouldn't go there if I were you." Fantis. Where the purple people had come from. Where he had come from. Where he was now. "I don't know where to go," Orphan said, fighting down the urge to talk further about Fantis. "It's kind of..." "Fearful, I should think," said the Farmwife with a pat of sympathy. "I'd offer you housing for your help, which I could well use, but my man wouldn't have it. He's suspicious of strangers. Not without reason." "Maybe it'll be easier when you have children," said Orphan, with a glance at the Farmwife's bulging belly. "They'll be a help." "It's some years before they become helpful," she replied wearily. "My recollection is that about the time they're able to be helpful, they decide to leave home. Also, I'm old to start another family. Never mind. Until some help comes, l'll have to get by." "Maybe angel and I'll come back this way and drop in again," Orphan offered. The Farmwife tickled the angel's neck with her finger as she said, "Best you not, unless you see I'm here alone. Best you avoid the next few places down the valley too. There's some feeling against villagers there." "But why'? We do no harm. And if it were not for the villages, none of the archetypes would be preserved. Where else would one find Oracles, or Wizards, or Fairy Godmothers'? Where else would there be Preachers and Princesses and Private Eyes.'?" "Well, no doubt someone wants them preserved," ruminated the Farmwife. "For someone sends messengers to cities and towns, to Edges, to farms, telling this Queen or that King, this Milkmaid or that Virgin they must go to such and such a village which has need of their archetype. Also, for those who petition for residency rights, villages are no doubt a convenient place to put persons who can't get along elsewhere, such as Dem, agogues and Bastards and Fools. But there are those who say the villagers are the centers around which the monsters gather, that if there were no villages, there'd be no dragons, no ogres, no trolls." "Just because two things exist at the same time, doesn't mean one causes the other!" cried Orphan. Burned Man had taught her that. "I know, child. I'm only telling you what people say." She shook her head sympathetically. "I'd stay close to the road, for the monsters avoid roads, but I wouldn't stop along the way until you get to Wise Rocks Farm, almost at the bottom of the valley. You'll see five pillar stones, sandy red and leaning together. Farmwife Suttle is mistress there; she'll feed you. Maybe even give you work. And no one there will bother you, as some might." A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 87 Orphan nodded. "Hero taught me to protect myself, so I'm not as unprepared as some might be." "Lord, child, I hope not. Most of us leave death out of our reckoning, don't we? We think death won't come for us, then we find him lurking behind every door. I did. I thought life would be berries and cream and a handsome prince to bear me away to his kingdom--" She laughed abruptly. "Listen what a fool I sound!" Orphan said soothingly, "I've had those same dreams. According to Oracle, most young women do. And young men dream too, vasty dreams of slaying dragons and rescuing maidens." "More likely slaughtering someone in the arena to the roar of cheering crowds," murmured the Farmwife. "Don't forget the cheering crowds. Do you watch the public amusement screens?" Orphan shook her head. "I've never seen one." "My husband bought a screen. For me, he said. So I wouldn't be lonely when he's away. Him that's as close with his coin as a bee with its honey, he bought me a screen, and the batteries to run it, and a generator thing that runs from the windmill to keep the batteries full of whatever they're full of, if you can believe that! Now I can sit in my kitchen and watch people killing each other all day so I won't be lonely." She laughed again, bitterly, tears at the comers of her eyes. "And perhaps that's how he meant it all along! If I see enough of it, I'll reconcile myself to solitude! Time you were going on. Don't forget. Farmwife Suttle, at Wise Rocks Farm.""Farmwife Suttle," repeated Orphan, obediently. "Tell her Farmwife Chyne sends word that she is expecting a child in thirty days' time and would be glad of help. For which, my thanks. And I'd take it as a kindness if you didn't mention having been here to anyone else. ' ' Orphan nodded that she'd do her best, then bowed politely before starting on her way once more. She could cover a good bit of territory by nightfall if she kept moving. Also, she had discovered that moving kept her from thinking much about a certain person, and she did not want to think about him. She walked for an hour on one of the parallel rots that extended from the farm-gate down the valley, stepping aside once to allow a heavily laden wagon to come up past her. "You there, girl!" the driver shouted. She stood quiet, waiting. "Where you from?" "Just walking," she said. "You stop anywheres along here? You been talkin' to anybody?" The voice was both frightened and threatening. 88 Sheri S. Tepper Orphan took a deep breath. "Nobody, mister. Didn't see anybody around." "Well, keep it that way. Don't stop anywhere." "Bastard," said the guardian-angel in her ear. "Don't stop anywhere." Orphan answered neither man nor angel. She merely lowered her head and trudged away, feeling eyes on the back of her head, listening to the sound of creaking wheels slowly diminish behind her. By the wind's knees, but these were a strange bunch. When she approached the next farm, identifiable by the sound of animals lowing, dogs barking, the lessening of weeds in the ruts she was following, and a slender pillar of smoke rising over the next hill, she moved to her left, into the trees, and stayed hidden among them until she passed the gate leading to a cluster of gray buildings. She saw no one. No one saw her. Once well past, she took to the ruts again, seeing no one at all at the next three farms, two of which were invisible from the road. From the top of the last hill, a wearyingly long one, she saw the five pillars of red stone standing above the tops of the trees like gnarly people gossiping with their heads together. These were undoubtedly the Wise Rocks, as well described by her informant of the morning. Here she would find Farmwife Suttle. She first found a child who was making its androgynous and curious way down a brook, turning over the stones as it went."Is this the Wise Rocks Farm?" "Mostly," said the child. "What isn't somebody else's farm. What sort of creature is that?" Orphan took the angel onto her finger. "It's a guardian-angel." "What's it for?" "It's to keep me out of trouble." "I've never seen one like that before." "Nobody has," said Orphan. "This is the only one. I've had it since I was a small child." She furrowed her brow, thinking. "Is Farmwi~fe Suttle near about?" "My ma. Near enough, I should think. Near enough to find me right away if I do something she thinks I oughtn't." The child turned a thoughtful face on Orphan, as though trying to decide what naughtiness to commit in order to summon her mother. "Don't do any such thing on my account," said Orphan. "I'd just as soon look for her." "You wouldn't say that if you knew what you were talking about," said the child darkly. "You might come upon the Widow Upton first, and she's a pain. Or Silly Sim, him the gangers knocked all the sense out of. Or my dad, and you wouldn't wish that on your worst old cow, her that the Knackers are coming for." A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 89 "Why is that?" asked Orphan, curious despite herself. "He's mad at the world, Ma says. It won't lie down and accommodate itself to his uses, so he's mad at it. Since it does no good to beat at the world, he beats at other folk, me for instance, or anybody wandering by. Like you." "But not your ma?" The child snorted. "She'd never stand for that. And he's not here often, so we've little to worry over." "Well, I really should find your ma. I've got a message for her." "And you shouldn't go saying things like that, either. People claiming to bc carrying messages might be Up To No Good." The child climbed out of ~hc stream bed and dried her feet on the grass. "If you and your angel sit ~~vcr there under that tree, I'll find her for you. Take cover if anybody else comes by." The child glowered at her threateningly. "And don't come g~tl~oping out until you see me!" The child trudged off down the lane without a backward glance, leaving Orphan to look after her with her mouth open. Such a very verbal young pc~'son! And so very opinionated. Orphan could not recall having such definite opinions at that age, or at any age. The indicated tree spread a patch of dense shade at its base, and O~phan sat there, prudently hidden behind the trunk from casual passersby. The ~uardian-angel whistled and nibbled her ear. The angel's feathers smelled swcet, like a mild spice. The smell always came as a surprise, and while Orphan was inhaling, the angel flew off into the trees, all in a flutter of green and blue wing feathers with raggedy red tail plumes fluttering behind. It had bccn doing that more and more lately, Orphan thought, falling into a doze. "Whsst" was the next thing she heard, a piercing whistle not unlike a bird's whistle. "Here's my ma!" Orphan stuck her head around the tree trunk to watch the woman approach, a stout figure with braids of dark red hair wound into a tight helmet around her head. "Seelie says you have a message," she said when she had looked Orphan over from head to foot. Orphan repeated her message from Farmwife Chyne. "Ah. Well." "I'd say she's very lonely," said Orphan, forgetting to be laconic. "And she was very big." She gestured how big, which was big enough. "The message alone would earn you supper," said the Farmwife, looking both glad and sorry at the same time. "She'll need help, but Farmer Chyne's so foolishly afraid of outsiders... Have you other news from up the valley?" "A little way back I saw two people high up on the mountain." 