PROLOGUE
The stock of Anka's crossbow was made of black
plastic. The string of chrome steel was operated by a noiselessly moving winch.
Anton did not think much of such innovations. He owned a conventional arquebus
in the style of Marshal Totz, Hing Pitz the first. It was overlaid with black
copper and a rope of steer sinews ran along small wheels.
Pashka, on the other hand, had an air
rifle. Crossbows were childish weapons, he thought, for he was lazy by nature
and lacked manual dexterity.
They landed on the north shore at a spot where the
gnarled roots of mighty pine trees protruded from the yellow sandy slope. Anka
let go of the rudder and looked around. The sun had risen above the forest. A
blue fog hung over the lake. The pines glowed dark green and a yellow sandy
beach stretched in the distance. A light blue sky arched over the whole
landscape.
The children bent over the side of the boat and looked into the
water.
"Can't
see a thing," said Pashka.
"A huge pike," said Anton, a
trifle too sure of himself. "With fins like that?" asked Pashka.
Anton
did not reply. Anka, too, looked into the water, but she saw
only
her own reflection in it.
"How about taking a swim?" said Pashka,
and plunged his arm into the water up to the elbow. "Cold," he
reported.
Anton climbed onto the bow and jumped ashore. The
boat rocked to and fro. Anton took hold of the boat and glanced questioningly
at Pashka. Now Pashka rose, placed the oar like a water carrier's beam across
his neck, bent his knees a bit and sang at the top of his voice:
Old salt¸ sea-dog¸
Witzliputzli! Are you watching¸ on your guard?
Look! A school of hard-boiled sharkies Are approaching¸ swimming hard!
Anton
rocked the boat.
"Hey, hey!" yelled Pashka,
trying not to lose his balance. "Why 'hard-boiled?'" Anka asked.
"I don't know," answered Pashka. They
climbed out of the boat. "But
it's pretty good, isn't it? 'A school of hard-boiled sharkies!'"
They pulled the boat ashore.
Their feet slipped
on the wet sand, which was strewn with dried needles
and pine cones. The boat was heavy and slippery
but they dragged
it all the way up onto the land.
Then they stopped for a
while to catch their breath.
"Almost squashed my foot," said
Pashka, and straightened his red fez.
He made sure that the tassel hung directly above
his right ear--just like the broad-nosed Irukanian pirates were wont to do. "life isn't worth
a farthing, my dear!" he recited dramatically.
Anka was intently sucking her finger.
"A splinter?" asked Anton.
"No. Got a scratch. One of you two
must have long nails." "Let me see!"
She showed him her finger.
"Ves," said Anton. "A scratch.--Well, let's do
something!"
"Pick up your arms and let's walk along the
shore!" suggested Pashka.
"For that we didn't need to crawl ashore," Anton said.
"It's chicken
to stay in the boat," stated Pashka. "But along the shore there
are all kinds
of things. Reeds,
canyons, whirlpools, eddies
with eels--and catfish, too."
"A school of hard-boiled
catfish," said Anton. "Hey, did you ever dive into a whirlpool?"
"Sure."
"Funny that I didn't see you do
it." "Lots of things
you haven't seen
yet"
Anka turned her back on them, raised her
crossbow and aimed at a pine tree 20 feet away. The bark came off in splinters.
"Wow, did you see that!" exclaimed Pashka with admiration. Then he aimed his air rifle at the same spot. But he missed.
"I didn't hold my
breath properly," he said.
"And even if you had held it properly, so what?" asked
Anton. He looked at Anka.
With a firm movement Anka retracted the
steel bow with the winch. She had splendid muscles, and Anton watched with
pleasure the hard ball of her biceps rolling beneath her tanned skin.
Anka took aim carefully, and shot again.
The second arrow penetrated the tree
trunk, a bit lower than the first
"That doesn't make any sense," said Anka, and let the crossbow
hang down her side. "What?" asked Anton.
"We're only damaging the
trees, that's all. Vesterday, a kid shot an arrow at a tree and I forced him to
pull that arrow out with his own teeth."
teeth."
"Pashka would have run away," said Anton. "Vou have good
"I can whistle through my teeth,
too," said Pashka. "Well," said Anka, "let's do
something!"
"I
don't feel like climbing up and down canyons," said
Anton. "Me neither.
Let's walk straight ahead."
"Where to?" asked Pashka.
"Just follow your nose." "Meaning what?" said Anton.
"Let's go into the forest!" said Pashka. "Toshka, do you
remember
the 'Forgotten
Road'?"
"Sure!"
"Vou know, Anetchka--" said Pashka.
"Don't you call me Anetchka," Anka cut in
abruptly. She could not stand to be called by any other name than Anka.
Anton remembered very well that she did
not like it, and said quickly:
"Sure--the Forgotten Road. Nobody
has driven over
it for ages.
It isn't even
marked on the map, and
where it leads
to, nobody knows."
"Have you ever been there?"
"Ves. But we didn't explore it."
"A road coming from nowhere and
leading nowhere," stated Pashka, who had regained his former
self-assurance.
"That's fine!" said Anka. Here
eyes narrowed to black slits. "Let's go! Will we get there by
tonight?"
"What are you talking about? Well be there by noon."
They clambered up the steep slope. Once they had
arrived at the top, Pashka tamed around. Down below was the blue lake with
yellow speckled sand bars, and the boat on the sandy beach. Close to the shore, where the water was as smooth as
oil, large concentric circles broke the surface-- that was the pike, probably.
And the boy felt, as always, that vague joy he experienced whenever he and
Toshka stole away from the boarding-school and a whole day of freedom lay
before them. A day filled with unexplored places, strawberries, sun-scorched
deserted meadows, lizards, and ice cold water from unexpected springs amidst
the rocks. And as always he felt overcome by a desire to shout out loud and
jump up into the air. Anton, laughing happily, watched him, and Pashka saw the
understanding in his friend's eyes. Anka placed two fingers in her mouth and
gave forth with a piercing whistle. And they entered the forest.
It was a pine wood, with sparse
vegetation. Their feet skidded over the slippery, needle-covered soil. The
slanting sun rays glittered between the straight tree trunks, and golden spots
danced on the ground. The air smelled of resin, the nearby lake, and strawberries.
Somewhere, far above them, an invisible lark was warbling.
Anka walked ahead. She carried her
crossbow in one hand, and with the other reached now and then for the
strawberries that occasionally peeked out, as red as blood, from among the
foliage. Anton marched behind her with the solid battle gear of Marshal Totz
slung over his shoulder. The quiver,
filled with mighty battle arrows, rhythmically banged against the seat of his
trousers with every step. He looked at Anka's neck: it was deeply tanned, and
the vertebrae jutted out like little
knobs. Once in a while he turned around and looked for Pashka, who had
disappeared; only the red fez flashed from time to time in the bright sunlight.
Anton imagined Pashka prowling silently among the pine trees, his air rifle
held in firing position, his lean face with the hooked nose pointing forward
like some predatory animal Pashka crawling through the underwood. But the
forest knows no mercy. A challenge--and you must react at once, thought Anton.
He was just about to duck--but Anka
was walking right in front of him, and she might turn around any moment
Wouldn't he look silly then!
Anka tamed around and asked:
"Did you sneak away real quietly?"
Anton shrugged his shoulders. "Nobody sneaks away noisily!"
"Well, I did. I guess
I made some awful noise," said Anka with a
worried expression. "I
dropped a cup--and suddenly I heard
steps in the corridor. Probably old maid
Hatja; she's on duty today.
I had to jump out of the window into
a flower bed.
Guess what kind
of flowers grow
there, Toshka?"
Anton frowned.
"Under your window? I don't know, what kind?"
"Pretty tough flowers. No wind can rock them,
no storm can break them. Vou can jump around in them and trample on them and it
won't harm them."
"That's interesting," said
Anton in a serious voice. He remembered that he also had a flower
bed under his window, with flowers that were neither
rocked by wind nor broken
by storm. But actually he had never paid any attention to it.
Anka
stopped and waited
until Anton had caught up with her.
She held her hand out to him.
It was full of strawberries. With the tip of his fingers, Anton seized exactly
three berries.
"Go ahead. Take some more," said Anka.
"No, thanks," said
Anton. "I like
to pick them
myself.-- But listen, Anka, it must be easy to get along with old maid Hatja, isn't it?"
"That all depends," said Anka. "Just imagine somebody
telling you every night how dirty and dusty your feet are--"
She fell silent. It was good to walk
with her through the woods, shoulder to shoulder, and their bare elbows
touching now and then. And it felt good to look at her--how pretty she was, so
nimble, so
friendly--and how big and
gray her eyes were, and what dark lashes she had.
"Sure," said Anton,
and stretched out his hand to grasp a spider web that glistened in the sun.
"Her feet wouldn't get dirty. If somebody carried you through every
puddle, then you wouldn't get dirty either."
"Who carries her?"
"Henry from the weather station. A big, strong
guy with blond hair, you know."
"Really?"
"Didn't you know it? It's old hat, everybody knows they're in
love."
caves.
Both fell silent again. Anton looked at
Anka. Her eyes were dark "And when did that happen?" she asked.
"Oh,
on a moonlit night," replied Anton, not too eagerly. "Just
keep this all to yourself,
will you?" Anka laughed.
"It wasn't hard to drag it out of
you, Toshka," She said. "Do you want some more strawberries?"
Quite mechanically, Anton now took some berries from her
red-stained hand and put them in his mouth.
I don't like
gossip-mongers, he thought I can't stand
people who tell
tales about others.
Suddenly he had a thought.
"Some day somebody will
carry you, too.
How would you like it if people talk about it then?"
"I'm certainly not going
to tell anybody
about it," said Anka. "I
don't like gossip."
Then she continued in a more confidential tone: "Vou know, I'm
really
fed up with having to wash my feet two times every night."
Poor old maid Hatja, thought Anton. What an uphill fight she has.
They reached a narrow lane. The path led up a steep
slope and the wood became darker and darker. Ferns grew in profusion, and wood
sorrel. The pine trunks were covered with moss and the whitish foam of lichen.
But the forest knows no mercy. Suddenly
a hoarse, shrill voice, quite unhuman, roared out:
"Stop! Throw your arms to the
ground! Vou, milord, noble don and you, too, Dona!"
If there is a challenge in the woods,
you must react at once, Anton knew. With calculated precision, Anton pushed
Anka down into the ferns to the left of the path, while he himself leapt into
the ferns to the right. He slipped at first, and then hid behind the
evil-smelling lichen foam. The echo of the hoarse voice still rang through the
wood, but the path was empty. Suddenly everything was quiet.
Anton turned to one side to bend his
bow, when an arrow hit close by. Dirt showered down on him. The hoarse, unhuman
voice announced:
"Milord has been hit in the heel!"
Anton moaned and pulled up his left
"Not that one, it's the right heel!" corrected the voice.
He could hear Pashka giggle nearby. Cautiously,
Anton peered out from the ferns, but he could not see him anywhere in the
dusky, green jungle.
At that moment, a penetrating, whistling
sound came and a thud as if a tree were falling to the ground.
"Owoooooo!" howled Pashka in a tortured voice. "Have
mercy!
Spare my life! Don't kill
me!"
Anton leapt to his feet. From
the thicket of ferns he saw Pashka approach in an unsteady gait, both arms raised above his head. Anka's voice asked:
"Toshka, can you see him?"
"Ves, I can," called Anton cheerfully. "Don't move!" he yelled in Pashka's direction. "Put your hands on top of your head!"
Pashka
obediently clasped his hands above his head and declared:
"I won't tell a thing."
"What shall we do with him, Toshka?" asked Anka.
"Vou'll find out in just a minute," said
Anton, settling comfortably on the ground and placing his crossbow across his knees.
"Name!" he croaked, using the voice of the witch of Irukan.
Pashka simply arched his back and made a
contemptuous gesture. He did not want to submit to defeat. Anton fired. The
heavy arrow noisily penetrated the branches above Pashka's head.
"Wow!" exclaimed Anka.
"They call me Don Sarancha," grudgingly confessed Pashka.
And then he began to recite:
"And here lies, as you all can see, one of his accomplices."
"An infamous thug and
murderer," Anton clarified. "But he is known never to do something
for nothing. On whose behalf have you come here to snoop around?"
"Don Satarina the Pitiless has sent me," Pashka lied.
Anton
spoke with contempt in his voice:
"This hand of mine cut the thread of Don
Satarina's stinking life on the Square of the Heavy Swords just two years
ago."
"Shall I pierce him with an arrow?" suggested Anka.
"Oh, I completely forgot," said Pashka
quickly. "Actually, I'm being sent by Arata the Fair. He promised me one
hundred gold pieces for your heads."
Anton slapped his knees.
"What a liar!" he shouted. "Do
you believe for an instant
that Arata would have anything
to do with a swindler
like you?"
"Maybe I'd better pierce
him with an arrow after
all?" asked a bloodthirsty Anka.
Anton laughed demonically.
"By the way," said Pashka, "you were
shot in your heel. Vou should have collapsed long since from losing so much
blood."
"Nuts!" countered Anton.
"First of all, I've had a piece from the bark of the White Tree in my
mouth the whole time; and, second, two beautiful barbarian maidens bandaged my
wound."
The ferns began to move and Anka stepped
out onto the path. On her cheek was a long scratch and her knees were smeared
with earth and lichen.
"It's about time we threw him into
the swamp," she declared. "If the enemy won't surrender, he must be
destroyed."
Pashka's arms dropped down and dangled at his sides.
"Vou don't stick
to the rules
of the game," he said to Anton. "With
you it always turns out that the witch is a good person."
"Vou don't know the first thing
about it!" said Anton. He, too, stepped out onto the path. 'The forest
knows no mercy, you filthy mercenary."
Anka returned the air rifle to Pashka.
"Vou two are real sharpshooters," said
Anka enviously. "Do you always aim so close?"
"What else did you expect from us?" Pashka
asked. "We don't
run around yelling 'Bang, bang--you're dead!' When we play, we always take risks."
Anton added with nonchalance:
"We play William Tell a lot."
"We take turns," volunteered Pashka. "One day I have to go stand there with an apple on my head, and next time he's got to do it."
"Vou don't say." Her words
came slowly. "I'd love to watch that some time."
"We'd show it to you right
now--with pleasure," snapped Anton. 'Too bad we don't have an apple!"
Pashka
grinned from ear to ear.
But Anka quickly
yanked the pirate's fez from his head and swiftly rolled
it up into a cone.
"It doesn't have to be an
apple!" she said. "This makes a marvelous target. Come on, let's play
William Tell!"
Anton
took the red cone and examined it carefully. He glanced at Anka; her eyes were
like dark wells.
Pashka was dancing
about; he felt great Anton held the cone out to him.
"I can hit the bull's-eye at 30
paces," he said flatly. "Of course, only with a pistol I'm familiar
with."
"Really?" said Anka, and she turned to Pashka. "And how
about
you?
Can you score a direct hit from 30 feet away?"
"I'm known as the fastest
gun this side
of the lake!" he grinned broadly.
"Let's try it out."
Anton made an about-face and walked down
the path, counting out loud:
"... fifteen... sixteen... seventeen..."
Pashka said something that Anton couldn't hear, and
Anka laughed, much too loud.
"Thirty," said Anton and turned around.
At a distance of thirty paces, Pashka looked pretty
small. The red cone sat on his head like a dunce cap. Pashka grinned. He was
still playing. Anton leaned forward and leisurely drew his bow.
"Bless you. Father William!" Pashka called out to him. "And whatever happens, thanks for everything!"
Anton
placed a bolt in the slot which
would guide the missile. He straightened up. Pashka and Anka
looked at him. They were standing close to each
other. The lane
stretched ahead like
a dark soggy
passage between tall green
walls. Anton raised
the crossbow. The battle gear of
Marshal Totz suddenly felt very
heavy. My hands
are trembling, thought Anton. That's bad. What nonsense! He remembered how he and Pashka
had amused themselves last winter
for one full
hour by aiming
snowballs at an icicle on a fence post They were throwing from a
distance of twenty feet, then fifteen, then ten--and they still could not hit
it And finally, when they had grown tired of the game and were just about to
leave, Pashka pitched the last snowball, without even taking aim, and made a
direct hit.
Anton pressed the stock hard against his
shoulder. Anka is standing much too close, he thought He was on the point of
calling out to her to move over a bit, but then he remembered that this would seem silly. Higher. Higher still. . .
Higher . .. Suddenly he was firmly
convinced that the heavy bolt was going to strike Pashka right between
the eyes, bore deeply between those merry, green eyes, even if he turned around
now and let the arrow fly in the opposite direction.
He opened his eyes and looked at Pashka.
Pashka's grin had vanished. Anka raised her hand very slowly, then ever so
slowly spread her fingers apart. Her face looked very intense and grown-up. Now
Anton lifted his crossbow higher still and pulled the trigger. He did not see
where the arrow landed.
"Missed it!" he said very loud.
He walked along the path but his legs would not
properly obey him. Pashka wiped
the red cone across his face, shook
himself like a wet dog,
unrolled the cone
and formed it into a fez again.
Anka bent down and picked up her crossbow. If
shell hit me over the head with it, thought Anton, I'll even say thank you. But
Anka did not even look at him.
She tamed to Pashka and asked: "Are
we leaving?" "Right
away," said Pashka.
He looked at Anton, tapping his finger against his forehead.
"But you were scared too." Anton said.
Pashka did not reply. Once more he tapped his finger against his forehead. Then
he followed Anka. Anton ambled along in the rear, trying to cope with his
doubts.
What did I do, he thought. His head felt
very heavy all of a sudden. Why are they so put out? Pashka--well, he was scared
stiff. Who
knows
who was more
afraid: Father William
or his son? But what's
the matter with Anka? Maybe
she was worried about Pashka. But what should
I have done?
Now they make
me trot behind
like an outcast. I should take off on my own. I can take that tarn over there
on the left, there's an interesting looking little pool Maybe I can
catch an owl; wouldn't that be something!
But he did not even slow down. That's
for good, he thought Somewhere he had read that such things happened
frequently.
They reached the Forgotten Road sooner than they had expected.
By now, the sun was high up in the sky,
and it was very hot. The pine needles pricked their bare skin. The road was
paved with concrete; it consisted of two rows of cracked, reddish-gray blocks.
Thick tufts of dried grass were growing in the cracks. The soft shoulders on
either side were full of dusty thistles. Above the road flew fat blowflies,
buzzing and droning, and a brazen one bumped right into Anton's forehead. The
air was quiet and sultry.
"Look, you two!" said Pashka.
He pointed to a round metal sign hanging over the
middle of the road on a rusty wire that had been strung across. The paint was
peeling off the sign. They could barely make out a light-colored crossbar on a
red background.
"What is that?" asked Anka.
She did not seem too interested.
"A traffic sign," said Pashka. "Do Not Enter."
"A one-way street," explained
Anton. "What does that mean?" asked Anka.
"That means that you can't enter
that road," said Pashka. "But why do they have the road, then?"
Pashka shrugged his shoulders.
"It's a very old road," he said.
"An anisotropic road," Anton
explained. Anka stood with her back to him. "Traffic can move only in one
direction."
"The wisdom of our
forefathers," said Pashka pensively. "There they were, driving along
for about 200 miles, and all of a sudden--smash, bang!--Do Not Enter! Wrong
Way! And you can't drive on, and there isn't anybody you can ask."
"Just imagine all the things that
might be there on the other side of
that traffic sign!" said Anka. She looked all around. For many miles there
was only the deserted forest and not a person to ask what might lie beyond that
traffic sign. "Maybe it isn't an anisotropic traffic sign after all,"
said Anka. "The paint's almost all peeled
off."
Now Anton lifted his crossbow, took
careful aim and shot off an arrow. How nice if the bolt would snap the wire and
let the traffic sign fall right before Anka's feet. But the arrow hit the upper part of the sign, pierced
the rusty metal and nothing fell down except some flakes of dried paint
"Silly ass!" said Anka without bothering to turn around.
That was the first remark she had addressed to him
since they had played William Tell. Anton smiled wryly.
"And enterprises of great pitch and
moment¸" he recited, "with this regard their current turn away and
lose the name of action."
Faithful Pashka called out:
"Hey, kids, a car was
here! After the thunderstorm! The
grass is still flat where the tires drove over
it! And here--"
That lucky Pashka, thought Anton. Carefully he
examined the tire tracks in the road. He, too, saw the trampled grass and the
black skid marks where the car must have suddenly braked before a pothole in
the concrete pavement.
"I
can see it now," called
out Pashka. "The car must have
come from the other side, from
behind the traffic sign."
It seemed very obvious, but Anton said:
"Baloney! He's come from the other
direction!" Pashka regarded him with surprise:
"What's gotten into you? Vou're blind as a bat!"
"He's come from this way here," Anton
argued stubbornly. "Let's follow his track."
"Vou idiot!" Pashka sounded angry. "Who in his right mind
would drive into a one-way street the wrong way? And look here: here is the
pothole and over there the skid mark --so where did the car come from?"
"I
don't care what you say! I'm going
along this one-way
street, even if it's the wrong way."
Pashka turned pale with fury. "Go right ahead!"
He started to hiccup. "What idiocy! The sun
must have cooked your brain!"
Anton turned around. He looked straight
ahead, ducked under the traffic sign and passed through to the other side. He
only wished he could come upon a collapsed bridge and have to work his way over
to the other side. I have nothing more to do with them, he thought. Let them go
wherever they please--with her darling Pashka. Then he remembered how Anka had
cut off Pashka when he had called her Anetchka, and feeling a bit relieved, he
turned and looked back.
His eye fell on Pashka. Like a dog
sniffing a scent, Don Sarancha was following the track of the mysterious car.
The rusty sign over the road was gently swaying in the wind, and the blue sky
gleamed through the hole the arrow had made, Anka sat at the side of the road,
her elbows resting on her knees and her chin supported by her small, clenched
fists.
As they were returning home, dusk began
to fall. The two boys rowed, while Anka sat at the rudder. A red moon stood
above the dark forest and the frogs croaked untiringly.
"And we had planned
everything so nicely," said Anka mournfully. "Vou two--!"
The boys remained silent. Then Pashka
asked softly: "Toshka, what did you find behind the one-way street
sign?" "A collapsed bridge," answered Anton. "And the
skeleton of a
German, chained to a machine gun." He thought
a while, then he added: "the machine gun was halfway sunk into the ground
already."
"Hmm, yes," said Pashka.
"These things can happen. I helped somebody repair his car back there."
Part Ome
As Rumata passed by the tomb of the Holy
Mickey--the seventh
and
the last on this stretch
of the road--darkness had already fallen.
The highly praised Chamalharian stallion which he had won from Don Tameo
in a game of cards,
was in fact
a miserable nag.
The animal was dripping
with sweat; it kept stumbling over its own legs, and its irregular trot
reminded one of the swaying
motions of a tossing ship.
Rumata pressed his knees
hard into the
animal's flanks and
slapped his gloves
between the horse's ears. The nag responded merely with a tired nod; its
pace remained the same.
Under the late
evening dusk, the
bushes that lined the road appeared like
solidified smoke clouds.
Swarms of flies
buzzed annoyingly around the rider's head.
Up in the darkened night
sky a few yellowish stars dimly
nickered. An alternately cold and warm
wind came in gentle,
irregular squalls, typical for this coastal strip during fall with its sultry,
dust-filled days and cold, frosty nights.
Rumata drew his cloak closer around his
shoulders and let go of the reins. There was no use trying to hurry. Midnight
was still one hour away, and already he could recognize the black jagged
outline of Hiccup Forest on the horizon. To the left and the right of the road
carelessly ploughed fields stretched into the distance. Swamps stinking of
rotten vegetation and decaying animals glimmered in the faint light of the stars: here and there silhouettes of hills
and the half-rotted wooden palisades from the time of the Great Invasion loomed
up horribly. Far off in the distance
the sullen, lambent flames of a fire flickered: most likely a village was burning somewhere over
there--one of the innumerable wretched little look-alike places that until
recently had been known by names such as "Death Hamlet,"
"Gallows Hill View," or "Robbers Nest"; imperial edicts had
renamed them "Blossom Grove," "Peace Harbor View" and
"Angel Rest."
This land stretched over hundreds of
miles, from the shores of the Big Bay to the eerie Hiccup Forest. The terrain
teemed with hosts of gnats, gouged by gorges, half smothered by swamps; its
inhabitants were raked by fever and forever threatened by pestilence and vile
colds.
Near a bend in the road, a dark figure stepped from the bushes.
The stallion gave a sudden start and
threw back its head. Rumata quickly seized the reins, then with a swift
movement adjusted his right sleeve--an old habit of his--and reached for his
sword. Then he had a closer look. The man at the side of the road took off his
hat.
"Good evening, noble don," he
said softly. "I beg your pardon." "What's the matter?"
inquired Rumata. He cocked an ear toward
the bushes.
There is actually no such thing as a silent ambush.
Robbers are betrayed by the singing of their bow strings; the men of the Gray
Militia constantly belch up their sour beer; the hordes of the barons grunt
with greed and rattle their sabers; and the monks who hunt for slaves scratch
themselves noisily. No, it was all quiet in the thicket. This man was no bushwhacker,
thought Rumata. He did not look at all like a sniper: he was a short, stocky
townsman wrapped in a rather inexpensive cloak.
"Will you permit me to run
alongside your horse?" he asked the rider and bowed deeply to him.
"Come along," said Rumata,
toying with the reins. "Vou can hold onto the stirrup."
The man walked alongside, holding his
hat in his hand. His head was completely bald. A stewart from some baronial
estate, thought Rumata. Visits barons and cattle dealers, buys up hemp and
flax. A
stalwart man . . . Then again, maybe
he's no stewart after all. Maybe he's a "bookworm," or a fugitive.
Maybe he's a ne'er-do-well--there are many of that kind roaming the roads at
night--certainly more than there are baronial stewarts. But be could be a spy
as well...
"Who are you and
where are you
coming from?" asked
Rumata. "They call me Hiun," answered the man sorrowfully. "And I come
from Arkanar."
"Vou mean you are fleeing
from Arkanar," said
Rumata and bent forward slightly toward him.
"Ves." The man
spoke with sadness. Some freak, an odd character, thought Rumata. Or is he a spy
after all? I'll keep an eye on him . . . But why should
I bother to keep an eye on him?
Who will be helped by that? Who
am I to scrutinize and
test him? I don't even want to observe
him! Why shouldn't I simply believe
him? There is a
man, quite obviously an intellectual, on the run, his life at stake
... He feels lonely,
he's afraid and weak, just
looking for a helping hand--and then he runs into an
aristocrat The aristocrats are too stupid and arrogant to know much about
politics. Instead, they have very long sabers,
and they don't
like the Gray Militia, Why shouldn't citizen
Hiun simply seek protection from some stupid,
arrogant aristocrat? That's
it. Of course, I won't keep my eye on him especially. I have no special
reason to. Let's rather chat for a while, kill some time, and then we will part
friends...
"Hiun . . ." he said aloud. "I once knew a Hiun. A quack
doctor and alchemist on Hlempner Street. Are you related to him?"
"Oh dear, yes, I am," said
Hiun. "I'm only a very distant relative of his, but they don't care. They
exterminate our kind up to the twelfth generation."
"And where are you fleeing to, Hiun?"
"Any place. As far away
from here as possible. Many
have fled to Irukan.
Ill try my luck with Irukan, too."
"Well, well," said Rumata.
"And you think
the noble don will lead you
safely through the sentry posts?"
Hiun remained silent.
"Or, maybe you think the noble don doesn't
know what kind of a man the alchemist on Hlempner Street really is?"
Hiun still did not answer. I think I'm
talking a lot of nonsense, thought Rumata. But then he rose high up in his stirrups
and, imitating the town crier on the Royal
Square, puffed up his throat
and shouted:
"Accused and condemned of the most
horrible and unforgivable crimes against God, the Crown and the public
safety!"
Hiun still remained silent.
"And what if the noble don adored and revered
Don Reba, the father of all abominations? What if he were devoted with all his
heart to the cause of the Gray Militia? Or do you think that is totally out of
the question?"
Hiun kept silent. To the right of the
road, the black silhouette of a gallows tree loomed in the dark. A ghostly
white naked body, strung up by the feet, swung from a crossbeam. Oh well,
thought Rumata, what's the good of it all? He pulled tight his reins, seized
Hiun by the shoulder and turned the man's face around for him to see.
"And how would you like it if the noble don would hang you now right next to that gallows bird?" he said and stared into the white
face and dark orbs of Hiun. "I'd do it myself.
Swift and skillful.
With a strong
Arkanarian rope? For the sake of ideals?
Why do you keep silent, bookworm Hiun?"
Hiun did not speak. His teeth were
rattling with fright and he twisted weakly under Rumata's strong grip like a
captured lizard.
Suddenly, a splash could be
heard as something fell into the canal alongside the road. At the same time, as
if to drown out the splashing noise of the impact, the man shouted desperately:
"Go ahead and hang me! String me
up, you traitor!" Rumata caught his breath and let go of Hiun.
"I was only joking," he said. "Don't be afraid."
"Lies, lies," Hiun sobbed. "Nothing but lies
everywhere!"
"All right, then," said Rumata. "Forgive me! Vou'd better
fish it out of the water, whatever
you just threw in there.
It will get soaked through otherwise."
Hiun did not budge from the spot. His
upper body swayed back and forth in indecision. He continued to sob softly, and
beat his palms senselessly against his cloak. Then, slowly, he crawled into the
canal. Rumata was waiting. He was very tired and he sank down into his saddle.
That's the way it's got to be, he thought; it can't be done any other way. Hiun
came staggering out of the canal, a bundle hidden under his cloak.
"Books, of course," said Rumata.
Hiun gently shook his head.
"No," he said hoarsely.
"Only one book. My book." "What do you write?"
"I'm afraid it wouldn't interest
you, noble don." Rumata wrinkled his brow and sighed.
"Hold onto the stirrup," he
said, "and come on." Neither spoke for a long time.
"Listen, Hiun," said Rumata. "I
was only joking.
Don't be afraid
of
me."
"What a world," grumbled Hiun. "What a funny world. Everybody
is making fun. And they all
do it the same way. Even the noble Don Rumata.
Rumata was startled. "Vou know my name?"
"Ves, I do," said Hiun.
"I recognized you by the circlet on your forehead. And at first
I was so happy to have met you of all people
here on this road--"
Why, of course, Rumata thought. That's
what was on his mind when he called me a traitor. He said:
"Vou see, I thought you were a spy. And those I kill usually at
once."
"A spy?" Hiun replied. "Ves, indeed. Nowadays it's so easy and
profitable to be a spy. Our
shining eagle, our most noble Don Reba, is very anxious to know what the king's
subjects are saying and thinking. I wish I were a spy. A proper scout in the
Gray Joy Tavern. How fine and honorable! At six o'clock, off I go to the inn.
The innkeeper will rush to my usual table to bring me my first tankard, and I
can drink as much as I can hold. Don
Reba is paying for the beer-- or to be exact, nobody really pays for it. I just
sit there with my beer in front of me and my ears open. Sometimes I pretend
to make some notes about the conversations, and you should see the
poor frightened things crawl up to offer their
friendship and their purses.
In their eyes
I can see what I always wanted to: the devotion of whipped dogs,
awe and fear and impotent hatred. I can have any girl I want, any time I like; women
melt in my arms right in front of their husbands' eyes--all
healthy, strapping men, who stand there with obsequious giggles. Splendid prospects, noble don, don't
you agree? I heard all this first-hand from a fifteen-year-old kid, a
pupil of the Patriotic School--"
"And what did you
tell him then?" Rumata's curiosity had been roused by the fugitive's tale.
"What should I have told him? He
wouldn't have understood anyhow. So I told him about the men of Waga Holeso,
the robber chief; whenever they catch a spy, they simply slit his belly open
and stuff his guts with pepper. Then again, there are the drunken soldiers who
jam a spy into a sack and drown him
in the village pond. And, what's more, I was telling the truth, the pure
truth--but he wouldn't believe me. He
said, "That's not what they teach us at school." Then I took a
piece of paper and started to write down our conversation. I needed it at the
time for my book, but the poor boy thought it was a denunciation. He suddenly
broke out in a sweat all over..."
They could see lights twinkle through
the foliage of the trees lining the road. It was coming from the inn called
Bako's Skeleton. Hiun's steps began to falter and he fell silent.
"What's the matter?" asked Rumata.
"A patrol of the Gray Militia. Over
there," answered Hiun under his breath.
"Well, so what?" said Rumata.
"Listen--we love and revere these simple rough men, our militant Gray
boys. We need them. From now on the people will have to keep their tongues in
check, if they don't want to dangle from the nearest branch of a tree!"
He laughed because
he had expressed it so splendidly--exactly in the
language of the Gray Barracks.
Hiun seemed to shrink; he
pulled his head between his shoulders. "Simple folk have to know their
place. God didn't give them a
tongue for talking, but for
licking the boots of their master, the noble lord, who has been placed above
them from the very beginning of time..."
In the paddock, behind the inn, the
saddled horses of the Gray Patrol pranced about. Through an open window came
the raucous cursing of the players and the knock and rattle from their game of
knucklebones. In the doorway stood "Skeleton Bako" in person,
blocking the way with his tremendous belly. He wore an old leather jacket whose
seams had burst in innumerable places. The edges of his sleeves dripped with moisture. His mossy paw
gripped a club--evidently he had just slain a dog for his broth, had broken out
in a heavy sweat with the effort, and had stepped outside to get his wind back.
A Gray Sturmovik lolled on the stairs, his battle-ax held between his knees. The massive handle
of his ax pushed his face to
one side. It was plain to see that he was nursing a giant hangover. When he
noticed the rider, be cleared his throat, spat between his feet, and called hoarsely.
"Sto-o-o-p! Who goes there?
St-o-o-op! No-o-o-ble
d-o-n-n-n!"
Rumata's chin barely jutted out as he rode past the
man without so much as a glance.
". . . But if their tongue is licking the wrong boots," he said
aloud,
"then
it must be yanked out, for it is written: Vour tongue--my enemy..."
Hidden by the
nag's croup, Hiun
hopped alongside with
long leaps. Out of the corner
of his eye,
Rumata noticed Hiun's
bald head gleaming with perspiration.
"Stop, I said!" roared the Sturmovik.
One could hear his ax scraping against the steps as
he dragged himself down the stairs, cursing God, the devil, and all people of
high birth.
About five men, pondered Rumata, and tugged at his lace cuffs.
Drunken butchers. So
what!
They had passed the inn by now and kept moving
toward the woods.
"I
can walk faster,
if you so desire," said Hiun with an exaggerated firm voice.
"Certainly not!" said Rumata and slowed his horse down.
"It would be boring to ride so many miles without a single brawl.
Don't you ever want to get into a good
fight, Hiun? Just talk, that's all you do, don't you?"
"No," said Hiun. "I have
never any desire to get into a fight." "That's exactly your
trouble," Rumata grumbled, annoyed. He
directed the stallion to the side of the road, and tugged impatiently at his gloves.
From a bend in the road, two riders came galloping at full speed.
They halted as soon as
they caught sight of him.
"Hey, there, noble don!" shouted
the first one. "Show your pass!" "Vou boor!" Rumata's voice
was icy. "Vou can't even read, what
good will a pass do
you!"
He jerked his knees deeply into his horse's flanks,
and the steed took off in a fast trot straight toward the two Gray Sturmoviks.
Cowards, he thought. Let's just slap their faces a few times! No, what's the
use.
Here I am, burning to
vent the rage that has been building up all
day--but nothing will come
of it anyhow. So let's
stay calm and
humane, let's forgive everyone, remain imperturbable like
the gods. The gods are never in a hurry;
after all, they have all eternity ahead of them...
He rode close to the Sturmoviks. The two
men, no longer sure of themselves, seized their axes and fell back.
"W-e-e-ell?" Rumata asked slowly.
"Oh--what's the matter with me?"
stammered the braver of the two
Sturmoviks, quite perplexed. "I mean--it's you, the noble Don
Rumata?"
His companion had already turned his
horse around and made off in a fast
gallop. The first Sturmovik kept falling back and lowered his raised ax.
"I
beg your most humble pardon,
noble don," he gushed. "We
did not recognize you right away ... it was our fault. Official
business, you know--so easy to make a mistake there.
The fellows have
been drinking a little, and they are burning with
eagerness--" He maneuvered his horse around, ready
to take off.
"Vou will understand, noble don, such
restless times . . . We're hunting down those fleeing bookworms ... I
hope you won't make complaints about us, noble
don--"
Rumata turned his back on him. "A
pleasant journey, most noble don!" shouted the Sturmovik after him, much
relieved.
As soon as the two riders were out of sight, Rumata called out
softly:
"Hiun!"
There was no answer. "Hey,
Hiun!"
Still no answer. He listened more
closely; now he could hear a distant rustling in the bushes that was set off
distinctly against the background of the constantly singing gnats and
mosquitoes. Hiun must be marching hastily across the land, toward the West, in
the direction of the Irukanian
border. That's that, thought Rumata. What was the good of the whole
conversation? It's always the same thing, over and over again. Cautious
exploring at first, then guarded exchange of ambiguous remarks . . . Week after
week you waste your energy on stupid chatter with any number of morons; but if
you are lucky enough to meet some real person, there's no time for a
heart-to-heart talk. Vou'd like to provide some cover for him, to protect him,
to help him reach some refuge--and he walks away without ever knowing whether
he encountered a friend or a vain fop. And you don't find out anything about him either--his desires, his abilities,
his reason for living, his goals...
His thoughts turned to Arkanar in the
evening. Solid stone houses along
the main streets, friendly lanterns over the inn gates, kindhearted, satisfied
shopkeepers drinking their beer at clean tables, chatting about the world, how
it isn't such a bad place after all; discussing the falling bread prices or the
rising harness prices; here and there a conspiracy is unveiled, warlocks and
suspect bookworms are incarcerated, the king is as magnificent and grand as
ever; Don Reba, however, is infinitely clever and always on his guard.
"Vou don't say!"---"That's the way it's supposed to be!"--
"The world is round!"--"For all I care it might be square, only
don't you touch our learned men!"--"Believe me, brothers, all our
misfortunes come from those know-it-alls!"-- "Happiness is not caused
by money; the peasant is a human being, too, so they say, fine, but go on--and
all the time more and more of this inciting poetry: and they begin to raise
hell, there are riots and mutiny . . ." "Throw them all in jail, brothers! Myself, for example, what
would I do? I would ask them directly: can you read and write? Lock him up! Vou
write poems? Lock him up! Vou are an expert on diagrams? Lock him up! Vou know
too much!--" "Bina, my angel, another three tankards of beer and a
roast hare!"
And outside the window--stomp, stomp,
stomp--come marching along the nailed boots of the sturdy, red-nosed fellows in
their gray shirts. And over their right shoulder, the heavy hatchets.
"Brothers!
There they are, our
protectors! They keep this learned rabble at a proper distance, yes, indeed! .
. . And that one over there, that's my boy, my
son--Over there on the right flank! It was only yesterday that I tanned his hide! Ves, brothers, we're living
in a wonderful time! Our monarchy, so solidly entrenched, prosperity,
unshakable law and
order--and justice. Hooray
for our Gray Troops! Hooray, Don Reba! Long live our Hing! That's the life,
brothers!"
Over the dark plains of the kingdom of
Arkanar, however, lit up by raging fires and glowing woods, hundreds of
miserable men are fleeing, skirting the sentry posts, running, stumbling, and
running on. Bitten by gnats, with bleeding, sore feet, covered with dust and
sweat, tormented, frightened and tortured by despair, but as hard as steel and firm in their convictions--they are
unlawfully accused and persecuted.
Why? Because they heal and teach their
people, who are riddled by disease and swamped by ignorance; because, like
gods, they create a second nature out of clay and stone, wishing to beautify
our existence, for a people that does not know beauty; because they penetrate
into the secrets of nature hoping to place these secrets at the service of and
for the benefit of the dull, apathetic people, who have been kept in fear by
ancient black arts. They are helpless, good and awkward, way ahead of their own
times...
Rumata pulled off one glove and soundly
slapped his stallion between the ears. "Let's go, you lame old mare!"
He spoke Russian. It was already past midnight when he rode into the forest.
Nowadays nobody could tell exactly any
more where that strange name came from--"Hiccup Forest." A rumor had
been circulated via official sources that some 300 years earlier the Iron
Squads of Imperial Marshal Totz (who later became the first king of Arkanar)
had penetrated this forest as they were
pursuing the retreating hordes of the copper-skinned
barbarians. There the brave warriors had gathered the bark of the White Trees
and brewed a kind of domestic beer which turned out so miserably that whoever
drank it would suffer for hours from
hiccups and belching. The following morning, so the legend goes, when said
Marshal Totz came to inspect the camp, he tamed up his
blue-blooded nose and spoke,
the following words; "Indeed, this is unbearable! The whole forest has the
hiccups and reeks of bad beer!" That is the origin, it is said, of this
peculiar name.
One might quarrel about the veracity of
this legend, but in any case this was no ordinary forest. Giant trees with firm
white trunks were growing in it, of the kind that could no longer be found
anywhere else in the country. Not even in the dukedom of Irukan, and definitely
not in the Mercantile Republic of
Sloan, where all the timber had long since been cut down for use in the
construction of ships. There were rumors
making the round that many such woods still existed beyond the Red
Mountains, in the country of the barbarians--but there are all kinds of stories
told about those barbarians, you know ...
A path had been cut through the forest
some 200 years back. This road led to the silver mines and by
virtue of feudal law the noble family of the Barons of Pampa, the descendants
of a comrade-in-arms of Marshal Totz, had been invested with these holdings.
According to this feudal law, the Barons of Pampa were supposed to pay the
Arkanarian kings twelve poods of pure silver each year. Thus each new king
would gather an army shortly after he ascended to the throne, and march toward
Castle Bau, where the barons dwelt The walls of the castle were solid, the
barons were brave, and each year, as before, the kingdom of Arkanar had yet to
collect the twelve poods of pure silver. After their defeated armies had
returned home, the Arkanarian kings would once again confirm the barons' legal
claims, in addition to other privileges, including the right to pick one's nose
at the royal table, the right to go hunting in the western regions of Arkanar
and, finally, the right to call the princes by their first names, without adding their rank and title.
Hiccup Forest was full of dark secrets.
Throughout the day, heavy carloads of silver ore would roll toward the South.
But at night, the road was deserted, for few men dared walk there under the
lights of the stars. It was said that at
night the Siu bird called from the High Tree. No
one had ever beheld this bird, for it cannot be seen by human eyes,
being
no ordinary bird.
It was said that great
shaggy spiders would
jump from the tree branches
onto a horse's neck to suck his blood in almost
no time. It was said that the monstrous primeval dragon Pech roamed this forest;
the monster was said to be covered
with giant scales;
to bear a live young
dragonlet once every twelve years; and to drag after it 12 tails pouring with
sweat. And somebody is said to have seen with his own eyes, in broad daylight,
how the naked wild sow ¥¸ cursed by the Holy Mickey, was dragging itself along the
highway, moaning and grunting--a rapacious beast of prey, invulnerable to iron
but easily pierced by a bone.
Here in this mysterious forest, you
might encounter the fugitive slave, the one with the black tattoos between his
shoulder blades. He was stupid and pitiless, just like the shaggy,
blood-sucking spiders. Or you might meet the magician, the one who had been
mangled by three deaths; he was always gathering mysterious mushrooms for his
magic potions, which could make a man invisible, or change him into different
animals, or even give him a second shadow.
Everyone knew, of course,
that the robber
captain Waga Holeso and his band roamed
along the road all through
the night, and fugitive
forced laborers from the silver mines, with their black hands and whitish, transparent faces. The poisoners would gather here
for their nocturnal meetings, and the brazen
hunters of the Barons of Pampa
camped out in the glades
where they could
roast their stolen
buffaloes on a spit over an open fire.
In the midst of the thicket, where the
underbrush was growing denser than anywhere, stood a giant
tree, gouged with
clefts and chinks
by old age. Beneath it leaned a warped wooden hut, surrounded by a
blackened, wooden palisade. The hut had been here since time immemorial. The
door was always closed. Idols hewn of entire logs leaned against the moldering wooden steps. This
hut was, as everyone
could testify, the
most, most dangerous spot in all
Hiccup Forest. Every twelve years the old wild sow Pech comes
here to bring
forth its young. Then the sow crawls under this
hut to die, poisoning the whole foundation of the hut with its black
venom. If ever this poison
seeps to the outside, the end
of the world will be near. People also say that on unclean nights, the idols
will dig themselves out from the soil, walk to the path, and make mysterious
signs there. And they also say that at times a demonic light will shine in the
dead windows of the hut, while dull sounds can be heard from within, and smoke
can be seen rising from the chimney up to the
sky.
Not long ago, the village idiot Hukisch
from the hamlet "Sweet Stench" (also popularly known as "Dung
Heap") happened to chance upon this hut and, fool that he is, stared into
a window. He came home completely mad, and after he had regained the pitiful
traces of wit he had, he told of having seen a light inside the hut, a man
sitting at a rough wooden table, his feet propped up on the rough bench,
holding a little casket in his hand
and drinking from it. His jowls drooped almost down to his belt and his skin
was all pockmarked. And that, naturally, was the Holy Mickey in person, before
he had seen the light, in fact: a moll hunter, drunkard, and blasphemer. To
gaze upon him was only possible for those who were entirely without fear. A
sweet, heavy odor had come through the window and shadows flitted through the trees.
People came from all over
to listen to the idiot's tale. The whole story
finally
ended when the
Sturmoviks appeared, screwed
his elbows up to his
shoulders and sent
him packing. Still,
of course, the rumors about the old hut could
not be quenched, and from then on it was generally
known as the "Drunkard's Lair."
Rumata made his way through the prolific
growths of gigantic ferns until he came to the entrance of the Drunkard's Lair.
He tied his horse to one of the idols. There was a light inside the hut and the
door was open, hanging by a single hinge. Father Habani sat at the table,
completely disheveled. A penetrating odor of schnapps filled the hut; on the
table, amidst gnawed bones and boiled beets, sat a giant earthenware jug.
