Night Lamp (37 page)

Read Night Lamp Online

Authors: Jack Vance

Tags: #Science Fiction

BOOK: Night Lamp
9.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Open the box,” said Skirl. “I can’t control my curiosity.”

Maihac looked warily around the area. “Let’s leave this place first. Just possibly Asrubal might have left someone on guard.”

The four climbed into the flitter, and returned to Tanzig spaceport. Back aboard the
Pharsang
, with the flitter stowed in its bay, Jaro opened the box. He withdrew a buff envelope folded from heavy parchment, to which another, smaller, envelope had been clipped. Jaro put the first envelope aside and raised the flap of the second envelope, removed a sheet of paper, and for the second time in his life read a letter from someone who had loved him and now was dead.

The letter had clearly been scribbled in haste and in an extremity of emotion. Jaro read aloud:

“ ‘I wonder who will be reading this, and how far in the future? I hope, Jaro, that it will be you. If I succeed in bringing you back, you will know that I could have done nothing else; so if you resent the coercion that I placed into your mind, please forgive me!

“ ‘Now I am desperate. I have waited too long; I have seen Asrubal. He will soon find us, and then life will be gone and we will be dead! It is not a nice thought. We will know not even nothing, and fear not even the unimaginable! Jaro, what a queer fact, and it makes me shiver to think of it. If I survive, you will never read this letter. Since you are reading it you will know that events went badly, at least for me. But I expect nothing else, and I grieve only that I must place this burden on you, if you indeed survive.

“ ‘Asrubal, or Urd House, is the feared one! He will have killed me, and he has killed Tawn Maihac, your father. I know this is so, since three years have passed, and he has not come to find us.

“ ‘These are your instructions; follow them if you are able. The other envelope contains, first, a draught upon the Natural Bank at Ocknow, which, with accrued interest, will make up to a very large sum. Secure this money by placing it in a new account of your own. Secondly, make six copies of the documents in the large envelope. Place one of these copies in the bank vault; take the other copies to Loorie on the world Nilo-May, by the star Yellow Rose. Place one of the copies into the vault of the local Natural Bank. Mail one copy to the Justiciar at Romarth on the world Fader, by the star Night Lamp. These documents will destroy Asrubal if and when they are received by the Justiciar. They must not fall into the hands of anyone from the House of Urd.

“ ‘Next, proceed to Romarth. This is dangerous and must be done carefully. At Loorie, locate Aubert Yamb, most likely to be found at the Primrose Consolidators. Identify yourself, induce him to charter a small spaceship and travel to Fader. Land near Romarth. This is illegal but you can protect yourself by stating that you are a special envoy to the Justiciar. As soon as possible, make yourself known to my father, Ardrian of Ramy, at his palace Carleone.

“ ‘When you meet the Justiciar, give him another of the copies and describe how you came by them. Assert that they demonstrate the criminal peculations of Asrubal of Urd. Assert that Asrubal has killed me, your brother Garlet, Tawn Maihac and also has tried to kill you. The duty I lay upon you is now fulfilled. You can do no more at Romarth, which, despite its beauty, is also most dangerous. Return to Loorie, and thence to Ocknow. Secure your money and thereafter pursue a happy life.

“ ‘Note: do not deal with Lorquin shipping; you will be killed and your body will be thrown into space. Lorquin is an agency of Urd House: which is to say, Asrubal.

“ ‘Fader is an old, old world; it is mostly wild and very dangerous. It is where your father met his death. At Loorie ask Yamb about conditions on Fader. Remember, Asrubal will kill you with pleasure.

“ ‘As I watch you I am heartsick, for now we will part. I love this brave little morsel of life named Jaro; I look across the room and see you as you are now, so earnest and handsome; you are wondering why I write so sadly, and when you read this letter you will know. My poor little Jaro. Once you had a twin brother, but Asrubal killed him, too.

“ ‘I have finished the letter. Now I will put a hypnotic force on your mind, to bring you back to this desperate place. You may not know why you are coming, but come you must.

“ ‘I can write no more. My love goes with you always; even when I am gone, it will persist, and perhaps you will feel it. If you listen, it might even give you counsel. I have often wondered about such things, and perhaps soon I will know. You will notice that I am contradicting the dreary remarks I inscribed above. That is called ‘hope’! As for now, I can do no more.

“ ‘Your mother, Jamiel.’ ”

After a time Skirl said softly: “Poor brave woman! So she was killed!”

