arasite at the construction. You suck but you don't feed, you harvest and you don't plough. Why would Bemish love you? While if you helped him..." "How can I help him? Should I not steal? How will I make my living?" "Why should you not steal? For instance, Bemish has serious problems with zealots. If you step on the zealots' tails, you will help Bemish." The guy looked at the vice-minister with animosity. Weian crooks didn't attack zealots as a rule. The pickings would be slim, and the zealots would go totally mad - if you touched them they wouldn't rest till they cut the whole gang down and declare it to be gods' wrath. "I have a feeling that the zealots blighted you, not Bemish," the thief said, "and that I will do a favor to you rather than to Bemish." X X X Two hours later, Bemish's helicopter landed in Kissur villa's backyard. "The master is not at home," a maid reported, "the mistress will see you in a moment. Could you, please, step into Lake Hall?" Idari met him dressed in a blue skirt with golden sable trim and a jacket embroidered with peacocks and squirrels. Her hair was pulled up in a large black bun and a silver hairpin in the shape of a Lamass rowboat pierced the bun. Bemish looked at the hairpin and it seemed to him that the hairpin was piercing his heart. Bemish kissed the house mistress' hand and said. "I am touched that you received me in Kissur's absence." Idari sat on the couch and pulled a tambour with a partially knitted belt onto her knees. The belt was embroidered with clouds and rivers. She almost always had needlework with her. Two servants brought fruit and cookie baskets to the veranda and departed. A tame peacock dropped by the veranda, unfolded his tail, scratched the doorstep with his red foot and left for the garden. "What are you upset about, Mr. Bemish?" Idari asked. "Do you have any problems with the fund?" "No," Bemish said. "It's just that while I bought and sold other people's stocks, I possibly wasted my own company." "I thought that you finished assembling the first line of landing pads a week before you planned." "I mean the mood at the construction - zealots and crooks. I can't eradicate them. Shavash tricked me when he obtained legal immunity for the construction." Idari was silent. "Why did he do it?" Bemish cried out. "Did he need me to hang the zealots? Does he need the Earthmen to butcher these idiots instead of the Empire, so that his hands are clean and the Earthmen's hands are smeared with shit?" "What am I saying?" a thought passed in Bemish's mind. "I am sitting with a woman that I would give all of Assalah away for - ok, not all of Assalah but at least thirty percent of it - and I am talking to her about god knows what and she considers me to be a greedy and cowardly Earthman." "He is not fully satisfied with you," Idari said. "What is he not satisfied with? The only thing I don't export is drugs!" "That's exactly right." Bemish froze, as if he just collided with a wall. "Are you...serious?" "I mean that all the legal violations taking place at the spaceport deal only with taxes. You have not broken any criminal laws yet, Terence, and Shavash doesn't like that. If you break tax laws you can be prosecuted only at this planet. If you break criminal laws, you can be prosecuted across the whole Galaxy. The more crimes you commit, the more power Shavash will have over you." "Bastard," Bemish muttered glumly. "If only I had known..." "Shavash is better than you are," Idari objected. "Shavash? Better?!!" "Shavash will be forgiven many things because he wants a lot. He wants women, power, glory, while you want only money." "I want you. I want you more than money," Bemish wanted to say. "You are right, Idari," he said, "I like money more than anything else." X X X The next evening, the phone rang in Bemish's office. Ross called - an ex-colleague of Giles - now his deputy on security issues. "We have an emergency," Ross said. "A packer boy was knifed. We got the killer." "Did he resist?" "No. He is quite a lout." "Bring him to me," Bemish ordered. Murders happened quite often at the construction. Generally, the killers could not be found. Even if a man was killed in broad daylight, somehow nobody saw anything. Bemish was leafing through a draft of the yearly company report prepared by the PR department on Earth when two wide-angled guys from the security department brought the killer in the office - an inconspicuous sixty-year-old man in washed out jeans and a jacket with white trim showing that he worked in the fifth roadwork team. The killer's hands were twisted behind his head and locked with handcuffs. The guys left and Bemish pointed the involuntary visitor to a chair. "Sit down." He sat silently. Bemish was leafing through the report's last pages. "Why don't