Authors: Roger Zelazny
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General, #Action & Adventure
His belongings we carried out to the place where the Skimmer would land, in front of the house.
Before the others (including Hasan) came up to bid him goodbye, he turned to me and said, "Tell me, Conrad, why are you tearing down the pyramid?"
"To needle Vega," I said. "To let you know that if you want this place and you do manage to take it away from us, you'll get it in worse shape than it was after the Three Days. There wouldn't be anything left to look at. We'd burn the rest of our history. Not even a scrap for you guys."
The air escaping from the bottom of his lungs came out with a high-pitched whine-the Vegan equivalent of a sigh.
"Commendable. I suppose," he said, "but I did so want to see it. Do you think you could ever get it back together again? Soon, perhaps?"
"What do you think?"
"I noticed your men marking many of the pieces."
I shrugged.
"I have only one serious question, then-about your fondness for destruction . . ." he stated.
"What is that?"
"Is it really art?"
"Go to hell."
Then the others came up. I shook my head slowly at Diane and seized Hasan *s wrist long enough to tear away a tiny needle he'd taped to the palm of his hand. I let him shake hands with the Vegan too, then, briefly.
The Skimmer buzzed down out of the darkening sky, and I saw Myshtigo aboard, loaded his bag-gage personally, and closed the door myself.
It took off without incident and was gone in a matter of moments.
End of a nothing jaunt.
I went back inside and changed my clothing.
It was time to bum a friend.
Heaped high into the night, my ziggurat of logs bore what remained of the poet, my friend. I kindled a torch and put out the electric lantern.
Hasan stood at my side. He had helped bear the corpse to the cart and had taken over the reins. I had built the pyre on the cypress-filled hill above THIS IMMORTAL 199
Volos, near the ruins of that church I mentioned earlier. The waters of the bay were calm. The sky was clear and the stars were bright-Dos Santos, who did not approve of cremation, had decided not to attend, saying that his wounds were troubling him. Diane had elected to remain with him back in Makrynitsa. She had not spoken to me since our last conversation.
Ellen and George were seated on the bed of the cart, which was backed beneath a large cypress, and they were holding hands. They were the only others present. Phil would not have liked my relatives wailing their dirges about him. He'd once said he wanted something big, bright, fast, and without music, I applied the torch to a comer of the pyre. The flame bit, slowly, began to chew at the wood. Hasan started another torch going, stuck it into the ground, stepped back, and watched.
As the flames ate their way upwards I prayed the old prayers and poured out wine upon the ground.
I heaped aromatic herbs onto the blaze. Then I, too, stepped back.
"'. . - Whatever you were, death has taken you, too,' " I told him. " *You have gone to see the moist flower open along Acheron, among Hell's shadows darting fitfully.' Had you died young, your passing would have been mourned as the destruction of a great talent before its fulfillment. But you lived and they cannot say that now. Some choose a short and supernal life before the walls of their Troy, others a long and less troubled one. And who is to say which is the better? The gods did keep their promise of immortal fame to Achilleus, by inspiring the poet to sing him an immortal paean. But is he the happier 200 ROGER ZELAZNY
for it, being now as dead as yourself? / cannot judge, old friend. Lesser bard, I remember some of the words you, too, wrote of the mightiest of the Argives, and of the time of hard-hurled deaths: 'Bleak disappointments rage this coming-together place: Menace of sighs in a jeopardy of time.. . .
But the ashes do not burn backward to timber.
Flame's invisible music shapes the air to heat, but the day is no longer.' Fare thee well, Phillip Graver.
May the Lords Phoebus and Dionysius, who do love and kill their poets, commend thee to their dark brother Hades. And may his Persephone, Queen of the Night, look with favor upon thee and grant thee high stead in Elysium. Goodbye."
The flames had almost reached the top.
I saw Jason then, standing beside the cart, Bortan seated by his side. I backed away further.
Bortan came to me and sat down at my right. He licked my hand, once.
"Mighty hunter, we have lost us another,' I said.
He nodded his great head.
The flames reached the top and began to nibble at the night. The air was filled with sweet aromas and the sound of fire.
