<h2>CHAPTER 3</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p>Hell is the place for me. For to
Hell go the fine churchmen, and
the fine knights, killed in the
tourney or in some grand war,
the brave soldiers and the gallant
gentlemen. With them will
I go. There go also the fair
gracious ladies who have lovers
two or three beside their lord.
There go the gold and the silver,
the sables and ermine. There
go the harpers and the minstrels
and the kings of the earth.</p>
<div class="rgt">—Aucassin</div>
</div>
<h3>NINE FOR A PARTY</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">I exchanged</span> my drink for
a new one from another tray
Beau was bringing around. The
gray of the Void was beginning
to look real pleasant, like warm
thick mist with millions of tiny
diamonds floating in it. Doc was
sitting grandly at the bar with a
steaming tumbler of tea—a chaser,
I guess, since he was just putting
down a shot glass. Sid was talking
to Erich and laughing at the same
time and I said to myself it begins
to feel like a party, but something's
lacking.</p>
<p>It wasn't anything to do with
the Major Maintainer; its telltale
was glowing a steady red like a
nice little home fire amid the tight
cluster of dials that included all
the controls except the lonely and
frightening Introversion switch that
was never touched. Then Maud's
couch curtains winked out and
there were she and the Roman
sitting quietly side by side.</p>
<p>He looked down at his shiny
boots and the rest of his black
duds like he was just waking up
and couldn't believe it all, and he
said, "<i>Omnia mutantur, nos et mutamur
in illis</i>," and I raised my
eyebrows at Beau, who was taking
the tray back, and he did proud
by old Vicksburg by translating:
"All things change and we change
with them."</p>
<p>Then Mark slowly looked
around at us, and I can testify that
a Roman smile is just as warm as
any other nationality, and he finally
said, "We are nine, the proper
number for a party. The couches,
too. It is good."</p>
<p>Maud chuckled proudly and
Erich shouted, "Welcome back
from the Void, <i>Kamerad</i>," and
then, because he's German and
thinks all parties have to be noisy
and satirically pompous, he jumped
on a couch and announced, "<i>Herren
und Damen</i>, permit me to introduce
the noblest Roman of
them all, Marcus Vipsaius Niger,
legate to Nero Claudius (called
Germanicus in a former time
stream) and who in 763 <span class="smcap">A.U.C.</span>
(Correct, Mark? It means 10 <span class="smcap">A.D.</span>,
you meatheads!) died bravely
fighting the Parthians and the
Snakes in the Battle of Alexandria.
<i>Hoch, hoch, hoch!</i>"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">We</span> all swung our glasses and
cheered with him and Sid
yelled at Erich, "Keep your feet
off the furniture, you unschooled
rogue," and grinned and boomed
at all three hussars, "Take your
ease, Recuperees," and Maud and
Mark got their drinks, the Roman
paining Beau by refusing Falernian
wine in favor of scotch and
soda, and right away everyone was
talking a mile a minute.</p>
<p>We had a lot to catch up on.
There was the usual yak about the
war—"The Snakes are laying mine
fields in the Void," "I don't believe
it, how can you mine nothing?"—and
the shortages—bourbon, bobby
pins, and the stabilitin that would
have brought Mark out of it faster—and
what had become of people—"Marcia?
Oh, she's not around
any more," (She'd been caught in
a Change Gale and green and
stinking in five seconds, but I
wasn't going to say that)—and
Mark had to be told about Bruce's
glove, which convulsed us all over
again, and the Roman remembered
a legionary who had carried a gripe
all the way to Octavius because
he'd accidentally been issued the
unbelievable luxury item sugar instead
of the usual salt, and Erich
asked Sid if he had any new Ghostgirls
in stock and Sid sucked his
beard like the old goat he is. "Dost
thou ask me, lusty Allemand? Nay,
there are several great beauties,
amongst them an Austrian countess
from Strauss's Vienna, and if it
were not for sweetling here ...