Jaro found that tears were welling down his cheeks. Maihac said gruffly, “It is a melancholy letter.”

Jaro opened the heavy brown envelope and withdrew the contents. There was a sheaf of what appeared to be commercial accounts and a bank draught upon the Natural Bank to the sum of three hundred thousand sols, payable to bearer, along with accruement of interest. Gaing examined the draught. “Sixteen years and more, at compound interest, the account will have doubled, or tripled, by this time, depending upon interest.”

“The money belongs to you and my father,” said Jaro. “It was intended as compensation for the
Distilcord
; it is not mine.”

“The money is nice to have,” said Gaing. “There is enough for us all.”

Skirl asked: “And these other papers? They seem to be invoices or bills of lading, or something similar.”

Jaro studied them. “They mean nothing to me. Still, my mother wanted them taken to Romarth, and I will do my best to oblige her.”

“That is how it must be,” said Maihac. “It is also dangerous, but not so dangerous as it might be if Gaing and I were not part of the company.”

Jaro returned the papers into the envelope. “So far as I can see, there is nothing to keep us on Camberwell. I have even learned the facts of my missing six years.”

Maihac rose to his feet. “I have an errand I must see to; it won’t take me long.” He left the ship.

Almost two hours passed. Maihac returned, looking grim and cheerless. He dropped into a chair and accepted a cup of tea. “I had not expected to find Jamiel alive, but now it’s official. At the Registry of Vital Records I learned that thirteen years ago a woman known as Jamu May, residing at 7 Riverfront Way in Point Extase, had been found dead in the river, the victim of unspecified foul play. Her son, age five or six years, was missing and presumed drowned.” Maihac sprawled back in the chair. “I thought that perhaps by some miracle Jamiel might have escaped. But now there is no more hope. In some horrid way she had been done to death. We will visit Romarth and deliver the documents Jamiel won at such great cost. We shall go prepared, and Asrubal of Urd will not be happy to see us. He will know that we have come for revenge. I only hope that he is alive.”

2

At Ocknow Maihac and Jaro visited the Natural Bank. Skirl remained aboard the
Pharsang
, while Gaing went to look for a shipyard capable of making the alterations to the
Pharsang
now considered necessary.

At the bank, Maihac and Jaro found that Erin Dykich now held the position of managing director. He made no difficulty about cashing the draught. As Gaing had predicted, the principal, compounding at six and three quarters percent, had far more than doubled itself. Six hundred thousand sols was redeposited in a new account; the balance was packed into a canvas bag.

Maihac told Dykich of how affairs had gone at Point Extase. Dykich reported that about five years previously Asrubal had come to his office, to demand that the draught, now seven years stale, should be voided. Dykich had refused, citing his instructions from the Council at Romarth. Asrubal had voiced bitter complaints; when Dykich remained adamant, Asrubal had stormed from his office in a cold fury.

Maihac and Jaro returned to the
Pharsang
with the canvas bag, now packed with cash. Gaing had found a reputable spaceyard and had arranged for alterations to be made upon the
Pharsang
.

Three weeks later armament of several types from heavy to light had been installed aboard the
Pharsang
. Additionally, power guns and target detection equipment had been fitted to the flitter, so that it functioned as a light version of an IPCC patrol craft.

Maihac took Skirl aside and explained the dangers which might beset the
Pharsang
and its crew on the world Fader. With great delicacy, Maihac suggested to Skirl that several options were open to her, any of which she might adopt without the slightest prejudice to herself or to the respect in which she was held. While the
Pharsang
and its crew pursued a dangerous program on Fader, Skirl could wait at Ocknow or even at Loorie, if she chose, until the
Pharsang
returned. On the other hand, Maihac was quick to add, should she wish to participate in the venture and share the attendant risks, everyone would take pleasure in her company.

Skirl responded in a stiff voice. She pointed out that, as a Clam Muffin, she feared nothing, and naturally her choice was the last option. She could not pretend to be pleased with Maihac for dangling the undignified alternatives before her. She declared that Maihac had tacitly called into question not only her courage and her adventurous spirit, but also her loyalty to Jaro and her honor.

