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Authors: Randall Garrett

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BOOK: The Glass of Dyskornis
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In any case, I had been wrong. The only surefire, ironclad, indisputable reason for one male vineh to beat the living tar out of another one is the fact that the other is male, and might someday be competition for the attentions of a female. Obscuring sight of a rival’s genitalia removed his identity as a rival.

Don’t ask me why.

The men of Raithskar had discovered this quirk, collected a colony of vineh, and put the males to work. The females were always in some breeding phase, producing three males for every female. Whether this created the fierce rivalry, or was a natural compensation for the high murder rate among males, was a “chicken or egg” problem that didn’t rate much analysis.

Beyond those facts, Markasset hadn’t known a whole lot about the vineh. Having his memory accessible to me wasn’t the blessing I had first thought it would be. For one thing, I had his
understanding
of facts and his
impression
of the events he remembered. For another, I needed always to be setting him aside to view things more objectively. Whenever I looked at anything within Markasset’s experience, it stimulated a natural search for associations that I had come to think of as Markasset’s “echo.” Worst of all, Markasset took this world, these people, this city for granted. A lot of the things I wanted to know, he had never bothered to learn.

2

It was almost noon by the time I reached home. The meat pies had worn off, and I was looking forward to lunch.

*
Hungry too,
* Keeshah told me, as I started in the front door of the big stone house. He had been given an entire side of glith the evening before, but I could well believe he needed more food. He had carried two men almost six hundred miles in just over four days. Even though he had hunted and fed during that time, his reserves had to be just about gone.

*
Right after lunch
* I told him. *
I
promise.
*

Lunch, as it happened, was going to be delayed.

Thanasset came out of the sitting room to the right of the midhall as soon as I opened the door. He was taller than I, and his head fur was beginning to darken with age. But he always gave an impression of vigorous health and great dignity. Just now he looked relieved.

“We were beginning to wonder if something had happened to you,” he said. He didn’t mention Worfit.

“ ‘We’?” I asked.

“Yes, Ferrathyn has been here most of the morning, waiting to see you.”

I hurried into the sitting room, where the slight old man was sipping a glass of
faen
, the Gandalaran equivalent of beer.

“It’s good to see you again, Chief Supervisor,” I said. “I’m sorry you had to wait. If I had known …”

He waved his hand and shook his head. “Not at all, not at all. One of the few good things that has come from losing the Ra’ira has been my frequent visits to Thanasset’s house. He and I have spent the morning renewing a friendship long neglected.

“Anyway, it happens that I have nothing else to do. Seeing you is my assignment from the Council.”

Uh-oh, somethings up
, I thought. It didn’t take much deduction. Ferrathyn was smiling up at me, wrinkles wreathing his face. And Thanasset was beaming, but not looking at me, as though I might read the secret in his eyes.

“I am empowered to invite you, Rikardon, to join the Council of Raithskar as its thirteenth member,” Ferrathyn said. “There are normally certain—uh—character tests to be passed, but these have been waived in your case, largely because the Council feels you have already proven yourself to be of excellent character. The Council will have a general meeting tomorrow, just after the luncheon hour. Please attend, and deliver your decision in person.”

He stood up and sighed. “Now that I’ve completed my mission, I must be on my way. I don’t think I need to say, Rikardon, that I hope you will decide to join us. Good day.” He turned to Thanasset. “Thank you for the refreshments and the conversation, old friend. I’ll see myself out,” he added, with a chuckle, after looking at me. “You’ll be needed to answer questions.”

“There have
never
been more than twelve members of the Council!” I said to Thanasset as the street door closed behind Ferrathyn.

“The Council created this position just for you,” Thanasset said, and I could see he was proud of it. “I didn’t attend last night’s meeting—technically, I was still under suspension until I was cleared—but Ferrathyn told me about it. The Council was very impressed with your command of the crowd outside the house. We all have so much work that there is little communication between the Council and the people. You are to be—well, a liaison, a communications link.”

A PR man
, I translated.
Right up there in the public eye. Where Wofit will always know where I am.

Maybe he’d be less likely to attack a public official? It sounds like the job might be interesting. And I guess it’s time I looked for a way to make a living. Guarding caravans is
not
a possible choice.

What else is Markasset trained to do? Trained … the boy was a fine swordsman. Maybe I could use that skill to become an instructor?

Thanasset watched me thinking about it, and his pleased expression was replaced by one of unbelief. “Don’t tell me you are thinking of refusing the Council’s offer? It is an unprecedented honor.”

“I realize that, sir,” I said.

Should I tell him about Worfit? No, he’ll only send Zaddorn to harrass him again, which is partly what started this in the first place.

“It’s a little sudden,” I told Thanasset. “I’m glad they’ve given me a day to get used to the idea. I just want to think about it for a while.”

“Rikardon, I wish you
would
accept the position,” he said seriously. “As a Supervisor, you could learn … so much about Raithskar, so quickly. I have the feeling that you may need information that Markasset didn’t have.”

Your intuition is right on the money, Thanasset
, I thought.
And that’s a point well worth considering.

I smiled and tried to put him at ease. “I do appreciate the honor of being asked, Father, and I want to accept, but I can’t say yes or no right now.”

Someone knocked at the street door, and Thanasset went to answer it. I poured myself some faen and had the glass halfway to my mouth when Thanasset called to me. I put the glass down on the stone-and-glass shelf and went out to the door. A man in a gray baldric was standing there, and I felt my neck hairs rise.

You were cleared of all charges
, I reminded myself.
There’s no reason to be nervous just because a cop comes to your door.

“Zaddorn’s apologies for not calling in person, Rikardon,” said the man in the street. “He asks if you will join him at his offices as soon as possible.”

Asks?

Zaddorn?

That’s a laugh.

“Of course.” I lifted my own baldric from the peg beside the door and slipped it over my head. I felt better with the weight of Serkajon’s sword at my left side. “Father, we’ll talk again before the Council meeting.” Thanasset nodded, and I stepped out to the small porch beside Zaddorn’s officer. “Let’s go.”

The center of the government district—which was very close to Thanasset’s house—was marked by another plaza. The largest building in Raithskar was located here, a three-story structure that held the offices and meeting room for members of the Council. There was also a large open room which took up most of the first floor. On Commemoration Day, the holiday which honored Serkajon’s return to Raithskar, the Ra’ira had been on display in that room, mounted in a special case. The vault where the gem had been kept at all other times was located on the top floor.

Across the plaza was a long, single-story building which was Raithskar’s jail, and headquarters for the Peace and Security Department. Zaddorn’s office was all the way at one end of the building, with a private outside entrance. The officer led me to that door, knocked, and opened the door for me at the sound of Zaddorn’s voice, oddly muffled: “Enter.”

I walked in to find him sitting at a huge desk that was covered with paper, some of it punched and bound into sheafs, some of it in neatly tied rolls, a lot of it just lying around loose. There was one small clear space right in front of Zaddorn, and in it was an empty bowl. The lingering aroma told me his lunch had been
rafel
, a meat and vegetable porridge I had grown to like a lot. Zaddorn was swallowing the last mouthful as I entered, and my stomach growled with envy.

“You’re looking better,” I told him. He had lost the look of pale weariness he’d had for the last two days of our trip back from Thagorn. “What can I do for you?” Without waiting for an invitation, I dropped into one of three chairs facing his desk.

Zaddorn finished his glass of faen and took the empty dishes to the inside door of his office, where someone was waiting to take them. He came back to his desk, sat down, and leaned his elbows on the clear spot.

“You can come work for me,” he said. “I’ve had the funding for an assistant for the past three years, but I’ve never found anyone I could trust, or wanted to work with.”

“You called me down here to offer me a job?” I asked. “There’s a lot of that going around.”

“Oh? Who else, if it isn’t prying?”

“Ferrathyn,” I said, and watched his eyebrows go up. “And the Council. They’ve decided to create a thirteenth Supervisor, and they want me to be it.”

