Cadool was carried farther down the street. He continued his hunting cry. Ahead, right in the middle of the road, was a ball of green arms and legs and tails—perhaps six or seven Quintaglios locked in mortal combat.
Cadool jabbed his feet into his shoveler’s side, this time toes in, deliberately piercing the hide. The tube-crester pumped out an anguished cry, splitting the air like all the thunder of a storm discharged with a single blast. Heads appeared from the ball of limbs, slick all over with blood.
“Kalahatch!” shouted Cadool.
Three individuals disentangled themselves from the ball; the rest, dead, dying, or dazed, didn’t get out of the way in time and were trampled by the stampede. But the ones who had escaped ran to the sides of the road, ensconcing themselves in recessed doorways, letting part of the shovelmouth herd thunder by. Cadool looked back long enough to see two of them leap onto shovelers. The third, a male apparently more injured than Cadool had first thought, collapsed slowly to the paving stones as the rest of the herbivores pounded on.
Cadool continued into the center of town. He was having about a three-quarters success rate at getting the crazed Quintaglio to switch from killing each other to hunting the shovelers. As for the rest, there was nothing he could do.
Suddenly the street widened into a large square, dotted with the red-spattered bodies of the dead or dying.
Entering the square from the opposite direction was another cluster of shovelmouths. Quintaglios were attacking them, purging their rage through the hunt, coming together in the hunt, cooperating for the hunt—
But how? Where were these other shovelers coming from?
And then Cadool saw. Dybo, the Emperor himself, riding atop a shovelmouth with an orange-and-blue-striped hide, one of the imported Arj’toolar beasts kept in the private imperial stockyard. Dybo, unaggressive to the point of docility, thought to be the weakest of his mother’s hatchlings, all but immune, apparently, to the clouds of pheromones drenching every corner of the Capital. Dybo, risking his life to quell the madness in his people.
Cadool saluted the Emperor, and Dybo waved back. The tide was turning, the madness abating, the population releasing its bloodlust. Shovelers fell to the paving, and Quintaglios feasted together, their mode shifting from violence to the torpor brought by full bellies.
Many had died, but most had survived—this time. But Cadool knew this was only a temporary reprieve.
Next time, they might not be so lucky.
Chapter 40
Fra’toolar
The first thing Toroca heard was a voice.
“What happened?” It was Delplas.
Toroca tried to rise, but made a small groan instead. “My head hurts.”
“You banged it when you collapsed,” said Delplas. “What happened?”
Toroca opened his eyes. It was dark; eight moons moved overhead. “When that inner door opened, I got this gush of air in my face. It was stale, musty. It smelled wrong. Then I collapsed.”
“Something funny about the air,” said Greeblo. “Your lamp went out, too.”
“How long have I been unconscious?”
“Not too long,” said Delplas. “About a daytenth.”
Toroca sighed. “It’s night. Let’s wait until morning to let some decent air get into that thing, then head back inside.”
“Aye,” said Delplas. “You’re probably right.”
It was even-night, the night most people didn’t sleep—everyone was back on normal schedules. Toroca lay on his belly, eyes turned up, watching the stars careen across the bowl of the sky.
As soon as the sun was up, Toroca squeezed into the tiny room with doors at either end. The outer door was still jammed half-open: the inner wasn’t yet quite open all the way. Toroca had succumbed to the bad air before he’d slid the panel all the way to the left side. He sniffed warily. Everything smelled fine now. He pulled the inner door all the way aside and stepped through, into the interior of the object, whatever it was, the spluttering flame from a hand-held lantern illuminating his way.
He was in a long gently curving corridor, running parallel to the outer wall of the object. Toroca was immediately startled by how straight the corridor was. Most Quintaglio corridors twisted and turned, so as to keep other users of them out of sight. There was a standard walking pace for corridors: as long as you moved along at that pace, you could walk the length of most hallways without ever seeing another individual, even if the hallway was actually in heavy use.
“Well?” called Delplas from outside.
“It seems all right,” replied Toroca, his voice echoing a bit. “Come along.”
Toroca stepped about ten paces down the corridor. He could hear Delplas making her way through the strange double-doored room.
The light from two lanterns—Toroca’s and Delplas’s—cast weird shadows on the blue walls. The object, like everything on Land, had been rocked over time by landquakes, and its floors were canted at an angle. Thick black dust had accumulated along the downslope side of the corridors. Toroca thought perhaps it was the remnant of some fabric covering that had decayed over time, although why one would put tapestries on the floor was beyond him.
They passed their first room. It contained blobs of corroded metal; perhaps once they had been furniture. None of the rooms seemed to have doors, just open archways. That made even more peculiar the strange double-doored room they had first come through. Littering the floor were artifacts similar to the one Toroca had originally found and clumps of rusted material, presumably artifacts made of less-stern stuff that had corroded.
Toroca and Delplas continued along, ten or so paces between them. The next room they passed also contained corroded metal, and the one after that, nothing at all, except intricate metal panels—perhaps art of some kind?—embedded in the walls. Toroca leaned in to examine one of the panels. It was perforated with many tiny holes in regular patterns, and most of the holes were covered with bits of colored glass or crystal. Little geometric shapes were etched into parts of the panels.