Maihac protested with great fervor that Skirl had misunderstood his motives. He questioned neither her courage, nor her gallantry, nor her readiness to share Jaro’s destiny, and certainly not her honor, which would have been unthinkable. He insisted that he had broached the topic only in the interests of orderly procedure. He wanted to make sure that Skirl knew everything there was to be known about the expedition, so that he need never feel guilty that he had allowed her a false sense of security. Maihac told her: “It is simply a matter of clearing my conscience, in case you are torn limb from limb by the Loklor. I would mourn you, of course, but I would be in a sense gratified to know that you had gone to your fate without any persuasion from me.”

“You are conscientious,” said Skirl. “Still, I am trusting you, along with Gaing and Jaro, to make sure that my person is protected at all times.”

“I will do my best,” said Maihac. “Jaro would never forgive me if I did less.”

“Does Jaro know that you are talking to me like this?”

“Definitely not! Jaro is perhaps just a bit vain. He would never suspect that you might prefer wealth, comfort and safety to dying some unspeakable death in his company.”

Both Skirl and Maihac laughed and parted friends, and the subject never arose again.

The
Pharsang
departed Ocknow and set off toward Yellow Rose Star. “The first objective is Asrubal,” said Maihac. “If we find him at Loorie and deal with him there, so much the better. If not, then it’s on to Fader and the city Romarth.”

3

The
Pharsang
slanted out toward the fringes of the galaxy, the star Yellow Rose shining ever brighter. In due course the
Pharsang
dropped down upon Nilo-May, and landed at the Loorie spaceport. After the usual precautions against transitional shock, the four debarked, complied with routine formalities and were given the freedom of the town. They found themselves at the head of a long tree-shaded avenue.

The four surveyed the town, taking note of the cramped and eccentric architecture, the lassitude which pervaded the air, the surreptitious habits of the townsfolk, the tall dendrons which overhung the street: all in all, a placid, almost bucolic, scene.

Maihac led the way to the Peurifoy Refreshment Parlor, across the street from the Lorquin Shipping Agency. They seated themselves in the open air, under the shade of black and green foliage, and were silently served pots of beer. Across the street wide windows displayed the interior of the Lorquin Agency. Behind the counter stood a small thin-faced old man with a puff of white hair. Dame Waldop was nowhere to be seen.

“At Primrose Consolidators, just a couple doors away, we can look for news of Aubert Yamb,” said Maihac. “When last I passed through Loorie, he had been discharged from the Lorquin Agency, and in my opinion is lucky to be alive.”

When the four had finished their beer they walked down the street to Primrose Consolidators. Jaro went to make inquiries. He pushed open the door, stepped into a dim interior which was heavy with the scent of herbs and resinous woods. A counter ran down the length of one wall. Behind the counter sat Dame Estebel Pidy, or so a plaque on the counter informed Jaro. A long black gown hung loose about her bony frame; her skin was parchment pale; her mop of black hair was cut short at ear level with a brutal lack of finesse. She inspected Jaro with black eyes. “Yes sir; what are your needs?”

“I have some business with Mr. Aubert Yamb. Where may I find him?”

Dame Pidy answered peevishly: “He is in poor health; he will not care to discuss his affairs with creditors.”

“No fear; I want none of his money.”

“Lucky for you,” sniffed Dame Pidy. “He has none, and you may be sure that his wife will tell you the same.”

“I expect nothing else,” said Jaro. “Where does he I’ve?”

“Go three blocks north; turn down Titwillow Lane. His house is ‘Angel’s Song,’ second on the right, under a canker tree.”

The four, following directions, found “Angel’s Song” deep in the shade of a sprawling black dendron which trailed heart-shaped blue pods.

They approached the front entrance, and were met by a slatternly woman with lank hair and a round suspicious face. She spoke sharply: “You have come to the wrong place; our quota is under dispute, and in any case it has long been over-subscribed.”

“That is not our concern,” said Maihac. “We have business with Aubert Yamb. May we come in?”

The woman refused to move. “Yamb is not well; he needs his rest.”

“Nevertheless, we must see him,” said Maihac. “Are you not the former Twee Pidy?”

“Yes, and I remain the same. What of it?”

“A few years ago I hired Yamb to do some important semi-official work; I met you at the time, as perhaps you will recall.”

Other books

Her Last Tomorrow by Adam Croft
Finding Nouf by Zoë Ferraris
Stung by Jerry B. Jenkins
Travelers' Tales Alaska by Bill Sherwonit
The Alien's Captive by Ruth Anne Scott
No Place Like Oz by Danielle Paige
The Editor's Wife by Clare Chambers
Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson