"But why should they fear it-in a shielded truck?" Var asked.
"It won't stay in the truck. We'll bring it inside."
Var felt a shock of horror he knew the others shared. "Carry it? Without the poles?"
"Two people can do the job. And hold the pass for hours afterward. So two can escape, and reach the wilds and later the coast, and-"
"No!" Var and Soli cried together.
"I did mention fifty per cent casualties," the Nameless One replied. "Perhaps you youngsters have become softened by civilized life. Have you any illusions what it would mean to fall into the hands of Ch'in's men now? We shall surely do so if we do not escape this region promptly. Already the dogs must have been unleashed-and those hounds are not gentle either. Sol and I have met a few in our business." -
Var knew he was right. The gladiators were better equipped to face reality and to take the prospect of torture and death in stride. They had to get through the pass, and they could not do so by bluff. They were known now, and their crime was known, and these soldiers were tough and disciplined. No appeal would move them, no ruse confound them, no empty threat cow them. Nothing short of artillery would dislodge them . . . except radiation.
"Who escapes?" Soli asked in a small voice.
"You do," the Master said brusquely. "And one to guard you."
"Who?" Soli asked again.
"One close to you. One you' trust. One you love." A pause, then: "Not me."
That left two to choose from, Var saw. Himself and Sol. He understood what was necessary. "Her father."
"Sol," the Master said quickly.
Sol, being voiceless, did not say anything.
So it was decided. Var felt cold all through, knowing he was going to die, and not swiftly. His skin would warn him of radiation, but could not protect him otherwise. He survived it by avoiding it, where others received fatal dosages unawares. If he touched one of those stones-Yet there was a morbid satisfaction in it too. He had never asked for more than the right to live and die beside the Master. Now he would do so. And Soli would be saved, and her father would guard her, as he had before. They would return to America, to the land of true solace, land of the circle code. He felt a tremendous nostalgia for it, for its courtesies and combats, even for the crazy crazies.
That was what meant most to Var: that Soli be safe and happy and home. That was what he had really tried, so unsuccessfully, to arrange for her before. A safe, happy home.
He would die thinking of her, loving her.
The challenge point came into sight. Metal bars closed off the road. As the truck stopped before them, other bars dropped behind, powered by a massive winch. "Dismount!" the guard bellowed from his interior tower.
The four got down and lined up before the truck.
"That's the girl!" the guard cried. "Ch'in's bride, the foreign piece!"
The Master turned-and suddenly a bow was in his hands, an arrow nocked, loosed, swishing up-and the tower guard collapsed silently, the missile through his windpipe.
Now was the time to pick up the rocks. Var stepped toward the back, girding himself for the flashing pain of contact-and the Master's huge hand fell on his arm. Var stumbled back, bewildered. Then he was shoved brusquely forward.
At the same time Sol whirled on his daughter, grasping her by the upper arms and lifting her bodily before him. She and Var met face to face, involuntarily, each held from behind. The Master's hand clapped down on Var's wrist, twisting off the bracelet. Sol reached out to take it and shove it on to Soli's wrist and squeeze it tight. Then Var and Soli were dropped, clutching at each other to keep from falling.
As they disengaged and righted themselves, they saw that Sol and the Nameless One had already grabbed hot stones. The two men leaped for either side of the grating, climbing rapidly with the deadly stones tucked into their waistbands. That was a talent the Master had not had before! They were at the top by the time the other guards discovered what had happened.
The Master hurled a stone toward a panel. "Listen!" he bellowed. Var heard the fevered chatter of crazy-type click boxes, the screams of amazement and fear.
The Master began to crank up the forward grill. Var saw the counterweights descending, the road opening ahead.
"Drive!" the Master shouted down. Var obeyed unthinkingly. He scrambled into the driver's seat, Soli into the other. The motor was running; it had never been turned off, he realized only now. The Master had planned every detail.
As the gate cleared, he nudged out. The top of the cab scraped the bars; then they were free.
As he started down the north slope, Var heard the portcullis crash behind. The Master had let it, drop suddenly. Probably he had cut the counterweight-rope, so that the barrier could not be lifted again without tedious repairs. There would be no vehicle pursuit.
Safely away from the fortress, Var braked the truck. "This isn't right," he said, recovering equilibrium. "I should be back there-"
"No," she said. "This is the way they meant it to be."
"But Soli-"
"Vara," she said.
Var stared at the gold band on her wrist, realizing what it meant. "But I didn't-"
"Yes, you did," she said, pretending to misunderstand. "Back on New Crete, by Minos' cave. And you will again, tonight. With more art, I trust. And then we shall go back to America and tell them what we know: that we have the best social system in the world, and dare not destroy it through empire. Helicon must be rebuilt, the nomads must disband, the guns must be abolished. We shall go to the crazy demesnes and tell them, my husband."
"Yes," he said, seeing it clearly at last.
Then, remembering the valiant sacrifice of her two fathers, Vara fell against him and sobbed, the little girl again.
"They die together-friends," Var said. And that was true, but it was scant comfort.