He lowered his head and heaved a great sigh.
Rising, he turned off the device. The humming stopped and the sparks faded.
A stronger tremor shook the room. He looked off, sensing its magnitude. Then his eyes turned inward.
At length he came out of his reverie and turned toward the door, walking briskly.
He muttered, “Now I gotta put my paycheck where my oral cavity gapes — as it were.”
Twenty-two
Plains
Gene hacked and slashed, then hacked again.
His hrunt opponent staggered back, throat agape and oozing. Gene followed up with a thrust to the diaphragm, driving his sword deep into tough abdominal muscle. The hrunt doubled up and fell.
Gene let the hrunt slide off his sword, then swung round to ward off a weak lunge from a wounded hruntan infantryman who wouldn’t go down. Gene skewered the creature, leaving little room for refusal.
Gene looked around and realized that the battle was over, and that the yalim had won the day, fighting under his personal military command. Hrunt bodies carpeted the battlefield.
He sheathed his sword, fetched his voort, mounted, and shouted the command for recall.
As the troops fell into ranks, thoughts of the castle drifted back. He hadn’t thought about home in a long while. How long had he been here? Four, five months? And in that time he had gone from yalim prisoner to First Husband and Captain of the Royal Cohorts.
He wondered what was going on back at Perilous. Did it still exist? He had kept his eyes open for any sign of the portal, but it was like hoping to get hit by the same raindrop twice. The portal could appear anywhere on this world, or it might never appear again.
Whatever was going on back there, it must have been bad, or Sheila and Linda would have made some attempt to find him. Maybe they had tried, and failed. There was another possibility, one he was loath to consider: they might have perished in some general cataclysm that he, by sheerest happenstance, had managed to escape.
The cohorts had mustered, and now a great cheer rose up from them.
Gene drew his sword and raised it above his head. The voort under him reared up, braying.
The cohorts cheered louder, broke ranks, and gathered round him. They took him from his mount and bore him on their shoulders back to the Queen’s field tent.
It was night, the lamps flickering in the soft breeze that blew through the tent. Outside, campfires crackled, animals grunted, and men laughed, happy and drunk, flushed with victory.
“You have conquered, my husband.”
“Yep. Peel me a grape, will you?”
“Is that what this fruit is called in your land?”
“Just kidding. Are you cold? Do you want to put some clothes on?”
“No. I will never wear clothes again, my husband, when we are alone together.”
“Hey, that’s fine with me. Look, I’ve got big plans. Now that the hrunt are cleared out of the lowlands, we —”
“You will continue your campaign into the southern desert?”
“Huh? No, not really. I think we should head west. As far as we know, no hrunt live there. But that’s where Annau is.”
“Annau?”
“Yeah, the city of Annau.”
Vaya sat up and regarded him, her dark eyes narrowed. “Why do you speak of an abode of the Old Gods? It is bad luck to do so.”
“Uh-huh. Well, look. Things are going to change around here. I realize that taboos are hard to overcome, but it simply has to be done if your people are going to have any future.”
She wrinkled her brow. “Future?”
“Sure. Do you want your people living in tents and scraping a living off this wasteland forever? You told me that every year the hunting is harder. Every year the tribe’s population shrinks a little. It’s a losing fight. That’s what happened to the Umoi when they tried to go the Whole Earth Catalog route. It was a dead end, and now they’re extinct.”
She shook her head. “You speak of many strange things. Forbidden things. You make me afraid, my husband.”
“Not to worry. Rub me right there. Yeah, that’s it.”
Her hands were soft. “But you are a great warrior.”
“You won’t get an argument from me.”
“You have killed more hrunt than all of my husbands combined. You have killed more than any yalim has ever killed.”
“Just applied some modern military tactics, is all.”
“One day you will kill all the hrunt and they will never again raid our camps or steal our food.”
“Right. Well, look, I’m no Stalin. I’m not out to exterminate the kulaks, or do anything like that. The hrunt …” Gene propped himself up on one elbow. “Look, there’s something you have to know about the hrunt. I’ve been researching this with Zond. And Zond says —”
“Is that the name of the spirit you converse with?”
“Uh, yeah. You see, the Umoi — the Old Gods — created both yalim and hrunt, but for different purposes. The hrunt were the field niggers, and the yalim were the … never mind. They were both servant classes, but the hrunt were created stupid so they wouldn’t mind working in deep mines or doing other dangerous stuff. But the real thing you should know is, hrunt are really just yalim who’ve been genetically altered a little bit.”
Vaya lay down, paralleling Gene, her long golden body radiant in the lamplight.
“Speak more of this to me, my husband.”
“Uh, yeah. Um … well, what that means is, a hrunt is really a yalim except for a few extra genes spliced into his DNA. They turn him ugly and change his body chemistry a little bit, but essentially he’s human. The thing is, once we get back into the cities, it won’t be any problem to snip those pesky genes out. We’d have to round up all the hrunt women, of course, and do some cell surgery….” Gene considered it. “Actually I guess the simplest solution would be sterilization, though that does have a totalitarian ring to it. But morally speaking, since hrunt are really just handicapped humans —” He trailed off into deep thought.
Presently he sat up. “Hey, guess what. Things aren’t simple even in fantasyland.”
“Things are never simple, my husband. It is not the way of the world.”
“Or the universe. Or universes.”
“You are a strange one, my husband. You came here speaking a strange tongue, wearing strange clothes, riding a chariot of the Old Gods. Yet you are a man. Are you a god as well?”
Gene raked his eye up and down Vaya’s exquisite body. “No. Just the best swordsman this side of Castle Perilous. And the luckiest guy in several worlds, I might add.”
She held out her arms. “Come to me, husband and lover.”
“Oy.”
Twenty-three
Island
Their house, sheltered by hill palms, had a beautiful view of the sea. A screened veranda jutted out to one side, and Sheila would sit there at all hours weaving baskets, mats, and other housewares. She liked watching waves break against the rocks and huge seabirds wheel in the sky.
The birds weren’t gulls; at least they didn’t look like sea gulls. They were eagle size but fatter, and they fished the waters of the lagoon. It was thrilling and a little frightening to watch them stoop, dive, and pluck a struggling fish out of the water, clutching their prey in great silver talons.
The weather was always beautiful. It rained sometimes at night, very softly, very soothingly on the thatched roof of their house. Trent told her that a monsoon season would come eventually, as this was standard procedure for tropical climes. But, then again, he didn’t know this world. Maybe the weather stayed fair all year long. Sheila hoped so.
After Trent finished the house, he spent his days building a raft. There was a reason for this.