"Good evening, Father Habani," said Rumata as he crossed
the threshold.
"I
bid you welcome," replied Father Habani
with a voice
that sounded like a hunter's horn.
Rumata approached the table with
clicking spurs, dropped his gloves on the table and looked again at Father
Habani, who sat motionless, his heavy drooping jowls supported in his palms.
His shaggy, half-gray eyebrows hung
down onto his cheeks like dried grass tufts
over a ravine. From the nostrils of his porous large-pored nose the air
came whistling whenever he breathed out. It stank of half-digested alcohol.
"I
invented it myself!" he said suddenly, unexpectedly. With great effort he pulled up his right
eyebrow and directed a somber glance at Rumata. "I myself! And what
for?" He withdrew his right hand from under his jowl and his hairy finger
gestured aimlessly in the air. "And despite all, I am good for nothing! I
have invented it--and yet I'm no good, eh? That's
right, that's right,
a failure. None of us invents anything anyhow, nobody has any new ideas,
but-- oh, the devil with it all...!"
Rumata unbuckled his belt, took off his
fez and removed his swords.
"Come, come," he said gently.
"The box!" Father Habani wheezed. Then he
fell silent and moved his cheeks in a strange fashion.
Without
taking his eyes
off the old man, Rumata
swung his feet,
shod in dusty
boots, over the bench and sat down.
He placed both his
swords next to each other on the table.
"The box . . ." repeated
Father Habani. "We always say we invented it. But in reality it was all
thought up a long time before us. Some person invented it ages ago, put it in a
box, made a hole in the box, and then made off--maybe went to sleep somewhere--And
what comes next? Then Father Habani arrives, closes his eyes and puts his hand
into the hole." Father Habani looked at his hand. "Ha! Invented! I,
he said, have thought up this thing ... ! And if you don't believe it, then you are an ass. And I stick my hand inside
--One! What do I find?
Barbed wire! What is that for? For the wolves, naturally. Splendid! And
I stick my hand inside again--Two! What
do I find? What a cleverly conceived thing, a so-called meat grinder. What is
that for? For finely ground meat. Splendid! I stick my hand inside for the third time--Three! What is it?
Firewater. What is that
for? To make damp wood burn, eh?"
Father Habani fell silent once, more and arched
forward as if someone had grabbed him by the collar. Rumata took the jug,
peered inside, then poured a few drops on the back of his hand. The liquid was
violet and smelled strongly of cheap
alcohol. Rumata carefully dried his hand with his lace handkerchief. Greasy
spots remained on the cloth.
Father Habani's disheveled
head touched the table. He suddenly straightened up again.
"Whoever put all this stuff into
the box knew what it was good for.
Barbed wire against the wolves? I made that up myself, fool that I am. They use
the barbed wire for fencing the mines and the pits! So that the political prisoners don't run away from there. But I
won't play along with them! I'm an enemy of the state, too. But did they ask
me? Sure they did! Barbed wire, eh? Sure, barbed wire, what else. Against the
wolves, eh? Against the wolves . . . Excellent . . . Splendid chap! Let's fence
the mines and the pits with it! Don Reba in person, the first minister of state,
helped to fence the mines. And he even requisitioned my meat grinder. He's got
brains, all right! Splendid! And now he grinds the meat in the Tower of
Joy--from human beings--And that works miracles during interrogations, people say..."
I know all that, thought Rumata. I know
it all. I know how you screamed in your
private audience with
Don Reba, how you crawled
at his feet, imploring and begging: Stop,
please. I'll confess!
But it was too late
already. Vour meat grinder had already started...
Father Habani seized the jug and lifted
it to his hairy mouth, tippling the poisonous swill as he roared like the wild
sow V. Then he set the jug back on the table with a bang and popped a boiled
beet into his mouth. Tears flowed over his broad cheeks.
"Ves, firewater!" he said when
he found his voice again. "To be used as tinder
for the hearth
and for a jolly game or two. But what kind
of firewater is that, my dear, if you can drink it? Mix it with beer, and how the price of beer would soar! But no, I won't give it to you! I'll drink it all myself. And how I drink it!
Night and day. I'm all bloated. And it's getting worse all the time. The other day I looked
in a mirror and--Don
Rumata, you won't believe it--I was scared of myself!
I looked
closer--may the Good Lord
protect me! What was left of Father Habani? A sea-monster, a polyp, dotted all
over with colored spots. Some red, some blue . . . They say firewater was
invented for merry games with fire--"
Father Habani spat on the floor, scraping
his shoe over the spot to rub out his spittle. Suddenly he asked: "What
day is it today?"
"The eve of Hata the Just,"
said Rumata. "And why isn't the
sun shining?" "Because it's night."
"Night again," said Father
Habani painfully and fell forward, his face splashing into the beets.
Rumata regarded him for a while,
whistling softly between his teeth. Then he rose from the bench and walked over
to the back porch. Amid small piles of beets and sawdust glittered the glass
pipes of Father Habani's voluminous distillation equipment for home-brewed
liquor. It was the amazing creation of a born engineer and a masterful
glass-blower. Twice, Rumata
walked around the devilish machine, then, in the dark, groped for a piece of
iron and began to hit about at random, without aiming at anything in
particular. There was the sound of breaking glass, rattling metal, and gurgling
liquids. The cheap smell of soured spirits pervaded the small room. As he
walked over to the other comer to switch on the electric light, the broken glass crunched
under
his boots. In the comer
stood a heavy
strongbox, containing a "Midas"
field synthesizer. With his right
hand Rumata swept
some rubble off the
top of the safe, dialed
a combination of various numbers
on the lock
and opened it. Even in the bright electrical light, the synthesizer
looked rather odd in the midst
of all the rubbish and garbage. Rumata
grasped a handful of sawdust from a pile and threw it into the feeder
funnel. The synthesizer started humming at once,
then automatically switched on the indicator. With the tip of his boot, Rumata
shoved a rusty
pail under the output
slot. And in no time--clink, clink, clink--golden ducats,
coins with the aristocratic profile of Pitz the Sixth, Hing of Arkanar,
fell into the battered pail.
Rumata carried the old man over to an
old creaking wooden cot, pulled off his boots, tamed him over on his right
side, and covered him with the almost hairless fur of a long-dead animal. In
the process, Father Habani woke up briefly. He could neither move nor think
clearly. So he contented himself with reciting a few verses of a forbidden
romance: "I am like a crimson flower in your dear little hand . . .
," whereupon he lapsed into a hearty snore.
Rumata cleared the table, swept the
floor, and cleaned the single window,
which was black with accumulated dirt and soot from the chemical experiments
that Father Habani conducted at the window sill. Behind the dilapidated stove
he found a bottle with alcohol which he poured into a rathole. Then he watered
his Chamalharian stallion, fed him oats from his saddlebag, washed his face and
hands, and sat down to wait. He stared into the little smoking flame of the oil lamp.
He had been leading this strange dual
existence for the past six years and had apparently adjusted to it by now. Only
from time to
time--like the present, for
instance--it suddenly seemed to him that there
was no reality behind the organized bestiality, the depressing cult of
the Grays. He felt as if a strange theater performance were unrolling in front of his eyes, with himself, Rumata,
playing the principal part And any moment now, after some particularly successful
rejoinder, the applause would begin to thunder and the connoisseurs and art
lovers from the Institute of Experimental History would shout enthusiastically
from their loges:
"Bravo, Anton, fantastic, great! Well done, Tony!"
He looked around but there was no crowded theater,
only damp, mossy walls of rough-hewn logs, blackened by the smoking oil lamp.
Outside, the Chamalharian stallion
neighed softly and pawed the ground. Gradually, a deep whistle came nearer. It
sounded so familiar, so well known from days of old, that tears almost welled
up in Rumata's eyes--the sound was so unexpected in this godforsaken place.
Rumata listened intently, his mouth half open. Now the throbbing stopped
suddenly; the tiny flame in the oil lamp began to sputter, then suddenly flared
up again. Rumata was about to get up from the bench when Don Hondor emerged
from the darkness of the night and came striding into the room. Don Hondor was
the Supreme Judge and Heeper of the Great Seal of the Mercantile Republic of
Soan, Vice-President of the Conference of the Twelve Negotiators, and Cavalier
of the Imperial Order of Righteous Pity.
Rumata jumped up and knocked the bench
over. He would have loved to embrace, his friend, kiss his cheeks, but his legs
automatically bent at the knee (as prescribed by etiquette), his spurs clicked
solemnly,
his right hand swept in a semicircle from his heart over to his right side,
and his head lowered itself
so swiftly that
his chin almost
disappeared in his scarf.
Don Hondor took off his velvet cap, adorned by a simple feather, and quickly
waved it in the direction of Don Rumata, as if he were shooing flies. Then he
threw the cap on the table and undid the clasp at the collar of his cloak. The
cloak sank downwards along his back as he sat on the bench
and stretched out his legs.
His left hand
was held akimbo,
and with his outstretched right hand he held the hilt of his
gilded sword, whose tip stuck in the moldy wood of the floor. He was rather
small and lean, and big, somewhat protruding eyes marked his pale face.
His black hair
was gathered, like
Rumata's, by a heavy golden circlet with a green stone on his forehead.
"Are you alone, Don Rumata?" he asked hastily. "Ves, noble don," Rumata
answered, depressed.
Father Habani's voice thundered
suddenly: "Noble Don Reba! Vou are a hyena, that's what you are!"
Don Hondor did not pay any attention to him. He did not even turn
around.
"I've come with the helicopter," he said. "Let's hope nobody saw you."
One legend more or less. "What's
the difference?" answered Don Hondor in a somewhat irritated voice.
"I've simply not the time to ride around on a horse. What's happened with
Budach? I'm worried about him. Do sit down, Don Rumata, will you please? I'm
getting a crick in my neck this way."
Rumata obediently took a seat on the bench.
"Budach has disappeared," he said.
"I waited for him at the Square of the Heavy Swords.
The only person
that came was a one-eyed vagabond, who gave the password and handed me a bag full of books. I waited for another two hours; then I
got in touch with Don Hug, who told me he took Budach as far as the border.
Budach was in the company of some
noble don, a man who could be trusted since
he had lost everything at a
game of cards with Don Hug and therefore sold himself over, body and
soul. Consequently, Budach
must be somewhere here in Arkanar. That's all I know."
"Not much, I dare say," remarked Don Hondor.
"But the affair with Budach is not that
important," replied Rumata. "If he is still
alive, I'll find him and extricate him from any tight
spot he might be in. That's no problem really. But this wasn't what I wanted to discuss with
you. I must
once more draw
your attention to the fact that the situation in Arkanar is
exceeding the bounds of the basis theory--"
Don Hondor made a sour face.
"No, no, hear me out," said Rumata
firmly. "I have the feeling I can never make myself properly understood
over the radio. And in Arkanar everything is helter-skelter! A new,
systematically effective factor has made its appearance. It looks as if Don Reba
is intentionally hurtling the whole depressing Grayness of the kingdom on the
scientists. Anyone who rises even slightly above the average Gray level puts
his life in jeopardy. Listen to me, Don Hondor! These are no vague, emotional impressions, these are
real facts! It's enough to be intelligent and educated, to dare to have doubts,
to say something out of the ordinary. Perhaps if some day you refuse a glass of
wine, your life will
be in danger. Any little grocery clerk
can beat you to death. Hundreds, thousands of people are being denounced. They
are caught by the Sturmoviks, strung up by their feet in the streets. Naked,
with their head dangling down. Only
yesterday they trampled an old man to death
in my street with their boots: somebody told them he could read and
write. They kept kicking him for two hours, these stupid pigs with their
beastly drooling snouts--"
Rumata
paused for a moment to collect himself
and ended in a
calm voice: "To sum it all up, it won't be long now until not a single
intelligent person will remain alive in Arkanar.
Just like in the domain of the Holy Order after the slaughter of Barkan."
Don Hondor fixed his dark eyes on Rumata
and pressed his lips together.
"I
don't like what's
happening with you, Anton," he said in Russian.
"There are lots of things I don't
like either, Alexander Vassilevitch," said Rumata. "For instance, I
don't like the fact that we have tied our own hands, the way we have set up our
problem here. I don't like the fact that we call it the 'problem of bloodless
procedure.' For as far as I am concerned, this is equivalent to scientific
justification of inactivity. I know all your arguments! And I am well
acquainted with our theories. But theories do not work in such a situation,
where every minute human beings are attacked by wild beasts in a typical
fascist manner! Everything is going to pieces, going to rack and rum. What good
is our knowledge and our gold? It always comes too late."
"Anton," said Don Hondor,
"calm down. I believe you when you say
that the situation
in Arkanar has reached a critical point. But I am
also convinced that
you cannot propose
a single constructive solution."
"That's true," agreed Rumata.
"I have no concrete solutions to propose. But it
gets to be more and more difficult for me to control myself in view of these
increasing signs of physical and moral corruption."
"Anton," said Don Hondor.
"There are 250 of us altogether on this entire planet. All of us exercise
effective self-control, and it is equally difficult for all of us. The most
experienced among us have lived here for twenty-two years. They came only as
observers, nothing else. They are forbidden to intervene here in any way. Just
imagine: an out-and-out ban on any intervention. We don't have the right to
rescue Budach, even if they trampled him to death in front of our eyes."
"Vou don't need to talk to me as if I were a child," said
Rumata. "But you are
as impatient as a child," replied Don Hondor.
"And
you must display a lot of
patience here." Rumata laughed bitterly.
"And while we are practicing
patience and waiting forever," he said, "holding endless discussions
about the proper ways to behave, these beasts are attacking their fellow human
beings every day, every single minute."
"Anton," said Don Hondor,
"there are thousands of other planets in the universe which we have not
yet visited and where history runs its course."
"But we did come to this planet!"
"Ves. Not to vent our righteous anger, but
rather to help these creatures here.
If you're too weak for the job¸ then get out! Go back
home!
After all, you're not a child. Vou knew what to expect here."
Rumata did not speak. Don Hondor's features
relaxed; he seemed
to have aged many years during his last words. Slowly he strode the
length of the table, seized his sword and dragged it behind him like a stick. Then
he lapsed into
an almost imperceptible, sad shaking of his
head; only his nose seemed to move.
"I
can understand all that," he said. "I've gone through all of this myself. There were times
when this sensation of personal impotence, my own wretchedness, appeared to me as the most horrible
thing. Some weaker characters even
went crazy over
it and were
sent back home
for treatment. It took me fifteen
years to understand what the most horrible
thing is. It's become dehumanized, Anton; to harden your soul by dragging it through the dirt. We are the gods here, Anton, but we have to be wiser than the local gods that
men here have created after their own image. Our path, however,
leads us along
the edge of an abyss.
One wrong step and you are caught in a morass,
and for the rest of your days you cannot
free and cleanse
yourself of it. In the Story of the Descent¸ Goran the Irukanian wrote:
After God had
descended from Hea»en
and emerged from the Pitanian swamps in order to show himself to the
people¸ lo and behold¸ his feet were co»ered with dirt."
"Goran was ultimately burned to
death for that," added Rumata in a somber voice.
"True, they put him to death by
burning him alive. But these things do not really concern us. I have been here
now for fifteen years. Even in my dreams I don't see Earth any longer. Some
time ago while I was rummaging in some old papers, I found the photo of a
woman, and for the longest time I could not remember who she was. Sometimes I am overcome by a sensation of horror
because in reality I am no longer a staff member of the Institute but rather an
exponent of that local institution, the highest judge of the Mercantile
Republic. That, to my mind, is the most frightening thing: to become adjusted
to your role.
Inside each of us, the noble
wild sow struggles with the communard. And while everyone around cheers for the
sow, the communard is all alone.--Earth is a thousand years and a thousand
parsecs away from here." Don Hondor fell silent; he patted his knees.
"That's the way it is, Anton," he said after a while, and his voice grew
firmer. "So let's remain communards!"
He doesn't understand, thought
Anton-Rumata. How should he after all? He's lucky; he does not know the Gray Terror
or Don Reba. All that he has seen
on this planet
in the course of these
past fifteen years fits somehow within the framework
of the basis theory. And if I talk to him about fascism,
the Gray Sturmoviks, the rising militancy of the petty bourgeoisie, he accuses me of emotional word games: "Don't fool around with terminology, Anton! Terminological
confusion will bring about dangerous results!" He is absolutely incapable
of comprehending that the average level of medieval bestiality corresponds to
the happy day yesterday on Arkanar. In his eyes
Don Reba is another Richelieu, a wise and
farsighted politician, who is defending the absolute regime from feudalistic excesses. I am the only one
on this planet
to see the terrible
shadow spreading over the whole land. But I just can't understand where this
shadow is coming from, and why. And how can I convince him, when I can clearly
see in his eyes that he would like best to send me back to Earth
on the spot for a cure?
"How
is the noble Synda?" asked Rumata.
Don Hondor stopped
inspecting him with his eyes and murmured: "Very well,
thank you." Then he added:
"We must finally
come to grips with the fact that neither you, nor I, nor anybody
of our group here, will ever see the tangible results of our
work. We are not physicists but historians. Our unit of time is not the second
but the century.
And what we are doing here
is not meant to be the sowing
of the seed but merely the preparation of the soil. And those emissaries from Earth,
those--enthusiasts we get
from time to time--I wish they'd go to hell, those eager beavers ..."
Rumata put on a forced smile and tugged
needlessly at his riding boots. Eager beavers. Ves indeed.
Ten years ago, Stefan Orlovski,
alias Don Hapada,
commander of the crossbow
troops of His Imperial Highness, had ordered his soldiers to open fire on the
emperor's men as they were publicly torturing eighteen Estorian witches. With
his own hand he had slain the imperial high judge and two of his assistants but
in the end he had been pierced by the spears of the emperor's bodyguard. As he
lay dying, he called out to the people watching the public
spectacle:
"Remember, you are human beings!
Defend yourselves, kill them, don't be afraid of them!" But his voice
could scarcely be heard over the din of the roaring crowd as they were
shouting, "Burn the witches! Burn them alive!"
And it was at about the same time that
Harl Rosenblum, one of the most highly regarded historical experts on the
Peasants' War in Germany and France, alias Pani-Pas, the wool merchant, incited
a riot amongst the Murian peasants, He took two cities by assault and was
killed by an arrow in his back as he tried to put a stop to the looting. He was
still alive when he was rescued by a helicopter but he could no longer speak.
His big blue eyes expressed guilt and amazement as big tears trickled down his
bloodless cheeks ...
And shortly before Rumata's arrival on
this planet, the most powerful fellow conspirator, confidant of the Tyrant of
Haisan (alias Jeremy Toughnut, specialist in reforms on Terra), had staged a palace
revolution out of a clear
sky, had seized
power and tried
to introduce the Golden
Age within two months; had stubbornly refused to reply to the strongest
protests and interpellations of neighbors and the Earth had earned the dubious reputation of a crazy
fool; had successfully evaded eight rescue attempts; and was finally
captured by the
Institute's special commando
troop who had taken him by submarine to an island base near the South pole...
"Just think of that!" Rumata
said under his breath. "And people on Earth
still firmly believe to this very day that our physicists are working on the
most complicated problems ..."
Don Hondor suddenly sat up and took
notice. "Ah, finally," he whispered.
From outside came the sound of angry or
desperate neighing, hoofs pawing the ground, and energetic cursing in a voice
with a strong Irukanian accent. A man entered the room, It was Don Hug, the
first groom of the chamber of His Lordship the Duke of Irukan. He was stout,
red-cheeked with a smartly upturned mustache, grinned from ear to ear, and from
under the wavy curls of his auburn wig peered two merry little eyes. And once
again Rumata wanted to obey the impulse to embrace
the new arrival--it was his boyhood
friend Pashka; but Don Hug suddenly assumed a formal posture, his fat face took
on the sickeningly sweet smile demanded by etiquette; he bowed nimbly from the
waist down, pressed his hat against his chest and pursed his lips. Rumata stole
a furtive glance over to Alexander Vassilevitch. Alexander Vassilevitch had
vanished, and in his place was Don Hondor, the Supreme Judge and Heeper of the
Seal; his legs stretched out, his left hand akimbo, while his right hand
clasped the hilt of his gilded sword.
"Vou are very late, Don Hug," he said in an unpleasant tone of
voice.
"I beg your most humble pardon!" called out Don Hug, swiftly
approaching the table.
"I swear by my Duke's rickets, nothing but totally unforeseen unfortunate
circumstances! I was stopped four times by the patrol of His Highness, the Hing
of Arkanar, and twice I had to fight off some rascals." He raised his left
hand with an elegant movement to show off his blood-soaked, bandaged limb.
"By the way, noble don, whose helicopter is that behind the hut?"
"It's mine," Don Hondor
answered snippishly. "I have no time to waste on brawls along the
way."
Don Hug gave him a friendly smile and
sat down, straddling the bench. "In other words, noble dons, we are forced
to state that our most learned Dr. Budach has mysteriously vanished somewhere
between the Irukanian border and the Square of the Heavy Swords-"
Father Habani stirred on his cot. He
turned over in his sleep and without waking he mumbled: "Don Reba
..."
"Leave Budach to me," said
Rumata, in a desperate tone, "and despite everything, will you please try
to understand me..."
Part
Two
Rumata woke up with a start. He opened his eyes. It
was broad daylight. Down in the street, just below his windows, was some commotion.
Somebody, probably a soldier, yelled at the top of his voice: "Vou
stinking bum! Look at this filth! I'll make you lap it up with your tongue!
(Good morning to you, thought Rumata.) Shut up, you! I swear by the hunchback
of Holy Mickey, you make me lose my temper!"
Another voice, hoarse and coarse,
growled: "Vou've got to watch your step in this miserable street! It
rained this morning, but who knows when they last swept this place."
"Vou'll show me where I'm supposed to look, all right."
"Vou'd better let go of me, noble don, let go of my shirt, will you!" "Oh, you'll show me, all right--"
Rumata heard a loud slapping sound. It
was evidently the second slap; the first one had woken him up.
"Vou'd better stop hitting
me, noble don." A familiar voice.
Who could it be? Probably Don Tameo. I'll let him win back his decrepit
Chamalharian nag today.
I wonder if I'll ever
learn to distinguish a good horse from a poor one. But after all,
my family isn't known for their expertise with horses.
Camels, yes; we are experts
on fighter camels.
A
good thing there are hardly, any camels
here in Arkanar. Rumata stretched his arms and legs, until his joints cracked.
He groped for a silken rope attached
to the headboard of his bed and tugged at it several times. Little bells could be
heard ringing throughout the house. That fellow is probably hanging
out of the window, watching
the racket down below.
I could simply get up, of course, and
get dressed by myself, but that would only start tongues wagging again.
He listened once more to the stream of
abuse coming from below his windows. The inventiveness of the human tongue!
What entropy, what measure of the uncertainty of human knowledge!
Lately, Rumata continued with his
thoughts, some know-it-alls have emerged in the guard troops, declaring that
only one sword alone can be used for noble warfare, while the second sword must
be used exclusively for street fights--and Don Reba pays too much attention to
their worries in beautiful Arkanar. By the way, Don Tameo is not one of them.
Too much of a coward, our dear Don Tameo, and an incorrigible armchair
politician.
How horrible when the day starts out
with Don Tameo ... Rumata sat up in bed and clasped his hands around his knees
underneath the patched-up elegant coverlet. He was seized by a feeling of
leaden hopelessness. Vou could ponder forever, keep thinking about how
powerless and small we are in the face of circumstances ... On Earth I wouldn't
ever dream of doing such a thing. On Terra we are strong,
self-assured men with
specialized, psychological training, men who are ready for anything. And we do
have strong nerves:
We manage, for instance, not to turn
away our head when some poor person
is beaten or executed. We are capable of tremendous
self-control: We can stand to
listen unperturbed to the endless babblings of the most abject cretins. We have
also forgotten how to feel disgusted: We don't mind when someone puts a dish
before us from which the dogs eat, or when they wipe it out afterwards with a
duly rag. And aren't we marvelous actors? Not even in our dreams do we lapse
into our mother tongue or any of the other languages of Earth. And after all,
we are equipped with an invincible weapon: The basis theory of feudalism,
worked out in the quiet offices of our officials and in our laboratories, based
on studious research and serious discussions...
It's just too bad that Don Reba hasn't
the slightest inkling of the theory. And too bad, also, that our special
psychological training peels off like sunburnt skin, that we have to go to
extremes, that we are forced to submit
to a steady mental reconditioning: grit your teeth and remember that you are a
god in disguise. Remember that they do not know what they are doing; and that
they are almost all free of guilt. And that is why you must have the patience
of Job, patience, patience--and meanwhile the fountains of humanism inside us,
which on Earth seemed to be well-nigh inexhaustible, are drying up here with
frightening speed. Holy Mickey!
Weren't we real humanists back on Terra, lovers of mankind, humanism was the
mainstay of our nature and in our respect for the human being, in our love for
man, we even steered toward anthropocentrism--and now we discover with horror
that we did not truly love mankind but
only the communards, our compatriots who resembled us ... And more and more
frequently we catch ourselves in the act of wondering: Are these human beings,
after all? Are they even
capable of becoming human beings in
time? And then we remember men like Hyra, Budach, Arata, the hunchback, or the
unsurpassable Baron Pampa, and we feel ashamed--but this is equally rare and
unpleasant and, worse still, it does not help us in the least...
All right, thought Rumata, that's enough
of that. At least not so early in the morning. And damn this Don Tameo! So much
trouble, so much has accumulated inside me, in my soul, and there is no place
to get rid of it in this isolated state. That's what gets me: the isolation,
the solitude. What did they call us back home? "Strong and self-assured,
strapping young men." When we were back home did we ever imagine in those days that we would ever have to
put up with such loneliness?
Nobody would believe it. Anton,
my friend, what's happening to you? To the West from here, barely three hours
by plane, lives Alexander Vassilevitch, a good man with a set of brains. To the
East is Pashka, a merry, faithful friend, who went to school with you for seven
years. It's just a momentary depression, Anton. Too bad--we believed
you had more endurance;
but doesn't this happen to all of us? What a wretched grind. We understand. So
why don't you go back home to Terra, recuperate from all this, occupy yourself
with theoretical research, and the rest will follow...
Incidentally, Alexander Vassilevitch is a dogmatist par excellence. So if the basis
theory doesn't take
in the Gray
Ones--"In fifteen years
of working on this,
my friend, I have never
once come across
an exception like this ..." In other words,
I am simply dreaming of the Gray hordes.
And if I dream
about them, it simply means
that I am overworked, under too much tension, that they should
send me home for a rest. "All right, Don
Rumata, I promise
to investigate this
personally and advise
you of my findings. But in
the meantime, give me your word, no excesses, please . . ."
And then there
is Pavel, whom I used
to call Pashka
when we were kids together: now he's a scientist, an expert, a brain
full of information. He became totally immersed in the history of two planets
and proved with enthusiasm that the phenomenon of the Gray hordes represents
merely the most common occurrence in the relationship of the bourgeoisie against the barons--" By the way,
I'll pay you
a brief visit in a few days. To be frank with
you, I'm quite disturbed when I think about the incident
with Budach . . ."
Many thanks! And that's the end of it! I'll take care of the Budach case
myself, even if I'm no longer much good for anything else.
The most learned Doctor Budach. A great
physician, a most devoted citizen of Irukan; the duke almost knighted him, but
then he changed his mind and had him incarcerated. The most distinguished
specialist for cures by drugs in the entire empire. Author of the widely known
and famous treatise Concerning Herbs and Other Plants¸ which Items in
Mysterious Ways Cause and Occasion Sorrow¸ Joy or Tranquility¸ Concerning the
Sali»ary and Body Fluids of Reptiles¸ Spiders and the Hairless Wild Sow ¥¸
which Last Disposes o»er said Characteristics and Many Others Besides. A
remarkable person, undoubtedly, and a genuine mental giant, at the same time a
devoted humanist and eccentric who never had any money. His entire fortune
consisted of a sack full of books. Who needs you, Doctor Budach, in this
country of darkest ignorance that wallows in a bloody morass of conspiracy and
greed?
Let us assume you are alive and you are in Arkanar. Of course
you may have fallen into the hands of
the barbarians, who periodically raid the countryside from their mountain
strongholds. If this should be the case, then Don Hondor will contact with our
friend Schumtuletidovodus, a specialist in the history of antique cultures, who
presently works as an epileptic shaman for the chieftain whose first name
consists of forty-five syllables. But if you should be in Arkanar after all--first of all, you might have been captured
by the nocturnal armies of the robber chieftain Waga Holeso. No, not
"captured, " - but simply taken along, for they would consider your
companion the far more desirable booty,
your friend, the noble don, who has gambled away
his entire fortune. Either way, they will not kill you: Waga Holeso is
far too avaricious.
There's
an equal chance,
though, that some
idiot of a baron has you in his clutches. Without any
malicious intentions, merely out of boredom
and some warped
idea of hospitality. He simply would
like to drink together with a
noble guest, so he sends out his hordes and has them drag you to the castle
of your companion. And you will be sitting
in the stinking chamber until
the dons have drunk themselves into oblivion and finally
part company. In that case no harm will befall you.
But it's quite another story with the
remnants of the recently defeated peasant army of Don Hsi and of Pert
Posvonotchnik, who have retreated to the hamlet "Rotten Nest" where
they are secretly supported and fed by our bright eagle, Don Reba himself--just
in case some complication should arise in his relationship with the barons.
These peasant soldiers know no mercy; better not even imagine the eventuality.
And then there is Don Satarina, a crabby imperial aristocrat, 102 years of age and, of course,
totally senile. He carries on a family
feud with the dukes of Irukan, and snatches--whenever he revives
sufficiently--anything that crosses the Irukanian border. He is very dangerous;
when he is under the influence of Cholezistit, he is quite capable of issuing
commands with such catastrophic results that the churches cannot collect the
corpses from his cellars fast enough.
And then there's the top possibility.
Not the most dangerous one, but the
one most likely to occur: the Gray Patrol of Don Reba. The Sturmoviks on the
main roads. Vou might have fallen into their hands quite by accident, Budach,
in which case your only hope would be the quick wit and cool head of your
companion to get you out of this calamity. But what if Don Reba should be
interested in you personally? For Don Reba will occasionally display an
unexpected concern . . . His spies might report that you are traveling through
Arkanar, then a detachment under the command of some very eager Gray officer
will be sent out to meet you. And this Gray cretin of low rank will be
responsible for your ending up in a bag of stones in the Tower of Joy...
Rumata pulled once more at the rope,
very impatient now. The bedroom door opened with a repulsive creak and a thin,
somber-looking boy entered the room. His name was Uno, and his fate might have
served as the theme for a ballad. He bowed deeply as he stood on the threshold,
scraping the floor with his torn shoes, and stepped up to the bed. On the small
bedside table he put down a tray with letters, some coffee, and a stale bread
crust to be chewed, which in turn was supposed to strengthen and cleanse the teeth.
Rumata glanced at him, very annoyed.
"Tell me please, are you ever going to oil that creaky door?"
The boy looked silently at the floor. Rumata threw
the coverlet back, let his bare feet dangle down over the edge of the bed and
reached for the tray. "Washed yourself this morning?" he asked. The boy shifted
from one foot to the other; without answering he wandered through the room,
picking up the scattered garments that lay on the floor.
"I
believe I asked
you whether you washed yourself
today?" said Rumata while he opened his first letter.
"Water won't wash away
your sins," muttered
the boy under
his breath. "So
why, noble don, should I wash myself?"
"And what did I tell you about microbes?" said Rumata. Carefully, the boy placed his master's
green trousers over the back of the armchair,
then passed his thumb in a circle
above it to chase away
the wicked ghosts.
"I
prayed three times
last night," he said. "What more could I do?" "Vou numbskull," said Rumata
and started to read his letter.
It was from Dona Okana, a
lady-in-waiting, the latest favorite of Don Reba. She invited him to come and
visit her this very evening, and signed the letter "amorously languishing
for you." The P.S. stated in clear, simple language what she really
expected from this rendezvous. Rumata felt embarrassed; he blushed. Throwing a
side glance at the boy, he murmured: "That's really too much . . ."
He ought to think it over. To go there was disgusting; not to go there would be
foolish. Dona Okana was a
well-informed person. He quickly drained his cup of coffee and put the
chewing-crust into his mouth.
The next envelope was made of heavy
paper; the seal was damaged. It was obvious that the letter had been opened.
The letter was from Don Ripat, an
unscrupulous careerist and lieutenant in the Gray Militia, who inquired after
his esteemed well-being, expressed his belief in the imminent victory of the
Gray Cause, and begged to postpone payment of his debt, by quoting various
unfavorable circumstances. "All right, all right," Rumata mumbled and
put the letter aside, picked the envelope up once again and examined it with
great interest. Oh yes, they were working much more carefully now; much more carefully.
The third letter contained an invitation
to a duel because of a certain Dona Pifa, but the writer was willing to
withdraw his challenge provided the noble Don Rumata would testify that he was
making no claims upon the person of Dona Pifa and had never made any such
claims. The letter was typical: the basic text had been written by a
calligrapher and the blanks had been filled in with names and times-- in a
clumsy hand and full of mistakes.
Rumata put the letter down and scratched
the mosquito bites on his left hand.
"I want to wash up. Bring the things in!" he ordered.
The boy disappeared behind the door, to return soon
with a wooden basin. He dragged the tub along the floor, his behind wagging
with the exertion. Then he ran once more out of the room and dragged in an
empty tub with a big dipper.
Rumata now jumped to his feet, pulled
the elaborately embroidered nightshirt over his head, and noisily unsheathed
the swords that had been hanging over the headboard of his bed.
Cautiously, the boy ducked
behind a chair. For ten minutes Rumata practiced attack and defense; then he
leaned the swords against the
wall, bent over the empty tub, and
ordered: "The water!" It was rather miserable to wash without
soap but Rumata
had become used to it. The
boy scooped up the water
with the dipper
and poured it over Rumata's back, neck, and head.
Dipper after dipper
filled with water.
All the while
he kept grumbling: "Everywhere else people
behave like human
beings, only here in our house
must we bother
with such refined
nonsense. Who has ever heard
of such a thing? To wash yourself with two buckets of water? Every
day a fresh towel . . . And His Lordship jumps
around all naked with two swords
every morning, without
having said his prayers
first.. ."
While Rumata toweled himself vigorously,
he spoke with an authoritative tone: "I am a member of the court, not just
some lousy baron. A courtier must always be clean and sweet-smelling."
"His Royal Highness will hardly
sniff at you," replied the boy. "Everyone knows that his Highness prays
day and night
for us sinners. And Don Reba--he
ne»er washes. I have it first-hand; his servant has told me
so."
"All right, don't fret," said
Rumata and put on his nylon undershirt. The boy regarded the undershirt with dismay. Rumors
about it had been
circulating for quite
some time now amongst the servants in Arkanar. But there was nothing that Rumata could
do about it, for very natural reasons growing out of his
masculine mentality. As Rumata slipped on his shorts, the boy jerked
his head to one side,
moving his lips
as if he wanted to shoo away the spirit
of impurity.
Still, it wouldn't be a bad idea to
introduce here the fashion of wearing undergarments, thought Rumata. But such
innovations could naturally be carried out only with the help of the fairer
sex. And in this area, too--unfortunately for him--he distinguished himself by
rather high requirements. Quite inconvenient for a spy. For a cavalier and man
of the world, for a renowned connoisseur of court etiquette and for a person
who was sent to the provinces, there to fight duels to settle love affairs, it
was only fitting to have twenty mistresses. Rumata made heroic endeavors to
keep up with his reputation. Half the members of his agency, rather than devote
their time to more serious efforts, spread the
most despicable rumors--rumors calculated to arouse the envy and delight of the
young men of the Arkanarian Guard. Dozens of overjoyed and disappointed ladies
whom Rumata visited until late in the
night--reciting poems all the
time (third night watch: fraternal kiss on the
lady's cheek, a mighty leap
over the balcony's balustrade and right
into the arms of the commander of the night watch, whom he knew
well)--dozens of ladies would outdo each other with tales of the marvelous style
of the genuine cavalier from the big city. Rumata
used the vanity
of these women,
depraved to the point of repulsiveness, for his own purposes. However, the
question of underwear was never touched on.
How much simpler had been the business
with the handkerchiefs! On the occasion of the very first ball be had pulled an
elegant silk cloth from his waistcoat pocket, and with flourish had proceeded
to dry his lips with it. And at the next
ball, the manly youths were drying their sweaty faces with large or small
pieces of cloth of various colors, gaily embroidered and with monograms. And
within one month, the ladies' men were outdoing each other by draping bedsheets
over their hand, dragging the four comers elegantly along the floor behind them ...
Rumata put on his green trousers and a white
batiste shirt with a freshly pressed, upturned collar.
"Any callers?" he inquired of the boy.
"The barber is waiting," said the boy.
"And there are two dons sitting in the drawing room, Don Tameo and Don
Sera. They had me bring them some wine and are quarreling violently. They are
waiting to have breakfast with you."
"Go and get the barber. Tell the noble
dons that I'll join them very soon. But don't be rude to them, do
you hear me? Vou must always remain polite."
Breakfast was not very opulent and left
room for an early lunch. A strongly
spiced roast was served along with dogs' ears, marinated in vinegar. They drank
Irukanian sparkling wine, the viscous, brown Estorian and the white Soanian.
While he skillfully dissected a leg of lamb with the aid of two daggers, Don
Tameo complained about the overbearing temerity of the lower classes. "I
will lodge a complaint at the highest
instance," he declared. "The nobility demands that the plebs, the
peasants, and the artisans be forbidden to show their faces in public places
and in the street. Let them use the courtyards and back entrances. In those instances
where the appearance of a peasant
cannot be avoided--for example, when they deliver bread, meat, or
wine--they should obtain a special permit from the Ministry for the Protection
of the Crown.'"
"What a clever brain!" Don
Sera spoke with enthusiasm and sprayed the area before him liberally with
saliva and juice from the meat.
"But last night at the Court . . ." And he related the latest gossip.
Don Reba's current flame. Lady in waiting Okana, had been careless enough to
step on the king's sore foot. His Highness flew into a rage and turned to Don Reba, ordering him to
mete out an exemplary punishment to the evildoer. Whereupon Don Reba, without
even so much as batting an eyelid, replied; "It will be carried out, Vour
Highness. This very night!"
"I
laughed so hard
that two buttons
popped off my waistcoat!"
remarked Don Sera, cocking his head to one side.
Protoplasm, though Rumata. Nothing but
ingesting and digesting and procreating protoplasm.
"Indeed, noble dons," he said.
"Don Reba is truly a very, very clever man."
"Ho, Ho!" said Don Sera. "Much more--he is an intellectual luminary!"
"An outstanding statesman," said Don Tameo emphatically, with a
knowing expression.
"Ves it's really very
strange," Don Rumata continued with a friendly smile, "when you
remember the kind of things people would tell about him hardly a year ago. Do
you recall, Don Tameo, how wittily you expressed yourself on the subject of his
bow legs?"
Don Tameo's drink almost went down the
wrong way as he quickly swallowed a little glass of Irukanian wine.
"I can't remember a thing," he
grumbled. "And besides I am not known
as a wit--"
"Oh surely you must remember,"
said Don Sera and reproachfully wagged
his head.
"Ves, indeed!" shouted Don Rumata. "Vou were present at
the
conversation, Don Sera! I remember so
well how you laughed at Don Tameo's witty ideas. Vou laughed so hard that
something popped off the clothes you were wearing."
Don Sera turned red and blue in the face
and started to justify his remarks
with long-winded and distorted explanations. He was lying in his teeth, of course. Don Tameo's face had
grown somber. He made a long face. He devoted himself wholeheartedly to the
strong Estorian wine, and since he had--according to his own words--"begun
two mornings ago, and had not been able to desist till now," he had to be
supported from either side when they finally departed.
It was a sunny, friendly day. The common
people stood around
in the streets and gaped as if there were something to look at; little
boys whistled and screamed, throwing mud at each other;
prettily bedecked housewives
with bonnets on their heads leaned out of the windows; daring servant girls
flashed their shy glances from moist eyes. Don Sera's mood began to improve. He tripped a peasant and
almost split his sides to see how the man wallowed in
the mud. Don Tameo suddenly noticed that he had put on his fez with the double
sword ornament back to front. He yelled: "Stop!
Stay put!" and raised his fez, held it up steady, while he tried
to turn his body 180 degrees underneath the fez. Another item
popped off Don Sera's waistcoat. Rumata seized a pretty
servant girl passing by the group, tugged at her pink ear and begged her to put Don Tameo's headgear in order. A crowd of onlookers quickly gathered around the three
noble dons, all
eagerly dispensing advice
to the girl whose face was as red as a beet--and Don's Sera's waistcoat
kept losing a steady stream
of buttons, buckles, and hooks. When
finally they were on their way again, Don
Tameo summoned up his courage
and on the spot drew up an addenda to his complaint wherein he pointed
out how necessary it was "To
keep pretty persons
of the female gender at a
proper distance from peasants and the common
people."
And then a cart loaded
with earthenware pots
blocked their path.
Don Sera unsheathed both his swords
and stated that it was not fit and
proper for the noble dons
to make a detour around
pots of any kind and declared his determination to pave his way straight
through the cart.
But while he was still busy
trying to aim properly and distinguish where the wall of the house ended and
where the pots began, Rumata grasped the spokes of two wheels and turned the
cart around, and thus cleared the road. The gaping crowd, who had followed the
incident with delight, began to cheer: Hip, hip, hooray! The noble dons were
about to continue on their way when from a second-storey window a fat
merchant's
gray-blue head popped out,
loudly giving forth with a tirade concerning the rudeness of the courtiers
against whom "Our Enlightened Eagle, Don
Reba, would soon find some proper remedy." Of course they had to stop on the spot once more and
transfer the entire load of pots into the merchant's window. Rumata saved the
last pot, threw two gold pieces with the profile of Pitz the Sixth inside into
the vessel and presented it to the petrified owner of the wagon.
"How much did you give him?"
asked Don Tameo as they started out again.
"Oh, it's not worth
mentioning," answered Rumata,
shrugging his shoulders. 'Two pieces of gold."
"I
swear by the humpback of our Holy Mickey!" broke
from Don Tameo's lips. "Vou
do have money! If you want, I'll sell you my
Chamalharian
stallion!"
"I'd rather win that stallion from you in a
game of knucklebones," said Rumata.
"Splendid!" shouted Don Sera
and stopped in his tracks. "Let's have a game of knucklebones!"
"Right here?" asked Rumata.
"Why not?" asked Don Sera. "I see no
reason why three noble dons can't
play a game of knucklebones wherever it pleases them!"
Suddenly Don Tameo stumbled and sprawled
full length in the mud. Don Sera's legs, too, suddenly became entangled and he
fell down.
"Oh, I completely forgot," he
said. "We're supposed to be on guard duty now."
Rumata dragged the two to their feet and
led each by the arm along the way. Before the giant dark house of Don Satarina
he came to a halt
"We ought to pay a visit to the old don," he suggested.
"Sure, can't see any reason why three noble
dons shouldn't call on Don Satarina," said Don Sera.
Don Tameo opened his eyes.
"In the king's
Service," he managed the words painfully, "we must all look ahead to
the future. D-d-d-on Satarina-- that's a piece of the past already. Onward,
noble dons! I must get to my guard post."
"Onward!" echoed Don Rumata.
Don Tameo's head dropped forward to rest on his
chest; he did not wake up a second
time. Don Sera cracked his knuckles and began to tell stories about his ever-successful
amorous adventures. They arrived at the palace and went to the guardroom where
Rumata, very relieved, laid Don Tameo on a bench. Don Sera, however,
took a seat at the table,
grandly swept aside a pile of orders signed by the king, and declared that the time had finally come to drink a glass of cold Irukanian wine.
The landlord ought to roll
out a little barrel, he stated, and these old women (he pointed to the officers
of the guard on duty
who were playing cards at another table)
should join them
for a drink. The commander of the guard, a lieutenant of the guard troop, came over. He
eyed Don Tameo and Don
Sera from top
to toe. And
after Don Sera
had directed an inquiry
to him--"Why are all the flowers fading
away in the shelter of my
solitude?"--he decided it would not make any sense to send them
to their sentry post in the present condition; they'd be better off to
lie there for a while.
Rumata
won a gold piece from the lieutenant and talked with him
about the new ribbons on their uniforms and the best method of polishing a sword. He mentioned a short time later that
he hoped to visit
Don Satarina, who
was known to possess some
fine grinding stones,
and seemed visibly upset
to learn that
the honorable grandee
apparently had now lost his mind for good. One month
earlier he was said to have released all his prisoners, had dissolved his bodyguard and handed over to
the state his rich arsenal
of instruments of torture. At the age of 102 years, the old man
declared, it was
his intention from
now on to devote
the rest of his life to good deeds. He'd probably not be long for this world now.
Taking his leave of the lieutenant,
Rumata left the palace and ambled
over in the direction of the harbor. He had to walk around puddles and jump
over deep wheel ruts filled with greenish-brown
water. Without further ado, he pushed
the loitering onlookers out of his path, winked at the girls (who seemed greatly
impressed by his outfit), bowed deeply to the ladies who were being carried
down the street in sedan chairs, waved friendly greetings to his acquaintances
from the court and deliberately ignored the Gray Sturmoviks.
Next, Rumata made a little detour to
look in at the School of Patriots. This school
had been founded
two years previously under the protection
of Don Reba himself for the purpose of training the adolescent sons
of merchants and the lower
middle class for positions as low-ranking
military and administrative officials. The building was constructed of stone,
without any columns or ornaments; it had thick walls with narrow, embrasurelike
windows; on either side of the main entrance
were two semicircular towers. If necessary, one could defend oneself there for quite a while.
Rumata climbed up a narrow circular
staircase leading to the second floor, his spurs clanking on the stone floor.
On his way to the office of the school's procurator he passed by the
classrooms. A monotonous, uniform hum of voices
came from the rooms; answers
were given in unison.
