“Erased?”
“Yes, for it’s quite obvious to me that the islands not only cut grass, they kept the plains free of obstructions that weren’t supposed to be there. And a dead island would constitute just such a hazard.”
Grizquetr spoke in a thin voice, “Perhaps, Father, I may yet understand you. I must be stupid,”
“Far from it. You’ll learn in time. Anyway, I should have known what they really were when I heard the tales of the sailors. Remember that one about the big hole made by the meteorite? And how something mysterious filled it in and covered it with turf? And then there was the way that wrecked ‘rollers would vanish down to the last nut and bolt and the skeletons of the dead aboard. And there was the legend of Samdroo the Tailor Turned Sailor and what he found in the metal chambers inside an island. The great white eye through which he saw what was outside the island. And the other paraphernalia. They weren’t the property of a wicked magician, as the tale would have it. Any Earthman would recognize TV and radar and dials and controls.”
“Tell me more.”
“I will when we get over this wall.”
Green had stopped before a barrier of stone, reaching at least forty feet high. A grim crown, it completely encircled the top of the hill. “Once it must have been difficult to scale, but mortar has crumbled here and there, and vines grow all the way up. Follow me. I remember exactly the path I took.”
He jumped up on a little ledge, seized a thick vine and hauled himself up to another minor projection. Unhesitatingly, the boy swarmed up after him.
Panting, they reached the top, where they rested a moment and wiped the blood from their lacerated fingertips. The cat was the only one that seemed unperturbed. Silently, Green pointed out the twenty foot high statue of the Fish Goddess below, her back turned to them as she gestured at the cave mouth with the rocket-shaped charm.
For the first time Grizquetr seemed scared. Like all his fellows, he had an unhealthy awe for the supernatural. This place, so walled off, so utterly ancient-looking, so invested with all the attributes of taboo, so invocative of the horrible tales of demons and angry gods, depressed him. Only his father’s seeming indifference to any fiends they might encounter kept him from turning tail and backing down the wall.
“One thing I’ll bet, and that is that Miran didn’t follow me this far but stayed down on the ground. With that belly of his he’d never have made it; he’d have tumbled off like a big fat bug and been squashed like one, too. Wouldn’t that have been awful! However, he didn’t have to go all the way with me. The very fact that I would dare to enter a taboo area is enough to condemn me, I should have slit his throat when Amra told me he’d been shadowing me. But I couldn’t do it without absolutely convincing evidence, and even if I’d had that I suppose I’m too civilized to kill him in cold blood.”
“You should have told me how you felt,” said Grizquetr. “I would have slipped a dagger through the tallow over his ribs.”
“No doubt, and so would your mother. Well, down we go.”
And he set the example by throwing his leg over the edge of the wall and letting himself down, somewhat gingerly. The descent was even worse than the ascent, but he didn’t bother telling the boy that. By the time he found out he’d be at the bottom.
Even so, when he reached ground, he thought that the lad couldn’t be one whit more shaky than he. Forty feet was a long, long way when you were up on top looking down, especially in the moonlight.
“This is the second time I’ve done it, but I don’t think I’d have guts enough for a third time,” said Green.
“But we have to climb back out, don’t we?”
“Oh, we’ll have to go over it, but I hope it won’t be so high by then,” said Green, looking mysterious.
“What do you mean?”