90 Sheri S. Tepper "Hunters," the woman grunted. "After goats. Or maybe deer. There's more deer up there all the time." "1 got passed by a man in a wagon, but he told me to keep moving." "Farmer Chyne. He could have stopped here and told me she was having a baby, but he wouldn't. Oh, no. He'll do it on his own or leave it undone, no matter who dies of it." She sighed. "Ah, well, I shouldn't say that. He lost his first wife and children to outsiders, strangers, citymen. They thought he had money hid, so they tortured the children to make the wife tell, then killed her for not telling what she couldn't. He's been leery of strangers since." "How'd you get to know her at all?" Orphan asked. "Seems like you people aren't very neighborly." "She's another who had family slaughtered before her eyes," snapped the Farmwife. "After that, she lived here with me for ten years. Dear to me as my own sister, she became, and ! wish she'd stayed. But she was longing for children of her own. When Farmer Chyne made her the offer, she took it, the more fool she. She'd be better off among the Sisters to Trees." The woman shook her head sadly before going on: "1'11 offer you supper, girl. I'll maybe offer you more than that, if you can keep your own counsel. You came from an archetypal village, didn't you? What were you'? Virgin'? Half of a Young Lovers? Princess?" "Orphan," she admitted. The woman snorted. "Orphan! You look no more like an Orphan than I do like a banty hen. You're too old and too pretty!" "Which may be one reason I was supplanted," said Orphan, depressed by the subject. The guardian-angel cried from among the trees and came fluttering to take its place on Orphan's shoulder. The Farmwife snorted. "So there's the other one of you. Two draggletailed refugees! Well, I can't go calling you Orphan. So far as the people here are concerned, you're my oldest sister's husband's youngest sister's middle girl. Kind of a round-about cousin." "What's my name?" whispered Orphan, aware that something meaningful Was taking place. A name--exactly what Oracle had said she needed. "Olly Longaster," answered Seelie promptly. "All Ma's kin are Longasters, even by marriage." "Not a very pretty name," said Orphan, doubtfully, wishing she'd spent more time choosing a label for herself. "All the better for that," said the Farmwife. "My family didn't go in much for pretty names. A pretty name would have a suspicious sound. You're Olly, now. Oily--say it over to yourself and answer to nothing else! You were sent here to help me by your pa, Leesnegger Longaster, one of the A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 91 Longasters of Longville. You were dropped off a freight wagon near Whitherby village, and you walked from there." She took the new Oily by the arm, murmuring as she did so, "See, Oily, there's Widow Upton with her son, Sim, come to meet us." The stout iron-haired woman who came bustling toward them was followed by a shambling figure carrying a rake over one shoulder. "Silly Sim," Seelie hissed. "Be careful what you say." "Hush, Seelie," her mother muttered. "Oily has quite enough to think about." "Who's this, who's this?" the widow cried. "Stranger," her son replied. "A stranger, a danger. Whack, whack. Beat my back." "Hush, Sim," Farmwife Suttle said. "This is no stranger; this is my kinswoman, Oily Longaster, come to spend a time in the country with her cousins." "Cousins by the dozens," the guardian-angel piped, flying to the silly's shoulder and pecking with its long, sharp beak. "Ouch-grouch, stranger-danger," Sire sang. "Word-bird." "Hush, son," his mother directed. "Well, my dear. l'm the Widow Upton, and this is my son, Simile. Dear Origenee didn't say a word about your coming--" The Farmwife interrupted, "Because her coming is a surprise. But your aunt Ori is glad to see you anyhow, dear girl. Come along, now. I know you and your pet must be weary. Seelie, run ahead and put fresh water in the spare room." "Far-star," Sire sang as he leaned toward the former Orphan, peering at her through faded eyes in which a strange, liquid glow pulsed. "Sorrowborrow.' ' "Hush, Sim," his mother said again. "Forgive him, Oily. Sometimes he doesn't make much sense." She, who had seen that same glow in the eyes of Oracle, merely nodded. Here was another one telling strange truths about somebody or other, but evidently no one realized it. So long as everyone told him to hush, she ought to be safe enough. CHAPTER 5 ~/~hen the Purples returned from visiting the Oracle, they were edgy, partly because Young Chief had been unusually petulant and unpredictable, but mostly because thcy had not known how to behave among the unknown dangers of the countryside. They had seen a manticore and two trolls, though at a distance, and had been much troubled at the sightings. Danger in the city was ubiquitous; death was likely on any given day; but IDDIs and stray gunshots were familiar while monsters were not. Abasio could not reassure them without betraying more familiarity with the area than he chose to. Besides, he himself was dismayed at the sightings. In all his years at the farm he had not seen so many in such a short time. Add to this general unease the specific irritations felt by Abasio and the Young Chief: The Young Chief had been promised a son (so Sybbis said), but since he didn't know what to do about the prophecy, he remained touchy and wrathful about everything. Abasio had been promised nothing. He was merely under a spell. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 93 He tried various mental contortions to deal with the girl in the village, telling himself she wasn't all that much, that he'd soon forget her. that she was, after all, merely a woman. None of it worked. He couldn't stop thinking about her. He couldn't minimize her, forget her, or categorize her. She was unlike any woman he'd ever known. She was certainly unlike the girl he'd been given when he first came to Fantis, who'd later miscarried and been traded off. And though he'd learned a good deal about sexual enjoyments from the farmers' daughters he'd dallied with occasionally while visiting the countryside and from the songhouse singer with whom he'd had a brief, careful, and thank God, inconsequential liaison, the girl in the archetypal village was totally unlike any of them. Of course, he had never thought of himself as being in love with any of them. It was not a word he often thought of, or a phrase he ever used. Gangers did not speak of love, though the word appeared frequently in the books he read. Ma and Grandpa had said they loved one thing and another. Grandpa had loved his wife, so he had often said, loved her and grieved over her leaving him. Ma had loved him, Abasio, so she had told him time ~~nd again as she begged him to stay in the country and be safe. Abasio had loved them both, he now thought, though he did not recall if he had told them so. Why did he think he loved this girl? She was a dozen years younger than Abasio! He'd held her when she was a toddler. She'd kissed him then and put her arms around his neck, a mere baby. Orphan. Which meant she had no one. No one at all. Except, perhaps, himself .... So, well, maybe he did love her. Maybe that was what love was, this tumbled, troubled, pit-of-the-stomach feeling, this ache in the groin, this habit of sighs, this suddenness of dreams that he woke from trembling, unable to remember what they'd been about. Except one, which was of someone