'Well,' it said. 'Well, I have a niece. Welcome, niece, to the Chambers of the Blessed. Now, you should trust your uncle and do what he says. Climb off Nu and swim through the grate. I'll protect you.'
'I don't want to get in the water,' she moaned.
'Well, you don't have much choice about that,' L'ekezh replied. 'Embrace it, let it fill you up. Become accustomed to it.'
'Why?'
'Because you will never leave here, that's why.'
'I will,' Hezhi insisted.
'You say you came here by the ducts. On purpose. Why did you do that?' L'ekezh seemed to be becoming more accustomed to the light. He swam nearer, put his in-Human face up to the grating. She saw that his teeth were sharp and long, ivory needles.
'I wanted to know… where we
L'ekezh laughed with a kind of bubbling delight, though it sounded more like someone choking.
'How bright you must be!' he remarked. 'That's too bad for you, though I'll doubtless enjoy our conversations. Then again, the bright ones go mad the most quickly. I think I've stayed sane for so long because I'm a bit thick. Tell me…' His voice dropped low, became an exaggeration of the 'conspiratorial' tone used in theater. 'Tell me. Do the priests know yet? Have you begun to manifest?'
'Manifest?'
'With me,' L'ekezh offered, 'the power came first. She'lu— your father—was
'I don't…
'Why? Why?
'Power,' she repeated dully.
'We are the Blessed,' L'ekezh snarled. 'I have more power in one of my eyes than the Chakunge and all of his court.'
'Then why do you stay down here?' Hezhi asked.
'Because,' L'ekezh began, and then stopped, his eyes staring at her with awful intensity. 'Are you real?' he whispered. 'Did I create you?'
'I am real,' Hezhi assured him.
'I will go mad, one day, you know,' L'ekezh confided.
'Why don't you leave?' she asked once again. 'If you have such power?'
'Because the River drinks it,' he replied woodenly. 'When they first put me here, I raged. I tried to pull down the foundations of the damned palace around me, kill them all. I could have
'You really shouldn't be on her back,' he said again, after a time.
'How many… how many of you are there?'
'How many Blessed?'
'Yes.'
'Alive? Still in flesh?'
Hezhi nodded.
'Oh, just a few. Five.'
'Where are they?'
'Oh… around here somewhere. Your light frightens them. Anyway, I'm lord here, now that Nu sleeps most of the time. It's my responsibility to welcome the new ones. I still don't see how I didn't notice them bringing you down the stair.'
'I told you, I didn't come that way.'
'Well. So you did,' L'ekezh muttered, perhaps more to himself than to her.
'I wonder…' she began. 'Is there one named D'en among you?'
'D'en? Of course, D'en,' the once-prince answered.
'I came to see him,' Hezhi said.
'Oh? Came all the way to see D'en. Well. Wait here.'
The head ducked beneath the black water and ripples marked his passage away.
She waited a long while, and it began to occur to her that she had been forgotten. L'ekezh seemed to have trouble
It was not L'ekezh. It was, to her eyes, a Human man, with long stringy black hair. His eyes, however, protruded on stalks and the hands that came up to grip the steel bars were clawlike, chitinous. One still possessed five fingers but the other had become like a pincer, the thumb grossly exaggerated and the other fingers melted together.
'D'en,' she whispered. 'Oh, D'en.'
The thing looked at her with its crablike eyes. It croaked, like a frog. It croaked again, more insistently, and Hezhi thought she recognized her name.
'D'en? Can you talk?' She suddenly knew that she was going to be sick. Her stomach expelled the bread she had eaten before waking Tsem and continued heaving long after nothing remained in it. D'en watched her impassively.
'D'en doesn't talk much,' L'ekezh told her, surfacing a few spans away. 'He did at first, talked all the time. Usually our bodies change the fastest, then our heads. D'en—he changed inside first.'
'Why… why do you change?' she managed, faintly. As if knowing would help.
L'ekezh smiled, a rubbery arc that might have been amusing to a madman. 'He fills us up,' he said, voice confidential. 'A mere Human body cannot contain his full power.'
She tried to understand, while D'en—or what D'en had become—cocked his head, as if regarding her from another angle would offer him something new. It may have, for slowly, tenta-tively, he reached the hand that was most Human through the bars.
She reached over and, after hesitating briefly, touched the hand. The fingers flexed but made no other movement. It felt cold, hard, not at all like the hand she remembered, the one she had held as they ran, laughing, across the rooftops. Now that hand clutched vaguely, not remembering how to hold another. It was a mercy when D'en suddenly snatched his hand away, croaked once again. His horrible eyes swayed on their stalks, and then he sank, quickly, beneath the water.
'He recognized you,' L'ekezh told her. 'I can tell. That was more than I expected.'
'D'en,' Hezhi mouthed softly. Beneath her, the rubbery flesh trembled again.
'Quickly,' L'ekezh cried. 'If you care for your life. Nu is awaking. If you really came through the ducts, go now. The River might yet let you.'
Hezhi rose shakily to her feet.
'Good-bye,' she said.
'I'll see you again soon enough,' L'ekezh said. 'See if they will let you bring me some wine. Though, of course, they won't.'
He sank away, vanished. She took up her lamp and stumbled across Nu's back. As she reached the dais, the monster was beginning to twitch and, before she had mounted it, began heaving. She hurried to the shaft, spared a glance back and saw Nu rising up. There was nothing recognizably Human about Nu at all; she was all fish and scorpion, her long, pointed tail lashing now at the water. More quickly than Hezhi could have ever imagined, the creature turned and lunged up onto the dais, flopped there, heaved and flopped again. Reflexively, she hurled her