<h2>CHAPTER 10</h2>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">My thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Shakes so my single state of man that function<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Is smother'd in surmise, and nothing is<br/></span>
<span class="i0">But what is not.<br/></span></div>
<div class="rgt">—Macbeth</div>
</div>
<h3>MOTIVES AND OPPORTUNITIES</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">My</span> big bad waif from King's
Lynn had set the tray on
his knees and started to wolf the
food down. The others were finishing
up. Erich, Mark and Kaby
were having a quietly furious argument
I couldn't overhear at the
end of the bar nearest the bronze
chest, and Illy was draped over
the piano like a real octopus, listening
in.</p>
<p>Beau and Sevensee were pacing
up and down near the control divan
and throwing each other a
word now and then. Beyond them,
Bruce and Lili were sitting on the
opposite couch from us, talking
earnestly about something. Maud
had sat down at the other end of
the bar and was knitting—it's one
of the habits like chess and quiet
drinking, or learning to talk by
squeak box, that we pick up to
pass the time in the Place in the
long stretches between parties. Doc
was fiddling around the Gallery,
picking things up and setting them
down, still managing to stay on his
feet at any rate.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Lili</span> and Bruce stood up, still
gabbing intensely at each other,
and Illy began to pick out with
one tentacle a little tune in the
high keys that didn't sound like
anything on God's earth. "Where
do they get all the energy?" I
wondered.</p>
<p>As soon as I asked myself that,
I knew the answer and I began to
feel the same way myself. It wasn't
energy; it was nerves, pure and
simple.</p>
<p>Change is like a drug, I realized—you
get used to the facts never
staying the same, and one picture
of the past and future dissolving
into another maybe not very different
but still different, and your
mind being constantly goosed by
strange moods and notions, like
nightclub lights of shifting color
with weird shadows between shining
right on your brain.</p>
<p>The endless swaying and jogging
is restful, like riding on a
train.</p>
<p>You soon get to like the movement
and to need it without knowing,
and when it suddenly stops
and you're just you and the facts
you think from and feel from are
exactly the same when you go
back to them—boy, that's rough,
as I found out now.</p>
<p>The instant we got Introverted,
everything that ordinarily leaks
into the Place, wake or sleep, had
stopped coming, and we were
nothing but ourselves and what we
meant to each other and what we
could make of that, an awfully
lonely, scratchy situation.</p>
<p>I decided I felt like I'd been
dropped into a swimming pool full
of cement and held under until it
hardened.</p>
<p>I could understand the others
bouncing around a bit. It was a
wonder they didn't hit the Void.
Maud seemed to be standing it the
best; maybe she'd got a little preparation
from the long watches
between stars; and then she is
older than all of us, even Sid,
though with a small "o" in "older."</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">The</span> restless work of the search
for the Maintainer had masked
the feeling, but now it was beginning
to come full force. Before the
search, Bruce's speech and Erich's
interruptions had done a passable
masking job too. I tried to remember
when I'd first got the feeling
and decided it was after Erich
had jumped on the bomb, about
the time he mentioned poetry.
Though I couldn't be sure. Maybe
the Maintainer had been Introverted
even earlier, when I'd
turned to look at the Ghostgirls.
I wouldn't have known. Nuts!</p>
<p>Believe me, I could feel that
hardened cement on every inch
of me. I remembered Bruce's
beautiful picture of a universe
without Big Change and decided
it was about the worst idea going.
I went on eating, though I wasn't
so sure now it was a good idea to
keep myself strong.</p>
<p>"Does the Maintainer have an
Introversion telltale? Siddy!"</p>
<p>"'Sdeath, chit, and you love me,
speak lower. Of a sudden, I feel
not well, as if I'd drunk a butt of
Rhenish and slept inside it. Marry
yes, blue. In short flashes, saith
the manual. Why ask'st thou?"</p>
<p>"No reason. God, Siddy, what
I'd give for a breath of Change
Wind."</p>
<p>"Thou can'st say that eftsoons,"
he groaned. I must have looked
pretty miserable myself, for he
put his arm around my shoulders
and whispered gruffly, "Comfort
thyself, sweetling, that while we
suffer thus sorely, we yet cannot
die the Change Death."</p>
<p>"What's that?" I asked him.</p>
<p>I didn't want to bounce around
like the others. I had a suspicion
I'd carry it too far. So, to keep
myself from going batty, I started
to rework the business of who had
done what to the Maintainer.</p>
<p>During the hunt, there had been
some pretty wild suggestions
tossed around as to its disappearance
or at least its Introversion: a
feat of Snake science amounting
to sorcery; the Spider high command
bunkering the Places from
above, perhaps in reaction to the
loss of the Express Room, in such
a hurry that they hadn't even time
to transmit warnings; the hand of
the Late Cosmicians, those mysterious
hypothetical beings who are
supposed to have successfully resisted
the extension of the Change
War into the future much beyond
Sevensee's epoch—unless the Late
Cosmicians are the ones fighting
the Change War.</p>
<p>One thing these suggestions had
steered very clear of was naming
any one of us as a suspect, whether
acting as Snake spy, Spider political
police, agent of—who knows,
after Bruce?—a secret Change
World Committee of Public Safety
or Spider revolutionary underground,
or strictly on our own.
