The Druid looked Joe over from head to foot. Joe decided that this must be the District Thearch. The Druid, with the faintest suggestion of furtiveness in his manner, looked back over his shoulder toward the palace, then back to Joe.
«I understand you're in the service of Hableyat.»
«The Mang? Why–yes.»
«You're not a Mang. What are you?»
Joe recalled the incident with the Druid at the terminal. «I'm a Thuban.»
«Ah! How much does Hableyat pay you?»
Joe wished he knew something of the local currency and its value. «Quite a bit,» he said.
«Thirty stiples a week? Forty?»
«Fifty,» said Joe.
«I'll pay you eighty,» said the Thearch. «You'll be my chief mechanic.» Joe nodded. «Very well.»
«You'll come with me right now. I'll inform Hableyat of the change. You'll have no further contact with that Mang assassin. You are now a servant to the Thearch of the District.»
Joe said, «At your service, Worship.»
THE BUZZER SOUNDED. Joe flicked down the key, said «Garage.»
A girl's voice issued from the plate, the peremptory self-willed voice of Priestess Elfane, the Thearch's third daughter, ringing now with an overtone Joe could not identify.
«Driver, listen very closely. Do exactly as I bid.»
«Yes, Worship.»
«Take out the black Kelt, rise to the third level, then drop back to my apartment. Be discreet and you'll profit. Do you understand?»
«Yes, Worship,» said Joe in a leaden voice.
«Hurry.»
Joe pulled on his livery. Haste–discretion–stealth? A lover for Elfane? She was young but not too young. He had already performed somewhat similar errands for her sisters, Esane and Phedran. Joe shrugged. He could hope to profit. A hundred stiples, perhaps more.
He grinned ruefully as he backed the black Kelt from under the canopy. A tip from a girl of eighteen– and glad to get it. Sometime, somewhere–when he returned to Earth and Margaret–he'd dust off his pretensions to pride and dignity. They were useless to him now, a handicap.
Money was money. Money had brought him across the galaxy and Ballenkarch was at last at hand. At night when the temple searchlights left the sky he could see the sun Ballen, a bright star in the constellation the Druids called the «Porphyrite.» The cheapest passage, hypnotized and shipped like a corpse, cost two thousand stiples.
From a salary of eighty stiples a week he was able to save seventy-five. Three weeks had passed–twenty- four more would buy him passage to Ballankarch. Too long, with Margaret, blonde, gay, lovely, waiting on Earth. Money was money. Tips would be accepted with thanks.
Joe took the car up the palace freerise, wafting up alongside the Tree, up toward the third level. The Tree hung over him as if he had never left the ground and Joe felt the awe and wonder which three weeks in the very shadow of the trunk had done nothing to diminish.
A vast breathing sappy mass, a trunk five miles in diameter, twelve miles from the great kneed roots to the ultimate bud–the «Vital Exprescience» in the cant of the Druids. The foliage spread out and fell away on limber boughs, each as thick through as the Thearch's palace, hung like the thatch on an old-fashioned hayrick.
The leaves were roughly triangular, three feet long-bright yellow in the upper air, darkening through lime, green, rose, scarlet, blue-black, toward the ground. The Tree ruled the horizons, shouldered aside the clouds, wore thunder and lightning like a wreath of tinsel. It was the soul of life, raw life, trampling and vanquishing the inert, and Joe understood well how it had come to be worshipped by the first marveling settlers on Kyril.
The third level. Down again, down in the black Kelt to the plat beside Priestess Elfane's apartments. Joe landed the car, jumped out, stepped across the gold-and-ivory inlay. Elfane herself slid aside the door–a vivid creature with a rather narrow face, dark, vital as a bird. She wore a simple gown of sheer white cloth without ornament and she was barefoot. Joe, who had seen her only in her official vestments, blinked, looked again with interest.
She motioned. «This way. Hurry.» She held back the panel and Joe entered a tall chamber, elegant but of little warmth. Bands of white marble and dark blue dumortierite surfaced two walls, bands inset with copper palettes carved with exotic birds. The third wall was hung with a tapestry depicting a group of young girls running down a grassy slope and along this wall ran a low cushioned settee.
Here sat a young man in the vesture of a Sub-Thearch–a blue robe embroidered with the red and gray orphreys of his rank. A morion inlaid with gold leaf-patterns lay beside him on the settee and a baton lathed from the Sacred Wood–an honor given only to those of Ecclesiarch degree–hung at his belt. He had lean flanks, wide spare shoulders and the most striking face of Joe's experience.
It was a narrow passionate face, wide across high cheekbones, with flat cheeks slanting down to a prow of a chin. The nose was long and straight, the forehead broad. The eyes were flat black disks in narrow expressionless sockets, the brows ink-black, the hair an ink-black mop of ringlets, artfully arranged. It was a clever, cruel face, full of fascination, overrich, overripe, without humor or sympathy–the face of a feral animal only coincidentally human.
Joe paused in mid-stride, stared into this face with instant aversion, then looked down to the corpse at the Ecclesiarch's feet–a sprawled grotesquely-rigid form oozing bright yellow blood into a crimson cloak.
Elfane said to Joe, «This is the body of a Mangtse ambassador. A spy but nevertheless an ambassador of high rank. Someone either killed him here or brought his body here. It must not be discovered. There must be no outcry. I trust you for a loyal servant. Some very delicate negotiations with the Mang Rule are underway. An incident like this might bring disaster. Do you follow me?»
Palace intrigue was none of Joe's affair. He said, «Any orders you may give, Worship, I will follow, subject to the permission of the Thearch.»
She said impatiently, «The Thearch is too busy to be consulted. Ecclesiarch Manaolo will assist you in conveying the corpse into the Kelt. Then you will drive us out over the ocean and we'll dispose of it.»
Joe said woodenly, «I'll bring the car as close as possible.»
Manaolo rose to his feet, followed him to the door. Joe heard him mutter over his shoulder, «We'll be crowded in that little cabin.»
Elfane answered impatiently, «It's the only one I can drive.»
Joe took his time arranging the car against the door, frowning in deep thought. The only car she could drive... He looked across fifty feet of space to the next plat along the side of the palace. A short man in a blue cloak, with hands clasped behind his back stood watching Joe benignly.
Joe reentered the room. «There's a Mang on the next balcony.»
«
«Hableyat knows everything,» said Elfane gloomily. «Sometimes I think he has mastered second- sight.»
Joe knelt beside the corpse. The mouth hung open, showing a rusty orange tongue. A well-filled pouch hung at his side, half-concealed by the cloak. Joe opened it. From behind came an angry word. Elfane said, «No, let him satisfy himself.»