you let me go, boss. They say you have a right to do it." Bemish was staggered by his gall. "Why did you kill the lad?" "I wanted to talk to you, boss," the visitor said. "See, it ain't easy to speak to you. I made an appointment with you, see, three times and you were just cooling it off. I make another appointment today, come in and they tell me, "the boss ain't here for you, Weian peasant mug, the boss is driving a big dog around the construction, it's not your lawn anymore, move it - go back to your barrack. So, I went back and it put me out. Why won't I do something that the boss notice me?" Bemish didn't interrupt the man yet. He had realized a while ago that sooner or later the bandits would visit him but he hadn't suspected that they would choose such an original way. And this knave is also reminding in a subtle way - I have no problem knifing a boy down or you, boss... "That was not a good idea," Bemish grinned, "because they will cut your head off now." "Our authorities?" the bandit laughed out, "Boss, it's not my first murder, and my head is still with me. Do you think you will find witnesses against me?" That was true. The witnesses were available when the bandit had to meet Bemish. Concerning his head though... "What did you want to offer me in person?" "Let's get things in order." "What order?" "What's all this mess around? They pick up stuff, swear - you know what's going on - steal materials, drink people away. Say, yesterday, a gang came in and started to play, six people sold themselves into slavery. So they are slaves and what happens next? They work and their owner rubs his belly and gets paid. We, on the other hand, would tidy things up." "And what do you want in return?" "Appoint me the landing field security manager." "Do you want to traffic drugs?" "Why should I traffic drugs, people make fortunes just on cigarettes. Say, you boss, made a company with Shavash and everybody says that the company hauls everything it wants and doesn't pay any tariffs." "Is that it?" "Pay us ten million dinars." "Why should I pay you exactly ten million dinars?" "You carried away two hundred million worth of Adera treasure and this treasure belongs to the people. The brothers think that if you return people one twentieth part it would be fair. Bemish froze. "The Adera treasure," Bemish said, "doesn't exist. There is neither gold nor silver in Chakhar, where could the treasure come from two thousand years ago?" "Don't bullshit me, boss," the bandit said, "and don't act like a little white lamb. You hang around with Shavash, he stole half the country and we only pick up the crumbs..." "I won't collaborate with you." "Aha, you can do it with Shavash but you can't do it with us." "There is a certain intelligence gap," Bemish said, "that makes our collaboration impossible. Shavash can pocket several million after a financial trick but he will not believe that a well with emerald walls exists in a God-forsaken hole." And he barked into the intercom. "Escort the prisoner!" In a moment, the security department guys were dragging the thief out of the chair. "Remember," he turned around at the door, "you stole more than your underling, boss, but it would be just as easy to knife you." "Move it," a beefy guy, barbarian Alom, said and jabbed the thief in his ribs. Bemish turned the air conditioner on and opened the window wide to clear the office of the thief's smell. The night air was stuffy and soaked by the dust raised by the dozens of excavators and the hundreds of trucks. Far away a compressor station rumbled and the stars, large and jagged like the shards from a bottle that the gods smashed at the stone firmament, were cooling off above him. Bemish was dismayed. Life was a disgusting and useless thing. He was building a military spaceport on a crazy planet with corrupted officials and an illiterate population and, as if it was not enough already, mafia coming to him and offering to transfer cars and cigarettes via the functioning spaceport's sectors. At the same time, it was totally clear to Bemish that the thief acted on Shavash's hints and all his castigations against the vice-minister were probably staged by this same small official. Idari is right this man will not stop pestering him till he starts exporting drugs via the spaceport... The door squeaked. Bemish span around and darted to the table where a gun was stored in a drawer. Needless to say, the thief's warning made a strong impression on him. The gun, however, would not be needed. On the doorstep, Kissur stood in fancy velvet pants and a multihued shirt embroidered with kissing ducks. "Oh, my God! What brought you here?" "Ah," Kissur said, "I spent too much time at home. I thought, "I haven't inhaled that gasoline smell at Bemish's for a while." But