"What is our king?"--"A sublime
person." "What are our
ministers?"-- "Faithful and without the spirit of contradiction." "And
God, the Creator, spoke: 'I pronounce a curse.' And He pronounced a curse . .
." ". . . and at
the sound of the horn blowing twice, run two by two and form a chain, holding
your spears ready to thrust ...""... in case the tortured should lose
consciousness, the torturing must be interrupted immediately..."
The school, thought Rumata. The breeding ground of wisdom.
The mainstay of culture
...
Without knocking, he pushed open the low entrance
door and entered the office; it was dark and icy as a crypt. Behind an
immensely massive writing desk, heaped with papers and thrashing canes, a tall,
angular man jumped to his feet. A pair of deep-seated eyes peered from his bald
head, and on his tightly braided gray uniform could be seen the epaulets of the
Ministry of Security. He was the procurator of the School of Patriots, the most
learned Father Hin, a sadist, a murderer, and a monk at the same time, author
of the Treatise Dealing with Denunciations, which had aroused Don Reba's
interest
"Well, how are you faring here?" asked Don Rumata with a
benevolent smile. 'The literate folk . . . Some we slaughter and others we
teach, eh?"
Father Hin smiled wryly.
"Not every literate man is an enemy of the
crown," he said. "The king's enemies are the literate dreamers,
skeptics, and disloyal dissidents! Whereas our task here--"
"All right, all right," said Rumata. "I
believe you. Are you writing anything new? I have
read your treatise--a very useful work,
but stupid. How can you harbor
such thoughts? How do you get such
ideas? That isn't very good, my dear ... procurator, is it... ?"
"I make no boastful claims of
special intelligence or wisdom," answered
Father Hin with
dignity. "My only
goal is the good of the state.
We need no clever people.
We need loyalty.
And we--"
"That will do, that will do,"
said Rumata. "All right then. But are you writing anything new or not?"
"In the near future I will hand the minister an outline of the New
State
for his perusal. I have used
the Realm of the Holy
Order as a model
for it"
"The very ideal" Rumata was
filled with wonder. "Do you intend to make monks of all of us?"
Father Hin pressed his palms together
and leaned forward. "Permit me, noble don, to make myself clear," he
said excitedly,
licking his
lips. "The crux
of the matter
lies somewhere else.
The crux of the
matter lies in the basic pillars of the New State. And the basic pillars
are rather simple; there are but three: blind belief in the infallibility of
the law; total submission to the law; and finally, the unrelenting observation
of everyone by all."
"Hum," said Rumata. "And
what for?" "What do you mean, what for?"
"Vou are stupid after
all," said Rumata.
"All right, I believe you. I
wanted something else.
What was it now? . . . Oh, yes.
Tomorrow you'll get two new teachers
to add to your staff.
Father Tarra, a venerable old man,
is dabbling in --cosmography; and Brother Nanin, also a most worthy man,
specialist in history.
They are my people, and you are to
treat them right! Here is my pledge." He threw a money pouch of leather on the table.
"That's for you, five gold pieces. All clear?"
"Ves, noble don," said Father
Hin humbly. Rumata yawned and looked around.
"Just as long as we understand each
other," he said. "For some reason my father
used to love these people
very dearly, and charged me with the task of making their lives as
pleasant as possible. Would you do me
a favor and explain, you learned man, why such a most noble don would be so
inclined toward the sciences?"
"Some special merits perhaps?" guessed Father Hin.
"What are you babbling about?" asked
Rumata angrily. "But then again, why not? Indeed, why not? There might be
a beautiful daughter, or a sister . . . Don't you have any wine here? Of course
not--"
Father Hin shrugged his shoulders guiltily. Rumata took one of
the papers that cluttered the writing desk and held it against
the light for a while.
"Defensive belt breakthrough,"
he read out loud. "Oh, you crafty fellows!"
He dropped the paper on the floor and
rose to his feet "Just make sure that your educated brood doesn't bother
these two. Ill come to visit them some time soon, and if I hear that--" He
pushed his fist under Father Hin's nose.
"All right, all right, don't
worry." Father Hin snickered obsequiously.
Rumata nodded curtly and walked out the
door, scraping his spurs along the floor.
On the Boulevard of Overwhelming
Gratitude, he went into an armorer's workshop and bought new rings for his
sword sheath. He tried out a few daggers, hurled them against the wall, weighed
them in his hand, but could not decide on any of them. Then he sat down on a
table and chatted with the owner of the place, a certain Father Hauk. Father
Hauk had kind, sad eyes, and small pale hands, stained with inkspots.
Rumata discussed with him for
a while the merits of Zuren's poetry, listened to an interesting commentary on
the poem. "It weighs upon my soul like fallen leaves," and asked for
something new to read. Before
leaving, he sighed with the author over
the inexpressibly sad verses and recited "To be or not to be" in an
Irukanian translation.
"Holy Mickey!" Father Hauk
cried out exuberantly. "Who writes such verses?"
"I do," said Rumata and left the store.
He made his way to the Gray Joy Inn, drank there a
glass of Irukanian white wine, patted the innkeeper's wife on the cheek,
skillfully overthrew with one thrust of his sword a table where a government
spy sat staring at him with empty eyes. Then he walked to a far comer of the
inn and found there a ragged, bearded man, who had an inkwell suspended around
his neck.
"Good day, Brother Nanin," he
greeted the man. "How many petitions have you written today?"
Brother Nanin's embarrassed smile displayed his small decayed
teeth.
"Nowadays people want to write very few petitions, noble don,"
he answered. "Some believe
that it is useless to beg for
favors. And others count
on the likelihood that they will get what they want soon anyhow,
without having to ask for it."
Rumata bent over and whispered in his
ear that he had arranged the matter with the School of Patriots.
"Here are two pieces
of gold for you," he said finally. "Clean up and put on some
decent clothes. And weigh your
words. At least
for the first few days. Father Hin, the procurator, is a dangerous
man." .
"I'll read him my treatise about rumors," said Brother Nanin merrily.
"I thank you, noble don."
"The things one does in memory of a
dear departed father," said Rumata. "But, tell me, where can I find
Father Tarra?"
Brother Nanin's smile vanished suddenly
and a nervous tick played around his mouth.
'There was a brawl here
yesterday," he said. "And Father Tarra had a bit too much to drink
and got somewhat out of hand. And, then, you know, he has red hair . . . They
broke his ribs."
"What a
mess!" Rumata said. "Why do you all drink so much?" "Sometimes
it's hard to control oneself," said Brother Nanin
sadly.
"That's very true," said Rumata. "Well, here's a few more
gold
pieces, and try to take
care of him, will you?"
Brother Nanin bowed low and wanted to kiss Rumata's
hand but Rumata stepped back quickly.
"Now, now," he said.
"I have seen
you make better
jokes in your time,
Brother Nanin. Farewell!"
The harbor smelled like no other spot in
Arkanar. It smelled of seawater and foul algae, of spices, tar, smoke, and
rotten corned beef, and from the taverns came a nauseating odor of boiled fish
and home brewed beer turned sour. The sultry air was filled with a jumble
of curses in many tongues. On the piers,
in the narrow lanes between the warehouses and around the taverns, thousands of
people shoved and pushed. They caught
the eye. Down-and-out seamen, bloated merchants, fishermen with somber faces,
slave traders, pimps, heavily made-up whores, drunken soldiers, men impossible
to classify, hung with arms from head to toe, and fantastic vagabonds in torn
clothes with golden bracelets around their dirty wrists. And all were excited and
ill-tempered. Don Reba had issued an
edict three days before, forbidding any ship or boat to leave the harbor.
The Gray Sturmoviks lounged on the
quays, playing with their rusty butcher cleavers. They spat into the water and
bestowed impertinent and malicious glances on the crowd. On some of the ships
that were moored near the quays, groups of five or six men huddled, brawny,
copper-skinned men clad in heavy furs turned inside out. These were the
barbarian mercenaries. They were no good in a fight at close range, but when
they were at a distance (as they were now) they were very dangerous with their
blowpipes and poisoned arrows. In the distance loomed the black masts of the
war galleys of the royal fleet, like threatening
fingers pointing skywards. From time to time, streams of fire issued from them and landed on the
surface of the water toward the quays: the oil slicks were ignited in this way
in order to intimidate the waiting crowd.
Rumata passed the customs shed where the
ship captains were waiting in front of closed doors in vain, trying to obtain
their permit to depart. He thrust through the noisy crowd that was busy at
bartering and trading with anything at
hand: from slave girls and black pearls to narcotics and trained spiders. He
continued on to the quays, threw a swift glance over to the side where corpses
in sailors' uniforms were publicly displayed. The dead bodies had already
swelled up under the hot sun. He described a wide circle around a square which
was littered with all kinds of junk and garbage, and finally entered an
evil-smelling little side street. It was much quieter here. Half-naked
prostitutes were sprawled in the doorways of cheap waterfront dives; at a
street crossing a soldier lay, dead drunk, his nose bashed in and his pockets
tamed inside out: suspicious figures with pale nocturnal faces crept along the
walls of the houses.
This was the first time that Rumata had
come here during the day. At first he was surprised at the lack of reaction to
his presence. The people he
encountered either looked past him with their watery eyes or saw straight
through him. Still, they stepped aside to let him pass. Once when he tamed
around a comer and then swiftly looked back, he saw some twenty various
heads--male and female, bushy-haired and
bald--disappear instantly
behind doorways, windows, and fences. Suddenly he felt the strange atmosphere
of this nauseating neighborhood, an atmosphere filled not so much with
hostility or danger as with an evil, avaricious interest.
He pushed a door
open with his
shoulder and entered
one of the taverns. Inside the darkened room a man dozed behind
the bar. He was very
old, with a face like a mummy
and an extraordinarily long nose.
There were no patrons in the room. Rumata
approached the bar and was just about to flip his fingers against the enormous
nose of the old man when all of a sudden he became aware that the old man was
not really asleep, but was watching him carefully from behind his almost closed
eyelids. Rumata threw a silver coin on the table and the old man's eyes jerked
open as if pushed by a button.
"What would you like, noble
don?" he inquired officiously. "Something to eat? To sniff? Or maybe
a girl?"
"Don't ask such stupid
questions," said Rumata. "Vou know quite well what I'm here
for."
"Well! Now isn't that the noble Don Rumata!" shouted the old
man
as if completely taken by surprise. "There I am, just
sitting there--and suddenly I see a familiar face--"
After
this long speech,
the old man closed his eyes again.
Rumata got the message: the coast was clear. He walked around the bar
and crawled through a tiny door into the adjoining room. It was very crowded and dark inside and the room was
filled with a penetrating odor of sour
beer. In the middle of the room, standing behind a high desk, was an elderly
man. His deeply wrinkled face was bent over a pile of papers. His head was
covered by a flat black cap. A weak oil lamp flickered on the high desk and its
pale light barely illuminated the faces of the men sitting motionless along the
wall. Rumata used his two swords like canes and groped for a low chair near the
wall. He sat down. Special laws and
a special etiquette ruled here. None of those present paid the slightest bit of
attention to the newcomer. If somebody entered, then that was the way it was
supposed to be; but in case it was not the way it was supposed to be, then you
blinked just once and that person disappeared. Vou could search the wide world
over and never find a trace of him . . . The pucker-faced old man busily
scratched his pen over the paper; the people along the wall did not budge. From
time to time one of them would sigh deeply. Up and down the walls scurried
invisible salamanders, hunting for flies.
The motionless men along the wall were
the leaders of robber bands. Rumata had known some of them by sight for quite a
while now. These dull brutes were not worth anything, actually. Their psyches
were no more complicated than that of the average shopkeeper. They were stupid,
brutal, and very handy with .knives and cudgels. But then there was the man at
the high desk.
He was called Waga Holeso, and he was
all-powerful; there was no competitor who would have contested his position as
chief of all the criminal forces in the land, from the Pitanian swamps in the
Western regions of Irukan to the maritime borders of the mercantile republic of
Soan. He had been cursed and expelled from all three official churches of the empire because
of his excessive haughtiness, for he claimed
to be the younger brother of
the ruling prince. He had at his disposal a standing nocturnal army, some ten
thousand men strong; had a few hundred thousand gold pieces in his treasure
chests; and his agents penetrated as far as the very heart of the government
machine. He had been officially executed at least four times during the past
twenty years, each time in the
presence of a large populace. According to an official version he was currently
languishing simultaneously in three of the darkest jails of the realm. Don
Reba, however, had repeatedly issued commands "regarding the rebellious
spreading of rumors and legends by enemies of the State and other malevolent
persons regarding a certain so-called Waga Holeso, who in actuality does not
exist and thus belongs to the realm of legends."
According to certain rumors, the same
Don Reba summoned several barons, who disposed of strong troops of warriors,
and promised the following reward: five hundred gold pieces for Waga's body and
seven thousand for Waga alive. In his time, Rumata himself had had to spend a
great deal of effort and money in order to establish contact with Holeso. He
felt violently repelled by the old man but Holeso was occasionally very useful,
even literally indispensable. Besides, Waga was
of scientific interest to him, namely as a most intriguing specimen in
Rumata's collection of medieval
monsters, and as a person who apparently lacked any trace of a past.
Finally, Waga put his quill aside,
straightened up his back and said with a croaking voice:
"Well, then, my dear
children. Two and a half thousand pieces
of gold within three
days. And expenses run only 1996.
Five hundred and four little round pieces
of gold in three days. Not bad, my dear children,
not bad at all..."
Nobody moved. Waga .left his place
behind the high desk, took a seat in a comer and forcefully rubbed his dry
palms together.
"Isn't that something to make you
jump for joy, my dear children?" he
said. "These are good times for us, these fruitful years . . . But we must
work hard for our daily bread. Indeed, how hard! My older brother, the king of
Arkanar, has set his mind on annihilating all learned men in his own kingdom as
well as in mine. Well, he in his wisdom ought
to know what should be done. After all, who are we to doubt the wisdom
of his judgment? It does not behoove us to criticize his most exalted
decisions. On the other hand, we may--nay, we must--extract some profit from these decisions. And since we are his loyal subjects,
we must serve him. As we are but his nocturnal
subjects we will not deliver into his hands our modest part of these profits
without further ado. He, of course,
won't notice it, and therefore he will not be annoyed at us. What is the matter?"
Nobody moved.
"I had the impression that
Piga was sighing
over there. Am I right, Piga, my son?"
There was a slight commotion, somebody
fidgeting in his seat, apparently, as nothing could be seen in the darkened
room. A slight cough came from a comer.
"I didn't sigh, Waga," said a coarse voice. "I wouldn't..
."
"That's it, Piga, just keep quiet! Excellent!
Now hold your breath and listen to me carefully! Look sharp and set to work and
nobody will bother you at your difficult task. My older brother, His Royal
Highness, has let it be known through his mouthpiece, the noble Don Reba, that
he has set a rather considerable sum of money on the heads of several learned
men who are in hiding or who wish to flee from here. We must deliver these
heads into his royal hands, just to humor the old man. On the other hand,
though, some of these scientists want to hide from my older brother's wrath,
and are willing to remunerate whoever will assist them in it. Out of
compassion, in the name of pity, and also to guard my brother's soul from the
burden of excessive misdeeds, we will help these people. And if later on His
Royal Highness should still be in need of these heads, he can still get them
from us. At a good price. Very cheap
..."
Waga fell silent and lowered his head.
Tears were trickling down his cheeks all of a sudden--the slow tears of an old
man.
"I am getting old," he sighed,
trying vainly to stifle a sob. "My hands
are trembling with
age, my legs
fail me and my memory
begins to fade. Indeed, I forgot completely that
inside this tiny, stifling cage a noble don is languishing in our midst--surely
he does not care to hear about our petty money deals. I am leaving you, I will
rest. But meanwhile, my children, let us ask the noble
don to be gracious enough to forgive our oversight . . ."
Moaning and groaning
he rose to his feet,
arched over to make a bow. The rest of
the men also got to their feet and bowed before Rumata, but indecision and fear
showed plainly in their faces. Rumata could literally hear their dull,
primitive brains crackling with the strain of trying to interpret the old man's
words and gestures.
Things were perfectly clear, however.
The clever old man would seize the opportunity at the right moment to inform
Don Reba of his intention that he and his nocturnal army would join the Gray
hordes in the pogrom they had just started. Now, however, the time for concrete
orders had come, when lists of names were to be handed out and the exact date
and hour were to be determined when the plans would be carried out. At this
point Don Rumata's presence was, to put it mildly, considered undesirable. This
way it was suggested to the noble don to state quickly the purpose of his visit
and then to take his leave as fast as possible. What a morose old man! A nasty
person! What was he doing here in town? Waga couldn't stand city life.
"Vou are right, my dear Waga," said Rumata. "My time is
limited.
But it is I who must beg your pardon
because I will bother you with some inconsequential little
business." Rumata remained
seated while all the
others listened to him standing up.
"It has come about
that I am in need
of your advice
. .. Vou may sit
down."
Waga bowed once more and sat down.
"This is what
I came to tell you," continued Rumata. "Three days ago I was supposed
to meet my friend, a noble don from Irukan,
at the Square of the Heavy
Swords. We failed
to meet. He has vanished. But I knew for certain that he has crossed safely
the Irukanian border.
Perhaps you might know
something further about his fate?"
Waga did not reply for a long time. The bandits
kept clearing their throats and sighed deeply. Then Waga, too, cleared his
throat.
"No, noble don," he said. "Nothing is known to us in this matter." Rumata instantly stood up.
"Thank you, my friend," he
said. Then he walked over to the high desk in the middle of the room and set
down a leather pouch with ten gold pieces. "I'm leaving this here with you
with the following request: Should you hear of any further news, let me know
about it, please." He touched his cap. "Farewell!"
He stopped once more, just before he
reached the door, turned around and remarked casually:
"Vou mentioned something about
learned men. A thought just occurred to me. I have the feeling
that the Hing of Arkanar won't succeed in capturing any proper bookworms even if he should try for a whole month. And I must found a university in the capital
city. I once made
such a vow when I was cured
there from the plague. So if you should seize any bookworms, will you let
me know before
you inform Don Reba. Maybe I might use one or the other for my university."
"That will cost you dearly,"
warned Waga with a mawkish voice. "The merchandise is hard to come
by."
"But my honor is dearer still," bragged Rumata as he turned to
go.
Part
Three
It would be most interesting, thought
Rumata, to capture this Waga and bring him to Terra. Technically not difficult
at all. Easy to arrange. But what would he do on Earth? Rumata tried to imagine
what Waga would do on Earth. Throw a giant shaggy spider into a bright room with shining walls and air conditioning
pervaded with pine scent or ocean
breezes - and the spider flattens itself against the shiny floor, jerks its
wicked, feverishly contorted eyes to and fro and--what else can he do?--crawls
sideways, always sideways into the farthest little comer, doubles up into a
ball and threateningly bares its poisonous mandibles. First and foremost, Waga
would seek out the company of the dissatisfied and the social outcasts. And
just as certain would it turn out, that even the most stupid grumbler of Earth
would still be too pure and unsuitable for Waga's purposes. The old man would
simply deteriorate. Maybe even expire. But who really knew what he
was like? That is the whole difficulty
in such an affair. The psyche of these monsters resembles a dark forest. Holy
Mickey! To find your way through it is far more complicated than in nonhumanoid
civilizations. It's possible to explain
all their actions but hellishly difficult to prognosticate them. Ves,
there was definitely a possibility that Waga might die of grief. Perhaps, though, he might look around, get adjusted
somehow, quickly understand what belongs where, and then sojourn in some
wildlife reserve as a sylvan spirit. It's most unlikely that he wouldn't have
some small, insignificant passion, some interest which is only in his way here,
but that on Earth might become the center of his existence. I believe he is
fond of cats. They say he has a whole barrage of them somewhere in Hiccup
Forest, and a servant who does nothing but take care of them.
And Waga even pays that man,
despite his reputation of being an old miser, and despite the fact that he
could simply string along the caretaker with promises and threats. But I can't
imagine what he would do on Earth with his tremendous lust for power!
Rumata
stopped before a tavern. He was about
to enter when
he noticed that one of his money pouches was missing. He stood at the
entrance door, totally perplexed--he could not get used to such things for the
life of him, although this was not the first time that it happened. He searched
and rummaged through
his pockets for the longest
time. All told he had brought along three pouches
with ten gold coins in each.
One he had given Father Hin,
the procurator, the second to Waga. The third pouch had disappeared. His
pockets were empty. From his left trouser leg all gold clasps had been
carefully cut away and his dagger had been removed from his belt.
Suddenly he saw two Sturmoviki a little
way off who were staring at him, grinning and sneering. As far as the
collaborator and member of the Institute of Experimental History was concerned,
they could simply go to Hell--but the noble don flew into a rage. For a moment
he lost control. He walked over to the two Gray Soldiers and raised his hand,
which somehow clenched into a fist of its own accord. Evidently some terrible change
had also come over his face, for the sneering soldiers were gripped by sheer
terror, their mocking faces suddenly frozen, and they fled inside the tavern.
Rumata was frightened. Only once before
had he ever felt so horrible: the time
when (as a standby cosmonaut) he had been seized by the first symptoms of
malaria. Nobody could understand how the malady had appeared so suddenly, and
two hours later he had been cured, and sent off with some good words and a few
jokes. But he had never been able to forget the shock, the shock that he
--who had never been sick
before in his life--had felt at the notion that something was disintegrating inside
his body, the realization that
he was gradually diminishing and was somehow
threatened with loss
of control over his body.
I didn't want to do it, he thought now.
It would never have crossed my mind. They didn't
even do anything in particular, after all ... They were just standing there,
grinning, baring their teeth ... It was a stupid grin, I admit, but I must have
looked quite idiotic myself, rummaging through my pockets like that. And I
almost tore them to pieces, he suddenly
realized. If they hadn't run inside I would have killed them! He remembered the bet he had recently
made, how he had taken a
dummy clad in a double
Soanian suit of armor and split it from head
to toe with his sword--cold shivers
ran down his back at the thought. They might now be lying here in a pool of their own blood, like stuck pigs, and
he would be standing here,
sword in hand,
not knowing what
to do ... A fine god you
are! Vou've become a beast ... Suddenly all his muscles ached as if he had been
doing heavy physical labor. Come on, come on, he told himself. It wasn't so
horrible after all. It's all over now. Just an instant flash. Like a bolt of
lightning and it's all gone. I am a human being, in spite of everything, so there must be animal
in me as well. It's only nerves. Nerves and the tension
of the past few days. The worst thing, though, is the sensation of an approaching shadow. Vou can't
tell whose shadow it is or where it comes from
but it keeps creeping closer and closer and can't be stopped .
. .
This feeling of inevitability pervaded
everything. It could be felt in the fact that the Sturmoviks, who until recently
had huddled like cowards inside their barracks, now paraded brazenly in the
middle of the roads, where
hitherto only the
noble dons had
been permitted. And in the fact that the streetsingers
had vanished from the city, the storytellers,
the dancers, the acrobats. And in the fact that the citizens no longer sang songs
with political themes,
had become very serious,
and could suddenly predict with utter certainty what would benefit the state. And in the fact that the harbor
had suddenly been
closed without any explanation. And in the
fact that "indignant crowds" had been
seen destroying all the old curiosity shops, the only places in the
kingdom where it was still possible
to buy or borrow books
and manuscripts in all
the languages of the country, even in the now dead languages of the natives beyond
the bay. And in the fact that the landmark
of the city, the shining tower of the observatory,
loomed against the sky like a blackened, decayed tooth: it had been burned down
by a "careless conflagration." And in the fact that the consumption
of alcohol had increased fourfold during the past two years--in Arkanar of all
places, that had been notorious for its heavy drinkers from days of old. And in
the fact that the flogged
and frightened peasants buried themselves in the cellars of their filthy little
nests and could not bring themselves to emerge
even to deal
with the most
urgent field chores.
And finally in the
fact that the old buzzard
Waga Holeso had transferred his
headquarters to the city (evidently he must have gotten wind of some worthwhile
spoils).
Somewhere in the interior of the palace, in the
luxurious apartments, where the gout-ridden king resided, the king who had not
seen the light of the sun for the past twenty years for fear of anything that
moved outside in the world; the son of his own grandfather; the imbecile king
who would sign one terrible edict after the other, sending the most honorable
and selfless people to a cruel death--somewhere inside there ripened a
tremendous abscess that threatened to burst any moment now...
Rumata stumbled over the remains of a
squashed melon and raised his head. He was on the Boulevard of Overwhelming
Gratitude, the neighborhood where the better merchants had their stores, the
moneylenders and the jewelers. The street was lined with solid old houses, the
sidewalks were wide and the road was paved with granite. Usually one would find
here the noble dons and the moneyed aristocracy of the town but now a dense crowd
of simple folk poured toward him.
They made a wide and cautious
detour around Rumata. Some gaped at him with curiosity; many, though, bowed
deeply before him, just to make sure.
Fat shiny faces glowed from the upper-storey windows like little light towers,
excited and paralyzed with curiosity. Somewhere, farther on ahead, imperious voices could be heard:
"Hey, there, move on!
Disperse! Hurry
up, will you?
Move it on!" Comments came from
the crowd:
"They've got the devil on their
backs, got to watch out for those, they're the worst kind. Look like ordinary,
quiet, moral people. Like honest folk. Just like any other merchant. But just
look a bit
closer--there's poison
inside them, .. bitter poison..."
"He had it coming, the devil ... I'm used to quite a lot, but my eyes are still smarting from that..."
"Put a fire under them! Ves, that
does my heart good. We can count on our boys."
"Wasn't that a little too cruel?
After all, he is a human being, a creature of flesh and blood . . . When
someone sins, well, you should punish him, set his mind right, but why--"
"Cut out that nonsense! And please
keep your voice down, my friend. Vou aren't alone here, remember
that, will you? People are listening ..."
"My dear
sir! It's marvelous material, a good
piece of cloth.
Take advantage of it now,
before the price
goes up again
. . . Take advantage of it, before Pakin's
agents snatch up everything again ..."
"Above all, my son,
don't doubt! Simply
believe, that's the most
important thing. Once
the authorities step
in, you can
be sure that
they know what they are doing..."
They've done it again. Cruelly beaten
some poor soul. Rumata wished he could
turn around, make
a wide detour
around this spot,
from the oncoming crowd and the
shouts of "Get a move on!
Disperse!" But he did not turn
back. Instead, he smoothed back
his hair to uncover the stone in the golden circlet around
his forehead. In fact, it was not a stone, but the lens of a television camera,
and the circlet was not an ornament but a transmitter. The historians back on Earth
could see and hear
everything that the two hundred
fifty scouting emissaries saw and heard on
the nine continents of this planet. And the emissaries were obligated to look
and to listen.
He made his chin jut out, spread the two swords
apart on each side of his body, in order to push as many people
out of his way as he
could, and marched directly toward the middle of the road. The idle onlookers
quickly jumped aside to let him pass. Four thick-lipped porters, their
mouths heavily painted, were carrying past
a silvery sedan
chair. From behind
the curtains peered
a beautiful, cold face with
half-closed eyes. Rumata took
off his hat with a flourish and made a bow. It was Dona Okana, the current
favorite of the Enlightened Eagle, Don Reba. Upon catching sight of the most
noble cavalier, she smiled at him, yearning and promise in her eyes. One could
have ticked off the names of at least two dozen noble dons who would have given
a great deal for that smile. Such a smile was a rare thing these days and could
not be bought with gold. Rumata paused for a moment and let his glance follow the sedan chair. I must come
to a decision, he thought. I must finally make up my mind . . . He shuddered at
the thought of what this would involve. But it had to be! I must . . . My mind
is made up now, besides I have no choice, there is no other way. Tonight. He
passed by the armorer's workshop where he had tried out the daggers and
listened to poetry earlier in the day. He stopped. So that's what it was. It
was your turn this time, my dear Father Hauk
...
The
crowd had already
begun to thin out. The door of the shop had
been torn off
its hinges, the
windows smashed. A bully of a Gray Sturmovik leaned in the entrance, his,
feet crossed. Another
Sturmovik squatted near the wall. The wind blew some torn papers with
writing across the street.
The Sturmovik bully
stuck his finger
in his mouth and sucked at it for a while,
pulled it out again and examined it carefully.
The finger was bleeding. The
Sturmovik caught Rumata's glance and said in a complacent, raucous voice:
'That beast bit like a polecat."
The second Sturmovik chuckled, full of zeal. What a
thin, pale youth, still insecure, with pimples around his mouth. He was
obviously: a greenhorn, a beginner, a young monster, a wolf cub.
"What's going on here?" asked Rumata.
"They went after a secret bookworm," the
wolf cub said nervously.
The bully stuck his finger back in his
mouth, without changing his posture.
"At-ten-tion!" commanded Rumata.
The young wolf cub jumped to
his feet and took his ax, holding it the proper way. The bully thought a while,
but then he straightened out his feet and stood more or less at attention.
"A bookworm? What kind? Who?" inquired
Rumata.
"Who knows?" said the young
one. "On orders of Father Zupik..." "Well--did they catch
him?"
"Sure. They got him all
right." "Splendid," said Rumata.
It wasn't too bad, after all. There was
still time left. Nothing is more important than
time, he thought. One hour may cost a life, one day is invaluable.
"And where did you take him to? To the Tower?"
"Huh?" asked the wolf cub in a
totally absentminded voice. "I'm asking you, is he in the Tower now?"
An uncertain smile spread over the pimply face. The bully
laughed deep in his belly. Rumata turned
around quickly. Over there, on the other side of the street, the body of Father
Hauk swung from a crossbeam of a house door. He hung limply like a bag filled
with rags. A few neglected children stared at him, their mouths wide open.
"Not everyone gets to go to the
Tower nowadays," came the raucous voice of the bully from behind his back.
"We do quick work these days. Rope around the neck--and
fare-thee-well..."
The wolf cub started giggling again.
Rumata glared at him with blind eyes and then walked slowly across the street.
The face of the sad poet was black
and unrecognizable. Rumata lowered his eyes. Only the poet's hands looked
familiar now, long, weak fingers, all covered with ink ...
No one walks out on life these days.
Vou're led out by the neck.
Did anyone ask for Another choice?
Limp and awkward
his feeble hands will fall.
Who knows where the heart of the polyp
is located Or whether the polyp has a heart at all...
Rumata turned away and left. Good weak
Father Hauk ... The polyp does have a heart.
And we know where it is. And that is the most horrible thing, my silent, forsaken
friend. We know its location, but we cannot
destroy it without
shedding the blood
of thousands of frightened,
corrupt, uncritical, blind people. And there are so many of them, so hopelessly many
dismal, desperate people,
grown hard by constant work without
proper recompense. Debased human beings who are not yet capable of rising above
the ideal of a few copper pennies. And they cannot yet be taught,
united, guided, and
saved from themselves. Too early, far too early, one century too early did the Gray
vermin rise in Arkanar; there is no resistance to meet it. So only
one thing remains
to be done: save
the few that
can still be saved. Budach,
Tarra, Nanin, and another dozen or two at most. . .
But merely the thought that thousands of
others, perhaps less gifted but still honest and truly noble human beings, were
condemned to perish, evoked in Rumata a sensation of chill horror and a feeling
of his own baseness. Occasionally this feeling would overwhelm him to the point
where his conscious awareness grew dim; and then Rumata could visualize in
bright daylight rows upon rows of Gray soldiers, their backs turned to him,
illuminated by flashes of gunfire; and Don Reba's insignificant face being
eaten up alive by stinking flies; and the Tower of Joy slowly collapsing in a
rubble heap . . . Wouldn't that be a splendid, a marvelous feat. Intervention
in great style. But then later ... They were right back home in the Institute.
Then the inevitable will follow. Bloody chaos throughout the country. Holeso's
nocturnal troops will rise to the forefront, ten thousand foul assassins, the
rejects of society, the excommunicated, the child molesters, the rapists, the
dregs of the human race; hordes of copper-skinned barbarians pour down from
their mountain strongholds and slaughter everyone, babes-in-arms and the old
alike; immense crowds of peasants, artisans and burghers, blinded with fear,
take to the woods, flee to the mountains, the desert; and your
comrades-in-arms--those wonderful, brave men!--will slit each other's bellies
in a cruel struggle for power and your machine gun, of course,
after you have come to an inevitable,
violent end, your death . . . And this stupid, ugly death will rise to find you
from a goblet of wine some friend will offer you, or in an arrow shot from
behind a curtain. And then the stony
face of your successor, who will be sent from Earth as your replacement and who
will find the land drenched with blood and
ravaged by fire--a land where everything, yes, everything must be
started all over again from the very beginning...
Rumata
pushed open his house door,
and entered the magnificent
entrance hall, which already had fallen in a state of disrepair. His face was as dark as an approaching thunderstorm. Muga, the hunchback, his gray-haired servant who had
worked as a lackey for the past
forty years, was frightened
at this sight He hunched his torso a bit more forward and drew his head still
deeper between his shoulders, as the furious young master tore off his hat,
cape, and gloves,
hurled his swords
on a bench, and quickly ascended
to his room. The boy Uno awaited
him in the drawing room.
"Give orders to have my lunch
served!" yelled Rumata. "In my study!"
The boy did not move from the spot.
"Somebody's waiting for you in there," he announced in a
sulking
voice.
"Who?"
"Some young woman. Perhaps a dona. Very charming, dressed
like a noble lady; she is
beautiful."
Hyra, thought Rumata, relieved. His tension began to fade away.
How wonderful, how good of her to come
right at this moment, sweet child . . . He stood there, his eyes closed in
order to regain his composure completely.
"Want me to chase her away?"
asked the boy solicitously. "Idiot," said Rumata. "I'll chase
you away! Where is she?" "In the study," answered the boy and
smiled sheepishly. "Lunch for two, Uno," Rumata said as he turned to
go to the
study. "And no visitors! Not even the king--or the devil --or Don Reba himself!
I won't let anybody in."
He saw her as he entered the study. She
was sitting in a big armchair, her legs tucked under sideways, her head cupped
in her little left hand, while she absentmindedly leafed through the Treatise
Concerning Rumors.
She saw Rumata
come into the
room and wanted
to stand up.
But he did not give
her enough time
to do so, rushed over
to her, embraced her, buried his nose in her
thick, fragrant hair and said softly: "Vou've come at the right time,
Hyra! How wonderful!"
There
was really nothing
very special about
Hyra. A girl
like many others, eighteen
years old, upturned nose. Her father
an assistant clerk at the courthouse, her brother a
sergeant in the Gray Militia. She had few admirers, since
she had reddish-blond hair, and redheads were not much in demand in Arkanar. This
was probably the reason she was so surprisingly quiet and shy:
she had nothing
in common with
those loud, voluptuous women
who were the
idols of rich
and poor alike.
Neither did she
share any of the characteristics of those languid
ladies of the court,
who were forced to learn--far too soon, and for the rest of their
lives--what a woman's role
was. Hyra was capable of true love, the way women on Earth would love--quiet
and without any reservations.
"Why have you been crying?"
"What has upset you so much?"
"No, tell me, why have you been crying?"
"I'll tell you in a moment. Vour eyes look so
tired. What has happened?"
"Later. Who insulted you?"
"Nobody insulted me. Just
take me away
from here! Please!" "I promise I will."
"When will we leave?"
"I
don't know, sweetheart. But we will
go away, most
assuredly." "Far away?"
"Very far."
"To the capital?"
"Ves... To the capital.
To my home." "Is
it beautiful there?"
"Very beautiful. Nobody ever has to cry there."
"And what are the people
like there?"
"Like me."
"All?"
"Not all. There are many far better
than myself." "That's impossible!"
"Vou'll see!"
"Why is it so easy to believe you? My father
won't believe in anybody. My brother says all men are pigs, filthy animals. But
I don't believe them, I have no confidence in what they
are saying, but I always believe you."
"I love you..."
"Wait. . . Rumata .. . Take off your circlet--you said it was
sinful--"
A happy smile
came over Rumata's
face. He removed
the circlet from his head, placed
it on the table and covered it with a book.
"That is the eye of the God," he said. "Let it rest for a while." He took her in his arms.
"It's really very sinful.
But when I am with you, I don't need any god, do I?"
"Ves, you are right," she said softly.
When
they finally sat down at the table,
the roast was cold and the wine from the cool cellar had
become warm. Uno came into the room and walked noiselessly along the wall--the
way he had been trained by old Muga--and began
to light the candles in the candlesticks,
although it was still day.
"Is that your slave?" asked Hyra.
"No, he is free. A splendid boy, only very stingy."
"Gold should stay in its
place," said Uno without turning around. "Vou probably still haven't
bought any new sheets, have you?"
asked Rumata.
"Why should I?" said the boy. "The old ones are still good
enough.
They'll do for quite a
while."
"But I can't sleep on the same sheets for a
whole month, Uno," remarked Rumata.
"Eh!" said the boy. "His
Royal Highness sleeps on the same sheets for half a year, and he doesn't
complain."
"And the candles?" said Rumata and winked at Hyra. "The
candles
in the candlesticks? Did you
get those for free?" Uno paused for a moment.
"But you have a visitor," he
said finally with emphasis. "Vou see what he is like!" said Rumata.
"He is a good person!" Hyra
was serious. "He's fond of you. Let's take him along with us."
"We'll see about that," said Rumata.
The boy frowned with suspicion and said:
"Where are we supposed to go? I
won't leave." "We'll go to a place where all men are like
Rumata."
The boy pondered for a while, then said,
full of contempt: "To paradise, eh, like nobility?"
Then he snorted like a horse and
shuffled out of the study. Hyra followed him with her eyes.
"A
fine boy," she said. "Grouchy as a bear cub. But you have a real friend in him."
"All my friends are good
people." "Baron Pampa, too?"
"Where do you know him from?" wondered Rumata.
"Vou talk about no one else. All I hear from
you is Baron Pampa this, Baron Pampa that."
"Baron Pampa is a valuable
comrade." "What do you mean: the Baron--a comrade?"
"I
meant to say,
he is a good fellow.
Very kind and cheerful. And he
dearly loves his wife, more than anything."
"I'd like to meet him ... or do you have second thoughts about
me?"
"N-n-n-o. But even if he is a good
fellow, he's still a baron." "But--"she said.
Rumata pushed back his plate.
"Now, tell me, why you were crying. And why you came running
to my house unaccompanied. Vou know it's not advisable these days to be
out in the streets all alone."
"I
couldn't stand it any longer
at home. I won't go back there.
I'll work for you as a
servant. For free."
Rumata smiled but he felt a lump in his
throat at the same time. "Every day Father copies written
confessions," she continued,
with quiet desperation in her
voice, "and the papers he copies from are stained with blood. He gets them
in the Tower of Joy. Oh, why did you ever teach me to read? Every evening,
every night, he copies these reports from the hearings--and he drinks. It's so
horrible, so horrible! 'Look, Hyra,' he says. 'Our neighbor, the calligrapher,
he used to teach people how to read and write. Can you imagine what he is in
reality? He confessed it in the torture chamber: A magician and an Irukanian
spy.--'And who,' he says, 'who should
one believe now? I myself,'
he says, 'learned to read and write from him.' And my brother comes
home from patrol service reeking of beer, dried blood on his hands . . . 'We
are exterminating all of them,' he says, 'down to the twelfth generation.' He
won't leave Father alone, he keeps asking him why he can read and write . .
Today, he says he and his friends dragged a man into our house
. . . They beat him until
they were splashed all over with blood. Then he finally stopped screaming.--I
can't go on like this, I won't go back any more, I'd rather die..."
Rumata stood beside her, his hand softly caressing
her hair. Her dry, shining eyes were
fixed on a far-away point. What could he say to her? He swooped her up in his
arms, carried her to the divan, sat down next to her and began to speak. He
told her of crystal temples, of gay gardens stretching for many miles--without
filth, or swarms of flies and gnats, or garbage. He spoke of the table that
serves dinner all by itself, of the flying carpet, of the charming city of
Leningrad, of his
friends--proud, happy, good
people, and of a wonderful country beyond the oceans, beyond the seven
mountains, the so-called "Earth" . . . She listened quietly and
attentively, and pressed closer to him as they heard now down below in the
street--grrrrum, grrrum, grrrum--rang out the metallic sound of boots on pavement.
Hyra
possessed a marvelous trait. She believed
unconditionally in what was good. If he were to tell the same story to some peasant
serf, the man would
only make an unbelieving, stupid
grimace, wipe the snot
off his nose on his sleeve and wordlessly gape at him as if he were a legendary
creature, all the while thinking: What a pity, such a good, clever, noble
don! Too bad
he lost his
marbles telling such
tales! Or even worse, let him tell such stories
to Don Tameo or Don Sera--they wouldn't bother hearing him out. One would
unfailingly fall asleep
and the other just belch and remark:
"Very creditable, very creditable indeed
. . . and how about
the women over
there, any good?" Whereas Don Reba
would listen attentively to the end, then give a sign to his
bloodhounds, the Sturmoviki, to screw the noble don's elbows up to his shoulder
blades and find out for sure where the noble don had learned such fairy tales
and who else had heard them...
After Hyra had calmed down and fallen
asleep, he kissed her gently on her peacefully slumbering face, covered her
with his fur coat, and left the room on tiptoe, closing the squeaking door
behind him softly. He descended through the darkened house, down the servants'
quarters, looked over the heads bowed down in salute to him, and said:
"I
have taken on a housekeeper. Her name is Hyra. She will live upstairs, share my quarters. The
room next to the study is to be thoroughly cleaned tomorrow. Vou will obey the housekeeper's orders as if they were my own!" He threw a
quick glance at his servants to see whether
anyone was grinning. No one as much as batted an eyelid; they listened to his instructions with
the respect due him. "And if anybody here
dares whisper behind
my back, I'll pluck out his tongue!"
After he had finished, he lingered a
while to let his words take full effect on them, then he turned and walked back
to his apartments. The walls of his parlor were draped all over with rusty old
weapons, and the room was filled with strange-looking furniture, stained from
the dead remains of innumerable insects. He went to the window, pressed his
forehead against the dark, cold glass, and looked down into the street.
The bells were just chiming
for the first night watch. In the windows across the street the lights were lit
and the shutters closed, to avoid attracting wicked men and ghosts. All was
quiet for a little while. The silence was broken only once, when a drunk roared
out horribly; either he was being robbed or else he had stumbled against a
strange house door.
These evenings were the most terrible
thing here: miserable, lonely, and hopeless. We believed it would be a long
drawn-out battle, wild but victorious, reflected Rumata. We believed we would
never
deviate from our firm notions of good
and bad, of friend and foe. And in general our ideas proved to be correct; but
we did not foresee everything. Evenings like these, for instance--although we
knew well enough that they were bound to come.
Downstairs he heard the sound of metal
striking upon metal: they were bolting the doors to prepare for the night. The
cook prayed to Holy Mickey to send her a man, any man, just as long as he had some pride in himself and understanding for her. Old
Muga yawned and made little circles with his thumb in the air. The servants in
the kitchen drank their evening beer and gossiped for all they were worth,
while the boy Uno flashed angry glances at them and scolded them like an adult:
"He'll wash your mouths out with soap, you fools."
Rumata stepped back from the window and
began to pace the room. It's hopeless, he thought. No power in this world is
strong enough to jerk them out of their habits, their worries, their ingrained
traditions. Vou could give them everything. Vou could move them to the most
modern spectro-acoustic housing, teach them the ionization--they'd still gather
in their kitchens at night, play cards till all hours, and let loose on the neighbor who beats his wife. And
there will be no better pastime for them. Don Hondor is right there: Reba is a
louse, a nothing compared to the overwhelming weight of traditions, strict
rules sanctified through the centuries, time-honored, irrefutable, and familiar
for even the most stupid. They relieve you of the necessity to think and to be
interested in something. And Don Reba will probably hardly be mentioned in high
school textbooks: "A minor adventurer during the epoch of consolidation of absolutism."
Don Reba, Don Reba!
Neither tall nor short, neither
fat nor lean; his hair is not
exactly full, but
he's far from
being bald. When
he moves, it's neither
energetic nor lethargic.
Vou'd forget his face in a minute; there
are thousands who resemble him closely. He is polite and gallant toward the
ladies; an attentive conversationalist, if he so chooses, but not a brilliant
one...
Three
years ago he emerged from some musty basement room in
the chancellery, a small, inconspicuous official . . . At that time he was
still servile, and his complexion was rather pale (sometimes even a little grayish-blue). Shortly afterwards,
the prime minister was suddenly arrested and executed. In the torture chambers
many high officials lost their lives; they went mad with fright and never even
knew what had happened. And over their corpses grew a giant, colorless
mushroom, this bull-headed, merciless genius of mediocrity.
He is a nobody. He comes from nowhere.
He is not some brilliant mind in the regime of a weak ruler, the kind of man we
know from history; nor is he the great man who strikes fear in many hearts as
he devotes his entire life to uniting the country in the name of autocracy.
He isn't even the greedy
parasite with nothing on his mind except women and gold, who, drunk with power,
will blindly lash out left and right, and who rules in order to kill. Some
people even whisper that he isn't Don Reba at all, that Don Reba is actually
quite a different person; while the other one. God knows, may be a werewolf, a
Doppelganger, a changeling...
