eiving stage in the laboratory tower of the royal place
ng the running fires, the shadow of bones formed a human skeleton in the blue, till suddenly the shape was laced with sudden silver, the net of nerves that held the body imp
ll right now, aren't I?" Another pause. "Well, I feel fine." He let go of the rail and looked at his hands, back and palms. "Dirty as hell," he mumbled. "Wonder where I can get washed up." He looked up. "Yeah
sed under the shadow of the great
fad
n. Through his ghost-like feet, he could see the rivets that held down the metal floor. He ma
onsultant chamber. A stained glass window further on rotated by silent machinery flung colors over his face
d out loud again. "Yeah, I know we haven't got time, but it will explain it to you better than I c
f Toromon. He opened the sharkskin cove
the Island of Toron established a settlement, a village, a city. Now they pushed to the mainland, and the shore became the central source of food for the island's population which now
ungle that held in its crescent the stretch of mainland. They were a mutant breed, gigantic in phys
as discovered. A great empire has a great crime rate, and our penal system was used to supply miners for the tetrhat it was that had killed all green things beyond the jungle. Lingering from the days of the Great Fire, a w
. Then only rock. Death was long if a man ventured in and came back. First immense thirst; then t
e being conducted with elementary matter transmission, and as a token to this new direction of science, the transit ribbon was commissioned to link the two cities. It was more a gesture of the solidarity of Toromon's empire than a practical app
izens of Telphar. Seven hours later the entire sky above Telphar was flickering with streaks of pale blue and yellow. Evacuation had begun already. But in th
l before the tetron mines; however, Telph
afraid when I saw where I was. That's why ..." He stopped, shrugged.
other window, like a person waiting for someone else to make up his mind. But the decision was not forthcoming. At last, belligerently he started up th
a light glowing blue behind those to the left, yellow behind those to the right. A sound f
arrying a folder and looked ser
aths. Then he ducked out and sprinted down the hall. At last
an answer, because he went to
inite enough to wake him was water against tile. He listened to it for nearly two minutes through the languid veil of fatigue. It was only when it stopped that he frowned, pushed back the sheet, and sat up. The door to his pri
; a few whistled notes. Suddenly he saw that dark spots were forming on the great fur rug that sprawled acro
mmed the flat of his palm on the button that drew back t
himself face down into the mound of pillows and tried to scream at the same time. Immediately he was caught, pulled u
id?" a voice whispered beh
ow just a
n the night table by the bed, and the curtains swept acro
ep still an
e as the weight lifted. He held still for a moment.
clothes, huh? You alwa
... there in
slid along the rack. The bureau at the back of the closet was opened. "This'll do f
e sound of t
ll right, once I get these
set, dressed now: a human for
ow some light around the place." The standing suit o
al-work filigree covered a white silk shirt that laced over a wide V-neck. The tight gray trousers were belted with a broad strip of black leather and fas
are you?" wh
crown," said Jon, "y
sputt
ears to when you and I w
ognition showed
d smashed a high-frequency coil, on purpose. And remember you dared that same kid to break into the castle and steal the royal Herald from the throne room? In fact, yo
egan Uske. "
But five years out in the tetron mines h
a murd
hat converged on me weren't kidding. I didn't kill him o
first. Jon Koshar, I think you're cr
But believe me, the last thing I c
he laughed. "Oh, of course. I'm dreaming al
frow
appearing. You can't possibly be more than a figment of my imagination. Koshar! The name! Of course. That's the na
ty?" Jon
had quite a pretty sister. I'm going back to sleep now. And when I
ent. Why ar
ged to amass quite a fortune. Chargill says I have to treat him kindly s
not dr
n, the Duchess of Petra. She was dragged all the way from her island estate to come to this t
to sleep,
button that pulled the curtains. And then the headless, handless figure
ed down
zing over the roofs of the city, the great houses of the wealthy merchants and manufacturers, over the hive-like buildings which h
shed the window open a bit, and the breeze waved her blue robe as she
nued down
ed. Her white hair was coiled in two buns on either side of her head, her mouth was slightly open and a faint breath hissed a
Royal Blood, Heir Apparent to the Empire of Toromon, and half a dozen more, w
ll slightly akimbo with natural awkwardness and
sing a moment to check his watch. He fastened the three snaps o
," Let apologized.
mber, you are heir to the throne of
I could," replie
through the tiny intercom. "Do you hear me? Ne
he felt closest. Usually, with her, he could forget the crown that was always being pointed to as it dangled above his head. His brother was not very healthy, nor even-as some rumored-al
mile to Let's face too. "Do you remember that story I tol
aling him with the harrowing details of three prisoners' attempt to escape the penal mines. She had terminated it at the height of suspense with the three men cr
ant to hear the
dn't get to sleep for h
the rear guard ran around to see what had happened, as planned, and they dashed through the searchlight beam
d Let. "Is
out it," s
tions they took, along with an uncannily vivid description of the scenery that had made him shiver as though he had been in the leaky, rotten-walled shacks. "
t. They brought him, and the one with the limp, back that morning in the rain and d
t the one who did make it?
fferently than he expected. "Let, in a little while, you may be going on quite an adventure, and you may want to
of advent
n to you? What would you do if you were king and those prisoners were under your rule,
m to know the answer on a question of government just because he had been born into it. "I suppose I'd have to consult the council, and see what Chargill said. It wou
d the Duchess quietly. "Just rem
third man, the o
ame back
adventures. What happened to
ed. The black-haired one got completely turned around, and wandered in the wrong direction until he had gone past the mines, out of the forest, and across the rocky stretch of ground beyond a good five miles. By the ti
ve been dead fro
ad a few miles back. He was tired. The food they'd taken kept him from being hungry. But he was definitely alive. Fi
lence over t
me for a dramatic pause, Let asked
it," Petra said,
Petra, wha
e story. And that's all you need to know. Maybe I'll be a
e, Pet
t's
enture I'm supposed to have, the war? Is t
simple, Let. Let's sa
said
member the story, a
d Let, wonder
the foot, passed into the castle garden, paused to squint at the