It took a while, but Toroca finally noticed the roofs. The ceilings of the corridor and rooms weren’t made of the same blue material. Rather, they seemed to be covered over with translucent glass. In several places, the glass was broken. Looking closely at a large piece that had fallen to the floor, Toroca saw that it wasn’t really glass. It was a softer material, waxier, and when he looked at it edge-on, it was white, rather than the dark green or blue of glass seen thus. He also found he could flex the material slightly.
Toroca looked up to where the piece of milky material had fallen from. Recessed in the roof were long orange tubes, and those, mostly cracked and shattered, did look as though they were made from real glass.
It was one of those sudden flashes of insight. Toroca suddenly realized what was missing from the walls—hooks to hang lanterns on, candle holders, anything to hold a light source. The translucent roof, and the strange tubes behind, must have provided light, somehow. Perhaps the tubes were optical conduits, something like Novato’s far-seers, channeling light from outside. Perhaps.
The next room they came upon was a complete surprise. Toroca motioned for Delplas to come stand relatively near him.
“What do you make of that?” said Toroca.
Jutting from the walls of the room were pallets, each one about twice as long as it was wide, covered with a pile of decayed material that might at one time have been fabric. There were a total of twelve pallets, three at about Toroca’s knee-level on each side of the room, and three more above these at his shoulder level. The upper pallets had strange ladder-like affairs leading up to them, except that the ladders were really two narrow ladders paired side by side, with a handspan’s gap between them. Toroca couldn’t fathom what the use of such ladders would be; they were almost what one might imagine for a Quintaglio who wanted to climb backward and needed a slot for his or her tail.
“They’re beds,” said Delplas at last, gesturing at the pallets.
Beds. M
ost Quintaglios slept on the floor, but such things were used in hospitals or in the homes of the very old to bring bodies up to a comfortable level for doctors to work on. But in all his life, Toroca had never seen a room with more than one bed in it.
“That would mean twelve people slept in this room at once,” said Toroca. “That’s not possible. No one could stand such close quarters for any length of time.” And, when the words were out, Toroca realized how true they were—even for him, even free of territoriality, the idea of sleeping with eleven others was completely beyond his ken.
“They do look like beds, though, don’t they?” persisted Delplas.
Toroca thought about that. “Yes. Yes, they do.” He shuddered as a thought occurred to him. Yes, this vast object was miraculous, but he’d still retained the thought, the six-fingered handgrip of the original artifact not withstanding, that it was of Quintaglio manufacture. After all, who else could have possibly built it? But this room—this room was no room a Quintaglio would ever use. And those straight corridors—hallways no Quintaglio would feel comfortable walking in except when completely alone. Someone else—something else—had built this.
What, wondered Toroca, did the builders look like?
With the outer door jammed partially closed, poor Greeblo still couldn’t get inside the great blue structure. Her job became cataloging the markings on its vast curving surface. Meanwhile, Toroca organized the other six surveyors into three interior-exploration teams. Because of the poor air circulation within the massive structure, each team had only a single lamp.
Toroca and Delplas constituted one such team. It was hard on Delplas, since Toroca carried the lamp and territoriality tended to make her lag behind in the dark. The blue structure was huge, and it was frustrating not to be able to get a really good look at its interior. Toroca’s lamp flame lit only a small area. The rest faded away into eerie darkness.
The inner walls were all made of the same blue material as the outer shell. Toroca tried to find seams indicating where two sheets of the blue stuff had been joined, but he couldn’t. It was almost as if the whole vast structure was one continuous piece, like blown glass.
Suddenly something occurred to Toroca. “It’s not a sailing ship,” he said, turning around to face Delplas, who cast a giant dancing shadow on the wall behind her in the swaying light of Toroca’s lamp.
“Oh?” she replied, crossing her arms in front of her chest. “I agree it doesn’t look like any ship I’ve ever seen before, but well, it is streamlined on the outside, and it has a ship-like quality about it.”
“Think about the Dasheter.” he said. “Do you remember the doorways?”
“They had nice scenes carved into them,” said Delplas.
“Yes, yes. But they also didn’t go all the way to the floor, I’m sure. There was a lip, a handspan or greater in height, that you had to step over at each doorway.”
“Now that you mention it, I do remember that.”
“It was to keep water from sloshing from compartment to compartment,” said Toroca. “As Var-Keenir once said to me, all ships leak.”
Delplas nodded in understanding. “But here the doorways go right to the floor, and in most cases there are no actual doors at all, just open archways.”
“Exactly,” said Toroca. “Whatever this thing was used for, it wasn’t a sailing ship.”
“But it can’t have been a building, either. It has a rounded floor. I mean, here, inside, the floors are flat, but the bottom of the—of the hull, call it—the bottom of the hull, as seen from outside, is rounded.”
“Yes. And no one would build an edifice that didn’t have a flat bottom.”
“So it is a ship,” said Delplas.
“Perhaps.”
“But not a sailing ship.”
“No, not a sailing ship.”
“Then what kind of ship is it?”
“I don’t—”
“Toroca!”