Just as no one had piped a word,
since the Maintainer had been
palmed, about the split between
Erich's and Bruce's factions.</p>
<p>Good group thinking probably,
to sink differences in the emergency,
but that didn't apply to
what I did with my own thoughts.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Who</span> wanted to escape so bad
they'd Introvert the Place,
cutting off all possible contact and
communication either way with
the cosmos and running the very
big risk of not getting back to the
cosmos at all?</p>
<p>Leaving out what had happened
since Bruce had arrived and stirred
things up, Doc seemed to me to
have the strongest motive. He knew
that Sid couldn't keep covering up
for him forever and that Spider
punishments for derelictions of
duty are not just the clink of a
firing squad, as Erich had reminded
us. But Doc had been flat on the
floor in front of the bar from the
time Bruce had jumped on top
of it, though I certainly hadn't had
my eye on him every second.</p>
<p>Beau? Beau had said he was
bored with the Place at a time
when what he said counted, so
he'd hardly lock himself in it maybe
forever, not to mention locking
Bruce in with himself and the babe
he had a yen for.</p>
<p>Sid loves reality, Changing or
not, and every least thing in it,
people especially, more than any
man or woman I've ever known—he's
like a big-eyed baby who
wants to grab every object and
put it in his mouth—and it was
hard to imagine him ever cutting
himself off from the cosmos.</p>
<p>Maud, Kaby, Mark and the
two ETs? None of them had any
motive I knew of, though Sevensee's
being from the very far future
did tie in with that idea about
the Late Cosmicians, and there
did seem to be something developing
between the Cretan and the
Roman that could make them want
to be Introverted together.</p>
<p>"Stick to the facts, Greta," I reminded
myself with a private
groan.</p>
<p>That left Erich, Bruce, Lili and
myself.</p>
<p>Erich, I thought—now we're
getting somewhere. The little commandant
has the nervous system
of a coyote and the courage of a
crazy tomcat, and if he thought
it would help him settle his battle
with Bruce better to be locked in
with him, he'd do it in a second.</p>
<p>But even before Erich had
danced on the bomb, he'd been
heckling Bruce from the crowd.
Still, there would have been time
between heckles for him to step
quietly back from us, Introvert the
Maintainer and ... well, that was
nine-tenths of the problem.</p>
<p>If I was the guilty party, I was
nuts and that was the best explanation
of all. Gr-r-r!</p>
<p>Bruce's motives seemed so obvious,
especially the mortal (or
was it immortal?) danger he'd put
himself in by inciting mutiny, that
it seemed a shame he'd been in
full view on the bar so long. Surely,
if the Maintainer had been Introverted
before he jumped on the
bar, we'd all have noticed the
flashing blue telltale. For that matter,
I'd have noticed it when I
looked back at the Ghostgirls—if
it worked as Sid claimed, and he
said he had never seen it in operation,
just read in the manual—oh,
'sdeath!</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">But</span> Bruce didn't need opportunity,
as I'm sure all the
males in the Place would have told
me right off, because he had Lili
to pull the job for him and she
had as much opportunity as any
of the rest of us. Myself, I have
large reservations to this woman-putty-in-the-hands-of-the-man-she-loves-madly
theory, but I
had to admit there was something
to be said for it in this case, and
it had seemed quite natural to me
when the rest of us had decided, by
unspoken agreement, that neither
Lili's nor Bruce's checks counted
when we were hunting for the
Maintainer.</p>
<p>That took care of all of us and
left only the mysterious stranger,
intruding somehow through a Door
(how'd he get it without using our
Maintainer?) or from an unimaginable
hiding place or straight out
of the Void itself. I know that last
is impossible—nothing can step
out of nothing—but if anything
ever looked like it was specially
built for something not at all nice
to come looming out of, it's the
Void—misty, foggily churning,
slimy gray....</p>
<p>"Wait a second," I told myself,
"and hang onto this, Greta. It
should have smacked you in the
face at the start."</p>
<p>Whatever came out of the Void,
or, more to the point, whoever
slipped back from our crowd to
the Maintainer, Bruce would have
seen them. He was looking at the
Maintainer past our heads the
whole time, and whatever happened
to it, he saw it.</p>
<p>Erich wouldn't have, even after
he was on the bomb, because he'd
been stagewise enough to face
Bruce most of the time to build
up his role as tribune of the people.</p>
<p>But Bruce would have—unless
he got so caught up in what he
was saying....</p>
<p>No, kid, a Demon is always an
actor, no matter how much he
believes in what he's saying, and
there never was an actor yet who
wouldn't instantly notice a member
of the audience starting to walk out
on his big scene.</p>
<p>So Bruce knew, which made him
a better actor than I'd have been
willing to grant, since it didn't look
as if anyone else had thought of
what had just occurred to me,
or they'd have gone over and put
it to him.</p>
<p>Not me, though—I don't work
that way. Besides, I didn't feel up
to it—Nervy Anna enfold me, I
felt like pure hell.</p>
<p>"Maybe," I told myself encouragingly,
"the Place is Hell," but
added, "Be your age, Greta—be
a real rootless, ruleless, ruthless
twenty-nine."</p>
<hr class="chp" />
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