Nightfall (47 page)

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Authors: Isaac Asimov,Robert Silverberg

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BOOK: Nightfall
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“Not quite. I haven’t seen a road-sign for a while, but my guess is that—”

He stopped abruptly.

“What is it, Theremon?”

“Look. Look there, to the right. Along that secondary road coming in from the west.”

They peered over the edge of the highway. Down below, a few hundred yards away, a long row of trucks was drawn up at the side of the secondary road, where it fed into an approach to the main one. There was a large, bustling camp there: tents, a big campfire burning, some men chopping logs.

Two or three hundred people, perhaps. All of them in black hooded robes.

Theremon and Siferra exchanged astounded glances.

“Apostles!” she whispered.

“Yes. Get down. Hands and knees. Hide yourself against the railing here.”

“But how did they manage to get this far south so fast? The highway’s upper end is completely blocked!”

Theremon shook his head. “They didn’t take the highway at all. Look there—they’ve got trucks that work. Here’s another one, coming right now. Gods, that looks strange, doesn’t it, an actual moving vehicle! And hearing the sound of an engine again after all this time.” He felt himself beginning to shiver. “They were able to keep a fleet of trucks undamaged, and a supply of fuel. And obviously they’ve come down from Saro around through the west, on little country roads. Now they’re joining up with the main highway, which I suppose is open from here to Amgando. They could be there by this evening.”

“This evening! Theremon, what are we going to do?”

“I’m not sure. There’s only one wild chance, I guess. —What if we went down there and tried to seize one of those trucks?
And drove it to Amgando ourselves. Even if we got there only two hours ahead of the Apostles, there’d be time for most of the Amgando people to escape. Right?”

Siferra said, “Perhaps. It sounds crazy, though. How could we steal a truck? The moment they see us, they’ll know we aren’t Apostles, and they’ll grab us.”

“I know. I know. Let me think.” After a moment he said, “If we could catch a couple of them at a distance from the others, and take their robes away from them—shoot them with our needlers, if we have to—and then, when we’re robed, just walk up to one of the trucks as though we have every right to be doing that, and jump on board and drive off toward the highway—”

“They’d follow after us in two minutes.”

“Maybe. Or maybe if we were calm and cool about it they’d think it was something perfectly ordinary, part of their plan—and by the time they realized it wasn’t, we’d be fifty miles down the road.” He looked at her eagerly. “What do you say, Siferra? What other hope do we have? Continue toward Amgando on foot, when for us it’ll be a journey of weeks and weeks, and they can drive past us in a couple of hours?”

She was staring at him as though he had lost his mind.

“Overpower a couple of Apostles—hijack one of their trucks—go zooming off toward Amgando—oh, Theremon, it’ll never work. You know that.”

“All right,” he said abruptly. “You stay here. I’ll try to do it alone. It’s the only hope there is, Siferra.”

He rose to a half-crouch, and began to scuttle along the side of the highway toward the exit ramp a few hundred yards ahead.

“No—wait, Theremon—”

He looked back at her and grinned. “Coming?”

“Yes. Oh, this is crazy!”

“Yes,” he said. “I know. But what else can we do?”

She was right, of course. The scheme
was
crazy. Yet he saw no alternative. Evidently the report Beenay had received had been garbled: the Apostles had never intended to move down the Great Southern Highway province by province, but instead had set out directly for Amgando in a huge armed convoy,
taking minor roads which, though not very direct, were at least still open to vehicular transport.

Amgando was doomed. The world would fall by default to Mondior’s people.

Unless—unless—

He had never imagined himself as a hero. Heroes were people he wrote about in his column—people who functioned at the top of their form under extreme circumstances, performing strange and miraculous deeds that the ordinary individual would never dream of even attempting, let alone of carrying off. And now here he was in this strangely transformed world, blithely talking of overpowering hooded cultists with his needle-gun, commandeering a military truck, speeding off to Amgando Park to sound the warning of the oncoming attack—Crazy. Utterly crazy.

But perhaps it might just work, simply because it
was
so crazy. Nobody would be expecting two people to appear out of thin air down here in this peaceful bucolic setting and simply run off with a truck.

