<h2>CHAPTER 7</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p>After about 0.1 millisecond (one
ten-thousandth part of a second)
has elapsed, the radius of the
ball of fire is some 45 feet, and
the temperature is then in the
vicinity of 300,000 degrees Centigrade.
At this instant, the luminosity,
as observed at a distance
of 100,000 yards (5.7
miles), is approximately 100
times that of the sun as seen at
the earth's surface ... the ball
of fire expands very rapidly to
its maximum radius of 450 feet
within less than a second from
the explosion.</p>
<div class="rgt">—Los Alamos</div>
</div>
<h3>TIME TO THINK</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Brother</span>, that was all we
needed to make everybody
but Kaby and the two ETs start
yelping at once, me included. It
may seem strange that Change
People, able to whiz through time
and space and roust around outside
the cosmos and knowing at
least by hearsay of weapons a billion
years in the future, like the
Mindbomb, should panic at being
shut in with a little primitive
mid-20th Century gadget. Well,
they feel the same as atomic scientists
would feel if a Bengal tiger
were brought into their laboratory,
neither more nor less scared.</p>
<p>I'm a moron at physics, but I
do know the Fireball is bigger than
the Place. Remember that, besides
the bomb, we'd recently been presented
with a lot of other fears we
hadn't had time to cope with, especially
the business of the Snakes
having learned how to get at our
Places and melt the Maintainers
and collapse them. Not to mention
the general impression—first Saint
Petersburg, then Crete—that the
whole Change War was going
against the Spiders.</p>
<p>Yet, in a free corner of my
mind, I was shocked at how badly
we were all panicking. It made
me admit what I didn't like to:
that we were all in pretty much
the same state as Doc, except that
the bottle didn't happen to be our
out.</p>
<p>And had the rest of us been
controlling our drinking so well
lately?</p>
<p>Maud yelled, "Jettison it!" and
pulled away from the satyr and
ran from the bronze chest. Beau,
harking back to what they'd
thought of doing in the Express
Room when it was too late, hissed,
"Sirs, we must Introvert," and
vaulted over the piano bench and
legged it for the control divan.
Erich seconded him with a white-faced
"<i>Gott in Himmel, ja!</i>" from
beside the surly, forgotten Countess,
holding, by its slim stem, an
empty, rose-stained wine glass.</p>
<p>I felt my mind flinch, because
Introverting a Place is several degrees
worse than foxholing. It's
supposed not only to keep the
Door tight shut, but also to lock
it so even the Change Winds can't
get through—cut the Place loose
from the cosmos altogether.</p>
<p>I'd never talked with anyone
from a Place that had been Introverted.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Mark</span> dumped Phryne off his
lap and ran after Maud. The
Greek Ghostgirl, quite solid now,
looked around with sleepy fear
and fumbled her apple-green
chiton together at the throat. She
wrenched my attention away from
everyone else for a moment, and
I couldn't help wondering whether
the person or Zombie back in the
cosmos, from whose lifeline the
Ghost has been taken, doesn't at
least have strange dreams or
thoughts when something like this
happens.</p>
<p>Sid stopped Beau, though he almost
got bowled over doing it, and
he held the gambler away from
the Maintainer in a bear hug and
bellowed over his shoulders,
"Masters, are you mad? Have you
lost your wits? Maud! Mark! Marcus!
