Doomsman - the Theif of Thoth

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Doomsman - the Theif of Thoth Page 4

by Harlan Ellison


  back into the pouch. Then he put his eye up to the hole.

  It was dim inside, but a brazier was flickering a spastic

  light across the walls and ceiling.

  His search for Grice was ended.

  Grice was inside. What was left of him.

  Juanito had seen some peculiar and terrible things in

  his years at the School. He had seen men crack from

  strain, and he had seen stereoplays of torture and death;

  he had witnessed and practiced many forms of pain infliction, he had learned how to steel himself against the onslaught of many enemies. But the Jukchus had their

  own particular way of doing it

  For the first time since he could remember, he was ill.

  Deathly ill. Violently ill, against the snow and the side of

  the hutch, in dry then slimey heaves. And when it bad

  passed, his bead swam with waves of nausea,

  DOOMS MAN

  He lay there, his face pressed to the clean snow on the

  other side of him, for the first time in his life lost in fear

  and fascination of death.

  He took some snow in his mouth, and more on his feverish forehead. Then he slumped against the side of the hutch and allowed his eyes to close. In the center of this

  enemy village, with the remnants of a Ruskie-Chink horror battalion on every side, he slid into reverie.

  He had to do it. Madness lay waiting a second away.

  After a while, he was able to look through the hole

  again. He had been wrong; Grice was not alone. There

  were four others there, and from what little was left of

  their clothing, he could see they had been members of the

  Hi Guard, probably sent out to scout for the village and

  captured by the Jukchus.

  The half breeds were slicing them up.

  It was a peculiar execution, for execution it had to be.

  The men had been hung from the ceiling to almost floor

  level, with ropes under their armpits and thighs. They

  were, in effect, in a eat's cradle. Other bonds held them in

  place, and each warrior who came through used his

  scimitarlike longknife with skill and accuracy. It was not

  a question of killing, but rather of maintaining life as long

  ·

  as possible.

  The Jukchus were a resourceful band, and skilled in

  this form of death, for one of the men still hanging-like

  so much beef on a hook-was without legs or arms, half

  his torso sliced away, and his entrails dangling. Yet he

  lived.

  They all lived.

  Grice lived.

  Though his eyes were gone, his feet were severed from

  his body, and the ropes under his armpits were held up

  by strips of cloth tied to the loops. For he had no arms.

  The prisoners uttered not a sound; it was apparent they

  had been drugged somehow. Then, as Juanita stared

  through the burnhole in the hutch's wall, he saw Grice's

  eyes flicker open, and he knew the man was not drugged

  after all. It was more a case of shock, insensitivity at the

  nerve ends, at this stage of dismemberment. But Grice

  was alive!

  And Juanito had no way of getting to him.

  DOOMSMAN

  Even as the assassin watched, warriors passed before

  him, making their terrible movements on the five things

  that had once been men, hanging from the hutch's ceiling.

  A lean, yellow-weathered Jukchu took a stance, swung

  his longknife around his head as though it were a cat by

  its tail, and sliced a chunk of flesh from the body on the

  end of the line. The swish and plop sounds came to Juanito, and he knew he must act quickly. There was no telling how long this torture had been going on-from the looks of it, of the dried blood on the ground beneath each

  carcass, for quite some time. It was strictly chance that he

  had gotten here before Grice was completely cut to

  shreds.

  The possibility of obtaining information from the man

  was even slight; but any further waiting would result in

  loss of the one link to the man in the N. Chicago Chambers. Juanito thought swiftly, clearly.

  He had to get that sliced hulk out of there, and get it

  alone for a few moments. He had to make Grice talk. But

  would-or could-Grice talk? Was he lost in a world of

  shock and half life? Juanito had to take the chance.

  He crawled away from the hutch, toward the outer ring

  of light the torches threw. He saw one Jukchu warrior

  leaning against a gnarled, white stump of what had once

  been a hardy bush. The Jukchu was drinking from a

  leather flasklike bag, and wiping his frozen mustache with

  gloved hand.

  , Juanito belly-crawled-just outside the half breed's

  line of vision-till he was directly behind the man. Then

  he got to one knee, drew his vibro-blade . . .

  And in one fluid movement swarmed over the man

  driving the shuddering whisper-thin death instrument into

  the Jukchu's neck. The blade severed the man's vocal

  cords at the instant before the blade pierced upward into

  the brain. He died instantly, slumping back against Juanito.

  The assassin dragged the man into the shadows, and

  stripped him of his bulky, animal hide clothing. Then a

  sparing application of dirt and skin-tinctures from his

  pouch, the collodin scar to emulate that on the Jukchu's

  cheek, a bit of plastoid material in imitation of the mous-

  DOOMSMAN

  tache, and Juanito emerged from the shadows a f�w minlater the perfect replica of the dead half-breed.

  With little difficulty Juanito managed to get into the

  nne of circling warriors. For an instant he thought he

  might have trouble, for one of the Jukchus did not care

  for the crowding, but Juanito mumbled a throaty nothing

  at the man, and brandished his own longknife. The other

  fell back a step and placated the apparently angered

  Juanita with mild blubberings.

  Juanita paid no attention to the man thereafter, but advanced as the line advanced.

  The group moved swiftly-for how long did it take to

  slash lick and clean a longknife?

  In a few minutes he was at the open door of the rude

  hutch, and still his plan was not wholly formed. Juanita

  was relying on instinct and reflexes to carry him. And

  then he was inside. The hutch smelled terrible.

  The odor of musky incense mingled darkly with the

  unell of dried blood, and worse, the smell of freshly

  slaughtered meat Juanita held his breath aud then let it

  out slowly.

  He saw a tall Jukchu with weathered yellow skin and a

  peaked miter standing beside the hanging horrors. After

  each warrior took his swing, the mitered Jukchu would

  apply a long stick with a slimey substance on it to the

  wound; he was caulking the blood off. That explained

  why the Hi Guards and Grice had not long since died of

  blood loss.

  Juanita's longknife was at the ready, as the man before

  him took a cut from the cheek of the man beside Grice.

  Then Juanita's reflexes were in the ascendant, and he

  knew the only way to get Grice away from here. The brazier that burned fitfully beside the yellow-slonned Jukchu.

  As gaily as possible, for such a happy occ
asion as this

  was to the Jukchus, he stepped forward Awkwardly.

  Clumsily. His shoulder caught the back of the man ahead,

  busy licking his longknife,

  The man stumbled ahead, throwing luanitoealculatedly---ofl-balance. Juanito went c&eel!J.i.ng mto the mitered Jukchu who threw him back in &df-defc:nse. Juamto went into the brazier, flailing it away from himself The fire caught in the straw on the f!oor, on the bound

  DOOMSMAN

  sheaves of wall matter, on the sticky substance coating

  the wood bundles, on the Jakchu's clothing. In a second

  the inside of the hutch was an inferno.

  Flames licked greedily up the bodies hung from the

  ceiling, and the last lights of life died in the tortured eyes

  of the slashed hulks. Flames bit at the air, and filled the

  hutch with smoke as the ceiling caught fire. A great blast

  of heat smashed at J uanito, and he leaped toward the

  swinging raw meat that was Griceo Even as he dodged

  forward-as the mitered Jukchu went screaming from the

  place, his hair and cape afire-the warrior behind him

  was shoving the line of men back.

  "Out! Out!" Juanita kept shouting, and a guttural cry

  as urgent as his own was picked up by the others.

  In an instant, in the tune it took for a spider's leg to

  wither, Juanita had severed the ropes holding up the

  torso of the half-dead Grice. He beat out the flames and

  threw himself--clutching the part body to his chest like a

  baby-through the rear of the flaming hutch.

  The snow was aflame with ruby shadows, dancing in a

  mad tune to the sounds of the Alaskan night. The wind

  roared down the hills, and the snow swirled crazily, and a

  lunatic moon gibbered in the trees as Juanita beat back

  through the wilderness, away from the Jukchu village,

  carrymg his terrible burden.

  Grice had to live!

  He had to name the man

  It was a short life, and ugly But he would know that

  name, Or Grice would yet learn what torture was.

  Somewhere back in the whiteness, under a cliff, in a

  shallow defile that might someday become a cave, Grice

  died. But first he talked.

  There was not much he could say, in his condition, but

  when Juamto laid the appendageless hulk on the snow,

  cuwred and swathed in animal hide clothing from the

  dead Jukchu, Grice's eyes flickered open, A part of his

  bead was gone, and his hair had been burned off complete!y Suoty matks coated his eyelids and forehead. Had he not been stout, there would have been less of him

  than Juanito h'ad saved.

  DOOMS MAN

  e-M-"" Grice managed to mouth, when he looked up

  at Juanita Montoya. His lips were blood-caked and

  cracked from no water. His face twitched uncontrollably,

  and what might have been a smile on anyone else showed

  as a death's-head grin on his white, exhausted features.

  "Hello, Grice," Juanita said in Speak.

  Grice slowly-through an arc of less than an inchnodded his head. His voice came from the black bottom of the sea as he replied in Speak. "H-hello, Montoya.

  Yuh-yuh-yoo f-found me, bah?"

  Juanita acknowledged with a soft, mournful nod. Grice

  gave the terrible smile again. "Y ou-y-y-you should h-have

  gotten h-h-here t

  . " he broke into a fit of shallow

  •

  .

  coughing and blood spattered against the snow, black and

  warm. His eyes closed and for a second Juanita thought

  he had lost the link to Eskalyo. Then Grice opened his

  eyes again and finished his sentence. "-t-two weeks 'go,

  fella

  th-that'�; when they s-st-strung m-me up. Oth­

  .

  ,

  •

  ers'd been uh-uhp f-for a week bub-before I got there . . .

