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    Doomsman - the Theif of Thoth

    Page 5
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    in a private craft that had overturned. As they should

      have. As they would have

      had not AmericaState

      •

      •

      •

      wanted them to believe any story he gave them

      had

      •

      .

      •

      not AmericaState wanted him to get to Tedus Nur _ . •

      had not AmericaState rigged the jetcopter to trackback its

      signals, so they would know where he was at any moment.

      He knew, then, and the knowledge did nothing to

      DOOMSMAN

      soothe him. All this effort, all these machinations, were

      all at the notice of the AmericaState officials. He had had

      his memories of Eskalyo discovered when he had been initially probed, and the Probers had decided he, Juanita Montoya, would make a good decoy to find and assassinate Eskalyo, in Ciudad Rosario. Was Eskalyo becoming too much of a threat for the AmericaState system? Was

      there more to this than Juanito suspected? Undoubtedly!

      Yet they had pulled it off this far: they had aroused his

      interest in Eskalyo, then planted Grice to let Juanito

      know he was the petty ruler's son, then arranged it so

      Juanita would think it was his own idea to seek out Grice

      and the man in the Chambers, and Eskalyo himself. It

      had all been a plan, and he had jibbered and capered

      through it like the puppet they wished him to be.

      He cursed himself silently, wishing he had never been

      found by the Seekers. He cursed the invisible, omnipotent

      Them who ruled the AmericaState, and for the first time

      since he could remember, he doubted the stately system;

      perhaps it was because he had been a child of freedom

      . . . perhaps it was because he had too much individuality to fully accept what he had been taught at the School

      . perhaps it was just that he was sick of being

      .

      •

      shunted about. But at that moment of realization he knew

      the AmericaState way was not the best way to rule the

      continent. The War had been a severe test, and the men

      who had come through it with the most strength left had

      been the ones to establish the School and the Seekers and

      the Probers and all the other security checks and confining minutia of AmericaState government. But Juanito had never doubted that was the best way; the petty rulers

      had to go; they were a menace.

      Was it so, however? Was that the way of it?

      Now he doubted until his brain hurt. Now he knew the

      regimentation was no good, and the School was no good,

      and there was a fear in AmericaState-a fear of Eskalyo.

      Or if there were not .

      why would they be going to so

      .

      •

      much trouble to convince Juanita he wanted to seek out

      his father?

      It had been chance, obviously, that Grice had been

      captured. Chance-he had been sent on a mission to

      keep him busy till Juanito arrived in Alaska-a harmless

      DOOMS MAN

      mission to keep him out of the way-and he had been

      captured-and tortured-and died with bitterness red on

      his lips.

      That bitterness had compelled him to speak. To tell the

      truth about this business to the man he y.ras supposed to

      have duped.

      So Juanita knew.

      He knew he was being driven to find his father, and

      the AmericaState officials would give him all the help he

      needed. Such as an idling jetcopter . . . a ChiTroop cutter . . . or a free passage to Ciudad Rosario--wherever it might be.

      Had not Grice been tortured in that way, had not his

      bitterness overcome his training, Juanita would have

      stumbled on, thinking he was escaping the assassin's

      corps, thinking he was going to his father, when all the

      while he would have been on his way to an assassination.

      The ChiTroop cutter skimmed over the water of Lake

      Michigan, speeding toward N. Chicago, as th� other

      thought struck J uanito Montoya:

      How were they going to insure that he killed Eskalyo?

      What hidden factors had they? Was he a tool without

      knowing it7 He struggled with himself for a long instant,

      and finally scoffed it away; he had been trained to kill.

      That was probably the hold they had over him. They felt

      sure he would not go back on his training when the moment of assassination came. He chuckled in the sanctity of his mind. They were so wrong.

      Unlike the many serfs and simple-souled draftees to

      the School, Juanito had been a creature of the wind, free

      and on his own: he did not feel grateful for the training,

      and in an instant he woUld throw it over. When he

      reached Eskalyo--his father-he would pledge himself to

      allegiance no matter what the cost.

      His assassin's training would come in handy.

      But that was all in time. First he had to find Tedus

      Nur, head executioner, field division, N. Chicago Chambers.

      Tedus Nur was the most hideous creature ever

      spawned.

      DOOMSMAN

      Not only his physical makeup-though that in itsctf.

      was frightening, and perhaps reason for his other

      defects-but his tone of voice, the look in his eye, his

      gait, his attitude toward the political prisoners in the

      Chambers, everything. In everything, his body was

      reflected. In every word, every deed, every concept and

      inclination, his dwarf's body was mirrored.

      Juanito Montoya instinctively slouched when he met

      Tedus Nur.

      A man with a warped and twisted body such as Nur's

      would be immediately antagonistic to a straight, tall youth

      with unscarred, clean limbs. Juanito sensed this, and lessened his own stature accordingly. If it had any effect on the dwarf, Nur did not let on.

      He was despicable from the first moment of their meeting.