Whatever plan Don Reba hatched out, it
was bound to fail. He incited two princely
houses of the kingdom to battle and intrigue against each other, in order to weaken
them, and tried to profit from this enmity
by waging a frontal attack against the
barons. But the two princely houses became reconciled, swore eternal
blood-brotherhood over the clinking of champagne glasses, and robbed the king
of a fine piece of land that since time immemorial had belonged to the royal
family Totz of Arkanar. He declared war on Irukan, personally led the army to
the border, let them drown in the swamps or lost them in the woods, left them
to their fate, and fled back to Arkanar. Due to Don Hug's endeavors--of which
he was totally ignorant, of course--he succeeded in wresting a peace treaty
from the Duke of Irukan, albeit at the cost of
two fortified border towns. Furthermore, the Hing was forced to scrape
the bottom of the barrel of his depleted treasury in order to cope with the peasant rebellions that had seized the
entire country. Anyone else committing such foolish blunders would have been
strung up by his feet in the Tower of Joy. Don Reba, however, somehow managed
again and again to remain in power. He issued a decree to dissolve the
ministries of culture and morals, founded the Ministry of Internal Security for
the Protection of the Crown, removed the local aristocracy and a few scholars
from key positions, totally upset the entire economy of the state, wrote a treatise Concerning the
Foolishness of Cattle Breeders and Agriculture¸ and just one year ago,
organized his special troops, the Gray hordes. Hitler was backed by the
capitalists, thought Rumata, but nobody stands behind Don Reba; it is as
inevitable as night follows day that his Sturmoviki will kill him like a fly
sooner or later.--But he kept on hedging and shuffling, committed one foolish
act after the other, extricated himself again and again from the net that
threatened to strangle him, cheated and deceived himself day after day, and was
in the grip of one ardent, insane
desire: to destroy all culture. Like Waga Holeso, he had no past. Barely two
years ago, every aristocratic parasite of the court had still talked of him
scornfully as a "contemptible swindler who cheats the Hing." At
present, however, you could ask any number of noblemen, and each would firmly
declare himself to be a relative of the minister of internal security, at least
on his mother's side.
Right now he seems to need Budach for
one of his plans. It's bound to turn into another of his many calamities.
Another blunder. Budach is a bookworm. Into the hole with him! Make a lot of
fuss and noise about it, so that all will know. But there is no fuss and
outcry.
Should that mean that
he needs Budach
alive? What for?
Reba can't be naive enough to hope to be able to
force Budach to work for him? But maybe he is that stupid
after all. Could
it be that Don Reba is merely
a dumb (but successful) spinner of intrigues, who doesn't know
what he wants himself, who
acts the fool with a sly face in front of everyone's eyes? It's ridiculous;
I've been watching him now for the past three years, and I still
can't figure him out. And if he should watch
me in turn, he would not fare any better. But anything is possible,
that's the amusing part about it all. The basis theory may put forth a list of
fundamental aspects of the psychological goals to be attained; but in reality there
are as many
of these objectives as there are human beings on Earth, and any one--it doesn't
matter who--can ascend
to power, even one
who has devoted his life to playing pranks on his fellow human beings,
sabotaging and ruining them. Eventually he is swept off the throne, of course, but in the meantime he's
had sufficient time
to show his contempt for all
mankind, to cause harm wherever there, is a chance, and, worst of all, to enjoy his evil deeds.
And he is not in the
least concerned that history won't even
wonder who he was, and just as little affected by the thought that his
descendants will rack their brains many years from now to categorize his
behavior to fit the advanced theory of the laws of history. Suddenly Rumata
remembered Dona Okana. Come on, make up your mind, he thought. Start at once.
Once a god decides to make a clean sweep
of things, he needn't bother
to make sure he has unsullied
hands . . . He felt nauseated as he thought of
what lay ahead of him. But this
was preferable to killing. Better filth than blood.
He walked on tiptoe, careful not to
awaken Hyra, to his E study and changed his clothes. Undecided, he kept toying
with his transmitter circlet, but then put it resolutely in a drawer of his
desk. Then he stuck a white feather
behind his right ear as a symbol of passion, buckled on his two swords and
threw his best cloak over his shoulders. As he was unlocking the gate
downstairs, he thought: If Don Reba gets wind of this, that will be the end of Dona Okana. But
it was already too late to turn back.
Part
Four
The guests were assembled, but Dona Okana had not yet arrived.
Gathered around a small golden snack
table, as if on a wall gobelin, were the chiefs of the royal guard, who were
famous for their duels and amorous adventures. They leaned forward gracefully
as they drank, while their fat behinds stuck out in the rear. Beside the
fireplace giggled thin-blooded ladies who were distinguished in nothing
whatsoever, and who for this reason had been assigned
to Dona Okana as her confidantes
and companions. They sat in a simple row on small, low divans, and before them
three elderly gentlemen danced around constantly on their thin legs: famed
lounge lizards from the era of the previous king, the last connoisseurs of long forgotten
anecdotes of the royal court. Every one knew that a salon was no proper salon
without these old gentlemen. In the middle of the hall, legs spread wide apart,
stood Don Ripat, lieutenant of the Gray Court Guard--a clever and dependable
agent for Rumata. He had a splendid mustache and was completely amoral. He had
hooked the thumbs of his big red hands into his leather belt and listened to
Don Tameo who, totally disorganized and with great rushes of detail, tried to
present a project to revitalize business at the expense of the peasants; at the
same time, Don Ripat pointed his mustache in
the direction of Don Sera, who groped his way along the walls, obviously
searching for some hidden door. Two famous portrait painters sat in a comer,
scanning the room with alert eyes as they devoured a roast the size of a
half-grown crocodile, and nearby in a bay window sat an elderly lad clad in black
-- the chaperone assigned to Dona Okana
by Don Reba. She stared straight ahead with a rigid face, looking very
severe; only once in a while would she suddenly jerk her whole body forward.
Off to one side, a personage of royal blood and the secretary of the Soanian
embassy passed the time with a game of cards. The royal personage was cheating and the secretary smiled
indulgently. He was the only person
in the entire
salon who was occupied with something serious:
he was gathering material for the diplomatic spy forces.
The guard officers at the little golden
tables greeted Rumata with friendly shouts. Rumata gave them a comradely nod
and went from one guest to the other. He exchanged bows with the old lounge
lizards, paid a few compliments to the confidantes of Dona Okana, who
immediately eyed the white feather behind his ear; gave a friendly slap to the
blubbery back of the personage of royal blood; and then turned his attention to
Don Ripat and Don Tameo. As he passed the bay window, the chaperone's upper
torso happened to fall forward once again; a strong odor of brew emanated from
her.
Upon seeing Rumata, Don Ripat pulled his
thumbs from his belt and clicked his heels. Don Tameo, however, called out
loudly: "It's you, my friend? Wonderful that you have come, I had already
given up all hope of seeing you. Like a swan with a broken wing¸ sighing and
staring up to a star . . . I was filled with such a longing--And if it had not
been for the most charming Don Ripat, I
would have long since perished from grief!"
It was obvious
that Don Tameo
had had the best intentions to remain sober until lunch,
but unfortunately had not quite made it.
"Dear, dear!" exclaimed
Rumata. "Since when do we quote the words of the rebel Zuren?"
Don Ripat straightened up and flashed
his catlike eyes at Don Tameo.
"Eh, eh--" stammered Don Tameo
in confusion. "Zuren? Ves, indeed, and why am I quoting him? Ves, yes, if
I may say so ... with sarcastic intent--I assure you, noble dons! Ves, for who
is this Zuren? Nothing but a common, ungrateful demagogue. I wanted simply to
emphasize--"
"That Dona Okana hasn't
arrived yet," interrupted Rumata. "And you were forced to drink without
her company."
"That's exactly what I wanted to
emphasize." "By the way, where is she?"
"We expect her any moment
now," answered Don Ripat, who then bowed and walked away.
The confidantes of the lady of the
house, however, sat there with their mouths wide open, still staring at the
white feather. The old lounge lizards snickered archly. Don Tameo finally
noticed the feather, too, and began to tremble.
"My friend!" he
whispered. "What is that supposed to mean? If Don Reba should see that . .
. Even if we don't expect him tonight, but you can never know for sure . .
."
"Oh, cut it out," said Rumata, letting
his eyes sweep
impatiently across the room.
He wanted to get it all over
with as quickly
as possible.
The officers
of the guard approached, wine cups in their hands. "How pale you
are!" whispered Don Tameo. "I understand,
passion is like that . . .
But, Holy Mickey! The state should come first. And after all, it's so
dangerous, so very dangerous... An insult to Don Reba's emotions ..."
Something in his face changed and he
began to mince his steps restlessly; he stepped back a bit and then walked
backwards out of the room, bowing and scraping all the while. The officers of
the guard gathered around Rumata. Somebody handed him a full wine goblet
"Let's drink to honor and to our Majesty, the
Hing!" shouted one of the officers.
"And to love!" added another officer.
"Just show her what the guard is capable of,
noble don," said a third officer.
Rumata
took the goblet;
then suddenly he saw Dona Okana. She stood in the doorway, fanning herself
with her elegant fan and swaying her shoulders, a languid expression animating
her features. She was very pretty. From this distance she could even be called beautiful.
Unfortunately she was not at all Rumata's type, but
she was undoubtedly pretty, this stupid, sensuous cow. Big, blue eyes without a
glimmer of intellect or warmth, a soft, knowing mouth, a voluptuous body whose
contours were revealed intentionally with skill and with great care ... A guard
officer behind Rumata apparently could not control himself any longer and he
noisily smacked his lips. Without turning around, Rumata handed him his goblet
and with long strides walked over to Dona Okana. All those present in the salon
turned their eyes aside and began to talk busily about inconsequential things.
"Vour beauty is blinding my
eyes," murmured Rumata as he bowed deeply and rattled his swords.
"Permit me to lie at your feet--like a whippet at the feet of an
indifferent and beautiful woman."
Dona Okana hid her face behind her fan
and peeked out coquettishly.
"Vou are very daring, noble
don," she said. "Poor ladies from the provinces that we are, we are
simply unable to withstand such storms . .
." She
had a deep, rasping voice, that occasionally failed. "Alas, there is nothing
left for me to do but to open the gates of my fortress and admit the victor..."
Gritting his teeth with shame and anger,
Don Rumata bowed deeper still. Dona Okana lowered her fan and called out
loudly:
"My noble dons! Go on and amuse yourselves! I'll be right
back with Don Rumata! I have
promised to show him my new Irukanian carpets ... I"
"Don't rob us too long of your
presence, you bewitching beauty!" bleated one of the old gentlemen.
"What a magnificent woman!"
called out another old man. And he added in a sickeningly sweet tone of voice:
"A fairy princess!"
The officers of the guard rattled their sabers. "Vou must admit, he
has pretty good taste," said the personage of royal blood. Dona Okana held
Rumata by his sleeve and dragged him along behind her. Out in the corridor,
Rumata could hear Don Sera declare in an offended tone of voice: "I can't
see why a noble don shouldn't have a look at some Irukanian carpets..."
At the end of the corridor. Dona Okana
suddenly came to a halt, clasped her arms around his neck and with a deep moan
to indicate a sudden outburst of wild passion, she kissed him hard on his
mouth, clinging and sucking on to his lips as tightly as a leech. Rumata held his breath. The woman's body radiated a
sharp odor of strong Irukanian perfume mingled with the smell of unwashed
limbs. Her lips felt fiery hot, moist and sticky from sweetmeats. He tried
valiantly to fight off nausea and to return the kiss, and was apparently
successful, for Dona Okana moaned again loudly and with tightly shut eyes
surrendered herself to his embrace. That seemed to last an eternity. Well, you're
going to get it now, you beast, thought
Rumata and pressed his arms tightly around her torso. Something began to crack,
the corset--or perhaps her ribs--; the beauty whined pitifully, opened her
startled eyes and wiggled weakly trying to free herself from his firm clasp.
Rumata quickly let go of her.
"Vou daredevil, you, what a
lover!" she said breathing hard and rapt with desire. "Vou almost
squashed me!"
"I'm burning with desire," he murmured guiltily.
"So am I. Oh, how
I have been
waiting for you!
Let's go! Let's
hurry!"
She led him by the hand through some icy
cold rooms. Rumata took his handkerchief and furtively wiped his Ups. The whole
affair seemed so senseless now. But it's got to be, he thought The things we
have to bear here! Can't be all done with words alone. Holy Mickey, why don't they ever wash here at court?
And on top of that stench this peculiar passionate temperament ... if only Don
Reba would surprise them now . . . She dragged him behind her, without a word,
with purposeful strength, the way an ant drags along dead larvae. Rumata felt
like an idiot and kept murmuring nonsense about "swift little
feet" and "rosy pink
lips." Dona Okana kept giggling the whole way. She whisked him into an
overheated boudoir, whose walls actually were decorated by huge rugs; threw
herself on her enormous bed, gaped at him with her moist, glittering eyes.
Rumata's body stiffened. There was an unmistakable odor of bedbugs in this
boudoir. "Vou are so beautiful!" she whispered loudly. "Do come
closer, come to me. I have been waiting
for you such a long time!"
Rumata turned away his eyes; he felt
nauseated. Perspiration beaded on his forehead. I can't do it, flashed through
his mind. To hell with all the information I can drag out of her . . . what a
beast she is, what a caricature . . . It's unnatural, it goes against my grain,
it's dirty. Dirt is preferable to blood, of course, but this here is far worse than dirt.
"What are you waiting for, noble
don?" panted Dona Okana. "Oh, my sweet, do come to me, I'm
waiting!"
"Oh, go to hell!" Don Rumata
hissed between his teeth impulsively.
She jumped off the bed and hurried
toward him. "What is the matter with you? Are you drunk?"
"I don't know." He forced the words over his lips. "It's
so hot
here."
"I'll have a cup brought for
you." "What cup?"
"Oh, forget it ... it'll pass . ," Her fingers were trembling with
impatience as she started
to unbutton his vest. "How gorgeous you are .
- ." she whispered breathlessly.
"But you are so shy, like a virgin. I'd never have suspected that from you
, . . But it's so exciting, I swear by the Holy Bara!-"
Whether he wanted to or not, he could no
longer delay it; he had to take her by the hands now. He looked down on her and
saw her lacquered, untidy hair, her round, bare shoulders, dotted with tiny
clumps of powder, and her tiny rose pink ears. Disgusting, he thought. Nothing
doing here. . Too bad, though, she is bound to know a few things . . . Don Reba
talks in his sleep ... He takes her along to the hearings, and she loves
cross-examinations . . . No, I can't do it...
"Well?"
she asked, irritated.
"Vour carpets are
beautiful indeed, Dona," he said. "Thanks for showing them to me but I have to go now."
At first she failed to understand; but
then her features were grotesquely contorted with fury.
"How dare you!" she demanded,
but he had already groped for the door knob, slipped out into the corridor and
taken to his heels. From now on I won't wash myself any longer, he thought. One
has to be a filthy swine here, not a god!
"Vou old nag!" she yelled.
"Vou miserable old woman! Vou should be thrown into the dungeon!"
Rumata yanked a window open and jumped
down into the yard. For a while he stood underneath a tree, greedily breathing
in big gulps of fresh, cold air.
Then he remembered the stupid white feather.
Furiously he pulled it from behind his ear and stomped on it with his boots. My
friend Pashka wouldn't have made it
either, he thought. None of our crowd. (Are you so sure?--Ves!-- Then none of
you are any good.--But it makes me nauseated!--The experiment doesn't care what
your feelings are. If you can't do it, then keep out of it!--But I'm no animal!
--If it's required by the
experiment, then you must turn into an animal,
if need be.--The
experiment can't make such demands.--It can very well, as you
see!--But then ... !
--What, then?--He did not
know what would follow after that--Then . . . Then . . . Well, then, well say
that I am a bad
historian.--He
shrugged his shoulders--so let's try to improve. Let's learn how to turn into a
pig ...)
It was midnight when he arrived home. He
undid the clasps of his fez and,
without getting undressed, threw himself down on a couch in the salon, where he
fell into a deep sleep.
He was awakened by the exasperated
shouting of Uno and a good-natured
deep bass voice yelling:
"Get away, you little
beast. I'll skin you alive!"
"My master is asleep, I'm telling
you!"
"Beat it! Don't crawl around my
legs!" "Vou can't go in, I'm telling you!"
The door flew open with a loud bang and
into the room came storming Don Bau, Baron Pampa, gigantic like the wild
monster Pech, red-cheeked, with white teeth, drooping mustache, a jaunty red
velvet beret on his head and an expensive raspberry-colored cape slung around
his broad shoulders, and a copper mail shirt clearly visible underneath. He
dragged Uno after him. Uno frantically clung to the baron's right trouser leg.
"Baron!" called out Rumata and
let his legs slide off the couch. "How
do you happen to be in town,
my friend? Uno,
let go of the baron!"
"What a devoted boy, he
really sticks by you," said the baron and
walked toward Rumata with open arms. "He seems all right, I must
say. How much will you take for him? But let's discuss this later . . . Now let
me embrace you!"
They
embraced. The baron
exuded a pleasant
smell of dusty country
roads, horses, and a mixed bouquet of various
wines.
"I
see you are totally sober," he said, sorrow
in his voice.
"But then, you are always
sober, you fortunate
man!"
"Please sit down, my friend!" said
Rumata. "Uno! Bring some Estorian wine, and plenty of it!"
"Not a drop!"
"What? Not a drop of Estorian wine? Uno,
forget the Estorian and bring us some Irukanian instead!"
"No wine at all!" said the
baron miserably. "I'm not drinking." Rumata sat down again.
"What has happened?" he asked, worried. "Are you
sick?"
"I am as healthy as a horse. But these damned
family quarrels ... To make a long story short; I have had a terrible fight
with the baroness. And now I am here."
"A fight with the baroness? Vou?
Now please stop it, baron; what kind of joke is that supposed to be?"
"I
can't understand it myself, I'm like in a fog. Ves, I came here on horseback, riding 120 miles,
my brain all in a fog!"
"My friend," said Rumata,
"let's start right
away and ride back to castle Bau."
"But my horse is still winded
and sweaty," replied
the baron. "And
what's more: I want to punish her!" "Who?"
'The baroness, damn it! Am I a man or a
mouse? Vou see, she is dissatisfied with Pampa, the--drunk; let her find out
for herself how sober he can be! I'd
rather rot away here with plain water than return to the castle!" Uno pouted:
"Tell him to stop wiggling his ears."
"Now be off,
you little rascal!" grumbled the good-humored deep voice of the
baron. "And bring
me some beer!
I've sweated it all out;
now I must fill up again."
Baron Pampa spent the next half hour
filling up again and chattering away merrily all the while. In between big
gulps from a tankard of beer he reported his troubles. He repeatedly cursed
"those drunkards, my neighbors, who come and invade my castle. They pretend they want to go hunting with me,
arrive early in the morning--and before you
know it, they are all dead drunk and smash up the furniture. They come charging
over the entire castle, befoul everything, annoy the servants, spoil the dogs
and set a terrible example for the young baron. Then they all depart, ride home
again and leave me behind, drunk as a pig, and I have to stay there with the
baroness, all alone, have to face her, eye to
eye..."
Toward the end of his story, the baron
lost control over himself and was just about to ask for some Estorian wine,
when he pulled himself together again and said:
"Rumata, my friend. Let's leave
here. Vour wines are much too expensive! Let's go!" "But where
to?"
'That doesn't matter, where to! How
about the Gray Joy?" "Hmm," said Rumata. "And what are we
going to do there at the
Gray Joy?"
The baron remained silent for a few moments and
tugged mischievously at his beard.
"Come, come, now!" he said
finally. "Vou ask the strangest questions. What are we going to do there?
We'll just sit and talk a bit."
"At the Gray Joy?" asked Rumata doubtfully.
"Ves," said the baron. "I understand
what you mean . . . That's awful . . . but still, let's go. Here I'm constantly
tempted to ask for
Estorian
wine!"
"My horse!" said Rumata and went into his
study in order to pick up his sender.
A few minutes later the two were riding
side by side down a narrow lane, enveloped by impenetrable darkness. The baron
had regained his good humor and told with a loud voice about the huge boar they
had killed the previous day, then about the remarkable talents of the young
baron, and about the miracle at the monastery of the Holy Tukky, where the
abbot had given birth from his hip to a six-fingered boy. In between stories he
did not forget his own kind of pranks. From time to time he would howl like a
wolf, sing lullabies, and knock with the heavy
handle of his riding whip against the shuttered windows.
They
arrived at the Gray Joy and the baron stopped
his horse and fell
into deep thoughts. Rumata waited. The dirty windows of the inn shone gaudily,
the horses were pawing the ground, the heavily made-up girls who were sitting
on a bench underneath the window were quarreling noisily, and two servants were
straining to roll a giant barrel through the entrance door.
The baron said sorrowfully:
"Alone! How horrible
to think that I have the whole night before
me, and all alone! And she, too, is all alone!"
"Don't be so sad, my friend,"
said Rumata. "The young baron is there with her, and I am here with
you."
'That is not the same thing," said
the baron. "Vou haven't the faintest idea, my friend. Vou
are young and
light-hearted. I believe
you even enjoy looking at
these sluts here."
"And why not?" replied
Rumata and regarded the baron with interest.
"These girls are quite acceptable, I think."
The baron shook his head and laughed sarcastically.
"Just look at that one over there," he
shouted, "her behind is practically flopping to the ground. And the one
over there, the one scratching herself, she hasn't any behind at all. They are
cows, my friend, cows at best. Just think of the baroness! What hands, what grace! What a body, my friend!"
"Ves," agreed Rumata. "The baroness is beautiful. Let's
get out of
here."
"Where to?" asked the baron depressed. "And why?" An
expression of resoluteness came suddenly over his face. "No, my friend.
I won't leave here. I won't go anywhere but you can do what pleases you."
He got off his horse. "Although I would feel insulted if you would leave
me here alone."
"I'll stay with you here, of course," said
Rumata. "But--"
"No buts," said the baron.
They threw the reins to one of the
servants who rushed up, and strutted haughtily past the girls into the inn. The
air was oppressively heavy. The weak light of the tiny oil lamps hardly
penetrated through the dense haze of fumes
and exhalations; the place resembled a big and very
filthy sauna bath back on Earth. Soldiers with unbuttoned tunics, dripping with
sweat, sailors with colorful kaftans over their naked bodies, women with barely
covered breasts. Gray Sturmoviks holding their battle axes between their knees,
and some down-at-the-heel workers were all sitting at some long tables, eating
and drinking, cursing, laughing, crying, and singing filthy songs with roaring voices.
To the left, one could vaguely see a
bar, where the innkeeper sat on a platform surrounded by huge barrels and
directed a swarm of skilled and fraudulent servants. On the right, a large
bright rectangle shone through the mist, the entrance to the "private
room," the room for noble dons,
reputable merchants, and Gray officers.
"Why shouldn't we wet our whistle,
come to think of it?" asked the baron in a tone of irritation. He seized
Rumata by the sleeve and made his way toward the bar, passing
through a narrow
aisle between the tables,
scratching the backs
of guests who were seated
at the tables with his
slightly protruding belt-armor. At the counter he picked up a large jug, had
the innkeeper fill it up to the rim and without a word drained the jug in one large
draught to the last drop;
then he stated that all was lost anyhow
and only one thing remained--to have a good time. Then he turned to the
innkeeper and inquired loudly if this establishment had some accommodation
where noblemen could pass the time in a befitting manner without having to be
bothered by all kinds of rabble, riff-raff and vermin. The innkeeper reassured
him that there was indeed such a suitable place on the premises.
"Excellent!" said the baron
with a grand flourish as he threw a few gold coins to the innkeeper. "Will
you bring us the best you have in your house? But don't have the food served by
some dolled-up little whore--we want to be waited on by some respectable older
woman!"
The innkeeper himself accompanied the
noble dons to the "private room." It was occupied by just a few guests.
In one comer
sat a group of Gray officers, two lieutenants in tight uniforms and
two captains in short soldiers' coats with the epaulets of the Ministry of
Internal Security. Two
aristocrats were dozing
near the window
over a slender jug of wine:
their faces looked
pinched and sour,
exuding an air of general depression. At the nearby
table sat a little band of impoverished dons in rumpled jackets
and mended cloaks.
They sipped their beer and
let their greedy eyes sweep around the room ever so often.
The baron lumbered over to a free table,
cast a mean glance in the direction of the Gray officers and grumbled:
"Vou just can't get away from that
rabble. Not even here." But now a fat old auntie waddled into the room
bearing the first course. The baron croaked greedily, pulled his dagger from
his belt, and fell over the feast.
Silently he devoured big chunks of roast venison, mountains of marinated
mollusks, huge piles of crabs, enormous quantities of salads and mayonnaise
dressings, washed everything down with cascades of wine, beer and home brew,
and finally wine mixed with beer and home brew. The impoverished dons attempted
repeatedly to join Baron Pampa at his table, but the baron sent them packing
with a majestic sweep of his hand and a nasty
growl.
Suddenly he stopped eating,
stared at Rumata
with protruding eyes, and roared like a beast
of prey: "It's quite a while
since I've been last in Arkanar, my noble friend.
And I swear upon my honor there is
something I don't like about this place!"
"And what would that be?"
inquired Rumata, interested, while he gnawed at a chicken wing.
Awe and attention marked the faces of
the impoverished dons. "Tell
me, my dear friend," thundered the baron and wiped his
greasy hands at his cloak, "since
when has it become the custom in our beautiful capital city, the seat of our
Highness the Hing, that the descendants of the oldest families of the realm
can't take a step without running into these miserable shopkeepers and
butchers?!"
The noble dons exchanged
quick glances and withdrew into their comer. Rumata blinked over to the other
corner where the Gray officers were sitting. They put down their glasses and
looked over to the baron's table.
"I'll tell you, noble dons, where
the fly in the ointment is," continued Baron Pampa. "The whole
trouble is that you are a bunch of damped cowards. Vou tolerate them because
you are afraid OF them. Vou over there, you are scared stiff!" He yelled
at the top of his voice and locked eyes with the impoverished don nearest to
him. But the poor nobleman, smiling weakly, left his table like a dog with his
tail between his legs. "Cowards!" trumpeted the baron. He was so
excited that his mustache reared up skywards.
But there wasn't much one could expect
from the impoverished dons. They were obviously disinclined to get into a
brawl; they only wanted to eat and drink.
Now the baron hurled one foot over the
bench, twirled the right half of his mustache around his fist, riveted his eyes
on the comer where the Gray officers were sitting and declared:
"But I, gentlemen, I am not afraid, not even of the devil!
I squash the Gray pests under
my foot wherever
I encounter them!"
"What's that beer barrel whining
over there?" loudly inquired a Gray captain with a horse's face.
A satisfied smile played around the
baron's lips. He rose Boisterously from the table and jumped onto the bench.
Rumata raised his eyebrows and started to gnaw at his second chicken wing.
"Hey, there, you Gray bastards from
hell!" yelled the baron as loud as if the officers were miles away.
"Let it be known that I, Baron Pampa Don Bau, gave a fine object lesson to
the likes of you just three days ago. Vou know, my friend," Baron Pampa
turned and spoke from the ceiling down to Don Rumata, sitting at the table,
"I had a few drinks the other night with Father Habani at my castle.
Suddenly my horse groom came running up to announce that a Horde of Gray
Sturmoviks is just about to tear down the Golden Horseshoe Inn. My inn! On my
own grounds! I issued the command; Let's ride! And we were there in no time. I
swear to you by my spurs, we found there a whole horde, some twenty men
altogether! They'd caught three of my men, got as drunk as pigs--these bastards
can't drink, of course--and they were just beginning to smash everything to
smithereens. I grabbed one by the legs, and that started the merry chase. I
chased them as far as the Heavy Swords.
Blood was flowing--you won't
believe it, my friend--we were
wading in it up
to our knees, and I don't know how many battle axes were left behind!"
Here the baron's account was
interrupted. The captain with the horse's face swung his hand and hurled his
heavy dagger against the baron's chain mail.
"Finally!" said the baron and drew his giant two-fisted sword.
He jumped off the bench with unexpected agility;
his sword arched expertly through
the air and cut through
a crossbeam supporting the low ceiling. The
baron cursed. The ceiling sagged
a little and plaster
and
dust fell from above on the men's heads.
Everyone in the room had risen. The impoverished
dons kept close to the walls. The young aristocrats climbed onto the tables to
have a better view. The Gray officers formed a half-circle and drew their
swords while slowly advancing toward the baron. Only Rumata remained seated, trying to figure out on
which side it would be safer to stand up without coming to grief. For now the
baron's broad sword was hissing ominously through the air, describing flashing
circles above the baron's head. It was an awe-inspiring sight. The baron
reminded Rumata of a freight
helicopter with idly spinning rotary blades.
Now the baron was hemmed in on three
sides by the Gray officers, who were
forced to a halt as soon as they came
within range of the
whirling sword. One
of the officers was unfortunate enough
to have his back
to Rumata, who leaned across
the table, seized
the hapless man by the collar, yanked
him down so that his back slammed
into the dirty dishes on the table,
and gave him
a sharp chop
behind his ear.
The Gray officer shut his eyes and his body stiffened. The baron yelled:
"Cut his throat, noble
Rumata, I'll finish
off the others!" He'll massacre the whole lot,
thought Rumata uneasily.
"Attention!" he
said to the Gray officers. "Why should we ruin each other's evening? Vou don't have a ghost of a chance against
us. Throw down your arms and
beat it!"
"Certainly not! That would be the
limit!" put in the baron, visibly upset. "I want to fight! I want
them to fight! Stand up and fight, you wretches!"
With
these words he advanced towards
the Gray officers, all the while
whirling his sword faster and faster above his head. The Gray officers fell
back, all pale in the face. Evidently this was the first time they had ever seen
a freight helicopter. Rumata jumped over the table. "Stop, my friend!" he
called out. "There is really no reason for us to quarrel with these people.
Vou don't care
for their presence
here? Fine, tell them to leave!"
"We won't leave without our
weapons," grumbled one of the lieutenants. "We'd be punished. We are
on patrol duty now."
"Go to hell and take your weapons with you!" decided
Rumata. "Sheath your swords,
hands on top of your head; leave
one at a time! And no tricks!
Or I'll beat you to a pulp!"
"How can we get out of the room?" inquired the captain
with the horse face. His long upper lip twitched
with irritation. "This don blocks our way as
you can see!"
"And
will continue to do so!" insisted the stubborn baron. The young dons
snickered.
"All right then," said Rumata. "I'll hold him down and you file out, one after the other, but hurry up. I
won't be able to control him much longer! Hey, there, clear the doorway!
Baron," he said and grasped Pampa around his broad waist, "it seems
to me you have forgotten an important fact. This
famous sword was
used by your
ancestors only to do battle, for it is written: Do not draw your sword
in ta»erns!"
The shadow of a doubt darkened the
baron's features while he continued to swing his sword.
"But I don't have another sword
here with me," he said puzzled. "All the more relevant . . . ,"
answered Rumata emphatically. "Do you think that?" The baron was still
hesitating.
"Vou
know the rules better than I do!"
"That's true," said the baron.
"Vou are right." He looked up to his whirling hands.
"Vou wouldn't believe
it, Don Rumata,
I could go on like this easily for another three or
four hours without stopping. And I wouldn't
even feel tired.
Too bad that she can't see me like this now!"
"Ill tell her all about it, rest assured," promised Rumata.
The baron sighed and lowered his sword. The Gray officers
crept out of the room, cowering in fear. The baron followed them with his eyes.
"I don't know,
I don't know," he said undecided. "Do you really think I made the right decision,
not smashing them to a pulp?"
"Vou acted correctly, absolutely correctly," Rumata reassured
him.
"Well then," said the baron as he sheathed his sword. "If
we were
not fortunate enough to have a good
fight, let's have something decent to eat and lots to drink."
He grabbed the still unconscious Gray lieutenant by
his legs and pulled him off the table, while he croaked out loudly: "Hey,
there, innkeeper! Bring us some wine and a bite to eat!"
The young aristocrats came to their
table to congratulate them most humbly on
their victory.
"That's nothing, it was easy!" said the
baron complacently. "Six skinny milksops--and big cowards, like all
shopkeepers are. I've finished off two dozen like that, at the Golden
Horseshoe--chased them out . . .
How fortunate," and he turned
to Rumata, "that I did not have my battle
sword with me at the time! I might have drawn it, absentminded as I am. Although the Golden Horseshoe
is actually not a tavern,
it's just a little
comer bistro ..."
"Some also say," remarked Rumata, "that it is written: Do not draw your sword in the corner bistro!"
The innkeeper's wife brought new dishes with meat
and some more wine. The baron rolled up his sleeves and set to work.
"By the way," said Rumata, "who were
the three prisoners you set free that time at the Golden Horseshoe?"
The baron stopped chewing and stared at Rumata.
"But my dear friend, maybe I
didn't make myself clear. I did not set anybody free.
True, they were all prisoners, had been
arrested, but these are affairs of the government. Why should I have liberated
them? It was just some old don, a big coward, an old bookworm and his servant .
. ." He shrugged his shoulders.
"Ves, of course," said Rumata.
Suddenly the baron
turned purple in the face;
he rolled his eyes in a most frightening manner.
"What?! Again?!" he roared.
Rumata turned around. Don Ripat stood in the
doorway. The baron jumped up from his seat, overturning benches and dishes. Don Ripat threw a significant glance at
Rumata and left the room again.
"I beg your
pardon, baron," said
Rumata, rising to his feet.
"The Hing's service is calling."
"Oh, dear," mumbled
the baron in a disappointed voice. "I feel sorry
for you. I wouldn't serve for anything in this
world!"
Don Ripat was waiting for him outside
the door. "What's new?" asked Rumata.
"Two hours ago," reported Don Ripat
officiously, "I placed
Dona Okana under arrest under
the orders of our Minister of Internal Security. I had her taken to the Tower of Joy."
"Hmm," was all that Rumata said.
"Dona Okana died one hour ago. She did not
survive the tortures."
"Hmm."
"Officially she was accused of being a spy.
But--" Don Ripat seemed embarrassed and gazed down at the floor. "I
think--I believe--"
"I understand what you mean,"
said Rumata. Don Ripat looked at him with a guiltridden face. "I was
powerless--" he started to say.
"That's none of your concern," said Rumata hoarsely.
Don Ripat's eyes became leaden.
Rumata slightly nodded his head to
him and went back to his table. The baron was just finishing off a platter with
fried clams.
"Estorian wine! Let's have
a lot of it!" Rumata
could hardly choke
out the words. He tried to swallow
a big lump in his throat. "Let's enjoy ourselves now! To hell with everything, let's
have a good time!"
When Rumata came to again, he found
himself lying in the middle of a big
empty lot. A gray day was dawning, in the distance roosters crowed a raucous
reveille. Dense flocks of blackbirds were crowing overhead, circling above
something unpleasant nearby. It smelled of rot and decay. The fog in Rumata's
head lifted quickly, the usual penetrating lucidity and reliability of all his
senses returned. A pleasant taste of mint seemed to linger on his tongue. The
fingers of his right hand hurt badly. Rumata lifted his right fist, all cramped
up, to his eyes. The skin around his wrist was chafed. He opened his fist and
found that he had still been grasping an empty vial of Casparamid, the potent
medication against alcohol poisoning that was standard equipment --just as a
precautionary measure--for all Terranian emissaries sent by the various
institutes to extraterrestrial planets. Apparently he had followed some blind
instinct and poured the whole contents of the vial into his mouth before he had
sunk completely into brute unconsciousness here on this large empty lot.
The neighborhood seemed familiar. The
charred skeleton of the observatory tower jutted skywards and to the left of
the burnt-out ruin, the watchtowers of the royal palace, thin as minarets,
pierced the pale light of the dawn. Rumata breathed in deeply the cold, humid air,
then set out for home.
Baron Pampa had had a wonderful night,
exactly the kind he liked. Accompanied by a little
band of moneyless dons who were
easily inclined to lose their dignity,
he set out on a gigantic roving
expedition through the cheap
saloons of Arkanar,
where he downed
unbelievable quantities of alcohol, accomplished amazing feats of
gluttony, and became involved in no less than eight brawls. At least this was
the number of times
that Rumata could
clearly recall having
intervened to separate the belligerents in order to prevent the worst from
happening. The rest had vanished in a haze.
Only occasionally the fog would
lift and animallike, grimacing faces, knives held in their teeth,
would emerge, then again the bewildered, bitter
face of the last of the moneyless dons, whom Don Pampa
tried to sell
as a slave down in the harbor
area, then again an Irukanian with a bulbous
nose and mean eyes, who, boiling
with
rage, demanded from the noble dons the return of his horse.
In the beginning Don Rumata still remained a spy.
He did not drink any less than the baron: Irukanian, Estorian, Soanian, and
Arkanarian wine; but every time he changed the brand of wine he secretly popped
a vial of Casparamid into his mouth. He retained his discerning power of
judgment and noticed that the Gray Patrols were stationing themselves in far
larger numbers than usual at intersections and bridges; then there was a sentry
post of barbarians on horseback somewhere on the Soanian cross-country road,
who would probably have shot the baron if Don Rumata had not understood and
mastered their dialect. He remembered clearly the thought that flashed through
his mind at the motionless rows of strange soldiers in long, black cloaks with hoods, who had taken up
position in front of the Patriotic School:
But isn't that the guard of the monks?
What business does the church ha»e in this place? he had wondered. Since when
does the church mix in secular affairs here in Arkanar? Only very gradually did
he get inebriated, but then, all at once, he was overcome by deep intoxication.
In a fleeting moment of lucidity he noticed a totally wrecked table
in some unfamiliar room, saw his own hand
brandishing a sword and the pitiful, imploring figures of the impoverished dons around him. He
almost thought it was time to go home; but by then it was already too late. He
was seized by a wave of mad rage and by a disgusting, irresistible joy to be
able for once to throw off all traces of humaneness. Nevertheless, he had still
remained a Terranian and an emissary of the institute back on Earth, a
descendant of man, the masters over fire and iron, who will neither spare
themselves nor stop before anything if it is in the cause of a great goal to be
achieved. He could not remain Rumata of Estoria, flesh from the flesh of twenty
generations of his warrior ancestors, who were famed
for their robbing and drunkenness. But neither was
he a communard, a comrade any longer. He no longer felt
any obligation to the great
Experiment. He was only concerned now with
obligations toward his own person.
And he was no more beset by doubts. Everything seemed clear now,
absolutely clear. He now knew exactly who was to blame for everything and he
knew exactly what he wanted
to do: to lash out blindly, to hurl down into the fire, down from the steps of the
palace, down onto the spears and pitchforks of the raging mob . . .
Rumata gave a sudden
start; he unsheathed his swords. There were nicks on the blades that were
otherwise blank. He remembered vaguely having fought with someone. But with
whom? And how had it ended?
They
had boozed away their horses.
The impoverished dons had
vanished somehow. Rumata
had dragged the baron home--this he could recall, too.
Pampa Don Bau was enterprising, apparently completely sober and good and ready
to continue with this most entertaining evening--only he could not stand on his
legs any longer. Besides, he believed for some obscure reason that he had just
taken leave of his beloved baroness and that he was now on a campaign against
his arch enemy, Baron Haska, who had already had the audacity to commit the
most outrageous feats ("Will you judge for yourself, my dear friend, this scoundrel brought forth from his hip a
six-fingered boy and named him Pampa...").
"The sun is about to set," he declared as he regarded a gobelin
representing a sunrise. "We could
drink all night through, noble dons, but we need some sleep
before the battle.
And not a drop of wine during the battle! Besides, the baroness would not care for it."
"What? A bed? Beds on a
battlefield? Our bed is our saddled steed." With these words he tore the
gobelin off the wall, wrapped it around his entire body and stumbled noisily
over to the comer under the big chandelier. Rumata ordered the boy Uno to place
a tub with pickled cucumbers and a tub with sauerkraut beside the baron. The
boy's face was sleepy and very angry. "There, look! He has wrapped himself
in our good gobelin," he muttered. "Eyes that look in different
directions . . ." "Shut up, you fool," said Rumata in answer,
and--then something happened. Something very vulgar, that had chased him
halfway across town to this empty lot. Something very, very vile, wretched,
mean, unforgivable, embarrassing...
The memory of this distressing action
reawakened as he approached his house. He stopped in his tracks.
. . . He had pushed Uno aside, climbed
up the stairs, pushed the door open and stormed over to her. He was her master.
And by the light of the street lantern he saw her white face and huge eyes
filled with fear and disgust--and in
these eyes he could see himself as he was: staggering, with a drooping,
drooling lower lip, with fists whose skin
hung down in shreds, in soiled clothes. He saw a beastly, vile,
blue-blooded skunk. And her
glance hurled him backwards, down the stairs, into the entry hall, out of the
door and out into the street, the dark
nocturnal street and on and on, farther and farther, as far away as possible ...
He gnashed his teeth, felt his insides
contort and turn to ice, then he gently opened the house door and entered the
hall. Over in a comer, snoring peacefully like a walrus, was the sleeping
baron. "Who is that?" called Uno, who had been slumbering on a bench,
a spread lying across his knees. "Quiet!" commanded Rumata in a
whisper. "Go to the kitchen, bring a bucket of water, vinegar and new
clothes. Hurry up!"
Leisurely he poured water over his body
for quite a while, and with great gusto scrubbed himself with vinegar, thus
cleansing himself from the filth of his nightly pleasures and fights. Contrary
to his usual self, Uno remained silent throughout while he assisted his master.
Not until he helped him button up the ridiculous lilac-colored trousers with
the pretty buckles did he report sullenly:
"During the night, after you ran
out, Hyra came downstairs and asked if the master had come home or not, but
then said that she must have been dreaming. I told her that you had not yet
returned from your guard duty at the palace, where you went last night..."
Rumata
sighed deeply and
turned away. But this did
not help in the
least. It made things even worse.
"And I've been sitting here the
whole night through near the baron with my spear all ready across my knees. I
was afraid he might crawl upstairs while he was so drunk."
"Thanks, my little one,
thanks," Rumata uttered
painfully. He put on his shoes, went
into the dressing
room and stood
in front of his dark metal mirror. The Casparamid was doing its
work. Very effectively. The mirror reflected an image of an elegant, noble don with a
slightly fatigued face after the long, strenuous night guard duty. But definitely very decent looking. His moist hair, framed by the golden
circlet, fell
softly and neatly down on either side of
his face. With an automatic gesture, Rumata adjusted the lens on his forehead.
Lovely scenes they're watching today on Earth, he thought somberly.
Meanwhile, the day broke. The sun began
to peer into dusty windows. The shutters rattled. Sleepy voices could be heard
in the street. "Did you sleep well, brother Hiris?"-- "Very
well, brother Tika, praise the Lord.
The night is over, thank
God."--"Somebody was beating against the windows of our house.
They say Don Rumata went out during the night"--"He is said to have a house guest."--"So, and he went out? I think he went to the young
prince, and did not even notice how they
burnt down half the town."-- "What can I tell you, brother Tika?
Thank God that we have such a noble don in our neighborhood. Once a year he does guard duty, and that's a
lot already."
Rumata walked up the stairs, knocked and entered the study.
Hyra was sitting in the armchair as the
day before. She raised her eyes and looked, restless and fearful, into his
face.
"Good morning, my darling," he
said, walked over to her, kissed her hands and sat down in an armchair across
from her.
She looked at him a while with questioning eyes and asked
finally:
"Are
you tired?"
"Ves, a bit. And I must go away
once more today." "Would you like me to prepare something for
you?"
"No, thanks. Uno will take care of it. Well. . . you might iron my
collar..."
Rumata could feel a wall of lies rise between them.
Very thin at first, then thicker and thicker and more and more solid. For the
rest of our lives! Rumata thought bitterly. He sat in his seat, covered his
eyes with his hands, while she was rubbing carefully various lotions and
perfumes onto his strong neck, his cheeks, his forehead and his hair.
Then she said:
"Vou don't even ask how I slept."
"How did you sleep, my darling?"
"I
dreamt. A terrible,
horrible dream. Do you know what I mean?" The wall grew as thick as a rampart.
"It's usually that way in a new place," said Rumata hypocritically. "The baron
must have caused
quite a commotion."
"Shall I order breakfast for you?" she asked. "Go ahead!"
"What kind of wine do you like in
the morning?" Rumata opened his eyes.
"I'd like some water," he said. "I don't drink in the
morning."
She went out and he heard how she spoke to Uno. Her
voice sounded clear and full. Then she returned, sat on the arm of his chair
and began to tell him her dream. Rumata listened, nervously plucking at his
eyebrows, and felt the wall grow thicker and more unassailable by the minute,
separating him forever from the only human being whom he loved and cherished
here on this horrible world. And, all of a sudden, he threw himself forcefully
against this wall.
Hyra,
he said. It was no dream!" And nothing extraordinary
happened.
"My poor darling," said Hyra. "Wait, I'll bring you some
pickles..."
Part
Five
Once, not too long ago the court of the
Irukanian kings had been one that especially concerned itself with refinement
and culture. A number of scholars were retained at court-- mostly charlatans,
of course, but also men like Bagir
Hissenski, the discoverer of the curvature of the planet, or the king's
personal physician Tata, who made the brilliant assertion that epidemics were
caused by tiny worms, invisible to the naked eye and spread by water and wind,
or Synda the alchemist, who--true to his kind--was searching for a way of
making gold from dirt, and who quite incidentally discovered the law of the
preservation of energy. There were also poets to be found at the Arkanarian
court. Though the majority consisted mainly of sycophants and parasites, there was
also Pepin, the Great, the author of the historical tragedy The Northern
Campaign¸ then there was also Zuren, the Just, who wrote over five hundred
ballads and sonnets that became folksongs; and finally the poet Gur, who wrote
the first secular novel in the history of the realm, a sad romance about a
prince who fell in love with a beautiful barbarian maiden. There were also
splendid artists, dancers and singers at the court. Remarkable painters covered
the walls with immortal frescoes,
famous sculptors adorned the parks of the royal abode with their creations.
Nevertheless it cannot be said that the Arkanarian kings were true patrons of
the arts and sciences or genuine connoisseurs. All that served merely as decoration,
the same as the ceremony accompanying the awakening and rising of the king or
the spectacular officers of the guard at the castle entrance.
The indulgence of the monarchs would
sometimes go as far as to permit
some scientists and poets to become note-worthy little cogs in the machinery of
the state. Thus, for instance, barely fifty years had passed since the highly
learned alchemist Botsa had held the post of Minister of the Department of
Mining--a position that had since been eliminated because it was no longer
needed. In this capacity he opened up several new mines and made Arkanar famous
for its high-grade, alloys; unfortunately, Botsa's secret formulas had been
lost after his death. Pepin, the poet, presided until recently over the state's
educational program, but then his Ministry for History and Language Sciences
was declared to be detrimental to mental health, as it was known to have caused
the disintegration of human minds.
