Goth moved away from the captain, stopped a few yards from Sunnat. He couldn’t see her face. But the air tingled with eeriness and he knew klatha was welling into the room. He had a glimpse of the Daal’s face, tense and watchful; of Sunnat’s, dazed with fear.
“Look in the mirror, Sunnat of Uldune!”
It
The voice rose on an admonitory note, ended abruptly in sharp command. It couldn’t, the captain realized, actually have been speaking for more than twenty seconds. But it had seemed much longer. There was silence for an instant now. Then Sunnat screamed.
One couldn’t blame her, he thought. Staring into the mirror, Sunnat had seen what everyone else in the Little Court could see by looking at her. Set on her shoulders instead of her own head was the bristled, red-eyed head of a wild pig, ugly jaws gaping and working, as screams continued to pour from them. There was a medley of frightened voices. The Daal shouted a command at Sunnat’s white-faced guards, and the two grasped the writhing figure by the arms, hustled it from the Little Court. As they passed through the side door, it seemed to the captain that Sunnat’s wails had begun to resemble a pig’s frightened squealing much more than the cries of a young woman in terrible distress…
“Toll!” the captain told Goth, rather shakily. “You were talking in Toll’s voice! Your mother’s voice!”
“Well, not really,” Goth said. They were alone for the moment, in a small room of the House of Thunders, to which they had been conducted by a stunned looking official after the Daal, rather abruptly, concluded judicial proceedings in the Little Court following the Young Wisdom’s demonstration. Sedmon was to rejoin them here in a few minutes — the captain guessed the Daal had felt it necessary to get settled down a little first. Their spy-screen snapped on the instant the room’s door closed on the official, who seemed glad to be on his way.
“It’s pretty much like Toll’s voice,” she agreed. “That was my Toll pattern.”
“Your what?”
Goth rubbed her nose tip. “Guess I can tell you,” she decided. “You won’t get it all, though. I don’t either…”
Her Toll pattern was a klatha learning device. In fact, a nonmaterial partial replica of the personality of an adult witch whose basic individuality was similar to that of the witch child given the device. In this case, Toll’s. “It’s sort of with me in there,” Goth said, tapping the side of her head. “Don’t notice it much but it’s helping. Now here — Sedmon was checking on how good I was. Don’t know why exactly. I figured I ought to get fancy to show him but wasn’t sure what I wanted to do. So the Toll pattern took over. It knew what to do. See?”
“Hmm… not entirely.”
Goth pushed herself up on the edge of a gleaming, blue table and looked at him, dangling her legs. “Course you don’t,” she said. She considered. “Pattern can’t do just anything. It has to be something I can almost do already so it only has to show me. Else it’d get me messed up, like I told you.”
“Meaning you’re almost able to plant a pig’s head on somebody if you feel like it?” the captain asked.
“Wasn’t a pig’s head.”
“Pretty good imitation then!”
“Bend light, bend color.” Goth shrugged. “That’s all. They’ll stay that way as long as you want. When Sunnat puts her hands up to feel, she’ll know she’s got her own head. But she’s going to look part pig for a time.”
“Can’t quite imagine you doing one of those incantations by yourself! That was impressive.”
“Incant… oh, that! You don’t need all that,” Goth told him. “Toll pattern did it to scare everybody. Especially Sedmon.”
“It worked, I think.” He studied her curiously. “So when will you start bending light?”
Goth’s face took on a bemused expression. There was a blur. Then a small round pig’s head squinted at him from above her jacket collar, smirking unpleasantly.
“Oink!” it said in Goth’s voice.
“Cut it out!” said the captain, startled.
The head blurred again, became Goth’s. She grinned. “Told you I just had to be shown!”
“I believe you now. How long will Sunnat be stuck with the one she’s got?”
“Didn’t you hear what the pattern told her?”
He shook his head. “I heard it — it seemed to mean something. But somehow I wasn’t really understanding a word. And I don’t think anyone else there was.”
“Sunnat understood it,” Goth said. “It was talking to her… She’s got to quit wanting to do things like burning people and scaring people, like that fat old Bazim. The less she wants that, the less she’ll look like a pig. She works at it, she could look pretty much like she was in about a month. And…”
Goth turned her head. There’d been a knock at the door. She put her hand in her pocket, snapped off the spy-screen, slid down from the table. The captain went over to the door to let in the Daal of Uldune.
“There are matters of such grave potential significance,” the Daal said vaguely, “that it is difficult — extremely difficult — to decide to whom one may unburden oneself concerning them. I…”
His voice trailed off, not for the first time in this conversation. His gaze shifted across the shining blue table to the captain, to Goth — back to the captain. He shook his head again, bit at a knuckle with an expression of worried irritability.
The captain studied him with some puzzlement. Sedmon seemed itching to tell them something but unable to make up his mind to do it. What was the problem? He’d implied he had information of great importance to Karres. If so, they’d better get it.
The Daal glanced at Goth again, speculatively. “Perhaps Your Wisdom understands,” he murmured.
“Uh-huh,” said Goth brightly, in her little-girl voice.
He’d tell Goth if they were alone? The captain considered. There hadn’t been many “Your Wisdoms” coming
Not so good, perhaps… He considered again.
“I really think,” he heard himself say pleasantly, “it might be best if you did unburden yourself to us, Sedmon of the Six Lives.”
The Daal’s eyes flickered.
“So!” It was a small hiss. “I suspected… but it was a difficult thing to believe, even of such as you. Well, we all have our secrets, and our reasons for them…” He stood up. “Come with me then — Captain Aron and Dani! You should know better what to make of what I have here than I do.”
The captain hoped they would. He certainly did not know what to make of Sedmon the Sixth, and of the Six Lives, at the moment! But he seemed to have said the right thing at the right time, at that -
Sedmon led them swiftly, the hem of his black gown flapping about his heels, through a series of narrow passages and up stairways into another section of the House of Thunders. They met no one on the way. Three times the Daal stopped to unlock heavy doors with keys produced from a fold in the gown, locked them again behind them. He did not speak at all until they turned at last into a blind passage which showed only one door and that near the far end. There he slowed.
“Half the problem is here,” he said, addressing them equally as they came up to the door. “When you’ve seen it, I’ll tell you what else I know — which is little enough. There’ll be another thing to show you later in another