Part 22 (1/2)
”Well, it works as good as new.” Shann held his hand and arm out into the full path of the sun. He had just stripped off the skin-case bandage, to show the raw seam of a half-healed scar, but as he flexed muscles, bent and twisted his arm, there was only a small residue of soreness left.
”Now what, or where?” he asked Thorvald with some eagerness. Several days' imprisonment in this room had made him impatient for the outer world again. Like the officer, he now wore breeches of the green fabric, the only material known to the Wyverns, and his own badly worn boots.
Oddly enough, the Terrans' weapons, stunner and knife, had been left to them, a point which made them uneasy, since it suggested that the Wyverns believed they had nothing to fear from clumsy alien arms.
”Your guess is as good as mine,” Thorvald answered that double question.
”But it is you they want to see; they insisted upon it, rather emphatically in fact.”
The Wyvern city existed as a series of cell-like hollows in the interior of a rock-walled island. Outside there had been no tampering with the natural rugged features of the escarpment, and within, the silence was almost complete. For all the Terrans could learn, the population of the stone-walled hive might have been several thousand, or just the handful that they had seen with their own eyes along the pa.s.sages which had been declared open territory for them.
Shann half expected to find again a skull-walled chamber where witches tossed colored sticks to determine his future. But he came with Thorvald into an oval room in which most of the outer wall was a window. And seeing what lay framed in that, Shann halted, again uncertain as to whether he actually saw that, or whether he was willed into visualizing a scene by the choice of his hostesses.
They were lower now than the room in which he had nursed his wound, not far above water level. And this window faced the sea. Across a stretch of green water was his red-purple skull, the waves lapping its lower jaw, spreading their foam in between the gaping rock-fringe which formed its teeth. And from the eye hollows flapped the clak-claks of the sea coast, coming and going as if they carried to some imprisoned brain within that giant bone case messages from the outer world.
”My dream----” Shann said.
”Your dream.” Thorvald had not echoed that; the answer had come in his brain.
Shann turned his head and surveyed the Wyvern awaiting them with a concentration which was close to the rudeness of an outright stare, a stare which held no friends.h.i.+p. For by her skin patterns he knew her for the one who had led that triumvir who had sent him into the cavern of the mist. And with her was the younger witch he had trapped on the night that all this baffling action had begun.
”We meet again,” he said slowly. ”To what purpose?”
”To our purpose ... and yours----”
”I do not doubt that it is to yours.” The Terran's thoughts fell easily now into a formal pattern he would not have used with one of his own kind. ”But I do not expect any good to me....”
There was no readable expression on her face; he did not expect to see any. But in their uneven mind touch he caught a fleeting suggestion of bewilderment on her part, as if she found his mental processes as hard to understand as a puzzle with few leading clues.
”We mean you no ill, star voyager. You are far more than we first thought you, for you have dreamed false and have known. Now dream true, and know it also.”
”Yet,” he challenged, ”you would set me a task without my consent.”
”We have a task for you, but already it was set in the pattern of your true dreaming. And we do not set such patterns, star man; that is done by the Greatest Power of all. Each lives within her appointed pattern from the First Awakening to the Final Dream. So we do not ask of you any more than that which is already laid for your doing.”
She arose with that languid grace which was a part of their delicate jeweled bodies and came to stand beside him, a child in size, making his Terran flesh and bones awkward, clodlike in contrast. She stretched out her four-digit hand, her slender arm ringed with gemmed circles and bands, measuring it beside his own, bearing that livid scar.
”We are different, star man, yet still are we both dreamers. And dreams hold power. Your dreams brought you across the dark which lies between sun and distant sun. Our dreams carry us on even stranger roads. And yonder”--one of her fingers stiffened to a point, indicating the skull--”there is another who dreams with power, a power which will destroy us all unless the pattern is broken speedily.”
”And I must go to seek this dreamer?” His vision of climbing through that nose hole was to be realized then.
”You go.”
Thorvald stirred and the Wyvern turned her head to him. ”Alone,” she added. ”For this is your dream only, as it has been from the beginning.
There is for each his own dream, and another cannot walk through it to alter the pattern, even to save a life.”
Shann grinned crookedly, without humor. ”It seems that I'm elected,” he said as much to himself as to Thorvald. ”But what do I do with this other dreamer?”
”What your pattern moves you to do. Save that you do not slay him----”