Read The Godmakers Online

Authors: Frank Herbert

Tags: #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General

The Godmakers (7 page)

"It's too bad you formed your opinion of us by observing the low grades of R&R," Orne said.

"Easy, easy," Stetson cautioned. "Don't pick a fight now. Remember he's arboreal, probably as strong as an ape."

"You ground-crawling slave," Tanub grated. "I could kill you where you sit."

"You kill your entire planet if you do," Orne said. "I'm not alone, Tanub.

Others listen to every word we say. There's a ship above us that could split open your planet with one bomb -- wash everything with molten rock. Your planet would run like the glass of your buildings. Your entire planet would be one big piece of ceramic."

"You lie!"

"I'll make you an offer," Orne said. "We don't want to exterminate you. We won't unless you force our hand. Well give you limited membership in the Galactic Federation until you've proven you're no menace to other . . ."

"You dare insult me," Tanub growled.

"You'd better believe me," Orne said. "We --"

Stetson's voice interrupted: "Got it, Orne! They caught the Delphinus in a tight little mountain valley right where you said it'd be! Blew the tubes off it. We're mopping up now."

"It's like this, Tanub," Orne said. "We've already recaptured the Delphinus."

Tanub's gaze darted skyward. He returned his attention to Orne. "Impossible.

We have your communications equipment and there has been no signal. The lights of our city still glow and you will not . . ."

"You've only the inferior R&R equipment," Orne said, "not what we use in the I-A. Your people kept silent up there until it was too late. It's their way, not that . . ."

Stetson demanded: "How'd you know that?"

Orne ignored Stetson, said: "Except for the captured armament you still hold, you obviously don't have the weapons to meet us, Tanub. Otherwise you wouldn't be carrying that rifle off the Delphinus."

"If this is truth, then we shall die bravely," Tanub said.

"No need," Orne said. "We don't . . ."

"I cannot take the chance that you lie," Tanub said. "I must kill you."

Orne's foot on the air sled control pedal kicked downward. The sled shot upward, heavy G's pressing its occupants into their seats. The gun was slammed into Tanub's lap. He struggled to raise it.

For Orne, the weight still remained only about twice that of his native Chargon. He reached over, removed the rifle from Tanub's grasp, found safety belts, bound the Gienahn with them. Then Orne eased off on the acceleration.

Tanub stared at him in teeth-bared fear.

"We don't need slaves," Orne said. "We have machines to do most of our work.

We'll send experts in here, teach you how to get into better balance with your planet, how to build good transportation, how to mine your minerals, how to .

. ."

"And what do we do in return?" Tanub whispered. He appeared cowed by Orne's strength.

"You could start by teaching us to make superior ceramics," Orne said. As he spoke, a series of formative thoughts fled through his awareness -- the peace-keeping function of the marketplace, the deliberate despecialization of manufacture with one village making the head of the hoe and the next village making the handle, the psychological security of guilds and castes . . .

Almost as an afterthought, he said: "I hope you see things our way. We truly don't want to have to come down here and clean you out -- although now we see that we could. But it'd be profoundly disturbing to us if we had to blast your city and send you back into the jungle for places to bear your young."

Tanub wilted. "The city," he whispered. Presently, he said: "Send me to my people. I will discuss what I have learned with . . . our . . . council." He stared at Orne and there was respect in his manner. "You I-A's are too strong

. . . too strong. We did not suspect this."

Because the earliest Psi sensations came upon mankind from the unknown, primitive emotional associations with Psi were those of fear and the maya projection of false realities, of incubi and witches and warlocks and sabbats.

These associations are bred into us and our kind has a strong tendency to recapitulate the old mistakes.

-- HALMYRACH, ABBOD OF AMEL, Psi and Religion

In the wardroom of Stetson's scout cruiser, the lights were low, the chairs comfortable and close to a green-beige table set with crystalate glasses and a decanter of dark Hochar brandy.

Orne lifted his glass, sipped the liquor. He said: "For a while there I thought I'd never again be tasting anything as lovely as this."

Stetson poured a glass of the brandy for himself, said: "ComGo heard the whole thing over the monitor net. D'you know you've been breveted to senior fieldman?"

"They've recognized my sterling worth at last," Orne said. As he spoke, he found the bantering lightness of his own words disturbing. He tried to recapture an elusive memory -- something about primitive gardening, about tools . . .

A wolfish grin spread over Stetson's big features. "Senior fieldmen last about half as long as the juniors," he said. "Very high mortality."

"I might've known," Orne said. He took another sip of the brandy, his thoughts going to the fate of the Gienahns, of the Hamalites: military occupation. Call it I-A necessity, call it preventative surveillance -- it still spelled control-by-force.

Stetson flicked the switch of his cruiser's master recorder system, said:

"Let's get it on record."

"Where do you want me to start?"

"Who authorized you to offer the Gienahns limited membership in the Galactic Federation?"

"It seemed like a good idea at the time."

"But junior fieldmen do not originate such offers."

"ComGo objects?"

"ComGo was telling me to authorize it when you jumped the gun. They weren't on your net, were they?"

"No . . . no, they weren't."

"Tell me, Orne, how'd you tumble to where they'd hidden the Delphinus? We'd already made a quick scan of the moon and it didn't seem possible they'd try to hide it up there."

"It had to be there. Tanub's word for his people was Grazzi. Most sentients call themselves something meaning 'The People.' But in his tongue, that's Ocheero. There was no such word as Grazzi on our translation list. I started working on it. There had to be a conceptual superstructure here with direct relationship to the animal shape, to the animal characteristics -- just as there is with us. I felt that if I could get at the conceptual models for their communication, I had them. I was working under life-and-death pressure and, strangely, it was their lives and their deaths that concerned me."

"Yes, yes, get on with it," Stetson said.

"One step at a time," Orne chided. "But on solid ground. By that time, I knew quite a bit about the Gienahns. They had wild enemies in the jungle, creatures much like themselves who lived in what might be enviable freedom.

Grazzi. Grazzi. I wondered if it might not be a word adopted from another language. What if it meant 'enemy'?"

"I don't see where this is leading," Stetson said.

"It is leading us to the Delphinus."

"That . . . that word told you where the Delphinus was?"

"No, but it fitted the creature pattern of the Gienahns. I'd felt from our first contact that the Gienahns might have a culture similar to that of the Indians on ancient Terra."

"You mean with castes and devil worship, that sort of thing?"

"Not those Indians. The Amerinds, the aborigines of wilderness America."

"What made you suspect this?"

"They came at me like a primitive raiding party. The leader dropped right onto the rotor hood of my sled. It was an act of bravery, nothing less than counting coup."

"Counting what?"

"Challenging me in a way that put the challenger in immediate peril. Making me look silly."

"I'm not tracking on this, Orne."

"Be patient; we'll get there."

"To how you learned where they'd secreted the Delphinus?"

"Of course. You see, this leader, this Tanub identified himself immediately as High Path Chief. That wasn't on our translation list either. But it was easy: Raider Chief. There's a word in almost every language in our history to mean, 'raider' and deriving from a word for road or path or highway."

"Highwayman," Stetson said.

"'Raid' itself," Orne said. "It's a corruption of an ancient human word for road."

"Yeah, yeah, but where'd all this . . ."

"We're almost home, Stet. Now, what'd we know about them at this point?

Glassblowing culture. Everything pointed to the assumption that they were recently emerged from the primitive. They played into our hands then by telling us how vulnerable their species survival was -- dependent upon the high city in the sunlight."

"Yeah, we got that up here. It meant we could control them."

"Control's a bad word, Stet. But we'll skip it for now. You want to know about the clues in their animal shape, their language and all the rest of it.

Very well: Tanub said their moon was Chiranachuruso. Translation: 'The Limb of Victory.' When I had that, it all fell into place."

"I don't see how."

"The vertical slit pupils of their eyes."

"What's that mean?"

"It means night-hunting predator accustomed to dropping upon its prey from above. No other type of creature has ever had the vertical slit in its light sensors. And Tanub said the Delphinus was hidden in the best place in all of their history. For that to track, the hiding place had to be somewhere high, very high. Likewise, dark. Put it together: a high place on the dark side of Chiranachuruso, on 'The Limb of Victory.'"