He was trying hard not to be impressed.

“You haven’t accepted yet, have you?” he asked.

“No, I’m to attend a Council meeting tomorrow and give my answer then. I got the impression from Ferrathyn, however, that he regards it as a formality. I think
he’s
sure I’ll do it.”

“There’s not the slightest doubt of that,” Zaddorn said with a grimace. “It is becoming increasingly difficult for the Chief Supervisor to conceive of anyone opposing him.” Then he smiled. “You’ve given me another reason to hope that you’ll choose to work for the Peace and Security Department.”

“Ferrathyn once said something to me about your providing him with a lot of headaches.”

Zaddorn laughed out loud. “Did he now? I’m delighted to hear it.” He looked at my face and laughed again. “You’re shocked. Beleive me, I show Ferrathyn all the proper respect. But since he has been Chief Supervisor—he moved up when Bromer died, shortly before I took this job—he has become increasingly insistent on having his own way. Maybe it’s his age. But on principle, I oppose pampering anyone, even our most important citizen. So I get in his way when I can.”

I see one reason why Markasset wasn’t fond of Zaddorn
, I thought.
He’s so sure of himself, so secure. And he’s graceful, both physically and socially. Markasset had a way of starting off on the wrong foot with people. I’ll bet that’s why Illia was so important to him—she didn’t see his social clumsiness as a handicap. Worfit took some pains to make Markasset feel like a high-class person, and the boy was probably subconsciously grateful. That would have become associated with his love of gambling, and reinforced it.

And speaking of Worfit, working for Zaddorn would be no more self-concealing than being a Supervisor.

I feel like a frayed rope in a three-way tug-of-war. I’m getting out of here.

I stood up.

“You’ll have my answer tomorrow.”

Zaddorn walked over to the door with me. “Good enough. All I ask is that when you think about this, you remember the way my desk looks right now. The Council already has twelve people, but I’m only one man.”

Outside, I took a deep breath.
Why can’t I just sit around this world for a while?
I complained to myself. The answer was already there.
Because that’s what Markasset was doing. Everybody who knows about me expects me to be different.

And I am, I guess. I’d like to do something useful here. But I was expecting some time off, first!

I still had the feeling that had brought me out of Zaddorn’s office, the need to get away from the pressure, be by myself and think things out.

Not quite by myself,
I amended.

*
Keeshah, how would you like to go on a picnic?
*

The reference escaped him, but he got the general idea.

*
Food?
*

*
And solitude,
* I told him. *
We’ll go for a run outside the city and have our lunch under a tree somewhere. Does that suit you?
*

I halfway expected his reaction to be “as long as there’s food, whatever you want is OK by me.” But I received a sense of complete agreement from him, as though he were as eager as I to get away from the city for a while, even though we had only returned to Raithskar yesterday.

I walked down to the market area and arranged to pick up a side of
glith
and a roast fowl. Then I went back home to get Keeshah.

I walked through the big double gate and followed the garden pathway to the outbuildings at the rear of Thanasset’s property. One of these was huge and square, its stone walls spattered with small openings for ventilation. Heavy bronze doors stood open to the garden.

Two grayish-tan paws appeared out of the shadows in the doorway. Claws as long as my fingers dug into the ground, and in a moment the wide wedge of Keeshah’s head appeared. His tapering ears were laid back and his mouth wide open in a stupendous yawn. His tusks glistened. He took a few short steps forward, stretching his hind legs and arching his tail, until he was all the way out in the sunlight. I could see the muscles rippling under his skin when he stretched. He was big. Powerful. Beautiful. He was part of me.

*
Sleepyhead,
* I teased him. *
You almost missed lunch—hey, wait, no fooling around now …
*

He had jumped toward me at exactly the same moment I had caught a flash of his intention, and he was too fast for me. One forepaw whipped out and slapped my legs out from under me. Even before I hit the ground, Keeshah had my left ankle in his jaws and was dragging me toward his house.

BOOK: The Glass of Dyskornis
11.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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