Power That Preserves
Empty silence answered him out of the darkness.
“Ah, hear me!” he called intently. “You have saved us from the hands of the Despiser. Do not abandon us now.”
The silence stretched, then broke. “Despair is Maker-work,” a voice said. “It was not our intent.”
“Do not trust them!” other voices cried. “They are hard.”
But the shuffling noise of feet came back toward Covenant and Foamfollower, and several of the clay forms lit themselves as they moved, so that the tunnel was filled with light. The creatures advanced cautiously, stopped well beyond the Giant’s reach. “We also ask your pardon,” said the leader as firmly as it could.
“Ah, you need not ask,” Foamfollower replied. “It may be that I am slow to recognize my friends—but when I have recognized them, they have no cause to fear me. I am Saltheart Foamfollower, the”—he swallowed as if the words threatened to choke him—“the last of the Seareach Giants. My friend is Thomas Covenant, ur-Lord and bearer of the white gold.”
“We know,” the leader said. “We have heard. We are the jheherrin—the aussat jheherrin Befylam. The Maker-place has no secret that the jheherrin have not heard. You were spoken of. Plans were made against you. The jheherrin debated and chose to aid you.”
“If the Maker learns,” a voice behind the leader quavered, “we are doomed.”
“That is true. If he guesses at our aid, he will no longer suffer us. We fear for our lives. But you are his enemies. And the legends say—”
Abruptly the leader stopped, turned to confer with the other jheherrin. Covenant watched in fascination as they whispered together. From a distance, they all looked alike, but closer inspection revealed that they were as different as the clay work of different children. They varied in size, shape, hue, timidity, tone of voice. Yet they shared an odd appearance of unsolidity. They bulged and squished when they moved as if they were only held together by a fragile skin of surface tension—as if any jar or blow might reduce them to amorphous wet mud.
After a short conference, the leader returned. Its voice quivered as if it were afraid of its own audacity as it said, “Why have you come? You dare— What is your purpose?”
Foamfollower answered grimly, so that the jheherrin would believe him, “It is our purpose to destroy Lord Foul the Despiser.”
Covenant winced at the bald statement. But he could not deny it. How else could he describe what he meant to do?
The jheherrin conferred again, then announced rapidly, anxiously, “It cannot be done. Come with us.”
The suddenness of this made it sound like a command, though the leader’s voice was too tremulous to carry much authority. Covenant felt impelled to protest, not because he had any objection to following the jheherrin, but because he wanted to know why they considered his task impossible. But they forestalled him by the celerity of their withdrawal; before he could frame a question, half the lights were gone and the rest were going.
Foamfollower shrugged and motioned Covenant ahead of him down the tunnel. Covenant nodded. With a groan of weariness, he began to crouch along behind the jheherrin.
They moved with unexpected speed. Bulging and oozing at every step, they half trotted and half poured their way down the tunnel. Covenant could not keep up with them. In his cramped crouch, his lungs ached on the stale air, and his feet slipped erratically in the slimy mud. Foamfollower’s pace was even slower; the low ceiling forced him to crawl. But some of the jheherrin stayed behind with them, guiding them past the bends and intersections of the passage. And before long the tunnel began to grow larger. As the number and complexity of the junctions increased, the ceiling rose. Soon Covenant was able to stand erect, and Foamfollower could move at a crouch. Then they traveled more swiftly.
Their journey went on for a long time. Through intricate clusters of intersections where tunnels honeycombed the earth, and the travelers caught glimpses of other creatures, all hastening the same way, through mud so wet and thick that Covenant could barely wade it and shiny coal-lodes reflecting the rocklight of the jheherrin garishly, they tramped for leagues with all the speed Covenant could muster. But that speed was not great, and it became steadily less as the leagues passed. He had been two days without food and closer to ten without adequate rest. The caked mud throbbed like fever on his forehead. And the numbness in his hands and feet—a lack of sensation which had nothing to do with the cold—was spreading.