and himself on Big Blue, walking slowly into darkness with her arms tight around him. He wondered about all this as he shaved in the morning, as he ran one errand or another; thought it as he went about the daily routine of living, seeing the world around him through love's eyes. What would she think of this, he wondered, as he traveled through the filthy streets. Though she'd had ashes on her face, she'd seemed immaculate to him, living with only cleanly woods around her, with pure water to bathe in and to drink. What would she think of this place, of the way he lived?What did he think of it? And that question stopped him in his tracks, stunned and gaping as he realized he didn't think of it much. It was, that was all. Not really chosen. Not really believed in. Just a way of going along, day after day, not making any decisions at all. A way of life he'd fallen into and never cared enough about to change. He wore the crest. He bore the tattoos. He had memorized 94 Sheri S. Tepper the Book of the Purples, gibberish though it was. He could recite the names of the Chiefs and the reason the Purples gave for not having gone to the stars when other men went. Not necessary, they said, for every Purple was a star, a sun, with woman-planets revolving about him, his worlds to make fertile, to raise a crop of tots from. Over the centuries Purples would become more numerous. Eventually, they would fill the world. So said the Book, and so partoted Abasio when necessary. What was his current life to him? It was merely easier than going home and admitting he'd been wrong to leave in the first place. It was merely easier than seeking the adventure he had left home to find. So he thought soberly, not liking the thought at all. He was not allowed to continue these uncomfortable meditations uninterrupted. Soniff sought him out, told him the Young Chief continued to be in a miserable mood and that Abasio had better find something to amuse him. Abasio complied, snorting to himself. Young Chief, indeed. Kerf was thirty, at least, and if it weren't for his daddy, he wouldn't have lived this long. Old Chief Purple might've bought himself a place in the Edge, but it was still his men who kept Kerf strutting and crowing. It was still Old Chief's men who sent Abasio running through the District, looking for something to amuse his sulky son. Sybbis ought to be sufficient amusement for any man. Sybbis, with her undulating form drifting out the door on the way to the baths. Sybbis, with her already-legendary tantrums in the women's quarters, screaming the House down almost daily. Sybbis, spending hours and hours at perfumers and the clothiers, as though it mattered what she smelled like, what she wore. Sybbis, spending her afternoons in the conk section at the arena, eating popcorn and drinking beer. Wasn't she sufficient amusement? Abasio gave her credit for being sly. So long as Kerr thought she might bear a son, he wouldn't do to Sybbis what he'd done to Elrick-Ann. Poor Elrick-Ann, slowly healing in the women's quarters. One thing Abasio was sure of: When Elrick-Ann was well enough, he intended to get h,er out of Purple House. If he could do nothing else for her, he would see to that. Thinking about love had decided the matter; it was needful to say something or do something about people one cared for, and he cared for Elrick-Ann. She was the nearest thing he had to family, and toward her he would not be merely a ganger, not merely a Purple, careless and heedless of the disposable people around him, all destined for an early and messy death. He set these thoughts aside as he set out on his assigned errand. One could not afford to be absentminded in Fantis. One had to be especia.lly alert in the District, where the streets were lined with woman brothels, boy brothels, eunuch brothels, smugglers' stores, drug boutiques, weapons stores, batteryshops and odds-shops, some of them owned by gangers, some by Edgers. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 95 The Battle Shop was the biggest store in the area, always with a display of new weapons in the window. It was said in Fantis that four out of five kills were done with Sudden's weapons or in the arena that Sudden managed. Sometimes, however, Sudden Stop had other things than weapons. Sometimes he had toys, playthings, gadgets. Among the array, Abasio had occasionally found amusements for Kerf. Today, however, the only thing that caught Abasio's attention was the way Sudden was looking at him, a kind of measuring stare, strangely disquieting. As soon as he could, Abasio eased himself out of the shop and away. When Sudden got interested in people, they often didn't last long. Abasio had no better luck elsewhere. At night, with the gaslights lit and crowds milling about, the District sometimes felt exciting, but now the shops were faded and tawdry, the area reeking of smoke. As a last resort, Abasio stopped at a smuggler's shop for a bottle of good stuff, paying the extortionate price without complaint as he dropped the bottle into the capacious pocket of his baggy trousers. From there he dodged swiftly and watchfully through the warehouse district to the South Bridge. Though this was neutral territory, one never knew when some kid might try to make a reputation. At the far end of the bridge was a Patrol Post where Abasio sometimes picked up information. This morning he slouched his way into the commander's office, grinning amiably and making clinking noises with a coin against the bottle in his pocket. "Whatso, Basio?" said the lieutenant, wondering thirstily what might come of the visit. "Not much." Abasio smiled, putting his elbow on the lieutenant's desk and letting one hand languidly support his chin. "Whatso with you?" The lieutenant shrugged. "Truck came in from Hanurg this mornin'. Loaded with honey-beer." Basio shrugged. He had drunk the beverage mentioned and found it merely average, though TeClar and CummyNup sloshed it down by the gallon when they could get it. The officer furrowed his brow in thought. He wouldn't get whatever Abasio had in his pocket unless he came up with something. "Whistler's down from the hills. His people came up with this new drug. He calls it Starlight. Dreamy stuff, he says. It's a sex thing." Basio pulled out his pocket notebook and ostentatiously made a note. He'd bought drugs from Whistler before. Sex stuff was always in demand. "He'll be sellin' the stuff in the market pretty soon." Abasio made another note, smiling noncommittally. The lieutenant slogged on. "When the patrol come in this mornin', they said there was a refugee reported out in the farmlands." Bells clanged in Abasio's head, like a tocsin ardently rung. "What sort of a refugee?" 96 Sheri S. Tepper "Just a refugee. Prob'ly from an ark-type village. They said a female. Looked to be young, dark-haired." Abasio went cold, then hot. He had no reason to think the refugee was anyone who would interest him. It could be an aged Ingenue or a wellpreserved Wicked Stepmother whose stepchildren had grown up and gone. He told himself this, knowing it wasn't true. The refugee was from the archetypal village he'd recently visited and could be only one person. He knew it as simply and absolutely as he knew his own name. The girl was Orphan, his Orphan (for so he had labeled her), out wandering around by herself. Still, he couldn't go all that way on mere intuition. "Who saw the refugee?" he asked from a dry mouth. "Who told the patrol?" "Hunters. They was out there above the Wise Rocks tryin' to get a few deer or wild goats for that roast-kitchen near the arena--Hub's Kitchen, you know--and they saw this refugee down below makin' for Long Plain." Abasio kept his face expressionless. The Purples had gone into the archetypal village from the north, where the road was. The girl must have come out from the south, over the gap in the hills, the way the old man and the donkey had gone, the way Abasio himself had used to go to spy on the village. Why? Why that break-back trail'? What trouble was she in? He reminded himself, with some effort, that he was supposed to be looking for amusements for the Young Chief. He would no more bring such a girl to the city to amuse the Young Chief than he would attempt insurrection among the Purples! His attempt at being dutiful did no good. He had to go see. He presented the bottle with an expansive gesture. "Little present," he muttered. "If you'll let me borrow a horse and wander out there to take a look." The officer, with a gap-toothed grin, waved at the paddock visible through the window where half a dozen horses lazed under the shade of a large tree, tails flicking. He had no objection at all. A man who brought such acceptable gifts could borrow a horse anytime he had a mind