<h2>CHAPTER 6</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p>Maiden, Nymph, and Mother
are the eternal royal Trinity of
the island, and the Goddess, who
is worshipped there in each of
these aspects, as New Moon,
Full Moon, and Old Moon, is
the sovereign Deity.</p>
<div class="rgt">—Graves</div>
</div>
<h3>CRETE CIRCA 1300 B.C.</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Kaby</span> pushed back at Sid some
seconds of bread and olives,
and, when he raised his bushy eyebrows,
gave him a curt nod that
meant she knew what she was doing.
She stood up and sort of took
a position. All the talk quieted
down fast, even Bruce's and Lili's.
Kaby's face and voice weren't
strained now, but they weren't relaxed
either.</p>
<p>"Woe to Spider! Woe to Cretan!
Heavy is the news I bring you.
Bear it bravely, like strong women.
When we got the gun unlimbered,
I heard seaweed fry and
crackle. We three leaped behind
the rock wall, saw our gun grow
white as sunlight in a heat-ray of
the Serpents! Natch, we feared we
were outnumbered and I called
upon my Caller."</p>
<div class="figc" style="width: 600px;"><ANTIMG src="images/003.png" width-obs="600" height-obs="393" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p>I don't know how she does it,
but she does—in English too.
That is, when she figures she's got
something important to report, and
maybe she needs a little time to
get ready.</p>
<p>Beau claims that all the ancients
fit their thoughts into measured
lines as naturally as we pick
a word that will do, but I'm not
sure how good the Vicksburg language
department is. Though why
I should wonder about things like
that when I've got Kaby spouting
the stuff right in front of me,
I don't know.</p>
<p>"But I didn't die there, kiddos.
I still hoped to hurt the Greek
ships, maybe with the Snake's own
heat gun. So I quick tried to outflank
them. My two comrades
crawled beside me—they are males,
but they have courage. Soon we
spied the ambush-setters. They
were Snakes and they were many,
filthily disguised as Cretans."</p>
<p>There was an indignant murmur
at this, for our cutthroat
Change War has its code, the Soldiers
tell me. Being an Entertainer,
I don't have to say what
I think.</p>
<p>"They had seen us when we
saw them," Kaby swept on, "and
they loosed a killing volley. Heat- and
knife-rays struck about us in
a storm of wind and fire, and the
Lunan lost a feeler, fighting for
Crete's Triple Goddess. So we
dodged behind a sand hill, steered
our flight back toward the water.
It was awful, what we saw there:
Crete's brave ships all sunk or
sinking, blue sky sullied by their
death-smoke. Once again the
Greeks had licked us!—aided by
the filthy Serpents.</p>
<p>"Round our wrecks, their black
ships scurried, like black beetles,
filth their diet, yet this day they
dine on heroes. On the quiet sunlit
beach there, I could feel a
Change Gale blowing, working
changes deep inside me, aches and
pains that were a stranger's. Half
my memories were doubled, half
my lifeline crooked and twisted,
three new moles upon my sword-hand.
Goddess, Goddess, Triple
Goddess—"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Her</span> voice wavered and Sid
reached out a hand, but she
straightened her back.</p>
<p>"Triple Goddess, give me courage
to tell everything that happened.
We ran down into the water, hoping
to escape by diving. We had
hardly gotten under when the heat-rays
hit above us, turning all the
cool green surface to a roaring
white inferno. But as I believe I
told you, I was calling on my
Caller, and a Door now opened to
us, deep below the deadly steam-clouds.
We dived in like frightened
minnows and a lot of water with
us."</p>
<p>Off Chicago's Gold Coast, Dave
once gave me a lesson in skin-diving
and, remembering it, I got
a flash of Kaby's Door in the dark
depths.</p>
<p>"For a moment, all was chaos.
Then the Door slammed shut behind
us. We'd been picked up in
time's nick by—an Express Room
of our Spiders!—sloshing two feet
deep in water, much more cramped
for space than this Place. It was
manned by a magician, an old coot
named Benson-Carter. He dispelled
the water quickly and reported on
his Caller. We'd got dry, were
feeling human, Illy here had shed
his swimsuit, when we looked at
the Maintainer. It was glowing,
changing, melting! And when Benson-Carter
touched it, he fell backward—death
was in him. Then
the Void began to darken, narrow,
shrink and close around us, so I
called upon my Caller—without
wasting time, let me tell you!</p>
<p>"We can't say for sure what was
it slowly squeezed that sweet Express
Room, but we fear the dirty
Snakes have found a way to find
our Places and attack outside the
cosmos!—found the Spiderweb that
links us in the Void's gray less-than-nothing."</p>
<p>No murmur this time. This reaction
was genuine; we'd been hit
where we lived and I could see
everybody was scared as sick as
I was. Except maybe Bruce and
Lili, who were still holding hands
and beaming gently. I decided they
were the kind that love makes
brave, which it doesn't do to me.
It just gives me two people to
worry about.</p>
<p>"I can see you dig our feelings,"
Kaby continued. "This thing
scared the pants off of us. If we
could have, we'd have even Introverted
the Maintainer, broken all
the ties that bind us, chanced it
incommunicado. But the little old
Maintainer was a seething red-hot
puddle filled with bubbles big
as handballs. We sat tight and
watched the Void close. I kept
calling on my Caller."</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">I squeezed</span> my eyes shut, but
that made it easier to see the
three of them with the Void shutting
down on them. (Was ours
still behaving? Yes, Bibi Miriam.)
Poetry or no poetry, it got me.</p>
<p>"Benson-Carter, lying dying,
also thought the Snakes had done
it. And he knew that death was
in him, so he whispered me his
mission, giving me precise instructions:
how to press the seven
death's hands, starting lockside
counterclockwise, one, three, five,
six, two, four, seven, then you have
a half an hour; after you have
pressed the seven, do not monkey
with the buttons—get out fast
and don't stop moving."</p>
<p>I wasn't getting this part and I
couldn't see that anyone else was,
though Bruce was whispering to
Lili. I remembered seeing skulls
engraved on the bronze chest. I
looked at Illy and he nodded a
tentacle and spread two to say, I
guessed, that yes, Benson-Carter
had said something like that, but
no, Illy didn't know much about
it.</p>
<p>"All these things and more he
whispered," Kaby went on, "with
the last gasps of his life-force, telling
all his secret orders—for he'd
not been sent to get us, he was
on a separate mission, when he
heard my SOSs. Sid, it's you he
was to contact, as the first leg of
his mission, pick up from you
three black hussars, death's-head
Demons, daring Soldiers, then to
wait until the Places next match
rhythm with the cosmos—matter of
two mealtimes, barely—and to tune
in northern Egypt in the age of the
last Caesar, in the year of Rome's
swift downfall, there to start an
operation in a battle near a city
named for Thrace's Alexander,
there to change the course of battle,
blow sky-high the stinking Serpents,
all their agents, all their
Zombies!</p>
<p>"Goddess, pardon, now I savvy
how you've guided my least footstep,
when I thought you'd gone
and left me—for I flubbed your
three-mole signal. We've found
Sid's Place, that's the first leg, and
I see the three black hussars, and
we've brought with us the weapon
and the Parthian disguises, salvaged
from the doomed Express
Room when your Door appeared
in time's nick, and the Room around
us closing spewed us through before
it vanished with the corpse of Benson-Carter.
Triple Goddess, draw
the milk now from the womanhood
I flaunt here and inject the
blackest hatred! Vengeance now
upon the Serpents, vengeance
sweet in northern Egypt, for your
island, Crete, Goddess!—and a victory
for the Spiders! Goddess,
Goddess, we can swing it!"</p>
<p>The roar that made me try to
stop my ears with my shoulders
didn't come from Kaby—she'd
spoken her piece—but from Sid.
The dear boy was purple enough
to make me want to remind him
you can die of high blood pressure
just as easy in the Change World.</p>
<p>"Dump me with ops! 'Sblood,
I'll not endure it! Is this a battle
post? They'll be mounting operations
from field hospitals next.
Kabysia Labrys, thou art mad to
suggest it. And what's this prattle
of locks, clocks, and death's heads,
buttons and monkeys? This brabble,
this farrago, this hocus-pocus!
And where's the weapon you prate
of? In that whoreson bronze casket,
I suppose."</p>
<p>She nodded, looking blank and
almost a little shy as poetic possession
faded from her. Her answer
came like its faltering last
echo.</p>
<p>"It is nothing but a tiny tactical
atomic bomb."</p>
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