The Corridors of Time

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The Corridors of Time Page 6

by Poul Anderson


  Auri flushed and looked away. They continued in silence.

  And the silence lengthened. Gradually Lockridge grew aware of that. Ordinarily, this near the village, there was plenty of noise: children shouting at their games, fishermen hailing the shore as they approached, housewives gossiping, perhaps the triumphant song of hunters who had bagged an elk. But he turned right and paddled up the cove between the narrowing wooden banks, and no human voice reached him. He glanced at Auri. Maybe she knew what was afoot. She sat chin in hand, gazing at him, oblivious to everything else. He hadn’t the heart to speak. Instead, he sent the canoe forward as fast as he was able.

  Avildaro came in sight. Under the ancient shaw at its back, it was a cluster of sod-roofed wattle huts around the Long House of ceremony, which was a more elaborate half-timbered peat structure. Boats were drawn onto the beach, where nets dried on poles. Several hundred yards off stood the kitchen midden. The Tenil Orugaray no longer lived at the very foot of that mound of oyster shells, bones, and other trash, as their ancestors had done; but they carried the offal there, for the half-tame pigs to eat, and the site was veiled with flies.

  Auri came out of her trance. The clear brow wrinkled. ‘But no one is about!’ she said.

  ‘There must be someone in the Long House,’ Lockridge answered. Smoke curled from the venthole in its roof. ‘We had better go see.’ He was glad of the Webley at his hip.

  He pulled the canoe ashore, with the girl’s help, and made fast. Her hand stole into his as they entered the village. Shadows darkened the dusty paths between huts, and the air seemed suddenly cold. ‘What does this mean?’ she begged of him.

  ‘If you don’t know—’ He lengthened his stride.

  Noise certainly buzzed from the hall. Two young men stood guard outside. ‘Here they come!’ one of them shouted. Both dipped their spears to Lockridge.

  He went through the skin-curtained door with Auri. His eyes needed a while to adapt to the gloom within; there were no windows, and the smoke that didn’t escape stung. The fire in the central pit was holy, never allowed to go out. (Like most primitive customs, that had a practical basis. Fires were never easy to start before matches were invented, and anyone might come here to light a brand.) It had been stoked up until the flames danced and crackled, throwing uneasy flickers across sooted walls and pillars roughly hewn with magical symbols. The whole population was crowded in: some four hundred men, women, and children squatting on the dirt floor, mumbling to each other.

  Echegon and his chief councilors stood near the fire with Storm. When Lockridge saw her, tall and arrogant, he forgot about Auri and went to her. ‘What’s wrong?’ he asked.

  ‘The Yuthoaz are coming,’ she said.

  He spent a minute assimilating what the diaglossa associated with that name. The Battle Ax people; the northward-thrusting edge of that huge wave, more cultural than racial, of Indo-European-speaking warriors which had been spreading from southern Russia in the past century or two. Elsewhere they were destined to topple civilizations: India, Crete, Hatti, Greece would go down in ruin before them, and their languages and religions and ways of life would shape all Europe. But hitherto, in sparsely populated Scandinavia, there had not been great conflict between the native hunters, fishers, and farmers, and the chariot-driving immigrant herdsmen.

  Still; Avildaro had heard of bloody clashes to the east.

  Echegon hugged Auri to him for a moment before he said: ‘I had not too much fear for you under Malcom’s protection. But I thank Her that you are back.’ The strong, bearded visage turned to Lockridge. ‘Today,’ he said, ‘men hunting southward hastened home with word that the Yuthoaz are moving against us and will be here tomorrow. They are plainly a war band, nothing but armed men, and Avildaro is the first village on their way. What have we done to offend them or the gods?’

  Lockridge glanced at Storm. ‘Well,’ he said in English, ‘I kind of hate to use our weapons on those poor devils, but if we’ve got to—’

  She shook her head. ‘No. The energies might be detected. Or, at least, the story might reach Ranger agents and alert them to us. Best that you and I take refuge elsewhere.’

  ‘What? But – but —’

  ‘Remember,’ she said, ‘time is immutable. Since this place survives a hundred years from now, quite likely the natives will repel the attack tomorrow.’

  He could not break free of her eyes; but Auri’s were on him too, and Echegon’s, and his boatmates’ and girl friends’ and the flintsmith’s and everyone’s. He squared his shoulders. ‘Maybe they didn’t, either,’ he said. ‘Maybe they’re conquered underlings in the future, or would be except for us. I’m stay-in’.’

  ‘You dare —’ Storm checked herself. A moment she stood taut and still. Then she smiled, reached out and stroked his cheek. ‘I might have known,’ she said. ‘Very well, I shall stay too.’

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  They came west across the meadows, the oak forest on their left, and the men of Avildaro stood to meet them. They numbered perhaps a hundred in all, with ten chariots, the rest loping on foot: no more than their opponents. When first he squinted through the brilliant noontide, Lockridge could hardly believe that these were the dreaded men of the Battle Ax.

  As they neared, he studied one who was typical. In body the warrior was not very different from the Tenil Orugaray: somewhat shorter and stockier, his brown hair twisted into a queue and his beard into a fork, his countenance more Central European than Russian in its beak-nosed harshness. He wore a jerkin and knee-length skirt of leather, a clan symbol burned in, carried a round bullhide shield painted with the fylfot, and had for weapons a flint dagger and a beautifully fashioned stone ax. His lips were drawn wide in carnivore anticipation.

  The chariot he followed, evidently his chieftain’s, was a light two-wheeled affair of wood and wicker, pulled by four shaggy little horses. A young boy, unarmed and clad merely in a loincloth, guided them. Behind him stood the master: bigger than most, wielding an ax so long and heavy it was a halberd, with two spears racked ready to hand. The chief had a helmet, corselet, and greaves of reinforced leather; a short bronze sword hung at his waist, a faded cloak of linen from the South fluttered off his shoulders, and a necklace of massy gold flashed beneath his shaggy chin.

  Such were the Yuthoaz. When they saw the uneven line of fishermen, they slowed their pace. Then the lead charioteer winded a bison horn, the troop howled wolfish war cries, and the horses thudded into gallop. After them banged the wagons, leaped the yelping footmen, boomed the axes on drum-head shields.

  Echegon’s gaze pleaded with Storm and Lockridge. ‘Now?’ he asked.

  ‘A little longer. Let them get close.’ Storm shaded her eyes and peered. ‘Something about him in the rear – the others block my view —’

  Lockridge could sense the tension at his back: sighs and mutters, feet that shifted, the acrid stink of sweat. Those were not cowards who waited to guard their homes. But the enemy was equipped and trained for war; and even to him, who had known tanks, the charge of the chariots grew terrifying as they swelled before his eyes.

  He brought up his rifle. The stock was cool and hard along his cheek. Storm had grudgingly agreed to let the twentieth-century guns be used today. And perhaps the fact they were about to witness lightnings, even on their own behalf, stretched thin the courage of the Tenil Orugaray.

  ‘Better let me start shootin’,’ he said in English.

  ‘Not yet!’ Storm spoke so sharply, above the racket, that he gave her a glance. The feline eyes were narrowed, the teeth revealed, and a hand rested on the energy pistol she had said she would not employ. ‘I have to see that one man first.’

  The charioteer in the van lifted his ax and swept it down again. Archers and slingers at the rear of the Yuthoaz halted, their weapons leaped clear, stones and flintheaded arrows whistled toward the seafolk.

  ‘Shoot!’ Echegon bellowed. He need not have done so. A snarl of defiance and a ragged volley lifted from his line.r />
  At this range, no harm was done. Lockridge saw a missile or two thunk against a shield. But the Yuthoaz were in full career. They’d be on him in another minute. He could make out the flared nostrils and white-rimmed eyes of the nearest horses, blowing manes, flickering whips, a beardless driver and the savage grin that split the beard behind, an ax upraised whose stone gleamed like metal. ‘To hell with this!’ he cried. ‘I want ’em to know what hit ’em!’

  He got that chieftain in his sights and squeezed the trigger. The gun kicked back with a solidity that strengthened his soul. Its bang was lost in yells, hoofbeats, squeal of axles and rattle of wheels. But the target flung his arms wide and fell to earth. The halberd soared through an arc. The grass hid man and weapon alike.

  The boy reined in, drop-jawed and scared. Lockridge realized at once that he needn’t kill humans, swung around and went for the next team of horses. Crack! Crack! One animal per bunch would do, to put a wagon out of commission. A stone glanced off the gun barrel, which rang. But the second chariot went over, harness tangled, tongue snapped across, left wheel demolished in the wreck. The live horses reared and neighed their fear.

  Lockridge saw the charge waver. Two or three more of those battle cars stopped, and the invaders would bolt. He stepped forward to be in plain sight, his blood too much athrum for him to care about arrows, and let the sun flash off his metal.

  The sun itself struck him.

  Thunder exploded in his skull. Blinded, shattered, he whirled into night.

  Awareness returned with a hurricane of anguish. Light-spots still clouded his vision. Through screams, whinnies, rumbling and booming, he heard the shout: ‘Forward, Yuthoaz! Forward with Sky Father!’

  It was in a language the diaglossa knew, but not the Tenil Orugaray.

  He groped to hands and knees. The first thing he saw was his rifle, half melted on the ground. That destruction had absorbed most of the energy beam. The cartridges had not gone off in the clip, nor had he himself suffered worse than a vicious burn on face and chest. But fire was in his skin. He could not think for the torment.

  A dead man lay nearby. Little remained of the features except charred meat and bone. The copper band on one arm identified Echegon.

  Storm stood close by. Her own weapon was out to make a shield. Brief rainbow fountains of flame played around her. The enemy beam passed on, to sickle down three young men who had gone sealing with Lockridge.

  The Yuthoaz roared! In one tide, they swept over the villagers. Lockridge saw a son of Echegon – unmistakable, that countenance and that doggedness – ground his spear as if the horses earthquaking down upon him were a wild boar. Their driver swerved them. The chariot clattered past. The warrior who stood in it swung his ax with dreadful skill. Brains spurted. Echegon’s son fell by his father. The Yutho hooted mirth, chopped on the other side at someone Lockridge couldn’t see, hurled a spear at an archer, and was gone by.

  Elsewhere, the village men were in flight. Panic had them, and they wailed as they ran into the forest. Pursuit ended there. The Yuthoaz, whose patron gods were in the sky, did not like those rustling twilit reaches. They turned back to dispatch and scalp any wounded of their enemy.

  One chariot rushed toward Storm. Her energy shield made her lioness form shimmer; in Lockridge’s delirium it was as if he watched a myth. He had the Webley too. He fumbled for it, but consciousness left him before he got the weapon loose. His last sight was of the one who stood back of the driver – no Yutho – a man beardless and white-skinned, immensely tall, in a hooded black cloak that flapped after him like wings —

  Lockridge awoke slowly. For a while he was content to lie on the earth and know he was free from pain. Piece by piece, there came to him what had happened. When he heard a woman scream, he opened his eyes and sat bolt upright.

  The sun was down, but through the doorway of the hut where he was, past the shore and the bloodily shining Lim-fjord, he glimpsed clouds still lit. The single room here had been stripped of its poor possessions and the entrance was barred with branches lashed together and fastened to the doorposts by thongs. Beyond, two Yuthoaz stood guard. One kept glancing inside and fingering a sprig of mistletoe against witchcraft. His mate’s eyes rested enviously on a pair of warriors who drove several cows along the beach. Elsewhere was tumult, deep-throated male shouts and guffaws, tramp of horses and clatter of wheels, while the conquered keened their grief.

  ‘How are you, Malcolm?’

  Lockridge twisted his head around. Storm Darroway knelt beside him. He could see her as little more than another shadow in the murky cabin, but he caught the fragrance of her hair, her hands moved softly across him, and she sounded more anxious than he had ever heard her before.

  ‘Alive … I reckon.’ He touched fingers to face and breast, where some grease had been smeared. ‘Doesn’t hurt. I – I actually feel rested.’

  ‘You were lucky that Brann had antishock drug and enzymatic ointment with him, and decided to save you,’ Storm said. ‘Your burns will be healed tomorrow.’ She paused, then – her tone might almost have been Auri’s; ‘So I am also lucky.’

  ‘What’s goin’ on out there?’

  ‘The Yuthoaz are plundering Avildaro.’

  ‘Women – kids – no!’ Lockridge struggled to stand.

  She pulled him down. ‘Save your strength.’

  ‘But those devils —’

  She said with a touch of her old sharpness: ‘At the moment, your female friends do not suffer greatly. Remember the local mores.’ Empathy returned. ‘But of course they mourn for those they love, dead or fled, and they will be slaves….No, wait. This isn’t the South. A barbarian’s slave does not live so very differently from the barbarian himself. She suffers – unfreedom, yes, homesickness, the fact that no woman whatsoever has the respect among the Indo-Europeans that she had in this place. But spare your pity for later. You and I are in worse trouble than your little companion of yesterday.’

  ‘M-m-m, okay.’ He subsided. ‘What went wrong?’

  She moved around to sit on the floor in front of him, hugged her knees, and let the breath whistle out between her lips. ‘I was a slogg,’ she said bitterly. ‘I never imagined Brann was in this age. He organized the attack, that is obvious.’

  He felt the shaken self-accusation in her, reached out and said, ‘You couldn’t have known.’

  Her fingers hugged his. They went limp again, and she said in a winter voice: ‘There are no excuses for a Warden who fails. There is only the failure.’

  Because that was the code of the service whose uniform he had worn, he thought suddenly that he understood her and they had become one. He drew her to him as he might have drawn his sister in her sorrow, and she laid her head on his shoulder and clung tight.

  After a while, when darkness was nigh absolute, she pulled herself gently free and breathed. ‘Thank you.’ They sat side by side now, hands clasped.

  She said low and fast: ‘You must realize the numbers in this war through time are not large. With powers such as a single person may wield, they cannot be. Brann is – you have no word. A crucial figure. Though he must take the field himself, because so few are able, he is a commander, a maker of planet-shaking decisions, a … king. And I am as great a prize. And he has me.

  ‘I do not know how he learned where and when I was. I cannot imagine. If he could not find me in your century, how could he hound me down to this forgotten moment? It frightens me, Malcolm.’ Her clasp was cold and close around his. ‘What contortion in time itself has he made?

  ‘He is here alone. But no more were needed. I think he must have come out of the tunnel under the dolmen earlier than we did, sought the Battle Ax people, and made himself their god. That would not be hard to do. This whole inwandering of the Indo-Europeans – Dyaush Pitar’s, Sky Father’s, the sun’s worshippers, herdsmen, weaponmakers, charioteers, warriors, the men of clever hands and limitless dreams, whose wives are underlings and whose children are property – this was engineered by
the Rangers. Do you understand? The invaders are the destroyers of the old civilization, the old faith; they are the ancestors of the machine people. The Yuthoaz belong to Brann. He need but appear among them, as I need but appear in Avildaro or Crete, and in their dim way they will know what he is and he will know how to control them.

  ‘Somehow he learned we were here. He could have brought his full force against us. But that might have warned our agents, who are still strong on this millennium, and led to uncontrollable events. Instead, he told the Yuthoaz to fall on Avildaro, swore the sun and the lightning would fight with them, and swore truly.

  ‘Having won’ – Lockridge felt her shudder – ‘he will send for a certain few of his people, and what else he needs, to work on me.’

  He held her close. Her whisper was frantic in his ear: ‘Listen. You may get a chance to escape. Who knows? The book of time was written when first the universe exploded outward; but we have not yet turned over the next leaf. Brann will take you for a mere hireling. He may see no danger in you. If you can – if you can – go up the corridor. Seek out Herr Jesper Fledelius in Viborg, at the Inn of the Golden Lion, on an All Hallows Eve in the years from 1521 to 1541. Can you remember that? He is one of us. Can you but reach him, perhaps, perhaps —’

  ‘Yes. Sure. If.’ Lockridge did not want to speak further. In an hour or two she could explain. But right now she was so alone. He reached around with his free hand to clasp her shoulder. She moved to make his palm slip downward, and laid her mouth on his.

  ‘Not much life is left me,’ she choked. ‘Use what I have. Comfort me, Malcolm.’

  Stunned, he could only think: Storm, oh, Storm. He gave her back the kiss, he drowned in the waves of her hair, there was nothing but darkness and her.

  And a torch flared through the bars, A spear gestured, a voice barked, ‘Come. You, the man. He wants you.’

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  Brann of the Rangers sat alone in the Long House. The holy fire had gone out, but radiance from a crystalline globe sheened off the bearskin on his dais. The warriors who led Lockridge to him bent their knees with awe.

 

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