When the Five Moons Rise

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When the Five Moons Rise Page 19

by Jack Vance


  The screen lit once more, showing a bright room with high white walls. Windows opened on sun-dazzled clouds. A man, thin as the first to answer the screen, but somber, with gray hair and oil-black eyes, looked quietly at him. Under the bore of the sharp eyes, Shorn suddenly felt uneasy. Would his disguise hold up?

  “Well, Kurgill, what do you have to tell me?”

  “It’s a face-to-face matter.”

  “Hardly wise,” Dominion commented. “Don’t you trust the privacy of the visiphone? I assure you it’s not tapped.”

  “No. I trust the visiphone. But—I stumbled on something big. I want to be sure I get what’s coming to me.”

  “Oh.” Dominion made no play at misunderstanding. “You’ve been working—how long?”

  “Three days.”

  “And already you expect the great reward it’s in our power to bestow?”

  “It’s worth it. If I’m a Telek, it’s to my advantage to help you. If I’m not—it isn’t. Simple as that.”

  Dominion frowned. “You’re hardly qualified to estimate the value of your information.”

  “Suppose 1 knew of a brain disease which attacks only Teleks. Suppose I knew that inside of a year half or three-quarters of the Teleks would be dead?”

  Dominion’s face changed not a flicker. “Naturally I want to know about it.”

  Shorn made no reply.

  Dominion said slowly, “If such is your information, and we authenticate it, you will be rewarded suitably.”

  Shorn shook his head. “I can’t take the chance. This is my windfall. I’ve got to make sure I get what I’m after; I may not have another chance.”

  Dominion’s mouth tightened, but he said mildly enough, “I understand your viewpoint.”

  “I want to come up to the Pavilion. But a word of warning to you; there’s no harm in clear understanding between friends.”

  “None whatever.”

  “Don’t try drugs on me. I’ve got a cyanide capsule in my mouth. I’ll kill myself before you get something for nothing.”

  Dominion smiled grimly. “Very well, Kurgill. Don’t execute yourself, swallow it by mistake.”

  Shorn smiled likewise. “Only as a gesture of protest. How shall I come up to Glarietta?”

  “Hire a cab.”

  “Openly?”

  “Why not?”

  “You’re not afraid of counterespionage?”

  Dominion’s eyes narrowed; his head tilted slightly. “I thought we discussed that at our previous meeting.”

  Shorn took care not to protest his recollection too vehemently. “Very well, I’ll be right up.”

  Glarietta Pavilion floated high above the ocean, a fairy-book cloud- castle—shining white terraces, ranked towers with red and blue parasol roofs, gardens verdant with foliage and vines trailing down into the air.

  The cab slid down on a landing flat. Shorn alighted. The driver looked at him without favor. “Want me to wait?”

  “No, you can go.” Shorn thought wryly, he’d either be leaving under his own power or not be leaving at all.

  A door slid back before him; he entered a hall walled with russet, orange, purple, and green prisms, glowing in the brilliant upper-air light. In a raised alcove sat a young woman, a beautiful creature with glossy butter-colored hair, a cream-smooth face.

  “Yes, sir?” she asked, impersonally courteous.

  “I want to see Adlari Dominion. I’m Cluche Kurgill.”

  She touched a key below her. “To your right.”

  He climbed a glass staircase which spiraled up a green glass tube, came out in a waiting room walled with gold-shot red rock that had never been quarried on Earth. Dark-green ivy veiled one wall; white columns opposite made a graceful frame into an herbarium full of green light and lush green growth, white and scarlet flowers.

  Shorn hesitated, looked around him. A golden light blinked in the wall, an aperture appeared. Adlari Dominion stood in the opening. “Come in, Kurgill.”

  Shorn stepped into the wash of light, and for a moment lost Dominion in the dazzle. When vision returned, Dominion was lounging in a hammock-chair supported by a glistening rod protruding horizontally from the wall. A red-leather ottoman was the only other article of furniture visible. Three of the walls were transparent glass, giving on a magnificent vista: clouds bathed in sunlight, blue sky, blue sea.

  Dominion pointed to the ottoman. “Have a seat.”

  The ottoman was only a foot high; sitting in it Shorn would be forced to crane his neck to see Dominion.

  “No, thanks. I prefer to stand.” He put a foot on the ottoman, inspected Dominion coolly, eye to eye.

  Dominion said evenly, “What do you have to tell me?”

  Shorn started to speak, but found it impossible to look into the smoldering black eyes and think at the same time. He turned his eyes out the window to a pinnacle of white cloud. “I’ve naturally considered this situation carefully. If you’ve done the same—as I imagine you have—then there’s no point in each of us trying to outwit the other. I have information that’s important, critically important, to a great number of Teleks. I want to trade this information for Telek status.” He glanced toward Dominion whose eyes had never faltered, looked away once more.

  “I’m trying to arrange this statement with absolute clarity, so there’ll be complete understanding between us. First, I want to remind you, I have poison in my mouth. I’ll kill myself before I part with what I know, and I guarantee you’ll never have another chance to learn what I can tell you.” Shorn glanced earnestly sidewise at Dominion. “No hypnotic drug can act fast enough to prevent me from biting open my cyanide—well, enough of that.

  “Second: I can’t trust any verbal or written contract you make; if I accepted such a contract Fd have no means to enforce it. You are in a stronger position. If you deliver your part of the bargain, and I fail to deliver my part, you can still arrange that I be—well, penalized. Therefore, to demonstrate your good faith, you must make delivery before I do.

  “In other words, make me a Telek. Then I’ll tell you what I know.”

  Dominion sat staring at him a full thirty seconds. Then he said softly, “Three days ago Cluche Kurgill was not so rigorous.”

  “Three days ago, Cluche Kurgill did not know what he knows now.”

  Dominion said abruptly, “I cannot argue with your exposition. If I were you, in your position, I would make the same stipulation. However”—he looked Shorn keenly up and down—“three days ago I would have considered you an undesirable adjunct.”

  Shorn assumed a lofty expression. “Judging from the Teleks I have known, I would not have assumed you to be so critical .”

  “You talk past your understanding,” said Dominion crisply. “Do you think that men like Nollinrude, for instance, who was just killed, are typical of the Teleks? Do you think that we are all careless of our destiny?” His mouth twisted contemptuously. “There are forces at work which you do not know of, tremendous patterns laid out for the future. But enough; these are high-level ideas.”

  He floated clear of his chair, lowered to the floor. “I agree to your stipulation. Come with me, we’ll get it over with. You see, we are not inflexible; we can move swiftly and decisively when we wish.”

  He led Shorn back into the green glass tube, jerked himself to the upper landing, watched impatiently while Shorn circled up the steps.

  “Come.” He stepped out on a wide white terrace bathed in afternoon sunlight, went directly to a low table on which rested a cubical block of marble.

  He reached into a cabinet under the table, pulled out a small speaker, spoke into the mesh. “The top two hundred to Glarietta Pavilion.” He turned back to Shorn. “Naturally there’ll be certain matters you must familiarize yourself with.”

  “In order to become a Telek, you mean?”

  “No, no,” snapped Dominion. “That’s a simple mechanical matter. Your perspective must be adjusted; you’ll be living with a new orientation toward life.”
/>   “I had no idea it was quite so involved.”

  “There’s a great deal you don’t understand.” He motioned brusquely. “Now to business. Watch that marble block on the table. Think of it as part of yourself, controlled by your own nervous impulses. No, don’t look around; fix on the marble block. I’ll stand here.” He took a place near the table. “When I point to the right, move it to the right. Mind now, the cube is part of your organism, part of your flesh, like your hands and feet.”

  There was murmuring and a rustle behind Shorn; obedient to Dominion he fastened his eyes on the cube.

  “Now.” Dominion pointed to the left.

  Shorn willed the cube to the left.

  “The cube is part of you,” said Dominion. “Your own body.”

  Shorn felt a cool tremor at his skin. The cube moved to the left.

  Dominion pointed to the right. Shorn willed the cube to the right. The tingling increased. It was as if he were gradually finding himself immersed in cool carbonated water.

