Journey - Book II of the Five Worlds Trilogy (13 page)

Read Journey - Book II of the Five Worlds Trilogy Online

Authors: Al Sarrantonio

Tags: #Science Fiction

“There’s nothing else
on
this frozen rock!” Gilgesh protested, before activating the lock on the outer door and running to the porthole to see who was there to waste his time.

Two figures shrouded in visored climate suits confronted him; the larger of the two began to raise a hand in greeting before Gilgesh cut him off.

“Go away! We’re closed for the day!” he snapped. The two, obviously stupid tourists, did not budge. “Are you deaf? I said leave! Go to the hotel and sit by the fireplace! Spend money in the gift shop! Come back tomorrow!”

Still they stood staring at him, faces unseen.

A brief chill drew through Gilgesh Khan, making even his ancient Khan’s blood freeze: could these two be advance guards for Wrath-Pei himself?

To find out: “Don’t you know that Wrath-Pei is due here today? We’re closed, I tell you!”

That got a reaction, and a good one, from the pair: instantly the larger one turned, pulling the shorter one after him, and they made their way out of the lock, leaving it open behind them.

Though secretly pleased at their alarmed reaction, Gilgesh was also angry:

“Stupid tourists! No discount for you tomorrow!” he shouted after them, activating the closing of the lock from where he stood. No one had any common courtesy anymore.…

But even as the lock closed, Gilgesh Khan turned from the door to fret once more over the items on his desk and to tap again at the ever-so-slightly askew testimonial on the wall behind his desk.

“Why me? Why now?”

 

C
liffs, Shatz Abel reached out a hand to stop Dalin Shar in his tracks.

“We don’t have much time,” Shatz Abel said grimly.

“Why?” Dalin answered. Though he couldn’t see the pirate’s eyes through the darkened visor, he nevertheless turned in the big man’s direction. “And why didn’t you ask Khan’s help?” A note of sarcasm crept into the king’s voice. “I thought you two were ‘tight as tigers’ in the old days.”

Ignoring the king’s tone, Shatz Abel answered, “We were tight, but Gilgesh is about as seaworthy as a sieve. If he knew we were here, Wrath-Pei would soon know it, too.” The anger that surfaced when Shatz Abel articulated Wrath-Pei’s name was evident.

“But what about his ship? I thought—”

“We’ll have to stick with Weems a bit longer, as little as I like it,” Shatz Abel said. “And the sooner we get to doing it, the sooner we get off this waste of a moon.”

Without another word Shatz Abel turned toward the hotel once more; in a moment, Dalin Shar, throwing up his hands in resignation, followed.

 

S
till fussing with his office bric-a-brac, Gilgesh Khan was startled to hear the audio monitor on his wall Screen come to life.

“Is anybody home?” a voice said lightly.

“Who is that?” Khan shouted back into the monitor; at the same time he ran to the window, straining to see up the sharp face of Canton Cliff. “Don’t you know the ride is closed? Get out of there immed—”

The last word turned into a gag in his throat as he caught a glimpse of a monstrous wedge-shaped ship, as long as Canton Cliff was high, hovering over the top of the ridge.

Wrath-Pei’s chuckle filtered through the Screen’s audio. “Why, Khan! Is that any way to greet an old friend? Do come up and say hello.”

“Yes, of course,” Gilgesh croaked out. Already he was fumbling for his climate suit, climbing into it backward before discovering his mistake and pulling it off to try again.

All the while muttering, “Why me?”

 

T
he ride up was not pleasant for Gilgesh Khan.

The ride’s owners had insisted that the elevator to carry customers to the cliff’s summit not only be spacious but that it be nearly invisible. Made of quality quartz glass, the elevator was little more than a soap bubble in which its passengers felt as if they were riding on air.

Most customers loved it; but Gilgesh, being afraid not only of heights but of upward movement (two facts which he had judiciously kept from the owners, since he very much needed the job at the time) hated the elevator with a passion. This hate was only superseded by his loathing for the ride itself; he made sure that his hirelings did as much of the maintenance at the apex as possible, leaving Gilgesh to fret about the much more important matters of cash receipts and promotion—two endeavors that could be carried out very easily at ground level.

So tightly were his eyes closed, in fact, that Gilgesh did not even realize that the elevator had reached the top of the cliffs until he felt a gentle hand on his shoulder and snapped open his eyes to peer into the crystal-clear visor of Wrath-Pei’s climate suit and see the delightedly smiling face of Wrath-Pei himself.

