Read The Totems of Abydos Online
Authors: John Norman
“You are the father!” cried out the small creature.
In that moment then it seemed as though the cliffs had broken open, splitting apart, and a thousand forms, violent, and hideous, uncompromising, had burst forth, howling and screaming. It was as though all the fathers, all the victims, loved and hated, revered and betrayed, had come forth, and all thirsting for blood. And now, in the person of the beast, in the person of this terrible thing, the injuries done onto all these might, in one night of carnage, be avenged. It is that which I am, now thought the beast, the most recent in a line of progenitors, one required for life, who gives life but is to be destroyed by the life it gives, who is doomed to be servitor to ungrateful seed, who will be feared and hated because of the scepter which must be borne, and which he, alone, can bear, he doomed to be protector, defense and shield, tyrant, lover, king, victim.
The Pons, shrieking, fled toward the gate.
The beast, in all its terribleness, had reared up on its hind legs, more then than forty feet in height, clawing at the dark sky, roaring in fury, and pain, understanding what it was, and what had been done to it, and what it could now do, if it wished.
The beast stood there then, a moment later, very quietly, eyeing the gate.
This stillness in it, somehow, seemed even more menacing than its rage of a moment earlier.
It was not a simple beast, of course. It was a beast, but, too, it had a mind capable of firmness of purpose, capable of planning, of attention to detail.
This made it additionally terrifying.
The gate shut. The bars were put in place. Only the small figure of the eyeless one was left outside the palings. He had fallen, twice, trying to flee toward the gate. It had been shut before he could reach it.
The beast walked toward the gate. The small eyeless one, sensing its approach, backed against the palings.
“Where is the rifle?” asked Brenner.
The eyeless one looked up toward the beast. “It was destroyed,” he said.
“Good,” said Brenner.
“I saw it done before I was given this body.”
“That was their mistake,” said Brenner.
“It is their way,” said the eyeless one.
“A mistake,” said Brenner.
“They are at your mercy, like infants,” said the eyeless one.
Brenner could see torches within the palings, and the faces of some of the Pons through the gate.
“What are you going to do?” asked the eyeless one.
Brenner did not respond to this but went to the palings at the left of the gate and, with his shoulder, pressing against them, snapped several, and forced others, rupturing the dirt in which they had been planted, from the ground. He then moved to his right, toward the gate and then past it, and, carefully, putting his head to one side, with his teeth, drew up some four or five palings. He dropped them, one by one, like sticks, outside the former perimeter of the fence. Pons drew back from those parts of the fence. Brenner then went to the gate itself and, with the huge prehensile paws of the form of life which he now shared, or had become, with its nature, its instincts, and its memories, seized the gate. Then, with a growl, he reared up, yanking the gate from the fence and, turning, hurled it a hundred feet behind him, across the clearing. He then entered through the hole where the gate had been. Pons shrank back before him, toward the village clearing.
The eyeless one, feeling his way about the palings, groping his way, followed the sounds, the tiny sounds of the retreating Pons, the soft, exultant, anticipatory growls of the beast, in effect, herding them before it.
Brenner sat down, at the edge of the village clearing. He could see the small, open-sided shelter where the git cage had been. He could see the hut he had shared with Rodriguez. He surveyed the Pons.
“Where are you?” called the eyeless one.
“I am here,” said Brenner.
The eyeless one came to him, and put his hands out, feeling the beast.
“What are you going to do?” asked the eyeless one.
“I am going to kill them,” said Brenner. “I am going to kill them all.”
The Pons shrank back, further,
“If I should miss one or two,” said Brenner, “others in the forest will finish the work. I will not kill you.”
“You will not do this,” said the eyeless one.
“Who can stop me?” asked Brenner.
“One who is your equal,” said the eyeless one.
“He was old,” said Brenner. “He would not have been my equal. And I killed him.”
“There is another.”
“Bring him forth then,” said Brenner. “We shall adjudicate the matter.”
“He is here,” said the eyeless one.
“Where?” said Brenner. He knew there could be no other. Could their sense of smell not inform them of that.
“You,” said the eyeless one.
“You are mad,” said Brenner, licking at his fur, on the left shoulder.
“Surely you understand,” said the eyeless one.
“No,” said Brenner.
“You are the father,” said the eyeless one. “No beast devours its own kind.”
“These are not my kind,” said Brenner.
“They are at your mercy,” said the eyeless one.
“Excellent,” said Brenner.
“They count on your protection,” said the eyeless one.
“They have miscalculated,” said Brenner.
“You cannot hurt them,” said the eyeless one.
“You are mistaken,” said Brenner.
“You will not hurt them!” said the eyeless one.
“Why not?” asked Brenner, puzzled.
“They are your children,” said the eyeless one.
“They are not my children,” said Brenner.
“Some carry your seed,” said the eyeless one.
The beast turned about, in fury. It fled through the hole where the gate had been. Outside the remains of the fence it stopped, and roared in defiance, in anger. Then it put back its head and howled toward the dark sky.
From within the remains of the fence, a voice was heard, high-pitched, calling out:
Oh, I could get me in.
I could lay them waste.
But I will not do so,
for they are my children.
I am the father.
The beast looked back toward the palisade. It then turned about and disappeared into the forest. It was its intention, at that time, never to return. It wandered a long time in the forest, tirelessly. It drank now and then, at one stream or another. But it did not pause to hunt. Oddly enough, as though understanding this, fleet ones, very still in the forest, looked up from their feeding, watching it pass by. It came to a line of white stones and stopped before it. Here something inside it, different from itself, wept, in memory of a mighty creature. It then looked down, again, at the white stones. It did not need the stones, of course, to find its way back to the village. Its sense of direction would have seemed uncanny to most species, and particularly to many which regarded themselves as rational, some of which prided themselves on the substitution of cogitation for the compass of the instincts. And it could, in any case, if it had wished, have followed its own backtrail, which lay as open to its senses, soft on the leaves, almost steaming there, as might have a paved road, a succession of blazed trees, a line of stones, to other forms of life. Shortly before dawn, not following the stones, it had returned to the edge of the clearing, that within which the village lay.
It sat there, amongst the trees, at the edge of the clearing, in the darkness. Torches had been set about the breaches in the fence. It could see figures moving about, mostly within the palisade. The Pons were laboring to restore the gate, the palings.
It thought the following:
Oh, I could get me in.
I could lay them waste.
But I will not do so,
for they are my children.
I am the father.
It then returned to its lair.
“This,” said Rodriguez, eagerly, “is the theory!”
“Why did you take their part?” asked Brenner.
“It was your part, as much as theirs,” said Rodriguez.
“Are you not horrified at what has been done to you?” asked Brenner. It was revolting to Brenner to look upon the small, eyeless creature, the tiny face lost in the larger head, disproportionate to the body. In such a casing he found it hard to think of Rodriguez, the wreck of whose body, even when Brenner first knew him, had been still large, formidable, strongly built. Brenner recalled that the git keeper had informed him that Rodriguez would be given a less dangerous body. The Pons had feared him, with that large, frightening body. The present body was harmless enough, indeed, small even, and weak even, for a Pon, and without eyes. Pons needed no longer fear the thing that had once been his friend.
“Yes,” said Rodriguez.
“What of the Pon whose body that formerly was?” asked Brenner. He remembered that Pon, from the temple.
“They did not need him any longer,” said Rodriguez. “He was disposed of, the brain. I saw it removed and destroyed.”
“You saw this?” asked Brenner.
“From my jar,” said Rodriguez.
Brenner’s body shuddered, the fur rippling over it.
“It had been placed on a shelf in the laboratory, overlooking the operating table.”
“The placement of the jar there was doubtless not an accident,” said Brenner.
“No,” said Rodriguez. “I do not think so.”
“Did you know what they intended to do?” asked Brenner.
“None had seen fit to inform me,” said Rodriguez, “but it was not difficult to divine their intention.”
Brenner was silent.
“One sees. One knows,” said Rodriguez. “But one can do nothing. One cannot scream. One cannot speak. One is moved about, here and there. One is done with, as others please.”
“I understand,” said Brenner.
“As you know,” said Rodriguez, “decapitory incarceration is used in maximum-security prisons on several worlds.”
“Yes,” said Brenner.
“It is interesting, in its way,” said Rodriguez. “One continues to feel one’s body, at least for a time, though it no longer exists, whether it is warm or cold, how the limbs are positioned, and such. It requires an effort to accept this, that the body no longer exists.”
“I understand,” said Brenner, shuddering. Sensation was located predominantly in the brain, and then extradited, so to speak, to various parts of the body. Indeed, even a disembodied brain, properly stimulated, could have experiences, visual, tactual, and otherwise. Indeed, a common form of paranoia, developed in his species over the past thousands of years, was the suspicion, or conviction, that one might be such a brain, in some ensconcement, being stimulated by aliens, who would then study it, or, perhaps, participate vicariously in its experiences.
Brenner lay on the summit of the cliff. It was a favorite place of his. He had carried Rodriguez upward, Rodriguez clinging to his fur. From where they were, Brenner, even reclining, could see over the forest, to the village. Behind him, at the foot of the cliffs, was the valley, and, on the other side of it, the cliffs with the openings, which he and Rodriguez, one fateful afternoon, had explored.
“Why did they do this to you?” asked Brenner.
“I could thus be of use to them,” said Rodriguez. “It was I who knew you, who was your friend. Thus it would be I, the least likely to be torn to pieces, who would approach the new father. You do not think they would wish to risk one of themselves, do you? Some, in the past, I gather, had perished in such a fashion. There was only this body about, almost less than occupied. It would do.”
“How is the body?”
“It is painful and feeble. I do not think it will last long.”
“They should all be killed,” said Brenner.
“They are your future,” said Rodriguez.
“Forgive me,” said Brenner. “But it disgusts me to look upon you.”
“It is a gruesome prison,” admitted Rodriguez. “In it I am little to be feared. Too, perhaps it amuses them that I should be kept in this fashion.”
“In the village,” said the beast, “had you said to me, ‘Kill’, in that instant, they would have learned you were more to be feared than they had thought.”
“They read me well,” said Rodriguez.
Brenner did not respond to this. The Pons, he knew, to his fury, had read another well, too.
“Do you have the memories of the beast?” asked Rodriguez.
“Yes,” said Brenner.
“Then it is not dead,” said Rodriguez.
“It is gone,” said Brenner. “Its memories remain. I have appropriated them. In a way it survives, in me. In a way it still lives. In a way we are one. Yet my consciousness is my own.”
“But your instincts, your needs?”