Jason approached.
"Father," he said, "he bore me to the place of burning rocks, but you were already escaped."
I nodded.
"A no-man friend freed us from that place.
Before that, this man Hasan destroyed the Dead Man. So your dreams have thus far proved both right and wrong."
"He is the yellow-eyed warrior of my vision," he said.
"I know, but that pan too is past."
THIS IMMORTAL 201
"What of the Black Beast?"
"Not a snort nor a snuffle."
"Good."
We watched for a long, long time, as the light retreated into itself. At several points, Bortan's ears pricked forward and his nostrils dilated. George and Ellen had not moved. Hasan was a strange-eyed watcher, without expression.
"What will you do now, Hasan?" I asked.
"Go again to Mount Sindjar," he said, "for awhile."
"And then?"
He shrugged. "Howsoever it is written," he replied.
And a fearsome noise came upon us then, like the groans of an idiot giant, and the sound of splinter-ing trees accompanied it.
Bortan leaped to his feet and howled. The donkeys who had drawn the cart shifted uneasily.
One of them made a brief, braying noise.
Jason clutched the sharpened staff which he had picked from the heap of kindling, and he stiffened.
It burst in upon us then, there in the clearing.
Big, and ugly, and everything it had ever been called.
The Eater of Men. . . .
The Shaker of the Earth. . . .
The Mighty, Foul One. . . .
The Black Beast of Thessaly.
Finally, someone could say what it really was. If they got away to say it, that is.
It must have been drawn to us by the odor of burning flesh.
And it was big. The size of an elephant, at least.
What was Herakles* fourth labor?
The wild boar of Arcadia, that's what.
I suddenly wished Herk was still around to help.
A big pig. ... A razorback, with tusks the length of a man's arm. . . . Little pig eyes, black, and rolling in the Firelight, wildly. . . .
It knocked down trees as it came. . . .
It squealed, though, as Hasan drew a burning brand from the blaze and drove it, fire-end forward, into its snout, and then spun away.
It swerved, too, which gave me time to snatch Jason's staff.
I ran forward and caught it in the left eye with it.
It swerved again then, and squealed like a leaky boiler.
. . . And Bortan was upon it, tearing at its shoulder.
Neither of my two thrusts at its throat did more than superficial damage. It wrestled, shoulder against fang, and finally shook itself free of Bortan *s grip.
Hasan was at my side by then, waving another firebrand.
It charged us.
From somewhere off to the side George emptied a machine-pistol into it. Hasan hurled the torch.
Bortan leapt again, this time from its blind side.
. . . And these things caused it to swerve once more in its charge, crashing into the now empty can and killing both donkeys.
I ran against it then, thrusting the staff up under its left front leg.
The staff broke in two.
Bortan kept biting, and his snarl was a steady thunder. Whenever it slashed at him with its tusks THIS IMMORTAL 203
he relinquished his grip, danced away, and moved in again to worry it.
I am sure that my needle-point deathlance of steel would not have broken. It had been aboard the Vamtie, though. . . .
Hasan and I circled it with the sharpest and most stake-like of the kindling we could find. We kept jabbing, to keep it turning in a circle. Bortan kept trying for its throat, but the great snouted head stayed low, and the one eye rolled and the other bled, and the tusks slashed back and forth and up and down like swords. Cloven hooves the size of bread-loaves tore great holes in the ground as it turned, counterclockwise, trying to kill us all, there in the orange and dancing flamelight.
Finally, it stopped and turned-suddenly, for something that big-and its shoulders struck Bortan in the side and hurled him ten or twelve feet past me. Hasan hit it across the back with his stick and I drove in toward the other eye, but missed.
Then it moved toward Bortan, who was still re-gaining his feet-its head held low, tusks gleaming.
I threw my staff and leapt as it moved in on my dog. It had already dropped its head for the death blow.
I caught both tusks as the head descended almost to the ground. Nothing could hold back that scooping slash, I realized, as I bore down upon it with all my strength.
But I tried, and maybe I succeeded, somehow, for a second. .. .
At least, as I was thrown through the air, my hands torn and bleeding, I saw that Bortan had managed to get back out of the way.
