Below, the reserves were taking something of a beating from the power of the covens, but it wasn't a hundred and sixty-nine witches to forty
besils
now, as it had been back in the witch village. It was more like twenty
besils
plus a dozen
wuks
and running, well-armed ground troops against thirteen witches in each case. It was costly to take them out, but even though they took half the attackers with them, the witches went down—went down and were mercilessly hacked to death.
I put down the monocular and looked at Ti for a moment. She seemed to sense it and turned to look at me, the stricken and confused look on her face mirroring, I'm sure, my own.
The Lakks attacked the witches, she said won-deringly. The two sides joined up. Cal, what's going
on
here? Have we been taken for
suckers?
I shook my head dully. No, honey. Well, yes,
I
guess we
have.
It's kind of crushing, though, finally to understand all this.
Damn!
I smacked my fist in my other hand. I don't know why I didn't figure it out from the start—at least from a few days ago, when I had all the pieces.
But they were fightin' for us, weren't they? They were gonna get us Zeis Keep!
I shook my head slowly and sadly and squeezed her hand. Baby, I doubt if
anybody
down there gives a damn about us one way or the other. I doubt if they have since the decision was made to fight. I let her go and smacked my fist in my left hand again. Pawns! I muttered. God damn it! All this way, all this far —and still pawns!
She looked at me uncomprehendingly. Wha . . .?
I sighed and got up. Come on. Let's take a nice long walk down to the Castle. Don't worry. Nobody's going to stop us or probably even notice our existence.
With Ti still confused, we started on down.
The extent of the carnage was enormous. The massacre of the witches had been most thorough, more gruesome than any autopsy.
It took over two hours to reach the Castle, and by that time even the mop-up had been completed. Yellow and red forces were methodically surveying the field, helping those who could be helped, cleaning up the debris. It would be a long, tough job.
As I expected, Father Bronz and a number of others were sitting in wicker chairs outside the Castle's gates, relaxing, eating, and drinking. I recognized Vola and her sister, Dola, Boss Rognival and the Ladies Tona and Kysil, and Master Artur. The others were not familiar to me but wore designs indicating they were of Zeis. One of them—a small, frail-looking man, bald and wizened—was dressed as elaborately in ornate silken tunic, heavy boots; he wore atop his head a tiara with a single large blue gem similar to, but not identical to, the one Rognival wore. Another man, dressed in a manner similar to the older, thin one but wearing mostly gold colors, as well as a wide-brimmed hat, relaxed nearby. He was an older man, with neatly trimmed gray beard, certainly once of the civilized worlds. Although he was many years my senior he looked to be in nearly perfect physical condition. •
Father Bronz spotted us. Call Ti! Please come over! he called pleasantly, and we did. Up close Bronz looked dead tired, and very, very old. He's put on at least ten years this morning, I thought. Still, he rose wearily from his chair, took my hand warmly, then kissed Ti on the forehead. Only then did he turn and nod toward the others.
Some of these fine people you know, he began, but I don't think you ever met Sir Honlon Tiel. The thin old man nodded in my direction, and.I could only stare at him. So
that
was the knight I was to take on, I thought glumly. The Boss of Zeis Keep. The Warden cells glowed more in Artur than in him.
The gentleman in gold there is Grand Duke Kobe, Bronz continued, and the other also nodded. He also introduced the others, but they were all of Zeis's ruling group. Then he turned back to me. I assume you understand everything now?
Pretty much, I told him. I can't say it makes me happy to be used in such a way, though. I feel like the child promised the new toy he's always wanted for his birthday, only to have nobody even come to his party, let alone getting the gift.
Bronz laughed. Oh, come now! It's not all that bad.
Will somebody, Ti interrupted in an even but slightly angry voice,
please
tell me what the hell is going on here?
I looked at her and sighed. Ti, may I present Ma-rek Kreegan, Lord of Lilith, First Lord of the Diamond?
The fact that she gasped when Father Bronz bowed indicated she still had a lot to learn.
The full explanation came later, after we'd bathed, changed, and sat down to a sumptuous feast in the great hall of the Castle. Ti still hadn't recovered from the shock of Father Bronx's true identity, but given that, she
had
managed to figure out the basics, I'll give her that. And she was mad as hell.
Still, I wanted to hear the tale from the man who had planned it all.
From the top, then, agreed Marek Kreegan. Of course, we had a problem. Lilith, as I told you long ago, is a rigid ecosystem in which we humans play no part. Its economy is fragile, its ability to support a large population in the wild very much in doubt without Warden protection of the masses. The pawns don't enjoy a wonderful life—but who does? The ruling class, always, that's who. Because while everybody would love to be king, if everybody
was
a king there'd be no labor to support this monarch. The civilized worlds are no different, only thanks to technology on a massive scale the standard of living for their pawns is higher than is currently possible on Lilith.
I still can't see the masses on the civilized worlds as pawns with a privileged class, I responded.
His eyebrows rose. Oh? Were you bom in that body?
You know I wasn't, I growled.
Exactly. The Merton Process, right? Potential immorality for anybody and everybody, right? But will the masses get it? Of course not! For the same reason that cures for the big three diseases that kill people have been withheld. We are at maximum and the frontier can expand only so fast. New planets take decades to develop, particularly to the point of self-sufficiency. Cal, no system can survive if its population doesn't die. Nor is the Merton Process' any cure-all, since you need a body for it. That means massive cloning—a couple of
trillion
clones. Ridiculous. They have to be raised and supported by some biomechanical means until needed. But the
leaders
of the Confederacy, now—that's a different matter. They're already immunized against diseases people don't even know are killing them. They get age-retardant processes like mad. And when they finally
do
wear out, they now have the Merton Process to keep 'em going for an infinite number of cycles. The masses count, in Confederacy society, only in the plural. Masses. Averages. Everything's an average. Only the elite get the plums. Exactly the same as here.
I'll agree with you to a point, I admitted, but leadership is available to those who wish it.
Again he laughed. Really? You think so? You think you got where you were because of willpower and dedication? Hell, man, you were
bred
for it. They designed and manufactured you as they would any tool they needed, because they needed it. The same as they did me.
But you crossed them up, I noted. That's why
you're
here.
He shrugged good-naturedly. The trouble with their system is that their human tools have to be smart guys and they have to be thrown out into the cold, cruel world to do-their jobs. Eventually we wise up and have to be eliminated ourselves before we become a threat. That's done by promotion to the inner circle—if they can fit you someplace—or sometimes by just having a junior knock you off. Hell, they can do it just by having you show up at the Security Clinic for normal processing, then instead of feeding you your past and what you need, reducing you to the common pawn vegetable with a nice little job as a widget monitor or something. I discovered this fact almost too late and mostly by accident, and I ran like hell.
To Lilith, I noted. Why in heaven's name
Li-lith?
Everybody at the table laughed at that, except of course the native-born.
I'm not going to tell you, he responded. At least not until we've gotten that damned organic transmitter removed from your skull and until you've been around enough to know whose side you're really on.
The aliens, I muttered, feeling like my last secrets were being stripped from me. He even knew about the transmitter.
He grinned and shrugged. Let's just say, ah, powerful friends of mine—of all Warden citizens, but mostly of the Four Lords of the Diamond. Anyway, it must surely have occurred to you that any civilization able to penetrate the security chamber of Military Systems Command would have no trouble at all finding out about the Merton Process. And report same to me, who knows better than anybody how the great minds of the Confederacy run. I know they'd zero in on Lilith because I was running the place, and that the only logical person to send would be someone whose own past and career matched mine as closely as possible.
I said nothing to this because I'd been a lot slower than he was giving me credit for, a fact I didn't like at all.
Well, anyway, we knew you were coming, continued the Lord of Lilith, and, Confederacy Intelligence being what it is, I had to figure that any agent sent down here would most logically duplicate my own initial situation as closely as possible, since they were setting one assassin to catch another. That meant Zeis Keep, since I had started here. That meant I just had to wait until Zeis got a new prisoner. Then you turned up. After your seasoning, I stepped in to size you up a bit and tantalize you as well. It was pretty clear to me that you were somewhat in the doldrums and needed a swift lack in the pants you couldn't wear then to get moving. Ti was the all-too-obvious leverage.
I glanced over at Ti, and she bristled. The full implications of what a pawn really was were dawning on her, and she didn't like it one bit.
So, anyway, he went on, I had already established myself in your mind as the only independent spirit on Lilith and told you pretty much where I was heading. Then I came back here and ordered Dr. Pohn to take Ti. I figured that, if you were anything like me, you'd get so damned mad you'd come after her, and that meant you'd have to have a Warden explosion. You were already ripe—I could see it in you.
And if it hadn't happened?