“Khan!” Wrath-Pei said, releasing the proprietor from his grip one uncurling finger at a time before settling back into his gyro chair. “So nice to see you again!”

As always, Wrath-Pei was dressed with impeccable, if chilling, taste: his climate suit, jet-black, was form fitting and seamless to the tips of his gloves; his helmet, save for the clear faceplate, was ebony also, and sculpted to mimic Wrath-Pei’s swept-back lionine mane of silver hair. The effect was startling.

Trying not to shiver, and trying most of all not to stare at the holster secured at the side of Wrath-Pei’s gyro chair like a scabbard, Khan bowed at the waist and stuttered, “And n-nice to s-see you, t-too, Your G-G-Grace!”

Wrath-Pei clapped his hands in delight. His protégé Lawrence, standing a few paces behind the chair, took a tentative, creaking step forward before resuming his silent position. Gilgesh noted that the boy was somewhat shorter than at their last meeting; bile churned from his stomach into his throat when he saw the blunt lines at the boy’s thighs that delineated real flesh from artificial limb. “H-how may I serve you, Your Grace?” Gilgesh Khan said, wanting only for the interview to be over.

Wrath-Pei, still immersed in delight, turned his eyes from Gilgesh to take in the land- and skyscape around him. Hypnotized like a cobra, Khan’s eyes followed. Beyond the profile of Wrath-Pei’s ship, outlined against the diamond-on-black-velvet of starry space, sat Jupiter like a fat red pumpkin. The horrid crimson swirls of its Great Red Spot were just heaving into view, surrounded by a thousand other variegated storms and fault lines. At the horizon, the contrast of ebon space with white ice was startling; a far line of cliffs smaller than Canton stood like blunt teeth biting at the deep heavens. There had been vague talk about developing those other cliffs into further amusement rides, or the possibility of the exploitation of Europa’s huge ocean, sixty feet below the icy surface.

Suddenly Gilgesh Khan was filled with excitement: could this be why Wrath-Pei was here? Could this be about money?

Gilgesh’s confidence replaced his fear in an instant. Now he was on terra firma. If there was cash to be made, Khan would be involved. Perhaps Wrath-Pei had taken over the present ride and had come to introduce himself as the new owner. Or perhaps he really was here to present new plans—for new - amusement rides, a new hotel, even a theme park! Oh, joy! Oh, money!

“Your Grace, you are here—”

“I am here for two reasons,” Wrath-Pei said, with sudden detachment. The tyrant’s sight had fallen and stayed on the line of autochutes lined like obedient dogs at the edge of Canton cliff. Beside them was the tall credit machine, the lone sentry of commerce, which allowed customers to release one of the chutes from its locked mooring, don it, and leap from the titanium ledge perched like a pirate ship’s plank against the top of the cliff. Exactly eleven-point-eight minutes later the chute would automatically activate, ending the ride.

“Is it … fun?” Wrath-Pei asked idly.

“I wouldn’t know, Your Grace,” Gilgesh said, impatient to discuss the tyrant’s plans and reasons. “I’ve never been down.”

“No?” Wrath-Pei said, turning to study Khan.

“As to your reasons—”

“Yes, my reasons for being here,” Wrath-Pei said. “As I said, there are two. First and foremost, I need this ice ball as a defensive station against Prime Cornelian. I am therefore claiming it in the name of me, and closing your facility, including the hotel, forthwith.”

Shock replaced both fear and anticipation in Gilgesh Khan. “But Your Grace—”

“Second, and also important, I am looking for an old friend of yours, Shatz Abel, who I’m sure has come to you for help.”

Gilgesh Khan, dumbfounded, and beginning to feel fear again, sputtered, “I have not seen—”

“I’m sure he has come to you. I know he is on Europa, and there is nowhere else for him to go. He had an impudent pup who fancies himself king of Earth with him.”

“Dalin Shar?” Khan said in wonder.

“Yes. When did they come to see you?”

“But they have not been here! They have not—”

“In the old days,” Wrath-Pei said, “I overlooked your alliance with Shatz Abel because it did not matter. Suddenly it matters.”

“But I assure you—”

“Lawrence,” Wrath-Pei said, turning slightly in his seat to confront his ward, “please secure an auto-chute for Khan.”

Walking like a man on stilts, the young man went to the credit machine; in a moment there was a loud click, and one of the autochutes unsnicked from its mooring and flipped onto the ice, waiting.

Wrath-Pei looked at the chute. “Put it on, Khan.”

Gilgesh, quaking with fear, said, “Your Grace, I implore you!”

