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Authors: Timothy Zahn

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BOOK: Triplet
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“True, though with his crystal eye your castle-lord has an equally good ear for news from afar,” Ravagin pointed out. “How long has the trouble been happening here?”

“A few weeks, although the worst seems to have passed.” The captain seemed to make a decision, and again caught his men's eyes. “These may go. Resume your duties.”

Ravagin bowed. “My thanks, sir. If I should come across this problem elsewhere in my travels, would it be of use to your castle-lord for me to inform him?”

“It would be useful,” the other nodded. “If you are nearby at the time you may bring word to any of these our castle-lord's outposts; if not, the news may be sent directly to Castle Ordarleal.”

Ravagin nodded. “I hope you find this black sorcerer quickly,” he said, taking Danae's arm and leading her back aboard their sky-plane. “Good day to you, O Captain. Sky-plane: to the southwest of Darcane Forest.”

The carpet rose into the air … and Danae took a deep breath. “What in all Twenty Worlds was
that
all about?”

Ravagin handed her back her firefly, an oddly intense look on his face. “Probably nothing,” he said. “These mythical black sorcerers tend to get blamed for anything that goes wrong on Shamsheer.”

“I didn't mean that part. Do you think something could really be going wrong with the equipment in Ordarl?”

“Again, probably not. Random chance is occasionally lumpy, as the saying goes—these are probably nothing more than a bunch of malfunctions that just happen to have come up at the same time.”

The words were confident enough … but there was something in his tone that made Danae slide forward on the carpet to take a good look at his face. “But you're not sure. Are you?”

The lines in his face smoothed slightly as he turned to find her looking at him. “Well, I can't be
absolutely
sure, of course, can I? But this sort of thing has happened before, and after a certain amount of fussing the probability curve smoothes itself out and everyone's happy again.”

“Uh-huh,” Danae said, scooting back to her place again. Clearly, he wasn't going to confide any thoughts to her that he might feel would be upsetting to a paying client.

And yet …

Abruptly, the awareness of where they were flooded in on her. Flying high above the ground on a flimsy carpet-sized piece of alien machinery … a piece of machinery that could very well have been doing this for four thousand years or more. And good maintenance or no, she'd never yet heard of a machine that could run forever. Could it be that Shamsheer's magical technology was finally starting to unravel?

Come on, Danae,
she scoffed silently.
After all this time, you really think the whole marvelous machine would just happen to come apart while you were here to watch? Let's not let egocentrism run away with us, okay?

Nevertheless, she found herself keeping well back from the sky-plane's edge for the rest of the flight … and concentrating on the blue sky overhead instead of the ground far below.

Chapter 9

T
HEY'D BEEN FLYING TWO
more hours when Ravagin called her attention to a dark, irregular mass of buildings spreading across the landscape to the southeast. “Missia City,” he identified it. “Probably the largest city in this section of Shamsheer, though genuine population records aren't really kept. Look straight past it and you'll be able to see Forj Tower.”

Danae squinted against the sunlight. Beyond the city was a section of open space—desert, she remembered from the maps—and beyond that a clump of something that could have been the dense forest she knew was also there. And rising out of the center of the forest—

“My God,” she murmured. “That thing is
big.

“Nearly a kilometer high,” Ravagin agreed. “And something like seven hundred meters in circumference at the base.”

“I've seen the numbers, thank you,” Danae told him shortly. “It just looks bigger than that, somehow.”

“Optical illusion, probably—most of the comparable buildings you've seen in the Twenty Worlds are surrounded by other buildings of similar height. Here it's just standing out there on its own.”

Danae shaded her eyes. Details were impossible to pick out at this distance, but superimposed in her mind's eye were the drawings she'd seen: the secondary spires poking skyward from halfway up the main tower body; the intricate and unexplained relief patterns climbing like stone ivy from top to bottom; the windows in the upper third through which every bit of portable technology in this part of Shamsheer would eventually make its way. “I used to read fantasy books with Dark Towers in them when I was a girl,” she commented, half to herself. “It was always where the chief villain lived.”

