uncomfortable.

Yet it was impossible that I should occupy a suite other than that anciently set aside for the autarchs; and impossible too that I should have it refurnished to a degree that would imply criticism of my predecessors. And if the furniture had more to recommend it to the mind than to the body, what a delight it was to discover the treasures those same predecessors had left behind: There were papers relating to matters now utterly forgotten and not always identifiable; mechanical devices ingenious and enigmatic; a microcosm that stirred to life at the warmth of my hands, and whose minute inhabitants seemed to grow larger and more human as I watched them; a laboratory containing the fabled 'emerald bench'

and many other things, the most interesting of which was a mandragora in spirits.

The cucurbit in which it floated was about seven spans in height and half as wide; the homuncule itself no more than two spans tall. When I tapped the glass, it turned eyes like clouded beads toward me, eyes blinder far in appearance than Master Palaemon's. I heard no sound when its lips twitched, yet I knew at once what words they shaped and in some inexplicable sense I felt the pale fluid in which the mandragora was immersed had become my own blood-tinged urine.

'Why have you called me, Autarch, from the contemplation of your world?'

I asked, 'Is it truly mine? I know now that there are seven continents, and none but a part of this are obedient to the hallowed phrases.'

'You are the heir,' the wizened thing said and turned, I could not tell if by accident or design, until it no longer faced me.

I tapped the cucurbit again. 'And who are you?'

'A being without parents, whose life is passed immersed in blood.'

'Why, such have I been! We should be friends then, you and I, as two of similar background usually are.'

'You jest.'

'Not at all. I feel a real sympathy for you, and I think we are more alike than you believe.'

The tiny figure turned again until its little face looked up into my own. 'I wish that I might credit you, Autarch.'

'I mean it. No one has ever accused me of being an honest man, and I've told lies enough when I thought they would serve my turn, but I'm quite sincere. If I can do anything for you, tell me what it is.'

'Break the glass.'

I hesitated. 'Won't you die?'

'I have never lived. I will cease thinking. Break the glass.'

'You do live.'

'I neither grow, nor move, nor respond to any stimulus save thought, which is counted no response. I am incapable of propagating my kind, or any other. Break the glass.'

'If you are indeed unliving, I would rather find some way to stir you to life.'

'So much for brotherhood. When you were imprisoned here, Thecla, and that boy brought you the knife, why did not you look for more life then?'

The blood burned in my cheek, and I lifted the ebony baculus, but I did not strike. 'Alive or dead, you have a penetrating intelligence. Thecla is that part of me most prone to anger.'

'If you had inherited her glands with her memories, I would have succeeded.'

'And you know that. How can you know so much, who are blind?'

'The acts of coarse minds create minute vibrations that stir the waters of this bottle. I hear your thoughts.'

'I notice that I hear yours. How is it that I can hear them, and not others?'

Looking now directly into the pinched face, which was lit by the sun's last shaft penetrating a dusty port, I could not be sure the lips moved at all. 'You hear yourself, as ever. You cannot hear others because your mind shrieks always, like an infant crying in a basket. Ah, I see you remember that.'

'I remember a time very long ago when I was cold and hungry. I lay upon my back, encircled by brown walls, and heard the sound of my own screams. Yes, I must have been an infant. Not old enough to crawl, I think. You are very clever. What am I thinking now?'

'That I am but an unconscious exercise of your own power, as the Claw was. It is true, of course. I was deformed, and died before birth, and have been kept here since in white brandy. Break the glass.'

'I would question you first,' I said.

'Brother, there is an old man with a letter at your door.'

I listened. It was strange, after having listened only to his words in my mind, to hear real noises again the calling of the sleepy blackbirds among the towers and the tapping at the door.

The messenger was old Rudesind, who had guided me to the picture-room of the House Absolute. I motioned him in (to the surprise, I think, of the sentries) because I wanted to talk to him and knew that with him I had no need to stand upon my dignity.

'Never been in here in all my years,' he said. 'How can I help you, Autarch?'

'We're served already, just by the sight of you. You know who we are, don't you?

You recognized us when we met before.'

'If I didn't know your face, Autarch, I'd know a couple dozen times over anyhow.

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