Yet he trudged on. He was not afraid that he would cripple himself; in his weariness, that perpetual leper’s dread had lost its power over him. Feet, head, hunger—the conditions for his return to his own world were being met. It was not the fear of leprosy which drove him. He had other motivations.
The conditions of the trek gradually improved. Rock replaced the mud of the tunnel; the air grew slowly lighter, cleaner; the temperature moderated. Such things helped Covenant keep going. And whenever he faltered, Foamfollower’s concern and encouragement steadied him. League after league, he went on as if he were trying to erase the troublesome numbness of his feet on the bare rock.
At last he lapsed into somnolence. He took no more notice of his surroundings or his guides or his exhaustion. He did not feel the hand Foamfollower placed on his shoulder from time to time to direct him. When he found himself unexpectedly stationary in a large, rocklit cavern full of milling creatures, he stared at it dumbly as if he could not imagine how he had arrived there.
Most of the creatures stayed a safe distance from him and Foamfollower, but a few dragged themselves forward, carrying clay bowls of water and food. As they approached, they oozed with instinctive fear. Nevertheless they came close enough to offer the bowls.
Covenant reached out to accept, but the Giant stopped him.
“Ah, jheherrin,” Foamfollower said in a formal tone, “your hospitality honors us. If we could, we would return honor to you by accepting. But we are not like you—our lives are unalike. Your food would do us harm rather than help.”
This speech roused Covenant somewhat. He made himself look into the bowls and found that Foamfollower was right. The food had the appearance of liquefied marl, and it reeked of old rot, as if dead flesh had moldered in it for centuries.
But the water was fresh and pure. Foamfollower accepted it with a bow of thanks, drank deeply, then handed it to Covenant.
For the first time, Covenant realized that Foamfollower’s sack had been lost in the thorn wastes.
The rush of cold water into his emptiness helped him shake off more of his somnolence. He drank the bowl dry, savoring the purity of the water as if he believed he would never taste anything clean again. When he returned it to the waiting, trembling jheherrin, he did his best to match Foamfollower’s bow.
Then he began to take stock of his situation. The cavern already held several hundred creatures, and more were arriving constantly. Like the jheherrin who had rescued him, they all appeared to be made of animated mud. They were grotesquely formed, like monsters ridiculed for their monstrosity; they lacked any sense organs that Covenant could recognize. Yet he was vaguely surprised to see that they came in several different types. In addition to the short erect forms he had first seen, there were two or three distinct beast-shapes, which looked like miserably failed attempts to mold horses, wolves, Cavewights in mud, and one oddly serpentine group of belly crawlers.
“Foamfollower?” he murmured. A painful intuition twisted in him. “What are they?”
“They name themselves in the tongue of the Old Lords,” Foamfollower replied carefully, as if he were skirting something dangerous, “according to their shapes. Those who rescued us are the aussat Befylam of the jheherrin. Other Befylam you see—the fael Befylam”—he pointed to the crawlers—“and the roge”—he indicated the Cavewight-like creatures. “I have heard portions of their talk as we marched,” he explained. But he did not continue.
Covenant felt nauseated by the thrust of his guess. He insisted, “What are they?”
Under the mud which
darkened his face, Foamfollower’s jaw muscles knotted. His voice quivered slightly as he said, “Ask them. Let them speak of it if they will.” He stared around the cavern, did not meet Covenant’s gaze.
“We will speak,” a cold, dusky voice said. One of the fael jheherrin Befylam crawled a short distance toward them. It slopped wetly over the rock as it moved, and when it halted, it lay panting and gasping like a landed fish. Resolution and fear opposed each other in every heave of its length. But Covenant was not repelled. He felt wrung with pity for all the jheherrin. “We will speak,” the crawler repeated. “You are hard—you threaten us all.”
“They will destroy us,” a host of voices whimpered.
“But we have chosen to aid.”
“The choice was not unopposed!” voices cried.
“We have chosen. You are—the legend says—” It faltered in confusion. “We accept this risk.” Then a wave of misery filled its voice. “We beg you—do not turn against us.”