  "

  "Try not to talk, Grice," Juanita soothed the dying

  shell. He wanted him to talk only one phrase, and did not

  want Grice to waste his breath on anything else.

  "They caught you spying out the village, right?" Juanita asked. Grice nodded yes. "Some kind of a ceremony for captured enemies, was that it?" Again the affirmative

  nod. "Grice, I got you out of there to ask you-"

  Grice interrupted, and a flash of fire ran wild in his

  dying eyes. "Yoo, yuh-you got m-me out there so I'd tell

  y'how t-tuh find-" a fit of coughing severed the words,

  but he plunged on through coughs and blood,

  "-th'm-man in Noo Chii, in't th-that it, Montoy-y-a

  e

  , " His shuddering added · the question mark.

  ..

  Juanita nodded solemnly. "I followed half across

  AmericaState, Grice. It's important to me, more important to me than anything in the world, that I find Eskalyo. 1-1 found out he's my-my-"

  He did not need to finish the sentence. Grice smiled an

  arrogant smile and said softly, in a whisper, "Your father."

  Iuanito's dark eyes opened wider. "How did you-"

  Grice smiled again. This time insipidly. "I have you to

  thank for my being here, Montoya," he said, and there

  DOOMSMAN

  was no slightest trace of pain or halting in his voice. The

  clarity before death? Juanita hastened him to speak on.

  "You don't th-think you fooled them at the School, do

  you, Montoya? No one gets his assignment changed just

  because he goes in to see a Probesman. They changed

  you because they wanted you to find me-and think you

  were doing something b1g and secret. They planted me,

  Montoya! They took me out of classes and planted me at

  that Combats Meet.

  "I'm not from Argentina

  .

  I'm from Oklahoma

  •

  •

  . but they wanted you to get interested in Eskalyo.

  •

  •

  They revived those memories of him, and wanted you to

  think you were outwitting the Seekers and the Probesmen

  and AmericaState and all of them; then when they made

  sure you found Eskalyo, they were going to have you kill

  him-whether you wanted to or not!"

  His face was drained. There was only a scrap of life

  left to be eaten in him. How he managed to go on with

  such determination, Juanita could not understand.

  "So you see, Montoya, you are the reason I'm here. If

  they hadn't wanted to get you to assassinate Eskalyo, and

  if it hadn't been imperative that you think you were on

  your own, I would have had a soft berth in Oklahoma

  not cut to nothing out here . . .

  " He began to cry.

  •

  .

  .

  "The name!" Juanita pleaded, not yet convinced of the

  truth of what Grice had said .

  for how could the

  .

  •

  School make him kill his father if he did not want to do

  it? He did not believe

  but he had to know that

  .

  •

  •

  .

  name.

  "Y-ysss," Grice trembled. "The man's n-name is Tedus

  Nur

  he is head, huh-head executioner-f-fuh-field

  •

  •

  •

  div

  divishn , . . N. Chicago C
hambers . . .

  "

  .

  •

  •

  The portly assassm's face started to pale toward milk

  white. Juanita bent low and mumbled, "!-I'm sorry,

  Grice

  I'm sorry this had to happen because of me-"

  .

  .

  •

  But Grice did not die then

  He managed to laugh once more.

  A round, full laugh, that was edged with sorrow.

  "D-don't b-b-e sorry for muh-me, Mont-t-, don't b-be

  sorry for m-me. I'm gettin' away easy . . . I f-f-feel sorry

  for yooo . .

  they got hell p-p-planned fo-for you,

  •

  Monnnnn-"

  DOOMSMAN

  Then he died.

  Oddly enough, Juanito was afraid. There had been an

  obvious note of pity in Grice's voice. Now why would he

  pity Juanito?

  It was difficult digging the snow for a grave.

  Juanita believed. Had he not been able to escape the

  Hi Guard territory, had the sort of restrictions he had

  been led to believe AmericaState imposed to keep men in

  line, been imposed on him to keep him from leaving

  Alaska, he might have thought Grice was delirious. Or

  lying. But there had been no difficulty escaping.

  One dark night after he had returned to the Hi Guard

  GHQ and reported Grice's death, the fate of the other

  missing Hi Guards and the destruction of the Jukchu

  chieftain-for that had been the mitered Jukchu in the

  hutch-he slipped out of the GHQ and found-

  A jetcopter idling and ready for someone absent.

  He took the opportunity, and stole the copter, not

  realizing til he was four thousand miles away that the

  ship had been planted, and this was probably what the

  Seekers and AmericaState wanted. The realization came

  to him suddenly, shockingly, and he was quick to take

  remedial steps.

  He crash dived the jetcopter into the center of Lake

  Michigan.

  His skintite was equipped to withstand the temperatures of Lake Michigan in the Fall, but it was not a substitute for a life belt. He had to swim for it.

  . Just within the space of time left to Juanita to stroke,

  he was sighted by a CbiTroop cutter which bleeped in on

  him and scooped him from the water.

  They did not question his story of having been jaunting

 

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