01. Spirits of Flux and Anchor (10 page)

 

The most curious thing, for those able to think about it at all, was that, after a while, they awoke with less and less pain and linked up and marched with perfect adjustment without being told.

 

And then, late one night, they reached the west gate, the high fortified wall stretching out into the darkness on both sides of them, its inner guard walkway illuminated by torches every few meters. The whole structure, including the gate structure itself, was made of solid stone. The wall was four meters thick, with a stone guard station every fifty meters around the entirety of the Anchor. The gate added another three meters on each side, and had a headquarters building on top. The inner gates were of solid steel, a third of a meter thick them- selves, and it took an entire team of mules just to turn the mechanism to open or close them. Inside was a passage called, with good reason, the Death- way: a stone opening through the wall that had its own small openings from which guards could not only monitor anyone and anything inside but fire upon it as well.

 

Above, just inside the gates on both sides, hung a heavy steel portcullis held up on a winch. A single kick of a lever by any guard could cause both to drop, imprisoning anyone inside who managed to jam the gates. The gates themselves

 

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were on a clever mechanism that had the outer gates always open if the inner ones were closed and vice-versa. It was said that vats of boiling hot oil could be unleashed in the Deathway with the same ease as dropping the portcullis.

 

The officer and sergeant of the guard halted them, then rode forward to the gate itself. There they were met by other uniformed border guards and there was a long conversation. Then there were some shouts, men ran one way or another, then a single shouted signal, and, slowly, the massive closed gates began to open.

 

It was a dramatic event in and of itself, but as they opened more and more a figure was revealed framed between them. It was the stringer Matson, on his white horse, idly smoking a cigar.

 

As soon as there was clearance he eased his mount slowly forward, then approached the sad- looking column, stopping here and there but tak- ing a ride completely around the group. He mum- bled something to himself and then rode back over to the guards watching him.

 

"A pretty miserable-looking lot," he commented sourly. "You could have at least sized them to make it easier."

 

The officer shrugged. "Not my problem. After ten days with 'em on the trail seasoning them up for you on the juice, I ain't too particular about anything except gettin' rid of 'em. You don't like their condition, you take the next batch out from the city."

 

Matson snorted. "That ain't my responsibility," he responded sarcastically. "How well seasoned are they?"

 

"Meekest group in years," the officer told him. "Hardly any trouble at all. Today they were barely on the juice at all and they made the best time of the trip. You could, take them ropes and rods off now and I bet they'd keep perfect distance and

 

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interval and even sit just right. Ain't but a handful complained about any aches or pains when they woke up today, either. Some of 'em got real good leg muscles, even the women, and they're all in better shape than they ever been in their lives. 'Cept in the head," he added.

 

Matson nodded, a sour expression on his face. "Okay, then, get those damned rods off and remove the strings. I can't take 'em through all at once, you know."

 

"You got to sign for them first," the officer re- minded him. An orderly who had been standing nearby brought up a clipboard with pen attached. Matson took it and looked over the forms carefully. They matched the ones he was carrying in his head.

 

"All present, if you want to count 'em," the offi- cer assured him.

 

"I already have counted them, and checked their general condition," the stringer replied curtly. He scribbled a signature on the sheet. "All right -- let's get 'em over to my side."

 

It was a strange experience to have the leggings and ropes removed. It had been such a seemingly endless time with them that their removal seemed almost an unnatural, out-of-balance thing to the exiles. The drug used, which was occasionally used for religious indoctrinations and retreats by the church and by guards in basic training, was quite a powerful conditioner. Highly repetitive actions performed over a sustained period were reinforced a hundredfold or more each time, and they had been almost continuously under for more than ten days. The officer was not exaggerating -- freed of all linkages, they all still stood as if bound, and guards had to actually restrain the rear part of the party to keep it from following the first group through the gates and in the Deathway.

 

Matson went with the first group so he could

 

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effectively reassemble them on the other side. The inner gate slowly closed, and, as it did, the outer gate opened to reveal a large, brightly lit tent city crowded with strange and misshapen creatures. This area, technically referred to as the Anchor apron, was as close as most from the Flux were ever allowed into Anchor. Beyond the apron, barely visible in the darkness and reflecting none of the light from wall or apron, was the Flux itself.

 

FLUX

 

It really wasn't until they had been fed, bedded down, and slept for some time that their senses started to return to them. Cassie awoke with a strangely disoriented feeling, not quite understand- ing where she was or what had happened. Open- ing her eyes and looking around only helped slightly, for the sights of the tent city and its mill- ing throngs of very strange human beings and very scruffy animals did little to orient her or the others. It was only when she looked up and saw the Flux before her, then turned and saw the great wall and gate behind, that she understood exactly what was going on.

 

It took a moment more to realize that the leggings, rods, and even the ropes were now gone, although the collar and waistband remained, the latter hanging rather loosely on her hips. Her mus- cles ached, but not with the terrible pain of the first -- what, days? -- out. They had just been used to their maximum, pressed to their limits, and were letting her know it.

 

All of these discomforts were minor compared to seeing the Flux -- and from outside the gates. It was a terrifying sight, even more than it had been when she'd stood on top of that wall back there as a young schoolchild and stared at it.

 

82

 

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There was no difference, really, between the apron and the Anchor itself. The wall had been built well in from the Flux boundary for a number of reasons, some practical and some superstition. There was grass here, and well-worn paths, and it felt quite normal. Still, the Flux lay just beyond.

 

It rose upwards as far as the eye could see, blocking off the sky and everything else from view. It looked like a great, infinite wall of opaque glass, a light reddish tan in color, and it shimmered some- thing like an early morning fog in the fields. Inside there seemed to be tiny little flashes of energy, so small they would not even be noticed in isolation but so numerous that they could not be ignored. The overall effect was of a smooth wall or con- tainer holding a mass of fog-shrouded, moving se- quined material.

 

There were a number of grumbles and groans as the group slowly awoke to the new day and the same realizations that Cassie had felt. They had very little time to socialize, though, for Matson, looking sharp in his black outfit, hat, boots, and with his shotgun, knife, and whip on his belt, strode over to them from a nearby tent.

 

"All right -- everybody up on their feet!" he ordered. "We're going to have a little orientation talk and then you'll get food and drink but with no drugs to help you along. That part's over. And don't give me any trouble or any shit or I'll skip food and water in your case for starters, and once we're in the Flux you'll wish you'd never been born."

 

There was no problem now. They were too scared to do much more than obey. Scared -- and curious.

 

"All right- Now, my name's Matson and I own you. Yeah, I know that sounds funny, but it's liter- ally and legally true. You stopped being people when your numbers got drawn. Now, that means that there's no place to run, no appeals, no protec-

 

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tion. I'm the law, the absolute authority and if I don't like you I can do anything I want with you and I don't even have to have much of a reason. If I wake up in a bad mood and decide that the first two of you I see will have their arms chopped off because I feel like it, that's the way it'll be. You remember that. And you remember, too, that any- body who gives me lip can have his or her tongue cut out with a gesture from me and I won't even lose any sleep over it. Do you understand?"

 

There were a few mumbled assents. The rest had progressed in one short moment from being scared to being terrified.

 

Matson looked slightly peeved. "When I talk to you as a group I expect to be answered by the group. Now, let's try that again. Do you under- stand me?"

 

"Yes," came an almost uniform response.

 

"When you talk to me you call me 'sir' always. Now, what was that again?"

 

"Yes, SIR!" they responded.

 

"Louder! Sometimes it's hard to hear in the Flux, so shout everything, you understand?"

 

"YES, SIR!" they screamed at him.

 

He nodded. "That's better. All right. Let's start with the apron here. Those people that you see are Flux people. They usually live in the Flux, except when they have business here, although some of them are permanent residents of the aprons, dealing in goods and services for stringers like me. Just in case you never heard the term before, they are called duggers. Duggers are one kind of group that lives in the Flux. Forget that bullshit they sold you in school and church -- the Flux is full of life, and death, and is anything but empty. In fact, a lot of stuff that keeps the Anchors going comes from Fluxlands. Anchors trade for the stuff, and what they trade is often information or

 

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services, but is also people. You, to be exact, in this case."

 

He paused to let that sink in.

 

"Now, you may wonder why the hell the Flux needs people. Part of the reason is that it's a pretty hard, violent place compared to Anchors. They have a very high death rate. The odds are that your own lives will be short, but don't let that upset you too much. There are still a lot of folks out there who live to ripe old ages, and some who live so long they seem almost immortal. Children are bom in the Flux, too, but the infant mortality rate is very high, and the odds are against some- body growing to adulthood there. Again, that doesn't mean everybody. I was born in the Flux, and I've lived more than twice as long as any of you."

 

Again he paused, looking at their faces to see how they were taking it.

 

"Okay, then. Right now you're imagining some wild, savage kind of Anchor or something. Well, for- get it. In fact, if you want to stay alive, forget every single bit of science or logic that you were ever taught. All that applies only to Anchors- In fact, that is the real difference between Anchor and Flux.

 

"In Anchors, everything's following a clearly de- fined set of natural laws. You drop a stone, it falls at a specific rate to the ground thanks to gravity. That's a good example. In the Flux, there are no natural laws- None. There are standard conditions --  what we call 'default conditions,' but those exist only where not modified. You will not go floating into the air. You will be able to breathe it, and the temperature is rather warm although usually ex- tremely dry. But these are all defaults, not fixed conditions. They are subject to change. You can take nothing for granted in the Flux. Nothing.

 

"Now -- what changes these conditions? Well, the fact is, the Flux is as you see it over there. That's

 

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the default, too. A big nothing. What looks like fog, though, isn't fog at all -- it's energy. The Flux does obey one natural law -- energy can neither be cre- ated nor destroyed, but it can be changed. When you put a match to oil in a lamp you let out the energy in the oil. When you were in the city, though, you saw electric lights and powered gadgets. That power came from turning some matter, some solid stuff, into energy- You can do that in the Flux, too -- but there you can also do it backwards!"

 

That caught some of them off balance. Those who had been able to follow things so far tried to figure out his last comment and fit it in, the others just stood there trying to look like they understood it all.

 

"What that means," he went on, "is that energy, what you see back there, can be changed into matter. Solid things. If you're good enough, or smart enough, you can do almost anything there- Those who can totally control it are like gods. In fact, some of 'em think they are gods and act like it, too. We call 'em wizards -- master magicians. They really do have the power of gods in the Flux, and they run tilings. They're the ones who created the Fluxlands, the independent places in the Flux, and they run them like gods as well. Watch out for them.

 

"As for the rest, there are those who have vary- ing degrees of skill in manipulating the Flux. Some of 'em are what we call false wizards. They, say, turn you into a bird. You think you're a bird, and everybody else thinks you're a bird, and when you jump into the air off the cliff you and everybody else thinks you're flying. But you're still you, and you can't fly, so you crash and die. Watch out for the false wizards. In their own way they're more dangerous than the real ones."

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