Part 30 (1/2)
”Huh?” Uske leaned on one elbow, blinked, and scratched his head with his other hand.
A shadow approached him, then stopped, naked, faceless, transparent, half in and half out of the light. ”See,” came the voice. ”A figment of your imagination.”
”Oh, I remember you,” Uske said.
”Fine,” said the shadow. ”Do you know what I've been doing since the last time you saw me?”
”I couldn't be less interested,” Uske said, turning over and looking the other way.
”I've been trying to stop the war. Do you believe me?”
”Look, figment, it's three o'clock in the morning. I'll believe it, but what's it to you.”
”Just that I think I've succeeded.”
”I'll give you two minutes before I pinch myself and wake up.” Uske turned back over.
”Look, what do you think is behind the radiation barrier?”
”I think very little about it, figgy. It doesn't have very much to do with me.”
”It's a primitive race that can't possibly harm us, especially now that its--its generators have been knocked out. All of its artillery it got from a source that is now defunct. Look, Uske, I'm your guilty conscience. Wouldn't it be fun to really be king for a while and stop the war? You declared war. Now declare peace. Then start examining the country and doing something about it.”
”Mother would never hear of it. Neither would Chargill. Besides, all this information is only a dream.”
”Exactly, Uske. You're dreaming about what you really want. So how does this sound: make a deal with me as your guilty conscience and representative of yourself; if this dream turns out to be correct, then you declare peace. It's the only logical thing. Come on, stand up for yourself, be a king. You'll go down in history as having started a war.
Wouldn't you like to go down as having stopped it too?”
”You don't understand....”
”Yes, I know. A war is a bigger thing that the desires of one man, even if he is a king. But if you get things started on the right foot, you'll have history on your side.”
”Your two minutes have been cut down to one; and it's up.”
”I'm going; I'm going. But think about it, Uske.”
Uske switched off the light and the ghost went out. A few minutes later Jon crawled through the laboratory tower window, b.u.t.toning his s.h.i.+rt.
Arkor shook his head, smiling. ”Well,” he said. ”Good try. Here's hoping it does some good.”
Jon shrugged.
In the morning, Rara got up early to sweep off the front steps of the inn (windows boarded, kitchen raided, but deserted now save for her; and she had the key); she swept to the left, looking right, then swept to the right, looked left, and said, ”Dear Lord, you can't stay there like that. Come on, now. Get on, be on your way.”
”Oh, I'm sorry.”
”For pity's sake, woman, you can't go around cluttering up the steps of an honest woman's boarding house. We're re-opening this week, soon as we get the broken windows repaired. Vandals didn't leave a one, after the old owner died. Just got my license, so it's all legal. Soon as we get the window, so you just move on.”
”I just got here, this morning.... They didn't tell us where to go, they just turned us off the s.h.i.+p. And it was so dark, and I was tired.... I didn't know the City was so big. I'm looking for my son--not so big! We used to be fishermen back on the mainland. I did a little weaving.”
”And your son ran off to the City and you ran off after him. Good luck in the New Land; welcome to the island of Opportunity. But just get up and move on.”