<h2>CHAPTER 4</h2>
<div class="poem" style="width: 19em;"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">De Bailhache, Fresca, Mrs. Cammel, whirled<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Beyond the circuit of the shuddering Bear<br/></span>
<span class="i0">In fractured atoms.<br/></span></div>
<div class="rgt">—Eliot</div>
</div>
<h3>SOS FROM NOWHERE</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">I realized</span> the piano had deserted
Erich and I cranked my
head up and saw Beau, Maud and
Sid streaking for the control divan.
The Major Maintainer was blinking
emergency-green and fast, but
the code was plain enough for even
me to recognize the Spider distress
call and for a second I felt
just sick. Then Erich blew out his
reserve breath in the middle of
"Door" and I gave myself another
of those helpful mental boots at
the base of the spine and we hurried
after them toward the center
of the Place along with Mark.</p>
<p>The blinks faded as we got there
and Sid told us not to move because
we were making shadows.
He glued an eye to the telltale and
we held still as statues as he
caressed the dials like he was making
love.</p>
<p>One sensitive hand flicked out
past the Introversion switch over
to the Minor Maintainer and right
away the Place was dark as your
soul and there was nothing for me
but Erich's arm and the knowledge
that Sid was nursing a green
light I couldn't even see, although
my eyes had plenty time to accommodate.</p>
<p>Then the green light finally
came back very slowly and I could
see the dear reliable old face—the
green-gold beard making him look
like a merman—and then the telltale
flared bright and Sid flicked
on the Place lights and I leaned
back.</p>
<p>"That nails them, lads, whoever
and whenever they may be. Get
ready for a pick-up."</p>
<p>Beau, who was closest of course,
looked at him sharply. Sid shrugged
uneasily. "Meseemed at first it was
from our own globe a thousand
years before our Lord, but that indication
flickered and faded like
witchfire. As it is, the call comes
from something smaller than the
Place and certes adrift from the
cosmos. Meseemed too at one
point I knew the fist of the caller—an
antipodean atomicist named
Benson-Carter—but that likewise
changed."</p>
<p>Beau said, "We're not in the
right phase of the cosmos-Places
rhythm for a pick-up, are we, sir?"</p>
<p>Sid answered, "Ordinarily not,
boy."</p>
<p>Beau continued, "I didn't think
we had any pick-ups scheduled.
Or stand-by orders."</p>
<p>Sid said, "We haven't."</p>
<p>Mark's eyes glowed. He tapped
Erich on the shoulder. "An octavian
denarius against ten Reichsmarks
it is a Snake trap."</p>
<p>Erich's grin showed his teeth.
"Make it first through the Door
next operation and I'm on."</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">It</span> didn't take that to tell me
things were serious, or the
thought that there's always a first
time for bumping into something
from really outside the cosmos.
The Snakes have broken our code
more than once. Maud was quietly
serving out weapons and Doc
was helping her. Only Bruce and
Lili stood off. But they were watching.</p>
<p>The telltale brightened. Sid
reached toward the Maintainer,
saying, "All right, my hearties. Remember,
through this Doorway
pass the fishiest finaglers in and out
of the cosmos."</p>
<p>The Door appeared to the left
and above where it should be and
darkened much too fast. There
was a gust of stale salt seawind,
if that makes sense, but no
stepped-up Change Winds I could
tell—and I had been bracing myself
against them. The Door got
inky and there was a flicker of gray
fur whips and a flash of copper
flesh and gilt and something dark
and a clump of hoofs and Erich
was sighting a stun gun across his
left forearm, and then the Door
had vanished like that and a tentacled
silvery Lunan and a Venusian
satyr were coming straight
toward us.</p>
<p>The Lunan was hugging a pile
of clothes and weapons. The satyr
was helping a wasp-waisted woman
carry a heavy-looking bronze chest.