“Here it's more like where the shoemaker's elves live,” Ravagin said dryly. “Anyway, that's where it is. I thought you might like to see it.”

She nodded silently, still looking at the dark mass of buildings of the city below. All those people, in Missia and other cities nearby, clustered around the Tower as if around a wizard's abode … “They really don't understand, do they?” she murmured.

Ravagin half turned. “You mean how all this operates? No, of course not. I thought we'd discussed that.”

“Well, yes, but … oh, never mind.”

“The scientific method isn't a basic component of the human psyche, Danae,” Ravagin shrugged. “It's a relatively recent development, and it only caught on because it happens to work. On Shamsheer, it's not needed.”

Danae grimaced. “So in exchange for all their marvelous voodoo technology they get locked into a totally stagnant society.”

“Basically. Probably on purpose.”

She looked at him sharply. “You're talking Vernescu's theory, aren't you? That Triplet was set up as a deliberate test of whether humans function best with magic, science, or a mixture of the two.”

He glanced back at her. “I take it you disagree with him.”

“I hate the whole idea,” she snorted. “It's internally inconsistent, for one thing. Any beings so advanced they could build two entire worlds
and
possibly even the dimensions to hold them
and
the Tunnels to get between them surely would have had enough ethical sense not to play games like this with other sentient beings.”

“Why?” Ravagin countered. “What makes you think the Builders even saw us as sentient beings, let alone cared about us? Maybe the human race started its existence as the white rats for their experiments and we just got out of hand after they went off and left us.”

“I hate
that
theory, too.”

He shrugged. “You're the one who was grousing about the lack of scientific curiosity on Shamsheer a minute ago. Why are you so upset by the possibility that Triplet itself is a massive monument to scientific curiosity?”

She glared at him for a moment, then turned away and glowered toward the Dark Tower fading into the horizon in their wake. There was no answer for that, unfortunately, which galled her to no end. She hated Vernescu's theory—hated the way it reduced human beings to pawns on someone else's chessboard—but she had no viable alternative to offer in its place.

Not yet, anyway. But that didn't mean there wasn't one … and if there was, she was damn well going to be the one to find it.

Pursing her lips, she glanced over her shoulder. Ravagin was again sitting facing front, his back to her. Nothing in his stance or posture indicated anger or hostility—almost certainly, the argument had been little more than a game to him. A way to slide salt under her skin without doing anything he could be reprimanded for.
Cynical; perhaps more than a little bitter,
she decided, playing back that last conversation in her mind.
A function of all his years of running people through here? Or is it just the way he's expressing the frustration he said everyone eventually suffers in Shamsheer?

She didn't know. And for the moment, anyway, she didn't really care.

The sun had just passed zenith when they reached the western edge of Darcane Forest.

The forest was
huge,
and perhaps more than anything else Danae had seen it served to drive home on a visceral level the strangeness of this world. All other forests she'd ever seen—whether on developed or relatively undeveloped worlds—had somehow carried about them a noticeable and in many ways comfortable aura of civilization. Not here. The trees stretching to the horizon below carpeted the ground completely, with no roadways or monolines cutting artificially straight lines through the greenery. No roadways, no watchtowers, no tethered guidelights; nothing down there but untouched, untamed, uncaring wilderness. Abruptly, she shivered.

“Impressive, isn't it?”

She grimaced, annoyed that Ravagin had noticed her reaction. “It's nice,” she told him shortly. “Not a place I'd want to spend the night.”

“I don't blame you,” he grunted. “There are some particularly nasty animals living down there—most of them, fortunately, nocturnal. Sky-plane: follow my mark.” He pointed about forty-five degrees to the right of their current direction. “Mark.”

The sky-plane obediently took up the new course, and Ravagin glanced up at the sun. “We'll be at the way house in about an hour. Do you want to wait until we get there, or eat the lunch Essen packed us now?”