I should get used to it. Soon, my whole country will stink like your spaceport." Bemish was silent. "Why are you so sad?" "A thief today told me straight that if I didn't collaborate with mafia, I would regret it. Do you know what he asked as a proof of our friendship? He asked me for the Adera treasure." "Hm," Kissur said, "Maybe you should give this treasure away to the bandit? I've heard it brings misfortune to its owner, anyway." Terence stared at Kissur with astonishment. The latter suddenly broke into laughter and slapped the Earthman on his shoulder. "I gotcha!" Kissur cried out, "I gotcha again! Don't you get jokes?" A phone squealed. Bemish picked up the receiver and slammed it back down. "It's not that I just stopped getting jokes," Bemish screamed. "I will start believing in this treasure myself tomorrow! I will believe in a field witch that is born of a rotten pole, in a tin can witch that is born of an old tin can and in a carburetor witch coming from a carburetor dumped in a swamp. I will believe that I am building a hole to hell, put a white robe on and go preaching to the Following the Way that Earthmen are demons and everything made by them is a phantom because I am not able to prove it's not true." "Actually, it's very easy," Kissur said. "What?" "It's easy to prove that Earthmen don't send phantoms." "Be so kind, tell me." "It's a very old trick," Kissur said, "I used it myself eight years ago when I ran across a gang of crazies in some province. Their chief assured that he was invulnerable to arrows and I told him that if it was the case why wouldn't he stand next to a wall and I would shoot at him with my bow. And he believed what he was saying and he stood next to a wall. I struck him so that my arrow entered his chest and stuck out of his spine for a full elbow and he pulled his legs from under himself and hung from this arrow and his followers ran away, disappointed. It would be enough for you to take an assault rifle and suggest to their preacher to place his belly in the way of a rifle burst. If you, say, stay alive than all our hardware is a phantom and I promise you to leave, and if you die than you lied. Don't you like it?" "No." "Why? Are you afraid the rifle will misfire?" Bemish paused and asked. "So, Kissur what should I do with the bandits? Should I make peace or war?" "How are you to make war with the bandits?" Kissur got angry. "I am telling you - if you want to kill the zealots off, take a gun and shoot at a zealot - he will approach you himself! You don't want to shoot at a zealot that will stick his belly at you. Do you think that a bandit will stick his belly at you?" "What would be your advice then?" "You are a chicken, Terence. You turned the construction in a shithouse. Just recently Shavash was amazed how you accounted for some equipment in such a way that you managed to shave the tax by half a million and he was so amazed by this - even he didn't know this trick. And while you were accounting your contraptions and books..." and Kissur grinned. "Well, if gods didn't give you the ability to shoot, you will have to make peace." "What if I asked you to kill the bandits off?" "I won't do it." "Why? Do you have a lot of good friends among them?" Kissur paused. At this moment, the office door flung open and angry Giles flew in. "Why don't you answer the phone, Terence," he shouted, "what is this habit of hanging the receiver!" "Do you have something urgent?" "Urgent? Do you know what's happening at the Adera Temple? This preacher, Ashinik, brought a crowd in, they broke the fence, forced their way into the temple and they are having a worship service." Bemish turned and picked up a close-knit hemp overcoat that he often wore at the construction to be less conspicuous. "What are you going to do?" "I am going to attend the worship." "You're going nuts," Giles said. "Call Shavash. Call the troops in. They have finally broken the laws!" "Call the troops in and what? Should I jail the whole village?" "You should jail the rabble-rousers." "And I should turn the others from ill-wishers into terrorists, shouldn't I?" "Bemish was tying the overcoat's laces decisively." "I know what Terence wants," Kissur said, "I will go with him." "Where are you going? Just the two of you? Oh, my God!" the spy roared and seeing Kissur and Bemish rushing out of the office, followed them. The Ninth Chapter Where the demons' boss makes a pact with the pious people. Adera's temple floated in the night lit with torches from below. The crowd was huge - people in woolen jackets and grass overcoats girdled with red belts crowded in the broken hall where the sky instead of a roof covered a hurriedly built stage. Kissur and two Earthmen, dressed in rural hemp overcoats, were ignored. Only when Bemish, while