to. Abasio rode with a natural grace, though he'd done it seldom since coming to the city. Gangers preferred their smoke-wagons: nongangers rode bicycles or walked. Edgers, so it was said, had clean vehicles that ran on electricity. Only farmers and patrolmen used horses, and those in the paddock were an unexciting lot, uniformly lazy, underexercised, and fat. Why then, this thrill of anticipation that went through him as he went into the tack room for a saddle, a canteen, and blankets? Why this feeling of energy and liveliness as he mounted? He sat stiffly for a moment, waiting for the feeling to abate or clarify itself. It didn't happen. Instead, there was A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 97 a sort of clenching in the pit of his stomach, a feeling of alertness to his skin. Was it the girl? Was it something else? He had a sudden recollection of his dream about himself and someone else on Big Blue, walking off into the darkness. The officer, holding the open bottle by the neck, was watching Abasio curiously from inside the door. Abasio waved one hand, trying not to let his confusion show. "Ride careful," called the patrol officer. "Ayeh," he called over his shoulder. The horse was already moving off in the right direction, as though it knew where he wanted to go. Morning beneath the Dome. Standing immobile, Qualary held the book. The Witch leaned upon the railing, watching the walkers depart. "Mine," the Witch muttered, turning her head slightly. The mask glittered in the motion, almost as though it smiled. Qualary did not move. It was unwise to hear the Witch when she spoke, as now, privately to herself. It would be only a few moments longer. The last of the serpent lines was leaking away. Almost the last. Caught by an unusual sound, Qualary risked a glance from the corner of her eye. One of the creatures had fallen over. It was making crawling motions, arrhythmically thwacking itself against the marble floor. The Witch muttered an obscenity under her breath, whipping her robes around her as she descended in the chair to the console, where her fingers flew across the buttons. Qualary knew what she was doing: summoning certain of her creatures by number, particular ones she had taught to obey her. In the marketplace, in the community tavern, Qualary had heard Mitty's men say that the creatures should be on a regular maintenance schedule, that they would begin malfunctioning otherwise. Was this what they meant? Was the thing broken? If so, it seemed determined to break the rest of the world as well. Already it had shattered great chunks out of the floor and fractured one of the pillars. The balcony trembled with the creature's flailing, and Qualary reached out a hand to steady herself. Luckily, the Witch was concentrated on the event below and did not see the movement. Half a dozen beetle-blacks came silently from the shadows to carry the crippled one away. It went on mindlessly thrusting with arms and legs. Qualary had never seen a broken walker before. From the way the Witch was half crouched over the console railing, like a vulture about to drop, neither had she. "Malfunction," muttered the voice from behind the mask. "Was it?" 98 Sheri S. Tepper Qualary didn't reply. The question hadn't been directed at her. "Or was it sabotage?" the voice hissed, then paused, as though awaiting an answer. "Berkh, perhaps?" the voice asked. "Or perhaps Gaddi House?" Qualary gave no evidence of having heard. In her mind she quoted one of her rhymes for trying times:" 'When you're bitten by a louse, blame the bites on Gaddi House.' "Everything was the fault of Gaddi House, to hear Ellel tell it. "Ellel?" called a voice from below. Qualary knew the voice well. The Artder. "May I come up?" The Witch did not reply, but one arm beckoned. Fashimir Artder came whirling up the spiral trackway, his gown fluttering, his sleeves like kites. Qualary took no notice of him, nor he of her. "I saw one of the walkers being carried out," he cried, his flutelike voice giving the words a tremolo of concern."Malfunction," said the mask. "Ah. Well, I suppose one has to expect some of that," he said dismissively. "Is there anything interesting on the console?" Even from where she stood, Qualary could hear the careless complacency of Ander's voice, see the irritated quiver of the Witch's shoulder. They would be amazed to know she had heard them, seen them, knew what they felt. So far as Ander and Ellel were concerned, servants were deaf and blind and mute. The Witch did not answer her visitor. She merely stood aside from the console, letting Ander approach it, which he did diffidently, with a sycophant's shuffle. "Some of the population figures look odd," he said after a few moments' perusal. "I don't remember their being this low before. Berkli was here a few days ago. He should have seen it." "Was he?" The Witch turned from the railing and peered through her eyeholes at her follower. "Here, you see," Ander chirruped. "Population is down in segment AN 856, and has been for weeks." "Where is segment AN 8567" The words were hollow, distant. Qualary had only recently realized what the Witch sounded like: She sounded like her own creatures. Like the walkers. She moved like them. Even her masked l'ace copied their inhuman quality. "Let me find it for you," said Ander, manipulating the console, which honked at him several times before displaying the desired information. "It's a piece of manland, farmland mostly, though it includes a couple of cities A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 99 ,~.,~1 Edges. Well, you don't need to worry about that, Ellel. The Edges keep their population stable, but in the cities, every time they have a little gang r ~~' a flare-up of plague, the population goes down. Afterward, the birthrate ~,~:trs, and the population rises again." :~lc cast a sidewise glance at his colleague, and received no encouragement, ~,~ went back to fiddling with the console, bringing some display onto the ,, ,'cc~. From where Qualary was, it looked to be a star chart, little lights all roped together in one area. ' \\ nat's this?" Ander asked curiously. "You've got many of your walkers gathering in one place?"The Witch laughed. Qualary bit her cheeks, tasting blood. To those who knew the Witch best, ~l~:~t laugh carried terrible associations. '~I think we've found the Gaddir child," she said. "You're joking?" Ander was incredulous. l'hc Witch laughed again. "Berkli jokes; I don't. I remember what my l~lher told me years ago to expect from Berkli, from you all. Expect nonsense ~~,,m Gaddi House, he said. Expect machines from the Mittys; aesthetics l[,,m the Anders; balks from the Berklis." Silently, Qualary completed the list, well-known among the servant class: ind tyranny from the Ellels." "Why are you here?" the Witch asked. "You asked me to meet you," Ander reminded her. "You wanted to see ~i~ shuttle this morning?" "Ah." A long silence. "I want to check what we've been told, yes. I i~ere's always the possibility we've been lied to." Ander sighed, one of his much-put-upon sighs. "I don't know why you ',t~ink Berkli or Mitty would lie about the shuttle. They don't care about it ,::~ough to lie about it." "I will see what has been accomplished." He frowned at her obdurate tone, but he got into his chair in response to :~ imperious gesture, swirling down the track and clearing the way for her i,, follow him. Only when the two had gone off down the long corridor leading toward ~~~e silo did Qualary ease her rigid muscles, relaxing them slowly. Sometimes ~,,,, the end of the morning's ceremony they had grown so stiff and unyielding, ,i~e thought her bones would snap when they let go. She took a deep breath, i,.t it out, moved her head, her arms. If she hurried, she could have the \\'itch's apartments cleaned before the Witch got back from looking at the .~uttle. 