Swathed in white bandages, the limb ended some foot and a half short of where it should have.
"My arm...?" he asked again, with a child"s bewilderment. "What happened to my arm?"
"I tried to tell you," the woman said, softly. "We had to amputate half of your arm. If we had not, you would have died."
"My arm," Geo said again, and lay back in the bed.
"It is difficult," the woman said. "It is only a little consolation, I know, but we are blind here. What burned your arm away, took our sight from us when it was much stronger, generations ago. We learned how to battle many of its effects, and had we not rescued you from the river, all of you would have died. You are men who know the religion of Argo, and adhere to it. This another of your party has told us. Be thankful then that you have come under the wing of the Mother G.o.ddess again, for this is a hostile country." She paused. "Do you wish to talk?"
Geo shook his head.
"I hear the sheets rustle," the woman said, smiling, "which means you either shook or nodded your head. I know from my study of the old customs that one means "yes" and the other "no." But you must have patience with us who cannot see. We are not used to your people. Do you wish to talk?" she repeated.
"Oh," said Geo. "No. No, I don"t."
"Very well," the woman said. She rose, still smiling. "I will return later." She walked to a wall in which a door slipped open, and then it closed again, behind her.
He lay still on the bed for a long time. Then he turned over on his stomach. Once he brought the stump under his chest and held the clean bandages in his other hand. Very quickly he let go, and stretched the limb sideways, as far as possible away from him. That didn"t work either, so he moved it back down to his side, and let it lay by him under the white sheet.
After a long while, he got up, sat on the edge of the bed, and looked around the room. It was completely bare, with neither windows nor visible doors. He went to the spot through which she had exited, but could find not seam or crack. His tunic, he saw, had been washed, pressed, and laid on the foot of the bed. He slipped it over his head, fumbling with only one arm. Getting the belt together started out to be a problem, but he hooked the buckle around one finger and maneuvered the strap through with the other. He adjusted his leather purse, now empty, on his side. Then he saw that the sword was gone.
An unreal feeling, white like the walls of the room, was beginning to fill him up like a pale mixture of milk and water. He walked around the edge of the room once more, looking for some break.
There was a sound behind him and the tiny-eyed woman in her white robe stood in a triangular doorway. "You"re dressed," she smiled. "Good. Are you too tired to come with me? You will eat and see your friends if you feel well enough. Or, I can have the food brought."
"I"ll come," Geo said.
She turned, and he followed her into a hall of the same luminous substance. Her heels touched the back of her white robe with each step, but she was silent. His own bare feet on the cool stones seemed louder than those of the blind woman before him. Suddenly he was in a larger room, with benches. It was a chapel, obviously of Argo because of the altar at the far end, but its detail was strange. Everything was arranged with the white simplicity that one would expect of a people to whom visual adornment meant nothing. He sat down on a bench as the woman said, "Wait here." She disappeared down another hall.
Suddenly the woman returned from the other hallway, followed by Snake.
Geo and the four-armed boy looked at each other, silently, as the woman disappeared again. A wish, like a living thing, suddenly writhed into a knot in Geo"s stomach, that the boy would say something. He himself could not.
Again she returned, this time with Urson. The big man stepped into the chapel, saw Geo, and exclaimed, "Friend, what happened?" He came to him quickly and placed his warm hands on Geo"s shoulders. "What ..." he began, and shook his head.
Geo grinned suddenly, and patted his stump with his good hand. "I guess jelly-belly got something from me after all."
Urson held his own forearm next to Geo"s and compared them. There was paleness in both. "I guess none of us got out completely all right. I woke up once while they were taking the scabs off. It was pretty bad, and I went to sleep again fast."
Iimmi came in now. "Well, I was wondering ..." He stopped, and let out a low whistle. "I guess it really got you, brother." His own arms looked as though they had been dipped in bleach up to the mid forearms.
"How did this happen?" Urson asked.
"When we were back doing our tightrope act on those d.a.m.n girders,"
explained Iimmi, "our bodies were in the shadow of the girders and the rays only got to our arms. I"ve got something you"ll be interested in too, Geo."
"Just tell me where the h.e.l.l we are," Urson said.
"We"re in a monastery sacred to Argo," Iimmi told him. "It"s across the river from the City of New Hope, which is where we were."
"That name sounds familiar; in the ..." began Urson. Snake gave him a quick glance, and he stopped, and then frowned.
"We knew of your presence in the City of New Hope," explained the blind Priestess, "and we found you by the riverside after you swam across. You managed to cling to life long enough for us to get you back to the monastery and apply what art we could to sooth the burns from the deadly fire."
Geo suddenly saw that there was no jewel around Iimmi"s neck either. He could almost feel the hands ripping it from his neck in the water. Iimmi must have made the same discovery, because his pale hand raised to his own chest.
The Priestess beckoned and started down another hall, and again they followed. They arrived at an even larger room, this one set with white marble benches and long white tables. "This is the main dining room of the monastery," their guide explained. "One table has been set up for you. You will not eat with the other priestesses, of course."
"Why not?" asked Iimmi.
Surprise flowed across the blind face. "You are men," she told them, matter of factly. Then she led them to a table where wine, meat, and bowls piled with strange fruit were placed. As they sat down, she disappeared once more.
Geo reached for a knife. For a moment there was silence at the table as the nub of the arm jutted over food. "I guess I just have to learn," he said after the pause.
Halfway through the meal, Urson said, "What about the jewels? Did the Priestess take them from you?"
"They came off in the water," said Iimmi.
Geo nodded corroboration.
"Well, now we really have a problem," said Urson. "Here we are, at a temple of Argo"s where we could return the jewels and maybe even get back to the Priestess on the ship, and out of the silly mess, and the jewels are gone."
"I guess that also means our river friends are working for Hama," said Geo.
"Well," Iimmi said, "Hama"s got his jewel then, and we"re out of the way. Perhaps he delivered us into Argo"s hands as a reward for bringing them this far?"
"Since we would have died anyway," said Geo, "I guess he was doing us a favor."
"And you know what that means," Iimmi said, looking at Snake now.
"Huh?" asked Urson. Then he said, "Oh, let the boy speak for himself.
All right, Four Arms, are you or are you not a spy for Hama?"
A pained expression came over Snake"s face, and he shook his head not in denial but bewilderment. Suddenly he got up from the table, and ran from the room. Urson looked at the others. "Now don"t tell me I hurt his feelings by asking."
"You didn"t," said Iimmi, "but I may have. I keep on forgetting that he can read minds."
"What do you mean?" Urson asked.
"Just when you asked him that, a lot of things came together in my mind that would be pretty vicious for him if any of it were true."
"Huh?" asked Urson.
"I think I know what you mean," said Geo.
"I still--"
"It means that he is a spy," explained Iimmi, "and among other things, he was probably lying about the radio back at the city. And that cost Geo his arm."
"Why the--" began Urson, and then looked down the hall where Snake had disappeared.