elbowing energetically to the stage, pushed somebody in the back a guy jammed him in return and said rudely, "Don't push like a demon!" On the left and on the right of the stage, huge copper lanterns burned and a round basin with fragrant water steamed on the altar. At the very edge of the stage, Ashinik stood - the young preacher of Following the Way. His face, thin as an onion peel, reddened, his eyes glistened in the torchlight and the crowd responded with an ardent bellow to his every word. Ashinik was dressed in a red hooded overcoat embroidered with red winged bulls reaching all the way to the ground. His belt was made out of polished copper plates. Black suede high boots looked out from under the overcoat. A bound white goose lay at Ashinik's feet. Ashinik preached about Earthmen. More precisely, he preached that the clothing sewn by demons should not be worn. "Two hundred years ago, in the last years of Emperor Sashar's rule," the man in the red overcoat gleaning in the torchlight was saying, "a fashion spread among the people from the country of Great Light - a fashion to wear the clothing made out of wool brought in by barbarians. It was a clear omen that the barbarians would conquer the country. And now people wear the clothing sewn by demons - a clear omen that the demons will conquer the country. So, everyone wearing their foul jeans or jackets is, basically, walking naked. You should know that everything that demons make is just phantom and deceit. And they can't make anything but phantoms. Although they are very powerful sorcerers, we are even more powerful than they are." "Bullshit," Kissur said. Everybody present turned facing him. "Who are you?" Ashinik cried. "My name is Kissur the White Falcon and this is Terence Bemish, the construction boss, my best friend and we came today to see how you go nuts." "It doesn't befit you, Kissur, to hobnob with demons," Ashinik spoke harshly, "Since many people call you Irshahchan reborn but, truly, even a white cloud dirties itself over an unclean mole." Kissur unhurriedly ascended the stage and poked the youth in the chest. Ashinik's bodyguards stirred agitatedly - didn't Ashinik see Kissur in his last sovereign prophecy? "You are a dog and you are a dog's bone," Kissur shouted with the same voice he used to command an army of many thousand troops and the voice carried above the quelled crowd without any speakers - you addle people's minds and prattle a lot of nonsense and you say that white is black and mix up hell and Big Galaxy and nothing but harm to the state comes from zealots. And if you think that everything Earthmen make is phantoms - do you see what this is?" "It's a weapon of theirs," Ashinik said. "Laser gun Star-M," Kissur thundered, "fan effect with improved specifications. And you will stand at this gross shithouse that you call an altar and I will shoot at you with this gun. And if Earthmen's weapons are phantoms and you are a sorcerer, you will stay alive, and if the Earthmen's weapons are weapons and you are a liar and a cheat, you will keel over and go to hell that you say so much crap about." Ashinik paled. He had never stood in front of a laser barrel. He heard many times that the demons shot at the pious and it all came out to be a phantom. But... "Are you afraid?!" Kissur shouted. And he turned to the peasants. "Yes, he is afraid; he knows that he is lying to you!" "Shoot," Ashinik cried. "Go to the altar!" Kissur shouted. "And all of you move aside and watch with two eyes and don't tell people afterwards what didn't happen." The crowd quieted and only breathed intensely. Ashinik snarled at his bodyguards and they crawled aside hurriedly. Ashinik came to the altar, raised his hands and faced Kissur. "It's all stupidity and phantom," Ashinik said and you, Kissur, fell prey to it. But when you shoot and I come back alive, your delusion will disperse and you will not shame your name any more and will stand with us against demons. Kissur silently picked a fresh "doughnut" out of his pocket, recharged the gun and turned off the safety switch with a clip. The eye on the "doughnut's" top swelled with green light. Ashinik closed his eyes and extended his hands forward. Bemish could clearly see the zealots' leader young face covered with sweat and his chicken neck in the torchlight. "Good lad," Giles whispered nearby. Kissur raised the laser. "Don't you dare shoot, Kissur," Bemish said. "What are you doing?" Giles hissed from the side. Bemish pushed him away and leaped on the stage. "Don't shoot!" "Idiot," Kissur smirked. "I can't allow you to kill a man right at my eyes, whatever this man believes in!" "You are demon!" Ashinik shrieked, "Look, people, he knows that he can't kill me!" The crowd clamored threateningly and rocked to the