100 Sheri S. Tepper Ellel and Ander made slow progress down the long corridor between Dome and silo. The distance was not great, but there were a multitude of niches and closets and storage rooms for Ellel to examine as they went by. Then came a door giving onto the raised side aisles above the noisy, bustling Domer shops where tools and equipment were manufactured for trade with those beyond the wall; then a tortuous ramp that led them a considerable distance underground; and finally the huge double doors with their multiple locks, which gave upon echoing space where curving walls forced their eyes toward the cylindrical structure before them and thence upward. Ander shut his eyes as he always did when he came to the silo. Though he was looking up, not down, the perspective made him feel vertiginous. Everything dwindled away to an infinite distance: the circular wall, the vast cylindrical construction held in its protective arc, the zigzagging ladders that went up to the limits of vision. He could never convince himself he was not falling. High above, in the gloom, the lights that sparkled like stars could have been an infinite distance below. Voices echoed from aloft; tools whined like trapped insects. "They're working," said Ellel. "What did you think they'd be doing'?" asked Ander in the slightly sardonic tone he sometimes, though rarely, dared use with her. "Having a nap'? Shall we go up and ask the workmen if Berkli is sabotaging the ship'? Or maybe make a tour of inspection? In that case, do tell me what to look for!" He knew she would not. She didn't intend to display her knowledge, at least not yet. Ander knew of it only by inference. But then, Anders were notoriously good at inference. She did not dignify his sarcasm with an answer but merely strode to a nearby control panel and keyed a summons. After what seemed a very long time, a mechanism high on the side of the ship began to hum shrilly as it moved downward, finally stopping against the floor with a metallic cry of protest. A stocky man with a much-lined face emerged, pausing to remove his protective helmet before approaching them. He bowed. "Madam Founder. Sir." He knew them well enough, but Domers never remembered anyone's name who wasn't a family member, so he introduced himself. "Dever, project engineer in charge." The Witch's question was fiat, unemphatic: "How near is the shuttle to completion'?" He took off his helmet and rubbed his forehead thoughtfully. "We've made excellent progress recently, mostly because we've had everything on hand we've needed. Search and salvage teams have been scavenging materials and fuel for a long time, but you know that. It was members of your Families who sent them out in the first place." A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 101 "We do know that," said Ander, with a sidelong glance at his companion. "It's taken a long time," said Ellel. The words were an indictment. The engineer stared from face to face, a little fearfully, wondering what had sparked this inquiry. "I know it's been frustrating," he commented, assuming what they did not say. "Finding the materials was the big problem. Sometimes a team couldn't find what it expected to; sometimes teams didn't come back. More than once we had to pay ransom to the Tribes to get our pc~ple back, and them empty-handed." He sighed and rubbed the sides of hi~ face where the protective helmet had made reddened welts. "Most of the delays were early in the project, however. We have everything we need n~)w. Except the guidance system, of course, but you know about that." ~'How long?" breathed the implacable voice from behind the mask. l)cver shrugged. "Since we're doing everything for the first time, it's I, ccn hard to judge the time any specific job will take. Barring any unforeseen difficulties, however, I'd say a few more days for the shuttle itself." "Which is exactly what we've heard before from Berkli," remarked Ando~', jittering uncomfortably from foot to foot. "Do we need to know anything "One more thing." The woman turned back toward the engineer. "Dever, x~ hat's the status of the space station'?" l'he engineer was momentarily confused. "Status?" 'Fhe robed woman merely waited. What did the woman want? "No one's looked at it. I mean, we can't get ~}}cre, can we? Not until this shuttle is finished." He rubbed at the furrows t~ctwcen his eyes. "When I came on the project, 1 was told there'd been a c,,rnplete computer review before the project even started. Of the moon bases Ander made a finicky gesture. "We've seen the records, Ellel. Our grandlathers used the orbital telescope to look at everything visible, and they got the station and settlement computers back on line as well. Everything up there is just as it was left when men departed for the stars." The engineer nodded assent, wondering why the hell they were asking these questions now. A little late, wasn't it? He was given no answers. x,~,'ithout farewell, the woman turned and left, Artder tottering after her, ~iming exhaustion. Heaving a deep, relieved breath, Dever put on his helmet :~d went up to the shuttle tip once more. Around him, surfaces gleamed ~ ith polish and paint, each component individually made and finished. The control section was complete. He ran his fingers along the enclosed bunks for the flight crew, the doors of the toilets and the galley. Behind them was what had been cargo space on the plans, now divided into personnel cubicles, each with its own bunk and storage space. And behind that, the moon lander folded neatly into its own compartment--a salvage crew had found that in 102 Sheri S. Tepper a museum, so they hadn't had to build one, though getting it to the Place of Power had been a three-year nightmare. Behind the lander were the engines. They'd had to build a plant just to create the fuel they needed. Twentysome-odd years of his life. Sighing once more, he went back to what he'd been doing before the interruption: making the connections between the engines and the booth, the control panel and the booth. He called it the booth to himself, though it was actually a reclining chair. With a helmet. With automatic mechanisms to insert filaments through the helmet and through the skull of the person sitting there. The so-called guidance system. Dever still found the concept unsettling: a human brain of a particular genetic type that was uniquely specialized to guide the ship anywhere at all. If not for the detailed plans that had been found rolled up inside something else, Dever would have considered the whole thing impossible. The funny thing was, he'd been through that set of specifications--for the fuel injection system, it was--a dozen times, and he'd never noticed anything called the Organic Guidance System before. The whole thing was just a little too pat, and he'd tried to tell .lark III so, but Jark was so excited, he'd heard none of it. Not that ~ark had accepted i~ righ~ ax~ay himself. The plans said i~ had to be a Gaddir brain, so Jark had asked Werra about it. Twenty years ago, that had been. Right before Jark went away, and just before Werra died. The conversation had taken place down on the floor of the silo, and Dever had heard the whole thing. Old Werra, tottering around on his cane, exclaiming at this, that, the other thing, and Jark III asking, oh, so casually, if it were true that there were Gaddirs who could guide ships in space? Werra had hemmed and hawed, finally saying something about the talent applying "historically" to Gaddir females who were reared away from other Gaddirs, and yes, a girl-child had been born with the talent, and well, yes, but. Well, yes, but, was right, so far as Dever was concerned. So an electronic system would have required at least another decade to build and to test. What was the hurry? You put a human brain into this thing, the brain wouldn't be removable. Not alive. Not thinking. And suppose something went wrong'.> How would you fix it? With an electronic system, at least one could carry spare parts! He swallowed, fumbled in his pocket for a lozenge, and put the ultimate purpose of what he was doing out of his mind. As a purely technical exercise, it was going well. As it should. This was the one task connected with the shuttle with which he'd had an opportunity to gain experience in advance. He sucked noisily on the lozenge, thinking about being sick when they A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 103 raised this shuttle. He'd already decided on that. If they asked him to go, he was going to be too sick to go along. He was going to be too sick even to watch. Across the Place of Power from the Dome, high behind the forbidding fi~cade of Gaddi House, the one surviving Gaddir, he sometimes called Old Man Seoca in his absence though usually Your Wisdom in his presence, lay in his bath thinking soothing thoughts. The Witch beneath the Dome was planning to murder him. According to the telltales and the spies, however, she did not plan to do so until she returned from her extraterrestrial voyage. At the present time, no action was needed, and it was pleasant to procrasfinate, to temporize without feeling guilty about it. "Your Wisdom," murmured Nimwes, his favorite helper. "Umm," he acknowledged. "Would Your Wisdom like a little more hot water'?" "A touch, perhaps," he said. "And a few more drops of the cedar oil." Water flowed; resinous scent rose around his face. The world had so many simple enjoyments. Warmth and fragrances and tastes. Why did people constantly find it necessary to complicate things'? Like those... he fumbled unsuccessfully for a word to describe the Domers that was sufficiently pcjorative. He muttered, "Those damned chatterers "Your Wisdom?" "Nothing. Nothing important, at any rate." "Does Your Wisdom have work to do tonight'?" "Yes." Yes, he did. All kinds of work: A book-burning team had returned, and he wanted to go over the reports. There were several longplanned jobs to be implemented if his assistant, Fuelry, had everything ztrranged. The old man shifted uncomfortably. He was depending upon t:uelry entirely too much. Fuelry was a layman, as was Nimwes, and it wasn't appropriate to involve them in this way, but since Werra was gone, 5eoca had no choice .... Seoca had warned Werra to stay in Gaddi House, to stop mixing with the l)omers, but longtime Gaddirs had their own failings. A kind of lofty complacency was one of them. Werra had thought himself inviolable. Unfortunately, Gaddirs were not immune to poison. Which meant Seoca was now all alone, facing a task that he could not do alone. He had to rely on Fuelry. And IXlimwes. "How long has it been, Nimwes?" She interpreted his expression, one of sadness. Or perhaps loneliness. 