They edged their way down the highway ramp, Theremon a short distance in the lead. A thickly overgrown field lay between them and the camp of the Apostles. “Maybe,” he whispered, “if we get down and wriggle through the tall grass here, and a couple of the Apostles come wandering out this way for some reason, we can rise up and jump them before they know what’s happening.”

He got down. He wriggled.

Siferra went right after him, keeping pace.

Ten yards. Twenty. Just keep going, head down and wriggle, over to that little knoll, and then wait—wait—

A voice said suddenly, just behind him, “What do we have here? A couple of peculiar serpents, is it?”

Theremon turned, looked, gasped.

Gods! Apostles, seven or eight of them! Where had they come from? A private picnic in the field? Which he and Siferra had crawled right past, all unknowing?

“Run for it!” he barked to her. “You go this way—I’ll go that—”

He began to sprint to his left, toward the towers that supported
the highway. Maybe he could outrun them—disappear into the wooded country on the other side of the road—

No. No. He was strong and fast, but they were stronger, faster. He saw them coming up alongside him.

“Siferra!” he yelled. “Keep going! Keep—going!”

Perhaps she had actually made it to safety. He couldn’t see her now. The Apostles were all around him. He reached for his needle-gun, but one of them caught his arm immediately, and another got him by the throat. The gun was yanked from his hand. Legs poked between his, entangling him, tripping him. He fell heavily, rolled over, looked up. Five hooded faces, unsmiling, rigid, looked back. One of the Apostles had his own needle-gun aimed at his chest.

“Get up,” the Apostle said. “Slowly. With your hands in the air.”

Awkwardly Theremon stumbled to his feet.

“Who are you? What are you doing here?” the Apostle demanded.

“I live around here. My wife and I were just taking a shortcut through these fields, back to our house—”

“The nearest farm is five miles away. A very long shortcut.” The Apostle gestured with a nod of his head toward the camp. “Come with us. Folimun will want to talk to you.”

Folimun!

So he had survived the night of the eclipse after all. And was in charge of the expedition against Amgando!

Theremon glanced around. No sign of Siferra at all. He hoped she was back on the highway by now, heading for Amgando as fast as she could go. A slim hope, but the only one left.

The Apostles marched him toward the camp. It was a weird sensation to be among so many hooded figures. Scarcely any of them paid attention to him, though, as his captors nudged him along, into the largest of the tents.

Folimun was seated at a bench near the back of the tent, looking through a sheaf of papers. He turned his chilly blue eyes on Theremon and his thin, sharp face softened for an instant as a smile of surprise crossed it.

“Theremon? You here? What are you doing—covering us for the
Chronicle?

“I’m traveling south, Folimun. Taking a little holiday, since
things are a little unsettled back in the city. Would you mind asking these thugs of yours to let go of me?”

“Release him,” Folimun said. —“Where are you heading, exactly, eh?”

“That’s of no importance to you.”

“Let me be the judge of that. Going to Amgando, are you, Theremon?”

Theremon offered the cultist a cold level stare. “I don’t see any reason why I should tell you anything.”

“After all that I told you, when you interviewed me?”

“Very funny.”

“I want to know where you’re heading, Theremon.”

Stall, Theremon thought. Stall him as long as you can.

“I decline to answer that question, or any other you might happen to have for me. I’ll discuss my intentions only with Mondior himself,” he said in a steady, determined tone.

Folimun made no reply for a moment. Then he smiled again, a quick on-off. And then, suddenly, unexpectedly, he broke into actual laughter. Theremon wondered if he had ever seen Folimun laugh before. “Mondior?” Folimun said, his eyes glinting with amusement. “There is no Mondior, my friend. There never was.”

[42]

It was hard for Siferra to believe that she had actually managed to escape. But that was indeed what appeared to have happened.

Most of the Apostles who had surprised them in the field had gone after Theremon. Looking back once, she had seen them surrounding him like hunters’ hounds surrounding their prey. They had knocked him down; he would certainly be captured.