  Left. Right. Left. Right. The cube seemed to be nearer to him, though he had not moved. As near as his own hand. His mind seemed to break through a tough sphincter into a new medium, cool and

  Telek

  wide; he saw the world in a sudden new identity, something part of himself.

  Dominion stepped away from the table; Shorn was hardly conscious that he no longer made directive gestures. He moved the cube right, left, raised it six feet into the air, twenty feet, sent it circling high around the sky. As he followed it with his eyes, he became aware of Teleks standing silently behind him, watching expressionlessly.

  He brought the cube back to the table. Now he knew how to do it. He lifted himself into the air, moved across the terrace, set himself down. When he looked around the Teleks had gone.

  Dominion wore a cool smile. “You take hold with great ease.”

  “It seems natural enough. What is the function of the others, the Teleks behind on the terrace?”

  Dominion shrugged. “We know little of the actual mechanism. At the beginning, of course, I helped you move the cube, as did the others. Gradually we let our minds rest, and you did it all.”

  Shorn stretched. “I feel myself the center, the hub, of everything—as far as I can see.”

  Dominion nodded without interest. “Now—come with me.” He sped through the air. Shorn followed, exulting in his new power and freedom. Dominion paused by the comer of the terrace, glanced over his shoulder. Shorn saw his face in the fore-shortened angle: white, rather pinched features, eyes subtly tilted, brows drawn down, mouth subtly down-curv- ing. Shorn’s elation gave way to sudden wariness. Dominion had arranged the telekinetic indoctrination with a peculiar facility. The easiest way to get the desired information, certainly; but was Dominion sufficiently free from vindictiveness to accept defeat? Shorn considered the expression he had surprised on Dominion’s face.

  It was a mistake to assume that any man, Telek or not, would accept with good grace the terms dictated by a paid turncoat.

  Dominion would restrain himself until he learned what Shorn could tell him; then—and then?

  Shorn slowed his motion. How could Dominion arrange a moment of gloating before he finally administered the coup de grace ? Poison seemed most likely. Shorn grinned. Dominion would consider it beautifully just if Shorn could be killed with his own poison. A sharp blow or pressure under the jaw would break the capsule in his tooth.

  Somehow Dominion would manage.

  They entered a great echoing hall, suffused with green-yellow light that entered through the panes in the high-vaulted dome. The floor was silvershot marble; dark-green foliage grew in formal raised boxes. The air was fresh and odorous with the scent of leaves.

  Dominion crossed without pause. Shorn halted halfway across.

  Dominion turned his head. “Come.”

  “Where?”

  Dominion’s mouth slowly bent into a grimace that was unmistakably dangerous. “Where we can talk.”

  “We can talk here. I can tell you what I want to tell you in ten seconds. Or if you like, I’ll take you to the source of the danger.”

  “Very well,” said Dominion. “Suppose you reveal the nature of the threat against the Teleks. A brain disease, you said?”

  “No. I used the idea as a figure of speech. The danger I refer to is more cataclysmic than a disease. Let’s go out in the open air. I feel constricted.” He grinned at Dominion.

  Dominion drew in a deep breath. It must infuriate him, thought Shorn, to be commanded and forced to obey a common man and a traitor to boot. Shorn made a careless gesture. “I intend to keep my part of the bargain; let’s have no misunderstanding there. However—I want to escape with my winnings, if you understand me.”

  “I understand you,” said Dominion. “I understand you very well.” He made an internal adjustment, managed to appear almost genial. “However, perhaps you misjudge my motives. You are a Telek now; we conduct ourselves by a strict code of behavior which you must learn.”

  Shorn put on a face as gracious as Dominion’s. “I suggest then that we hold our conference down on Earth.”

  Dominion pursed his lips. “You must acclimate yourself to Telek surroundings—think, act, like a Telek.”

  “In due time,” said Shorn. “At the moment I’m rather confused; the sense of power comes as a great intoxication.”

  “It apparently has not affected your capacity for caution,” Dominion observed dryly.

  “I suggest that we at least go out into the open, where we can talk at leisure.”

  Dominion sighed. “Very well.”

  VI

  Laurie went restlessly to the dispenser, drew tea for herself, coffee for Circumbright. “I just can’t seem to sit still_”

  Circumbright inspected the pale face with scientific objectivity. If Laurie condescended to even the slightest artifice or coquetry, he thought, she would become a creature of tremendous charm. He watched her appreciatively as she went to the window, looked up into the sky.

  Nothing to see but reflected glow; nothing to hear but the hum of far traffic.

  She returned to the couch. “Have you told Doctor Kurgill...of Cluche?”

  Circumbright stirred his tea. “Naturally I couldn’t tell him the truth.”

  “No.” Laurie looked off into space. She shuddered. “I’ve never been so nervous before. Suppose—” her forebodings could find no words.

  “You’re very fond of Shorn, aren’t you?”

  The quick look, the upward flash of her eyes, was enough.

  They sat in silence.

  “Sh,” said Laurie. “I think he’s coming.”

  Circumbright said nothing.

  Laurie rose to her feet. They both watched the door latch. It moved. The door slid back. The hall was empty.

  Laurie gasped in something like terror. There came a tapping at the window.

  They wheeled. Shorn was outside, floating in the air.

  For a moment they stood paralyzed. Shorn rapped with his knuckles; they saw his mouth form the words, “Let me in.”

  Laurie walked stiffly to the window, swung it open. Shorn jumped down into the room.

  “Why did you scare us like that?” she asked indignantly.

  “I’m proud of myself. I wanted to demonstrate my new abilities.” He drew himself a cup of coffee. “I guess you’ll want to hear my adventures.”

  “Of course!”

  He sat down at the table and described his visit to Glarietta Pavilion.

  Circumbright listened placidly. “And now what?”

  “And now—you’ve got a Telek to experiment on. Unless Dominion conceives a long-distance method of killing me. He’s spending a restless night, I should imagine.”

  Circumbright grunted.

  “First,” said Shorn, “they put a bug on me. I expected it. They knew I expected it. I got rid of it in the Beaux-Arts Museum. Then I began thinking, since they would expect me to dodge the bug and feel secure after I’d d
one so, no doubt they had a way to locate me again. Tracker material sprayed on my clothes, fluorescent in a nonvisual frequency. I threw away Cluche’s clothes, which 1 didn’t like in the first place, washed in three changes of solvicine and water, disposed of the red wig. Cluche Kurgill has disappeared. By the way, where is Cluche’s body?”

  “Safe.”

  “We can let it be found tomorrow morning. With a sign on him reading. ‘I am a Telek spy.’ Dominion will certainly hear of it; he’ll think I’m dead, and that will be one problem the less.”

  “Good idea.”

  “But poor old Doctor Kurgill,” remonstrated Laurie.

  “He’ll never believe such a note.”

  “No.. .1 suppose not.” She looked Shorn over from head to feet. “Do you feel different from before?”

  “I feel as if all of creation were part of me. Identification with the cosmos, I guess you’d call it.”

  “But how does it work?”

  Shorn deliberated. “I’m really not sure. I can move the chair the same way I move my arm, with about the same effort.”

  “Evidently,” said Circumbright, “Geskamp had told them nothing of the mitrox under the stadium.”

  “They never asked him. It was beyond their imagination that we could conceive such an atrocity.” Shorn laughed. “Dominion was completely flabbergasted. Bowled over. For a few minutes I think he was grateful to me.”

  “And then?”

  “And then, I suppose he remembered his resentment, and began plotting how best to kill me. But I told him nothing until we were in the open air; any weapon he held I could protect myself from. A bullet I could think aside, even back at him; a heat-gun I could deflect.”

  “Suppose his will on the gun and your will clashed?” Circumbright asked mildly.

  “I don’t know what would happen. Perhaps nothing. Like a man vacillating between two impulses. Or perhaps the clash and the subsequent lack of reaction would invalidate both our confidence, and down we’d fall into the ocean. Because now we were standing on nothing, a thousand feet over the ocean.”

  “Weren’t you afraid, Will?” asked Laurie.

  “At first—yes. But a person becomes accustomed to the sensation very quickly. It’s a thing we’ve all experienced in our dreams. Perhaps it’s only a trifling aberration that stands in the way of telekinesis for everyone.”

 

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