stage. "Son of a bitch," Giles screeched, yanking a Kalet laser from under his armpit. "Kill them," Ashinik screamed. "They can't harm you!" People were pushing at the stage. "One more step and we will shoot," Giles shouted. "Stop!" Bemish cried out. Strangely, the crowd stopped for a moment. Bemish turned to the crowd spreading his palms - a local greeting gesture. "What are you blaming me for?" he asked. "Not all the Earthmen, just me, you know, I can't be responsible for every conman born on the other side of the sky. What do you blame me personally for, Terence Bemish, the Assalah construction director?" Jumbled shouts came out of the crowd. "They beat the villagers... Walk around drunk... Took the land away... Make a lot of money..." "Ah, make a lot of money!" Bemish shouted. "Why don't you make a lot of money? Have I offered you a job? I have! I have hundreds of jobs for you! Whose fault is it that you make less? Is it mine? Or is it those who don't allow you to work at the construction?" The crowd was getting restless. It was evident that the idea about the sect being guilty of current problems had indeed popped in various minds, especially the young ones but nobody had said it aloud and it's as if an unsaid idea doesn't really exist. "There is no order at the construction," a cry came out of the crowd. Bemish raised his hand. "You are right. I was not able to establish order at the construction." And he turned to Ashinik. "Will you be able to establish it?" "The god is capable of everything and I am his servant here, in the village," Ashinik said. "Excellent," Bemish said, "Your adherents are right. I can't maintain order at the construction. The sovereign, after all, can't maintain order in this whole country, who am I to maintain order in the spaceport? Scoundrels and cads trickled in to the construction and I can't figure out who the culprits are. So, I am asking you, Ashinik, to become my vice-president, fire everybody you would like to and hire everybody you would like to." The zealot looked somewhat shocked. "I can't serve demons," Ashinik said. "In this case," Bemish said, "You will be responsible for the every binge, fight and depravity happening at the spaceport. Since, if you worked at the construction, you would be able to prevent this depravity. Why do you refuse to do good for the people? Can't you do this? Why then do you muddle people's minds calling yourself a man of power? Don't you want to do this? Why do you call yourself a pious man then?" The grey crowd looking like a huge centipede with burning eyes made of the torches turned and moved and voices reached Bemish, standing on the stage. "If Ashinik became a boss, everything would be really different." Ashinik was silent. Bemish waited - what kind of man is he and what's stronger in him - the desire to hurt the people from the stars or the desire to help the peasants. "You know my beliefs, Mr. Bemish," Ashinik uttered. "Do you think I will exchange them for your window they disburse money from?" "I," Bemish said, "Believe in the freedom of conscience. The freedom of conscience is not, when you let your employees believe in what you like, it's when you let your employees believe what they want to. If you want to consider me a demon - go ahead. If you are afraid that a close encounter with me will weaken your beliefs, then they aren't worth much." "All right," Ashinik said, "I accept your offer." "You are nuts, Bemish," Giles said dismally. Annoyed Kissur weighed the gun in his hand and threw it down the black Adera well. "You are a fool, Terence," he said, "and all of you, Earthmen, are fools. It looks like your chicanery is of more use than your weapons." The next day, the old bandit was taken to the capital in a truck. On its way, a crowd of peasant zealots stopped the truck, pulled the bandit out and dragged him to the village, somehow the bandit happened to be torn apart on the way. Not informing local police, Bemish called special troops in masks but with an evident barbarian accent from the capital - mostly they were Kissur's ex-warriors - and they scoured the hired workers' barracks mercilessly fishing everybody suspicious out. They found about fifty such people, beat them senseless, deposited them in a net and attached the net to a freight helicopter. The helicopter made three triumphal circles above the spaceport and flew to the capital. Afterwards Bemish let Ashinik and his zealots into the barracks. He gave full power to Ashinik and he proved to be right. The young fanatic was a great manager and his intelligence service seemed to know the background of each worker. They knew who in the barracks was a perspective zealot cowed by the bandits and the thieves, who was an honest worker away from all these catfights, who had