'No?' For a moment anger flared in his eyes then he shrugged. 'Well, it can't be helped. Still nothing from Altini?'

'No.'

'Why doesn't he keep in touch?' Ishikari pulled irritably at his chin. 'He should make regular reports. He must know I want to keep abreast of what is going on.'

'The radio was for emergency communications only.' Ellen was patient, recognizing his anxiety, the strain he was under. 'The mere fact we have heard nothing is a good sign. He may have decided against responding to our signals. He could be in a precarious situation. There could be monitors, anything. He wouldn't want to trigger an alarm.' Suddenly she was tired of pandering to his conceit. 'He's not fool enough to risk his neck just to satisfy your curiosity. You must trust his judgment.'

A matter on which he had no choice. He rose from the table, pulling at his chin, a gesture she had never seen him make before. Once, perhaps, in years gone by, he had worn a beard and pressure had revived an old habit. Now he paced the salon, quivering, restless, a man yearning to grasp the concrete substance of a dream. One terrified lest the dream itself should vanish like a soap bubble in the sun.

'Relax,' she said. 'There's no point in wearing yourself out.''

'It's getting late.'

'It isn't that bad. Your time sense is distorted. It happens in times of stress. Here.' She shook blue pills from a vial, handed them to him together with a glass of wine. 'Get these down and you'll feel better.' Her voice hardened as he hesitated. 'Do it! I don't want another neurotic on my hands!'

And she didn't want to become one herself. She strode from the salon, feeling a sudden claustrophobia, a need for unrecycled air, the ability to stretch her vision. The Argonne had landed in a wide cleft to one side of a line running from the Temple to the Hsing-Tiede complex. Hills loomed to all sides making a framework for the night sky. One blazing with the stars of the Sharret Cluster. Suns which threw a diffused illumination over the area and created pools of mysterious shadow.

The crewman at the port killed the interior lights before opening the panel, catching at her arm as Ellen stepped to the edge.

'Careful. Don't get too close. There could be things out there.'

Good advice and she took it, staying well back from the rim, looking up and breathing deep of the natural air. It caught at her throat and lungs with a metallic acridity and she was shocked then surprised that she had been shocked and then annoyed at herself for the conflicting emotions. The air was bad as was the planet, but the sky compensated for everything. A span of beauty graced with scintillant gems constructed of fire and lambent gases and swirling clouds of living plasma. The glory of the universe against which nothing could compete.

'My lady?' The crewman was anxious, eager to regain the safety of his sealed cocoon.

'All right.' Ellen took a last breath of the acrid air. 'You can close the port now.'

She heard the clang as she headed toward the salon, back to the harsh metal of decks and bulkheads, the prison men had created to travel between the stars. Even as she walked her hand was fumbling at the vial for the blue pills. There was nothing to do now but wait-and, for her, waiting had never been easy.

Chapter Twelve

The priests had not been gentle. From where he stood Clarge could see the crusted blood marring Dumarest's left cheek, the ugly bruise on his right temple. Red welts showed at his throat and his lips were swollen. Injuries which could have been caused when he fell but which had more likely been given by those answering the alarm in the treasury. And there could be no doubt as to his bonds; thin ropes tied with brutal force clamped him to a thronelike chair. His boots gave his legs some protection but the flesh of his hands was puffed, purpled from the constriction at his wrists.

To the priest who had accompanied him Clarge said, 'Bring water.'

A table stood in one corner of the room. Clarge moved it, set it down before Dumarest. A chair followed and he sat, waiting, looking at the man for whom the Cyclan had searched for so long. One now trapped, helpless, hurt and suffering. The fantastic luck which had saved him so often before now finally spent.

'The High Priest has given me permission to question you. I trust that you will not be obdurate.'

Dumarest made no answer. His head still swam a little from the effects of the gas and, like an animal, he had withdrawn into himself to escape the pain of his body, his bonds. Retreating into a private world in which he saw again the deep-set door which Chang had indicated. The door through which they should have passed to the inner chambers, the secrets they had come to find. To learn them, take what they could, to escape by the route the thief had prepared. A daring plan which could have worked. One ruined by the fighter's greed. Well, Sanchez would pay for it as would they all. Now it was each for himself with survival the golden prize.

He moved his head a little as the priest returned with the water, accentuating his weakness. But there was no pretense as to his thirst and he gulped the water Clarge held to his mouth.

'Is that better? Would you like more?' There was no charity in the cyber's offer-it would be inefficient to attempt to hold a conversation with a man unable to speak. 'Here.'

'Thank you.' Dumarest breathed deep, inflating his lungs, striving to clear his senses. Here, now, would be his only chance of life. A wrong word, a wrong move and it would be lost. 'I must congratulate you for having found me.'

'It was a simple matter of logical deduction.'

'Simple?' Dumarest shook his head. No cyber could feel physical pleasure but all shared the desire for mental achievement. It would do no harm to let the man bask in his success. 'You have succeeded where others have failed.'

As yet, but the real success still had to come. Clarge glanced at the priest. 'That will be all. Withdraw now. Wait in the passage.'

'The High Priest-'

'Ordered you to attend me. Must I report your disobedience?'

Dumarest waited, then as the door closed behind the priest he said, 'I am in pain from my hands. Would you please loosen the bonds.'

'There is no need.'

'The pain makes it hard to think. Harder to remember.'

'You know what I want?'

'Of course. Loosen the bonds and we'll talk about it.' Dumarest looked down at his hands. 'It would be better to cut the rope. Use my knife.'

It was still in his boot-an apparent act of criminal stupidity on the part of the priests but Clarge knew better. The knife, Dumarest's clothing, the chronometer he wore, even the thin, black robe were, like himself, a violation of the Temple. Symbolic dirt to be kept together for united disposal.

Clarge pulled free the blade, ran the edge against the ropes, backed as they fell from Dumarest's arms. Placing the knife on the table he produced a laser from within his wide sleeve.

'Do anything foolish and I will use this. I will not kill you but-'

'I know.' Dumarest stretched his arms and flexed his fingers, baring his teeth at the pain of returning circulation. He was still fastened by legs and body to the chair but something had been gained. 'You'll burn my knees, char my elbows, sear the eyes from my head. I've heard it all before. Crippled I would still be of use to the Cyclan-but not this time. Or have you forgotten what they intend doing with me?'

Clarge had no doubt. Dumarest was to die- but when he died the precious secret would die with him. Escape was impossible and logic dictated the inevitable should be accepted.

'The affinity twin,' said Dumarest. 'The secret of how the fifteen biomolecular units should be assembled. You want me to tell you the correct sequence.'

Fifteen units-the possible combinations ran into the millions. Since it had been stolen the laboratories of the Cyclan had been striving to rediscover it but time was against them. It took too long to assemble and test each combination. Eventually the secret would be found but it could take millennia before it would happen.

Clarge said, 'Give me the secret and I will speak to the High Priest on your behalf. It may be possible to avoid your execution.'

'I will be allowed to live?' Dumarest stared at the cyber. 'What is your prediction as regards that probability?

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