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everything--joy and love, freedom and purity.

"You must go back, Silk. He sends us to tell you."

"You must, my lad." A man's voice, the voice of which Lemur's

had been a species of mockery. Looking up he saw the carved brown

face from his mother's closet.

"We're your parents." He was tall and blue-eyed. "Your fathers

and your mothers."

The other woman did not speak, but her eyes spoke truth.

"You were my mother," he said. "I understand."

He looked down at his own beautiful mother. "You will always be

my mother. Always!"

"We'll be waiting, Silk my son. All of us. Remember."

* * *

Something was fanning his face.

He opened his eyes. Quetzal was seated beside him, one long,

bloodless hand swinging as regularly and effortlessly as a pendulum.

"Good afternoon, Patera Calde. I would guess, at least, that it may

be afternoon by now."

He lay on dirt, staring up at a shiprock ceiling. Pain stabbed his

neck; his head, both arms, his chest, both legs, and his lower torso

ached, each in its separate, painful way.

"Lie quietly. I wish I had water to offer you. How are you

feeling?"

"I'm back in my dirty cage." Too late, he remembered to add _Your

Cognizance_. "I didn't know it was a cage, before."

Quetzal pressed down on his shoulder. "Don't sit up yet, Patera

Calde. I'm going to ask a question, but you are not to put it to the

test. It is to be a matter for discussion only. Do you agree?"

"Yes, Your Cognizance." He nodded, although nodding took

immense effort.

"This is my question. We are only to speak of it. If I were to help

you up, could you walk?"

"I believe so, Your Cognizance."

"Your voice is very weak. I've examined you and found no broken

bones. There are four of us besides yourself, but--"

"We fell, didn't we? We were in a Civil Guard floater, spinning

over the city. Did I dream that?"

Quetzal shook his head.

"You and I and Hyacinth. And Colonel Oosik and Oreb. And..."

"Yes, Patera Calde?"

"A trooper--two troopers--and an old fencing master that

someone had introduced me to. I can't remember his name, but I

must have dreamed that he was there as well. It's too fantastic."

"He is some distance down the tunnel now, Patera Calde. We

have been troubled by the convicts you freed."

"Hyacinth?" Silk struggled to sit up.

Quetzal held him down, his hands on both shoulders. "Lie quietly

or I'll tell you nothing."

"Hyacinth? For--for the sake of all the gods! I've got to know!"

"I dislike them, Patera Calde. So do you. Why should either of us

tell anyone anything for their sake? I don't know. I wish I did. She

may be dead. I can't say."

"Tell me what happened, please."

Slowly, Quetzal's hairless head swung from side to side. "It would

be better, Patera Calde, for you to tell me. You've been very near

death. I need to know what you've forgotten."

"There's water in these tunnels. I was in them before, Your

Cognizance. In places there was a great deal."

"This is not one of those places. If you have recovered enough to

grasp how ill you are and keep a promise, I'll find some. Do you

remember blessing the crowds with me? Tell me about that."

"We were trying to bring peace--peace to Viron. Blood had

bought it--Musk, but Musk was only a tool of Blood's."

"Had bought the city, Patera Calde?"

Silk's mouth opened and closed again.

"What is it, Patera Calde?"

"Yes, Your Cognizance, he has. He, and others like him. I hadn't

thought of that until you asked. I'd been confusing the things."

"What things, Patera Calde?"

"Peace and saving my manteion. The Outsider asked me to save

it, and then the insurrection broke out, and I thought I would have

saved it if only I could bring peace, because the people made me

calde, and I would save it by an order." For a second or two, Silk lay

silent, his eyes half closed. "Blood--men like Blood--have stolen

the city, every part of it except the Chapter, and the Chapter has

resisted only because you are at its head, Your Cognizance. When

you're gone..."

"When I die, Patera Calde?"

"If you were to die, Your Cognizance, they'd have it all. Musk

actually signed the papers. Musk was the owner of record--the man

whose body we burned on the altar, Your Cognizance. I remember

thinking how horrible it would be if Musk were the real owner and

clenching my teeth--puffing myself up with courage I've never

really had and telling myself over and over that I couldn't allow it to

happen."

"You're the only man in Viron who doubts your courage, Patera

Calde."

Silk scarcely heard him. "I was wrong. Badly mistaken. Musk

wasn't the danger, was never the danger, really. There are scores of

Musks in the Orilla, and Musk loved birds. Did I tell you that, Your

Cognizance?"

"No, Patera Calde. Tell me now, if you wish."

"He did. Mucor told me he liked birds, and he'd brought her a

book about the cats she carried for Blood. When he saw Oreb, he

said I'd gotten him because I wanted to be friends, which wasn't

true, and threw his knife at him. He missed, and I believe he

intended to miss. Blood, with his money and his greed for more, has

done Viron more harm than all the Musks. Everything I've done has

been trying to pry bits of the city from Blood. I was trying to save

my manteion, I said; but you can't save just one manteion--I can't

save our quarter and nothing else. I see that now. And yet I like

Blood, or at least I would like to like him."

"I understand, Patera Calde."

"Little pieces--the manteion, and Hyacinth and Orchid, and Auk,

because Auk matters so much to Maytera Mint. Auk..."

"Yes, Patera Calde?"

"Auk pushed me, Your Cognizance. We had been together in the

floater, Hyacinth and I. Your Cognizance, too, and--and others.

We were coming down, and Colonel Oosik--"

"You've made him Generalissimo Oosik," Quetzal reminded Silk

gently.

"Yes. Yes, I did. He passed me the ear, and I talked to the

convicts, telling them they were free, and then we hit the ground.

We opened a hatch and Hyacinth and I climbed out--"

"I'm satisfied, Patera Calde. Promise me you won't try to stand

until I come back, and I'll look for water."

Silk detained him, clasping one boneless, bloodless hand. "You

can't tell me what's happened to her, Your Cognizance?"

Again Quetzal's head swung from side to side, a slow and almost

hypnotic motion.

"Then Auk has her, I don't know why, and I must get her back

from him. What happened to me, Your Cognizance?"

"You were buried alive, Patera Calde. When the floater crashed,

some of us climbed out. I did, as you see, and you and your young

woman, as you say. The fencing master, too, and your physician.

I'm sure of those. The convicts were running to a hole in the ground

to escape the shooting and explosions. Do you remember them?"

This time Silk was able to nod without much difficulty, although

his neck was stiff and painful.

"There was a ramp down the side of the hole, and a break in this

tunnel at the bottom. The fencing master and I ducked through.

Almost at once there was another explosion, and the hole fell in