"Welcome, my friends. For my sins I am the leader here and I am delighted to welcome you. Lewis, fetch chairs for my guests."
With Batik and Shannow seated, and Lewis sent to bring refreshment, Sarento leaned back on the table and spoke.
"You are a remarkable man, Mr Shannow. I have followed your exploits for a number of years: the taming of Allion, the hunting down of the Brigand Gareth, the attack on the h.e.l.lborn and now the liberation of Castlemine. Is there nothing that can stop you, sir?"
"I have been fortunate."
"Fortune favours the Rolynd, Mr Shannow. Have you come across the name?"
"Archer mentioned it, I believe."
"Yes, dear Samuel ... I cannot tell you how much his death depresses me. He more than anyone is responsible for the growth in Guardian wisdom. But I was speaking of the Rolynd. A wondrous race were the Atlanteans; they conquered mysteries which still baffled our elders eight thousand years later. They were the fathers of magic - and they understood the gifts men carried. Some could heal, others could grow plants. Still others could teach. But the Rolynd were special for they were lucky; they carried luck like a talisman - a personal G.o.d who would step in whenever needed. And with the Rolynd warriors it was needed often. Warriors like you, Mr Shannow, who could somehow hear a stealthy a.s.sa.s.sin creeping upon them in the mist of a storm. The Atlanteans believed the gift was linked to courage. Perhaps it is. But whatever the cause, you have the gift, sir."
Lewis returned and served a goblet of white wine to each of the men, then laid the pitcher on the table and left the room.
"You have great power here," said Shannow.
"Indeed we do, sir. With knowledge comes power, and we guard the secrets of the old world."
"But you also have the Stones."
"What is the point you are making?"
"With all this power, why do you not stop the h.e.l.lborn?"
"We are not meddlers, Mr Shannow, though we have tried to guide this world for more than three hundred years. Men like Prester John Taybard and the man you knew as Karitas have been sent from here to educate the people of this continent - to lead them towards an understanding of what they are, and from whence they come. I have no army and if I did, I have no G.o.d-given right to change the destiny of the h.e.l.lborn. On the other hand, since the battle is unequal, I am willing to help you."
"In what way?"
"I can give you weapons to take to Daniel Cade."
"How will that help me kill Abaddon?"
"It will help you to do more than that; it will help you to beat him."
Shannow looked into Sarento"s dark eyes and stayed silent.
"What sort of weapons?" asked Batik.
Sarento gave an order to one of his men, who opened a hidden door in the far wall to reveal a firing range. At the furthest end of the first Une was a wooden statue, dressed in the armour of the h.e.l.lborn. Sarento stepped on to the range and lifted a bulky black weapon almost three feet long, which he handed to Batik. "Pull back the bolt on the left, then aim it - but hold it steadily, it may surprise you."
Batik sprang the bolt and pulled the trigger. The rolling explosion deafened them momentarily and the statue disappeared, its upper torso smashed beyond recognition.
Batik laid the weapon gently to rest.
"Five hundred bullets a minute, moving at three thousand miles per hour," said Sarento.
"Hit a man in the upper leg with just one and the hydraulic shock will drag his blood from his heart and kill him. You can destroy an army with ten of these and I"ll give you fifty."
"I"ll think about it," said Shannow.
"What is there to think about?" argued Batik. "We could ride in and take Babylon itself with these."
"Probably, but I"m tired. Is there somewhere I can rest?" Shannow asked Sarento.
"Of course," was the reply, whereupon he opened a door which Lewis entered. "Show our guests to suitable quarters. I will see you both in the morning."
The Guardian took them to another level and into a T-shaped room containing two beds, a table, four chairs and a wide window looking out on a gleaming lake. Shannow moved to the window and tried to open it, but the lock would not shift.
"It does not open, Mr Shannow - it is not a window at all, but a light picture - what we call a mood-view." He moved to a dial on the wall and turned it. The view mellowed into dusk, evening and finally moonlit night. "Set it as it pleases you. I shall have food sent to you."
Once the guardian had left Shannow lay back-on the first bed, his head pillowed on his arms.
"What"s bothering you, Shannow?" asked Batik.
"Nothing. I am just tired."
"But those weapons . . . Even your G.o.d would be hard-pressed to come up with a better miracle."
"You are easily pleased, Batik. Now leave me to think."
Batik shrugged and wandered around the room until Lewis returned with food. For Batik he brought a huge rare steak and green vegetables. For Shannow, there was cheese and black bread. When they had consumed the food, Lewis rose to leave.
"Is there no water anywhere?" asked Shannow. "I would like to clean the dust from my body."
"How foolish of me," said the guardian. "Look over here." As he spoke, he slid back the wall by the mood-view to reveal a cubicle of gla.s.s. Lewis reached inside and pressed a switch at which warm water jetted from a nozzle in the wall. "Soap and towels are in here," said Lewis, opening a wall cupboard.
"Thank you. This place is like a palace."
"It was constructed from plans that existed before the Fall."
"Did the Guardians build this place?"
"After a fashion, Mr Shannow. We used the Stones to recreate the magic of our forefathers."
"Where are we now?"
"You are inside the sh.e.l.l of the Ark. Once we harnessed the Sipstra.s.si, we rearranged the interior to house our community. I think that was some three centuries ago; there have been some modifications since."