The woman was wearing a short
skirt and high-collared bolero
jacket of leather so dark brown it
was almost black. She had a two-horned
<i>petsofa</i> hairdress and she
was boldly gilded here and there
and wore sandals and copper
anklets and wristlets—one of them
a copper-plated Caller—and from
her wide copper belt hung a short-handled
double-headed ax. She
was dark-complexioned and her
forehead and chin receded, but the
effect was anything but weak; she
had a face like a beautiful arrowhead—and
a familiar one, by golly!</p>
<p>But before I could say, "Kabysia
Labrys," Maud shrilly beat me
to it with, "It's Kaby with two
friends. Break out a couple of
Ghostgirls."</p>
<p>And then I saw it really was
old-home week because I recognized
my Lunan boy friend Ilhilihis,
and in the midst of all the confusion
I got a nice kick out of
knowing I was getting so I could
tell the personality of one silver-furred
muzzle from another.</p>
<p>They reached the control divan
and Illy dumped his load and
the others let down the chest, and
Kaby staggered but shook off the
two ETs when they started to support
her, and she looked daggers
at Sid when he tried to do the
same, although she's his "sweet
Keftian friend" he'd mentioned to
Bruce.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">She</span> leaned straight-armed on
the divan and took two gasping
breaths so deep that the ridges
of her spine showed through her
brown-skinned waist, and then she
threw up her head and commanded,
"Wine!"</p>
<p>While Beau was rushing it, Sid
tried to take her hand again, saying,
"Sweetling, I'd never heard
you call before and knew not this
pretty little fist," but she ripped
out, "Save your comfort for the
Lunan," and I looked and saw—Hey,
Zeus!—that one of Ilhilihis'
six tentacles was lopped off halfway.</p>
<p>That was for me, and, going to
him, I fast briefed myself: "Remember,
he only weighs fifty
pounds for all he's seven feet high;
he doesn't like low sounds or to
be grabbed; the two legs aren't tentacles
and don't act the same; uses
them for long walks, tentacles for
leaps; uses tentacles for close vision
too and for manipulation, of
course; extended, they mean he's
at ease; retracted, on guard or
nervous; sharply retracted, disgusted;
greeting—"</p>
<p>Just then, one of them swept
across my face like a sweet-smelling
feather duster and I said, "Illy,
man, it's been a lot of sleeps," and
brushed my fingers across his muzzle.
It still took a little self-control
not to hug him, and I did
reach a little cluckingly for his
lopped tentacle, but he wafted it
away from me and the little voice-box
belted to his side squeaked,
"Naughty, naughty. Papa will fix
his little old self. Greta girl, ever
bandaged even a Terra octopus?"</p>
<p>I had, an intelligent one from
around a quarter billion <span class="smcap">A.D.</span>, but I
didn't tell him so. I stood and let
him talk to the palm of my hand
with one of his tentacles—I don't
savvy feather-talk but it feels good,
though I've often wondered who
taught him English—and watched
him use a couple others to whisk
a sort of Lunan band-aid out of
his pouch and cap his wound with
it.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the satyr knelt over
the bronze chest, which was decorated
with little death's heads and
crosses with hoops at the top and
swastikas, but looking much older
than Nazi, and the satyr said to
Sid, "Quick thinkin, Gov, when
ya saw the Door comin in high n
soffened up gravty unner it, but
cud I hav sum hep now?"</p>
<p>Sid touched the Minor Maintainer
and we all got very light
and my stomach did a flip-flop
while the satyr piled on the chest
the clothes and weapons that Illy
had been carrying and pranced
off with it all and carefully put it
down at the end of the bar. I decided
the satyr's English instructor
must have been quite a character,
too. Wish I'd met him—her—it.</p>
<p>Sid thought to ask Illy if he
wanted Moon-normal gravity in
one sector, but my boy likes to
mix, and being such a lightweight,
Earth-normal gravity doesn't
bother him. As he said to me
once, "Would Jovian gravity bother
a beetle, Greta girl?"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">I asked</span> Illy about the satyr
and he squeaked that his name
was Sevensee and that he'd never
met him before this operation. I
knew the satyrs were from a billion
years in the future, just as
the Loonies were from a billion in
the past, and I thought—Kreesed
us!—but it must have been a real
big or emergency-like operation to
have the Spiders using those two
for it, with two billion years between
them—a time-difference that
gives you a feeling of awe for a
second, you know.</p>
<div class="figc" style="width: 600px;"><ANTIMG src="images/002.png" width-obs="600" height-obs="528" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>I started to ask Illy about it, but
just then Beau came scampering
back from the bar with a big red-and-black
earthenware goblet of
wine—we try to keep a variety of
drinking tools in stock so folks
will feel more at home. Kaby
grabbed it from him and drained
most of it in one swallow and then
smashed it on the floor. She does
things like that, though Sid's tried
to teach her better. Then she stared
at what she was thinking about
until the whites showed all around
her eyes and her lips pulled way
back from her teeth and she looked
a lot less human than the two ETs,
just like a fury. Only a time traveler
knows how like the wild
murals and engravings of them
some of the ancients can look.</p>
<p>My hair stood up at the screech
she let out. She smashed a fist into
the divan and cried, "Goddess!
Must I see Crete destroyed, revived,
and now destroyed again?
It is too much for your servant."</p>
<p>Personally, I thought she could
stand anything.</p>
<p>There was a rush of questions
at what she said about Crete—I
asked one of them, for the news
certainly frightened me—but she
shot up her arm straight for silence
and took a deep breath and began.</p>
<p>"In the balance hung the battle.
Rowing like black centipedes, the
Dorian hulls bore down on our
outnumbered ships. On the bright
beach, masked by rocks, Sevensee
and I stood by the needle gun,
ready to give the black hulls silent
wounds. Beside us was Ilhilihis,
suited as a sea monster. But
then ... then ..."</p>
<p>Then I saw she wasn't altogether
the iron babe, for her voice
broke and she started to shake
and to sob rackingly, although her
face was still a mask of rage, and
she threw up the wine. Sid stepped
in and made her stop, which I think
he'd been wanting to do all along.</p>
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