      "What do you want?"

      The thin, gashlike mouth opened to reveal less than

      half the teeth nature had intended. What few wined in a

      broth of saliva were yellow and broken, save for two canines white and clean and deadly-looking, as if Nur were part animal, keeping those two· teeth in good case for his

      animal stages. The mouth opened and a rank smell came

      forth. The eyes narrowed as the mouth opened, and the

      banked fires of hatred-an all-directional hatred, for

      everyone and everything-blazed more brightly from the

      thinned slits. Nur's eyes were bloodshot and stained about

      the iris with orange flecks. His eyes were any color. Any

      sick color. They were not brown, but mud. They were not

      black but dirt. They were not blue but the color of veins.

      Nor green but the color of mold.

      The nose was a delicate, upturned sweetness, like a

      cherry thrust atop a pie of dung, or an innocent child lost

      in a colony of lechers, or a clean thought in the mind of a

      pervert. The nose was not of his face, but merely loaned

      from some other.

      The head was pointed and nearly bald. It sat on a

      nearly nonexistent neck that ran into huge, massively

      corded shoulders . . . segment of a twisted and evil form.

      Tedus Nur was a crippled dwarf of the most objectionable

      sort.

      "Dammit, I ask what you want? You gone answer?"


      DOOMSMAN

      Juanita loathed the dwarf at once, but this was the

      man who would give him the words to lead a son to his

      father. By plan of AmericaState, to be sure, but Juanita

      had one ace they knew nothing of:

      He knew they were maneuvering him, now.

      So now he knew, and he knew this play-acting with

      Nur was important; he must not let on that he knew their

      plan. He must allow himself to be a dupe. So far as it

      would bring him to the feet of Eskalyo.

      For he had decided: there was where his destiny lay.

      With his father.

      So he swallowed his loathing of Tedus Nur and replied:

      "I was in a private yacht that sank in the Lake.

      A-uh-friend of mine, John Grice, once told me if I

      ever had a problem, and was near New Chi, I should

      look you up, that you would-uh-help me out."

      Nur's eyes narrowed stjll more, if that was possible,

      and his mouth slitted fine to a sharp reply. "No one is my

      friend, man. You got a name, you got papers, what you

      got I should know you come from Grice?"

      Juanita swallowed hard. Tedus Nur could tell he was

      an assassin. Only an assassin wore the ebony skintite and

      pouch.

      Yet he wanted Juanita to declare himself. "My name is

      Lland Jackh. I come from Oklahoma, near Grice's birthplace. Grice said you would help me find a-uh-certain person."

      Tedus Nur grinned. It would h�ve been more soothing

      had he snarled. He knew Juanita was lying. Juanita knew

      the dwarf was aware of his lie. It was part of the play-act.

      Juanita spoke with the lilt of the Spaniard, not with the

      twang of the Okie. He was obviously from the

      Argentine-and what did it matter where he obviously

      was from, or what he obviously was, for Tedus Nur had

      had his instructions.

      From the top.

      It was his play, all the way.

      "Come, man, I take you to my evening's work. I show

      you how I earn my living."

      The dwarf rose off the many pillows piled on the floor

      of the office and capered toward the door. His wrinkled

      DOOMSMAN

      and crushed little body was all evil and all purpose as he

      took a blacksnake bullwhip from pegs near the door.

      Then he threw open the door-with its latch close to the

      floor-and bowed low.

      "After you, Mr. Lland Jackhl"

      Juanito moved out into the corridor, composed of softly glowing green rock. Green rock that was the foundation of the Chambers. The New Chicago Torture Chambers, where political unfortunates were sent for confession and-in every case-execution. It was a huge tower in the center of N. Chi, surrounded by a force

      mesh that went out for two blocks in any direction. Once

      a man was condemned to the Chambers, no one bothered

      to think of him again-he was dead. The tower rose one

      thousand three hundred feet into the New Chicago sky,

      the stone and not-stone of it glowing soft green by night

      and by day.

      Beacon to those who sought the stem authority of

      AmericaState.

      Bogey to children warned by their mothers at bedtime.

      Source of information from those who sought to overthrow the regimented, assassin-strong, Seeker-filled, Probesman-laden culture of AmericaState.

      Cradle of terror.

      Gray-hailed, green-walled, silent and impregnable

      graveyard into which a man might disappear and never

      be seen again. Turned into the capabl� hands of

      executioners like Tedus Nur.

      "Are you coming, Mr. Jackh?" The little dwarf trotted

      down the green-lit hallway.

      Juanita's thought swirled back into his mind as water

      swirls quickly down a drain. "Uh, oh yes, yes of course,

      I'm coming."

      He followed the dwarf, and wondered how long the

      play-act would continue. He hoped his end would not

      come here, between these walls.

      From somewhere below, a scream swirled up to pierce

      his reverie.

      Tedus Nur enjoyed his work. In his warped, single-line

      DOOMSMAN

      way, in his own way and in no way Juanito could imagine

      as sane, he was probably a top man in his field.

      His field was cruelty.

      Juanito followed the dwarf down a series of baflle

      corridors and areaways, confusing in the extreme; a

      minotaur's maze of strange angles and bewildering backtracks. This was another feature of the escape-proof Chambers.

      Finally they came to a stairway, and the dwarf capered

      and caroled down it as though he were a child bent on a

      playday. Nur whistled and gibbered to himself like a

      thing gone mad, winding down and ever down that :flight

      of fearful stairs. A rank and hideous odor came up from

      below, and though the green walls shone with equal brilliance at any distinct spot, there was a feeling of increasing darkness, of increasing dankness and depth as they descended.

      The screams continued, sometimes rising, sometimes

      falling in pitch, but always there, always commanding and

      drawing them down down down into the bowels of the

      Chambers, and perhaps into the bowels of N. Chi itself.

      Juanito never knew.

      When it seemed his legs would wear off at the knees,

      Juanito heard the little maniac-who had practically

      flown down the last hundred feet of steps till he was well

      ahead of the assassin�all a huzzah, and urge him on.

      He stumbled down the last steps, rounding a curve that

      brought him in sight of a great hall, with low benches in

      every direction, and a hundred green doors set in the

      wall. The doors were all of plasteel, it was obvious, even

      from that distance, and they were numbered from one to

      one hundred. From behind the doors, strange sounds

      could be heard, intermingling and mixing with the sounds

      from other doors. Down here the screams were not terri'fying, but worse, heart-rending.

      The dwarf took up an heroic stance, hands on hips,

      bullwhip dangling, and legs apart, and smiled. He waved

      a hand about proudly. "Mr. Jackhl My office!"

      The benches were black with dried blood.

      "What is this hall?" Juanito asked.

      "Waiting room," . the dwarf answered simply, explaining no further. Yet the manner in which he spoke

      OOOMSMAN

      those two words was enough to send a tremor through

      Juanita's shoulders.

      "Come with me, won't you?'' the dwarf said, and it

      was by no means a request.

      Juanito followed hlm, expecting anything, and expecting even treachery that would leave him imprisoned in one of these cells for the rest of his life. But he followed, for in the warped and twisted mind of this warped and twisted dwarf lay the answer to the puzzle: Where is

      Eskalyo? Where is my father?

      Tedus Nur strode briskly forward, his eyes all fire and

      yearning, his hand tight to the mailed grip of the blacksnake bullwhip. It was just as they reached door number 76 that Juanito noticed something about the whip.

      It was not simply a material construction. There were

      wire tips protruding from the cat that ended the stalk.

      Wire tips that ran up through the stalk and into the handle. The handle was equipped with a series of studs that could be controlled from the fingertips.

      As Juanito st
    ared down at the whip, the dwarf turned

      and caught his eyes. "Interesting, eh? A little thing I had

      them send me from the SecuritySeek Research Labs in

      Up-Dakota. Guaranteed to make my job easier." He

      cracked the whip with authority, and sparks blazed a blue

      and gold arc over his head. Juanita drew back as a faint

      touch of that current stood his dark hair on end, and

      burned in his eyes.

      If he had ever doubted it, now he knew for certain: the

      dwarf was criminally insane. A megalomaniac.

      "You need a haircut," the dwarf observed, with no relation to anything else, and dismissing it, turned to palmlock open the door.

      His prints were scanned and grooved and compared

      and okayed, and the door slid back in its trough. The cell

      within was large, but that did the prisoner no good.

      She was bolted to the floor.

      By her thighs, her biceps, her wrists, her waist, her feet

      and her neck. Auburn-haired, closed-eyed, limp and

      filthy, no shard of clothing left on her body, the girl started at the sound of the whip in the air as Tedus Nur entered, and as though the cry were being tom from her stomach, she screamed for the heavens to take notice.

      DOOMS MAN

      "Please, please," she whined, ''please beat me! Beat

      me, but don't touch me, please, rm crying, can't you see

      that, please, please

      .'' Her voice was thick with emo­

      .

      •

      tion, and her eyes filled with the sort of tears that were

      not affectation.

      She wished for a beating from that hideous whip, more

      than the touch of the dwarf. What horrors had the man

      inflicted on her, Juanito wondered.

      "You asked me to help you find a man, Mr. Jackh,"

      the dwarf said, looking steadily at the girl

      "Yes."

      "What is that man's name?"

      "1-Eskalyo." The hesitation was momentary.

      The dwarf turned then to Juanito, and his face was a

      plea for understanding. My God, thought Juanito, the little scum has emotions after alii

      "Mr. Jackh, in my business, rm told very little about

      matters of consequence, aboveground. I am told there is

      an important man on his way to me who will ask me

      about Eskalyo. I am told to give him all the help I can. I

      would not show what I am about to show to you, to anyone, sir. But I long for recognition my soul cries out

     


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