"I'm a pie-eyed greepus," Stetson whispered.

Orne grinned at him. "I won't agree with you . . . sir. The way I feel right now, if I said it, you might turn into a greepus. I've had enough nonhuman associates for a while."

"It is by death that life is known," the Abbod said. "Without the eternal presence of death there can be no awareness, no ascendancy of consciousness, no withdrawal from the gridded symbols into the void-without-background."

-- ROYALI's Religion for Everyone, conversations with the Abbod They called it the Sheleb Incident, Stetson noted, and were happy that the I-A suffered only one casualty. He thought of this as his scout cruiser brought the one casualty back to Marak. A conversation with the casualty kept coming back to him.

"Senior fieldmen last about half as long as the juniors. Very high mortality."

Stetson uttered a convoluted Prjado curse.

The medics said there was no hope of saving the field agent rescued from Sheleb. The man was alive only by an extremely limited definition. The life and the definition depended entirely upon the womblike crechepod which had taken over most of his vital functions.

Stetson's ship stood starkly in the morning light of Marak Central/Medical Receiving, the casualty still aboard waiting for hospital pickup.

A label on the crechepod identified the disrupted flesh inside as having belonged to an identity called Lewis Orne. His picture in the attached folder showed a blocky, heavy-muscled redhead with off-center features and the hard flesh of a heavy planet native. The flesh in the pod bore little resemblance to the photo, but even in the flaccid repose of demideath, Orne's unguent-smeared body radiated a bizarre aura.

Whenever he moved close to the pod, Stetson sensed power within it and cursed himself for going soft and metaphysical. He had no theory system to explain the feeling, thus dismissed it with a notation in his mind to consult the Psi Branch of the I-A just in case. Likely nothing in it . . . but just in case.

There'd be a Psi officer at the medical center.

A crew from the medical center took delivery on the crechepod and Orne as soon as they got port clearance.

Stetson, moving in his own shock and grief, resented the way the medical crew worked with such casual and cold efficiency. They obviously accepted the patient more as a curiosity than anything else. The crew chief, signing the manifest, noted that Orne had lost one eye, all the hair on that side of his head -- the left side as noted in the pod manifest -- had suffered complete loss of lung function, kidney function, five inches of the right femur, three fingers of "the left hand, about one hundred square centimeters of skin on back and thigh, the entire left kneecap and a section of jawbone and teeth on the left side.

The pod instruments showed that Orne had been in terminal shock for a bit over one hundred and ninety elapsed hours.

"Why'd you bother with the pod?" a medic asked.

"Because he's alive!"

The medic pointed to an indicator on the pod. "This patient's vital tone is too low to permit operative replacement of damaged organs or the energy drain for regrowth. He'll live for a while because of the pod, but . . ." And the medic shrugged.

"But he is alive," Stetson insisted.

"And we can always pray for a miracle," the medic said.

Stetson glared at the man, wondering if that had been a sneering remark, but the medic was staring into the pod through the tiny observation port.

The medic straightened presently, shook his head. "We'll do what we can, of course," he said.

They shifted the pod to a hospital flitter then and skimmed off toward one of the gray monoliths which ringed the field.

Stetson returned to his cruiser's office, an added droop to his shoulders that accentuated his usual slouching stance. His overlarge features were drawn into ridges of sorrow. He slumped into his desk chair, looked out the open port beside him. Some four hundred meters below, the scurrying beetlelike activity of the main port sent up discordant roarings and clatterings. Two rows of other scout cruisers stood in lines just outside the medical receiving area -- gleaming red and black needles. Part of the buzzing activity down there would be ground control getting ready to shift his cruiser into that waiting array of ships.

How many of them stopped first in this area to offload casualties? Stetson wondered.

It bothered him that he didn't possess this information. He stared at the other ships without really seeing them, seeing only the dangling flesh, the red gaps in Orne's body as it had been when they'd transferred him from Sheleb's battered soil to the crechepod.

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