The City Outside the World
Lin Carter
I
Flight from Yeolarn
1. The Girl with the Golden Eyes
They were hunting him.
You can’t stay alive on Mars for very long without developing a sixth sense for such things. And Ryker had stayed alive.
It was nothing obvious or overt the hunters did which caught his attention. They were too wise in the art of manhunting to blunder or expose themselves; no, it was nothing like that.
It was a matter of many small, trifling things. The sound of a footstep in an alley he had believed empty. A shadow against the wall, gone when he glanced at it. A tingle at the back of his neck that told him unseen eyes were watching.
They had been hunting him for a long time, he knew.
And now they were closing in… .
Ryker growled a curse under his breath: he had been hunted before, and knew the feeling well. Not that he liked it much.
The worse thing was not that men were after him. That much he could handle, he thought, balling his heavy hands into scarred fists and hunching his broad shoulders so that the great ropes of muscles stood out on his bronzed bare forearms like cables of woven copper wire. No, being hunted did not worry him.
The thing was, he didn’t know why.
Whenever Ryker came in from the Dustlands to the city, he usually holed up in the native quarter across the old canal. You could live cheap there, if you could stay alive, and one thing was sure: the CA cops couldn’t find you, even if they tried.
Cops never go into the Old City of Yeolarn if they can help it. And when they can’t help it, well, they don’t live long once the narrow walls and shadowy alleyways of the ancient town have closed about them, cutting them off from the bright steel-and-plastic sprawl of the New City across the waterway.
Ryker grinned briefly, baring white teeth in a dark, scarred face. He hated the cops, hated them more than the natives did, he often thought. And that was a lot of hate.
Yeolarn is built like this: on one side of the canal the old-time astronomers back Earthside had named Hydraotes, the New City rises, all chrome and neon and multicolored plastic. It is by way of being the capital of Mars; at least that’s where the Colonial Administration has its central offices. In the New City live the men and women from Earth—bankers,clerks, accountants, civil and military personnel, doctors, nurses, bureaucrats. In neat rows of prefab, airsealed bungalows, sanitized and sterilized and pressurized, holding the thin, bitter air and the soft, cold dust of old Mars at arm’s length.
On the further side of the canal, the Old City rises. It was already old when they laid the cornerstone of Babylon, old when Pharoah’s engineers cleared away the sand to start building the Great Pyramid, old before the ice came down over Europe. When Yeolarn was young the British Isles were still attached to the continent, and our ancestors wore furs, wandered the world-wide forests, had yet to domesticate the dog or invent fire.
Old—that was Yeolarn. Old beyond our thoughts or dreams. Older by a million years and more than Mohenjo-dara, Ur of the Chaldees, or Jericho. The ages had marched over its squat, nine-sided towers and flattened domes and sleek walls of terracotta-colored native marble, smoothing the sharp edges, wearing the newness away. As house or shrine, temple or palace, slumped into decay under the slow march of the millenia, they were tamped down, and new structures were raised above their dead ruins like tombstones. Yeolarn had been built and rebuilt so many times that it was by now a trackless maze of zigzag alleys, a warren of windowless blind walls, a labyrinth in which a man could hide forever.
When Ryker first stumbled on the fact that he was being watched and followed, he assumed it was the CA cops. It was only a logical assumption, given his record. Gun-running, smuggling, aircar-theft, these were only the more innocuous of the crimes listed in his dossier. So it was natural that his first thought was that the cops were dogging his steps.
That was his first mistake.
So he doubled his tracks, left a few scraps of gear and clothing in the cheap dockside room he had rented, and slunk by furtive, secret ways into the Old City.
That was his second mistake.
Once he had doubled back and forth through the maze of dark, crooked alleys and put himself beyond the ability of the most sharp-nosed of cops to find, he headed across the city towards the old Bazaar of the Lions, bound for the wineshop of Kammu Jha, his favorite joy-house.
That was his third mistake, and it was very nearly fatal.
The public room of the wineshop was long and low ceilinged and roofed with slabs of stone. At one end of the hall gaped the yawning mouth of a huge fireplace, carved out of worn gray stone into the likeness of a dragon’s fanged and grinning jaws. Along one wall ran benches.
Small tables stood scattered about in helter-skelter fashion. There was no bar: serving boys fetched orders of wine or ale or the Martian equivalent of brandy from kegs hung on the walls of a back room.
In the stone fireplace, coiled on the flat of the dragon’s granite tongue, danced flame. Flame sprung from no ordinary fuel, for coal and wood were rare and precious beyond the dreams of avarice here on this cooling desert world. No, this flame leaped from a flat metal dish like an ewer. Therein lay pooled the ice-green fluid the Martian people call hiyawa ziu: “mother of fire.” This strange chemical burns like thermite or phosphorus, but slowly, yielding a tremendous store of heat. The People distill it from a porous mineral called ziuaht, “firestone.”
The room was full of men.
A score or more crouched on the long benches, or sat, hunched with tension, motionless at the tables. They were natives one and all, with the red-copper hide and oblique amber-green eyes of their kind. Under shaven brows, their faces were lean and hard and wolfish. Rings of tooled bronze or beaten copper clasped throat, wrist, biceps. Kiltlike skirts of faded leather shielded belly and thighs; some of these were worked with tartanlike patterns of cross-hatched lines which were the tribal bearings of their nations. Others, however, wore their leather plain, which denoted them as aoudhha: “the clanless,” men without kin—outlaws, or outcasts, or both.
They paid no attention to Ryker as he came into the wineshop. That was because their attention was rivetted upon the girl who danced before them in an open space. The girl who coiled and glided like the flame that danced upon the stony dragon’s tongue that was the hearth.
When Ryker saw her, his attention was seized, too.
She was naked, except for a single strap of gilded leather that hung down before her loins. Her body was slim and lean and tawny, sinuous as a panther’s, and as golden. That rare, pale gold that denotes on Mars the pure breeding of the princely houses of the High Clans.
Her hair was a banner of black silk, floating on the spicy, hot breath of the fire. Her breasts were shallow, rounded, firm, like lustrous, pale fruit. As she danced, moving her loins and torso alone, her feet all but motionless on the pave, her arms were thrust skyward and slightly back, curved at the wrists, held moveless.
She danced—if the writhing undulation could be named with so mundane a verb—with her belly and her breasts and her buttocks.
Ryker sucked in one long breath, and held it until the blood drummed in his temples. His pale and colorless eyes burned coldly from the dark leathern mask of his face. Never had he seen or imagined a dance so rawly savage, yet so exquisitely sensual.
She danced like ripples of moonfire riding the black waters of the old canals; like pattering leaves driven by a moaning and restless wind aprowl through an abandoned courtyard. Her flesh—crawled. Her bare breasts panted. Her belly and loins swung in a slow, undulating spiral that was naked invitation.