“No. Vampires have no minds, Louis Wu. A vampire protector starts fresh, intelligent from birth, bound by no preconceptions and no old loyalties or promises. If a hominid cannot choose a protector of her own species, a vampire must be her next best choice.”
You’d have killed each other for the last tree-of-life root. Louis didn’t say it. He wasn’t sure it was true. “You found the master protector. How? Why did you fight?”
“We fought for who would best guard the Arch and all beneath.”
“But his record was good, wasn’t it? Whole species must have evolved and died out during his time, but civilizations rose and flourished until—”
“But we won, Anne and I.” Bram turned away. “Hindmost, what progress?”
Louis looked toward a skeleton standing in dimness. He had guessed who that must be. “How did you get to him? He was eighty thousand falans old, you said.” Nearly a million Ringworld rotations. Twenty thousand Earth years. “All that time, and then there was you.”
“He had to come. Hindmost?”
The puppeteer called down. “I have played the Meteor Defense on three targets. We will not see results for two hours. Three before the installation in the comet can observe and react. Any of the others have hours to move, but who can dodge a beam of light?”
“Your opinion?”
“My people prefer to achieve our aims by giving other species what they want,” the Hindmost said.
“Louis Wu, react.”
Louis answered. “You’ve started something you can’t stop. You’ve attacked two war fleets, three if you count the Fleet of Worlds. Political structures get old and die, Bram, but information never gets lost anymore. Storage is too good. Somebody will be testing the Ringworld defenses for as long as there are protons.”
“Then the Arch must have a protector, for as long as there are protons.”
“At least one. Invaders wouldn’t just take over territory. They’d fiddle and test and maybe ruin something, like the City Builders did when they took the attitude jets on the rim wall to make interstellar ships.”
The knobby man waited.
“A vampire might be a mistake.”
“You have a vampire in place. To fight him might be a far more expensive mistake.”
When Louis said nothing-still chewing his thoughts-Bram fished something from his vest. It was carved wood, bigger than the flute he’d played earlier. The windsound was deeper, richer, with a drumbeat that was Bram’s fingertips tapping the barrel of the thing. Soothing, despite Louis’s irritation.
Louis waited for the mournful tootling to stop. He said, “You need a meteor watch in the plane of the Ringworld. I don’t know how to do that. The solar Meteor Defense can’t fire on anything that’s hiding under the Ringworld floor.”
“Come,” Bram said. “Hindmost, come. We’ll return later to see what has escaped us.”
The knobby man’s hand felt like a handful of marbles, and his pull on Louis’s good wrist was irresistible. Louis found himself walking rapidly away. He looked back once at bones in a stance of attack. Then Bram guided or pushed Louis onto the stepping disk.
They flicked through into Needle’s cargo space.
The knobby man helped Louis strip the suit off inside out, careful of his injured arm, careful not to release spores that might have accreted on the surface. Where was the Hindmost?
Bram led Louis onto the other disk, flicked them both through into crew quarters. At no time had Louis considered resisting. Bram was just too futzy strong.
The protector knelt before a blank wall. “The puppeteer worked here to summon images into his own quarters. Let us see how well I observed him.” He produced wooden picklocks and went to work.
A diagram appeared: the map of the stepping disks.
Then a view of Weaver Town.
The Hindmost flicked in: lander bay, then crew cabin. “Forgive the delay,” he said.
“Were you testing my security? Hindmost, wake the Kzin now,” Bram said. “Afterward I want a better view of the rim wall where the protectors are working. Send your refueling probe.”
The Hindmost glanced at readouts in the autodoc lid, touched something, and danced back as the lid lifted.
The Kzin stood in one fluid motion, ready to take on an army.
Now the knobby man was armed with flash and variable-knife, though Louis hadn’t seen him move. Bram waited to see Acolyte relax, then asked, “Acolyte, will you bind yourself to me according to the terms of Louis Wu’s contract?”
The Kzin turned. His scars had disappeared and his hands looked fine. “Louis Wu, shall I do that?”
Louis swallowed his reservations and said, “Yes.”
“I accept your contract.”
“Get out of the ‘doc.”
Acolyte did. Bram led Louis to the big ‘doc and helped him in.
The Hindmost was busy elsewhere. Color-coded dots and rainbow arcs swirled and shifted in the captain’s cabin, responding to the puppeteer’s music. Suddenly he whistled in discord. “The probe!”
“Speak,” Bram said.
“Look! The stepping disk is dismounted from my refueling probe! Wait—” The puppeteer tapped at the wall. The view from the partly submerged probe became a view from the cliffside webeye. “There! Look, there it is!”
The teleport device that had been mounted on the probe’s flank now lay flat on the riverbank beside the Council House.
“Nobody’s trying to hide it,” Louis said. “The little disk in the nose with the deuterium filter, is that still in place?”
The Hindmost looked. “Yes.”
“It’s almost flattering. Someone wants me back.”
“Theft!”
“Yeah, but leave it. What you’d better do is bring the probe here and mount another disk. Acolyte, the Hindmost will read you your contract. Don’t harm either of these people. Wake me up when the ‘doc is through with me. The kitchen wall has settings to feed a Kzin, and Bram here will be using it, too. Will you be all right?”
“Yes.”
“Stet.” With no small trepidation, Louis lay down in the coffin-shaped ‘doc. The lid closed.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE — PHYSICS LESSONS
They saw it days ahead: a black line against the vastly more distant starboard rim wall.
Closer, the line became a tremendous and artificial silhouette rising above the desert: a raised platform with bumps clustered near the center.
Closer yet, the Reds could see daylight under parts of the elevation. By then Warvia knew. It was the Night People’s goal, and the Sand People’s cemetery.
They were traveling through a dry land. Sand wasn’t good for the motor. There had been a hungry few days before they ran across the Sand People.
The Sand People went muffled in pastel robes. Small, compact beasts drew their wagons in groups of twelve, and served as meat animals, too. Carnivores! Red Herders and Machine People rejoiced alike.
They made gifts of the cloth they’d taken from the Shadow Nest. The Sand People killed two of their beasts to make a feast. The several species shared lore and stories as best they could. Only Karker spoke the trade language well enough to be understood, and everything had to be translated.
Rishathra didn’t require translation, only gestures. Without their robes, the Sand People were small and compact: as short as Gleaners, with broader torsos and lean arms and legs.
Harpster and Grieving Tube kept to the payload shell.
The cruiser departed at halfdawn.
It made Warvia uneasy to know that the Ghouls below her driving bench were near starving. But their goal was in sight.
They arrived in bright mid-afternoon.