robbed an Iniss bank last year and who had begged in Upper Kharaine. Ashinik just brought Bemish the lists of workers to be fired and Bemish initialed them without asking for any explanations that he wouldn't get anyway. The same day, Shavash called Bemish and insistently demanded the arrest of all of the zealots. Bemish refused saying that they was necessary to exterminate the bandits. Shavash said that he would give Bemish two weeks to finish the bandits off and then Bemish should consecutively arrest all the zealots for abusing their authority, lynching and sadistic treatment of their subordinates. Actually, Shavash didn't suggest this plan out loud but rather pretended that it had been Bemish's plan from the very beginning. To destroy one infection using another one and then to write off all the depravities that had happened during the extermination of the former to the latter. During that week, order and cleanliness came to rule the construction. Bemish didn't entertain any illusions about the methods the zealots used to attain this cleanliness - he saw how two janitors were whipping their colleague for a rug that he hadn't washed at his shift's end - they whipped him bloody with cries and brined whips. For two weeks, Bemish wordlessly signed Ashinik's requests including a request for buying, at the company's expense, three hundred meters of white silk and three white geese even though Bemish was totally aware that white silk would be used for belts the zealots covered with spells and wore on their bodies and the three geese would be used for the divination about the demons' fate. In the beginning of the third week, Bemish found his new human resources manager sitting and reading an acetylene welder construction and repair manual that a zealot, considering acetylene welding to be a phantom and illusion, was not supposed to do. X X X The next day, a highly placed committee from a Federation financial advisory body arrived. The committee was supposed to study Weian economics and collect data on the Galactic Bank target loan provided by the Federation. From Bemish's point of view, this endeavor was pointless since he hadn't seen a single target loan yet that was used for purposes other than the construction of suburban villas for the officials in charge of the credit distribution. The loans were humongous and the villas came out luxurious. And since the loans were guaranteed by the state, the Federation officials didn't give a damn what they were used for. The committee landed in Assalah spaceport and expressed a desire to examine the finished buildings and also the construction's next stage, separated from the spaceport's operating part by steel mesh. The committee was absolutely impressed with the order at the construction site. Parting with Bemish, the committee head, the Galactic Bank of Development Assistance vice-chairman, told him that he had a brilliant trade union leader. "It's incredible! Terence, where have you found this treasure? Have you seen how the workers listen to him? They listen to him holding their breath as if he was a prophet, and he is not even twenty yet!" The vice-president said that this guy should immediately get a scholarship and go to Havishem or Harvard and promised to write him a reference letter. Upon the committee's departure, Ashinik asked Bemish why Shavash hadn't arrived with the Earthmen, since he had mostly been responsible for the distribution of the above mentioned loans. Bemish answered that Shavash had been busy. In fact, Shavash had called an hour before the flight and said that he would come on one condition only - if he could take back with him Ashinik's head in a sack. Shavash expressed himself exactly this way - "head." "Do you know," Shavash asked, "That these Following the Way guys organized the last attempt at my assassination?" "How would I know," Bemish snapped back, "If you hanged completely different people for it?" X X X The next day, Bemish saw the Okuri company stock price skyrocketing and it happened since Okuri perchance had secured from the sovereign the rights to develop copper deposits recently found in the Chakhar mountains. Bemish called Shavash to find out if Okuri had really gobbled this chunk or if somebody was spreading the rumors to pick some dough and to find out if there really was any copper ore in the Chakhar Mountains to begin with. "I will exchange information about Okuri on Ashinik's balls," Shavash said. "No," Bemish said. "What's happened to you, Terence, have you fallen in love with him? I haven't noticed you leaning this way before." Bemish choked. "I am kidding. Since you love a different - woman," Shavash said heavily and with a hidden meaning. And he dropped the receiver. This evening, when Ashinik was having a dinner in the common cafeteria, Bemish sat next to him. After tea, Bemish asked. "Why does your sect dislike Shavash so much?" Ashinik paused. "Shavash is a briber and a scoundrel." "Ashinik, sonny, all Weian officials are bribers and scoundrels. You, however, dislike Shavash much more than, say, Khanida or Akhaggar - while they cause just as much harm." "Khanida hasn't tried to destroy us." "That's why. And has Shavash tried?" "Yes. He filled our circle with spies and dissidents. He bribed those who were not firm in their convictions and they started preaching a lot of nonsense and many people let themselves be lured." "What kind of nonsense did they preach?" "He bribed Dakhak and Dakhak started saying that it's wrong to deny salvation to demons and that they would not be damned forever. And he bribed Amarn and Amarn started teaching..." Ashinik suddenly stopped. "Our teachings are none of your business," he finished. Bemish couldn't conceal his smile. "Are you sure that every zealot that doesn't believe the same things you do, is necessarily bribed or seduced?" "These people were bribed by Shavash," Ashinik cut him off. Bemish paused. Really, Ashinik's words could be true. Shavash himself told the Earthman that nothing was more efficient at killing the zealots than discords among the sects. And the whole thing just looked like Shavash's doing. Yes, this official stole, embezzled and it was not an accident that a joke about him traveled around - out of all gods Shavash envied ten handed Khagge the most - imagine how much you can steal with ten hands? At the same time, only Shavash among all the bribers surrounding him could be seriously concerned with the future danger of Following the Way. Yes. It makes sense that Shavash tried to take care of the sect in a way that wouldn't cause an international scandal. It would be one thing to hang the zealots publicly pissing off all the human rights committees and another thing to make them throttle each other. X X X At the end of the third week, Bemish found Ashinik on the border of an unfinished sector. The lad was holding Bemish's gun that he had probably picked up in a drawer in the office and, having extracted the battery, was contemplating the "doughnut" thoughtfully. Ten meters away from Ashinik, a huge basalt rock arose; it had been left on the field since it was too heavy to transport. Now, a regular Atari could drag the rock away in two trips - it was cut in half and black basalt foam bubbled at the jagged wound's edges. The light on the "doughnut" top blinked red - the battery was dead. When Bemish approached, the zealot threw the gun on the grass and asked. "Why didn't Kissur shoot me?" Bemish rolled on his feet. "I've already told you. I can't let a deliberate murder happen right in front of me even if the victim doesn't mind." "I thought that this thing couldn't shoot me. At that moment, I thought that you didn't allow Kissur to show that I was right." Bemish silently looked at the youth. It would be interesting to know how much time it took him to quarter the rock. Star's "doughnut" is specified for forty eight minutes of uninterrupted shooting. "It's very difficult," Ashinik said, "when you had seen that something was black and then it appeared to be white." "Have you really had visions, Ashinik?" "I still have them." "What are they about? Are they about Earthmen being demons?" "Yes," Ashinik remarked, "Tell me, could a man be born out of a golden egg?" "Read a biology textbook," Bemish dryly suggested. X X X The next day, Ashinik was managing the forest clearing in a new area and he fainted in the workers' view. He regained his senses in ten minutes and continued working even though Bemish told him on the radio to go and rest. Ashinik felt fine for two days and he fainted again on the third one. Then, he told the workers that he would turn them into cockroaches if they told Bemish about the fits and Bemish didn't know anything till, in two weeks, Ashinik fainted at a morning business meeting. He recovered quickly but Bemish, not letting him open his mouth, dragged him to the health services - to Isaak Malinovskii who was in charge of influenza, accidents and malaria at the construction and who also kept terrorizing Bemish with the possibility of a cholera epidemic. Malinovskii took the youth's blood pressure, put him on the couch, wrapped him with wires and ran a tomography on him. Ashinik didn't resist. He didn't seem to care. "What problems do you have?" Malinovskii finally asked, having covered the youth with a blanket and sitting next to him. "Am I fine?" "You have a bad case of nervous exhaustion. What happens to you before you faint?" "I see different pictures. I was sitting, for example, at the today's meeting and then everybody around started growing horns and snouts and a wall tied around me and began choking me." Ashinik paused. "Tell me, doctor, am I crazy?" "Why are you asking this question?" "I have visions. I read this thick book - a psychiatry textbook. It said that if a man saw what others didn't, it meant that something was wrong with his brains." "If an Earthman came to me and told me what you had just described, I would definitely recommend him a psychiatrist. But the specific subculture you belong to is very different. For Following the Way a trance is normal and the ability to fall in a trance is one of the ways to prove your leadership skills. You are a very nervous and excitable man, Ashinik, but you are mentally normal. And I think that your visions will disappear soon because here, working for the company, you've found another way to be a leader. Malinovskii attached a plastic drug vial to a syringe and said, "And now you need to sleep long and well." When Ashinik woke up, it was already day time. The fiery snouts that had buzzed in his mind yesterday disappeared. He lay in a wide bed in a room with carved pink wood walls and a wide open window. A cardinal sat on the windowsill and studied him with eyes that looked like mercury droplets and far away, behind the bird's red feathers and bush greenery two hundred meters of Assalah spaceport control tower soared in the sky. Ashinik realized that he had probably been moved to Terence Bemish's villa. He hadn't been to the villa yet because there was a lot of work at the spaceport and because Bemish either slept at the spaceport or flew to the capital on business. Ashinik turned his head and saw a girl sitting next to him. The girl was dressed in a velvet jacket and a long bell shaped skirt sewn with flowers and grasses. A hazy silk belt tied with a five-petal knot fluttered behind her back like butterfly wings. The girl smiled at Ashinik shyly and Ashinik suddenly smiled back. Something scurried between them - Ashinik imagined for a moment a furry little animal jumping out one smile into another. "Mr. Bemish said that you should stay in bed and should not get up." "Are you Bemish's concubine?" Ashinik asked. His voice suddenly acquired the cold confidence that he preached to hundreds of people with. "Yes." "I heard about you. You are Inis. How much did he pay for you?" Inis shuddered. "He paid for me as much as they asked." "Does he love you?" "Mr. Bemish likes me quite a bit." Inis said. "Why haven't I seen you at the construction?" Inis smiled guiltily. "Mr. Bemish really wanted me to be at the construction," Inis said. "He taught me himself how to work with accounting software and make accounting reports. He made me his secretary. And then this crap happened... I was once sitting in the office in the evening when three workers came in. They were going to file a complaint about their manager but when they saw me sitting there alone, they assaulted me and... I was just able to call for help. After that, I asked Mr. Bemish to let me stay in the villa and he agreed." Inis straightened up and added proudly. "But I do a lot of stuff here. I check all the bills and last month I saved Mr. Bemish two hundred thousand when I noticed one local official running fake accounts through the company." She sighed and added. "We still had to give this official a fifty thousand bribe." "What software do you use," Ashinik asked. He had practically no experience with computers and, frankly, he was afraid of these scary answerers that Earthmen always carried with them like handkerchiefs and at every third word took them out of their pockets and spread open. Seeing them always reminded him one of the most popular sect myths - that demons took their souls out and put them in these organic silicon handkerchiefs or iron boxes and the demons' souls felt lonely and blinked on the monitors with multicolored lights. Inis started saying something but Ashinik had drifted off. "The demon is not very jealous if he leaves his concubine alone with a young man," he thought. X X X Ashinik returned to the construction in three days and Bemish was very happy since it was quite difficult to manage things without him. Bemish happened to send Ashinik to villa several times for important papers or with some orders and Ashinik always drove there with a visible delight. Soon Inis appeared in Bemish's office again as a secretary and Ashinik's frequent trips to the villa came to an end. Ashinik and Inis were quite a bit younger than Terence Bemish - she was seventeen, he was twenty - but Bemish just didn't notice how Inis' blushed when his young deputy entered the company director's office and how often Ashinik and Inis ate together in the company cafeteria or in one of the port's restaurants that had grown around like mushrooms. Although