“Don’t implore. Just do what I say.”

Trembling, Gilgesh retrieved the autochute and secured it, pulling the straps tight across his front. It occurred to him that though he had helped countless foolish tourists with this procedure, this was the first time he had ever actually mounted one of the devices himself.

“Now jump,” Wrath-Pei said, indicating the titanium plank jutting out into nothingness.

“I cannot!”

“Of course you can, Khan,” Wrath-Pei said.

In a moment the tyrant’s chair had whirred into motion, and Wrath-Pei hovered beside Khan, at eye level. A gentle hand was once again placed on his shoulder, urging him forward.

“Jump,” Wrath-Pei said.

“I canno—”

The murderously cold look on Wrath-Pej’s face spurred Khan into action, and he stumbled forward, moaning, to the plank’s beginning, and then, step by edging step, to its end, where all of Europa seemed to hang below him in dizzying white splendor.

“Ohhhhhhhh …”

“Now jump.”

After giving Wrath-Pei the briefest look, Gilgesh Khan did so.

He fell, into splendid nothingness

-and found, to his amazement, that his vertigo was gone!

A thrilling ecstasy filled Gilgesh Khan. Behind him, the vertical face of Canton Cliffs glided slowly past, as if in a dream. The wall was pocked with ridges and icy depressions that resolved themselves into pictures. Gilgesh had sold 3-D Screen views of these anomalies, but had never appreciated their beauty: the Smiling Clown, its face naturally etched in ice; the Rocket, a natural formation in the shape of a Martian cruiser; the infant, and all the others.

And here now were other marks on the ice—manmade graffiti etched by clever parachutists working vertically in a deft fight against gravity: “Mark Loves Ang-Frei,” “Choi Lives!” and “Lem-jam Was Here.”

As mesmerized as he was by his slow-motion fall, Gilgesh turned to face away from the cliff.

He felt suspended in space. There was the Europa Hotel in the distance, its green spires rising like emerald fingers from a blanket of white ice. And beyond it, all of Europa outlined now against the massive limb of Father Jupiter, King of Planets, its red, orange, and cream bands like a dream in the sky!

How could he have missed this wonderful attraction, this marvelous ride, for so long?

Each day, from now on, he would begin with a ride down Canton Cliff, the “Greatest Attraction in the Solar System,” to renew his sense of wonder!

And now Gilgesh looked down and saw the ground rising slowly up to meet him. How long had it been? Six minutes? Eight? In only a matter of minutes now he would reach bottom, the slow journey down nevertheless having imparted enough velocity to his mass to crush him like an egg but for the opening of his chute—

His chute—

It was now that Gilgesh Khan, long-separated descendant of Genghis Khan, who had proof of that blood bond, remembered what he had seen in that last brief glimpse back at Wrath-Pei before he had leaped.

What had he seen:

Wrath-Pei, resheathing his razor-sharp snips in their holster next to his chair.

And, in Wrath-Pei’s other hand, the severed straps of Gilgesh’s autochute; while, on the ground, the packed mass of the chute itself lay unrolling.

To confirm his fate, Gilgesh Khan reached around to feel nothing strapped to his back.

The flat shelf of ice at the bottom of Carlton Cliff rose inevitably up.

Gilgesh opened his mouth to scream—but something far down and ancient in his genes stayed his terror and steeled him.

He glared at the approaching ground with defiance.

And Gilgesh Khan, ruler of no empire save his approaching death, opened his arms wide to meet it as that other Khan would have.

 

Chapter 15

 

T
he hotel desk clerk cowered beneath Shatz Abel’s towering, rage-filled form.

“He
what?”
The pirate bellowed, as the frightened clerk tried to meekly wave something up at him from where he crouched behind his desk.

“C-c-captain Weems said to give this to you, sir,” the clerk said, thrusting a data card up at Shatz Abel; the pirate’s rage was only intensified when he saw that the hotel bill was attached to the card.

“That
worm!”
Shatz Abel fumed, but the clerk had already skittered away on all fours, as Dalin Shar tried to pull the pirate away from the desk and calm him down.

“Don’t you realize we’re surrounded by Wrath-Pei’s men?” Dalin whispered fiercely in the freebooter’s ear; already, two of the black-leather-clad figures, clustered at the small bar across the lobby, had glanced their way, and Dalin was certain they would be recognized if Shatz Abel’s antics continued. It was hard enough for Dalin to keep his hood over his eyes. “At least let’s see what Weems has to say,” Dalin continued, pulling the pirate away from the desk and toward the nearest lift tube.

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