Only two of the Apostles had split off to pursue her. Siferra had jabbed one in the face, hard, with the flat of her hand at the end of her stiff outstretched arm, and at the speed she was traveling the impact had sent him reeling to the ground. The remaining one was fat and ungainly and slow; in moments Siferra left him far behind.

She doubled back the way she and Theremon had come, toward the elevated highway. But it seemed unwise to go up onto it. The highway was too easily blocked, and there was no safe way down from it except at the exit ramps. She would only be putting herself at risk of running into a trap if she went up there. And even if no roadblocks lay ahead, it would be a simple thing for the Apostles to come after her in their trucks and pick her up, a mile or two down the way.

No, the thing to do was to run into the woods on the far side of the road. The Apostles’ trucks wouldn’t be able to follow her there. She could lose herself easily enough in those low shrubby trees, and hide there until she had figured out her next move.

And what could that be? she wondered.

She had to admit that Theremon’s idea, wild as it was, still was their only hope: steal a truck somehow, drive down to Amgando and sound the alarm before the Apostles could get their army on the move again.

But Siferra knew there wasn’t the remotest chance that she could simply tiptoe up to an empty truck, jump in, and drive it away. The Apostles weren’t that stupid. She’d have to order one of them at gunpoint to switch the truck on for her and surrender its controls to her. And that involved carrying out the whole bizarre maneuver of trying to overpower a stray Apostle, getting his robe, slipping into the camp, locating someone who could open up one of the trucks for her—

Her heart sank. It was all too implausible. She might just as well consider trying to rescue Theremon while she was at it—go marching in with her needle-gun blazing, take hostages, demand his immediate release—oh, it was absolute foolishness, a silly melodramatic dream, a gaudy maneuver out of some cheap children’s adventure book—

But what will I do? What will I do?

She huddled down in a copse of tightly woven little trees with long feathery leaves and waited for time to pass. The Apostles gave no sign of breaking camp: she could still see the smoke of their bonfire against the twilight sky, and their trucks were still parked where they had been along the road.

Evening was coming on. Onos was gone from the sky. Dovim hovered on the horizon. The only suns overhead were
her two least favorite ones, bleak and cheerless Tano and Sitha, casting their cold light from their distant location at the edge of the universe. Or what people had
thought
was the edge of the universe, rather, in those far-off innocent days before the Stars appeared and revealed to them just how immense the universe really was.

The hours ticked interminably by. No solution to the situation made sense to her. Amgando seemed lost, unless someone else had managed to get a warning to them—certainly there was no way she was going to get down there ahead of the Apostles. Rescuing Theremon was an absurd idea. Her chances of stealing a truck and getting to Amgando by herself was only slightly less preposterous.

What then? Simply sit back and watch while the Apostles took command of everything?

There seemed to be no alternative.

At one point during the evening she thought that the only path open to her was to walk into the Apostles’ camp, surrender, and ask to be imprisoned with Theremon. At least they would be together then. It astonished her how much she missed him. They had not been out of each other’s company in weeks, she who had never lived with a man in her life. And all during the long journey from Saro City, though they had bickered now and then, even quarreled a little, she had never tired of being with him. Not once. It had seemed the most natural thing in the world for them to be together. And now she was alone again.

Go on, she told herself. Give yourself up. Everything’s lost anyway, isn’t it?

It grew darker. Clouds veiled Sitha and Tano’s frosty light, and the sky turned so dusky that she half expected the Stars to reappear.

Go ahead, she thought bitterly. Come out and shine. Drive everyone crazy all over again. What harm can it do? The world can only be smashed once, and that’s been done already.

But the Stars, of course, did not appear. Veiled as they were, Tano and Sitha nevertheless afforded enough light to mask the glow of those distant points of mysterious brilliance. And as the hours went by, Siferra found herself swinging completely
around from her mood of total defeatism to a new sense of almost reckless hope.

When all is lost, she told herself, there’s nothing left to lose. Under cover of this evening gloom she would slip into the Apostles’ camp and—somehow, somehow—take one of their trucks. And rescue Theremon, too, if she could manage it. And then off to Amgando! By the time Onos was in the sky tomorrow morning, she’d be down there, among her university friends, in plenty of time to let them know that they had to scatter before the enemy army arrived.

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