Part 22 (2/2)
He was right to pursue his mission, even though it facilitated the opposition. He had to get down to the fundamental ploy of the resistance. The Adepts might let him do that, because they believed they could not win without his help. He was now less certain about that than they were. This planet was deviously dangerous.
He made his way to an exit panel near the concourse. He would have to get out, trusting his spell of invisibility to humans and avoidance by machines to protect him, and try to find Nepe. She still needed his help, for she could not masquerade as Tsetse alone.
He opened the panel and stepped out. He took one step-and a serf blundered into him. Lysander had done the most elementarily foolish thing: he had a.s.sumed that other people would automatically avoid collisions. But they couldn't, because Lysander was invisible to them. They were not machines.
”Hey, there's a man here!” the serf exclaimed, groping as he caught his balance. ”I can't see him!”
Citizen Tan's voice came over the speaker system. ”Hold him! We want him!”
Lysander brought up his hand and pinched the man's neck, making him gasp with pain and let go. But half a dozen others were now closing in. These were serfs who had volunteered to serve in the new order; they wore the identifying arm bands with tentacle pattern that denoted lesser collaborators. They spread their arms, to prevent anyone unseen from pa.s.sing by them, and more were converging from beyond. Lysander knew he would not be able to fight his way clear of this. All because of his completely stupid mistake!
Then another serf lurched toward him. Lysander got one look at the man's face-before it vanished. The man had turned invisible!
”Duck down, crawl away,” a voice beside him said. ”Nepe's waiting next intersection. I'll distract them.”
Lysander didn't question it. He ducked down just as the first serf of the closing ring made contact. The man might have fell his touch, but immediately contacted the other invisible man and grabbed on to him. ”I've got him! I've got him!” he yelled- before his breath whooshed out from what must have been a blow to the solar plexus.
Lysander slid around and between legs, and got clear as the melee proceeded. Who was the other man? He had never seen him before. Yet obviously the man had not only seen Lysander, he had recognized him-and known his mission with Nepe.
He hurried down to the next intersection, getting well clear of the action behind. He skirted a standing guidebot, but felt a thread extending from it. He paused, then touched it with a finger.
It was warm and alive. It was Nepe in disguise.
Now the machine moved, evidently called for duty somewhere else. Lysander followed. They entered the side hall and got out of sight of the pedestrians. Then they ducked into an empty food alcove.
Nepe was already flattening. Lysander heaved her up and draped her thinning body over his shoulders. He stood nervously while she spread out across his body, making it visible; the process was not instantaneous, and if someone came right now- No one came. Nepe completed the transformation. He did not need to look in any mirror; he saw the b.r.e.a.s.t.s and hips. He was a visible woman again.
Guided by her, he walked onto the concourse. There was Brown, looking about. They approached her. There was pressure at his lips. ”I'm sorry,” he said in Tsetse's voice. ”I didn't know your game was through.”
”It's all right, Tsetse,” Brown said. ”We have pa.s.ses to leave. My golems will carry us back to the castle.”
She showed the way to a public exit, where they stood and waited for half an hour. Then a horse appeared, running toward the city. It was a wooden horse-a golem-with a wooden carriage behind.
They boarded the carriage, and the horse set off for home. ”Citizen Purple won his game,” Brown said. ”I was able to a.s.sist him, and I think he was pleased. I must say he has treated me better than I expected.”
”I'm glad,” Lysander said. He did not feel free to say anything else; Purple might have this carriage under observation, as a routine precaution.
They drew up to the Brown Demesnes. ”I thank thee for thy company, Tsetse,” Brown said, reverting to her Phaze self. ”I will need thee not again this day; do as thou willst.”
”Thank you, Brown,” Lysander said carefully. She knew that her companion was not the real Tsetse, but did she know who it really was?
They entered the castle. Brown went to her room, probably to lie down; she had had a wearing session, he was sure. Nepe guided him to the golem storage room.
There she drew away from him, and formed her natural self, the naked girl. ”We can talk now, Lysander,” she said. ”This castle is secure, when Purp's not here. I just wanted you to get rehea.r.s.ed for your role, before. You did well.”
”Thank you. But what happened to the Hectare seed? You didn't lose it, after all that?”
She patted her abdomen. ”No, I have it in here. I never thought I'd be pregnant at age nine!”
She was a Moebite, of course, able to a.s.sume any form; she could as readily carry an object inside her in human form as when she was in ball form or machine form. This allowed her to function normally while maintaining a suitable environment for the seed, so as not to let it die. Still, her remark surprised him. He had absorbed enough of human culture to know that human children did not procreate any more than immature Hectare did. ”Glad I could be of help, getting you pregnant,” he said dryly.
”You aren't finished. We have to take the Hec seed to the West Pole.”
”That's where your center of operations is?”
”You don't think I'll tell you,” she accused him mischievously. ”But I will. The answer is, I don't know where our setup is, and neither does anybody else. All I know is that I have to get a Hec seed to the West Pole, and then I'll see what else I have to do.”
”So if I want to find out, I'll have to keep helping you.”
”Right. We're making you fulfill the prophecy, even if you don't like it. But you'll get a choice somewhere, I think, if you stay with it.”
”You play a nervy game!”
”I've had experience. I can't save the planet alone, so I'm recruiting whatever I need. You helped a lot, especially with the Hec code to null the alarm. Now we can relax, until Tsetse comes back. Then a long walk, so you better rest.”
”Why not change to Flach and conjure us there?”
”Two reasons. First, he couldn't carry the seed like this, so it has to be me. Second, Purp's got magic warners out, to spy on any Adept-level magic in Phaze. So the small stuff, like invisibility, is about all that'll pa.s.s. So I have to hoof it, and I can't make it by myself in time, so I need you and Echo to help.”
”Echo's coming with us?” he asked, his human heart coming alive. The pressure and oddity of events had distracted him, but now he missed her intensely.
”You bet. We make it nice for you, so you'll think about joining our side. Same way as Purp makes it nice for Brown. So he's got her working for him, and I've got you working for me.”
”But Brown is still helping you against the Hectare, and I'm still working for the Hectare.”
”Yep. You can't get full use out of an enemy. But you do what you can.”
”Who was that man who took my place, so I could get away from the serfs? He turned invisible?”
”That was Bane. My father, aka the Robot Adept.”
”Oh! He distracted them, then conjured himself clear!”
”No. After Flach conjured you and Echo out, Purp got wise and set up a magic barricade against conjuration and transformation in the dome. That's why Flach couldn't just conjure himself in to steal the Hec seed; I had to do it. He could've overridden Purp's magic, but it would have made a splash, and alerted the Hecs. Tan's got splash-watch, I think. He's been having a lot of fun with Jod'e, but he watches the warners all the time. So we had to do it the hard way. Good thing it worked.”
Jod'e-that still hurt, though now he had other love. ”You mean your father let himself be captured-to help me escape?” Lysander asked, astonished. ”Knowing that I'm an enemy agent?”
”He did that. Just as Green and Black gave themselves up to spring Flach. We need you, 'Sander.”
”You have more faith in your prophecy than I do!”
”We know magic better than you do. Now eat something, if you need it; there's some food in a chest in the comer. And sleep; you can dream of Echo. One good night is all we have before it gets rough.”
At this point, he believed it.
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