Mnnnn."</p>
<p>I poked a finger in Erich's chest
between two of the bright buttons
with their tiny death's heads. "You,
my little von Hohenwald, are a
menace to us real girls. You have
too much of a thing about the unawakened,
ghost kind."</p>
<p>He called me his little Demon
and hugged me a bit too hard to
prove it wasn't so, and then he
suggested we show Bruce the Art
Gallery. I thought this was a real
brilliant idea, but when I tried to
argue him out of it, he got stubborn.
Bruce and Lili were willing
to do anything anyone wanted
them to, though not so willing to
pay any attention while doing it.
The saber cut was just a thin red
line on his cheek; she'd washed
away all the dried blood.</p>
<p>The Gallery gets you, though.
It's a bunch of paintings and sculptures
and especially odd knick-knacks,
all made by Soldiers recuperating
here, and a lot of them
telling about the Change War from
the stuff they're made of—brass
cartridges, flaked flint, bits of ancient
pottery glued into futuristic
shapes, mashed-up Incan gold
rebeaten by a Martian, whorls of
beady Lunan wire, a picture in
tempera on a crinkle-cracked thick
round of quartz that had filled a
starship porthole, a Sumerian inscription
chiseled into a brick from
an atomic oven.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">There</span> are a lot of things in
the Gallery and I can always
find some I haven't ever seen before.
It gets you, as I say, thinking
about the guys that made them
and their thoughts and the far
times and places they came from,
and sometimes, when I'm feeling
low, I'll come and look at them so
I'll feel still lower and get inspired
to kick myself back into a good
temper. It's the only history of the
Place there is and it doesn't change
a great deal, because the things
in it and the feelings that went into
them resist the Change Winds better
than anything else.</p>
<p>Right now, Erich's witty lecture
was bouncing off the big ears
I hide under my pageboy bob and
I was thinking how awful it is that
for us that there's not only change
but Change. You don't know from
one minute to the next whether a
mood or idea you've got is really
new or just welling up into you
because the past has been altered
by the Spiders or Snakes.</p>
<p>Change Winds can blow not
only death but anything short of
it, down to the featheriest fancy.
They blow thousands of times
faster than time moves, but no
one can say how much faster or
how far one of them will travel
or what damage it'll do or how
soon it'll damp out. The Big Time
isn't the little time.</p>
<p>And then, for the Demons,
there's the fear that our personality
will just fade and someone else
climb into the driver's seat and us
not even know. Of course, we Demons
are supposed to be able to
remember through Change and
in spite of it; that's why we are
Demons and not Ghosts like the
other Doublegangers, or merely
Zombies or Unborn and nothing
more, and as Beau truly said, there
aren't any great men among us—and
blamed few of the masses,
either—we're a rare sort of people
and that's why the Spiders have
to Recruit us where they find us
without caring about our previous
knowledge and background, a Foreign
Legion of time, a strange kind
of folk, bright but always in the
background, with built-in nostalgia
and cynicism, as adaptable as
Centaurian shape-changers but
with memories as long as a Lunan's
six arms, a kind of Change People,
you might say, the cream of the
damned.</p>
<p>But sometimes I wonder if our
memories are as good as we think
they are and if the whole past
wasn't once entirely different from
anything we remember, and we've
forgotten that we forgot.</p>
<p>As I say, the Gallery gets you
feeling real low, and so now I
said to myself, "Back to your lousy
little commandant, kid," and gave
myself a stiff boot.</p>
<p>Erich was holding up a green
bowl with gold dolphins or spaceships
on it and saying, "And, to
my mind, this proves that Etruscan
art is derived from Egyptian. Don't
you agree, Bruce?"</p>
<p>Bruce looked up, all smiles from
Lili, and said, "What was that,
dear chap?"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Erich's</span> forehead got dark as
the Door and I was glad the
hussars had parked their sabers
along with their shakos, but before
he could even get out a Jerry cussword,
Doc breezed up in that
plateau-state of drunkenness so
like hypnotized sobriety, moving
as if he were on a dolly, ghosted
the bowl out of Erich's hand, said,
"A beautiful specimen of Middle
Systemic Venusian. When Eightaitch
finished it, he told me you
couldn't look at it and not feel
the waves of the Northern Venusian
Shallows rippling around your
hoofs. But it might look better inverted.