Magdalene! On your lives, unhand
that casket!"</p>
<p>Maud had swept the clothes
and bows and quivers and stuff
off it and was dragging it out from
the bar toward the Door sector,
so as to dump it through fast when
we got one, I guess, while Mark
acted as if he were trying to help
her and wrestle it away from her
at the same time.</p>
<p>They kept on as if they hadn't
heard a word Sid said, with Mark
yelling, "Let go, <i>meretrix</i>! This
holds Rome's answer to Parthia
on the Nile."</p>
<p>Kaby watched them as if she
wanted to help Mark but scorned
to scuffle with a mere—well,
Mark had said it in Latin, I guess—call
girl.</p>
<p>Then, on the top of the bronze
chest, I saw those seven lousy
skulls starting at the lock as plain
as if they'd been under a magnifying
glass, though ordinarily
they'd have been a vague circle
to my eyes at the distance, and I
lost my mind and started to run
in the opposite direction, but Illy
whipped three tentacles around
me, gentle-like, and squeaked,
"Easy now, Greta girl, don't you
be doing it, too. Hold still or Papa
spank. My, my, but you two-leggers
can whirl about when you
have a mind to."</p>
<p>My stampede had carried his
featherweight body a couple of
yards, but it stopped me and I
got my mind back, partly.</p>
<p>"Unhand it, I say!" Sid repeated
without accomplishing anything,
and he released Beau, though he
kept a hand near the gambler's
shoulder.</p>
<p>Then my fat friend from Lynn
Regis looked real distraught at
the Void and blustered at no one
in particular, "'Sdeath, think you
I'd mutiny against my masters,
desert the Spiders, go to ground
like a spent fox and pull my hole
in after me? A plague of such
cowardice! Who suggests it? Introversion's
no mere last-ditch device.
Unless ordered, supervised
and sanctioned, it means the end.
And what if I'd Introverted ere
we got Kaby's call for succor,
hey?"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">His</span> warrior maid nodded with
harsh approval and he noticed
it and shook his free hand at
her and scolded her, "Not that I
say yea to your mad plan for that
Devil's casket, you half-clad lackwit.
And yet to jettison.... Oh, ye
gods, ye gods—" he wiped his hand
across his face—"grant me a minute
in which I may think!"</p>
<p>Thinking time wasn't an item
even on the strictly limited list
at the moment, although Sevensee,
squatting dourly on his hairy
haunches where Maud had left
him, threw in a dead-pan "Thas
tellin em, Gov."</p>
<p>Then Doc at the bar stood up
tall as Abe Lincoln in his top hat
and shawl and 19th Century duds
and raised an unwavering arm for
silence and said something that
sounded like: "Introversh, inversh,
glovsh," and then his enunciation
switched to better than perfect as
he continued, "I know to an absolute
certainty what we must do."</p>
<p>It showed me how rabbity we
were that the Place got quiet as a
church while we all stopped whatever
we were doing and waited
breathless for a poor drunk to
tell us how to save ourselves.</p>
<p>He said something like, "Inversh
... bosh ..." and held our
eyes for a moment longer. Then
the light went out of his and he
slobbered out a "<i>Nichevo</i>" and
slid an arm far along the bar for
a bottle and started to pour it
down his throat without stopping
sliding.</p>
<p>Before he completed his collapse
to the floor, in the split second
while our attention was still
focused on the bar, Bruce vaulted
up on top of it, so fast it was almost
like he'd popped up from
nowhere, though I'd seen him start
from behind the piano.</p>
<p>"I've a question. Has anyone
here triggered that bomb?" he said
in a voice that was very clear and
just loud enough. "So it can't go
off," he went on after just the
right pause, his easy grin and brisk
manner putting more heart into me
all the time. "What's more, if it
were to be triggered, we'd still have
half an hour. I believe you said
it had that long a fuse?"</p>
<p>He stabbed a finger at Kaby.
She nodded.</p>
<p>"Right," he said. "It'd have to
be that long for whoever plants it
in the Parthian camp to get away.
There's another safety margin.</p>
<p>"Second question. Is there a
locksmith in the house?"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">For</span> all Bruce's easiness, he was
watching us like a golden eagle
and he caught Beau's and Maud's
affirmatives before they had a
chance to explain or hedge them
and said, "That's very good. Under
certain circumstances, you two'd
be the ones to go to work on the
chest. But before we consider that,
there's Question Three: Is anyone
here an atomics technician?"</p>
<p>That one took a little conversation
to straighten out, Illy having
to explain that, yes, the Early Lunans
had atomic power—hadn't
they blasted the life off their planet
with it and made all those ghastly
craters?—but no, he wasn't a technician
exactly, he was a "thinger"
(I thought at first his squeakbox
was lisping); what was a thinger?—well,
a thinger was someone who
manipulated things in a way that
was truly impossible to describe,
but no, you couldn't possibly thing
atomics; the idea was quite ridiculous,
so he couldn't be an atomics
thinger; the term was worse than
a contradiction, well, really!—while
Sevensee, from his two-thousand-millennia
advantage of the Lunan,
grunted to the effect that his culture
didn't rightly use any kind
of power, but just sort of moved
satyrs and stuff by wrastling space-time
around, "or think em roun ef
we hafta. Can't think em in the
Void, tho, wus luck. Hafta have—I
dunno wut. Dun havvit anyhow."</p>
<p>"So we don't have an A-tech,"
Bruce summed up, "which makes it
worse than useless, downright dangerous,
to tamper with the chest.
We wouldn't know what to do if
we did get inside safely. One more
question." He directed it toward
Sid. "How long before we can jettison
anything?"</p>
<p>Sid, looking a shade jealous, yet
mostly grateful for the way Bruce
had calmed his chickens, started to
explain, but Bruce didn't seem to
be taking any chance of losing his
audience, and as soon as Sid got
to the word "rhythm," he pulled
the answer away from him.</p>
<p>"In brief, not until we can effectively
tune in on the cosmos
again. Thank you, Master Lessingham.
That's at least five hours—two
mealtimes, as the Cretan officer
put it," and he threw Kaby a
quick soldierly smile. "So, whether
the bomb goes to Egypt or elsewhere,
there's not a thing we can
do about it for five hours. All right
then!"</p>
<p>His smile blinked out like a
light and he took a couple of steps
up and down the bar, as if measuring
the space he had. Two or three
cocktail glasses sailed off and
popped, but he didn't seem to notice
them and we hardly did either.
It was creepy the way he kept
staring from one to another of us.
We had to look up. Behind his
face, with the straight golden hair
flirting around it, was only the
Void.</p>
<p>"All right then," he repeated suddenly.
"We're twelve Spiders and
two Ghosts, and we've time for a
bit of a talk, and we're all in the
same bloody boat, fighting the
same bloody war, so we'll all know
what we're talking about. I raised
the subject a while back, but I
was steamed up about a glove, and
it was a big jest. All right! But
now the gloves are off!"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Bruce</span> ripped them out of his
belt where they'd been tucked
and slammed them down on the
bar, to be kicked off the next time
he paced back and forth, and it
wasn't funny.</p>
<p>"Because," he went right on,
"I've been getting a completely
new picture of what this Spiders'
war has been doing to each one
of us. Oh, it's jolly good sport to
slam around in space and time and
then have a rugged little party
outside both of them when the
operation's over. It's sweet to know
there's no cranny of reality so narrow,
no privacy so intimate or
sacred, no wall of was or will be
strong enough, that we can't shoulder
in. Knowledge is a glamorous
thing, sweeter than lust or gluttony
or the passion of fighting and
including all three, the ultimate
insatiable hunger, and it's great
to be Faust, even in a pack of
other Fausts.</p>
<p>"It's sweet to jigger reality, to
twist the whole course of a man's
life or a culture's, to ink out his
or its past and scribble in a new
one, and be the only one to know
and gloat over the changes—hah!
killing men or carrying off women
isn't in it for glutting the sense of
power. It's sweet to feel the Change
Winds blowing through you and
know the pasts that were and the
past that is and the pasts that may
be. It's sweet to wield the Atropos
and cut a Zombie or Unborn out
of his lifeline and look the Doubleganger
in the face and see the
Resurrection-glow in it and Recruit
a brother, welcome a newborn fellow
Demon into our ranks and decide
whether he'll best fit as Soldier,
Entertainer, or what.</p>
<p>"Or he can't stand Resurrection,
it fries or freezes him, and you've
got to decide whether to return
him to his lifeline and his Zombie
dreams, only they'll be a little
grayer and horrider than they were
before, or whether, if she's got that
tantalizing something, to bring her
shell along for a Ghostgirl—that's
sweet, too. It's even sweet to have
Change Death poised over your
neck, to know that the past isn't
the precious indestructible thing
you've been taught it was, to know
that there's no certainty about the
future either, whether there'll even
be one, to know that no part of
reality is holy, that the cosmos itself
may wink out like a flicked switch
and God be not and nothing left
but nothing!"</p>
<p>He threw out his arms against
the Void. "And knowing all that,
it's doubly sweet to come through
the Door into the Place and be
out of the worst of the Change
Winds and enjoy a well-earned
Recuperation and share the memories
of all these sweetnesses I've
been talking about, and work out
all the fascinating feelings you've
been accumulating back in the cosmos,
layer by black layer, in the
company of and with the help of
the best bloody little band of fellow
Fausts and Faustines going!</p>
<p>"Oh, it's a sweet life, all right, but
I'm asking you—" and here his eyes
stabbed us again, one by one, fast—"I'm
asking you what it's done
to us. I've been getting a completely
new picture, as I said, of what
my life was and what it could have
been if there'd been changes of the
sort that even we Demons can't
make, and what my life is. I've
been watching how we've all been
responding to things just now, to
the news of Saint Petersburg and
to what the Cretan officer told
beautifully—only it wasn't beautiful
what she had to tell—and mostly
to that bloody box of bomb.
And I'm simply asking each one
of you, what's happened to you?"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">He</span> stopped his pacing and
stuck his thumbs in his belt
and seemed to be listening to the
wheels turning in at least eleven
other heads—only I stopped mine
pretty quick, with Dave and
Father and the Rape of Chicago
coming up out of the dark on the
turn and Mother and the Indiana
Dunes and Jazz Limited just behind
them, followed by the unthinkable
thing the Spider doctor
had flicked into existence when I
flopped as a nurse, because I can't
stand that to be done to my mind
by anybody but myself.</p>
<p>I stopped them by using the old
infallible Entertainers' gimmick, a
fast survey of the most interesting
topic there is—other people's
troubles.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Offhand</span>, Beau looked as if he
had most troubles, shamed
by his boss and his girl given her
heart to a Soldier; he was hugging
them to himself very quiet.</p>
<p>I didn't stop for the two ETs—they're
too hard to figure—or for
Doc; nobody can tell whether a
fallen-down drunk's at the black
or bright end of his cycle; you
just know it's cycling.</p>
<p>Maud ought to be suffering as
much as Beau, called names and
caught out in a panic, which always
hurts her because she's plus
three hundred years more future
than the rest of us and figures she
ought to be that much wiser, which
she isn't always—not to mention
she's over fifty years old, though
her home-century cosmetic science
keeps her looking and acting teenage
most of the time. She'd backed
away from the bronze chest so as
not to stand out, and now Lili came
from behind the piano and stood
beside her.</p>
<p>Lili had the opposite of troubles,
a great big glow for Bruce, proud
as a promised princess watching
her betrothed. Erich frowned when
he saw her, for he seemed proud
too, proud of the way his <i>Kamerad</i>
had taken command of us panicky
whacks <i>Führer</i>-fashion. Sid still
looked mostly grateful and inclined
to let Bruce keep on talking.</p>
<p>Even Kaby and Mark, those
two dragons hot for battle, standing
a little in front and to one side
of us by the bronze chest, like its
guardians, seemed willing to listen.
They made me realize one reason
Sid had for letting Bruce run on,
although the path his talk was leading
us down was flashing with danger
signals: When it was over,
there'd still be the problem of what
to do with the bomb, and a real
opposition shaping up between Soldiers
and Entertainers, and Sid
was hoping a solution would turn
up in the meantime or at least was
willing to put off the evil day.</p>
<p>But beyond all that, and like the
rest of us, I could tell from the
way Sid was squinting his browy
eyes and chewing his beardy lip
that he was shaken and moved by
what Bruce had said. This New
Boy had dipped into our hearts
and counted our kicks so beautifully,
better than most of us could
have done, and then somehow
turned them around so that we had
to think of what messes and heels
and black sheep and lost lambs
we were—well, we wanted to keep
on listening.</p>
<hr class="chp" />
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