I was dazed by the fall, for I had been thrown! far and high; and I heard a great pig-mad squealing.
Hasan screamed and Bortan roared out his great-throated battle-challenge once more.
. . . And the hot red lightning of Zeus descended twice from the heavens.
. . . And all was still.
I climbed back, slowly, to my feet.
Hasan was standing by the blazing pyre, a flam-ing stake still upraised in spear-throwing position.
Bortan was sniffing at the quivering mountain of flesh.
Cassandra was standing beneath the cypress beside a dead donkey, her back against the trunk of the tree, wearing leather trousers, a blue woolen shirt, a faint smile, and my still-smoking elephant gun.
"Cassandra!"
She dropped the gun and looked very pale. But I had her in my arms almost before it hit the ground.
"I'll ask you a lot of things later," I said. "Not now. Nothing now. Let's just sit here beneath this tree and watch the fire burn."
And we did.
A month later, DOS Santos was ousted from the Radpol. He and Diane have not been heard of since. Rumor has it that they gave up on Returnism, moved to Taler, and are living there now.
I hope it's not true, what with the affairs of these past five days. I never did know the full story on Red Wig, and I guess I never will. If you trust a person, really trust him I mean, and you care for him, as she might have cared for me, it would seem THIS IMMORTAL 205
you'd stick around to see whether he was right or wrong on your final big disagreement. She didn't, though, and I wonder if she regrets it now.
I don't really think 1*11 ever see her again.
Slightly after the Radpol shakeup, Hasan returned from Mount Sindjar, stayed awhile at the Port, then purchased a small ship and put out to sea early one morning, without even saying goodbye or giving any indication as to his destination. It was assumed he'd found new employment somewhere.
There was a hurricane, though, several days later, and I heard rumors in Trinidad to the effect that he had been washed up on the coast of Brazil and met with his death at the hands of the fierce tribesmen who dwell there. I tried but was unable to verify this story.
However, two months later, Ricardo Bonaven-tura. Chairman of the Alliance Against Progress, a Radpol splinter group which had fallen into dis-favor with Athens, died of apoplexy during a Party Tunction. There were some murmurings of Divban rabbit-venon in the anchovies (an exceedingly lethal combination, George assures me), and the following day the new Captain of the Palace Guard vanished mysteriously, along with a Skimmer and the minutes of the last three secret sessions of the AAP (not to mention the contents of a small wallsafe). He was said to have been a big-, yellow-eyed man, with a slightly Eastern cast to his features.
Jason is still herding his many-legged sheep in the high places, up where the fingers of Aurora come first to smear the sky with roses, and doubtless he is corrupting youth with his song.
Ellen is pregnant again, all delicate and big-206 ROGER ZELAZNY
waisted, and won't talk to anybody but George, George wants to try some fancy embryos urgery, now, before it's too late, and make his next kid a water-breather as well as an air-breather, because of all that great big virgin frontier down underneath the ocean, where his descendants can pioneer, and him be father to a new race and write an interesting book on the subject, and all that. Ellen is not too hot on the idea, though, so I have a hunch the oceans will remain virgin a little longer.
Oh yes, I did take George to Capistrano some time ago, to watch the spiderbats return. It was real impressive-them darkening the sky with their night, nesting about the ruins the way they do, eating the wild pigs, leaving green droppings all over the streets. Lorel has hours and hours of it in tri-dee color, and he shows it at every Office party. It's sort of a historical document, spiderbats being on the way out now. True to his word, George started a slishi plague among them, and they're dropping like flies these days. Just the other week one dropped down in the middle of the street with a big splatt! as I was on my way to Mama Julie's with a bottle of rum and a box of chocolates. It was quite dead when it hit. The slishi are very insidious. The poor spiderbat doesn't know what's happening; he's flying along happily, looking for someone to eat, and then ^.ockf it hits him, and he falls into the middle of a garden party or sombody's swimming pool.
I've decided to retain the Office for the time being. I'll set up some kind of parliament after I've whipped up an opposition party to the Radpol-Indreb, or something like that maybe: like Independent Rebuilders, or such.