The Sky Is Falling
Public Domain
Chapter 5
The knife had pierced Dave’s chest until the hilt pressed against his rib cage. He stared down at it, seeing it rise with the heaving of his lungs. Yet he was still alive!
Then the numbness of shock wore off and the pain nerves carried their messages to his brain. He still lived, but there was unholy agony where the blade lay. Coughing and choking on what must be his own blood, he scrabbled at the knife and ripped it out. Blood jetted from the gaping rent in his clothing. It gushed forth--and slowed; it frothed--trickled--and stopped entirely.
As he ripped his shirt back to look, the wound was closed already. But there was no easing of the pain that threatened to make him black out at any second.
He heard shouting, quarreling voices, but nothing made sense through the haze of his agony. He felt someone grab at him--more than one person--and they were dragging him willy-nilly across the ground. Something was clutched around his throat, almost choking him. He opened his eyes just as something clicked behind him.
The huge, translucent walls of the monstrous egg were all around him and the opened side was closing.
The pain began to abate. The bleeding had already stopped entirely and his lungs seemed to have cleared themselves of the blood and froth in them. Now with the ache of the wound ceasing, Dave could still feel the venom burning in his blood, and the constriction around his throat was still there, making it hard to breathe. He sat up, trying to free himself. The constriction came from an arm around his neck, but he couldn’t see to whom it belonged, and there was no place to move aside in the corner of the egg.
From inside, the walls of the egg were transparent enough for him to see cloudy outlines of what lay beyond. He could see the ground sweeping away beneath them from all points. A man had run up and was standing beside the egg, beating at it. The man suddenly shot up like a fountain, growing huge; he towered over them, until he seemed miles high and the giant structures Dave could see were only the turned-up toes of the man’s shoes. One of those shoes was lifting, as if the man meant to step on the egg.
They must be growing smaller again.
A voice said tightly: “We’re small enough, Bork. Can you raise the wind for us now?”
“Hold on.” Bork’s voice seemed sure of itself.
The egg tilted and soared. Dave was thrown sidewise and had to fight for balance. He stared unbelievingly through the crystal shell. They rose like a Banshee jet. There was a shaggy, monstrous colossus in the distance, taller than the Himalayas--the man who had been beside them. Bork grunted. “Got it! We’re all right now.” He chanted something in a rapid undertone “All right, relax. That will teach them not to work resonance magic inside a protective ring; the egg knows how we could have got through otherwise. Lucky we were trying at the right time, though. The Satheri must be going crazy. Wait a minute, this tires the fingers.”
The man called Bork halted the series of rapid passes he had been making, flexing his fingers with a grimace. The spinning egg began to drop at once, but he let out a long, keening cry, adding a slight flip of his other arm. Outside, something like a mist drew near and swirled around them. It looked huge to Dave, but must have been a small thing in fact. Now they began speeding along smoothly again. The thing was probably another sylph, strong enough to move them in their present reduced size.
Bork pointed his finger. “There’s the roc!” He leaned closer to the wall of the tiny egg and shouted. The sylph changed direction, and began to bob about.
It drifted gently, while Bork pulled a few sticks with runes written on them toward him and made a hasty assembly of them. At once, there was a feeling of growing, and the sylph began to shrink away from them. Now they were falling swiftly, growing as they dropped. Dave felt his stomach twist, until he saw they were heading toward a huge bird that was cruising along under them, drawing closer. It looked like a cross between a condor and a hawk, but its wing span must have been over three hundred feet. It slipped under the egg, catching the falling object deftly on a cushion-like attachment between its wings, and then struck off briskly toward the east.
Bork snapped the side of the egg open and stepped out while the others followed. Dave tried to crawl out, but something held him back. It wasn’t until Bork’s big hand reached in to help him that he made it. When all were out, Bork tapped the egg-shaped object and caught it as it shrank. When it was small enough, he pocketed it.
Dave sat up again, examining himself, now that he had more room. His clothing was a mess, spattered with drying blood, but he seemed unharmed now. Even the burning of the venom was gone. He reached for the arm around his neck and began breaking it free from its stranglehold.
From behind an incredulous cry broke out. Nema sprawled across him, staring at his face and burying her head against his shoulder. “Dave! You’re not dead! You’re alive!”
Dave was still amazed at that himself. But Bork snorted. “Of course he is. Why’d we take him along with you hanging on in a faint if he were dead? When the snetha-knife kills, it kills completely. They stay dead, or they don’t die. Sagittarian?”
She nodded, and the big man seemed to be doing some calculations in his head.
“Yeah,” he decided. “It would be. There was one second there around midnight when all the signs were at their absolute maximum favorableness. Someone must have said some pretty dangerous health spells over him then.” He turned to Dave, as if aware that the other was comparatively ignorant of such matters. “Happened once before, without this mess-up of the signs. They revived a corpse and found he was unkillable from then on. He lasted eight thousand years, or something like that, before he got burned trying to control a giant salamander. They cut off his head once, but it healed before the axe was all the way through. Woops!”
The bird had dipped downward, rushing toward the ground. It landed at a hundred miles an hour and managed to stop against a small entrance to a cave in the hillside. Except for the one patch where the bird had lighted, they were in the middle of a dense forest.
Dave and Nema were hustled into the cave, while the others melted into the woods, studying the skies. She clung to Dave, crying something about how the Sons of the Egg would torture them.
“All right,” he said finally. “Who are these sons of eggs? And what have they got against me?”
“They’re monsters,” she told him. “They used to be the antimagic individualists. They wanted magic used only when other means wouldn’t work. They fought against the Satheri. While magic produced their food and made a better world for them, they hated it because they couldn’t do it for themselves. And a few renegade priests like my brother joined them.”
“Your brother?”
“She means me,” Bork said. He came in to drop on his haunches and grin at Dave. There was no sign of personal hatred in his look. “I used to be a stooge for Sather Karf, before I got sick of it. How do you feel, Dave Hanson?”
Dave considered it, still in wonder at the truth. “I feel good. Even the venom they were putting in my blood doesn’t seem to hurt any more.”
“Fine. Means the Sather Karf must believe we killed you--he must have the report by now. If he thinks you’re dead, there’s no point in his giving chase; he knows I wouldn’t let them kill Nema, even if she is a little fool. Anyhow, he’s not really such a bad old guy, Dave--not, like some of those Satheri. Well, you figure how you’d like it if you were just a simple man and some priest magicked her away from you--and then sent her back with enough magic of her own to be a witch and make life hell for you because she’d been kicked out by the priest, but he hadn’t pulled the wanting spell off her. Or anything else you wanted and couldn’t keep against magic. Sure, they fed us. They had to, after they took away our fields and the kine, and got everyone into the habit of taking their dole instead of earning our living in the old way. They made slaves of us. Any man who lets another be responsible for him is a slave. It’s a fine world for the Satheri, if they can keep the egg from breaking.”
“What’s all this egg nonsense?”
Bork shrugged. “Plain good sense. Why should there be a sky shell around the planet? Look, there’s a legend here. You should know it, since for all I know it has some meaning for you. Long ago--or away, or whatever--there was a world called Tharé and another called Erath. Two worlds, separate and distinct, on their own branching time paths. They must have been that way since the moment of creation. One was a world of rule and law. One plus one might not always equal two, but it had to equal something. There seems to be some similarity to your world in that, doesn’t there? The other was--well, you’d call it chaos, though it had some laws, if they could be predicted. One plus one there depended--or maybe there was no such thing as unity. Mass-energy wasn’t conserved. It was deserved. It was a world of anarchy, from your point of view. It must have been a terrible place to live, I guess.”
He hesitated somberly. “As terrible as this one is getting to be,” he said at last. “Anyway, there were people who lived there. There were the two inhabited worlds in their own time lines, or probability orbits, or whatever. You know, I suppose, how worlds of probability would separate and diverge as time goes on? Of course. Well, these two worlds coalesced.”
He looked searchingly at Dave. “Do you see it? The two time lines came together. Two opposites fused into one. Don’t ask me to explain it; it was long ago, and all I know for sure is that it happened. The two worlds met and fused, and out of the two came this world, in what the books call the Dawnstruggle. When it was over, our world was as it has been for thousands of centuries. In fact, one result was that in theory, neither original world could have a real past, and the fusion was something that had been--no period of change. It’s pretty complicated.”
“It sounds worse than that,” Dave grumbled. “But while that might explain the mystery of magic working here, it doesn’t explain your sky.”
Bork scratched his head. “No, not too well,” he admitted. “I’ve always had some doubts about whether or not all the worlds have a shell around them. I don’t know. But our world does, and the shell is cracking. The Satheri don’t like it; they want to stop it. We want it to happen. For the two lines that met and fused into one have an analogue. Doesn’t the story of that fusion suggest something to you, Dave Hanson? Don’t you see it, the male principle of rule and the female principle of whim; they join, and the egg is fertile! Two universes join, and the result is a nucleus world surrounded by a shell, like an egg. We’re a universe egg. And when an egg hatches, you don’t try to put it back together!”
He didn’t look like a fanatic, Dave told himself. Crazy or not, he took this business of the hatching egg seriously. But you could never be sure about anyone who joined a cult. “What is your egg going to hatch into?” he asked.
The big man shrugged. “Does an egg know it is going to become a hen--or maybe a fish? We can’t possibly tell, of course.”
Dave considered it. “Don’t you even have a guess?”
Bork answered shortly, “No.” He looked worried, Dave thought, and guessed that even the fanatics were not quite sure they wanted to be hatched. Bork shrugged again.
“An egg has got to hatch,” he said. “That’s all there is to it. We prophesied this, oh, two hundred years ago. The Satheri laughed. Now they’ve stopped laughing, but they want to stop it. What happens to a chick when it is stopped from hatching? Does it go on being a chick, or does it die? It dies, of course. And we don’t want to die. No, Dave Hanson, we don’t know what happens next--but we do know that we must go through with it. I have nothing against you personally--but I can’t let you stop us. That’s why we tried to kill you. If I could, I’d kill you now, with the snetha-knife so they couldn’t revive you.”
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