Shannow sipped a gla.s.s of clear wine. He was bone-weary, but there was much he needed to know.
"I never really had a chance to talk to Archer about what you guard. Would you mind explaining?"
"Not at all. Our community exists to gather and h.o.a.rd the secrets of Pre-Fall, in the hope of one day bringing it back. We have a library here with over thirty thousand books, most of them technical. But there are also four thousand cla.s.sics in eleven languages."
"How can you bring back what is past?" asked Batik.
"That is a question for Sarento, not a soldier."
"And you believe you can help bring back civilization with guns that could kill five hundred men a minute?" said Shannow softly.
"Man is an inventive animal, Mr Shannow. Any weapon of death will be improved. Would you not sooner have the guns than the h.e.l.lborn? Sooner or later their gunsmiths will perfect them."
"How many of you are there?"
"Eight hundred, including the women and children. We are a fairly stable community.
Tomorrow I will show you around. Perhaps you would agree to meet Amaziga Archer - it will be painful, but I know she wants to hear of her husband"s last hours."
"He spoke of her at the end," said Shannow.
"Perhaps you would be kind enough to tell her that."
"Of course. Were you a friend of Archer"s?"
"Very few people disliked Sam. Yes, we were friends."
"His Stone turned black," said Batik. "It was very small."
"He always over-used it; he treated it like a magic bauble. I shall miss him," said Lewis with genuine regret.
"Was he the only guardian with a love of Atlantis?" asked Shannow.
"Very much so - he and Sarento, that is."
"An interesting man. How old is he?"
"Just over two hundred and eighty, Mr Shannow. He is very gifted."
"And you, Mr Lewis? How old are you?"
"Sixty-seven. Sam Archer was ninety-eight. The Stones are wondrous things."
"Indeed they are. I think I will rest now. Thank you for answering my questions."
"It was a pleasure. Sleep well."
"One last question?"
"Ask it."
"Do the Stones create your food for you?"
"They used to, Mr Shannow, but we needed the power for other and more important things. We now run a sizable herd of cattle and sheep, and we grow most of our vegetables."
"Thank you again."
"Not at all."
Shannow lay awake long after Batik was asleep. The mood-view was set to moonlight and he watched as clouds drifted across the sky, the same clouds time and again in relentless regularity. He closed his eyes and saw once more the sundered statue, picturing a real man lying there with his entrails around him like torn ribbons.
Had Karitas possessed weapons such as these, the h.e.l.lborn would never have destroyed his village and young Curopet would still be alive.
Shannow rolled over and lay on his stomach, but sleep evaded him despite the softness of the bed. He was uneasy and tense. He swung his legs from the bed and moved to the water cubicle, stepping into the shallow basin and turning on the spray. In a tray to his right was a bar of scented soap and he scrubbed his skin, revelling in the heat of the shower.
Towelling himself down, he returned to the mood-view and on impulse switched it to day and watched the sun hurtle into the sky.
He sat at the table and poured a gla.s.s of water. All his life he had been both hunter and hunted, and he trusted his instincts. There had to be a cause for his uneasiness, and he was determined to find it before his next meeting with Sarento.
Sarento. He did not like the man, but that was no reason to judge him harshly. Shannow liked few men. . . and the Guardian leader had been pleasant enough. Despite his words he had not seemed unduly distressed by Archer"s death, but then the man had merely been a follower, and Shannow knew that the emotions of men whom the world thought great rarely ran deep. Humanity invariably ran a poor second to ambition.
Shannow relaxed his mind. In hunting one used peripheral vision to spot movement and it was the same with a problem. Staring at it head on often blurred the perspective. He let his thoughts roam . . .
Karitas leapt from his subconscious - kind, gentle Karitas.
h.e.l.lborn Karitas, the father of guns.
Sent out by Sarento?
To serve Abaddon?
Shannow"s jaw tightened. He knew little of Karitas" background, but had not Ruth told him that he gave Abaddon the secrets of firearms? And had not Sarento claimed he was a Guardian sent to instruct?
What game was being played here?
And why did the Guardians need cattle when their Stones could create such a palace of miracles within a ghost ship? Lewis said they needed the power for more important things.
What was more important than feeding a colony?
Sarento had said that Shannow was Rolynd, which meant his knowledge of Atlantis was greater than Archer"s. Why had he not shared it with the Guardian?
And lastly there was Cade: Cade the Brigand, Cade the killer, throwing his hat into the ring of war.
What right-thinking man would supply him with the weapons of empire?
Shannow had told Ruth that he was happy to hear of Daniel"s actions, and that was true.
Blood was thicker than water, but Shannow knew Cade better than any man alive. His brother was tough, and merciless. And if he had taken on the mantle of leadership, it would not be for altruistic reasons. Somewhere within the horror of war, Cade had seen the chance of profit.
He switched the mood-view to night and returned to his bed, where with his thoughts more settled he fell into a deep sleep. When he awoke Batik was already dressed and sitting with Lewis at the table. Before the h.e.l.lborn was a plate stacked high with eggs and bacon. Shannow dressed and joined them.
"Would you like some food, Mr Shannow? I am afraid Batik ate your ration."
"I am not hungry, thank you."
Lewis glanced at a rectangular bracelet on his wrist. "Sarento is ready to meet you."
Batik belched and rose. "How are we going to get those guns to Cade?" he asked.