"What is this place?" he asked the driver, who gave him a glance of mild wonder.
"The Circle, site of Pathetic Communion, as you can see. You are a stranger in Settra?"
"Yes."
The driver consulted a yellow cardboard schedule. "The next event is Ivensday, when a nineteen-score comes to clarify his horrible desperation. Nineteen! The most since the twenty-two of Agate Crystal's Lord Wis."
"You mean he killed nineteen?"
"Of course; what else? Four were children, but still a feat these days when folk are wary of awaile. All Settra will come to the expiation. If you're still in town you could hardly do more for your own soul's profit."
"Probably so. How far to Blue Jade Palace?"
"Through Dalmere and we're almost there."
"I'm in a hurry," said Reith. "As fast as possible."
"Indeed sir, but if I wreck or injure, I'll feel extraordinary shame, to my soul's sickness, and I would not care to risk despondency."
"Understandable."
The motor-buggy spun along a wide boulevard, dodging and veering to avoid potholes. Enormous trees, black-trunked with brown and purple-green foliage, overhung the way; to either side, shrouded in dark gardens, were mansions of the most extraordinary architecture. The driver pointed. "Yonder on the hilclass="underline" Blue Jade Palace. Which entrance do you favor, sir?" He inspected Reith quizzically.
"Drive to the front," said Reith. "Where else?"
"As you say, your lordship. Although most of the fronters don't arrive in three-wheel motor-buggies."
Up the driveway rolled the vehicle, and under a porte cochere the buggy halted.
Paying the fare, Reith alighted upon a silken cloth laid under his feet by a pair of bowing footmen. Reith walked briskly through an open arch into a room paneled with mirrors. A myriad prisms of crystal hung tinkling on silver chains.
A majordomo wearing russet velvet livery bowed deeply. "Your lordship is at home. Will you rest or take a cordial, though my Lord Cizante impatiently awaits the privilege of greeting you."
"I will see him at once; I am Adam Reith."
"Lord of which realm?"
"Tell Lord Cizante that I bring important information."
The majordomo looked at Reith uncertainly, his face twisting through a dozen subtle emotions. Reith understood that already he had committed gaucheries. No matter, he thought, the Blue Jade Lord will have to make allowance.
The majordomo signaled, a trifle less obsequiously than before. "Be good enough to come this way."
Reith was taken into a small court murmuring to a waterfall of luminous green liquid.
Two minutes passed. A young man in green knickers and an elegant waistcoat appeared. His face was wax pale, as if he never saw sunlight; his eyes were somber and brooding; under a loose four-corner cap of soft green velvet his hair was jet black: a man richly handsome, by some extraordinary means contriving to seem both effete and competent. He examined Reith with critical interest, and spoke in a dry voice. "Sir, you claim to have information for the Blue Jade Lord?"
"Yes. Are you he?"
"I am his aide. You may impart your information to me with assurance."
"I have news relating to the fate of his daughter," said Reith. "I prefer to speak to the Blue Jade Lord directly."
The aide made a curious mincing motion and disappeared. Presently he returned.
"Your name, sir?"
"Adam Reith."
"Follow me, if you will."
He took Reith into a wainscoted room enameled a brownish ivory, lit by a dozen luminous prisms. At the far end stood a frail frowning man in an extravagant eight-piece suit of black and purple silk. His face was round, dark hair grew down his forehead in an elflock; his eyes were dark, far apart, and his tendency was to glance sidelong. The face, thought Reith, of a secretive suspicious man.
He examined Reith with a compression of the lips.
"Lord Cizante," said the aide, "I bring you the gentleman Adam Reith, heretofore unknown, who, chancing past, was pleased to learn that you were in the vicinity."
There was an expectant silence. Reith understood that the circumstances demanded a ritual response. He said, "I am pleased, naturally, to find Lord Cizante in residence. I have only this hour arrived from Kotan."
Cizante's mouth tightened, and Reith knew that once again he had made a graceless remark.
Cizante spoke in a crisp voice. "Indeed. You have news regarding the Lady Shar Zarin?"
This was the Flower's court name. Reith responded in a voice as cool as Cizante's own. "Yes. I can give you a detailed account of her experiences, and her unfortunate death."
The Blue Jade Lord looked toward the ceiling and spoke without lowering his eyes. "You evidently claim the boon?"
The majordomo entered the room, whispered to the aide, who discreetly murmured to Lord Cizante.
"Curious!" declared Cizante. "One of the Gold and Carnelian scions, a certain Dordolio, likewise comes to claim the boon."
"Send him away," said Reith. "His knowledge of the matter is superficial, as you will learn."
"My daughter is dead?"
"I am sorry to say that she drowned herself, after an attack of psychic malaise."
The Lord's eyebrows rose more sharply than before. "She gave way to awaile?"
"I would suppose so."
"When and where did this take place?"
"Three weeks ago, aboard the cog Vargaz, halfway across the Draschade."
Lord Cizante dropped into a chair. Reith waited for an invitation to do likewise, but thought better of seating himself. Lord Cizante spoke in a dry voice: "Evidently she had suffered deep humiliation."
"I couldn't say. I helped her escape from the Priestesses of the Female Mystery; thereafter she was secure and under my protection. She was anxious to return to Cath and urged me to accompany her, assuring me of your friendship and gratitude. But as soon as we started eastward she became gloomy, and, as I say, halfway across the Draschade she threw herself overboard."
While Reith spoke Cizante's face had shifted through phases and degrees of various emotions. "So now," he said in a clipped voice, "with my daughter dead, after circumstances I do not care to imagine, you come hurrying here to claim the boon."
Reith said coldly, "I knew then and know nothing now of this 'boon.' I came to Cath for several reasons, the least important of which was to make myself known to you. I find you indisposed to what I consider civilized standards of courtesy and I will now leave." Reith gave a curt nod and started for the door. He turned back. "If you wish to learn further details regarding your daughter, consult Dordolio, whom we found stranded at Coad."
Reith left the room. The Lord's sibilant murmur reached his ears: "You are an uncouth fellow."
In the hall waited the majordomo, who greeted Reith with the faintest of smiles.
He indicated a rather dim passageway painted red and blue. "This way, sir."
Reith paid him no heed. Crossing into the grand foyer, he left the way he had come.
CHAPTER SEVEN
REITH WALKED BACK toward the Oval, pondering the city Settra and the curious temperament of its people. He was forced to admit that the scheme to build a small spaceboat, which in far-off Pera had appeared at least feasible, now seemed impractical. He had expected gratitude and friendship from the Blue Jade Lord; he had encountered hostility. As to the technical abilities of the Yao, he was inclined to pessimism, and he fell to appraising the vehicles which passed along the street. They appeared to function satisfactorily, though giving the impression that flair and elegance, rather than efficiency, had been first in the minds of the designers. Energy derived from the ubiquitious power cells produced by the Dirdir; the coupling was not altogether quiet: an indication, so Reith considered, of careless or incompetent engineering. No two were alike; each seemed an individual construction.