Although it had occasionally happened
that the king's favorite mistress, a dull, mawkish person, did not care for a
particular scientist or artist, who then
might be either sold abroad or poisoned by arsenic, it was Don Reba who finally espoused the cause thoroughly and
with gusto. During his reign as omnipotent Minister of Security for the
Protection of the Crown, he would organize such violent pogroms amongst the
members of the intelligentsia that he would even manage to evoke the dissatisfaction of certain noble
grandees, who pronounced that court life was becoming increasingly more boring
and who complained that they heard nothing but silly gossip at the court balls.
Bagir Hissenski was accused of insanity present to
a degree bordering on treason, and was then imprisoned in a dungeon. It was
only through the efforts of Rumata that he was released and returned to the capital. Bagir's observatory was
burned to the ground and those of his students who had remained
unmolested fled as far away as possible. Tata, the king's personal
physician, together with five other quacks, suddenly turned out to be a common
poisoner who was inciting the Irukanian Duke against the person of the Hing. He
confessed everything in the torture chamber and was hanged in public on the
Royal Square.
While attempting to rescue
Tata, Rumata spent thirty poods of gold, lost four of his agents (noble dons
who did not realize what they were doing) and came himself within an ace of
being killed when he was attacked during an attempt to abduct the condemned
physician.
That had been his first big defeat. And
that was when he finally understood that Don Reba was no mere accident. One
week later he learned that Synda
the alchemist was to be brought to trial for allegedly
concealing the philosopher's stone from the state treasury. Rumata was still
boiling mad over his latest defeat and therefore decided to take matters into
his own hands.
He laid an ambush around
the house of the
alchemist, disguised himself
with a black mask, and personally disarmed the Sturmoviks who were about
to march the alchemist off to prison; locked
the Sturmoviks in the cellar
of Synda's house
and that very night
led Synda, who had not the vaguest
notion what was happening to him,
across the border to Soan.
There, after an initial shrug
of his shoulders, the alchemist continued his
search for the philosopher's stone under Don
Hondor's supervision. Pepin,
the poet, suddenly donned a monk's garb and retired to some distant
monastery. Zuren, the Just, had been
unmasked only recently. He was found guilty of making criminally ambiguous
utterances, and was further convicted of playing up to the taste of the lower
classes. He was declared to have forfeited his honor and fortune,
tried to fight for his rights, recited
quite openly subversive ballads in disreputable inns
and was twice almost beaten to death by some patriotically minded persons. Not
until then did he permit his friend and patron
Don Rumata to persuade him to flee to the capital of the realm. Rumata would never be able
to forget the sight of the departing poet: pale and blue at the same time,
totally drunk, his thin arms clung to the planks
of the ship as it left the dock, while he roared out his farewell sonnet in a
resonant, surprisingly youthful voice: "It weighs upon my soul like fallen
lea»es .¸."
As far as the poet Gur was concerned, he
was informed by Don Reba on the occasion of a private audience that the Prince
of Arkanar could not befriend his ilk, in view of the hostility expressed in
his poems. Whereupon Gur personally threw his own works into a bonfire on the
Royal Square. Ever since that time, whenever the king was graciously pleased to
go for a ride, Gur would stand in the crowd of courtiers, his head bowed, his
face blank; upon an imperceptible sign from Don Reba, he would step forward from
the courtiers' ranks and recite ultrapatriotic poems-- which, however, were
greeted with nothing but secretly stifled yawns.
And on the stage the same play was
presented over and over again: The Downfall of the Barbarians¸ or Marshal Totz¸
Hing Pits of Arkanar. Musical performances were generally limited now to
concerts with songs accompanied by orchestra. Those artists who had survived
painted signboards. Two or three of the
cleverest ones even managed to remain at court, where they painted
portrait after portrait of the king and
Don Reba (who was always solicitously and respectfully supporting the king).
This characterization was none too encouraging: the king was always represented
as a radiant twenty year old clad in a suit of armor, while Don Reba was
pictured as a mature man with a very meaningful expression.
It became very boring indeed at the Arkanarian court.
Nevertheless, the grandees, the noble
dons without occupation, the officers of the guard, and the noble dons'
frivolous beauties would fill the
antechambers and salons of the palace as of yore--some out of vanity, others
out of fear. To be truthful, many were quite unaware of any changes. They were
those who, in the olden days, when they had had to attend concerts and poetry
readings, had been most appreciative of the intermission. In fact, they could
hardly wait for the pause so that they could discuss the merits of various
breeds of hunting dogs or tell each other jokes. They were still capable of
participating in a short dispute about the characteristics of souls in life
after death, but problems such as the
form of planets or the cause of epidemics were already considered indecent. A
certain nostalgia was felt by the officers of the guard when the painters
vanished; their representations of nature in
the raw had been so masterful...
Rumata appeared at the palace, a little
too late. The ceremony of the king's toilette had already begun. The rooms were
packed, and the king's irritated voice could be heard over the melodious commands
of the master of ceremony, who oversaw the formal dressing of His Majesty. The
courtiers were discussing the events of the previous night. A criminal with Irukanian features had stolen into the
palace during the night, slain the guard, and crept into the king's sleeping chamber.
There, it was said, he had
been disarmed and captured by Don Reba in person; on the way to the Tower of
Joy he had been torn to pieces by a pack of patriots whose servility and
loyalty to the king had driven them wild with rage. This was the sixth attempt
on the king's life in one month, and
this latest incident hardly roused any particular interest. It was only the
special details that were being discussed. Rumata learned that His Majesty had
set up in bed at the sight of the murderer and had covered the most beautiful
Dona Midara with his own body, while uttering the historic words: "Get
away with you, scoundrel!" Most courtiers willingly believed that these
historic words had been spoken but assumed that the king had uttered them
mistaking the murderer for a servant.
And all agreed to a man that as usual Don Reba had been on his guard and was
invincible in a fight at close quarters. Rumata expressed his agreement with
this opinion with some flowery expressions, and in reply told a story he
thought up on the spur of the moment how Don Reba had been attacked
by twelve bandits:
he finished off three of them
right then and there, and routed the rest. The story was received with keen interest and lively
approval, whereupon Rumata made the incidental remark that he had heard this
story from Don Sera. All interest rapidly faded from the faces of the
listeners, for it was common knowledge what a notorious liar and cheat Don Sera
was. Not a word was said about Dona Okana. Either they had not yet heard
about it or they pretended not to know anything.
With pleasant remarks, gallantly kissing the ladies' hands,
Rumata
pushed his way step by step through
the crowd of bedizened,
perfumed and profusely sweating people until he reached the front rows. The
nobles of the land spoke
in soft voices:
"Ves indeed, what
a filly. She tried to barricade herself but, confound it! if he didn't
gamble her away that
same night and lost her to Don He . . ."--"And her hips, my noble don, were of the most exquisite shape.
How did Zuren
phrase it so beautifully . . . hm, hm, hm . . . mountains of cool foam . . . hm, hm, hm .
.
. no, hills of cool foam......... be it as it may, they were fine
hips."--"So I
open the
window very softly, take my dagger between my teeth, and just imagine, my dear
friend, I feel how the window grating above me is giving way . .
."--"I raked the hilt of my sword across his teeth so that the old gray dog spun twice around his
axis. By the way, you can admire him right over there; there he stands looking like he owned the world......................................................................................................... "
--"...... and Don Tameo was spitting on the
floor, slipped and fell head
forward
into the fireplace . . ."--"...... then the monk says to her: 'Do tell
me your dream.' Ha ha
ha!"
Nauseating, thought Rumata. If somebody should
chance to do away with me at this moment, this group of morons would be the
last thing I had seen in my life. Only ready wit, that's the only thing that
will save me. Me and Budach. Seize the right moment and then suddenly let him
have it. Take him by surprise so he won't even have a chance to open his mouth!
But don't give them a chance to finish me off; there-is no reason for me to die
here!
At a measured pace he advanced toward
the door of the king's bedchamber, touched his swords with both hands, bent his
legs slightly at the knees according to the court's etiquette and approached
the royal bed. They were just about to put on the king's stockings. The master
of ceremonies followed with bated breath each movement of the skillful hands of
the two royal grooms. To the right of an open alcove stood Don Reba, talking in
a hardly audible voice with a tall, rawboned man in a gray velvet uniform. It
was Father Zupik, one of the leaders of the Sturmoviki, a colonel in the king's
bodyguard. Don Reba was a
well-experienced courtier. To
judge by the expression on his face, his only concern here was the nose of a
certain filly, or the virtuous behavior of the royal niece. Father Zupik,
however, a warrior and an ex-grocer, did not know how to control himself. His
face grew dark, he bit his lips, and
his fingers gripped his sword hilt, then released it suddenly. Finally, with a
violent twitching of his cheeks, he turned around abruptly and--violating all
rules of proper etiquette -- walked straight out of the king's bedchamber
toward the crowd of assembled
courtiers, who stood there
petrified by such rudeness. Don Reba looked after him with an innocent smile,
while Rumata followed the awkward gray figure with his eyes and thought:
another dead man. Here we go again! He knew of the friction between Don Reba
and the leadership of the Gray hordes. History was about to repeat itself;
another one to share the fate of Captain Ernst Rohm of Nazi fame!
Now the stockings had been properly pulled up on the king's legs.
Obeying the melodious orders of the
master of ceremony, the royal grooms elegantly reached for the royal shoes with
their fingertips, when suddenly, out
of the clear blue sky, the king kicked at them and turned so violently in the
direction of Don Reba, that his belly flopped on his knees like a fully packed sack.
"I am sick and tired of your attempts on my life!" he howled
hysterically. "Assassins, assassins, assassins! I want to sleep at night,
and not to have to battle with assassins! Why can't it be arranged
that they attack me sometime during
the day? Vou're
a lousy minister, Reba. Another night
like this and
I will have
you executed." Dona
Reba bowed and put his hand
on his heart. "I always get a headache after these attempts on my life!"
All of a sudden he fell silent and
quietly regarded his belly. The moment seemed favorable. The royal grooms were
hesitating. Above all, he had to draw the king's attention to himself. Rumata
yanked the right shoe out of the royal groom's hand, knelt down before the king
and reverently pulled the shoe onto the heavy, silk-clad foot. For this was the
age-old privilege of the house of the Rumatas: to shoe with their own hand the
right foot of the crowned heads of the kingdom. The king bestowed a dull glance
upon Don Rumata; then suddenly, a glimmer of interest came into his eyes.
"Ah, Rumata!" he said.
"Vou are still alive? But Reba promised me to do away with you!"
He started to chuckle. "What a
miserable minister he is, that Reba. He's always making promises but he only
pretends. He promised to put an end to all these conspiracies but the
conspiracies grow more and more frequent. And these Gray monsters he's shipped
into my palace . . . I'm a sick man, and he hangs all my personal physicians."
Rumata had now completely slipped the
shoe on, bowed and stepped back two paces. He intercepted an attentive glance
from Don Reba and tried to give his face a snooty, dull expression.
"I'm a very sick man," the king continued. "Everything hurts me. I'd like
to pass on to my eternal rest.
I would have
long since done
so, but you'll all go to rot and ruin without
me, you pigs..."
Now they put on his other shoe. He rose
to his feet but soon began to moan, doubled over with pain, and clasped his
knees.
"Where are my physicians, my
quacksalvers?" he roared with pain. "Where is my good Tata? Vou
hanged him, you imbecile! And I would feel better at the mere sound of his
voice! Be silent! I know myself that he
was a poisoner! But I could not have cared less? So what if he concocted
poisons? He was a physician, he was a good medical doctor! Do you understand
that, you murderer? He may have poisoned some people, but he cured others. But
you strangle everybody you can lay your hands on. How I wish you'd hanged
yourself instead of him!" Don Reba bowed, placed a hand over his heart and
remained in this position. "Vou had all of them hanged! Nobody stayed
alive except for the charlatans! And the priests who administer holy water to
me instead of medicine . . . Who will prepare some medicine for me now that
Tata is gone? Who will rub healing
ointment on my foot?"
"My Hing!" Rumata spoke up
loud and clear, and it seemed to him that
the whole palace froze in horror. "Vou have but to give the command and the best doctor in your entire
kingdom will be here within one hour!"
The king stared at him perplexed. The
risk was tremendous. Don Reba needed merely to blink an eyelid . . . Rumata
could sense with all his body how numerous eyes stared at him intensely, ready
to attack at any moment-- he also knew the purpose of the rows of round, black
openings which were visible just below the ceiling of the bed chamber. Don Reba
regarded him with an expression of both politeness and
benevolent
curiosity.
"What is that supposed to mean?" asked
the king in a sulking voice. "Well, then, I am giving you an order: where
is your quacksalver?"
Rumata's entire body began to tense up. He could almost feel the arrow
tips in his back already.
"Vour Majesty," he said
quickly. "Please, order Don Reba to produce the famous doctor Budach
before your presence!"
How amazing! He had said the most
important thing and he was still alive. Should Don Reba harbor any doubts about
his position in this case? The king directed his weary glance toward his
Minister of Internal Security.
"Vour Majesty," continued Rumata,
now without haste
and with a deliberate and restrained tone.
"Inasmuch as I have known
of your truly
unbearable suffering, and
heedful of my family's duty
toward the royal house, I arranged for the famous,
most learned physician Budach to come here from Irukan. Most regrettably I must report that the doctor's
journey to you was cut short. The soldiers of our honorable Don Reba seized him one week
ago and his fate from
that day on is known
to Don Reba alone.
I presume that the physician is currently somewhere in this vicinity, probably
in the Tower of Joy.
I can only hope that
Don Reba's peculiar dislike
of physicians has not yet had a fateful effect
on Doctor Budach's well-being."
Rumata fell silent and held his breath.
Apparently everything was going
smoothly. Hold your horses, Don Reba! He glanced swiftly in the direction of
the minister--and froze. The Minister of Internal Security had firm control over himself. He nodded
briefly toward Rumata--a tender, fatherly reproach. This was the last thing
Rumata expected from him. He seems triumphant, thought Rumata nonplussed. But
the king, on the other hand, behaved true to
form.
"Vou scoundre!" he shouted. "I'll wring your
neck! Where is the doctor? Where is the doctor, I am asking
you!"
Reba advanced a step, smiling pleasantly.
"Vour Majesty," he said, "you are
truly a fortunate ruler, for you have so many devoted subjects that they
sometimes interfere with each other in their desire to serve you." The
king stared at him with dull, uncomprehending eyes. "I do not wish to
conceal that our zealous Don Rumata's noble intentions were well known to me,
like everything else in your realm. I do not wish to conceal that I sent out
our Gray soldiers to meet Doctor Budach halfway for the sole purpose of protecting
the honorable old man from the discomforts of his long journey.
Furthermore, I do not wish to conceal that I was in no particular hurry to present
the Irukanian Budach
to Vour Majesty"
"How dare you do that!" the king reproached him.
"Vour Majesty, Don Rumata is young and as
inexperienced in politics as he is experienced in the noble art of dueling.
Thus he was, of course, totally unaware of the dastardly feats the Duke of
Irukan is capable of in his raging wickedness against the person of Vour
Majesty. But you and I, we two are naturally aware of that, aren't we, Vour
Majesty?" The king nodded assent. "And that is why I deemed it
advisable to conduct some kind of an investigation, merely as a precautionary
measure. I would not have rushed matters, but if you, my Hing (a deep bow
toward the king), and you, Don Rumata (a slight nod toward Rumata), so urgently
insist on it, I'll bring Doctor Budach into
your
presence this very
day, after your
midday meal, so that he can begin your treatment."
"Vou are not so stupid after all,
Don Reba," said the king, after pondering a little while over his
minister's words. "An investigation . . . that's fine . . . can never do
any harm.
The
cursed Irukanian . . ."
He howled suddenly with pain and touched
his knee again. "Oh, damn that leg! Good, right after the midday meal then? I'll have to wait till then . . . have to wait."
And leaning on the shoulder of the
master of ceremony, the king slowly walked into the presence chamber, past Rumata,
who was completely dumbfounded. And just as Don Reba was about to make his way
through the crowd of the courtiers, who politely stepped aside to let him pass
through, he bestowed a friendly smile on Don Rumata and asked:
"Is it correct, Don Rumata, that it
is you who will do guard duty tonight in the
Prince's bedroom? I have been
properly informed, haven't I?"
Rumata bowed in silence.
Rumata ambled aimlessly through the endless
corridors and cross passages of the
palace. It was dark and humid there, and smelled of ammonia and putrefaction.
He passed by magnificent rooms, decorated with rich carpets and wall hangings,
and also by storage closets filled with junk and old furniture with peeling
gilding. One rarely encountered anybody there. Occasionally some courtier would
lose his way and wander around in this labyrinth, located in the back wings of
the palace where the royal apartments gradually merged into the offices of the
Ministry of Internal Security. It was easy to get lost here. Everyone
remembered the time when a patrol of the guard, doing their rounds, were
frightened by the howling of some man, who stretched his scratched hands out to
them through the barred window of an embrasure. "Save me!" yelled the
man. "I am a gentleman of the bedchamber! I don't know how to get out of
here! I haven't eaten in two days! Will you get me out of here!" (There
was an animated correspondence for ten days between the Treasurer of the
Household and the Lord Stewart, which finally resulted in a decision to yank
out the window bars. During these ten
days they fed the poor gentleman of the bedchamber with bread and meat that was
passed to him speared upon the tip of a lance.) Besides, there lurked various
other dangers in these passages. Drunken soldiers of the Household troops, who were
supposed to guard the person
of the king, and drunken Sturmoviks, in charge of watching over the ministry,
would clash in these narrow corridors and fight bitter battles. But after they
had done with beating each other up, they would separate and carry off their
wounded. And finally, this was where the ghosts of the slain would wander
about--a quite considerable crowd of poor murdered souls had accumulated here
in the palace during the course of the last two centuries.
From a deep nook in the wall he saw a Sturmovik
emerging who was on guard duty. The Gray soldier raised his ax and said
somberly:
"No admittance."
"A fat lot you know, stupid!" said Rumata and shoved him aside.
As he was walking on, he could hear the Sturmovik
scrape the floor with his boots and stomp his feet, unable to decide how he
should react to Don Rumata's insult. Don Rumata caught himself thinking that
this offensive manner of speaking and
these indolent gestures had almost become second
nature to him: no longer
did he merely
pretend to act
like a lout
of noble birth,
but he had assumed such
behavior as sort of
an automatic reflex.
He visualized the effect of such behavior
back on Earth and
was overcome at once by a feeling
of shame and
nausea.--Why should I behave
that way? What
change has come
over me? Whatever became of the respect
and the confidence in my peers
that constituted an
ingrained pattern of conduct ever since I was a child? What kind of
relationship have I developed to other human beings, to the wonderful creature called
"man"? But I must be beyond all help anyhow
by now . . . The horrifying thought raced through
his mind: I actually hate and despise them. I feel no pity for them--no, I truly hate and despise
them.
Even if I consider the
dullness and bestiality of that lump of flesh, the social circumstances and his
horrible education ... I can try as hard as I might, but I now see quite
clearly that this is my enemy, hostile to everything I hold dear, the enemy of
my friends, the enemy of all I personally hold sacred. And I do not hate him in
an abstract manner, nor as a
"typical representative," but as an individual. I hate his disgusting
mouth, all smeared with saliva, the stench of his unwashed body, his blind faith,
his antipathy toward anything beyond sexual needs and guzzling beer. There he
stands, shuffling his feet, this adolescent whose potbellied father used to
thrash his hide not more than half a year ago in order to train him with such
methods to become a merchant in maggoty flour and mouldy jam: there he stands,
moaning and groaning, this addlebrain, torturing himself as he tries in vain to
remember the pertinent paragraphs of the
rules that were crammed into his stupid head--and he cannot make up his mind
whether to use his hatchet on the
noble don, to shout for help, or to simply wave him on his way.
Whichever way he decides, no
one will ever find out about it. He shrugs off everything in the world that
bothers him, returns to his niche in the wall, puts a piece of chewing rind
into his fat mouth, smacks his lips, chews the cud like a contented cow, and
drips saliva like a teething babe. And nothing in the world will interest him.
He will not exercise his brain for anything. God forbid! But how much better
than he is our Enlightened Eagle, Don Reba? True, his psyche is more
complicated, and his reflexes are more intricate, but his thoughts definitely
resemble those of this fellow, who is reeking of ammonia and these labyrinthine
corridors, studded with crimes. And he is indescribably vile, a horrid
criminal, an unscrupulous spider. I have come to this planet to love these people, to assist them in their task of
self-development, to enable them to see the light. No, I am a poor emissary, he
thought sadly. I am a failure as a historian. And when did it happen that I
fell into this abyss of which Don
Hondor was speaking? Is a god entitled to any other feelings besides pity?
From behind his back came a hurried
clomping of boots down the corridor. Rumata spun around and seized both swords
with his hands placed crosswise at the hilt. Don Ripat rushed toward him,
brandishing his unsheathed sword.
"Don Rumata, Don Rumata!" he called out in a loud whisper while
still far away.
Rumata released his grip on his swords.
Now Don Ripat had come quite close; he looked carefully in all directions, then
whispered, almost inaudibly, into Rumata's ear:
"I've been looking
for you for nearly an hour. Waga
Holeso is here in the palace! He is talking
with Don Reba in the lilac room."
Rumata narrowed his eyes momentarily.
Then he cautiously stepped to one side and said with polite surprise:
"Vou wouldn't be talking about the
famous robber chief? I believe he has been executed a long time ago, or
probably exists only as a figment of popular imagination."
The lieutenant licked his chapped lips.
"He does exist . . . He is in the palace
... I thought this would
interest you."
"My dear Don Ripat," said Rumata with emphasis. "I am
always interested in all kinds of rumors. Gossip. Anecdotes. Life is so dull...
Vou must have misunderstood me."
The lieutenant regarded him with
perplexed eyes. Rumata continued: "Just use your own judgment, will you?
Why should I be involved in Don Reba's underhand dealings and fishy
relationships? But don't forget how much I do appreciate Don Reba as a person;
I would be unable to condemn and criticize his actions.--Please, will you
forgive me, I am in a hurry. A lady is expecting me."
Don Ripat licked his lips again, bowed
awkwardly and walked off to one side. Suddenly, Don Rumata had an inspiration.
"By the way, my friend," he called after
Don Ripat with kindness
in his voice, "how did you like the little
trick we played
on Don Reba this forenoon?"
Don Ripat willingly came to a halt.
"We are most satisfied," he said. "Wasn't it charming?"
"It was marvelous! The leadership
of the Gray soldiers is very pleased that you finally have openly taken our
side. Such a clever man like you, Don Rumata, wasting your time with barons,
these titled monsters ..."
"My dear Ripat!" said Rumata
condescendingly, while turning to leave. "Vou seem to forget that seen
from the pinnacle of my lineage hardly any difference can be noticed between
the king and your ilk.
Goodbye!"
He strode off confidently through the corridors,
turned into side passages without a trace of indecision and pushed the guards
aside without as much as a word being said. He had only some dim notion how to
proceed now but he was sure that this was an amazing and very rare coincidence.
He must hear the conversation between the two spiders. It was not for nothing
that Don Reba had promised fourteen times the reward for Waga brought in alive
rather than dead.
From behind the heavy lilac-colored
curtains stepped two Gray lieutenants, their swords unsheathed.
"Greetings to you, my
friends," said Don Rumata and stopped
right between the two men. "Is the minister in his apartment?"
"The minister is busy, Don
Rumata," said one of the two lieutenants.
"I'll wait for him, then,"
said Rumata and passed between the drapes. It was pitch dark here, impossible
to see anything at all. He cautiously groped his way through
chairs, tables, and heavy cast
iron lantern stands. Then
he perceived a thin ray of light,
heard the familiar tenor voice of Waga
Holeso, and came
to a halt. Several times
he
distinctly heard someone breathe just
behind his head and he was enveloped in a cloud of garlic and beer odors. Then
he felt a spear point pressed cautiously but unmistakably between his shoulder
blades. "Heep calm, you moron!" he said irritably but softly.
"It's me, Don Rumata!"
The spear was withdrawn. Rumata pushed a
chair toward the chink of light, sat down, crossed one leg over the other, and
yawned so loud that anyone could hear it. Then he started to observe.
The spiders had met. Don Reba sat there,
very tense, elbows on the table and fingers interlaced. At his right was a
stack of papers with a heavy wooden-handled dagger placed on top.
The minister's face displayed a pleasant
if somewhat rigid smile. The honorable Waga was sitting on a divan, his back
turned to Rumata. He resembled a quaint old magnate who had been spending the
last thirty years of his life on his country place in total seclusion.
"The murgles are crockled," he
said, "and the crack-stampers have been stubbing
around our warrels
with their greems
quappered up. And there are twenty long zackerlings
by now. Crupply and cressly, I would shrab them right on the snoller, crump
over crass. But the zackerlings have a zunker way of sharmauning things. That's why we've
been brimsing our trunks. That's our expomple
..."
Don Reba cupped his well-shaven chin in
his hand. "Murbelously brickered out," he said pensively.
Waga shrugged his shoulders.
"That is krapul
our expomple. I wouldn't flarry
that you'd cruckle with us. Well, groosby then?"
"Groosby," said the Minister
of Internal Security firmly. "And smucks off," said Waga and got to
his feet.
Rumata, who had listened totally
perplexed to this nonsense, discovered a bushy mustache in Waga's face and a
little, gray pointed beard. A genuine courtier from the reign of the former king.
"This was a very pleasant chat, Don Reba," said Waga. Don Reba rose, too.
"I thoroughly enjoyed our
conversation, a great pleasure indeed," he said. "I have never met
such a courageous man as you, my dear Holeso..."
"The same here," replied Waga
with a slightly bored expression. "I am as amazed as I am proud of the
boldness of the First Minister of our kingdom."
Then he turned on his heels and walked
toward the exit, leaning heavily on his cane. Don Reba did not take his eyes
off the old man. He seemed lost in thought and absentmind-ediy placed his hand
on the handle of his dagger. Immediately afterwards somebody standing behind
Rumata puffed with all his might and the long blue tube of a blow-gun pushed
past his ear to the chink in the drapes. For a moment, Don Reba remained
motionless, intent on listening, then he sat down again, pulled out a drawer,
took out a bundle of papers and began to study them. Somebody spat out in back
of Rumata and the blowpipe disappeared. It was all very clear. The spiders had
found their solution. Rumata stood up, stepped on someone's feet and finally
left the horrid room with the lilac-colored drapes.
The king was dining in a gigantic hall
whose ceiling took up two storeys. The ninety-foot table had been set for 100
persons. The king was joined at table by Don Reba, personages of royal blood
(two dozen
blue bloods, gluttons, and experienced
drunkards), various masters of ceremony, several members of the local
aristocracy who traditionally were the king's dinner guests and among whom
Rumata was counted, a few transient barons with their wooden-headed spouses,
and at the farthest end of the table, the landed gentry, the lesser nobility
that had been invited with or even without any special privileges. The last
group of guests received, together with their dinner invitations, a seating
number for the table, and a list of instructions: "Sit quietly; the
Hing does not like people to wiggle in
their seats. Heep your hands on top of the table; the Hing does not like people
to hide their hands underneath it. Do not turn around; the Hing does not like
people to turn then back on him."
At every meal they would devour enormous quantities of the choicest foods,
guzzle down rivers of old wines, and veritable mountains of the famous Estorian
porcelain dishes were broken. In one of his reports to the king, the Treasurer
once boasted that one such dinner at the royal table cost as much as was spent
for the upkeep of the Soanian Academy of Sciences during six months.
While Rumata was waiting for the master
of ceremonies to call three times, "Come to table!" and the accompanying sound of fanfares, he joined a group of courtiers
and listened for the tenth time to Don Tameo's famous story about how he had
had the honor to partake of another royal meal some six months ago. "...
So I arrive at my designated seat, we're
all standing, the
Hing enters, sits
down, so we, too, sit down, and the meal
takes its normal
course. But suddenly, just imagine, my noble
dons, all of a sudden
I feel all wet on my seat.
Wet! I don't dare to budge
from the spot,
neither turn around,
nor put my hand
down there. But, then, I wait for some propitious moment and cautiously feel down there with the fingers
of my left hand. And would you believe
it, my dear gentlemen, would you believe it! It's wet down there! I quickly
sniff at my fingers--no, they don't stink. What the devil is going on? Meanwhile
the dinner is over, everyone
rises from their
chairs,
but--as you can fully imagine,
my dear dons--I don't quite feel like
getting up from my seat . . . Then, lo and behold, the Hing comes toward
me, His Majesty! But I remain seated like some yokel baron from the hinterland
who knows nothing about court etiquette. His Majesty comes quite close, smiles
graciously and puts his hand on my shoulder. 'My dear Don Tameo,' he says. 'We
have all gotten up from table and are going to watch the ballet but you are
still sitting on your chair. What is the matter? Have you not had enough to eat,
perhaps?'--'Vour Majesty,' I say, 'have my head cut off, but my seat
is wet." His Majesty was graciously pleased to break out in laughter, and
ordered me to stand up. I rise from my chair--and guess what? Loud laughter all
around us.
Noble dons, all throughout dinner I had been sitting
on a rum torte! His Majesty
was graciously roaring with laughter. Finally he said: 'Reba, Reba! Is that one
of your pranks again? Just wipe the noble don's behind, he has his pants full!'
Don Reba doubles over with laughter, pulls
out his dagger
and scrapes the
torte off the seat of my pants.
Can you picture what I felt like, noble dons? I won't hide it from you,
I was trembling and shaking all over, frightened to death at the thought of
having humiliated Don Reba in front of everyone, afraid that he now would revenge
himself. Fortunately, however,
all turned out all right at
the end. I assure you,
my noble dons,
this was the
happiest event in my
life! I made the Hing
enjoy himself. Oh,
how he laughed! How he had
fun!"
The fanfares sounded, the master of ceremonies called in his
melodious voice for all to
come to the table. The king entered the hall, slightly dragging one leg behind.
All took their seats at the royal table. The guards on duty were stationed in
all four comers of the hall, immobile, leaning on their double-fisted swords.
Rumata's table companions on either side were silent. To his right, the chair
was filled with the quaking, immense belly of the somber glutton Don Pifa,
married to a fabled beauty. On his left sat the poet Our, staring into his
empty plate with a blank expression. The guests were all intently watching the
king. The king fastened a napkin, more gray than white, around his neck,
quickly glanced at the round of dishes in front of him, and reached for a
chicken leg. Hardly had he fastened his teeth on the meat than one hundred
knives swept with a noisy clatter down on the plates and one hundred hands
greedily dug into the dishes. The dining hall was filled with slurping and
smacking of lips, the wine flowed like a torrent.
The mustaches of the guardsmen, who were leaning unmoving on their swords,
began to twitch in a dance of greed. Once Rumata had been nauseated by these
affairs, but now he had gotten used to them.
While he was carving the thigh of a ram
with his dagger, he slyly glanced to his right, but quickly looked away again:
Don Pifa's torso was bent over an entire
roast boar and working its way into it like a bulldozer. Not even the bones
remained behind his steadily advancing body. Rumata held his breath and emptied
a full glass of Irukanian wine. Then he turned slightly to his left. The poet
Gur was poking his spoon joylessly in a bowl of meat salad.
"Writing something?" inquired
Rumata in a subdued voice. Gur gave a sudden start.
"Writing something? I? I don't know
... sure, sure,
lots of things.." "Poems?"
"Ves, yes ... poems ..."
"They're terrible poems, Father Gur." Gur
looked at him with a strange expression "Vou're no poet!"
"No poet. . . Sometimes I reflect on what I really am, and what I am afraid of. I don't know..."
"Look into your plate and continue
eating. I'll tell you what you are. A creative genius, the discoverer of new ways
in literature, and
one of the most productive
writers to boot." Gur's cheeks became flushed with red. "In a hundred years,
and maybe sooner,
dozens of poets
will follow in your tracks."
"God forbid!" The words
escaped from the poet's lips. "Now I shall tell you what you're really
afraid of." "I am afraid of the dark." The evening
darkness?"
"This too. For dusk
offers us up to the power of the ghosts.
But most of all I fear the darkness
at night, for everything turns gray in the same manner at night."
"Well said. Father Gur. But now,
something else: is your work still obtainable?"
"I don't know--and I do not want to
know." "Let me assure you, one copy is in the capital, in the
emperor's library. Another copy is preserved in the Museum of Rarities in Scan.
And a third copy is in my possession." Gur took a spoonful of jelly, his
hand trembling heavily. "I... I do not know..."
His large, deep-set
eyes were depressed as he looked
at Rumata. "I would
like to read it... read it once more . .." "I shall send it to you
with pleasure." "And then?" "And then you'll return it to
me." "Oh, yes, give it back again!" said Gur sharply. "Don
Reba has intimidated you very much Father
Gur." "Intimidated , . . Have you ever had to burn your own
children? What do you know of terror,
of fear, noble
don?"
"I bow my head respectfully before
all you have had to go through, Father Gur. But I condemn you with all my soul for giving
up!"
Suddenly Gur, the poet, began to whisper so softly that Rumata could
hardly hear him over the general babble of voices and noisy eaters at the
table.
"And what is that
all supposed to mean? What
is the truth?
Prince Chaar really did love
that beautiful copper-skinned woman. They had children together. I know
their grandchildren. They
poisoned them, they really did. But they told me this
was all a lie. They told me truth is whatever is beneficial for the Hing. All
else is nothing but lies and crimes. Only now am I finally writing the truth .
. ." He suddenly rose from his seat and recited
in a lofty, declamatory singsong:
Great and glorious, like eternity, Rules
the Hing named Noblemind. Plotting princes grope uncertainly When their visions
he strikes blind.
The king interrupted his chewing for a
moment, parted his lips to show a mouth full of food. He regarded Gur out of
dull eyes. The guests pulled their heads back between their shoulders. Only Don
Reba smiled and clapped his hands a few times, almost inaudibly. The king spat
out several bones onto the carpet and said:
"Glorious? Right. Eternity? Good!
Vou can go on eating." The lip smacking and babbling started anew. Gur sat
down.
"How sweet and pleasant to tell the
Hing the truth right to his face," he said raucously.
Rumata was silent. Then he said:
"I'll have a copy of the book sent over,
Father Gur. One condition though. Vou will immediately begin a new work."
"No," said Gur. "Too late. Let Hiun write. I'm already
poisoned.
And
anyway, I'm no longer interested in these things.
The only thing
I'd like to do now--I want to learn to drink.
Only I can't... My stomach
hurts
..."
One more defeat to chalk up, thought Rumata. Too late.
"Listen, Reba," said the king suddenly.
"Where is the quack? Vou promised to bring me a physician after
dinner!"
"He is here, Vour Highness,"
said Don Reba. "Are you ordering me to call him?"
"Am I ordering you? That's more
than flesh and blood can bear! If you
had pains in your knee like mine, you'd be squealing like a stuck pig! Have him
come in at once!"
Rumata leaned back in his chair in order
to see better. Don Reba raised his hand above his head and snapped his fingers.
The door opened and in walked an old, bent man, constantly bowing, clad in a
floor-length mantilla embroidered with silvery spiders, golden stars and
glittering snakes. He was carrying a long, flat satchel under his arm.
Rumata was worried and
disappointed at the same time. He had imagined Budach to look quite different.
Could such a wise man and
humanist, author of the encyclopedic
Treatise Concerning Poisons¸ have such restlessly wandering, inflamed eyes,
lips aquiver with fear, and such a pitiful, subservient smile? But then Rumata
remembered the poet Gur. Wouldn't the persecution of an Irukanian spy be a
worthwhile literary discussion in Don Reba's cabinet? Wouldn't it be fun to
tweak Don Reba's ear, he thought,
and mentally smacked
his lips. He should be dragged off to the dungeon. And the
torturers should be instructed: There he is, that Irukanian spy who pretends to
be our Arkanarian Minister of Internal Security. The king demands that you drag
out of him where the real minister
is being kept. Go to work! And woe betide you, if he dies before the week is
over . . . Rumata had to hide his face in his hand. A wave of hatred swept over
him. What a terrible thing, this hatred...
"There you are. Come over here, you
quack," said the king. "Come here, my dear man, you mental giant.
Well, sit down over here--sit down, I said!--and begin!"
The unfortunate Budach set to work, his face contorted with
fright.
"Go on, go on!" winced the king. "Heep on going, I tell
you! Get
down on your knees,
your knees can't
possibly hurt you.
Cured himself, that devil!
Now, let me see your teeth! That's
the way. I'll say a fine set of
teeth you have here. If I only had teeth
like that! And your hands
are in fine shape,
too, good and strong. What
a healthy chap
he is ... and a mental
giant in spite of it ... Well, then . . . Come on, my dove, go on, heal me, what are you waiting for?"
"If Vou-you-r Ma-majesty . . .
would graciously show me the sick leg ... the leg . . .," stuttered the
physician. Rumata looked up.
The physician knelt before the king and cautiously examined his
leg.
"Eh!" snorted the king. "What's that supposed to be? Don't
you
touch me! Now that you
have started, cure me!"
"I ... I ... have
seen everything I need, Vour
Majesty," mumbled the physician nervously and started
to rummage hurriedly in his satchel
The
guests stopped chewing.
The aristocrats of lower rank,
who were sitting at the farthest end of the
table, even stood
up and, burning with curiosity, stretched their
necks so as to be able to see better.
Budach
took a few small stone
bottles from his satchel, uncorked them, sniffed at each,
one after the other, then placed them in one row
on the table before him. Then he took the king's goblet and filled
it half with wine.
While he was executing mysterious hand motions above
the goblet, he whispered magic formulas then swiftly emptied all the
little bottles into the cup. A distinct smell
of ammonia spread
throughout the hall. The
king's lips became pencil-thin. He peered into the cup, puckered, up his mouth,
and glanced over
in Don Reba's direction. The minister smiled sympathetically. The courtiers held their breath.
What on earth is he doing? wondered
Rumata. The old king has gout! What concoction has he been brewing together in
that cup? Vet he stated quite clearly in his treatise:
"Rub the swollen limbs with the three-days-old poison of the Qu
snake." Perhaps
he is going to use it to rub the potion into his skin? "What is this?" asked the king, full of distrust, pointing
with his
right forefinger to the
goblet. "It's a liniment, is it, to rub into my aching knee?"
"Not at all, Vour
Majesty," said Budach. He seemed to have regained his composure somewhat by
now. "This is to be taken by
mouth."
"B-y-y mou-outh?" The king
puffed out his
cheeks and leaned
back in his armchair. "I
don't want to take anything
by mouth! Rub it in!"
"Vour wish is my command," said Budach obediently. "But I take the
liberty of warning
Vour Majesty that an external
application will not help
you, not at all."
"And why did all the others used to
rub my knee with ointments?" inquired the king in a surly tone. "And
you insist on making me drink this abomination."
"Vour Majesty," said Budach
and straightened up proudly. "This medicine is known only to me. I have
cured the uncle of the Duke of Irukan with it. And what concerns those who
advocate rubbing your knee with salves . . . permit me to say ... these
quacksalvers have not cured Vour Majesty ..."
The king glanced
once more over to Don Reba. Don Reba smiled
with compassion, it seemed.
"Vou swindler!" said the king to the physician
in a nasty tone of voice.
"Vou yokel! Vou
flea-bitten know-it-all!" He seized the
cup. "Here, that's what I'll do with this brew! I'll throw it in
your teeth!" He peered into the goblet.
"What if it makes me throw up?"
"Then the procedure will have to be
repeated. Vour Majesty," answered Budach with a sad face.
"Well, I'll do it then," said the king and was just about to raise the
cup to his lips when he suddenly pushed it back again, so violently that some of the liquid
spilled on the rug. "Ha, dear man, you drink some of it first!
I know your ilk, you tricky Irukanians have even sold our Holy Mickey to the
barbarians. Drink, I order you!"
Budach accepted the cup, looking rather
offended, and sipped a few drops from it.
"Well, what does it taste like?"
"Bitter, Vour Majesty," said Budach
subdued. "But you, Vour Majesty, must drink this medicine now!"
"Must, must!" wailed the king. "I
know all by myself what I must do.
Give it to me! Half
has been spilt
already anyhow. Well
then, hand it to me!"
He drained the cup at one draught.
Compassionate sighs could be heard here and there coming from the
dinner guests. And suddenly all was quiet. The king grew rigid, his mouth wide
open. Tears welled up in his eyes, then ran down his cheeks, one by one. His
face became flushed, little by little, then it turned blue. He stretched one
hand out over the table, spasmodically
snapping his fingers. Don Reba quickly handed him a sour pickle. The king
hurled the pickle at Don Reba and then stretched his hand out again.
"Wine!" he croaked hoarsely.
Somebody bent down and handed him a clay jug. The
long drank hastily with huge gulps, madly rolling his eyes all the while. Red
stripes were flowing down on his white vest. After he had drained the jug, he
threw it at Budach, but he missed.
"Vou dog's son!" he said with an unexpected deep basso. "Why do you want to kill
me off? Haven't they hanged enough of your kind? Go to the devil!"
He
fell silent and touched his knee.
"It hurts!" he said in the same whining tone as before.
"It's still hurting!"
"Vour Majesty!" said Budach.
"To obtain a complete cure
your Majesty ought to drink this mixture
daily, for at least one week."
Something seemed to burst in the king's throat.
"Get away!" howled
the king. "Go and be hanged!
All of you!" The courders jumped
up, rushed en masse to the doors,
overturning some chairs.
"Out of my sight! Ou-ou-ou-t!"
screamed the king, beside himself with fury, and swept the dishes from the
table.
After Rumata had quickly fled the scene
along with the rest of the diners, he dived behind the nearest curtain at hand
and started to laugh.
Behind the curtain next
to him, he heard the others laughing too--fitfully, gasping
for breath and howling with delight.
Part
Six
Rumata's tour of night duty in the
prince's bedchambers did not begin until midnight. Rumata decided, therefore,
to go home in the meantime in order to check if everything was in order and to
change clothes. He was puzzled by the way the town looked in the evening light.
The streets were enveloped in deep silence, the inns and taverns had shut their
doors. At the street crossings groups of the Gray Sturmoviks rattled
metallically, their torches in their hands. They, too, did not utter a sound, and seemed to be waiting for
something definite. On several occasions one of them would come quite close to
Rumata, stare at his face, but as soon as he had recognized him, would always
silently permit him to proceed on
his way. When Rumata was within fifty feet of his own house, a group of suspicious-looking characters followed hard
behind him, yet keeping at a steady distance. Rumata came to a brief halt and
rattled his swords. The figures fell back a bit, but soon afterwards he heard
behind him the click of a loaded crossbow. Rumata hurried on his way, all the
time pressing close to the walls of the houses. He groped for his house door,
turned the key in the lock and was all the time painfully aware of his
unprotected back. He leapt inside the entrance hall with a sigh of relief.
All his servants had already assembled
in the entrance hall, armed with all kinds of weapons. They had checked the
gate already repeatedly to make certain it was well secured. Rumata liked none
of this. Perhaps I shouldn't leave the house after all, he thought. To hell
with the young prince.
"Where is Baron Pampa?" he asked.
Agitated greatly, his crossbow slung over his
shoulder, Uno answered that the baron had not awakened until noon, had then
drunk all the available water from the sour pickle jugs and had then departed
again to have some more fun. Then Uno reported in a serious voice that Hyra had
inquired several times after the master--she was most worried about him.
posts.
"All right," said Rumata and ordered his
servants to take up their
All in all, not counting the female cooks, he had
six servants,
dependable people generally,
used to street brawls. Of course, they won't start up anything with the Gray
Ones, thought Rumata, for they fear the wrath of the omnipotent Minister of the
Security Forces; but they can make a
stand against the wretched characters of the nocturnal army, all the more,
since the robbers were expecting to find easy prey without any resistance. The
servants were equipped with two
crossbows, four battle-axes, several big butcher knives, iron helmets;
the gate was secured, studded with nails and bound with iron in keeping with the good old local
traditions. Or would it perhaps be best not to leave the house tonight?
Rumata walked upstairs and tiptoed into
Hyra's room. Hyra was sleeping in her clothes, curled up on top of the bedspread.
Rumata leaned over her, a candlestick held in his hand. Shall I go or not? I
would dearly like for once not to have to leave.
He put a light blanket over her, kissed
her on the cheek and returned to his room. I must go. Whatever happens, a scout
must always be right in the thick of
all that is going on. For the benefit of the historians back on Terra. A bitter
smile flitted across his features, he took the circlet off his forehead,
carefully cleaned the lens with a soft
rag and then put the circlet back on again. Then he called Uno and
ordered him to bring his suit of armor and the freshly polished copper helmet
Shivering with cold, he pulled his metalloplast shirt over his undershirt,
right underneath his vest. The metalloplast garment was fashioned like chain
mail (the local chain mail provided good protection against injuries inflicted
by daggers or swords, but an arrow from a crossbow could easily pierce it).
While he girded himself with his uniform
belt, fastening the metal clasps, he said to Uno:
"Listen, my boy. I trust you more than anyone else.
Whatever might happen here, Hyra must remain alive
and well. I don't care if the whole house burns down, or if they steal all the
money I have, but do protect Hyra for me. Lead her, if necessary, over roofs or
through basements, whichever way is best, but look out for her, guard her. Is
that clear?"
"Ves, sir," said Uno. "Vou shouldn't go out tonight"
"Listen to me. If I'm not back in three days,
take Hyra and lead her to the clearing in Hiccup Forest. Do you know where that
is? Well, there you will find the Drunkard's Lair, a peculiar-looking hut not
far off the road. Vou need only ask, people will show you where it is. But be
careful who you ask. A man by the name of Father Habani lives there.
Tell him everything. Is
that clear?"
"Ves, sir. But it would be much better if you wouldn't
leave tonight."
"I would prefer to stay. But it's
impossible. Duty calls. Well then, be careful!"
He gently patted the boy's cheek and
returned his awkward smile with a
friendly glance. Downstairs, he said a few encouraging words to his servants,
left the house, and disappeared once more into the darkness. Behind him, he
heard the clanking of the heavy doors as they were barred against intruders.