Danae hadn't even thought about food. “I'm not really hungry at the moment. As a matter of fact, why do we even have to stop at the way house? I thought you wanted to get us to Karyx as soon as possible.”

“Well …” Ravagin scratched thoughtfully at his cheek. “It's occurred to me since we last talked about it that I might be pushing things a bit much.” He waved a hand back toward the way they'd come. “After all, there's been absolutely no indication that your pal Hart has even managed to get through to Shamsheer, let alone that he's right behind us. I think it might be a good idea to spend one more night here before tackling Karyx.”

Danae frowned, visualizing the maps of Karyx she'd learned. “I don't see the problem. We wouldn't be able to get to Besak or Torralane Village before nightfall if we went through now, but so what? There are supposed to be inns along the road, or we could even camp out overnight.”

He cocked an eyebrow. “You really
are
eager to get to Karyx, aren't you? Has it occurred to you that the culture shock you experienced in Shamsheer will be even worse on the far side of
this
Tunnel?”

“Maybe not as bad as you'd think,” she retorted coolly. “At least there I won't have to worry about offending someone without any way to defend myself.”

“Oh, really?” Ravagin snorted. “All right, let's take a quick for-instance. We step out of the Tunnel, and you turn to find a
cintah
crouched to spring. What do you do?”

“I say
sa-trahist rassh
with the proper placement gesture and invoke a firebrat between us and him,” she said promptly.

“And if that particular spot happens to be where a clump of dried leaves has collected …?”

“Then they catch on fire, I suppose.”

“Right. So how do you put the fire out?”

Danae glared at him. “What's this supposed to prove, anyway?”

“I'm just trying to show that all you've got at the moment is tape-learning,” Ravagin sighed. “Fine stuff, very useful, but hardly the full preparation you think it is. So either tell me how to put out that fire or we stay overnight at the way house here. It's up to you.”

Danae gritted her teeth, stifling the urge to argue. Once again, damn him, he was right. … “All right,” she growled. “I release the firebrat by saying
carash-carsheen
and then say
sakhe-khe fawkh
to invoke a nixie.”

“Who will have a hell of a time bringing water to a fire in the Cairn Mounds,” Ravagin cut in. “The nearest stream is over a kilometer from the Tunnel, and it's hardly a trickle at the best of times.”

“So she can pull the water up from underground,” Danae snapped. “Or condense it from the air if she has to. I know she can do both, so quit trying to mislead me.”

“Agreed; but if you set her too hard a task you could wind up with a premature spontaneous release,” Ravagin warned. “I don't suppose anyone thought to mention those to you?”

“No, I know about them, thank you,” Danae ground out. “All right, then—let's hear how
you
would handle it.”

“Oh, about the way you described,” he shrugged. “But knowing how dry the Cairn Mounds are, I would have added a geas onto the nixie's invocation to put it more firmly under my control.”

“I was told not to use a geas unless absolutely necessary,” Danae said stiffly. “They said the spirits don't react well to them.”

“No, they don't,” Ravagin nodded. “But premature releases are usually worse—the damn thing can sometimes take a swipe at you before it vanishes.”

“So how do you know which is the better risk?”

“Experience, of course. Which was the point I was trying to make in the first place.”

She bristled. “Are you telling me that I'm not to use any spells unless you clear them in advance? Because if you are, you can just—”

“Whoa, Danae—take it easy,” he cut in, holding his hands palm outward toward her. “I never said anything of the sort. All I'm trying to do is let you know that things on Karyx aren't nearly as laser cut as those little six-week fact-stuffing courses pretend. Karyx's spirit magic is every bit as layered and complex as Shamsheer's technological magic, with the added danger of the spirits turning on you if you aren't careful. You've already shown yourself willing to disobey orders you don't especially want to follow—I'm trying to impress upon you the fact that pulling that stunt here could literally get you burned alive.”

BOOK: Triplet
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