Evenly, firmly, Foamfollower said, “We will never willingly harm the jheherrin.”
A silence like disbelief answered him from every part of the cavern. But then a few voices said in a tone of weary self-abandonment, “Speak, then. We have chosen.”
The crawler steadied itself. “We will speak. We have chosen. White gold human, you ask what we are. We are the jheherrin—the soft ones—Maker-work.” As it spoke, the rocklight pulsed in the air like sorrow.
“The Maker labors deep in the fastness of his home, breeding armies. He takes living flesh as you know living flesh, and works his power upon it, shaping power and malice to serve his own. But his work does not always grow to his desires. At times the result is weakness rather than strength. At times his making is blind—or crippled—or stillborn. Such spawn he casts into a vast quagmire of fiery mud to be consumed.”
A vibration of remembered terror filled the cavern.
“But there is another potency in that abysm. We are not slain. In agony we become the jheherrin—the soft ones. We are transformed. From the depths of the pit we crawl.”
“We crawl,” voices echoed.
“In lightless combs lost even to the memory of the Maker—”
“Lost.”
“—we supplicate our lives.”
“Lives.”
“From the mud of the thorn wastes to the very walls of the Maker-place, we wander in soil and fear, searching—”
“Searching.”
“—listening—”
“Listening.”
“—waiting.”
“Waiting.”
“The surface of the Earth is denied to us. We would perish in dust if the light of the sun were to touch us. And we cannot delve—we cannot make new tunnels to lead us from this place. We are soft.”
“Lost.”
“And we dare not offend the Maker. We live in sufferance—he smiles upon our abjection.”
“Lost.”
“Yet we retain the shapes of what we were. We are”—the voice shuddered as if it feared it would be stricken for its audacity—“not servants of the Maker.”
Hundreds of the jheherrin gasped in trepidation.
“Many of our combs border the passages of the Maker. We search the walls and listen. We hear—the Maker has no secret. We heard his enmity against you, his intent against you. In the name of the legend, we debated and chose. Any aid that could be concealed from the Maker, we choose to give.”
As the crawler finished, all the jheherrin fell silent, and watched Covenant while he groped for a response. Part of him wanted to weep, to throw his arms around the monstrous creatures and weep. But his purpose was rigid within him. He felt that he could not bend to gentleness without breaking. To destroy Lord Foul, he grated silently. Yes! “But you—” he responded harshly. “They said it’s impossible. Cannot be done.”
“Cannot,” the crawler trembled. “The passages of the Maker under Kurash Qwellinir are guarded. Kurash Qwellinir itself is a maze. The fires of Gorak Krembal ward the Maker-place. His halls swarm with malice and servants. We have heard. The Maker has no secret.”
“Yet you aided us.” The Giant’s tone was thoughtful. “You have dared the Maker’s rage. You did not do this for any small reason.”
“That is true.” The speaker seemed afraid of what Foamfollower might say next.
“Surely there are other aids which you can give.”
“Yes—yes. Of Gorak Krembal we do not speak—there is nothing. But we know the ways of Kurash Qwellinir. And—and in the Maker-place also—there is something. But—” The speaker faltered, fell silent.
“But,” Foamfollower said steadily, “such aid is not the reason for the aid you have already given. I am not deaf or blind, jheherrin. Some other cause has led you to this peril.”
“The legend—” gulped the speaker, then slithered away to confer with the creatures behind it. An intensely whispered argument followed, during which Covenant tried to calm his sense of impending crisis. For some obscure reason, he hoped that the creatures would refuse to speak of their legend. But when the crawler returned to them, Foamfollower said deliberately, “Tell us.”
A silence of dread echoed in the cavern, and when the speaker replied fearfully, “We will,” a chorus of shrieks pierced the air. Several score of the jheherrin fled, unable to bear the risk. “We must. There is no other way.”
