Authors: Roger Zelazny
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure
Sleep is best. . . .
I might say that if our party had taken the long way from Lamia to Volos-the coastal road-the whole thing might never have happened the way that it did, and Phil might be alive today. But I can't really judge all that occurred in this case; even now, looking back, I can't say how I'd rearrange events if it were all to be done over again. The forces of final disruption were already goosestepping amidst the ruins, arms upraised. .. .
We made it to Volos the following afternoon, and on up Mount Pelion to Portaria. Across a deep ravine lay Makrynitsa.
We crossed over and found the others.
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Phil had guided them to Makrynitsa, asked for a bottle of wine and his copy of Prometheus Unbound, and had sat up with the two, well into the evening.
In the morning, Diane had found him smiling, and cold.
I built him a pyre amidst the cedars near the ruined Episcopi, because he did not want to be buried. I heaped it with incense, with aromatic herbs, and it was twice the height of a man. That night it would burn and I would say goodbye to another friend. It seems, looking back, that my life has mainly been a series of arrivals and departures.
I say "hello." I say "goodbye." Only the Earth endures. . . .
Hell.
So I walked with the group that afternoon, out to Pagasae, the port of ancient lolkos, set on the prom-ontory opposite Volos. We stood in the shade of the almond trees on the hill that gives good vantage to both seascape and rocky ridge.
"It was from here that the Argonauts set sail on their quest for the Golden Fleece," I told no one in particular.
"Who all were they?" asked Ellen. "I read the story in school, but I forget."
"There was Herakles and Theseus and Orpheus the singer, and Asclepius, and the sons of the North Wind, and Jason, the captain, who was a pupil of the centaur, Cheiron-whose cave, incidentally, is up near the summit of Mount Pelion, there."
"Really?"
"I'll show it to you sometime,"
"All right."
"The gods and the titans battled near here also,"
said Diane, coming up on my other side. "Did the ROGER ZELAZNY
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titans not uproot Mount Pelion and pile it atop Ossa in an attempt to scale Olympus?"
"So goes the telling. But the gods were kind and restored the scenery after the bloody battle."
^A sail," said Hasan, gesturing with a half-peeled orange in his hand.
I looked out over the waters and there was a tiny blip on the horizon.
"Yes; this place is still used as a port."
"Perhaps it is a shipload of heroes," said Ellen,
"returning with some more fleece. What will they do with all that fleece, anyhow?"
"It's not the fleece that's important," said Red Wig, "it's the getting of it. Every good story-teller used to know that. The womenfolk can always make stunning garments from fleeces. They're used to picking up the remains after quests."
"It wouldn't match your hair, dear."
"Yours either, child."
"That can be changed. Not so easily as yours, of course. ..."
"Across the way," said I, in a loud voice, "is a ruined Byzantine church-the Episcopi-which I've scheduled for restoration in another two years.
It is the traditional site of the wedding feast of Peleus, also one of the Argonauts, and the sea-nymph Thetis. Perhaps you've heard the story of that feast? Everyone was invited but the goddess of discord, and she came anyhow and tossed down a golden apple marked Tor the Fairest.' Lord Paris judged it the property of Aphrodite, and the fate of Troy was sealed. The last time anyone saw Paris, he was none too happy. Ah, decisions' Like I've often said, this land is lousy with myth."
"How long will we be here?" asked Ellen.
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"I'd like a couple more days in Makrynitsa " I said, "then we'll head northwards. Say about a week more in Greece, and then we'll move on to Rome."
"No," said Myshtigo, who had been sitting on a rock and talking to his machine, as he stared out over the waters. "No, the tour is finished. This is the last stop."
"How come?"
"I'm satisfied and I'm going home now."
"What about your book?"
"I've got my story."
"What kind of story?"
"Ill send you an autographed copy when it's finished, My time is precious, and I have all the material I want now. All that 1*11 need, anyhow. I called the Port this morning, and they are sending me a Skimmer tonight. You people go ahead and do whatever you want, but I'm finished."
"Is something wrong?"
"No, nothing is wrong, but it's time that I left. I have much to do."
He rose to his feet and stretched.
"I have some packing to take care of, so I'll be going back now. You do have a beautiful country here, Conrad, despite.-I'll see you all at din-nertime."
He turned and headed down the hill.
I walked a few steps in his direction, watching him go.
"I wonder what prompted that?" I thought aloud.
There was a footfall.
"He is dying," said George, softly.
«
My son Jason, who had preceded us by several days, was gone. Neighbors told of his departure for Hades on the previous evening. The patriarch had been carried off on the back of a fire-eyed hellhound who had knocked down the door of his dwelling place and borne him off through the night. My relatives all wanted me to come to dinner. DOS Santos was still resting; George had treated his wounds and had not deemed it necessary to ship him to the hospital in Athens.
It's always nice to come home.
I walked down to the Square and spent the afternoon talking to my descendants. Would I tell them of Taler, of Haiti, of Athens? Aye. I would, I did.
Would they tell me of the past two decades in Makrynitsa? Ditto.
I took some flowers to the graveyard then, stayed awhile, and went to Jason's home and repaired his door with some tools I found in the shed. Then I came upon a bottle of wine and drank it all. And I smoked a cigar. I made me a pot of coffee, too, and I drank all of that.
I still felt depressed.
I didn't know what was coming off.
George knew his diseases, though, and he said the Vegan showed unmistakable symptoms of a neurological disorder of the e.t-variety. Incurable.
Invariably fatal.
And even Hasan couldn't take credit for it.
"Etiology unknown" was George's diagnosis.
So everything was revised.
George had known about Myshtigo since the reception.-What had set him on the track?
-Phil had asked him to observe the Vegan for signs of a fatal disease-THIS IMMORTAL 193
Why?
Well, he hadn't said why, and I couldn't go ask him at the moment.
I had me a problem.
Myshtigo had either finished his job or he hadn't enough time left to do it. He said he'd finished it.
If he hadn't, then I'd been protecting a dead man all the while, to no end. If he had, then I needed to know the results, so that I could make a very fast decision concerning what remained of his life-span.
Dinner was no help. Myshtigo had said all he cared to say, and he ignored or parried our questions. So, as soon as we'd had our coffee, Red Wig and I stepped outside for a cigarette.
"What's happened?" she asked.
"I don't know, I thought maybe you did."
"No. What now?"
"You tell me."
"Kill him?"
"Perhaps yes. First though, why?"
"He's finished it."
"What? Just what has he finished?"
"How should I know?"
"Damn it! /have to! I like to know why I'm killing somebody. I'm funny that way."
"Funny? Very. Obvious, isn't it? The Vegans want to buy in again, Earthside, He's going back to give them a report on the sites they're interested in."
"They why didn't he visit them all? Why cut it short after Egypt and Greece? Sand, rocks, jungles, and assorted monsters-that's all he saw. Hardly makes for an encouraging appraisal."
"Then he's scared, is why, and lucky he's alive.
He could have been eaten by a boadile or Kourete.
He's running."
"Good. Then let him run. Let him hand in a bad report."
"He can't, though. If they do want in, they won't buy anything that sketchy. They'll just send somebody else-somebody tougher-to finish it. If we kill Myshtigo they'll know we're.still for real, still protesting, still tough ourselves."
". . . And he's not afraid for his life," I mused.
"No? What, then?"
"I don't know. I have to find out, though."
"How?"
"I think I'll ask him."
"You are a lunatic." She turned away.
"My way, or not at all," I said.
"Any way, then. It doesn't matter. We've already lost."
I took her by the shoulders and kissed her neck.
"Not yet. You'll see."
She stood stiffly.
"Go home," she said; "it's late. It's too late."
I did that. I went back to lakov Korones' big old place, where Myshtigo and I were both quartered, and where Phil had been staying.
I stopped there in the deathroom, in the place where Phil had last slept. His Prometheus Unbound was still on the writing table, set down beside an empty bottle. He had spoken of his own passing when he'd called me in Egypt, and he had suffered an attack, had been through a lot. It seemed he'd leave a message for an old friend then, on a matter like this.
So I opened Percy B's dud epic and looked within.
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It was written on the blank pages at the end of the book, in Greek, Not modern Greek, though.
Classical.
It went something like this:
Dear friend, although I abhor writing anything I cannot rewrite, I feel I had best tend to this with dispatch. I am unwell. George wants me to skim to Athens. I will, too, in the morning. First, though, regarding the matter at hand-Get the Vegan off the Earth, alive, at any cost.
It is important.
It is the most important thing in the world.
I was afraid to tell you before, because I thought Myshtigo might be a telepath. That is why I did not go along for the entire journey, though I should dearly have loved to do so.
That is why I pretended to hate him, so that I could stay away from him as much as possible. It was only after I managed to confirm the fact that he was not telepathic that I elected to join you.
I suspected, what with DOS Santos, Diane, and Hasan, and the Radpol might be out for his blood. If he was a telepath, I figured he would learn of this quickly and do whatever needed to be done to assure his safety. If he was not a telepath, I still had great faith in your ability to defend him against almost anything, Hasan included. But I did not want him apprised of my knowledge. I did try to warn you, though, if you recall.
Tatram Tshtigo, his grandfather, is one of the finest, most noble creatures alive. He is a philosopher, a great writer, an altruistic administrator of services to the public. I became acquainted with him during my stay on Taler, thirty-some years ago, and we later became close friends. We have been in communication ever since that time, and that far back, even, was I advised by him of the Vegan Combine's plans regarding the disposition of Earth. I was also sworn to se-crecy. Even Cort cannot know that I am aware. The old man 196 ROGER ZELAZNY
would lose face, disastrously, if this thing came out ahead of time.
The Vegans are in a very embarrassing position. Our ex-patriate countrymen have forced their own economic and cultural dependence upon Vega. The Vegans were made aware -quite vividly!-during the days of the RadRol Rebellion, of the fact that there is an indigenous population possessing a strong organisation of its own and desiring the restoration of our planet. The Vegans too would like to see this happen.
They do not want the Earth. Whatever for? If they want to exploit Earthfolk, they have more of them on Taler than we do here on Earth-and they 're not doing it; not massively or maliciously, at any rate. Our ex-pop has elected what labor exploitation it does undergo in preference to returning here.
What does this indicate? Retumism is a dead issue. No one is coming back. That is why I quit the movement. Why you did too, I believe. The Vegans would like to get the home world problem off their hands. Sure, they want to visit it. It is instructive, sobering, humbling, and downright frightening for them to come here and see what can be done to a world.
What needed to be done was for them to find a way around our ex-pop gov on Taler. The Talerites were not anxious to give up their only claim for taxes and existence: the Office.
After much negotiation, though, and much economic suasion, including the offer of full Vegan citizenship to our ex-pop, it appeared that a means had been found. The im-plementation of the plan was given into the hands of the Shtigo gens, Tatram in especial.
He finally found a way, he believed, of returning the Earth proper to an autonomous position and preserving its cultural integrity. That is why he sent his grandson, Cort, to do his 'survey.) Cort is a strange creature; his real talent THIS IMMORTAL 197
is acting (all the Shtigo are quite gifted), and he lows to Rose. I believe that he wanted to play the part of an alien very badly, and I am certain that he has carried it with skill and efficiency. (Tatram also advised me that it would be Corl's last role. He is dying of drinfan, which is in-curable; also, I believe it is the reason he was chosen.) Believe me, Konstantin Karaghiosis Korones Nomtkos (and all the others which I do not know), Conrad, when I say that he was not surveying real estate: JVo.
But allow me one last Bryonic gesture. Take my word that he must live, and let me keep my promise and my secret.
You will not regret it, when you know all.
I am sorry that I never got to finish your elegy, and damn you for keeping my Lara, that time in Kerch!-PHIL
Very well then, I decided-life, not death, for the Vegan. Phil had spoken and I did not doubt his words.
I went back to Mikar Korones' dinner table and stayed with Myshtigo until he was ready to leave. I accompanied him back to lakov Korones* and watched him pack some final items. We exchanged maybe six words during this time.