104 Sheri S. Tepper "Since Werra--passed on, Your Wisdom'? Twenty years, I think, or a bit more. It was a year or two before you went out that last time. I remember, because Mama worried until you got back." "I haven't seen your mama in years. How is she?" "Well, generally. She fusses over these walkers!" "As do we all," he said grimly. "That trip you mention was the last one I made outside the ~vall." "It's getting harder for any of us to go outside the wall. Sometimes the walkers stop us as we enter or leave Gaddi House. Sometimes they ask us questions." He sat up, water spioshing, anger surging. He had not thought himself capable of such anger any longer. "Walkers asking questions! At the doors of my Gaddi House? Of my people?" "Yes, Your Wisdom. All the gardens along the front wall have died because the walkers parade there. And the lawn is all black." Her voice rose, distressed. "Including my rosebushes!" He patted her hand. "Who sent them there'?" "Who other than the Witch," she murmured. "That unmitigated bitch," he mumbled. "Bitch-witch. Amazing how tyrants sprout, like mushrooms, out of nothing." Though it wasn't really out of nothing. The Ellels had been power-mad for at least four generations, digging through old cities and prying through ancient books, endlessly seeking anything that would give them an advantage. With every generation they had grown more inbred, more psychotic, and more clever. Ellel had twice the mind her father had had, and that was saying a good deal. Until she'd put on her black robes and her golden mask, she'd never looked particularly clever or malign, which had been one of the most dangerous things about her. Like a clay-colored snake, crawling quiet in the sun, venom oozing from every pore. It was she who had poisoned Werra, almost killed him, shortened his life! He thrashed, getting himself in position to be lifted from the tub. Nimwes pressed the proper button and stood, head down, holding the soft drying robe. The lift raised him, turned him, put him upon his feet. He wrapped the robe about himself and sat in the chair, which promptly buzzed him onto the terrace. Whenever the weather was appropriately warm, the old man went to the terrace after his bath. Even at night, as now, he could feel the soft winds, watch the stars, smell the trees. He sniffed. The forest immediately below the terrace was mostly spruce and pine. Farther down the canyon, the trees were pition, stout little nut trees, mixed with cedar and sage. Through his telescope, he could watch the people who came to gather nuts. Watch them spreading their blankets beneath the trees and beating the branches to dislodge the seeds from the cones. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 105 Some were Sisters to Trees in their green ceremonial robes, gathering the nuts for planting rather than eating. Animal Masters sometimes came as well, and a few Guardians from time to time. And of course, there were the Artemisians. Seoca was always interested in seeing the Artemisians, assessing their numbers and their habits. They were, as he had often pointed out to Nitnwes, a very hopeful sign. "Does your family still gather nuts in the fall?" he asked her now, trying t~~ regain his calm. He did not want to be angry. It was not wise to act when angry. Hot blood made bad decisions. "Umm," she agreed. "My oldest brother is usually away this time of year, but my younger brothers sneak out very early in the mornings S(~lnetimes.""Sneak?" "Well, this year was a good year for nuts, but it's getting more and more dil'ficult to get past the marketplace. The walkers are patrolling the road, now, and they don't let us by." "Gives the damned Domers something to do, I suppose," he snorted. "Except for conspiracy and murder, God knows they have nothing else to occupy them." "Except," she whispered, "you know. The little journey they're planning." He nodded with a wry grimace. "Which, please Creation, they may soon begin!" He fumed silently, wishing many things, gradually calming himself. "Is Fuelry here?" "He is, Your Wisdom." "Tell him to come out here. It's warm enough, and 1 like the smell of the night." Nimwes left silently, and Fuelry came as silently, standing just outside the door as he waited for his eyes to adjust to the dark. The terrace was set invisibly into the eastward side of Gaddi House, the side that formed a seamless part of the barrier around the Place of Power. From this vantage point, one might look into the outside world without being seen by anyone but jays, the occasional buzzard, or any flying monster with a taste for staring at the forbidden. It had been a long time since old Seoca had been seen by anyone but Nimwes and Fuelry and a half-dozen other Gaddirs. In the dim glow from the windows, Tom Fuelry thought the old man appeared just as usual, just as he had for as long as Tom could remember, or Tom's father before him, except that he now stayed in his chair most of the time. The chair kept him massaged and exercised. The geriatric drugs kept him capable and intelligent. Eventually, none of it might do any good, but though the old man must be, well, extremely aged, there was no sign of dissolution yet. 106 Sheri S. Tepper "Your Wisdom," Tom Fuelry said formally, keeping any trace of affection out of his voice. Affection embarrassed His Wisdom. He seemed never to feel he had quite earned it. "Sit down, Tom," said the old man. "Pull a chair over close so we needn't shout. I shouldn't be surprised if those yattering Domers have someone out there trying to listen, even at this time of night." "It would be an unsuccessful try," said Fuelry, as he brought a chair from the side of the terrace. "I've put a sound screen across this whole side of the building." "Clever." The old man nodded. "But then, you always were. An instinctive technological genius is what your teachers called you. Or was it a preeminent gadgeteer?" "Thank you, Your Wisdom." He blushed, embarrassed by this praise. "What brings you tonight?" Fueiry arranged his thoughts. "A couple of things," he said, raising a finger to mark the first of these. "Our information shows a drop in population in several local districts.""Which districts?" "City districts in manland, mostly. Both around Echinot and up toward the lakeshore." The old man nodded slowly, heavily. "Yes, that would be probable. What else?" "There's been some shuttle visiting and a lot of message traffic back and forth from the Dome. Signs of unusual excitement." "The shuttle must be very nearly complete. A bit sooner than I'd anticipated, but ambition breeds efficiency, does it not? Have they---or should I say, has she--made definite plans yet? Has she specified what they're going to do?" "You mean, if she finds the guidance system?" The old man grimaced painfully. "Assuming they find what they're looking for, yes." "Quince Ellel has always said they're going to salvage materials from the space station. Recently there's been some talk among the Anders about reopening the moon mines, or even going to the stars, but basically they say what she does: They're going for salvage.""Have they said why?" Fuelry shrugged. "Because it's what they've been planning to do for several generations." "Just going to be going? No particular material that they expect to find up there?" He hummed to himself, tapping his teeth with a fingernail. "I don't believe that for a moment." A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 107 Fuelry shrugged again. "You know the Domers, Your Wisdom. They're devious." "Not all of them. The Berklis are true to their heritage. They're thinkers, not doers; they don't take themselves too seriously, so their influence