Traditionally, the prince's apartments
had never been guarded very closely. Quite likely this was the reason no
one had ever made an attack against the
life of the Arkanarian princes. And in particular, nobody seemed to be
interested in the present prince. There was no one who liked this sickly
blue-eyed boy, who resembled everyone except his own father. Rumata was fond of
the boy, though.
His education had been
grossly neglected and therefore his imagination
had remained unspoiled; he was not cruel like the others, could not stand Don Reba--instinctively, it would seem--loved to sing songs
to the verses of Zuren and
to play with
little boats. Rumata
had ordered some illustrated books to be sent for
him from the capital, told him about the starry sky and completely won the boy's
sympathy by regaling him with fairy
tales about flying ships. To Rumata, who rarely had any dealings with young
children, the ten-year-old prince seemed to be quite
different from the other inhabitants of this wild country. And yet these
innocent, blue-eyed children, whichever strata of the population they came from, were the ones who would later
develop bestiality, ignorance, and blind
submission to the authorities.
Still, these children showed absolutely no traces of meanness. It
wouldn't be a bad idea, he thought sometimes, if there were no adults on this
planet.
The prince was already asleep. Rumata began his guard duty.
Together with the officer he had come to
relieve, he approached the bed where
the prince was sleeping, and they executed complicated figures with their naked
swords as prescribed by court etiquette. Then Rumata made the traditional
rounds to check if all windows were closed and bolted, if the nursery-maids
were stationed at their assigned places and if candlesticks were burning in all
the rooms. Then he returned to the antechamber, played a game of knuckles with
the officer of the guard, who was now off duty, and who inquired of the noble
don what he thought of the recent events in town. The noble don, a man of
tremendous intellectual prowess, became lost in deep thoughts, then announced
that in his opinion the common folk were preparing for Holy Mickey Day.
After the officer had left, Rumata
pushed a chair to the window, sat down at ease and looked out over the city.
The house of the prince stood atop a hill and during the day one had a splendid
view all over the city and as far as the ocean. Now, however, all was enveloped
in darkness. Only occasional clusters of lights were visible where people
gathered at the crossroads, waiting for the torch signals of the Sturmoviks.
The city was asleep, or at least pretended to be. How interesting it would be
to know whether the inhabitants could sense that something horrendous was about
to happen. Or did they assume, like the noble don with the tremendous
intellectual prowess, that these were just preparations for Holy Mickey Day?
Twenty thousand men and women. Twenty thousand locksmiths, armorers, butchers,
cloth merchants, jewelers, housewives, prostitutes, monks, money-changers,
soldiers, vagabonds, and bookworms who had still been spared were tossing in
their sticky beds that reeked of bedbugs. They were sleeping, making love,
going over in their minds the profits of the day, crying, gritting their teeth
with wickedness or depression...
Twenty thousand human beings! In the
eyes of a terrestrial observer, they all had something in common. Probably it
was the fact that all of them, with
almost no exceptions, were not yet human beings in the current sense
of the word, but rather
preliminary stages, blocks
of
raw iron ore out of which the bloody
centuries of history would eventually
forge proud and free men. They were passive, greedy, and incredibly egoistic.
Seen from a psychological point of view, almost all of them were slaves--slaves of faith, slaves of their own
persons, slaves of their powerful passions and slaves of their avarice. And if
by chance one of them was born a nobleman, or worked his way up through
diligence over the years, he did not even know what to do with his freedom. He
rushed to become a slave once more--enslaved by wealth, enslaved by unnatural
luxury, enslaved by debauched companions and enslaved by his own slaves. The
majority could not really be blamed for this at all.
Their enslavement was rooted
in passivity and ignorance. Passivity and ignorance, however, would lead in
turn again and again to their enslavement. If indeed they all came from the
same mold, all would merely twiddle their thumbs and not a glimmer of hope
would exist for them. But they were nevertheless human beings and bore the
spark of intelligence. And thus constantly, sometimes here, sometimes there,
the fire of a very, very distant but inevitable future would flare up. It would
begin to bum, despite everything. Despite their apparent incompetence. Despite
the unending suppression and persecution. Although they were kicked and beaten.
Although nobody in this world needed them, and all men were against them.
Although at the very best they could count on uncomprehending, condescending
pity ...
They did not realize that the future was
ahead of them, that the future was impossible without them. They did not recognize themselves as the only real hope for the
future in a world caught in the grip of horrible ghosts of the past, that they
are a ferment, the vitamin in the organism
of their society.
Once you destroy
these ferments, society
will start to rot, social decay will result,
the muscles grow limp, the eyesight
fade and the teeth fall out. No state can develop without
the help of the
sciences.--It will be wiped out by its neighbors. Without
art and culture
a state will lose its
capacity for self-evaluation, will give impetus to the wrong drifts, will
constantly bring forth hypocrites and scoundrels, encourage the development of overconsumption of goods by its citizens, engender arrogance and
eventually fall victim in turn to some bolder neighbor. Let the authorities
persecute the bookworms as much as it pleases,
hinder and stop
the activities of the scientists, destroy the arts: sooner or later the government leaders
will stumble, and as they gnash
their teeth they will be forced to reopen all those avenues to mankind that are so hated
by the power-hungry dunderheads and ignoramuses.
And as thoroughly as these
Gray men in power might despise culture and knowledge, in the long run they are
nevertheless impotent in the face of objective historical necessity--they can
only delay the course of progress, but they can not bring it to a complete
standstill. And even if they fear and scorn educated minds, they are
inescapably forced to further them eventually, simply in order to survive.
Sooner or later they must stand by as universities are founded, scientific
societies are organized, scientific research centers are set up, observatories
and laboratories are built, to train cadres of experts who are already beyond
the rulers' control--to educate men with a totally different psyche, with
completely different demands.
These people, however, cannot exist--nor
can they function properly--in an atmosphere of common greed, plebeian interests,
dull self-sufficiency, and exclusively sensual desires. They need a new type of
atmosphere--an atmosphere of general and
all-encompassing cognition, imbued
with artistic tension; they need writers, poets, painters, composers --and the
mighty Gray Ones will see themselves forced to make concessions here, too.
Those who resist will be swept away by cleverer rivals in the battle for power;
those, on the other hand, who agree to make such concessions, will be digging
their own graves against their own will--inescapably and paradoxically. For
ignorant egoists and fanaticists are doomed, once
the people's culture
awakens in all
areas, from scientific research to the ability to enjoy good music. This is followed by an epoch of vast
social upheavals, accompanied by an upswing of the sciences such as has never
been seen before. And in conjunction with the intellectualization of society
through all strata will follow an era when the powers of Gray will gather their
final effort in a battle whose cruelty will throw mankind back to the
inhumanity of the Middle Ages. This life-and-death struggle will see the
downfall of the powers of Gray,
and they will ultimately go under in a society
freed of all class distinctions and the oppression of man .. .
Rumata
was still looking
out over the city, a petrified glob veiled in gloom. Somewhere in its midst,
in some stifling little room, was Father Tarra, twisting and squirming on a
wretched cot, racked by fever, but Brother
Nain was sitting
next to him at a lopsided little
table--drunk, happy, and mean--finishing
his Treatise about Rumors¸ the book wherein he ridiculed with obvious relish,
and with artfully chosen words, the life of Graydom. Somewhere else, down
there, Gur, the poet, was pacing the floor of his empty, elegant rooms, blind
with despair and terrified at the
realization that in spite of everything new worlds were trying to surface from
the depths of his ravaged soul. These new, bright worlds seemed to be buoyed up
by an unknown force, seemed to be filled with wonderful human beings and
staggering emotions. And somewhere down there Doctor Budach was spending the
night, who knew how? Humbled, forced to his knees, and beaten, but still alive
. . . My brothers all, thought Rumata. I am one of you. After all, we are
of the same flesh! Suddenly he was
overwhelmed by the insight that he was no god protecting the luminaries of the
mind between the palms of his hands, but rather a brother helping another
brother, or a son hurrying to his father's rescue. "I'll kill Don
Reba."--'What for?"--"He has destroyed
my brothers."--"He does not know what he is doing."--"But
he is murdering the future."--"He is innocent; a child of his
time."--"Vou mean he does not realize his guilt? But what does it
matter whether or not he is aware of his guilt?"--"And what about
Father Zupik? What wouldn't he give if someone were to slay Don Reba? Now
you're silent. Vou'll have to do a lot of killing, won't you?" --"I
don't know. Perhaps.
One after the other. All those who try
to prevent the future from happening."--"The same
old story. Poison,
homemade bombs--they never
changed
anything."--"Oh yes, they did. The strategy of the revolution was born."--"What do you care
about the strategy
of the revolution? All
you want is to kill."--"Ves, I want to kill."--"Can you
really go through with it?"--"Vesterday I caused the death of Dona
Okana. I knew she would be killed the moment I went to her house with a feather
stuck behind my ear. I only regret having killed her senselessly. They've
almost managed to teach me such things
here."-- "But this
is bad. It's
a serious matter, and
a dangerous one.
Do you remember Sergei Hoschin, George Lenni or Sabine
Hrueger?"--Rumata ran his hand over his
sweat-covered forehead. Here you are,
pondering, contemplating and worrying--and all you have to show for it is a
load of garbage.
He leapt to his feet and tore the window
open. The widely dispersed concentrations of lights throughout the dark city
were set in motion, broken,
scattered, drifted apart, moved along in chains, vanished behind invisible
houses and appeared again. An indefinable roar surged up over the city, a
distant, many-voiced din. Two conflagrations flared up, illuminating the
neighboring rooftops.
Something exploded
in the harbor area. It had begun.
In a few hours it would be known what the significance
was of the union between the Gray hordes and the nocturnal army, this unnatural
alliance of little shopkeepers and robbers. And it would also be known then
what Don Reba had accomplished with that and what new provocation he had
managed to finagle, or--to put it in a plain language--who was to be
slaughtered tonight. Most likely this was the beginning of a night
of the long knives,
a blood-letting among
the leadership of the Gray
hordes and at the same time the annihilation of
those unfortunate barons who just happened
to be in town, as well as of those
aristocrats who represented the greatest nuisance. I wonder what
Pampa is doing,
he thought. If only
he isn't asleep. Hell make out all right then.
There was no more time now to give free
rein to his thoughts. The door began
to shake from a violent hammering with fists; somebody was yelling in a hoarse
voice: "Open up! Open up!" Rumata pushed back the bolt. A man, half
undressed, blue with fright, rushed into the room, seized Rumata by his vest and shouted with a
trembling voice:
"Where is the prince?
Budach has poisoned the king! Irukanian spies have started a riot in the city! Save the prince!"
It was the marshal of the prince's
household, a stupid man, an obsequious servant of his master.
He pushed Rumata
aside and ran
into the prince's
bedchambers. The women
began to scream.
Meanwhile, however, brandishing their
notched battle-axes, the Sturmoviks in gray
shirts rushed through
the open doors,
their distorted faces
drenched in perspiration.
"Get back," he said as cool as a cucumber.
From behind his back, from the bedchamber, came a
brief, muffled outcry. We are in trouble, thought Rumata. He dashed into a
comer and barricaded himself behind a table. Panting Sturmoviks began to fill
the room. Fifteen men in all, it seemed. A lieutenant in a gray uniform, in the
front row, raised his dagger.
"Don Rumata?" he asked, gasping for air. "Vou are under
arrest.
Surrender your
swords."
"Why don't you come and get them!" said
Rumata and threw a quick glance toward the window.
"Seize him!" the lieutenant wheezed.
Fifteen men, drunk and equipped with mere axes are
no match for one who is an expert in defensive techniques that will become known here only three hundred years hence.
The crowd surged forward and then fell back again. On the floor remained
several axes, two Sturmoviks writhing in pain, their smashed hands gingerly
pressed against their stomachs as they stumbled off to the back rows of their comrades.
Rumata was a master of the
defensive fan technique. The attackers were greeted by a dense, glittering curtain
created by his whirling swords, and it
seemed impossible to penetrate this barrier of steel. The
Sturmoviks withdrew and looked at each
other with baffled faces. A sharp odor of beer and onions emanated from them.
Rumata
moved the table,
cautiously walked along
the wall toward
the window, all the while keeping an eye on the Gray soldiers. A knife
was thrown at him from
the back rows
but it missed. Rumata laughed, set one foot on the window
ledge and said;
"Vou try once
more and this time I'll cut off your hands. Vou
know me."
They knew him. They knew him very well,
and not one of the men budged from his spot despite the commands and curses
from their officers who were careful not to risk anything themselves.
Constantly threatening them with both swords, Rumata pulled himself all the
way up onto the window ledge. At that
moment a lance, coming from the street down below, hit him in the back. The
impact was terrific. Though the weapon did not pierce his metalloplast shirt,
it still swept him off the ledge and
threw him back into the room, down to the floor. Rumata held onto his two
swords but they were of no help in this situation. The whole mob pounced at
once. All of them together must have weighed well over a ton but they were in
each other's way and thus he succeeded in getting back to his feet again.
His fist smashed between somebody's wet
lips, another fellow was wiggled under his shoulder like a wounded rabbit, and
Rumata kept hitting out in all directions with his fists, elbows, shoulders (he
had not felt that free in a long time) but he could not shake them off.
Dragging a throng of bodies behind him, he managed to get as far as the door,
where he finally freed himself from the men who had dug their fingers into his legs.
Then he felt a painful, mighty blow on his shoulder and he fell on his back.
Several Sturmoviks were struggling to get out from under him. Once again he
managed to get back on his feet, dealing short blows that hurled the desperately
hitting and kicking Gray soldiers against the walls. For a moment he saw the
pockmarked face of the lieutenant loom up before him as he ducked behind his
discharged crossbow, when suddenly the door gave way and a new flood of
sweating, grimacing faces poured into the room. They threw a large net over him, drew it together around his feet, and flung him to the ground.
He stopped resisting at once in order to
preserve his strength. For a while they kicked him with their boots-- silently,
straining hard and panting with
delight. Then they grabbed him by his feet and dragged him away. As they passed
the open door of the bedchamber, he could
see the master of the prince's household nailed to the wall by a spear, and a
bundle of bloody sheets on the bed. "It's a revolution!" thought
Rumata. 'That's what it is all about. Poor boy. .." They pulled him down
the stairs, and then he lost consciousness.
Part
Sevem
He was lying on a grassy hill looking up
into the clouds that sailed along the deep, blue sky. He felt quiet and at
peace but on the grassy hill next to him sat the embodiment of shooting pain.
The pain was externalized, and yet he could also feel it inside himself,
especially
on his right side and on the back of his
neck. "Hicked the bucket, has he? I'll cut off your heads!" And then
a flood of icy cold water poured down on him from out of the sky. True, he was
lying on his back and looking up into the sky, but it was not a grassy hill,
but a puddle of water; and the sky was not blue either, it was leaden black
with red stripes. "Not a bit," said another voice. 'That's alive.
Twitching with the eyes." I am the one who is alive, he thought. They are
talking about me. I am the one whose eyes are twitching. What's all this
drivel? Don't they know how to speak properly?
Someone moved nearby and hit the water
with some heavy object. The black silhouette of a head with a flat cap appeared
on the sky.
"How about it, noble
don, will you walk under your own power or shall
I have them carry you?"
"Untie my legs!" snapped
Rumata, and felt at once a sharp, burning pain in his bruised lips. Gingerly he
passed his tongue over them. Some lips, he thought. More like flabby pancakes.
Someone busied himself about his feet,
pushing and pulling them unceremoniously.
People were conversing nearby in subdued voices.
"Vou certainly made a mess of him."
"Had to, he almost got away . . . He's
bewitched--arrows bounce off his body ..."
"I knew a fellow once, you could
work him over with an ax and he wouldn't bat an eyelash."
"Probably a peasant." "Of
course he was."
"So? But this one is a blue blood."
"To hell with it. Look how they tied these
knots! Even our Holy Mickey couldn't untie those.
Pass me a torch!"
"Better take, a knife!"
"Hey, fellows, leave his legs tied up. Hell
start thrashing at us again. He almost knocked my head off."
"No, no, he won't do anything."
"Whatever anyone says,
comrades, I sure
let him have
it with my spear.
It went right through his armor."
Some
voice called out peremptorily from
the darkness. "Finish
up, will you!"
Rumata felt now that his legs were free;
he stretched them, tried to stand up, but fell down immediately. Several
Sturmoviks who were crouching on the ground watched in silence as he wallowed in
the muddy puddle. Rumata gnashed his teeth in fury and humiliation. He jerked
his shoulder blades: his hands were bound and turned up on his back, but so
tightly that he could not tell where his palms and where his elbows were. He
gathered up all his strength and violently jerked them upwards, but at once
doubled over in pain. The Sturmoviks broke out in laughter.
"Can't escape that way," said one of them.
"I think he's a little tired. Hey,
you, drop dead." "Hey, don, not too pleasant, is it?"
"Shut up! Stop that silly
babbling!" said the imperative voice from the dark. "Come over here,
Don Rumata!"
Rumata struggled to his feet and walked
toward the voice; he felt himself staggering uncertainly from side to side. A
man appeared from
somewhere, holding a torch, and led the
way for him. Rumata recognized the locality. It was one of the innumerable
interior courts of the Ministry of Security, near the royal stables.
He thought quickly.
If they lead me to the right,
that would mean the
Tower, the dungeon.
To the left: The offices
of Don Reba's Ministry. He shook his head. So what, he thought.
I am still alive, I'll make out all
right.--They turned to the left. These new, bright worlds seemed to be buoyed
up by an unknown force, seemed to be filled with wonderful human beings and
staggering emotions. And somewhere down there Doctor Budach was spending the
night, who knew how? Humbled, forced to his knees, and beaten, but still alive
... My brothers all, thought Rumata. I am one of you; after
all, we are of the same flesh! All of a sudden
he was overwhelmed by an insight that
he was actually
no god protecting the
luminaries of the mind between the palms of his hands, but rather a brother
helping another brother or a son hurrying to come to his father's rescue.
"I'll kill Don Reba."--"What for?"--"He has destroyed my brothers."--"He does
not know what
he is doing."--"But he
is murdering the future!"--"He is not guilty;
he is a child of his
time."--"Vou mean
he does not realize his guilt? But what does it matter whether or not he is
aware of his guilt?"--"And what about Father Zupik? What wouldn't he give if somebody were to slay Don Reba.
Now you're silent. Vou'll have to do a lot of killing, won't you?"
--"I don't know.
Perhaps. One after the other.
All those that try to prevent the future
from happening!"--"That's an old story. Poison, homemade
bombs--And nothing ever changed."--"Oh yes, something did change. The
strategy of the revolution was born."--"What do you care about the
strategy of the revolution? All you want is to kill!"-- "Ves, I want
to kill."--"Can you really go through with
that?"--"Vesterday I caused the death of Dona Okana. I knew she would
be killed the moment I went to her house with a feather stuck behind my ear. I
only regret having killed her senselessly. They've almost managed to teach me
such things here."--At least not right away, thought Rumata. First an
interrogation, a cross-examination. Awful. In that case, what can they accuse me of? That's obvious
enough. Inducing the poisoner
Budach to poison the king, conspiracy, plotting against the crown. Maybe also
murdering the prince. And, of course, spying for Irukan, Soan, the barbarians,
the barons, the Holy Order, and so on and so on. Surprising enough that I am
still alive. That means he has been thinking of something else still, the toadstool.
"This way," said the man with
the imperious voice. A low door flew open. Rumata ducked his head and entered a
large room, lit up by a dozen
chandeliers. The men who sat or lay on the worn rug in the center of the room
were tied up and covered with blood. Some were already dead or had fainted.
Almost all were barefoot and wore only worn and ripped night shirts. Along the
walls, the red-nosed Sturmoviks were leaning negligently on their hatchets and
battle axes. They looked about with wild eyes and were satisfied. They had been
victorious. The officer on guard was striding up and down before them, his
hands clasped on his back. He wore a gray uniform with a very greasy collar.
Rumata's companion, a tall man in a black cloak, approached the officer and
whispered something in his ear. The officer nodded his head, regarded Rumata
for a moment with great interest and disappeared behind the heavy, colorful
drapes at the other end of the room.
The Sturmoviks examined Rumata in turn, also very interestedly.
One
of them, with a dim eye, said:
"Say, that's some precious stone there on his forehead!"
"Not bad, that stone," agreed another
soldier. "Some booty for the king. And the circlet is made of pure
gold."
"We are the kings now."
"Down with it then, eh, what do you
think?"
"Get away from there," growled
the man in the black cloak. The Sturmoviks stared at him in surprise.
"Another one to patronize us?"
asked the Sturmovik with the blind eye.
The man with the black cloak
did not answer, but turned his back on him and stepped
close to Rumata.
The Sturmoviks looked him up and
down, their eyes filled with mistrust.
"Perhaps a blackbird, a priest?" said the Sturmovik with the blind
eye.
"Hey,
blackie, want a smackie?"
The Sturmoviks cackled
and crowed in amusement. The dim-eyed
man spat on his palms, tossed
his hatchet from hand to hand and moved toward Rumata. He's going to get it
now, thought Rumata, and slowly pulled back his right foot.
"The people I have always beaten
up," said the Sturmovik as he came to a halt before the man in black, and
staring at him insolently, "were the priests, any learned trash and our
so-called masters. Once I--"
The man with the black cloak raised his
outstretched hand. A buzzing click could be heard all of a sudden, just below
the ceiling.
Sh-sh-sh-! The Sturmovik with
the blind eye dropped his hatchet and fell over backwards. A thick, feathered
arrow protruded from the middle of his forehead. All at once there was absolute
silence. The Sturmoviks shifted nervously from one foot to the other, their
eyes flitted anxiously along the openings below the ceiling.
"Get rid of that body, quick!"
Several Sturmoviks bent down, grabbed their comrade
by his arms and legs and dragged him outside. A Gray officer came out from
behind the curtains and beckoned to Rumata and the man in black.
"Let's go, Don Rumata," said the man in black.
Rumata passed the bodies of the prisoners and
walked over to the curtains. I don't understand anything
any more, he thought. Once behind the
drapes, he was seized by invisible hands that expertly frisked his body in the darkness, tore the empty
scabbards from his belt, then pushed him into the light.
Rumata knew at once where he was.
This was the infamous cabinet of Don Reba in the
lilac-colored apartments. Don Reba sat at the same spot, striking the identical
pose as once before; his back straight, elbows resting on the tabletop and
fingers clasped. I bet the old man is suffering from hemorrhoids, the thought
abruptly flashed through Rumata's mind. He felt sorry for him. To the right of
Don Reba was enthroned Father Zupik, concentrating hard and pompously biting
his lips. To Don Reba's left sat a kindly smiling potbellied man, the
epaulettes on his shoulders marking him as a captain of the Gray Army. Nobody
else was in the room besides these three- As Don Rumata entered, Don Reba said
benevolently in a low voice:
"Well, my friends, here we have finally the noble Don Rumata."
Father Zupik smiled condescendingly and the fat man
started to nod his head kindly.
"Our old and very consistent enemy," said Don Reba.
"An enemy? Hang him!" remarked
Father Zupik hoarsely. "And what is your opinion, Brother Aba?" asked
Don Reba,
throwing a warning glance
at the potbellied man.
"Vou know . . . somehow I have . . ."
Brother Aba smiled
rather childishly and lost,
fidgeting with his short arms in the air. "Somehow, you know, I actually do
not care. But maybe we ought to hang him anyhow? Or perhaps burn him, what do you say, Don Reba?"
"Why not," said a pensive Don Reba.
"Vou see," continued Brother Aba
desperately, and directed a strangely
friendly smile toward Rumata, "in general we hang the
riff-raff, the little fish.
But we must maintain a respectful relationship toward the aristocracy. For the
sake of the people. After all, he is a descendant from old nobility, an
important Irukanian spy. Irukanian, isn't that right?" He took a piece of paper from the table and stared
at it with nearsighted eyes.
"Ah, and besides
that, also a Seaman spy.
Even worse!"
"Burn him then," concurred Father Zupik.
"Fine," said Don Reba.
"Then we are all agreed. Burn him!" "By the way, I believe Don
Rumata might ease his lot!" said
Brother Aba. "Vou know
what I mean, Don Reba?" "To
be quite frank with you, not quite."
"His fortune! My noble don, his
fortune! The Rumatas are a fabulously wealthy family... !"
"Vou're right, as always," said Don Reba.
Father Zupik yawned, covered his mouth with his
hand, and kept stealing glances toward the heavy lilac-colored drapes to the
right side of the table.
"All right then, let's start
according to the rules," said Don Reba with a sigh.
Father Zupik still cast furtive glances
at the drapes. Evidently he was waiting for something definite and was not at
all interested in this cross-examination. What kind of a farce is that? thought
Rumata. What is the meaning of all this?
"Well, then, my noble don,"
said Don Reba and turned to Rumata, "it would be most pleasant to hear
your answers to some questions we are interested in."
"Remove these bonds from my hands," said Rumata.
Father Zupik flinched, while making desperate
chewing motions with his lips. Brother Aba moved his head from side to side
excitedly.
"Well?" said Don Reba and
looked first at Brother Aba, then at Father Zupik. "I do understand you,
my friends. However, considering the circumstances and the fact that they will
also be clear to Don Rumata . .." With a meaningful glance he let his eyes
sweep along the rows of openings in the walls underneath the ceiling.
"Untie him," he said in the same quiet, even voice.
Without making a sound, somebody stepped
up to Rumata from behind. He felt the oddly soft, skillful fingers touching his
hands, and then heard the ropes being cut with a knife. With amazing
speed--considering his
bulk--Brother Aba pulled a huge crossbow from underneath the table and placed
it directly in front of him on top of a
pile of papers. Rumata's arms fell to
his sides like two braids. He had almost no feeling in them.
"Well, then, let's begin,"
said Don Reba cheerfully. "Name, family, and rank?"
"Rumata, descended from the race of the Estorian Rumatas.
Noble courtiers for the
past twenty-two generations."
Rumata looked around, saw a sofa, sat down and
started to massage his wrists. Brother Aba gasped for air and aimed the crossbow at him.
"Vour father?"
"My noble father--imperial councilor, loyal
servant and personal friend of the emperor."
"Is he alive?" "He's
dead."
"When?"
"Eleven years ago." "How
old are you?"
Rumata found no time to reply. From
behind the lilac-colored curtains came suddenly some noises, and Brother Aba
turned around suspiciously. Father Zupik rose slowly from his seat and laughed
maliciously.
"Well, there you are, gentlemen
..." That was all he managed to say. For three men jumped out from behind
the heavy drapes, to Rumata's greatest surprise--they were the last people he
would have expected in this place. Apparently his feelings were shared by
Father Zupik. The three men were powerfully built, clad in black monk's garb,
their hoods pulled down over their eyes. Swiftly and noiselessly, they leapt
over to Father Zupik and seized him by the elbows.
"Devil take it!" he uttered
somehow. A deathly pallor fell over his face. Undoubtedly he had expected
something quite different.
"What do you think,
Brother Aba?" inquired
Don Reba calmly
and leaned slightly toward
the fat man.
"Ves, of course!" Father Aba answered resolutely. "Of
course!"
Don Reba motioned with his hand. The monks lifted
Father Zupik off his feet and carried him, still treading noiselessly, behind
the curtain. Rumata frowned in disgust, Brother Aba rubbed his soft palms
together and said boldly;
"That went off splendidly. What did you think, Don Reba?"
"Ves, not bad," nodded Don Reba in consent. "But let's go
on. So.
How old are you, Don
Rumata?" "Thirty-five years."
"How long have you
been in Arkanar?" "It has been five years."
"Where did you come from?"
"Till then I had been living in Estoria on my family's ancestral
seat."
"Why
this change of residence?"
"I was forced by circumstances to leave Estoria. I was in search
of a city that could
challenge the splendor of our capital." Finally he began to feel a fiery
tingling in his arms. Patiently and untiringly, Rumata continued to massage his
swollen joints.
"What kind of circumstances?" asked Don Reba.
"I killed a member of the imperial household in a duel."
"Oh?
Who?"
"The young Duke Ekin."
"And what was the reason for this
duel?" "A woman," answered Rumata briefly.
He became gradually suspicious that all
these questions were actually meaningless. That they were just as much part of
the game as the consultation regarding the manner of his execution.
The three of us are waiting for
something. I am waiting until I have regained full use of my hands. Brother
Aba, the dunderhead, is waiting for me to drop all the gold of the family
treasure of the Rumatas in his lap. Don Reba, too, is waiting for something.
But the monks, the monks! How did the monks come to be here at court? And
especially such skillful and nimble fellows--?
'The name of that woman?"
Oh, these questions, thought Rumata. One would be hard put to think
up a more witless batch.
I'll try to throw him out of gear a bit.
"Dona Rita," he replied.
"I did not expect that you would
answer me. Thank you." "Always at your service."
Don Reba slightly bowed his head.
"Have you ever been in lrukan?"
"No."
"Are you sure?" "Are
you?"
"We want to speak the truth!"
said Don Reba in a didactic tone of voice. Brother Aba produced a quivering nod
of his head. "Nothing but the truth."
"Aha!" said Rumata.
"And I was under the impression .. ." He fell
silent.
"Under
what impression?"
". . . that you were mainly interested in laying your hands on my
fortune. But for the life of me I can't imagine,
Don Reba, how you will finagle that?"
"How about donating it? Ves, donate
it!" shouted Brother
Aba. Rumata laughed impudently.
"Vou are an ass,
Brother Aba, or whatever your
name might be. One
can see with half an eye that you're nothing
but a miserable little
shopkeeper. Vou probably
are not aware
that the right
of primogeniture is not subject to transfer into other hands?"
It was plain to be seen that the fat man was ready to explode with rage.
But he managed to keep himself under control.
"Vou are not entitled to speak in
such a manner," said Don Reba in a gentle voice.
"Vou want the truth?" countered Rumata. "Here it is, the truth, nothing but the truth--the absolute truth: Brother
Aba is an ass and a
petty shopkeeper."
Meanwhile, Brother Aba had completely
regained his composure. "It seems to me that we are not sticking to the point,"
he said
with a smile. "What
do you think, Don Reba?"
"Vou're right, as always," said Don Reba.
"My noble don, did you ever go to Soan?"
"I was in Soan." "For what purpose?"
'To
attend the Academy of Sciences."
"What a peculiar occupation for a young man of
your circumstances."
"That's what I fancied."
"And are you acquainted with the chief judge
of Soan, Don Hondor?"
Rumata became suspicious; he smelled a rat "He is an old friend of my
family."
"A most worthy man, isn't he?"
"A most honorable person."
"Are you familiar with the fact
that Don Hondor is a member of the conspiracy against His Majesty the
Hing?"
Rumata's chin began to jut out imperceptibly.
"Put your own house in order first, Don
Reba," said Rumata haughtily. "As far as we, the old nobility of the
capital, are concerned, all these
Soanians and Irukanians, as well as the Arkanarians, are and will always be
nothing but vassals of the imperial crown!" He crossed his legs and turned away.
Don Reba studied
him pensively. "Are you rich?"
"I
could buy up all of Arkanar if I had a mind to. But I am not interested in trash."
Don Reba took a deep breath.
"My heart bleeds," he said, "when I consider how I am forced to chop
off the famous
branch of such
a famous and noble lineage! It would almost be a crime if I were not
driven to do it in the higher interests of State."
"Don't worry so much about the interests of the state," said Rumata. "Better worry about how to save your own skin."
"Vou are quite right," said Don Reba and snapped his fingers.
Rumata alternately tensed and relaxed his muscles.
His body was apparently functioning normally again. From behind the curtains,
once more three monks jumped out, with the same incredible agility and
precision which bespoke a great deal of experience. They surrounded the still
smiling Brother Aba and grasped his arms, twisting them up behind his back.
"Ou-ou-ou-ouch!" he screamed in pain, his fat face distorted in
agony.
"Hurry up, get it over with quickly!" commanded Don Reba. As
they were dragging him behind the
drapes, the fat
man
resisted furiously. He could
still be heard, crying and whining; then suddenly he roared briefly in a weird,
hardly recognizable voice, and finally all became quiet again.
Don Reba stood up and cautiously unloaded the crossbow.
Rumata, quite perplexed,
followed his motions with his eyes.
Slowly, Don Reba began to pace the floor,
apparently lost in deep thought, while scratching his back with the arrow.
"Good, good," he murmured, almost tenderly. "How perfect . .
." He seemed to have completely forgotten Rumata's presence. He kept
pacing faster and faster, twirling the arrow in the air like a baton. Then,
abruptly, he stopped in his tracks by the table, threw the arrow away, sat down
gingerly, his face suddenly lit up by a smile, and said:
"Well, what do you say to that? Neither of them even put up a
good fight. I don't
think we'd get away as easily as that with you." "Ve-e-es ...," said Rumata slowly,
thoughtfully.
"All right then. Now let's have a
talk, Don Rumata. Or is it maybe not even Rumata? And perhaps not even a don?
How about it?"
Rumata remained silent and examined him
interestedly. Don Reba was pale,
and little red veins showed
on his nose. He was nearly
shaking with excitement, as if he were about to clap his hands in glee and scream
out: "I knew it! I knew it!"--Vou know nothing at all, you dog, he thought. And even if you should
find out, you would not believe it anyhow. Go ahead, speak, I'm listening.
"I'm listening," said Rumata.
"Vou are not Don Rumata," explained Don
Reba. "Vou are an usurper." He looked seriously into Rumata's eyes.
"Rumata of Estoria died five years ago and is entombed in the family crypt
of his ancestors.
And the
saints have long since quieted his rebellious and--excuse me--none too pure
soul. So? Do you confess or do you need some prompting?"
"I confess," said Rumata. "I
am called Rumata
of Estoria, and I am not
accustomed to people doubting my words."
Let me annoy
you a bit, thought Rumata. Look out, here we go. "I can see well have to
continue this talk somewhere else," said
Don Reba in an ominous tone.
Remarkable changes came over Don Reba's face. The
pleasant smile disappeared, his lips narrowed to a thin line. It was odd,
almost to the point of eeriness: even the skin on his forehead started to
twitch.
Ves, thought Rumata, a man
like that can be frightened. "Vou do have hemorrhoids, don't you?" he
asked solicitously.
Something flashed in the comers of Don
Reba's eyes but he did not bat an
eyelid. He acted as if he had not heard.
"Vou treated Budach very
badly," said Rumata. "He is an excellent physician. That is to say,
he was . . . ," he added significantly.
For another moment, Don Reba's eyes
flashed again. Aha, thought Rumata. Budach is presumably still alive ... He
settled more comfortably in his chair, clasped his hands around his knees.
"Vou refuse to confess," said Don Reba. "What?"
"That you are an usurper!"
"My most honorable Don
Reba," said Rumata with the intonation of a schoolmaster. "Such
accusations usually ought to be solidly backed by concrete proof. Vou insult
me!"
Don Reba's face assumed an expression of utter sweetness.
"My dear Don Rumata," he said.
"Forgive me if I continue to use that name for the time being. I am not
usually in the habit of proving anything. The proof comes over there, in the
Tower of Joy. For this purpose I have at my service experienced, well-paid
specialists who work with the meat grinder of our Holy Mickey, with the weapons
of the sole divine force, the gloves
of the holy martyr Tata, or, for instance, with the seating accommodation--oh,
pardon me, with the iron chair of Totz, the fighter. They can prove anything
they please with these implements. That God exists or that He does not exist.
That human beings walk on their hands or even on their sides. Do you understand
me? Vou are perhaps unaware of it but we have an entire science devoted to
obtaining confessions. Just think for a moment:
Why should I try to prove what I already know? And
what's more, no harm will befall you after you have confessed . .."
"I am not threatened by any harm, but you
are," interrupted Rumata.
Don Reba pondered for a while.
"All right," he said finally.
"Apparently I will have to make a beginning. Let's examine in what way
Rumata of Estoria has distinguished himself during
the five years
of his stay in the kingdom of Arkanar. And then you will explain
the meaning of it all. Agreed?"
"I won't make
any rash promises," said Rumata. "But I am interested in listening to what you have to say."
Don Reba started to rummage in his writing desk,
took out a thick pile of square papers and skimmed them with raised eyebrows.
"Vou are probably aware of the fact," he
started with a pleasant smile, "that in my capacity as Minister of
Internal Security I have undertaken some steps--for the protection of the
Crown--against the
so-called bookworms, scholars and other
elements that are useless and harmful for the State. These actions encountered
strange resistance. At the same time as the entire population helped me in a
unanimous wave of patriotism and loyalty--denouncing hidden criminals,
organizing trials on the spot, giving useful hints as to who the suspicious
characters were that had escaped my
attention--just at that time some unknown but extremely energetic person
snatched away from right under my nose all the most important, incorrigible and
detestable criminals and abducted them across the border. This way many have
gotten away, as for instance the godless astrologer Bagir Hissenski; the
criminal alchemist Synda, who, it has been definitely proven, was in alliance
with the devil's brood as well as with
the Irukanian potentates; the vile pamphleteer and disturber of the peace,
Zuren; and several others of low rank. And the mad magician and mechanic Habani
has slunk away and is hiding in some hole somewhere. Some unknown person has
distributed enormous sums of gold in order to prevent the people from venting
their righteous anger on those blasphemous spies and poisoners, the former
personal physicians of His Majesty. Someone liberated Arata, the hunchback,
under the most fantastic circumstances which once more lead us to suspect the
unknown to be in league with ungodly forces--Arata, a regular demon of
depravity, who seditiously poisons the nation's soul, the instigator and leader
of peasants' revolts
..."
Don Reba stopped, wrinkled his forehead and
regarded Rumata with a meaningful glance. Rumata turned his eyes up to the
ceiling and smiled dreamily. True, he had kidnapped Arata, the hunchback, yes,
indeed--with a helicopter at that. It had made a tremendous impression on
Arata's guards. On Arata, too, by the way. I'm quite a guy, I must admit, he
thought. That was a good piece of work.
"Vou are probably also aware that the
aforementioned Arata is currently in the eastern sectors of the capital,
leading a mutineering army of slaves, shedding considerable quantities of noble
blood--and he still disposes over sufficient money and arms."
"I can easily believe that," said Rumata.
"He impressed me right away as a very determined man."
"Vou confess then?" quickly
asked Don Reba. "To
what?" asked Rumata surprised.
They remained silent for a while, just
staring at each other. "I'll
continue," said Don Reba. "In order to rescue all these
spoilers of souls, you,
Don Rumata, have
poured out at least over
one hundred pounds of gold, according to my moderate and incomplete
calculations. I will not make mention here of the fact that contact with these
forces of evil has sullied your soul for all eternity. Neither will I discuss here
the fact that
you did not receive a single copper
penny from your Estorian estates as long as you
have been staying within the borders of the
Arkanarian realm; surely,
after all, why
should you have gotten any money? Why provide a dead man with money
even if he's
a relative? But your gold, your gold!"
He opened a strong-box that had been
buried under a pile of papers on the table and took out a handful of gold coins
showing the profile of Pitz the Sixth.
"This gold alone would suffice to
have you burnt at the stake!" he cried. 'This gold is the devil's work!
Human hands are not capable of producing gold of such purity!"
He literally pierced Rumata with his
glance. I must admit in all honesty, Rumata thought, he's got me there. Touche.
We didn't think
of that one. Must give him credit for that; he's the first to have noticed
it .
.. But Don Reba grew suddenly
very mild again. Paternal, solicitous tones came into his voice:
"And in general you are behaving in a most imprudent manner, Don Rumata. I kept
worrying about you the whole
time. What a duelist,
what a mischief-maker! One hundred and twenty-six duels within five years! And not a single person
killed . . . After
all, in the final analysis, one might arrive at some conclusions. I, for instance, have done so. And
I am not the only one. Just take Brother Aba, for example--well, we shouldn't speak
ill of the dead, but
he was a very cruel
man, and I never
could really stand him . . . Well, then.
Brother Aba selected not the most skillful, but the biggest
and strongest men
to have you
put under arrest. And he was right in the end. A
few dislocated shoulders, wrenched necks, not to mention some bashed-in teeth .
. . And here you are standing in front of me! But how could you know you were
fighting for your life? Vou
are a master! Vou are undoubtedly the
best sword fighter in the whole country. And there can be no doubt that
you have sold
your soul to the devil, for only in hell is it possible to learn such fantastically
masterful swordsmanship. I am even inclined to admit that you were given this fabulous skill
only under condition never to kill anyone.
Although I am hard put to imagine why the devil of all creatures should
insist on such a stipulation. But that's something for our scholars to
figure out..."
A thin, high scream, a sound like a squealing
pig, interrupted Don Reba's deliberations. Annoyed, he looked at the
lilac-colored, heavy drapes. Sounds of people scuffling came from behind them.
There were thuds, blows, and someone shouting, "Let go! Let go!" and
then hoarse voices, cursing and shouting in an incomprehensible dialect.
Suddenly the curtain tore with a crack like a whip and fell to the ground. Into
the cabinet staggered a bald-headed man on all fours, his chin bleeding and his
eyes open wide. Huge human paws pushed through a chink of the other curtains
that were still in place, seized the man by his-feet and pulled him back again.
Rumata recognized the man--it was Budach.
He screamed like a wild animal:
"Betrayed!
I have been betrayed! It was poison! Why?"
They dragged him back into the darkness. A man,
clad in black, swiftly picked up the fallen curtain and arranged it again. The
sudden silence was interrupted by sickening noises coming from behind the
curtain--somebody was vomiting. Rumata understood.
"Where is Budach?" he asked harshly.
"As you can see, he's had a little
accident," answered Don Reba, but he was clearly no longer as self-assured
as he had been.
"Don't try to pull the wool over my
eyes," said Rumata. "Where is Budach?"
"My dear Don Rumata," said Don Reba,
wagging his head. He had collected himself again. "What
do you want with Budach? Is he a relative of yours, perhaps? Vou've never even
set eyes on him in your life until now."
"Listen to me, Reba," Rumata
was enraged. "I'm not joking. If anything
happens to Budach,
you'll die like a dog. I'll strangle
you with my own two hands!"
"Hardly," Don Reba said quickly. He was very pale.
"Vou're a fool, Reba. Vou're a master at
intrigue, but you actually don't know your way around. Vou've never let
yourself in for a game as dangerous as this one. And you don't even know
it."
Don Reba bent over the table, his eyes like glowing coals. Rumata
knew that he himself had never been in a situation as precarious as the present
one. It was time to put the cards on the table; they would soon know who had
the upper hand in the game. Rumata tensed his muscles, ready to spring. There
was no weapon, be it spear or arrow, that could kill you instantly: the thought
was written on Don Reba's face. And the old man with the hemorrhoids wanted to
live. "What is it that you want?" he said in a whining voice.
"We've had a nice little chat here . . . your Budach is alive. Alive and
healthy. He'll even live to treat me one of these days. Just don't get excited."
"Where is Budach?" "In
the Tower of Joy." "I need him!"
"So do I, Don Rumata."
"Listen to me, Reba," said Rumata,
"don't provoke me. And stop pretending. Vou are afraid of me. And well you
might be. Budach belongs to me, do you understand? To me!"
Now both were standing, facing each
other. Don Reba's face was an alarming sight: He turned blue, his
lips began to twitch feverishly and he
mumbled to himself with little spurts of saliva coming from his mouth.
"Vou whippersnapper!" he hissed.
"I'm not afraid
of anybody! I can
squash you like a leech!"
He wheeled around abruptly and pulled
down a gobelin that had been hanging behind his back. A wide window appeared.
"There, have a look!"
Rumata went to the window. It opened onto the
square in front of the palace. Dawn was approaching by now. The smoke of many
fires rose into the sky. The square was dotted with corpses. In the center of
the square was a black, unmoving rectangular mass. Rumata examined it more
closely. It was a group of riders, lined up with amazing exactitude. They wore
long black cloaks, black hoods that were pulled
down
over their eyes,
black, triangular shields
in their left hand--and
long halberds in their right.
"If you please," said
Don Reba with
a rattling voice.
He was trembling all over.
"The valiant, martial
children of the Lord our
God--the cavalry of the Holy
Order. They landed in the port of Arkanar during the night in order to crush
the barbarian revolt of the nocturnal scoundrel Waga Holeso, who allied himself
with the snooty merchants and storekeepers. The rebellion has been quelled. The
Holy Order now rules over the city and the entire country whose name henceforth
is the Arkanarian Province of the Holy Order..."
Instinctively, Rumata scratched the back
of his neck. So, that's what it is! These are the people
for whom the unfortunate shopkeepers have paved the way.
What a coup! Don Reba
was grinning triumphantly.
"We haven't properly met yet,"
he continued with the same rattling voice. "Allow me to introduce myself:
Don Reba, representative of the Holy Order in the Arkanarian Province. Bishop
and Councilor of War, servant of Our Lord!"
It isn't so surprising after all,
thought Rumata. Wherever Graydom triumphs, the blackbirds will always seize
power. Oh, you historians, to hell with you ... But he regained his composure,
gripped his hands behind
his back and began to rock back
and forth on his heels.
"I
am tired now," he said in an affected
manner. "I want to sleep. I
want to wash myself with warm water,
to rinse off the blood and spit of your cut-throats. Tomorrow . . . that
is to say, today . . . let's say, one hour after sunrise ... I'll come to your
offices. The writ for Budach's release must be ready by then."
"Look, down there! Twenty thousand
men!" shouted Don Reba pointing to the square below the windows. Rumata
frowned.
"Not quite so loud, please,"
he said. "And just remember, Don Reba: I am absolutely certain that you
are not a bishop. I know you through and through. Vou are nothing but a filthy
traitor and a clumsy, cheap schemer . . ."
Don Reba licked his lips; his eyes assumed a glassy
stare. "I know no pardon. For any foul play, involving myself or any of my
friends, you'll have to pay with your own life! I hate you, just remember that!
I'll have to tolerate you, but you must learn in time to get out of my way. Vou understand?"
Don Reba smiled
pleadingly and said
quickly: "I have
only one wish. I want you to be near me, Don Rumata.
I cannot loll
you. I do not know why, but I cannot do it!"
"Vou are afraid," said Rumata.
