He said, “Bram, you know why I judged you and Anne unfit to hold the Repair Center. I haven’t heard you say I was wrong. We could argue before Tunesmith and let him judge. Bram?”
Silence.
“Tunesmith, did you examine the skeleton?”
“Yes.”
“I’ve been calling him Cronus. Cronus was your ancestor. I think even Bram saw the implication. Cronus had eighty thousand falans to breed his genetic line toward the traits he wanted. He shaped an empire with communications that reach all the way around the Arch—”
“Ring. It’s a ring,” said Tunesmith.
“Cronus extended his breeding program through an area almost too vast to describe. The Night People must number tens of billions. They’re all one species, as the vampires are not. He shaped you to be ideal protectors.”
Tunesmith said, “I see possible improvements.”
“So? Bram here is a vampire protector. We have recordings of Bram in better health, and you’ll see them. You’re his clear superior. Bigger brain. More versatile. Less reflex, more choices. Bram?”
Bram said, “He beat me. Bigger brain? He was intelligent as a breeder, of course it’s bigger now. Louis, he knows nothing. Invaders threaten. You are obliged to train him!”
“I know, Bram—”
“Contract violation or no, you must teach him. Tunesmith, trust his intent, question his judgment. Learn from the Web Dweller but do not trust until he gives you a contract.”
Louis asked, “My turn?”
“Speak.”
“Tunesmith, protectors do immense damage when they fight. Bram and his mate fixed a problem, and the protectors in charge of the rim wall right now are a local spill mountain species. We need them there. I’ll show you why when we get—” The smell. “—get back to the ship.” It was tree-of-life. “Get me out of here, Tunesmith. I can’t stay here!”
“Louis Wu, you’re much too young to respond to the smell of the roots. It’s faint here, too.”
“I’m too old! The root would kill me!” Louis rolled to his knees. He couldn’t use his right arm—“Last time I smelled this I barely got away.” With Acolyte’s help he was on his feet, and he lurched toward the stepping disk.
He had beaten current addiction once. The tree-of-life smell had turned off his mind in a moment, but he had beaten that, too. It had been much stronger eleven years ago. Only a reformed current addict could have walked away from it.
A hand like a fistful of walnuts had his wrist. “Louis Wu, I heard him use three chords and I followed him through each time. One leads to traps and a weapons cache, one to a fall from the ceiling, and the last flicks us to where we fought. Whole fields of tree-of-life grow there, where an artificial sun—”
Louis began to laugh. The smell of tree-of-life was in his brain, and the way out led to where he had fought Teela Brown!
Tunesmith watched him. He said, “Too old, but something was done to you.”
Bram was trying to laugh. It sounded awful. “I saw records. Nanotechnology. Experiment stolen from Earth, stolen again, bought by General Products from a thief on Fafnir. It’s the puppeteer’s autodoc, Louis!” His voice wasn’t built for it and his lungs were collapsing, but he laughed. “Eighty falans, Louis. Ninety. No more. Remember me!”
Tunesmith and Acolyte were both looking at Louis Wu.
The scent was in his nose, but it wasn’t pulling him. His mind was his own. But that meant …
He told them, “I was very sick. The autodoc must have healed me very thoroughly. Changed everything. Every cell.” Bram was right. Twenty years, twenty-five tops.
“You could become a protector,” Tunesmith said.
“It’s only a choice.”
Bram was dead. Maybe a protector could will his heart to stop. His last words were suspiciously apt.
“It’s an option,” Louis repeated. The strength was draining out of him.
“You’re ill,” Tunesmith said.
The Kzin helped him lie down. Tunesmith’s knobby hands probed him. The portable medkit hadn’t magically healed anything. Tendons, mesentery, a hamstring. His shoulder was badly swollen around five deep puncture wounds. Tunesmith’s arm was worse, puffed out and immobile in a sling, but the protector ignored it.
“I don’t know your kind. I don’t think you can walk, and you may have a fever soon. Louis, what would you normally do for medicine?”
“Back to the ship. Into the ’doc. Heals everything.”
Tunesmith went away, taking the Kzin with him. They were back quickly. They lifted Louis and set him down again. He rose into the air, lying flat.
“This will carry you. Signal the magic door.”
The Ghoul protector had invented the stretcher? No, they’d gone for a cargo plate and rope to pull it. Louis said, “I can’t sing the Hindmost’s programming language.”
“We’re trapped?”
“Not quite.”
They set him down. Tunesmith said, “Louis, what shall I do to find my son?”
“Oh … tanj. I totally forgot Kazarp in all this. Would he hang around the Weavers? Does he have relatives in the area?”
“There were Night People with us when I flicked in. They can return him to his mother. My fear is that he may have followed me.”
“Aw, futz! No, wait, you’d smell him. Knowing your own gene line is built into your brain. Tunesmith, he’ll know me. Better send me. Don’t go yourself.”
“I would terrify him. Louis, shall I play random chords?”
“And test them how? Bram set traps. Tunesmith, we don’t need the stepping disks. I led us back to Needle once before, on foot, without the Hindmost’s help. Dug a tunnel. That’s still in place.”
“How long?”
“A few days. You’ll have to tow me. We’ll need water and food.”
“There’s water at the tree-of-life farm,” Tunesmith said. “Food—” He and Acolyte moved toward Bram’s body, and stopped. Tunesmith said, “I was taught that others should not see me eat.”
“He’s not yet carrion,” Acolyte said.
“My teacher’s friend, few there are who will discuss cuisine with the Night People, but I see you have an interest. We can eat the freshly dead. We often prefer it, but some are too tough at first, and this was a protector. I could put him on a second cargo plate and pull him along with a longer rope—”
“I’m hungry now, Tunesmith. I would not offend you by eating in your presence.”
“Take what you need.”
Louis turned his back on what happened next, but he couldn’t help grinning. The sounds told the story. A kzinti kitten must have to fight for his food. Now Acolyte was trying to wrench his hard-won portion from Bram’s body. Now he used his wtsai, thuk! and retreated with whatever that got him.
Tunesmith approached and settled cross-legged. “A child’s habits aren’t easily broken. Will Acolyte listen to me after this?”
“It’s a good start.”
“There is food for you, too, Louis Wu. I see no risk in your eating boiled tree-of-life root.”
The thought made him flinch, but, “Yams and sweet potatoes are nearly the same species. We roast them.”
“It means?”
“Build a fire. Put the roots in the coals where it’s not too hot.”
“We’ll find something to burn in the tree-of-life farm.” Tunesmith called toward sounds of grinding teeth and yowling rage. The Kzin was still trying to chew nourishment from the corpse of a protector. “Acolyte, there is prey in the tree-of-life farm. Little animals, and quick. I don’t think anyone but a Night People protector will ever eat Bram, and then not today.”
“Well, let me hunt, then!”
“You’ll need me to get back.” Tunesmith fluted, and they flicked away.
Tunesmith come back with an armful of yellow roots. “Acolyte hunts alone. I whistled in the return flick to use when he wants it.” He set the roots in the fire. “How do you like your water?”