is limited. The Mittys are so completely dedicated to their own field, they're not even aware of what else is going on. The Anders come from a sycophantish strain. They're essentially unctuous and truckling, admirers of power without wanting to hold it in their own hands." He nodded to himself slowly. "Unlike the Ellels, who do." "Odd that the entire Families are..." "Not really," said the old man. "They're inbred. Like certain kinds of dogs. Self-selected for certain characteristics. Mittys quit breeding with other Families because they considered them technical nitwits. Ellels quit breeding with other Families because they didn't trust them. The Berkli sense of humor rubs everyone raw save other Berklis, and no one's sensitive enough for an Ander save another Ander. '~So what do you think they're up to?" Tom Fuelry shook his head and said blandly, "I try not to think, Your Wisdom. I think too much, I get all rattled." The old man hid a smile. "Very well, Tom. I'll do the thinking. I think it is time for Plan B. Let our friends know they may be needed soon." Fuelry nodded. "Oh, yes, sir. They're not only ready but eager. I'll send word tonight." The old man nodded. "How are the other stocks building up? Contingency items?" "About completed, sir. I think we've prepared for all the contingencies you've brought to my attention." "Provided we've foreseen them all. Which is unlikely. We didn't foresee those damned walkers. If we had, all this would be over. Well. Justice demands that we be sure of Quince Ellel's intentions. She has a person working for her. One Qualary Finch. Get next to her." "Get next to her?" Fuelry shook his head, confused. "I'm sorry, s~r .... " "Cultivate her. Get acquainted with her. Make friends with her." "Oh, sir, I--" "You don't like women?" "Of course, but--" "Everything I've found out about her tells me you are precisely the kind of man Qualary Finch might hope for." The old man was careful not to smile. What he said was true, but he didn't want to explain it. "Tom'? All right'?" 108 Sheri S. Tepper "Yes, sir," he said, still shaking his head. He doubted it was ethical. And he wasn't all that sure it was possible. Sybbis, concubine of Young Chief Purple, chewed the end of her pen reflectively, crossed out several words she had just printed with great effort, printed several others, then nodded to herself as she regarded the muchcorrected page with baleful satisfaction. It would do. Settling hersell'. she took a clean sheet and copied the text laboriously but clearly, then folded the single page and put it in an envelope that she taped and addressed to her younger sister Posnia, at Bloodrun homeground. The letter invited Posnia to visit her. Such visits weren't exactly encouraged, but they were common enough among sisters, or even between mothers and daughters, if the gangs involved weren't enemies or if the Chiefs hadn't forbidden it. Young Purple hadn't forbidden it, and the Bloodrun Chief was Sybbis's own father. He'd always babied her. He'd let Posy come. It was absolutely essential he let Posy come. She rose and stretched like a cat as she peered through the grating ot' her private room at the roof garden she shared with the other homewomen and their tots. The Warlord's woman, Carmina, was nursing her new baby. Half a dozen of the younger women and mostly grown girls were playing patty ball. Two hags were mending bed sheets under the arbor. Sybbis felt no desire to join them. They didn't like her because of Elrick-Ann, even though Sybbis had had nothing to do with Elrick-Ann. It wasn't her fault the Greens had chopped on Elrick-Ann. She knew whose fault it was, but she wasn't going to say anything about that, or the same thing might happen to hcr~ unless she could make something else happen instead. The Oracle had been the first step toward that! This letter was the second. The Young Chief would read it before he'd let it go, but let him. The day she wasn't smarter than the Young Chief would be the day she'd deserve being cut on! Later, in his room below, the Young Chief ripped open Sybbis's letter ~.rOFl~ r.e..4/t~ it. r..ad'~..fj~lJ~ ~a~x~ex.~..[ "Why's she want her sister?" he grunted to Soniff, who was dozing in the window. The Warlord shrugged. "I suppose she's lonely, Young Chief." The Young Chief grunted, rubbing his smooth cheek with one pudgy hand, a habitual gesture with him, feeling for whiskers that had never come. If he'd grown whiskers, Old Chief would have let him run the gang himself instead of having Soniff do it. If he'd grown whiskers, Old Chief would still be at Purple House instead of living in the Edge and never coming here anymore. Kerf never got to see him. Soniff saw him, but not here. Old Chief met Soniff somewhere else to give him orders: What Kerf could do, what A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 109 Kerf couldn't do. Kerr couldn't go to the baths where the men might make fun. Kerf couldn't go to the songhouses. Not that Kerr wanted to! What was all the fuss about? Not that it was painful or anything, but it was boring. Elrick-Ann hadn't expected him to do it hardly at all, but then, Elrick-Ann couldn't make a baby. She'd told him that, just this past spring. He'd said he didn't like it, and she'd said well fine, he didn't have to do it with her because she couldn't make babies anyhow. She was sterile. If she hadn't told him that, he wouldn't have... he wouldn't have needed Sybbis. "I guess it's okay." He handed the letter to the man who'd brought it. "You can take it on over to the Bloodruns." Posnia, who was a year younger than Sybbis but looked much like her, came with her escort the following morning. The men delivered her at the front door, then camped out in the street, waiting to take her back. Two of the Purples escorted her upstairs, being careful not to touch her on the way. Touch some Chief's daughter he was holdin' for a good price, and you might find yourself eunuched before you knew it. Posnia found her sister smoking a drug called Dreamland and listening to recordings by a newly heralded street singer. "I hear you went to an Oracle," whispered Posnia, when she had divested herself of her red-and-green-striped street gown. "It all over Fantis how you go gettin' a pro-phe-cy." Sybbis pursed her mouth, as though to spit, rolled over, and turned the music up so they could not be overheard."How the hell you hear that?" "What she tell you?" Posnia whispered. "What you think! I not goin' get pregnant 'less I cn get fucked!" ~'He still can't do it?" Sybbis made a face. "I don' think he has any li'l bitty idea what 'it' is. He goes through the motion, like maybe he seen somebody do it, or somebody maybe tole him about it, but he just pushin' nothin' 'round. It this dinky thing the size my thumb, Posy. You wouldn' believe! After a while he sigh and sorta yawn and say somethin' like, 'Is that enough, you think'?'" "He doesn' come?" "He doesn' get close." "He's never seen one stiff?" "Posy, don' ask me. He's smart enough 'bout some things, but he just doesn' know nothin' 'bout that. I think he never did grow up. 1 think he like a baby still. I think his pa made sure he never fin' out he not like other men." "How could he keep from findin' out?" Posnia cried, surprising herself 110 Sheri S. Tepper at the sound. She put a quick hand over her mouth. Someone could be listening. Sybbis whispered, "He got these Old G's. His daddy's men. His daddy's Warlord, even. They always close aroun' him. They tell him he can talk to this one or that one, he can do this or that. Tha's what Carmina say. She the Warlord's homewoman, an' I figure she should know." "You think his father know? Old Chief Purple?" '"Course he know! But I think maybe he hope." Posnia shook her head in confusion. "Little Chief not thirty yet. Maybe Old Chief, he hope like, Little Chief's just slow. Maybe he hope if his son is a good Chief, the res' will come. Like you train a dog to fetch, later you train'm to roll over." Sybbis laughed, chokingly. "Train'm to kill enough Blue Shadows, maybe he can do t'other thing." "What are you going to do?" Sybbis sobered, her eyes narrowed. "I not goin' like that other one, that Elrick-Ann, tha's for sure. She at the baths, an' I see what happen to her." She shuddered, remembering the livid scars that crossed Elrick-Ann's face and body. "I hear she get away from the Greens. Nobody knows how. People say even Wally Skins don' know." Sybbis pouted. "That don' matter. What matter is, what that Oracle say. It got to be up to me. He don' know it his fault I not pregnant, and don' look for me to tell him, tha's for sure. I got to get me pregnant some other way. Otherwise it be me the Greens are cuttin' on." Posnia looked apprehensively at the curtained door leading