"All right, then,
so I am afraid," said
Don Reba. "Maybe you are the devil,
maybe the Son of God. Who can tell? Maybe, on the other hand, you come from
some faraway, powerful
domain: People say they
do actually exist. I won't
even try peering
down into the abyss that has
swallowed you. My head begins
to swim and I feel
close to heresy.
Vet, I can have you killed any time I want to. Now. Tomorrow. Vesterday... Do you
understand that?"
"I am not interested in any of
that," said Rumata. "So? What does interest you?"
"Nothing at all," answered
Rumata. "I simply want to have a good time.
I am neither a devil nor a god, I am Chevalier Rumata of Estoria, a gay
nobleman, a courtier, burdened with personal whims and prejudices, accustomed
to be free in every respect. Bear that in mind,
will
you!"
Don Reba had himself well under control again. He
dabbed his swollen face with a handkerchief and smiled pleasantly.
"I appreciate your stubbornness.
After all, even you are striving toward some goal. And I respect these ideals,
even if I fail to comprehend them. I am very happy that we had a heart-to-heart
talk. Quite possibly sometime you will present your views to me more fully and, who knows, you
might convince me that way
to revise my own. All men
are liable to make mistakes; that's a human
failing. It may well be that
I am the one who is making
a mistake, that I am not striving
toward those goals that would make it worthwhile to work as arduously
and strenuously as I do now. I am a man of broad views, and I can well imagine
that some day we will work together, standing shoulder to shoulder..."
"That remains to be seen," said
Rumata and left
the room. What
a bootlicker!" he thought. Some collaborator he would make!
Shoulder to shoulder... "
The city was shaken to the core by the
unbearable terror. The blood-red morning sun illuminated a somber scene of
empty streets, smoking ruins, shattered window shutters and doors. Bloody glass
splinters glittered in the dust of the roads. Innumerable swarms of crows descended on the city as if it were a
churchyard. Patrols of two to three riders, clad in black, trotted their horses
across open places and at crossroads.
They slowly tossed from side to side in the
saddles.
Everywhere could be seen
wooden stakes, hastily rammed into the ground, with scarred bodies drooping
over the embers of the pyre. The whole city gave the appearance that nothing
alive had remained--except for the disgusting, screeching crows and the busy
slaughterers in black.
Rumata
was making his
way through the
city. Most of the time
he kept his eyes closed. He was gasping for air, his bruised body
hurting furiously.--Can these still
be called human
beings? Some are slaughtered
openly in the streets while the others sit inside their houses, waiting
obediently for their turn. And each one thinking: Who cares what happens, as long as it is not me--I'll escape. Cold-blooded bestiality of the slaughterers and
cold-blooded obedience of the slaughtered. Stupid cold-blooded attitudes, that is the worst. Ten people
will stand there paralyzed with fear and wait obediently until someone comes by
and chooses a victim and cuts his throat in cold blood. The souls of these
people are littered with filth, and each hour of obedient waiting will sully
them further and further. Quite unintentionally, these homes, cringing with
fear, will give birth to the vilest villains, informers, and murderers.
Thousands of people who throughout all their lives will be wracked by fear and
fright, will teach fear and fright to their own children, and these children in
turn will teach their children.--I can't go on, Rumata kept repeating to himself. I am close
to losing my mind and then I'll become like these people;
it won't take much more before I finally stop understanding the reason for my being
in this place
... I must gain perspective again,
turn my back on all of this for a while, get some
peace and quiet...
". . . At the end of the year of
the Great Water--in the year X of the new era--the centrifugal processes
rapidly gained ground in the old empire.
By taking advantage of this future, the Holy Order which represented the
interests of the most reactionary groups of the feudal
society
who tried with every means to bring to a halt the general decay .
. ." But are you familiar with the
stench of smoldering corpses at the stake? Do you know what it is like? Have you ever seen a naked woman, her belly slit open, wallow in the
dusty road? Have you ever seen cities where human beings are silent and only
crows can be heard? Vet, the still unborn boys and girls, who will be sitting
before the dictascopes of the schools in the Communist Republic of Arkanar?
His chest bumped into something pointed and hard. He looked up and saw a
black rider before him. A long spear with a broad, precisely toothed blade,
pressed against his chest. The rider regarded him silently through the slits of
his black hood. All the hood revealed were a
thin-lipped mouth and a small
chin. I must do something, thought Rumata. But what? Dismount him? No. The
rider slowly drew back his right arm, readying his spear. This gesture reminded
Rumata of what he had to do. Casually, he raised his left hand and pulled back
his sleeve.
An iron bracelet came to
light; it had been handed to him before he had left the palace. The rider
inspected the bracelet, lowered his weapon, moved aside to let Rumata pass.
"In the name of the Lord," he said with a strange accent.
"Blessed be His name," murmured Rumata. A short stretch farther on he
passed another rider who was busily knocking down with his spear some
elaborately carved figurines representing
little devils from a roof ridge. On the second floor a fat face,
distorted with fright, peeked out from behind half-lowered shutters--probably
one of those shopkeepers who barely three days ago had enthusiastically
hollered, "Hooray for Don Reba!" while waving his beer stein and
listening with gusto and relish to the crunch, crunch, crunch of the Gray horde's hobnailed boots marching on
the pavement. Oh, Graydom, Graydom... Rumata turned away.
But what is happening at home? he
suddenly remembered, and he began to quicken his steps, almost running during
the last stretch of the way. The house was unharmed. Two monks were sitting on
the small stoop. They had pulled back their hoods, exposing their badly shaved
heads to the sunlight. The moment they saw him, they stood up. "In the
name of the Lord," both said in unison. "Blessed be His name,"
replied Rumata and demanded:
"What business have you to be
here?" Both monks bowed and folded their arms over their stomachs.
"Now that you have come we can leave," answered one of the monks.
They descended the few steps and walked leisurely off, their crossed arms
halfway hidden in their long sleeves. Rumata followed them with his eyes,
remembering how many thousands of times he had seen these humble figures in
then-long black habits, walking down the street. But then they did not use to
drag the scabbards of long swords behind them in the dust. We goofed on this
one. Oh, and now we goofed here, he thought. What a delightful pastime it had been for the noble dons to
attach themselves to some lone monk, ambling down the road, and to tell each
other naughty stories close to the monk's ears. And fool that I am, I pretended
to be drunk, and would walk behind them, laughing out loud for joy because the
country, at least, was not ravaged by religious fanaticism. But what else could
we have done? Indeed¸ what else could we ha»e done?
"Who is it?" rang out a voice.
"Open up, Mugu, it's me," said Rumata softly. The bolts clicked as
they were pushed back; the door was Opened slightly, and Rumata squeezed
himself through the narrow chink. Here in the entrance hall,
all was as usual, and Rumata breathed
a sigh of relief. Old Mugu with the
silvery hair and
perpetually wagging head
relieved his master
of his helmet and swords. "How is Hyra?"
"Hyra is upstairs," said Mugu.
"She is fine." "Splendid," said Rumata while he unbuckled
his belt. "And where is Uno? Why is he not here to welcome me?" Mugu
took the belt.
"Uno is dead," he said in a
calm, firm tone. "He is lying in the servants' room." Rumata closed
his eyes. "Uno dead..." he repeated. "Who killed him?"
Without waiting for an answer, he went into the servants' room. Uno's body lay
on the table. He was covered with a sheet up to his waist. His hands were
folded over his chest, his eyes wide open and his mouth distorted in a grimace.
The servants surrounded the table, their heads bowed, listening to the
murmurings of the monk who prayed in a comer. The cook was sobbing. Without
taking his eyes off the boy, Rumata unbuttoned his collar.
"The dirty dogs," he said.
"Oh, those filthy beasts!" He stumbled over something, went very
close to the table, looked into the dead eyes, raised the sheet slightly, but
dropped it again at once.
"Ves, too late," he said. "Too late. Hopeless. Oh, you
bastards!
Who killed him? The
monks?"
He turned to the monk, seized him by the scruff of
his neck, pressed him down to the ground and bent over his face.
"Who killed him?" he said.
"Was it one of you? Speak up!" "No, not the monks," spoke a
calm voice behind his back. "The
Gray soldiers did
it."
For a while Rumata stared into the emaciated face
of the monk, whose pupils slowly began to dilate. "In the name of the
Lord," croaked the monk painfully. Rumata let him go, sat down on a bench
at the boy's feet, and began to cry. He covered his face with his hands, cried,
and listened to the quietly droning voice of Mugu. The old servant told that
shortly after the second watch, there was knocking at the house door:
"Open up, in the name of the Hing!" Uno called out not to open the
gate, but then they were forced to open it after all when the Gray soldiers
threatened to set the house on fire. They forced their way into the entrance
hall, beat and bound the servants, then crept upstairs. Uno had been standing guard at the doors of
the upstairs apartments; he started shooting with his crossbow. He had two
bolts, and shot off both. The second arrow missed. The Gray soldiers threw
their knives, and Uno fell. They dragged him down the stairs and were just
about to kick him and hack him with their cleavers, when suddenly the black
monks entered the house. They killed two Gray soldiers, disarmed the rest, tied
ropes around their necks and dragged them out into the street.
Mugu fell silent But Rumata remained
seated at the end of the table, his elbows resting on the table top at the feet
of the dead boy. Slowly he rose to his feet, wiped his eyes dry with his
sleeve, kissed the boy on his cold forehead. Then he walked upstairs, placing
one foot in front of the other with great effort.
He was half dead with fatigue and
exhaustion. Only with great effort did he reach the landing, and walk through
the guest room to his bed; there, moaning, he fell face down on a pillow. Hyra
hurried over to him. He was so exhausted that he could not even help her as she
removed his soiled clothing. She pulled off his boots, cried over his swollen
face, took off his uniform and the metalloplast shirt, and
continued to weep quietly over his
bruised body. Now, suddenly, he felt his bones aching, aching as if he had been
bound on the torture rack.
While Hyra washed his body with a sponge
dipped in vinegar
water, he panted and hissed through
his teeth, without
opening his eyes:
"I could have killed him . . .He was standing
right next to me ... Wrung his neck
with my bare hands ... Is that a life,
Hyra? Let's leave
this place . . . After
all, this is an experiment with me, and not with them." He did not even
notice that he was speaking Russian. Hyra looked
anxiously at his eyes,
glassy with tears, and showered
gentle kisses on his cheeks.
Covering him with the
mended sheets (Uno
had not bought
any new ones
despite his master's urging)
she ran downstairs to prepare some
mulled wine for him. Moaning
in physical and
mental pain, Rumata
crawled from his
bed and staggered barefoot
into the study.
There he opened
a secret drawer in his desk, rummaged in his medicine chest, and took
several Sporamin tablets. When
Hyra returned, bearing
a steaming kettle
on a silver tray, he was
already back in bed. He felt the pain leave him, the din in his head quieten
down and his body fill with new strength and energy. He drained the kettle and
soon felt quite well again. Then he called Mugu and asked that his clothes be made ready.
"Don't go, Rumata," said Hyra.
"Don't go! Stay here at home!" "I must go, my darling!"
"I am afraid. Stay here... They'll kill you!"
"Vou don't say. Why should they kill me?
They're all afraid of me, aren't they?"
She started to weep again, but quietly, as if she was afraid of annoying
him. Rumata pulled her down on his lap and gently stroked her hair.
"The worst is
over," he said. "And remember, we're going to leave this place..."
She calmed down and pressed her body against
his. Mugu stood
quietly next to them, patiently holding Rumata's trousers with the little golden bells.
"But before we leave,
I have a lot to do here," continued Rumata.
"Countless numbers of people have been killed
this night. I must find
out who is still alive
and who has been slain.
And I must help those
who are still in danger."
"And who is going to help you?"
"Fortunate the man who thinks only of others .
. . And besides, there are powerful people who will
come to our
assistance if necessary."
"I cannot think of others,"
she said. "Vou came home more dead than alive. I can see with my own eyes
how they have beaten you. And Uno was beaten to death. Where were your powerful
people when you needed them? Why did they not prevent all this slaughter? I do
not believe you ... I do not believe..."
She tried to wrest herself free from his arms but he held her
tight.
"It was unfortunate," he said. "This time they came a bit
too late.
But now they
are watching us again and will protect us. Why don't you believe me today? Vou have always
believed me. And didn't you see for yourself:
I came home half dead, and now, just look at
me!"
"I don't want to look at you,"
she said hiding her face. "I don't want to cry again."
"Oh, come, come! These scratches here? Nothing! The worst is
over now ... at least for the two of us.
But there are fine, upstanding people for whom the horror has not yet ended.
And I must help them."
She sighed deeply, kissed his neck and
freed herself gently from his embrace. "Come tonight," she begged.
"Will you come?"
"Vou can count on it," he said firmly
and smiled. "I'll be home even
earlier than nightfall, and most likely
not alone. I'll be back at
dinner time."
She walked over to an armchair, sat
down, clasped her hands around her knee, and watched Rumata getting dressed. As
he put on his trousers with the
bells he mumbled to himself in Russian; Mugu sat cross-legged on the floor
before him and began to fasten the innumerable buckles and buttons. Rumata put
a clean undershirt over his metalloplast shirt. Finally he said in a desperate
tone: "Darling, please do understand me, I must go! What can I do?! It's
simply out of the question for me to remain here!"
Suddenly she said pensively:
"Sometimes I wonder why you don't beat me."
Rumata
was just buttoning
his shirt with the lacy frills; he froze with horror.
"What do you mean by that?" he
asked perplexed. "How could anyone possibly want to beat you?"
"Vou are not only a good, a very
good man," she continued without listening to him, "but you are also a strange
man, almost like
an archangel. When you are with me I feel very
strong. Now, for example, I am strong.
Sometime soon I shall ask you for something. Won't
you tell me about
yourself some day? Not now,
only when all this is over-- will you do that for me?"
Rumata did not reply for a long time.
Mugu handed him the orange-colored vest with the red ribbons. Rumata put it on
with intense dislike and buckled up his belt.
"Ves," he said finally.
"Someday I shall
tell you everything, my darling."
"I'll wait till then," she said seriously. "But now you
must leave.
Don't let me detain you
here any longer."
Rumata walked over
to her and pressed his bruised lips
tenderly on her soft mouth. Then he pulled the iron circlet from his
wrist and held it out to her.
"Put this on your left arm," he said. "I
doubt that they'll
pay us another visit
today . . . but in case they should
turn up here just show them
this iron bracelet."
She
followed him with her eyes and he felt that she was mutely
calling out after him.--I know, she is thinking: I do not know who you are,
perhaps the devil or the Son of God, or maybe a man from legendary worlds
across the seas,
but one thing
is certain. If you do not return I will die.
He was most grateful for her silence,
for having to leave her now was somehow quite unusually hard for him. Like
diving head first from a sunny, emerald-blue shore into an evil-smelling
puddle.
Part
Eight
Rumata decided not to take the direct
route to the offices of the bishop of Arkanar. He crept stealthily through rows
of backyards, hid behind rags hung on washlines, crawled through holes in
fences--catching his rich,
colorful ribbons and strips of the finest Soanian lace on rusty nails--and
wriggled on all fours between mounds of potatoes. But for all his efforts he
failed to evade the watchful eye of the black soldiery. As he turned into the
narrow, winding lane which led to
the big dump heap, he encountered two somber, drunken monks.
Rumata wanted to get out of their way
but the monks drew their swords and blocked his path. As Rumata, too, grasped
both his swords, the monks whistled for reinforcements. Rumata was just about
to withdraw to the hole in the fence through which he had emerged a moment ago
when an agile little man with a nondescript face ran toward him. He brushed
against Rumata's shoulder, hurried over to the monks, and whispered something
to them, whereupon the monks pulled up their long habits, baring their legs
wrapped around with lilac-colored ribbons and made off in a trot, soon to
disappear behind some houses. The little man scurried after them without
looking back once.
So that's the story, thought Rumata. A spy, a
bodyguard. And he doesn't even bother to do his job in an inconspicuous manner;
our new bishop of Arkanar really thinks of everything. It would be interesting
to know whether he's frightened for me or of me. Following the spy with his
eyes, Rumata walked toward the dump heap. The dump heap led to the rear
buildings of the former Ministry of Internal Security. He hoped that no guards had been posted there.
The lane was empty; not a living thing could be
seen. But soon he could hear the soft creaking of shutters, doors being opened
and shut, a baby crying, and above all that hung anxious whispering. From
behind a half-rotten fence cautiously peered out an emaciated face all
blackened by deeply imbedded layers of soot. Two frightened, hollow eyes stared
at Rumata.
"I beg your pardon,
noble don; please
forgive me. Could
the noble don perhaps tell
me what is going on in the
city? I am Hickus, the
smith, also called the lame one; I want to go to my forge, but I am afraid ..."
"Don't go there," advised Rumata.
"One can't fool around with these monks. The Hing is dead. Don Reba has seized power.
He is now the bishop of the
Holy Order. Just stay home, will you."
The smith accompanied each of Rumata's words with
an eager nod of his head, his eyes filling with melancholy and despair.
'The Holy Order,
you don't say," he mumbled heavily.
"I'll be damned ... I beg your pardon,
noble don. So, the Order,
well then . . . They
are the Gray Ones, aren't they?"
"No, no," said Rumata and regarded him
with a certain curiosity. "The Gray Ones have been beaten, you see. These
are the monks."
"Oh, dear me!" said the smith. "So
the Gray Ones are ... well, and the Holy Order! The Gray Ones are defeated? Not
bad, I say. But what is going to
happen with us now, noble don, what do you think? We'll have to conform, eh?
Conform to the Holy Order, yes?"
"Why not," said Rumata. "The Order will have to eat and drink,
too. Adjust to them, I say!"
All of a sudden the smith became quite animated.
"That's what I think, noble
don. We must
adjust and conform. I believe the main
thing is not to bother others and you will be left in peace. Is that the idea?"
Rumata shook his head.
"Oh, no," he said. "Those who remain
quiet and peaceful will be the first ones to be slaughtered."
"That sounds right to me, after
all," moaned the smith. "But what are we supposed to do? One man
alone is as weak as a little finger, and all the snot-nosed blackbirds are on
his back. Oh, Glorious Mother, if only they would cut my master's throat! He
was an officer with the Gray Ones. What do you think, noble don, it's possible
that they did him in, isn't it? Vou know, I owe him five golden guilders."
"I wouldn't know," said
Rumata. "They might have finished him off, quite possible. But I'd like
you to think about something: It's true that
you alone are as weak as a little finger,
but fingers like that exist by the tens of thousands in this city."
"So?" said the smith.
"Just think about it, what that means!"
said Rumata annoyed, and walked on.
A fat lot of good that advice will do him, thought
Rumata. It's still too
early for him to try and think.
And how simple
things could be here
really; Ten thousand such hammerlike fists--if properly infuriated--would make mincemeat out of
any foe. But they have not yet reached that point. They have not yet experienced the right kind of fury. Only fear.
Every man for himself,
and one god for the lot of them.
The elderberry bushes lining the road suddenly
began to move and sway and out jumped--Don Tameo. The moment he saw Rumata
walking in the harrow lane, Don Tameo roared with joy, and despite his enormous
bulk he leapt nimbly to his feet, then staggered toward Rumata, stretching his
dirt-encrusted hands out to him.
"My noble friend!" he roared.
"What joy! I see you too are on your way to the chancellery offices?"
"Ves, indeed, my noble don,"
answered Rumata and quickly twisted his body to free himself from Don Tameo's
embrace.
"Will you permit me to join you, noble
don?" "It will be an honor for me, noble
don."
They bowed to each other. Apparently Don
Tameo had not yet quenched his thirst from earlier in the day. He extracted a
little bottle of the finest quality from the folds of his wide yellow trousers.
. "Would you care to join me in a
drink?" came his offer, accompanied by an elegant flourish of the bottle.
"No, thank you," said Rumata.
"Rum!" explained Don Tameo. "Genuine
rum from the capital! I've paid its weight in gold!"
They descended to the dump heap. They held their noses as they made their
way through the garbage piles, past dead dogs, through stinking puddles
swarming with white worms. The morning air was filled with the constant hum of
millions of emerald green flies.
"Most peculiar," said Don
Tameo, and stoppered up the bottle. "I've never been in this place
before."
Rumata was silent.
"I've always been delighted by Don Reba,"
said Don Tameo. "I knew all along that he would sweep this good-for-nothing
monarch from
the throne and pave new ways for us and
open up new vistas for the country." With these words he slid with one leg
into a yellow-green puddle, splashing mud over himself from head to toe, but
managed to grasp Rumata's arm to avoid falling flat on his face. "Oh,
yes," he resumed his remarks after they had regained firm ground once
again, "we, the young
aristocracy, will always
stand by Don Reba's side!
Now they'll finally show
the proper respect
due to us.
Judge for yourself, my noble friend, I've been walking now for one hour through
streets and gardens and I have not
met a single Gray bastard. We have wiped
the Gray scum off the face
of the earth. Ah, how wonderful and how sweet
it is now to be able to breathe freely in our newborn Arkanar! In place
of the boorish shopkeepers, in place of the impertinent swindlers, and peasant louts,
the streets have
now been taken
over by the
Servants of the Lord.
I have seen it with
my own eyes: noblemen are parading quite openly in front of their houses.
No longer must they fear that some fool
in a
coachman's apron will splash mud all over them with his dirty cart.
And you no longer have to elbow your way through the throng of butchers and
shopkeepers. Inspired by the blessing of the great Holy Order, for
which--I must admit--I have always felt
great admiration and great sympathy, we are now striving
forward to an era of unheard-of glory. No peasant
will dare any longer to raise his eyes up to a nobleman
without procuring first a special permit which will have to be signed by the district
inspector of the Holy Order.
I am just on my way to hand in a
written petition for this purpose."
"A nauseating stench," said Rumata with feeling.
"Ves, disgusting," agreed Don Tameo and
replaced the cork on his bottle. "On the other hand, though--how freely we
can breathe in our newborn Arkanar I And the price of wine has gone down to
half what it was just yesterday..."
By the time they reached the end of the
lane Don Tameo had emptied the contents of his bottle, which he flung to the
side of the street. He became
unduly agitated, fell twice flat on his face, refusing both times to brush the dirt off his soiled clothes,
declaring that it was
his natural state to be defiled and that he wished to come into the presence of his new master in this condition. He began again
and again to recite
his petition at the top of his lungs. "How marvelously said!" he shouted. "Just take this
passage, for instance, noble dons: 'In order that the stinking
peasants . . .' Eh? Isn't that a splendid
thought?"
As they entered the courtyard behind the
chancellery, Don Tameo collided with
a monk, burst into tears and begged for forgiveness of his sins. The almost
choking monk tried to ward off his iron clasp and whistle for help but Don
Tameo clung to the monk's habit and thus both fell into a garbage heap. Rumata
left them lying there and walked on.
From quite a distance he
could still hear the fitful, pitiful whistling and the shouts of "In order that the stinking peasants!
. .. your blessi-i-ing! . .
. with all my heart! ... I felt
sympathy, sympathy, understand, you peasant lout?"
On the square in front of the entrance to the chancellery stood a
detachment of infantry monks, armed with blunt cudgels. They had removed the
dead from the street. The morning wind drove yellow columns of dust across the
square. The rectangular shadow of the Tower of Joy fell across the monk
soldiers. Below the broad, conical roof of the tower the crows were cawing and
quarreling as usual. A rafter jutted
out above; this was where they would
hang the men head downwards. The tower had been built two hundred years before
by the king's ancestors for the exclusive purpose of warding off the enemies in
case of war. It had been erected on a firm foundation, a three-storey
structure, which served as storage rooms for victuals in case of a protracted siege.
Later on the tower was used as a prison. As a result of an earthquake, all the
floors and ceilings inside the tower collapsed and the prison had to be moved
to the basement. Some time previously, an Arkanarian queen complained that the
cries of the tortured prisoners disturbed her, whereupon her royal consort
decreed that a military band was to play in the tower from early in the morning
until late at night. It was from this time that it received its present name.
It was no longer anything more than an empty stone shell; the torture chambers
had long been shifted to the newly
opened, deeper cellar holes; and the orchestra had long since stopped playing
its daily concerts; but the citizens still called it by its old name, the Tower
of Joy.
Usually the area around the Tower of
Joy. was deserted. But today there was a great commotion. The soldier monks
led, pushed, dragged along the ground hordes of Sturmoviks in torn gray
uniforms, miserable vagabonds clad in rags, half-undressed citizens, frozen
with fear, and hysterically screaming young girls. The down-at-the-heel
soldiers of the nocturnal army, casting sullen looks about them, were driven
there like whole herds of cattle. And from secret exits they pulled out the corpses with barbed hooks,
threw them on carts, and transported them out of the city. In the long queue of
waiting courtiers and privileged citizens that still stood outside the doors of
the chancellery, the last in line observed this dreadful traffic with fear and
horror.
All were admitted to the chancellery;
some, however, were guided inside in a
convoy. Rumata elbowed his way inside, where he found the air as sticky and
close as in the dump heap. Behind an enormous table, piled high with papers,
sat an official with a yellow-gray complexion. A giant goose quill was stuck
behind his right ear. The petitioner, whose turn it was now, the noble Don Heu,
haughtily twitched his mustache as he
announced his name.
'Take off your hat," said the
official in a monotonous voice, without raising his eyes from his papers.
"The clan of the Heus has the privilege to keep on their hats, even
in the presence of the Hing," stated Don Heu proudly.
"Nobody has any privileges before
the Holy Order," said the official in the same monotonous tone of voice.
Don Heu began to hiss and tamed beet
red, but removed his hat nevertheless. The official moved his long yellow
finger across the paper.
"Don Heu . . . Don Heu," he
murmured. "Don Heu . . . Hing Street, number twelve?"
"Ves," said Don Heu
in his fat,
irritated voice. "Number 485, brother Tibak."
Brother Tibak, his face purple from
obesity and shortness of breath, sat at the next table. He rummaged in some
documents, wiped the sweat from his brow, got to his feet and read out in a
toneless voice:
"Number 485, Don Heu, Hing Street,
number twelve, guilty of blasphemy against the name of His Magnificence, the
bishop of Arkanar, Don Reba, two years ago at a royal dance, is ordered to
receive three
dozen
lashes on his bare buttocks, as well as to kiss the shoe of His Magnificence."
Brother Tibak resumed his place again.
"Go to the corridor here," said the official with the colorless
voice. "The lashings to the right, the shoe to the left. Next,
please."
To Rumata's great surprise, Don Heu did
not even attempt to protest. Evidently he must have seen a great deal while he was waiting in line. He croaked
once briefly, stroked
his mustache with great dignity
and walked out into the corridor.
The next in line was the gigantic Don Pifa, who wobbled with fat. He had
already taken off his hat as he stepped up to the table. "Don Pifa
. . . Don Pifa," cackled
the official and moved his finger along the paper before him. "Milkjug
Street, number two?" Don Pifa emitted a gurgling sound. "Number 504,
brother Tibak." Brother Tibak stroked his bald head and stood up.
"Number 504, Don Pifa, Milkjug Street, number two, remained unnoticed for any offenses by His Magnificence and
consequently pure!"
"Don Pifa," said the official,
"receive the sign of blameless conduct." He bent down over a box next
to his chair and took out an iron bracelet
which he handed to Don Pifa. 'To be worn on the left wrist, to be presented immediately when requested by
the warriors of the Holy Order. Next one, please."
Once more Don Pifa emitted a gurgling
sound; his eyes were riveted to his bracelet as he left the room.
The official with the colorless voice was already calling
out the next name. Rumata
viewed the people who had lined up to wait. There
were many familiar faces among the crowd. Some were dressed in fine clothes as
usual, others were obviously impoverished, but whether they
were rich or poor, they
were all thoroughly splashed with mud. Somewhere in the middle
of the line, Don Sera said in a loud voice and for the third time in
five minutes, "I fail to see why a noble don shouldn't get a few sound whacks,
too, in the name
of His Magnificence!"
Rumata waited until they sent the next
man into the corridor (he was a well-known fishmonger, sentenced to five
strokes with a
cane--without having to kiss
the shoe-- because of illicit trains of thought). Then Rumata jostled his way
to the table and without much ado placed his hand on the official's stack of
papers.
"I
beg your pardon," he said. "I
need an official order for Doctor Budach's release. I am Don Rumata."
The official did not look up.
"Don Rumata . . . Don Rumata," he mumbled, pushed
Rumata's hand aside and ran a finger down a list of names.
"What are you doing, you old
inkpot?" said Rumata. "I need an order of release!"
"Don Rumata . . . Don Rumata . .
." It was impossible to stop this ossified automaton of a bureaucrat,
"Spengler Street, number eight.
Number sixteen. Brother
Tibak." Rumata sensed how all behind him were holding their breath. But to
be quite frank, he, too, felt somewhat
ill at ease. The scarlet-faced, heavily perspiring Brother Tibak stood up!
"Number sixteen, Spengler Street,
number eight, for special services in the cause of the Holy Order to receive an
expression of special recognition by His Magnificence. His Magnificence will
therefore graciously issue for him an edict for Doctor Budach's release, over
whose person
he will be permitted to dispose at his own discretion, see form 6/17/11."
The official proceeded to
pull this form immediately from the pile of documents to his right and handed
it to Don Rumata.
"Through the yellow
door, to the second floor, room six, straight through the corridor, make a
right turn at first, then one to the left," he said without moving a
muscle. "Next, please."
Rumata quickly skimmed the contents of
the document. It was not an order
for Doctor Budach's release. It was merely a document to obtain an entry permit to the fifth special
department of the chancellery, where he was supposed to pick up a recommendation for the secretary of the secret police.
"What did you give me here, you nitwit?" asked Rumata. "Where is
the official release order?!"
"Through the yellow door,
to the second
floor, room six,
straight through the corridor, make a right turn first, then one to the
left," repeated the official.
"I am asking you, where is the
release order!" yelled Rumata. "Haven't the faintest idea ... no idea
. . . Next one, please!"
A softly rattling breath sounded above
Rumata's ears and something warm and soft leaned against his back. He shook it
off with a brief resolute movement. It was Don Pifa, who had pushed his way
back once more to the front.
"It doesn't fit," he complained in a whining voice.
The official looked up and regarded him
with his tired, dull eyes. "Name? Rank?" he inquired.
"It doesn't fit," repeated Don Pifa, and pulled and pushed the bracelet that would hardly
fit over three
of his fat fingers.
"It doesn't fit ... it doesn't fit
. . ." murmured one of the two officials
and suddenly seized
a fat book that had been lying
on the table over in a comer.
The book looked
ominous in its
greasy, black cover.
For a few seconds Don Pifa stared in confusion at the book, then swiftly
recoiled one step and without
another word quickly
stomped toward the exit. Voices from the
queue began to complain: "Don't keep us waiting!... hurry up, will you!"
Rumata,
too, left the table. Vou filthy beast.
I'll show you a thing
or two! thought Rumata. The official started loudly to read from the
greasy black book in a droning voice:
"In case said
bracelet should not fit
the left wrist,
or if the purified person
should not have a left hand . .
." Rumata walked around to the other side of
the table, stuck both hands into the box with the bracelets, took out as many
as he could hold in his hands and went his way.
"Hey, hey," shouted the official in the same monotonous tone,
"the motivation ..."
"In the name of the Lord,"
said Rumata over his shoulder with significant emphasis. The official and
Brother Tibak rose swiftly from their seats and answered confused: "In His name!" The people waiting
in line stared after Rumata
with envy and admiration.
Rumata left the chancellery
and made his way toward the Tower of Joy, merrily jingling the iron rings on
his left hand. It turned out that he had snatched nine iron rings but he could
find enough place for only five on his left arm. So he slipped the other four
over his right wrist.
That's the
way the bishop of Arkanar intended to get rid of me, he thought. Well, he's
barking up the wrong tree! His metal bracelets were
clanking with every step he made and in
his hand he held an important-looking piece of paper--form 6/17/11-- decorated
with many
colorful stamps. The monks in
the street, walking or riding toward him, quickly gave him a wide berth.
Occasionally he caught a glimpse in the crowd of his faithful spy and
bodyguard, who always kept at a respectful distance. Rumata arrived at the gate
of the Tower of Joy. He rattled his swords in a menacing manner at the guard
who stuck out his head in curiosity, but who just as quickly withdrew it when
he heard Rumata's growl. Rumata passed through the courtyard and descended the
slippery, worn-out state down into the semidarkness, only relieved by some
primitive, sputtering oil lamps. Here was the entrance to the Holy of Holies of
the former Ministry of Internal Security, the royal prison, and the torture chambers.
Every ten paces along the vaulted
corridor he could see a stinking torch fastened in a rusty holder on the wall.
Below each torch was a cavelike recess that ended in a small black door with a
tiny window provided with iron bars. This was the entrance to the prison cells;
heavy bolts on the outside secured the doors. The corridors were teeming with
people. They bumped into each other, ran back and forth, shouted and screamed,
trying to give orders to each other. Bolts rattled and clanked, doors were
opened and slammed, somebody was being beaten and cried out in pain, another
tried desperately to hold onto the railing as he was dragged away, another was
shoved into a cell that was already overflowing with too many prisoners, and
another prisoner, whom some men were unsuccessfully trying to drag out of a
crowded cell, clutched his neighbor with an iron grip, screaming all the
while: "Not me, not me!" The
faces of the passing monks were eager and puckered up. Everyone was in a hurry,
everyone performed duties of great importance to the State. Rumata intended
first of all to find out what was going on in this place. He wandered leisurely
through a number of passages and corridors, gradually venturing farther down
the stairs. The lower floors were somewhat quieter. Judging by the
conversations he overheard, this was the place where the graduates of the
School for Patriots were examined. Clad only in leather breechcloths, the adolescents
stood at the doors of the torture chambers, leafed through old greasy manuals,
and occasionally walked over to a big wooden tub to drink water from a tin cup
that was fastened by a chain to the wall above. Horrible cries came from the
chambers, the sound of thrashings, and
it smelled unmistakably of burnt flesh. And their talk! Oh, that talk!
"Vou know, the rack has a screw on top, and it got worn out and went
right through. Is that my fault, I ask you? He had them whip me for that. 'Vou
rotten, stupid pig,' he said. 'Vou ape, go get five on your naked butt. Then
let me see you again.'"
"If we only could
find out who does the whipping. Maybe
it's one of us, a student. We could grease
his palm--a few
copper pennies would
do the trick ..."
"If you get a fat man, the spikes won't leave
a mark in his flesh.
The best
thing to do is take a couple of red-hot needles and push the lard aside a bit..."
"Ves, but the Lord's bonds are
intended for torturing only the legs,
and the martyr's gloves, those with the screws, are specially for the hands, remember?"
"I almost exploded, brothers, I laughed so
hard! I go inside to have me a look--and who's
lying there, all chained up?
Fika with the
red hair, the butcher from
down our street,
he always used to box my ears, when he was drunk.
Now it's my turn, I said to myself, just wait..."
"And Pekor with the thick lips was dragged away this morning by the
monks. He hasn't come back yet. Didn't show up even for the exam."
"I was supposed to work the meat
grinder but I accidentally placed the man sideways. Well, he broke a few ribs,
so what? But you should have seen Father Hin! He grabs me by the hair and kicks
me in my behind with his heavy boots. Boy, can he aim well! I saw stars!
'What's the idea,' he screamed at me; 'you're damaging the goods!"
Just look here, friends. Come take a
good look, thought Rumata while he slowly turned his head from side to side to
get a sweeping view of the scene. We're not dealing with mere theory here. No
one on Earth has ever seen anything like it before. Just watch, listen, and
film it all!
And learn to appreciate and
love our own era on Earth--oh, damn it-- and
bow to honor the memory of those who have lived through times like
these! Just take a long, close look at these disgusting faces--young, dull,
indifferent, inured to the worst kinds of bestialities; but don't turn up your noses. Our own ancestors weren't any
better in their time.
By now the young students had noticed
him. A dozen pairs of eyes of all shades stared at him.
"Hey, look, the noble
don deigns to visit us down here.
A bit pale around the
gills, eh, milord?"
"I say! I thought we were all done
with noblemen?" "They say in such cases they put water in front of
them, but make the chain too short for
them to reach it..." "What's he nosing around down here for?"
"I'd love to lay my hands on that character. He'd answer every question,
confess anything I'd ask him to, I bet.,.."
"Heep it quiet! Not so loud,
friends! He's quite capable of drawing his sword all of a sudden, just watch
out . . . Look at all the iron bracelets
he is wearing--and that slip of paper!"
"I
don't like it the way he is looking at us. Let's beat it, boys; we don't
want to mix with such unsavory characters!"
Finally they withdrew and left the
scene, hiding in some dark comers where occasional flashes from suspicious
spider eyes revealed their presence. Good riddance, thought Rumata, they won't
bother me any more. He was just about to tug at the cloak of one of the monks
who hurried by down the corridor, when he noticed three other monks in a comer
who were less in a hurry and quietly concentrated on their business at hand.
They were systematically beating a
henchman--probably guilty of
some insubordination--with their heavy sticks. Rumata approached them.
"In the name of the Lord," he said and clanked his iron
bracelets.
The monks lowered their cudgels and examined
Rumata. "In His name," said the tallest of the three. 'Take me to the
section supervisor!" said Rumata. The monks quickly exchanged some
glances. Meanwhile, the henchman crawled behind a water tub to hide. "What
do you need him for?" asked the tall monk. Without a word, Rumata shoved
the paper under the monk's nose.
"Aha," said the monk.
"Well, for the time being I am the supervisor for this section."
"Splendid," said Rumata and rolled up the piece of paper.
"I am Don Rumata. His Magnificence has made a
present to me of Doctor Budach. Have him brought
here!"
"Budach?" he said frowning.
"Who is that supposed to be?" The monk put his hand under his hood
and noisily scratched his head. "Budach, the troublemaker?"
"No, no," said another monk. "The troublemaker is called
Rudach.
He was released last night already. Father
Hin in person removed his chains and led him out of the building. But I--"
"Nonsense, nonsense!" said Rumata impatiently and slapped the rolled-up
paper against his thigh. "Budach is the one who poisoned the Hing!"
"Ah-aah," said the supervisor.
"Now I know who you mean. He's probably already in the dungeon. Brother
Pacca, go and have a look in number twelve." Then he turned again to
Rumata. "So, and you want to take him out of here?"
"Of course," said Rumata. "He belongs to me now."
"All right. Vour Honor. May I have that paper?
I must record everything properly." Rumata handed him the form. The
supervisor examined both sides
of the paper,
devoting special attention to the seal,
and then remarked delightedly:
"That's what I call
a fine document! Pardon me, don,
will you just step
aside for a moment and wait until we have finished this little business here . . . Now where did that henchman
get to?"
The monks searched for the hangman, who
had apparently treated the tortured prisoners too tenderly for the new master's
taste. Rumata walked away. The monks found the hangman, pulled him from behind
the water tub expertly, laid him out flat on the floor and then started to work
him over again with their sticks without displaying any particular passion or cruelty.
Five minutes later, the first monk, who had been sent off to fetch Doctor
Budach, reappeared. The monk came around a bend in the corridor pulling behind
him a rope that had been fastened around the neck of an emaciated gray-haired
old man in dark clothes.
'There you have your man! Vou old
Budach!" shouted the monk joyfully while still at a distance. "He
hadn't been thrown into the dungeon yet; he's alive and well! Just a bit weak,
probably hasn't eaten in quite a while."
Rumata walked toward them, yanked the
rope out of [:] the
monk's hand, and removed the noose from the old man's neck.
"Are you Budach from Irukan?"
asked Rumata. "Ves," said the old man.
"I
am Rumata. Follow
me and try to keep
up with me!" Rumata turned to the monks. "In the name of the Lord," he said.
The supervisor straightened up, let his
stick sink to his side and answered, breathing heavily: "In His
name!"
Rumata turned his
attention back to Doctor Budach. He saw that the old man was leaning against the wall, hardly able to keep on his feet "I am nauseated and very weak," he said,
and a sickly smile came
over his face.
"Please forgive me, noble don!"
Rumata took him by the arm and led him along the
corridor. As soon as the monks no longer could see them, he stopped
and took from a small vial a Sporamin pill. He handed it
to Budach who questioned him with his eyes.
"Just swallow it," said
Rumata, "you'll feel better directly." Budach was still leaning
against the wall.
He took the tablet from
Rumata's hand,
examined it carefully, sniffed at it, raised his shaggy
eyebrows, then cautiously placed the pill
on his tongue
and tasted it.
"Swallow it, just swallow
it," said Rumata
with a friendly smile. Budach swallowed the pill.
"Mmm," he said. "And I
thought I knew everything there was to know
about medicines." He fell silent
again and observed the changes that soon came over his body.
"Mmm," he said again. "Interesting! Dried
spleen of the wild sow ¥? Np, can't be, I can't taste any putrefaction."
"Let's go," said Rumata.
They walked along the corridors, then up some
stairs, turned into another passage, a few more steps again. Suddenly Rumata
stopped in his tracks as if struck by lightning. A wild and familiar roar
filled the prison vaults. From somewhere inside one of the cells curses boomed
out damning God and the world; it was the thundering voice of his dear friend
the baron Pampa, Don Bau de Suruga de Gatta de Arkanar. With his stentorian
voice be cursed God and all the saints he could think of, Don Reba, the Holy
Order, and many more. So the baron fell into their clutches after all, thought
Rumata very contritely. I had completely forgotten about him. He wouldn't have
forgotten me ... Rumata quickly slipped two bracelets off his own wrist, placed
them on Doctor Budach's thin arms and said:
"Walk upstairs now, but stay inside
the building. Wait for me somewhere in some
hidden comer. If anybody should
bother you, just show him these iron circlets and you'll be left alone."
Baron Pampa roared and howled like an
atomic icebreaker plowing through the Polar fog. A thundering echo reverberated
in the vaulted building. The people in the corridors stiffened and listened
attentively, their mouths wide open. Many quickly passed (heir thumbs across
their faces in order to chase away the evil spirits. Rumata raced down two
stairs and hurled aside the monks that tried to block his way. With his two
swords he forced his way through the throng of the graduating students of the
School for Patriots, and kicked in the door of the cell. The whole room shook
with Baron Pampa's bellowing voice. The flickering light of the torches
revealed a strange sight: His friend Baron Pampa, this mountain of a man, had
been strung up by the legs and was hanging face down and stark naked. His face
had turned a bluish-black color from the congestion of blood in his head. At a
small table with crooked legs sat a hunchbacked official holding his hands over
his ears; a perspiring torturer --who somehow resembled a dentist--busied himself with his clinking instruments in an
iron vat.
Rumata dosed the door, stepped up to the
torturer from behind and struck him on the head with the hilt of his sword. The
torturer wheeled around, his hands flew up to his head, he lost his balance and fell
backwards into the tub. Rumata drew his other sword from its sheath and hacked
the table in two where the official had been silting shuffling his papers. The
torturer sat in the tub hiccupping violently, while the official swiftly
crawled on all fours into a comer of the cell.
Rumata stepped over to the
baron and tried to loosen the chains by which his feet had been fastened to the
wall. At the second try he succeeded in yanking the chains down. Carefully, he
helped the baron to get back on his feet. The baron abruptly ceased to roar, stiffened
in a
peculiar pose, then hastily pulled and
tugged at his bonds and freed his hands.
"I can't believe my eyes," he
bellowed, rolling his blood shot eyes from side to side. "It's you, my
noble friend! I've found you at last!"
"Ves, my friend, here
I am," said
Rumata. "But let's
get out of here.
This is no place for you!"
"Beer!" said the baron.
"I've seen beer
somewhere in this
place." He walked around
the cell, dragging the rest of his chains
behind him on the
floor and did not stop roaring and bustling about. "Half the night I was
chasing through town! And damn it, they told me you had been arrested, so I beat
up a number of people,
one after the other. And I was convinced I would find you here in
this prison! Well, and here you are indeed, as it turns out."
He went over to the torturer and with
one move of his mighty arm swept him and the tub aside as if he were busy
dusting off something.
Beyond the space where the
tub had stood appeared now a small barrel.
With his bare fist the baron smashed in its bottom, threw back his head, opened
his mouth wide and let the contents pour down his throat. A torrent of beer ran
gurgling into his gullet. What a guy, thought Rumata as he watched the baron
with great pleasure. Looks like an ox, like some
brainless bull, but still, he went looking for me, wanted to rescue
me, and most likely landed here in this
prison because of me . . . and he did all this out of his own accord. Thank God
there are some human beings on this world after all, as rotten as it is. How
lucky it's turned out all right in the end!
The baron had drained
the barrel dry and hurled
it into the comer where the official's teeth
could be heard
loudly chattering. Now a squeal came from that comer.
"That's better," said the
baron and wiped
his beard with
the back of his hand. "Now I'm ready to follow you. Does it
matter that I have nothing on?"
Rumata looked around the room, walked
over to the torturer and shook him out of his leather breechcloth.
"Take that for the time being," he said.
"Vou are right," said the baron and tied
the breechcloth around his loins. "It would be most improper to appear
naked before the baroness."
They left the torture chamber. Nobody
had the courage to block their way and the corridor was suddenly quite deserted
for twenty paces.
"I'll kill all of them!"
shouted the baron. "They're occupying my castle--they've ordered
somebody by the name of Father Arima
to take up residence there. I don't
know whose father
he is, but I swear
to you that his children will soon be orphans! Devil take it, dear. friend,
don't you agree that these ceilings here are mighty
low? I've already
skinned the top of my skull to the bone..."
Finally they got out of the tower. For a
moment the spy and bodyguard became visible but he disappeared directly again
in the crowd. Rumata gave a sign to Budach to follow him. The crowd in front of
the gate parted before them as if they had tried to scatter them with a sword. They could hear shrieks that an
important state criminal had fled,
fingers pointed to them, and voices growled: "Just look at that naked
devil, the famous Estorian hangman!"
The baron walked to the center of the square,
stopped and halfway had to close his eyes because of the bright sunlight. Speed
was of the essence now. Rumata quickly sized up the situation. "My horse
was somewhere around here," said the baron. "Hey you there! My
horse!"
Over in the paddock where the horses of
the cavalry of the order were prancing, a wild commotion arose.
"Not that one!" crowed
the Baron. "That one over there,
the gray piebald stallion."
"In the name of the Lord!"
yelled Rumata belatedly and pulled his circlet down over his forehead.
A frightened little monk in a dirty cloak brought the Baron his
horse.
"Give him something, Don Rumata," said the baron and raised
himself with difficulty
up onto his saddle.
"Stop, stop!" came loud shouts from the tower.
Several monks came running across the square,
brandishing their cudgels. Rumata gave the baron one of his swords.
"Hurry up, baron. Quick!" he said.
"Ves," said Baron Pampa. "I must
speed on. That Arima is probably cleaning out my whole wine cellar in the
meantime. Ill expect you at my castle, tomorrow or the day after, my friend.
Any messages for the baroness?"
"Hiss her hand for me," said
Rumata. The monks were almost upon them by now. "Faster, faster,
baron!"
"Are you out of danger yourself, my
friend?" the baron pressed. His voice betrayed that he was still concerned
about Rumata's safety.
"Ves, damn it, yes! Move on!"
The baron dashed off and rode at full speed directly
into the crowd of monks. One of them fell to the ground, another one tumbled,
there was a loud whine, a great cloud of dust arose, the horses' hooves
rapped sharply on the cobblestones -- and the baron was out of sight.
Rumata was just looking down a
lane which led off the square and where those who had been knocked over in the
tumult had taken refuge. Suddenly an insistent and stealthy voice sounded in
his ear:
"But, my noble don, don't you think
you are taking unwarranted liberties here?"
Rumata spun around and found himself
peering into the affectedly smiling face of Don Reba.
"Unwarranted?" said Rumata. "That word doesn't exist for
me."
Suddenly he remembered Don Sera. "And anyway, I can't
see why noble dons should not help each other in case of distress."
A group of heavily breathing
monks rode quickly past them, their halberds held ready for action, in hot
pursuit of Baron Pampa. A change came over Don Reba's face.
"All right then," he said.
"Forget it. Oh, isn't this the most learned Doctor Budach here? Vou look
splendid, Doctor. I think I ought to inspect my prison. Criminals of State,
including released prisoners, must never
go on foot when they leave. They should be carried out."
Doctor Budach stormed toward Don Reba
with the movements of a blind man. Rumata quickly stepped between the two men.
"By the way, Don Reba," he
said, "what do you think of Father Arima?"
"Father Arima?" Don Reba raised his
eyebrows. "An outstanding warrior. Occupies a high position in my
episcopate. What is that question supposed to mean?"
"As a faithful servant of Vour
Magnificence," said Rumata with obvious malicious relish of the situation,
"I hasten to inform you that you may consider this high position as
vacant."
"How come?"
Rumata glanced down the lane
where the yellow dust had not yet settled. Don Reba, too, looked that way. A
worried expression came over his face.
It was already late in the afternoon
when Hyra asked her noble Lord and his most learned guest to come to the table.
Now that Doctor Budach had bathed,
carefully shaved, and changed into fresh clothes, he made a pleasant and
imposing impression. His movements were deliberate and dignified, his
intelligent gray eyes peered out from under his shaggy eyebrows in a benevolent
and somewhat condescending manner. First of all he apologized to Rumata for his
impetuous behavior toward Don Reba during their encounter on the square.
"Please understand me," he
said. "He's a hideous person, a monster who came into this world only
because of some divine oversight. I am a physician, but I'm not ashamed to
admit that I would kill him if I only had an opportunity to do so. It has come to my ears that
the Hing has been poisoned. And now I do understand how he perished." Rumata sat up and took
notice. "That Reba came into my cell and demanded I should mix a poison
for him which
would become effective a few hours later.
Of course, I refused to do so. He threatened to have me tortured -- I laughed
in his face.
In reply, he summoned his torturers and ordered them
to bring a dozen boys
and girls, not more than
ten years old. He lined them
up in front of me, opened my medicine bag and declared he would try out all my
medications one after the other on these pitiful human guinea pigs until he found the right one. And this is
the way the Hing was poisoned, Don Rumata."
Budach's lips began to tremble, but he
soon regained his composure. Rumata nodded
knowingly and turned
aside, so as not to embarrass his scholarly guest.
Now I finally understand, he thought. I understand it all now. The king would
never have accepted anything from the hands of his ministers, not even a dill
pickle. So the wicked rogue foisted some fifth-rate charlatan off on the king by promising that no-good nobody
to make him
the king's personal physician as a reward
for curing his ailing legs. And now it's clear why Don Reba felt so triumphant
when I compromised him in the royal bedchamber: one would have been hard-put to
imagine a better way to slip the king a false Budach. The entire responsibility
now fell on the shoulders of Rumata from Estoria, the Irukanian conspirator and spy. We are real
greenhorns, he thought. Just
like silly little innocent puppies. They ought to teach a special course for
feudal intrigues back home at the Institute. And they should introduce another
course on how to acquire the right qualifications for properly sizing up the
Rebas of the universe, large and small. Doctor Budach was quite obviously
starving. Nevertheless, he politely yet very definitely refused all meat dishes
and devoted his attention exclusively to the salads, pastas and desserts. He
also drank a glass of fine Estorian wine and his eyes began to sparkle again; a
healthy blush spread over his cheeks.
Rumata could not swallow even a bite. He could still see in his mind's eyes the
crackling, smoking, scarlet torches; he could still smell the odor of burnt
flesh. He felt a big lump in his throat. And thus he waited, until
Doctor Budach had eaten his fill, while he, Rumata, leaned against the window
sill, conversing politely, slowly and calmly, to avoid disturbing the guest who
was enjoying his meal.
Slowly, life returned to the city.
People appeared in the streets again, voices could be heard, growing louder and
louder, accompanied by the pounding of hammers and the cracking of wood: they
were knocking down the wooden idols from the walls and the gabled roofs. A
bald, fat shopkeeper pushed a cart laden with a barrel of beer in front of him so he could sell it later on the
square for two pennies a jug. People walked arm in arm, slapping each other on
the back in a friendly fashion. Under
the arched gate across the street he could see his spy and bodyguard talking
with a thin woman. Carts passed under his window piled high with something. At
first Rumata failed to understand what kind of carts these were but then he
noticed blue-black hands and feet sticking out from under the hemp matting. He
quickly walked away from the window.
"Man's nature," said Budach
while chewing leisurely, "is characterized by his ability to adjust to
everything. There is nothing in this world that man cannot adjust to. Neither
horses nor dogs possess this ability. Presumably when God created man he
considered the tortures to which he would subject man on this earth, and
therefore equipped him with a tremendous capacity for endurance. Of course,
it's difficult to say whether this is good or bad. If man had not been endowed
with such potential for patience and suffering, then all good people would have
perished long ago and only the wicked and soulless would remain. On the other
hand, tolerance and adaptability make men dumb beasts, distinguishable from
animals only on corporal structure, even surpassing the lowly beasts in their
lack of ability to defend themselves. And each new day brings forth new horrors
of wickedness and brutality ..."
Rumata
glanced over in Hyra's direction. She sat opposite
Budach and attentively listened to his words, one cheek resting
on her hand.
Her eyes were filled with
grief: it was obvious how sorry she felt for mankind.
"Vou are probably right, dear
Doctor Budach," said Rumata. "But take me, for instance. I am nothing
but a simple don of high birth." Budach's high forehead became wrinkled
like a washboard and his eyes grew wide with amazement and amusement. "I
love learned people more than
anything; I admire their nobility of spirit. But on the other hand I completely
fail to understand why you, who are men of science and the sole representatives
of intellectual life and wisdom, remain so
hopelessly passive? Why do you surrender without any resistance to
contempt, why do you permit yourselves to be thrown into prisons, why do you
accept your fate and let yourselves be burnt at the stake? Why do you separate your raison d'etre -- the
search for new knowledge -- from the practical demands of life, the fight
against all evil?"
Budach pushed back his empty dish.
"Vou ask strange questions, Don Rumata,"
he said. "Oddly enough, I was
confronted with these self-same questions by the
honorable Don Hug, the duke's chamberlain.
Are you acquainted with him by any chance? Ves, I thought so . . . Indeed, the
fight against evil! But what actually do we understand by 'evil'? After all,
everyone is at liberty to interpret this concept of evil in his own way. For
us, the scholars, evil lies in ignorance; the Church, however, teaches
ignorance to be bliss and that all evil comes from knowledge. For the peasant,
evil consists of high taxes and drought; for the grain merchant, however,
drought is very propitious. Slaves see the evil embodied in the person of a
drunken, hardhearted master, while the artisans regard an avaricious
moneylender as evil personified. Tell me, then, what is the evil we are
supposed to fight, Don Rumata?" He cast a saddened glance at his
interlocutor. "Evil cannot be eradicated. No man is capable of curtailing
its growth in this world. The individual might improve his own lot, perhaps,
but always only at the expense of sealing the fate of others.
And there will always be
kings, who can be distinguished from one another by the degree of their
cruelty, and there will always be, too, crude and debauched barons, the same as
there will always be stupid folk, the ignorant masses, who show delight toward
their oppressors and who,
paradoxically, meet their liberators with hatred. This can all be explained by
the strange phenomenon that servants and slaves understand their masters (even
the most cruel) so much better than
their liberators; for each subjugated slave can easily picture himself
in the place of his master, but it's a rare one who can visualize himself in
the role of his liberator. This is the way of human beings, Don Rumata; this is
what our world is like."
"The world undergoes constant
changes. Doctor Budach," said Rumata. "We know of a time when there
were no kings at all..."
"The world cannot keep
on changing forever," countered Budach,
"for nothing is forever, not even change itself . . . We do not know the
laws of completed perfection but
completion will be reached some
day, sooner or later.
Examine, for example,
the structure of our society.
How pleasant for the eye of the beholder
to regard this
geometrically perfect system! Down at the very bottom
come the peasants
and the artisans, above them the noblemen, then
the clergy, and finally the king. How meticulously everything has been
calculated! What steadfastness, what constancy, what harmonic
order! What change
could ever occur
in this cut crystal
from the hand of our divine jeweler?
There is no structure in this world that is superior to a
pyramid--as any well-trained architect will confirm." He raised a finger, punctuating each remark with a slight stab in the air. "When grain
pours from a sack, it does not spread out flat
in a plane area, but will form a so-called conical pyramid. Each little
grain adheres to the next,
trying to avoid the fall to the ground. And this is the way it goes with mankind. In
their attempt to form some kind of an entity, men must cling
together, and inevitably they form a pyramid."
"Do you seriously
consider this world the best of all possible worlds?" asked Rumata
astonished. "After your encounter with Don Reba, your experiences in
jail?"
"Of course not, my young friend!
There are many things I do not like in this world, I'd like to see
many things changed. But what should we do? In the eyes
of the Supreme Power, perfection presents quite a different picture than in mine. What
sense would it make for a tree to complain that it is rooted
to the spot, although it would be most happy to be able to move away
in order to escape from
the woodcutter's ax?"
"But if it were possible
to change the decisions of the Supreme Power?"
"Only the Supreme Power itself is
capable of doing so," "But just imagine you had divine authority to
act . . ." Budach laughed.
"If I could imagine being God, I would become God!"
"All right, suppose
you had the
opportunity to give
God some advice?"
"Vou have a fertile
imagination," said Budach amused. "That would be splendid. Vou know
the Holy Scriptures? Wonderful! I'd be happy, to carry on a conversation with
you."
"Vou flatter me. But still, what
advice would you give the Almighty? What, in your opinion, would the Almighty
have to do so that you'd be able to say: the world is now truly good and
beautiful?"
Budach smiled approvingly, leaned
comfortably back in his armchair and folded
his hands across
his stomach. Full
of interest and anticipation,
Hyra peered into the physician's face.
"All right then," he said,
"if you so desire. I would tell the Almighty: 'Great Creator, I do not
know your plan; maybe it's simply not your
intention to make mankind good and happy. Nevertheless, I beg you: let it
happen--it would be so easy for you to accomplish--that all men have sufficient
bread, meat, and wine! Provide them with shelter and clothing, let hunger and
want disappear from the face of the earth, and all that separates men from each other."
'That
would be all?" asked Rumata. "Does it seem too little to you?"
Rumata shook his head slowly from side to side.
"God would answer you:
This would be no blessing for mankind.
For the strong of your world take away from the weak whatever I gave them and
the weak would be as poor as before."
"I would beg God to protect
the poor. "Enlighten the cruel rulers,' I would say."
"Cruelty is a mighty
force. Once the rulers rid themselves of their cruel ways they would lose their
power. And other cruel men would take their place."
Budach's friendly face grew suddenly somber.
"Then punish the
cruel men," he said with
determination, "and lead them away from the path of evil, so that the strong
may not be cruel to their weaker brothers."
"It is man's nature to be weak from
the moment he is born. He will only grow strong when there is no one stronger
than he is. And if the cruel ones among the strong are punished and removed
from their ranks, they will simply be replaced by the relatively stronger ones
from among the throng of the weak. And the newly strong ones will become cruel
in their turn. That would mean that eventually all men would have to be punished, and this I do not want
to do."
"Vou have greater
insight, Almighty Lord. Therefore arrange that mankind will obtain all they
need and thus avoid that they will rob each other of whatever you gave
them."
'This
solution wouldn't be a blessing for mankind either," sighed Rumata. "They would not reap profit from this. For
if they obtain everything from my hand without any effort on their part, they
will forget what it is to work and labor; they will lose their taste for living.
As
time
goes on they'll
become domestic animals
whom I will have to feed and clothe--and that for all eternity."
"Don't give them everything at once!" said
Budach excitedly. "Give
it to them slowly, gradually!"
"Gradually mankind will take
everything they need anyhow." Budach's smile became embarrassed.
"Now I can see that things are not
quite so simple," he said. "I've never really thought about the
problems ... I believe we have discussed all possibilities now. However,"
he leaned forward, "there exists still another possibility: Ordain that
mankind will love work and knowledge above all, that work and wisdom will be
regarded by them as their sole reason for being!"
Ves, thought Rumata, we've already
considered such experiments. Mass hypno-induction, positive remoralization,
exposure to hypnotic radiation from three equatorial satellites ...
This
is an alternative I might
choose perhaps," he said. "But could it be justified if I were to rob mankind of its history?
Does it make sense
to replace one type of man with
another? Would this
not mean in the end that
one would wipe this mankind off the face of the earth and create another in its place?"
Budach frowned and remained
silent, busy with his own thoughts. From below the windows came again the
melancholy groaning of heavily laden carts. Suddenly Budach spoke softly:
"Then, oh, Lord, remove us from the
face of the earth and create us anew, make us better men this time, more
perfect beings. Or, better still--leave us the way we are, but ordain that we
can follow our own path!"
"My heart is heavy
with sorrow," Rumata
said slowly, "but this is not within my power."
And he suddenly became aware of Hyra's
eyes which she had fastened on him with great intensity. There was fear and
hope in her glance now.
Part
Nime
Rumata led Doctor Budach to a bedroom to
rest for the long journey ahead, and then went to his study. The Sporamin had
worn off, and he felt exhausted; his wounds began to hurt again, and his
wrists--they still
smarted from the rope burns--started to swell. I should lie down and sleep
now for a while, he thought, I simply must
get some sleep; then I ought
to get in touch with Don Hondor. I should also communicate with Controls and
have them report everything to headquarters.
We need to decide what
to do now -- if there is anything
we can do at all.
And how we should behave
in case there's
nothing we can do.
As Rumata entered his study,
he saw a black monk sitting at the table, his hood pulled down over his eyes.
He was all bent over and had his arms hidden in his wide sleeves.
"What are you doing here?" asked Rumata,
very tired. "Who let
you
in here?"
"Greetings, noble Don Rumata," said the
monk and pulled back his hood.
Rumata shook his head gently.
"Well, I'll be damned!" he said. "Greetings to you, my
good Arata.
What brings you here?
What has happened?"
"The usual," said Arata. "The army
has broken up, the men are dividing up the land among themselves and nobody
wants to go south. The duke is gathering those of his warriors who have escaped
unscathed, and it won't be long now before he starts stringing up my peasants
by their feet along the Estorian tract. Everything as usual," he repeated.
"I understand," said Rumata.
He threw himself down on the divan, leaned his head
back on his crossed arms and regarded Arata. Twenty years earlier, when Anton
had built models with his erector set and played William Tell back on Earth,
the man had been known as Arata the Fair, and he was quite a different person
at that time.
At that time Arata the Fair had not yet
acquired the horrible purple scar on his
high forehead. He bore the scar ever since the mutiny of the Soanian sailors--three thousand naked, enslaved
workers who had been driven from all corners of the
realm to the wharves of Soan and who had already become so brutalized that they
had almost lost their drive for survival. One dark night they swarmed out of
the harbor area and attacked Soan, leaving nothing but bodies and raging fires behind.
Finally they
were received near
the edge of the town
by the imperial infantry, well equipped with
steel armor...
And at that time, of course, Arata still
had two healthy eyes. He lost his right eye through the vigorous blow of a
cudgel, struck by a baron, when a peasants' army, twenty-thousand men strong,
planned to invade the capital in order to ferret out the baronial gangs, and
when instead they encountered the imperial guard, five thousand men strong, on
the open field. They were split up into small groups, surrounded, and finally
trampled to death under the pointed iron shoes of the fighting camels ...
In those days, Arata the Fair was still as straight as a poplar tree.
He acquired his hunchback (and with it
his new nickname) after the battle in the dukedom of Uban, two oceans removed
from here, when after seven years of pest and drought, four-hundred-thousand
living skeletons seized their hay forks and threshing flails, chased away the
noblemen and besieged the Duke of Uban in his residence. However,
the duke, whose weak mind suddenly became strong in the face of this
unbearable strain and fright, declared himself willing to forgive his subjects,
lowered the price of intoxicating beverages and promised his serfs freedom.
Arata, seeing that all was lost, ordered and implored them in a desperate roar,
not to swallow this treacherous bait; he was then seized by the Atamans, who
believed that nothing good should be expected from a good man; they beat him
with iron rods and threw him into a pit, leaving him to die a miserable death ...
But the heavy iron ring on his right
wrist probably went back to the time when he was still called the Fair One. The
ring had been forged at the end of a
chain to the rudder of a pirate's galley, and Arata had ripped the chain apart,
struck a blow against the temple of Captain
Ega
the Gracious, captured first the ship
and then the entire pirate's fleet, and then had tried to found a free republic
on the ocean. And the whole enterprise ended in a blood fight, for at that time
Arata was still a young man who had
not learned how to hate and who believed that the gift of freedom was
sufficient in itself to render a slave into a godlike creature...
He was a professional rebel, an avenger
by the grace of God, a figure that is not often encountered during the Middle
Ages. Historical evolution gives birth to such pikes only from time to time,
releases them into the deep gulfs of society to stir up the fat carps who sit
and dream in the mud at the bottom of
the abyss . . . Arata was the only person here
whom Rumata neither hated nor pitied. And in the heated dreams of this
citizen of Earth, who had spent almost five years in blood and stench, he
frequently saw himself as a figure resembling Arata. He had gone through all
the infernal torments of this universe and was rewarded for it with the privileged right to slay the
murderers, to torture
the torturers, and to betray the traitors.
"Sometimes it seems," said
Arata, "that we are all powerless. I remain forever the leader
of mutineers and I realize
that my strength is based on my extraordinary vitality. But this
strength does not help me in my powerless state.
As if by magic, my victories change
into defeat. My allies in battle become
my enemies, the most courageous desert me, the most faithful betray me or perish.
And nothing remains to me but my own bare hands. But one cannot reach the
golden idols behind the fortress walls with bare hands ..."
"How did you get to Arkanar?"
asked Rumata. "With the monks."
"Vou're crazy! Vou're so easy to recognize."
"But not among monks. Among the crowds of
officers of the Holy Order nearly half are made up of divine fools and cripples
like myself.
The maimed and the deformed
are a pleasing sight in God's eyes." He stared straight at Rumata and
laughed.
"What do you intend to do now?" asked Rumata and lowered his
eyes.
"The same as always. I know the Holy Order. Before the year is
out, the people of Arkanar
will arm themselves and crawl out of their holes--they'll chop each other to
bits with their axes. I'll lead them so that
they slaughter not each other,
but rather those
who deserve it." "Do you need
some money?" asked Rumata.
"Ves, as usual. And weapons . . ."
He fell silent.
Then he narrowed his eyes and said;
"Don Rumata, do you remember how disappointed I was
when I found out who you really
are? I hate the shavelings, and it hurts me
that their tissue, of lies proved to be the truth. But unfortunately, a poor
rebel is forced to profit from circumstances of all kinds. The priests are
saying that the gods have thunderbolts at their disposal . . . Don Rumata,
I urgently need
such thunderbolts, to be able to smash the walls of these fortresses."
Rumata sighed deeply. Following his
miraculous rescue, Arata had ceaselessly demanded explanations. Rumata had once
even attempted to tell about himself, he even once showed him Sol, the sun of his planet, in the nocturnal sky --a
tiny, hardly recognizable star. But the rebel understood only one thing: The
cursed priests were right, gods were indeed living behind the walls of the
firmament, omniscient and
almighty gods. And from that moment on,
every conversation he had with Rumata would always lead to the same point: God,
since you do exist, lend me your strength, for this is the best that you can do
for me. And each time Rumata made no reply or would steer the conversation on to
a different topic.
"Don Rumata," said the rebel, "why don't you want to help
us?" "Just a minute," said Rumata. "I
beg your pardon,
but first tell
me
how you got into my
house?"
"That isn't so important. No one besides me
knows the way. But don't try to sidetrack me, Don Rumata. Why don't you want to
confer your powers on us?"
"We won't go into that."
"Oh yes, we will. I did not call you.
I have never asked a favor of anybody. Vou came to me of your own accord. Or did you just want
to have a little fun?"
It's hard to be a god, thought Rumata.
Patiently, he answered: "Vou don't understand.
I have tried at least twenty times to explain that I am not a god-- and you
wouldn't believe me. And
neither will you
comprehend why I cannot help
you with my weapons."
"Do you have thunderbolts?"
"I cannot lend you the thunderbolt."
"I've heard that story twenty times,"
said Arata. "Now I want to know: why not?"
"I'll tell you once more: you won't understand."
"So try once more to explain it to me."
"What do you plan to do with the thunderbolt?"
"I will burn the golden brood like bedbugs, to the last man, their cursed kith and kin down to the
twelfth descendant I'll wipe their fortresses off the face of the earth. I'll
burn their armies and all those whom they defend
and support. Vou can rest
assured that your
lightning will serve a just cause,
and once only
the freed slaves
remain on earth and peace reigns everywhere, I
shall return your thunderbolts to you and never again ask you for them."
Arata fell silent He was breathing
heavily. His face had turned almost purple from the blood that had congested
his brain. Apparently he could already see duchies and kingdoms going up in
flames, the seared bodies lying at the scene of conflagration and among the
burnt-out ruins,
and the gigantic
armies of the victors roaring
triumphantly: "Liberty! Liberty!"
"No," said Rumata. "I
will not give the thunderbolt to you. It would
be a mistake. Try to believe me, I can
see further than
you can."
Arata
lowered his chin
onto his chest.
Rumata began to crack his finger
joints. "I'll tell you just one of the reasons. Though it is insignificant
compared with the main reason, you will understand this one. Vou are brimming
over with vitality, dear Arata, but even you are
mortal. And if you should
perish and the thunderbolt should
happen to fall into
the wrong hands,
those that are not quite
as pure as yours, the mere thought of what this might
lead to is unbearable ..."
Neither spoke for some time. Then Rumata
took out a bottle of Estorian wine and something to eat, and placed it before
his guest Without raising his head, Arata started silently to bite off chunks
of bread and sip at the wine. Rumata was overcome by a strange and
morbid schism within himself. He knew he
was right and yet this awareness humbled him before Arata. Somehow, Arata
surpassed him; but not him alone--Arata surpassed all the others that came
unbidden to this planet and observed with full impotent pity its teeming life
from the lofty peak of passionless hypotheses and alien moral standards. And
for the first time Rumata thought: Nothing can be acquired without loss. We are
infinitely stronger than Arata within our realm of goodness but infinitely
weaker than he is within his realm of evil.
"Vou should not have descended from
heaven," Arata remarked suddenly. "Go back. Vou are doing us here
only harm!"
"No, no," said Rumata. "We don't harm anybody here."
"Oh, yes, you are harming us. Vou instill
unfounded hopes in us." "Who, for instance?"
"Me. Vou have weakened
my will power,
Don Rumata. It used to be
that I relied
only on myself,
but now you
have caused me to be always
aware of your strength standing behind me. Formerly, I fought every battle as
if it were my last one. But now I have noticed that I preserve my strength for the other
battles, for the decisive ones,
because you will participate in them. Leave this
planet, Don Rumata, return to your heavens,
and never come back here.
Or else, give us your thunderbolts,
or at least your iron bird. If nothing else, draw your sword and be our
leader."
Arata fell silent again and reached for
another piece of bread. Rumata observed Arata's hands, especially his fingers.
Two years ago, Don Reba in person had torn out the nails of both hands with
some special device. Vou know only half the story, thought Rumata . . . Vou
feel pacified by the thought that you are the only one to be condemned to
failure. Vou don't know yet how hopeless your entire cause really is. Vou don't
know that your enemy is not to be found beyond the ranks of your own soldiers,
but rather within themselves. Perhaps you will succeed in annihilating the Holy
Order of the Black monks and the wave of the peasant rebellion will carry you
onto the throne of Arkanar. Vou will raze to the ground the castles of the
feudal lords and drown the barons in the bay. The rebellious masses will shower
you, their liberator, with all honors, and you will be a good and wise
ruler--the only good and wise man in your entire kingdom; in your goodness you
will distribute all the land among
your comrades-in-arms, but what good will this land do your co-fighters without
serfs? And the wheel will turn in another direction again. And you'll be
getting off easy if you die a normal death and do not have to watch the new
barons and counts emerge from among the ranks of your faithful collaborators of
yesterday. All this has happened time and again, my good Arata, back on Earth
as well as on your planet.
"Vou are silent?" asked Arata.
He pushed back his plate and swept the bread crumbs off the table with the
sleeve of his cloak. "Once upon a time I had a friend," he said.
"Vou have probably heard of
him--Waga Holeso. We started
out together. Then he turned into a bandit, a dark prince of the night. I have
never forgiven him for this betrayal, and he knows it. Later, he would help me a great deal--out of fear or vanity--but whichever way, he did not wish to repent
his ways: He had goals of his own.
Two years ago his men delivered me into the hands of Don Reba . . ." He
looked down at his maimed fingers and clenched
his fist. "And this morning I caught him in the harbor of
Arkanar. Half-hearted friendships are
impossible in our cause, for half a friend--is always half an enemy."
He rose and pulled the hood down over
his eyes. "Will I find the gold in the usual place, Don Rumata?"
"Ves," said Rumata slowly. "In the usual place." "I am
leaving now. Thank you, Don Rumata." Almost inaudibly, he crossed the
study and disappeared behind the door.
Downstairs, in the
entrance hall, the door bolts clicked softly.
Part
Tem
"The Drunkard's Lair" was
comparatively clean today; the floor had been carefully swept and the table
vigorously scrubbed. Bunches of sweet-smelling herbs and lavender lay in the
comers. Father Habani sat respectably on a bench in the comer. He was completely
sober and calm and his clean hands rested in his lap.
While they waited for Budach to fall
asleep, they discussed everything imaginable. Budach, who sat next to Rumata at
the table, followed the lighthearted chatter of the noble dons with a
kind, indulgent smile. From time to
time he would give a sudden start, when he was just about to nod off. His
hollow cheeks burned from the double dose of Tetraluminal they had slipped
unnoticed into his food. The old man was highly excited and had great difficulty
falling asleep. Don Hug, filled with impatience, fingered a camel's horseshoe
underneath the table; his face, however, kept its appearance of unaffected ease. Rumata crumbled his bread into balls and
followed with tired interest Don Hondor's efforts to swallow his anger. The
Heeper of the Seal of State was excessively nervous since he had arrived late
at the extraordinary nocturnal conference of the twenty terrestrial agents. The
conference was to deal with the overthrow of the government in Arkanar, and he
was supposed to be the chairman.
"My dear friends!" Doctor
Budach said at last with a sonorous voice. He stood up and immediately fell
onto Rumata's shoulder.
Rumata carefully put an arm around him.
"Ready?" asked Don Hondor.
"He won't wake up till tomorrow morning," said Rumata,
and he took Budach into
his arms and carried him over onto
Father Habani's cot.
Father Habani said with jealousy:
"Vou certainly take good care of the doctor,
but you forget about old Habani. Well, then, gentlemen!"
"I have fifteen minutes," Don Hondor said in Russian.
"I need only five minutes," answered
Rumata. He could hardly hide his irritation. "And I've told you earlier so
much about it that even one minute will do now. In complete accordance with the
basis theory of feudalism," his
furious glance was directed straight at Don Hondor's eyes, "this is merely
a normal confrontation between the burghers and the barons"--he looked
over at Don Hug--"which developed, however, into a provoking intrigue of
the Holy Order and eventually made
Arkanar a stronghold of feudal-fascist aggression. We are sitting here,
racking
our brains in an attempt
to align the complicated, contradictory, and enigmatic figure of our Enlightened Eagle, Don Reba,
with historical personalities
of similar stature, such as Richelieu, Oliver Necker, Tokugawa Ledschasu, and Monk--and our eagle turns
out to be merely a little insignificant hoodlum and dolt. He betrayed and sold out anything
he could lay his hands on; got caught in the web of his own intrigues, was
overcome by mortal terror, then tried to save his skin by throwing himself into
the hands of the Holy Order. Wait another six months: they'll cut his throat,
but the Order will remain. The consequences resulting from this for the coastal
regions and eventually for the entire kingdom I simply dare not envision. One
fact, though, is certain: our entire work of twenty years
within the borders
of the kingdom has gone down the drain. There is no way back
under the regime of the Holy Order. In all probability, Budach
is the last person I'll be able to rescue. We won't save anyone
else; it's too late. That is all I have to say."
Don Hug finally broke the horseshoe in
two and hurled the fragments into a comer.
"That's quite a setback, to be
sure," he said. "But maybe it isn't quite as bad as you think,
Anton."
Rumata glanced briefly at him.
"Vou should have removed
Don Reba," said Don Hondor
suddenly. "What do you mean by 'removed'?"
Red splotches spread over Don Hondor's face. "In
a physical sense!" he said sharply.
Rumata sat down. "Hill him?"
"Ves! Ves! Ves! Hidnap! Destroy!
Squash! Hill him! Vou should have acted and not conferred with two idiots about
the matter, men who had not the vaguest notion what was really going on."
"Neither did I!"
"Vou sensed it, at least."
There was an uneasy silence.
Then Don Hondor started up again. He
spoke softly and looked to one side. "Something like the
carnage at Barkan?"
"Ves, something like it.
Only better organized." Don Hondor bit his lips.
"Would it be too late now to remove
him from the scene?" "Completely senseless," said Rumata.
"First of all, they'll finish
him off anyhow, with or without
our assistance; and secondly, it won't even be necessary to kill him. He's eating
out of my hand."
"What do you mean?"
"He's afraid of me. He senses that some
mysterious power is standing behind me. He even suggested that we
collaborate."
"Really?" growled
Don Hondor. "Then there's no point in doing it." Don Hug swallowed
hard.
"What is the matter with you, comrades, are you serious about all
this?"
"What
do you mean?"
"Well,
all this . . . everything ... to remove him, to kill him off ...
What has gotten into you,
are you out of your mind?"
"The noble don is cut to the quick,"
Rumata remarked softly. Don Hondor chose his words deliberately and cautiously:
"In case of extraordinary circumstances only extraordinary means
are effective!"
Don Hug let his eyes wander
from one to the other,
his lips trembling.
"Do you ... do you . . .
really know what you are getting into?" He could hardly bring the words to
his lips. "Do you realize what this might lead to?"
"Calm down,
please," said Don Hondor. "Nothing will happen. And now, enough
of that. What shall we do about
the Holy Order?
I suggest a blockade of the area around Arkanar.
What's your opinion,
comrades?
Make it quick, will you, I'm in a hurry."
"I have no opinion, not yet," replied
Rumata. "And neither has Pashka. Well have to confer with Controls. Let's
wait a bit. We'll meet again in one week and then come to a decision."
"Agreed," said Don Hondor and stood up. "Let's go!"
Rumata loaded Budach
onto his shoulders and left the hut. Don Hondor
lit the way with a lantern. They walked to the helicopter and Rumata laid
Budach down on the back seat. Don Hondor's foot got caught in his long cloak and he fell into the driver's seat with rattling swords.
"Couldn't you take me home
quickly?" asked Rumata. "I have to get some sleep."
"Ves, yes," rumbled Don
Hondor. "Make it quick, will you!" "I'll be right back," said Rumata and hurriedly returned
to the
hut.
Don Hug was still sitting at the table, staring vacantly ahead of
him and rubbing his chin.
Father Habani, who stood beside him, said: "This is the way it always
ends, my friend. Vou strive tooth and
nail, try to do your best, and still it doesn't
turn out right in the end ..." Rumata swiftly picked up his swords
and his fez.
"Cheer up, Pashka," he said to Don Hug. "Don't lose heart, we're
all overtired and irritable."
Don Hug shook his head vigorously.
"Look here, Anton," he said. "Will
you please look! I won't say anything about Uncle Sasha. He's been here a long
time, and we can't change him any more. But you . . ."
"I
want to sleep,
that's all I want now. Father Habani,
do me the favor and take my horses and bring them
to Baron Pampa.
I'll come to see him in a few days."
Outside, the propeller started
up a gentle roar. Rumata
waved to his friends and ran out of the hut. The bright light
streaming from the helicopter's headlights made the gigantic tangled growths of
the high fern look ghostly
against the background of the brilliant white trunks of the birch trees. Rumata climbed into
the cabin and slammed the little door.
Inside the cabin it smelled of oxygen,
synthetic wall-boards, and cologne. Don Hondor let the machine climb and guided
it with nonchalant assuredness along the country road. I wouldn't be up to that
now, thought Rumata, a bit jealous. From the back seat came the peaceful snore
of old Doctor Budach.
"Anton," said Don Hondor,
"I'd like to ... that is, 1 don't ... I don't
want to be tactless, and please believe me, I don't want to ... uh ...
interfere with your personal affairs..."
"I'm listening," said Rumata. He knew at once what Don Hondor
had
in mind.
"We are scouts on a mission here," said
Don Hondor. "And all we cherish must either remain back on Earth or locked
up inside ourselves. This way it can never be taken away from us or used for
blackmail or as hostages against us."
"Are you referring to Hyra?" asked Rumata.
"Ves, my friend. If all I have heard
about Don Reba
is true, then
it will be neither
easy nor safe
to hold him
back. Do you
understand what I mean?"
"Ves, I understand," said Rumata. "
I'll try to think of something."
They lay next to each other holding hands in the
darkness. It was very quiet now in the city. From the distance came only an
occasional neighing and stomping of horses. From time to time Rumata would drop
off into a light sleep, but he woke up quickly again. Then Hyra would hold her
breath; in his sleep he clung tightly to her hand.
"Vou are very, very tired,"
said Hyra softly. "Go to sleep, my darling."
"No, no, tell me all, I am
listening." "Vou keep falling
asleep, my darling."
"I'm nevertheless listening to you. Vou are right,
I am extremely tired, but I am longing
even more to be near you and to listen
to your words. I won't sleep.
Just go an telling me, I'll pay attention, go ahead."
Gratefully she rubbed her nose against
his shoulder, kissed him on the cheek and picked up her story again, how
recently the son of her father's neighbor had come to her one evening at her
father's bidding. "Vour father is confined to his bed. They chased him
from the office and beat him up with sticks as a farewell present. He hardly
eats anymore, he just drinks. His face looks bluish-gray, and he's got the
shakes." The boy also told her that her brother had appeared again,
wounded, but happy and drunk, in a new uniform. He gave some money to the
father, had a few drinks with him, then threatened that he was going to
slaughter all of them. He is now a lieutenant--goodness knows where--in some
special detachment, has sworn loyalty to the Holy Order, and will soon be
knighted. Her father implored her not to come home, at least for the time being. Her brother was
constantly threatening to disavow her since she, the red witch, had taken up
with some nobleman...
Sure enough, he thought, she can't go
home anymore. And under no circumstances can she stay here either. If anything
should happen to her ... He had vivid visions that some evil would befall her.
Chills ran down his back at the mere thought.
"Are you asleep?" asked Hyra.
He gave a sudden start and relaxed the hand that
had been squeezing her little finger spasmodically.
"No," he said, only half awake. "What else did you
do?"
"I tidied up your rooms; everything was in a
terrible disorder. I found a book, a work by Father Our. It tells about a noble
prince who loves a beautiful but primitive young girl from the mountain
regions. She is really
a savage and thinks he is a god, but she still
loves him with all her heart. Then they become
separated and she dies of grief."
"It's a good book," said Rumata.
"I
even cried. I kept thinking
it was about us, about you and me." "Ves, it concerns people
like the two of us. And, in general, all
human beings who are in
love with each other. Except that nobody will
ever
separate us."
The safest place
for her would
be on Earth, he thought.
But how will she get along there without
me? And how will I fare here, all alone? I
could ask Anka to become
your friend. But how will I be able to remain
here without you? No, we'll fly to Earth, but together! I myself will steer
the spaceship and you will sit beside me and I'll explain everything to you. So that you won't be afraid. So that you'll
love Earth immediately.
So that you will never be
homesick. This planet isn't your home at all. Vour home has rejected
you. And you were born a thousand
years before your time. My darling, you good, you dear, you selfless
girl, willing to sacrifice yourself . . . people like you have been born in
every epoch of the bloody history of our planets. Pure, unsullied souls who do
not understand cruelty and who know no hatred. Victims. Unnecessary victims.
Far more senseless still than the poet Our or Galileo. For people like you are
no fighters. In order to be a fighter one has to be able to hate and this is
exactly what you cannot do...
Rumata
dropped off to sleep again.
In his dreams
he saw Hyra standing at the edge of a flat
rooftop in Soviet Russia with a degravitator
fastened to her belt. And Anka, in gay and mocking mood,
urging Hyra impatiently toward the edge of a mile-deep abyss ...
"Rumata," said Hyra, "I'm
afraid!" "Of what, my darling?" .
"Vou are always silent,
forever silent I get an uncanny feeling..." Rumata pulled her
closer to him.
"All right, my darling," he said, "then I'll talk and you pay close
attention to me: Far, far away from here, beyond
the great forest,
is a sinister-looking, inaccessible castle There lives
Baron Pampa, a merry, happy and good man the very
best baron of all of Arkanar. He has a wife,
a beautiful, kind
woman, who loves
Pampa when he is sober
but who cannot stand him when he is
drunk..."
He fell silent and listened attentively.
He heard the stomping of many hooves in the street and the loud snorting of
many men and horses. "Looks like it's here, eh?" asked a coarse voice
under their windows. "Looks like
it, yes." "Ha-a-alt!" The heels of many boots
were clicked outside on the steps of the terraced staircase, and shortly
afterwards several fists
hammered on the
gate. Hyra was
frightened and clung closely to Rumata.
"Wait, my darling," he said
and threw back the blankets.
"They've come for me," she whispered, "I knew they would!"
Rumata
freed himself with difficulty from her arms and rushed
to the window. "In the name of the Lord!" they shouted down
below. "Open up, it'll
go bad with you if w have to beat down the front door!" Rumata pushed the curtain aside a bit and the dancing light of
torches flitted into the room. A fairly large crowd of riders were trampling
the ground in front of the house, somber people, dressed in black with pointed
hoods on their heads. Rumata cast a swift glance down below, then looked and examined the window frame.
The frame was solidly anchored in the masonry. Downstairs they were trying
to ram the front door.
Rumata groped for his sword in the dark and smashed
the window pane with the hilt A tinkling shower of splinters rained down to the street.
"Hey, you there!" he shouted
down to them. "What's the matter with you? Vou must be tired of
living!"
The pounding and ramming stopped.
"They always mess things up," came the
low voices from below. "The master is home..."
"And what should that matter to us?"
"Don't you know? He's unbeatable
with his swords in his hands..." "And they said he was away for the
night and wouldn't be back
before daybreak."
"Scared?"
"N-n-o, we aren't
scared. It's just
that we have
no orders to do anything with him. No orders to kill
him . . ."
"Well tie him up, beat him over the
head, and then chain his legs and hands! Hey, who's fidgeting with their spears
back there?"
"If only he won't bash in our skulls ..."
"No, don't be afraid. They all say he has the
strange habit of never killing anybody."
"I'll slit your throats like puppies," said Rumata with a
frightening
voice.
Hyra pressed herself against his back. Her heart was beating
wildly; he
could hear it. Downstairs the screaming commands were flying: "Hnock the
gate down, brothers! In the name of the Lord!"
Rumata turned around and
looked into Hyra's eyes. She stared at him as she had done a little while ago,
with fear and hope in her glance. The reflection of the torches shone in her
dry eyes.
"Come, come, my little one,"
he said tenderly. "Vou aren't afraid of that mob? Go and get dressed.
There's no sense in staying here any longer." Hastily he put on his
metalloplast shirt. "I'll chase them away and then well leave. We'll go to
Baron Pampa's castle."
She stood at the window and was looking
down into the street Red dots of light ran across her face. Sounds
of smashing, splintering wood, clanking metal came from downstairs. Rumata's heart seemed
to burst, it was so full of pity and tender
love for her.--I'll chase them away like mangy
dogs, he thought.
He bent down to pick up his other sword but when he straightened up again, Hyra was no longer standing
at the window. Her fingers
clutched the drapes as she slowly sank to the ground.
"Hyra!" he cried.
A bolt from a crossbow had pierced her throat,
another stuck in her chest. He seized her in his arms and carried her to the
bed, gently placing her down on the covers. "Hyra . . . ," he called
out softly. She moaned briefly and her limbs went limp. "Hyra," he
said. She did not answer. For a moment he stood over her, then he took his
swords, slowly walked down the stairs to the entrance hall and waited for the
gate to give way under their blows...
Epilogue
"And then?" asked Anka.
Pashka lowered his eyes,
slapped his knee several times
with the flat of his palm, bent down and picked
a wild strawberry growing on the ground near his feet. Anka waited.
"Then . . .," he murmured.
"Actually, nobody knows for sure what happened then, Anka. He had left his
transmitter at home, and after the house had burnt to the ground, they
understood at Controls that things were not going well, and they immediately
sent a special emergency squad to Arkanar. They released a considerable amount
of sleeping gas over the city, to cover all eventualities. At first they looked
at the house. But since it was totally burnt to the ground, they were confused,
not knowing where to look for him. But then they saw--"
He became embarrassed and hesitated for
a moment "Well, they saw the traces he had left behind."
Pashka
fell silent again
and started popping
one strawberry after
the other into his mouth.
"And?" said Anka softly.
"They came to the palace . . .
That's where they found him." "How?"
"Well ... he was sleeping. And all the others . , . around him . . .
were also lying on the ground. Some were asleep and others . . . well . . .
They also found Don Reba . . ." Pashka quickly glanced at Anka, then
swiftly lowered his eyes again. "They took him, that is, they took Anton
and brought him back to the station at the base . . . Vou see, Anka, he doesn't
tell us about anything. And in general he talks very little now."
Anka sat bolt upright, very pale, and
looked over Pashka's head toward the little meadow in front of the cabin in the
woods. The fir trees rustled their needles as they swayed in the breeze; a pair
of fat white clouds slowly drifted through the blue sky.
"And what was the
matter with the
girl?" she asked.
"I don't know," Pashka said
firmly.
"Listen, Pashka," said Anka, "maybe I shouldn't have come
here
at all."
you..."
"Will you stop that
nonsense! Of course
he will be happy to see "And I have the feeling he is hiding
somewhere here in the
bushes, watching us, and
waiting for me to leave."
Pashka laughed.
"No, no," he said. "Anton's not
hiding in the bushes, you can believe me. He hasn't got the faintest idea that
you're here. He's gone off fishing somewhere, as usual."
"And how does he behave toward you?"
"So-so. We get along all right. But didn't you
want something else?..."
They were both silent for a while.
"Anka," said Pashka. "Do
you remember the anisotropic road?" Anka frowned.
"What kind of a road?"
"The anisotropic road. With the one-way street
sign. Don't you remember? We were there, the three of us ..."
"Oh, yes. Now I remember. Anton used that word."
"Ves, and then he entered the one-way road the
wrong way and walked its whole length; and when he returned he said he'd found
a collapsed bridge and the skeleton of a German chained to a machine gun."
"I don't remember that part,"
said Anka. "What about it?" "Nowadays I often think
back to that
road," said Pashka.
"Maybe
there's some connection somewhere ...
the road was anisotropic--just as history is. There is no way back. And he went
right ahead anyway. And met up with a chained skeleton."
"I don't
follow you. What do you mean by the chained
skeleton?" "I don't know," admitted Pashka. "It's just an impression I have." Anka said:
"See to it that he doesn't brood
too much! Try to keep him involved in discussions about anything at all. Make
small talk with
him. Try to take his mind off
his worries."
Pashka sighed deeply.
"Oh, I know ... I've tried all of that. But
what good does all my small talk do him? He listens for a little
while, smiles and says: 'Pashka, why don't you sit here? I'm going for a walk.'
And then he goes off.
And there I sit ... In the beginning I used to follow him secretly; but
now I only sit here waiting for him to come back.
Maybe you could--"
All of a sudden Anka got to her feet.
Pashka stood up too and looked around. Anka followed with bated breath as Anton
emerged from a clearing in the woods and came walking toward them--very tall,
broad-shouldered, his face pale. He seemed completely unchanged; he had always had a
serious expression on his face.
She walked to meet him.
"Anka," he said tenderly. "Anka, my little friend ..."
He held his long arms out to her. Timidly she
leaned forward, then quickly jumped back a step. On his fingers . . .
But it was not blood, only the stain of strawberries.
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