The shout came from deep in the interior of the structure. Toroca broke into a dead run, Delplas following. His lantern made mad shadows run along with them as they bounded down the strange, straight corridors.
“Toroca!” went the shout again, echoing off the hard blue walls.
Ahead, Gan-Spalton was standing by an open doorway. “It had been closed,” he said, pointing. “One of the few I’ve seen that really had a door. I operated the latch, and—”
The corpse was desiccated. If it had been at one time covered with skin, that skin was long since gone. The body was about the same bulk as Toroca, but that was the only characteristic they had in common. The dome-shaped head had five eyes. A long trunk dangled from the face. It ended in a pair of convex, shell-shaped manipulators, each with six little fingers within, just right for handling the strange artifact Toroca had found all those days ago.
The body was slumped over, a bowl-shaped structure visible beneath it that might have been a chair. The creature’s torso was made up of a series of disks, shining like opals in the torchlight. At the end of the torso was a cup-shaped brace supporting three pairs of legs. The first pair was long, the second and third pairs much shorter, and looked as though they wouldn’t have reached the ground if the creature had been standing.
Toroca staggered back on his tail. What manner of creature was this? It was unlike a Quintaglio, or anything else he was familiar with. Even the bizarre lifeforms of the south pole had shared a fundamental body plan that he recognized, but this, this was like nothing he’d ever seen before, nothing he’d even imagined before.
And then it hit him, and his jaw dropped.
This ship, this giant blue vessel, must have traveled very far indeed.
Chapter 41
A Quintaglio’s Diary
Two down, four to go.
Perhaps I should have done Toroca when I last saw him. It will be a long time before he returns to the Capital, I’m sure. Still, the fact that he is away so much of the time makes his existence tolerable…to a degree. Absence makes the heart grow calmer.
That mass dagamant was a release for me, and for many others, I’m sure. Perhaps I’ll wait awhile until I do number three.
Or perhaps not.
Capital City
After the collective dagamant, Cadool searched and searched for Afsan. At last he found him, disoriented, unsure of where he was, slumped in an alley beside a building, exhausted, bruised, bloodied, but not severely injured.
They retired to Rockscape for three days, recovering, and waiting for Gathgol, now the busiest of all workers in the province, to collect all the bodies that littered the streets.
But, at last, Afsan and Cadool came back into the city to deal with the task at hand.
“Let’s rest here,” said Cadool. They’d been walking all afternoon, going from one side of the Capital to the other, the streets still a mess, blood splatters on the paving stones and adobe walls, broken tree branches and discarded sashes skittering along the avenues, propelled by the wind.
Here, in a small plaza, a marble likeness of the astrologer Tak-Saleed had been erected. Unlike many of the monuments in the Capital, this one was still standing despite the riots. Cadool helped Afsan find a seat on a bench, sitting him in the shadow of the statue.
“There is no sign that bloodpriest Maliden is in Capital City,” said Cadool, easing himself onto another bench. “Dy-Dybo’s guards have searched everywhere.”
Afsan nodded. “I always thought that was a long shot. Maliden would do well to be on the run; he’d be a fool to have remained here.”
“Indeed.”
“And Rodlox is telling the truth when he says he didn’t do it.”
“I’ve not heard such invective in my whole life,” said Afsan. “He took great offense that we should even ask.”
“But he did not commit the murders.”
“No.”
“It’s difficult to really fathom a motive for Dy-Dybo’s other siblings,” said Cadool. “Even so, only Dedprod and Spenress were already in town at
the time of the first murder, and neither of them did it.”
“That’s right, neither of them.”
“So that excuses all members of The Family.”
“Yes.”
“But not all members of your family.”
Afsan’s tail swished. “No.”
“Toroca was away on his Antarctic voyage during the first murder,” said Cadool.
Afsan nodded. “It pleases me that I didn’t have to speak to him about this.”
“And your daughter Dynax, although from Chu’toolar, where the mirror was made, told us the truth when asked if she was involved.”
“Yes.”
“Kelboon and hunt leader Galpook told us the truth, too; they’re innocent,” said Cadool, holding up a hand, ticking off fingers.
“A process of elimination,” said Afsan.
“Yes,” said Cadool. “Both what we’re doing, and, in a way, what he is doing.” There was no clicking of teeth accompanying the words.
“It was distasteful asking those questions of people I know,” said Afsan.
“They will forgive you.”
“I suppose.”
“There’s no doubt who the murderer is,” said Cadool.
Afsan spoke quickly. “There’s little doubt, yes. But until I confront him, I will assume his innocence.”
“As you wish.” Cadool paused. “Does it hurt?”
“What? Losing two children? Or being about to lose a third? In any event, yes, it hurts.”
“I’ll never know what it’s like to have a family,” said Cadool softly.
“Apparently,” said Afsan, “different individuals react in different ways to the concept.”
Cadool nodded. “Apparently.”
They were quiet for a time, Cadool knowing that Afsan was composing himself, preparing for what must come. At last Afsan said, “Let’s go.”
“To see him?”
“Not yet. We must go to my office in the palace first. There are some things I need. And we should have an escort, I think.”