to the Chief's quarters. "Sybby, you can't." Sybbis settled herself, placed a hand across her sister's mouth, and leaned toward her ear. "We go to the baths. Two, three times a week. The men stay outside when we go in. There a back door. You 'member that hag we use to have? She our nursemaid at Bloodrun House. Nelda?""She got sold to--" "! know where she got sold to. She got sold two or three times, but now she got a songhouse on Happy Street. I wrote her a letter askin' her to meet me at the baths nex Fifth-day." Sybbis patted her breast, pulling up a corner of the note so Posy could see it. "You take it when you go." "You want me goin' to a house on Happy Street! Sybby! Why don' you send the letter?" Sybbis spoke between gritted teeth. "Because I don' wan anythin' direc from me to Nelda. Jus in case Little Purple start askin' questions. I don' wan' anything lead from me to her." A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 111 "She won' come." "She will. She use to steal things at Bloodrun, and we both know 'bout it. She goin' to remember that. She goin' to be afraid we tell on her if she don' do what we want. Either you or me." "Why do 1 have to be there?" Posnia whined. "You have to be there, 'cause when the time come, you goin' to preten' to be me!" her sister snapped. Posnia was much tempted to lose the letter. Her prior experience with Sybbis, however, had been that when Sybbis was frustrated, it was Posnia who felt the pain. Therefore, out of apprehension rather than any sense of sisterly helpfulness, Posnia paid one of the bath-girls to deliver the note. The bath-girl, almost as a matter of course, unsealed the missive and read it, hoping for something juicy she could sell to a gang Chief. Finding nothing at all, she delivered the letter out of fear of what might happen to her if she did not. Nelda, in her turn, remembered the Bloodrun girls as fully capable of retaliation, so she took herself to the baths on the following morning, where Posnia drew her into a private room already occupied by Sybbis. "Sit down," Sybbis snapped when the two of them had been left alone. Nelda stiffened, gripping the knife in her pocket. What was this one up to? Sybbis, however, seemed more confiding than threatening. "I got me this problem, Nelly." Nelda sat down and leaned slowly forward, feeling her shoulder gripped by Sybbis's strong hand, hearing Sybbis's whisper, too low to be overheard by anyone. At the end of Sybbis's recital, the brothel mistress shook her head in mingled amusement and apprehension. "What do you want from me?" "I cn come here, then I cn go the back way an' get me to your place, Nelly. Or some other place, nearby. I put on a blackie robe, like you outside women wear, and I go someplace. Someplace, Nelly. You pick it. And you have to find me a cock. A quick one, one guarantee to make baby roosters." "What am I to tell this cock?" "Tell him nothin' 'cep he gets paid. Don' tell him who I am 'less you want your throat slit. I wear a mask when the time come.""Tattoos," Nelda reminded her. "Daddy wan' to make it up to me for sellin' me, so he tell Young Chief he mush' tattoo me. It not in the contrac'." Nelda laughed. "Determined, aren't you'? Well, you always were. How come you let your daddy sell you to that one at all'? The whole city knows Little Purple has no balls at all, no more than a bitty child." "Daddy need the money real bad. His insurance was goin' up and up, 112 Sheri S. Tepper and he los' a big sponsor. One those battery-shops, they decide on the Renegades 'stead of the Bloodruns. Daddy sits me on his lap an' call me his sweet baby an' say he sellin' me to the Purples, but ! should be patient for a little, 'cause Young Chief prob'ly sen' me home again pretty soon." "You think he won't?" "He sen' me in a basket! Or dead! Only reason I tell you is so you understan' why I got to do this, Nelly. I got to get pregnant. Young Chief got to think it his, too. It lucky he so ignorant. He believe anythin' anybody tell him. And his daddy, he wan' to believe it too!" "When's your baby time?" Nelda asked. With infertility rampant, the mechanics of conception were well understood by the women of Fantis. "lXlex Third-day," said Sybbis, who'd kept close track of her timing for months. "That's real soon," said Nelda. "Maybe I can't get everything put together SO soon." "Well, it then or it a month from then," said Sybbis. "One or the other." They talked awhile longer, Sybbis explaining how she would manage this, how she would manage that. Nelda asked for a hefty price, and Sybbis granted it almost without bargaining. "When I get pregnant, he be so puffed up, he give me the whole Purple war chest 'f I ask for it!" Sybbis had her bath and went home with her escort, believing things were well begun. Nelda, for her part, slipped down the mucky alley to her songhouse considering which of the cocks in Fantis she should make aware of this opportunity. Next Third-day was only six days away, and no matter what Sybbis said, this business was not simple! She made a mental list: Whoever she picked must be reasonably like Young Chief Purple in coloring. Since this was a gang-lord's child, his heritage could include ferocity, or at least good physical coordination. Perhaps the assignment would appeal to the Survivors--a supergang made up of men who'd survived battle in the debt-arena. Survivors were the quickest, the strongest--or at least the luckiest--Fantis had to offer. That would be a good heritage for Sybbis's child. Problem was, all the Survivors drank and boasted. The word would get out in no time. No. No, a Survivor was not a good idea. And there were three additional problems, from Nelda's point of view. The first was merely logistical: bringing the cock and hen together secretly and frequently enough to assure success. Sybbis's ideas on that matter were innovative, but they needed methodical refinement. Luckily, Sybbis had a healthy heritage on both sides, giving no reason to doubt her fertility. Which brought up the second problem, one Sybbis hadn't even mentioned. If Nelda wanted no problems later on from Sybbis or the Bloodruns, this A PLAGUE OF ANGELS 113 baby would have to be healthy, which was true of few babies these days. Many had drug-induced deformities. Many had genetic or transmissible disease. Men who frequented the brothels were likely to be tainted with one of the nasties. Ball-rot. Twinky-droop. Blood boils. All of which were sexually transmitted. In addition to these, many men had one of the IDDIs, which were invariably fatal. Sometimes they knew they had it; often they didn't. Sometimes they didn't care. Women who mated with such men usually didn't survive pregnancy. There could be none of that. Not if Nelda wanted to keep her neck intact. No, this one had to be clean, which meant a casual. Someone who only rarely came to a brothel. No, better someone who didn't come there at all. Which brought the third problem to mind: keeping him quiet afterward. And though Sybbis was in one hell of a hurry, Nelda knew she must not be. This matter must be accomplished carefully, she told herself. Very carefully indeed. If it were done, it should be well done so that she could retire to the country on the proceeds. Among the crowd gathered with their market baskets, waiting to go out the gate of the Place of Power to the marketplace beyond, Qualary Finch was an undistinguished member, being a brownish woman, a monotone of skin, hair, and clothing that resembled a carving as much as a living person. As though to increase this likeness, she had transferred into her daily life her workaday pose as furniture: a slightly wooden manner, a stillness of face, and a gracelessness of movement that suggested the unpracticed manipulations of an unpainted marionette. This carryover was understandable inasmuch as she had worked for the Witch for two decades, and it explained the lack of reaction she displayed when greeted by a fortyish, graying, round-faced fellow carrying a market basket of his own. "You're Qualary Finch, aren't you?" She nodded the least possible nod, turning slightly away so as not to encourage him. She did not recognize him as a Domer, which meant he was probably a Gaddir. It wasn't forbidden to speak to Gaddirs, but neither was it discreet. "You don't know me," he went on, undiscouraged. "But I know your brother Bossik. He's told me all about you." Qualary shuffled her feet, more than a little embarrassed. Unlike the rest of the family who had always given at least lip service to the Domer notion that Gaddi House was at best obsolete and at worst up to no good, her older brother Bossik was a renegade, a heretic, a man who actually said that Gaddirs might be decent folk, for all anyone knew to the contrary.