I wonder. Who are you,
young officer? <i>Nichevo</i>," and he
carefully put the bowl back on its
shelf and rolled on.</p>
<p>It's a fact that Doc knows the
Art Gallery better than any of us,
really by heart, he being the oldest
inhabitant, though he maybe picked
a bad time to show off his knowledge.
Erich was going to take out
after him, but I said, "Nix, <i>Kamerad</i>,
remember gloves and
sugar," and he contented himself
with complaining, "That <i>nichevo</i>—it's
so gloomy and hopeless, <i>ungeheuerlich</i>.
I tell you, <i>Liebchen</i>,
they shouldn't have Russians working
for the Spiders, not even as
Entertainers."</p>
<p>I grinned at him and squeezed
his hand. "Not much entertainment
in Doc these days, is there?" I
agreed.</p>
<p>He grinned back at me a shade
sheepishly and his face smoothed
and his blue eyes looked sweet
again for a second and he said, "I
shouldn't want to claw out at people
that way, Greta, but at times
I am just a jealous old man,"
which is not entirely true, as he
isn't a day over thirty-three, although
his hair is nearly white.</p>
<p>Our lovers had drifted on a few
steps until they were almost fading
into the Surgery screen. It was
the last spot I would have picked
for the formal preliminaries to a
little British smooching, but Lili
probably didn't share my prejudices,
though I remembered she'd
told me she'd served a brief hitch
in an Arachnoid Field Hospital before
being transferred to the Place.</p>
<p>But she couldn't have had anything
like the experience I'd had
during my short and sour career
as a Spider nurse, when I'd acquired
my best-hated nightmare
and flopped completely (jobwise,
but on the floor, too) at seeing a
doctor flick a switch and a being,
badly injured but human, turn
into a long cluster of glistening
strange fruit—ugh, it always makes
me want to toss my cookies and
my buttons. And to think that dear
old Daddy Anton wanted his Greta
chile to be a doctor.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Well</span>, I could see this wasn't
getting me anywhere I wanted
to go, and after all there was a
party going on.</p>
<p>Doc was babbling something at
a great rate to Sid—I just hoped
Doc wouldn't get inspired to go
into his animal imitations, which
sound pretty fierce and once seriously
offended some recuperating
ETs.</p>
<p>Maud was demonstrating to
Mark a 23rd Century two-step and
Beau sat down at the piano and
improvised softly on her rhythm.</p>
<p>As the deep-thrumming relaxing
notes hit us, Erich's face brightened
and he dragged me over.
Pleasantly soon I had my feet off
the diamond-rough floor, which we
don't carpet because most of the
ETs, the dear boys, like it hard,
and I was shouldering back deep
into the couch nearest the piano,
with cushions all around me and a
fresh drink in my hand, while my
Nazi boy friend was getting ready
to discharge his <i>Weltschmerz</i> as
song, which didn't alarm me too
much, as his baritone is passable.</p>
<p>Things felt real good, like the
Maintainer was just idling to keep
the Place in existence and moored
to the cosmos, not exerting itself
at all or at most taking an occasional
lazy paddle stroke. At times
the Place's loneliness can be happy
and comfortable.</p>
<p>Then Beau raised an eyebrow
at Erich, who nodded, and next
thing they were launched into a
song we all know, though I've
never found out where it originally
came from. This time it made me
think of Lili, and I wondered why—and
why it's a tradition at Recuperation
Stations to call the new
girl Lili, though in this case it happened
to be her real name.</p>
<div class="poem" style="width: 27em;"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0"><i>Standing in the Doorway just outside of space,</i><br/></span>
<span class="i0"><i>Winds of Change blow 'round you but don't touch your face;</i><br/></span>
<span class="i0"><i>You smile as you whisper tenderly,</i><br/></span>
<span class="i0"><i>"Please cross to me, Recuperee;</i><br/></span>
<span class="i0"><i>The operation's over, come in and close the Door."</i><br/></span></div>
</div>
<hr class="chp" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />