II

UDGE rubbed her chin meditatively and stared at Bival, who stood respectfully in front of her, her head bandaged where Brudoer’s belt buckle had sliced it. It was high sun. The other three quadrant counsels sat at ease, but silently. Bival had recounted her version of the incident.

Udge sighed. “There is no need to tell you this is not good. But it merely signifies a further need for discipline. With the outside world more restive, with the changes at Pelbarigan and Northwall, naturally the males will want more freedom. And you, Bival, by taking this boy as a student—”

“Ah. But he seemed so apt, so discerning, Protector.”

“—by taking this boy as a student, have by the misfortune of your liberalism, led him to the very outrage he has committed against you. The males shall not have more freedom. They…”

Outside, the watch guardsman had fitted his mouthpiece into the signal horn, a spiraling stone built into the tower, and sounded a long call of farewell.

“What is that?” Udge asked. She rang for a guardsman and asked again. The woman disappeared and soon returned.

“Protector, the Ursana has sent the boy, Gamwyn, to Pelbarigan by boat for treatment of his wound by the new physician, the one from the ancient dome.”

Udge suddenly stood, smashing her teacup on the floor. “Guardsman, get the guardchief. Have that boat recalled. Bring the Ursana here to me. Go.” She paced to the window, śquinting out. Already the boat was far upriver. It seemed some time before the guardhom blew for its return. As Udge watched, the guardhorn blew repeatedly, but the boat did not turn. True, there was a breeze. But it was not that strong. They should have heard. She watched as an arrowboat set out in pursuit then turned from the window. Bival had not moved. The guardchief stood silently by the door, awaiting the Protector’s attention.

Udge looked hard at her. “Was not the boy a prisoner? Why was he allowed to leave without notice? Do you realize what you have done?”

“A prisoner? I was not told. What did he do, Protector, other than to bump into the Southcounsel?”

“That is enough. Were you not told? Was that not clear?”

“Bival said so, yes, Protector. But she was angry. There was no legal ruling. She herself so bestially wounded the boy that—”

“Silence. You are not a judge. You are a functionary. I order the arrest of the boy. You are to carry it out. Have Wim brought to me. Now go.”

As the guardchief turned to leave, she nearly ran into the Ursana, a rather short old woman, heavyset, who wore her hair piled in two tiers, tightly bound. The Protector glared at her.

The old physician was panting. “You sent for me, Protector?” she asked mildly.

“I wish an explanation of why you exceeded your authority by sending the boy to Pelbarigan. Why did you not inquire for permission?”

“Permission, Protector?”

“Well, answer.”

The old woman sighed. “Protector, will you give me the opportunity to answer completely?”

“If I wish.”

“Then, Protector, you will get no answer at all. I am not a male to be herded. My family will stand behind me. So will the laws of Craydor. It is you who exceed your authority. I am willing to answer to the entire council, which you so seldom call.”

Udge looked around for the teacup she had smashed on the floor. She raised her arms, then dropped them. “Very well. But make it short.”

“The boy is horribly hurt. Look at it as a physician would. I am supposed to heal. I could sew the wound, try to keep it from growing angry, try to keep down the boy’s fever, perhaps even aid his healing—with a broad scar on his face. It’s a young face, Protector, still as smooth as a girl’s. Or was. Now it is swelled and destroyed. There is a chance, too, that he may die. We know the skill of this old physician, Royal, is far beyond mine. I thought—”

“Paaaah,” said Udge.

The Ursana simply raised her hand. “Please take another view, Protector. A political view. What if he were to die? The males are already disaffected. The boy’s act was only slightly wrong, though it had a bad consequence for Bival. If the males and their sympathizers felt that we withheld proper aid from the boy, and he did die, it would cause us more trouble than it is worth. If he returns healed, and the scar is slight, as I expect, we will have drawn strength from the opposition, because we will have proved ourselves wise and just rulers, as Craydor advised—and as Pell herself held proper.”

“Are you through?”

“Yes. Protector.”

“I believe it would be helpful if you retire. I will allow you to recommend a replacement for my review.”

“A replacement? At last. Yes, Protector. I will prepare a roll on the matter. I may go to Pelbarigan myself, then, to see this Royal.” The Ursana turned to go.

“Did I dismiss you?”

“Only from office, Protector, thank Aven. I am going. This is not a formal meeting. I know the protocol.” She turned away again, then paused, turned back, and added, “You of all people, Bival, should recall Craydor’s statement, ‘A shell is a design for life. Beyond that, though beautiful, it has no beautiful function. This is true in all the ways you can look at it.’”

Bival glared. “Stick to your bandages. I know more about design than any other five people in this city. Go and grind some of your useless medicine.”

The Ursana raised her eyebrows. “What you did this morning certainly didn’t arise from a stupendous knowledge of design.” She left, then leaned back in the door and added, “Or what you did to Warret.”

Bival screamed and started for the door, but the North-counsel jumped up and stopped her. “Easy, Bival. One casualty a day is enough. We have plenty of problems. Let her talk. It makes no difference. Your temper makes us all vulnerable.”

Udge was at the window, looking upriver. She could see nothing.

Brudoer had been shut into a prison room in the lowest part of the city, where the walls were thick, and all the rooms divided by heavy arches and broad pillars. That section of the city was given over to ice-storage rooms, general storage, mushroom culture, and the large prison rooms. These stood in a row of six, dim and tall, with high, narrow windows. They were quite plain but beautifully made. It had been Craydor’s view that people in need of imprisonment should be able to contemplate order and beauty, however abstract.

Fitted into one wall of Brudoer’s cell was a bed-bench surmounted by an arch in which one word, “Mercy,” was neatly chiseled. In several bands around the room, letters were also chiseled, but they made no sense or words. The diamond pattern of stone from the outside walls was repeated in miniature on these walls. Against the inside wall a stone bench lay.

But Brudoer saw none of these things. He was still seething with fury and worry. Sometimes his rage seemed to rise like a red rain, drenching the room. Whenever he began to calm, the image of Gamwyn’s bleeding face as Bival struck him would surge up in his memory, and the wave of anger would again rise. He would beat his fists against the wall, then suck his bleeding knuckles, hunching, watching the drops of blood and tears spatter the smooth stone. He would never rest until he had some revenge. He vowed it. Never.

It was the second quadrant after high sun before the arrowboat, with its guardcaptain and one other guardsman, came within hailing distance of the larger boat with Gamwyn. The lead boat never turned. Though tired, the men in it dipped and stroked, steadily, and the pursuing arrowboat still had a long chase before coming alongside and then ahead.

The guardsman in the bow raised a shortbow. “Halt. Protector’s orders. Halt and bring the boy back.”

The paddlers stopped, their backs slumping. They were all guardsmen, too. All males. The man in the stern called, “Come close. Look at him. He may be dying. Come and look.”

“Never mind that. It is a clear order.”

“Come anyway.”

Reluctantly, the arrowboat steered alongside. Gamwyn lay amidships, breathing fitfully, his bandaged face greatly swelled, his eyes glazed.

“Nonetheless,” the guardcaptain in the arrowboat began, as the guardsman in the stern of Gamwyn’s boat deftly flipped the narrow craft over, dumping the two in the river. They flailed and struggled.

“All right, men, paddle,” the man in the stern called. Wearily, but with a gleeful shout, they took up the rhythm and moved upriver away from the arrowboat. “Wait,” said the guardsman in the stern. He turned and looked at the two in the water. “All right. They can swim. Now, let’s go. We can take it easier now, but we have a quarter, sun to make today still. They have lost their weapons.” He laughed and dug his paddle into the water, pulling and chuckling. Then he looked again at Gamwyn and fell silent

“Don’t worry, Gam,” he finally said. “We’ll get you there. You just hang on.” He thought the boy nodded weakly.

 

When the boat had not returned by sunset, the Protector became uneasy. She had already replaced the guardchief with Wim, a family member with some guard experience. She had also replaced Suth, the Ursana, as chief physician. As she waited impatiently, a minister, Newall, came with a request from the workmen of the north quadrant for a special prayer service, for the harmonization of the present situation.

“They want to sing hymns in the chapel is all,” Newall said. “They are upset. May they? I think it will calm them.” Udge mused. “They may if the women sing with them.”

“The women do not wish to, Protector.”

“Always the males. Born to make trouble. My condition remains.”

“Protector…”

“No. They may sing all night if they sing as whole families. Now that seems plain.”

Newall paused, then left. Udge turned to Bival and said, “You really did something this time, Bival. I wish you could explain it all to me. A shell? It doesn’t seem worth it—though it may be just the occasion we need to enforce order once and for all.”

“It wasn’t just a shell, Protector. It was the model for this very tower we are in. It came all the way from the sea to the south. Craydor must have had one. This leads me to believe that the other towers also came from real models, not from Craydor’s own creations or modifications of familiar shells. This would accord with her theory of architecture—the use of natural forms as much as possible. Even with the short time I had the shell, I could see how she had used it. I could see its strengths, and how she modified the partitions within it to fit our needs here. This whole structure, in spite of its modifications, is essentially separate from the rest of the city, riding on it. I am sure of it. It is like a little fortress in itself. How she managed to curve and fit the stone, though, is beyond me. If we could understand that, how much we could do.”

“There is no need. The city is built. It is holding up well enough.”

“But Craydor left instructions for additions if that ever became desirable. She herself built and added enough times.”

“That was Craydor. We have to run the city our way now.”

A guardsman rang the small bell outside the door. Udge admitted her. “Protector, the arrowboat is back.”

“And the boy.”

“They would not return. The Ursana picked her own guardsmen, it would seem. They overturned the arrowboat, dumping the guardcaptain and her crewman.”

Udge struck her hand on the wide arm of her chair, then rubbed her smarting knuckles. “We will send a message bird ahead of them,” she said.

“Yes, Protector. At first light it shall be done.”

“Now.”

“They will not fly at night, Protector. If we had accepted the new message sender Pelbarigan offered us, perhaps then—”

“Silence! Everything will fall apart if we take all their innovations on. Message birds have always worked well enough.”

“Yes, Protector.”

“I will prepare the message. You may return for it in a few sunwidths.”

The guardsman bowed and left. Bival followed. Udge was alone. She went to the window, running her hands over the walls. She couldn’t understand what Bival was talking about. Designed like a particular shell? Well, perhaps she was right. But the old politician couldn’t see any importance in the fact. From below she could hear, faintly, massed voices singing, all male voices. She rang for the guardsman and said, “That singing. Was there a prayer service, then, against my order?”

“No, Protector. It’s only some workmen singing down in the ice caves. They often do that for their amusement.”

Udge listened. “It’s more than a few workmen. Have the guard tell them to desist. They are a disturbance.”

The guardsman hesitated just a moment, then bowed out, saying, “Yes, Protector.”

So Brudoer, who leaned, exhausted, against the wall of his cell, listening to the rich harmonies echoing mellowly among the heavy stone archways, heard hurrying footsteps, and shouting, then angry voices. The singing stopped. Again the face of Gamwyn swam up in his thoughts, but he was too weary to respond. He lay on the stone bench, staring at a single dim star he could see through the tall slit of a window. It seemed to tremble and melt, but as he calmed, it too seemed more steady, a hard point of blue-white light.