The crawler approached a few feet, then slumped wetly on the floor, gasping as if it could not breathe. But after a moment, it lifted up its quavering voice and began to sing. The song was in an alien tongue that Covenant did not comprehend, and its pitches were made so uncertain by fear that he could not discern the melody. Yet—more in the way the jheherrin listened than in the song itself—he sensed something of its potency, its attractiveness for the creatures. Without understanding anything about it, he was moved.
It was a short song, as if long ages of grim or abject use had reduced it to its barest bones. When it was done, the speaker said weakly, “The legend. The one hope of the jheherrin—the sole part of our lives that is not Maker-work, the sole purpose. It tells that the distant forebears of the jheherrin, the un-Maker-made, were themselves Makers. But they were not seedless as he is—as we are. They were not driven to breed upon the flesh of others. From their bodies came forth young who grew and in turn made young. Thus the world was constantly renewed, in firmness and replenishment. Such things cannot be imagined.
“But the Makers were flawed. Some were weak, some blind, others incautious. Among them the Maker was born, seedless and bitter, and they did not see or fear what they had done. Thus they fell into his power. He captured them and took them to the deep fastnesses of his home, and used them to begin the work of forming armies.
“We are the last vestige of these flawed un-Maker-made. Their last life is preserved in us. In punishment for their flaws, we are doomed to crawl the combs in misery and watchfulness and eternal fear. Mud is our sun and blood and being, our flesh and home. Fear is our heritage, for the Maker could bring us to an end with one word, living as we do in the very shadow of his home. But we are watchful in the name of our one hope. For it is said that some un-Maker-made are still free of the Maker—that they still bring forth young from their bodies. It is said that when the time is ready, a young will be birthed without flaw—a pure offspring impervious to the Maker and his making—unafraid. It is said that this pure one will come bearing tokens of power to the Maker’s home. It is said that he will redeem the jheherrin if they prove—if he finds them worthy—that he will win from the Maker their release from fear and mud—if—if—” The crawler could not go on. Its voice stumbled into silence, left the cavern aching for a reply to fill the void of its misery.
But Covenant could not bend without breaking. He felt all the attention of the jheherrin focused on him. He could feel them voicelessly asking him, imploring, Are you the pure one? If we help you, will you free us? But he could not give them the answer they wanted. Their living death deserved the truth
from him, not a false hope.
Deliberately he sacrificed their help. His voice was harsh; he sounded angry as he said, “Look at me. You know the answer. Under all this mud, I’m sick—diseased. And I’ve done things— I’m not pure. I’m corrupt.”
One last pulse of silence met his denial—one still moment while the intent, tremulous hope around him shattered. Then a shrill wail of despair tore through the multitude of the jheherrin. All the light vanished at once. Shrieking in darkness like desolated ghouls, the creatures ran.
Foamfollower caught hold of Covenant to protect him against an attack. But the jheherrin did not attack; they fled. The sound of their movement rushed through the cavern like a loud wind of loss, and died away. Soon the silence returned, fell limp at the feet of Covenant and Foamfollower like empty cerements, the remains of a violated grave.
Covenant’s chest shook with dry spasms like sobs, but he clenched himself into union with the silence. He could not bend; he would break if the rictus of his determination were forced to bend. Foul! he jerked. Foul! You’re too cruel.
He felt the attempted consolation of the Giant’s hand on his shoulder. He wanted to respond, wanted to utter in some way the violence of his resolve. But before he could speak, the silence seemed to flow and concentrate itself into the sound of soft weeping.
The sound grew on him as he listened. Forlorn and miserable, it rose up into the darkness like irremediable grief, made the hollow air throb. He yearned to go to the weeper, yearned to comfort it in some way. But when he moved, it found words to halt him, desolate accusation. “Despair is Maker-work.”
“Forgive me,” Covenant groaned. “How could I lie to you?” He searched for the right reply, then said on intuition, “But the legend hasn’t changed. I haven’t touched the legend. I don’t deny your worth. You are worthy. I’m just—not the pure one. He hasn’t come yet. I don’t have anything to do with your hope.”