He smiled. Then you weren't any good to me
or
to the Confederacy and you would have been abandoned to plant beans for the rest of your life. But of course it
did
happen, the night of the banquet. When Dola came and told us here, we immediately made plans on what we'd do next. We had to expose you to Dr. Pohn at his worst, for example, and Ti in that totally helpless condition at his villainous mercy. We had to show you not only Master Artur but his troops and beasts as well—Artur usually doesn't show newcomers around personally, you know—so you'd realize it'd take an armed force to come after Zeis Keep. And of course we had to test you for Warden potential and give you a taste of what that power is like without actually giving you that power right off. Vola took care of that, then also got you on the run with that wonderful piece of midnight theatrics. I of course was nowhere near at the time, since I already had to be far to the south to lay my trail for you to follow.
But I heard a voice...
Duke Kobe, I'm afraid, using a reed tube, he responded. Kobe shrugged apologetically. It was important that natural early suspicions about me be allayed. I
couldn't
be Kreegan in the hallways and also have gone to several Keeps in the time allowed, not without you rinding out about it. I counted on you to file that away in your mind. On the other hand, I had to be the only person to whom you could turn for help.
You took a chance there, I noted, nettled by his manner. I could just have gone to the wild.
I
never
took a chance with you, he replied. If at any time you hadn't been up to the job for one reason or another I could simply quit and find somebody else. But I had some insurance in Ti, here.
She shot him a glance that, had she had my Warden power, would have demolished the, hall.
Remember, Kreegan said, I'm forty years your senior, but we came out of the same background, went through the same training, did the same job for the same bosses. Oh, the faces and names change occasionally, but it's always the same bosses. It's a stratified and static society with a system it believes works. As a result,
I knew how you thought.
I could simply put myself in your place, decide what I'd have done, and act accordingly.
How were you so sure I'd take Ti, though? Again he grinned. Well, first of all, your reaction to Ti had been strong enough to trigger the Warden effect and get you to the Castle. So you
had
to be emotionally attached to her. Additionally, Dr. Pohn was an inducement if you cared anything about her. However, just in case you suddenly turned into the total pragmatist of your self-image, Vola mixed a mild hypnotic herb in with the first batch of juice; this —reinforced your tendencies, shall we say. I needed Ti. She was essential. You
had
to take her, since she was the only possible inducement for Sumiko O'Higgins to get involved.
Did you get her? I asked.
He nodded. But that's getting ahead of things. You must understand the threat she represented. She was a psychopath such as comes along only once in a century or more, thank heavens. There are some monsters who, when caught, deserve to be exterminated and had better be. Sumiko was one such. Had she not been caught in a fluke accident, she'd have accomplished the actual genetic code of the Institute for Biological Stability that determines the future look of the civilized worlds. Not just the look—well, you know how much genetics can really determine.
You just got through telling me that the civilized worlds needed changing, I pointed out.
Change, perhaps, he replied, but—monsters, Cal. Monsters in standard civilized world guise. They should have gotten rid of her, wiped her, vaporized her—but instead they sent her to Lilith, on the theory that anybody that smart might come up with something unusual. And she sure did!
I nodded. I got a whiff of her plans, thanks to Ti.
Not the half of it, Kreegan told me. You have no idea what a brilliance that twisted mind had. To tailor-made mutations in existing organisms. Mental genetic engineering! We had word of her activities, of course. She was hardly quiet about her recruiting of young women, that sort of thing. They performed human sacrifices, too, there in that village common. The same stone on which Ti rested was designed to hold a living human being; the grooves there were to drain off the blood, which they would all then drink. She was sick, Cal. Sick and enough of a genius to pull it all off. We had to stop her—but thanks to her brilliance, we couldn't even find her.
I nodded again, seeing it all. And, as Artur proved, she was unassailable even if you
had
been able to find her.
The sergeant-at-arms grumbled to himself.
That's about it, Kreegan agreed. Understand, she had discovered nothing that the Institute didn't already know about, but the Institute goes to a lot of trouble to keep things stable here. Using you and particularly Ti, I was able to get us all to her village. There I could tantalize her enough that I felt sure she'd come with us to the Institute—and come she did. A lot of evaluation went o'n there, without her knowledge, although she also learned from the library things she needed to know. Shortcuts, so to speak. We had to give her crumbs just to keep her as long as we could. Afterward, we had long discussions on what to do, the extent of her power, that sort of thing. We felt we'd given her enough new material for her to grow overconfident, and so it only remained to play fiie trump card—offer her a chance to find out how strong she really was. We made the bait as irresistible as possible.