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The Best Made Plans
Part 5
Everett B.Cole
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       _ Halfway through the narrow crevice, Don stopped and turned aside, to enter a narrow alcove that had been carved out of the rock. Hanging inside was a long tube of wood. Don rubbed his hands vigorously on the moss which grew on the rocks, then stroked the tube.
       A tone resonated from the chamber, growing louder as Don continued to stroke the tube. After a few seconds, an answering note of different pitch could be heard. Don nodded and stepped back into the path.
       "It's all right," he said. "They'll meet us at the head of the path." He smiled.
       "This way, we don't have someone dropping rocks on our heads."
       Pete looked up at the towering cliffs which almost joined overhead.
       "You mean they've got guards up there?"
       "Always," Don told him. "Day and night. Right now, they're at peace with everybody, but they never let their guard down. We'll have a reception committee waiting for us." He started striding up the steep path.
       At the head of the chasm, five men waited for them. In their hands, they held sticks about two feet long. At the end of each stick was a thong, with a flexible leather pad which could hold a fair sized stone. Don bowed in the direction of one of the group.
       "I know you, Korendwar," he said.
       The other bowed. "Michaels," he said. "I know you. And these?"
       Don looked at him, his thoughts going into overdrive. The form of address was all wrong. Always before, he had been Donald, of the clan Michaels--they abbreviated it to Michaelsdon. But what had gone wrong now?
       He tensed a little, then relaxed. At least, it was a friendly greeting. One does not "know" an enemy. He extended a hand toward Jasu Waern.
       "I bring the Waerntal, Jasu. And his son, Waernpeto," he said.
       The other nodded. "The men of Kor-en know the Waernu," he said noncommitally. "You want dealings with the Korental?"
       Don nodded. "The Waerntal would discuss clan affairs with the Korental." he said. "I but serve as guide."
       "It is well. You and this clansman may rest by the wells." Korendwar turned toward Jasu Waern, gesturing with his sling.
       "I will conduct you to the Korental, your honor."
       * * * * *
       Pete leaned against a mossy bank and watched one of the village women as she raised a clay pot from a well.
       "Tell me, Don, why did you push my father forward to consult with the Korental? Why didn't you go ahead and deal with him yourself? You said you knew him. Father doesn't."
       "That's just the point," smiled Don. "I do know him. And I know his people, and his way of thinking." He waved a hand to indicate the entire collection of huts.
       "These people are about as formal as you can get, when business is at hand. Did you notice the way I talked to Korendwar? Migosh, I've hunted with that guy, rolled around in the dirt with him when we were kids, know him about as well as you'd know a brother. But he was on guard. And, friend, you don't get informal with a clansman when he's on guard.
       "This is just like a little nation, and the Korental is just as surely a ruler as any king of a huge country," he went on. "Even more so than most."
       He fixed his eyes on the council hut, across the narrow end of the valley.
       "Everyone in his clan is his child--symbolically, at least. He tells them what to do. He tells them what to plant and when--and how much. He tells them when to hunt, and where. Governs their lives down to some pretty fine points. I mean, he's as absolute as an absolute monarch can get.
       "And if you want to get along with an absolute monarch, you treat him on his terms." He glanced at his companion.
       "Oh, I don't mean this guy's a tyrant or despot," he added quickly. "These people are pretty proud. They wouldn't like a dictator--as such. But the Korental doesn't need force to govern his people. They do things his way because ... well, it's a matter of tradition. It's the only honorable way to do things. See what I mean?"
       Pete shook his head doubtfully and Don frowned.
       "Pete, your family was originally a mountain clan. I should think you'd know these customs better than I do."
       Again, Pete shook his head. "I'm sorry," he said slowly, "but I don't. You see, my father and my uncle thought it would be better if I learned the customs and culture of your people and of the plainsmen. And they thought I should be familiar with the ways of the great cities."
       He looked across the village at the great tree which shaded the council hut.
       "You see," he continued, "my great uncle was king. And he had no children. He was getting old and it was agreed that if he died childless, his queen would then adopt me. And, of course, I would then be head of the Onaru, and king of Oredan." He smiled wanly.
       "The agreement was not made public, of course. And the queen no longer lives. But signatures and agreement are recorded at Oreladar. And they appear in the Book of the Waernu, against my name. References in the Book of the Waernu are so arranged that I may be quickly removed, to be placed in an already prepared place in the Book of the Onaru, if the time should come. This and the fact that my mother was the daughter of a brother of the king, places me in the line of kings of Oredan." He shrugged.
       "Especially since the king did, in fact, die childless.
       "And this, in my father's eyes, meant that I should know of the plains, of the cities, and of the galactics, since there, he said, lies the power and wealth of the present day Oredan."
       Don shrugged. "Wealth, maybe," he said quietly. "I'm not so sure about the power. The pressure of History is a very real thing, and I seem to remember noticing that every time some king has gotten into a jam with one of the other kingdoms or with his own nobles, he's had to raise the clans. And there have been times when that wasn't easy."
       Pete nodded. "I know. The Onaru took the throne two hundred years ago, simply because the clans withheld support from the Chalenu--the Old Line."
       "Yeah." Don picked idly at the bark of a tree. "And Stern's been trying to get the clans into hot water ever since he took over."
       Pete looked at him for a moment, then looked about the village.
       There was no orderly arrangement of houses, as could be found in town. Wherever someone had found a suitable spot, there he had embedded his poles. And there, he had erected walls, daubed them with clay from the nearby stream, and formed long, limber wands from the thickets into arched roofs, to be covered with long grass from the valley. There were isolated houses, and there were tight little groups of houses. Possibly, Pete thought, family groups.
       No streets existed here, though generations of sandaled feet had beaten the ground into winding paths which led from houses to wells, and from wells to fields, and to the surrounding forest.
       And there was no litter, as could be found in any city. No fallen twig or leaf was allowed to remain on the ground of the village. Grass and moss grew on unused ground and on hillsides, but before each hut, the growth gave way to the forecourt and the small garden.
       Here and there, a bank by a path had been reinforced with clay cemented stones and over these grew the moss, to soften the hard outlines of the works of man. Here and there, a small, neat pile of material for building lay, to remind the onlooker that this was a still growing community. Pete leaned back.
       "It's quite a bit different from the plains," he said, "and not as I thought it would be. I always thought the hillmen were wild and uncultured." He turned toward Don.
       "But you still haven't really answered my question. Why is it my father has to talk to the Korental--alone?"
       Don lifted a shoulder. "Simple enough," he said. "Your father is the head of your branch of the family right now. It's a pretty small clan branch--just the two of you, but he's the clan head--the Waerntal. Right?"
       "I suppose so. Yes." Pete thought a moment. "Actually, I guess he's tal over more than just the two of us. We are the senior line of the family."
       "Well, then. This is clan business. Your father wants to advance a member of his clan as a claimant for the throne of Oredan. He needs the support of other clans to do this. And this is important clan business. See?"
       Pete rubbed at an ear. "I begin to get the idea, I guess, but it just doesn't make too much sense. He could have you speak for him. Or I could plead my own case, for that matter, couldn't I?"
       "Makes all kinds of sense." Don shook his head. "Look, you can't talk to the Korental--not on even terms--not now. You're just a clansman. If he accepts you as king-to-be, then you'll be a sort of super clan head. Then you'll be able to discuss policy with him. But even then, only as an equal--never as a superior. He actually acknowledges no superior." He pointed to himself, pausing.
       "Me? Good grief, I'm not even in this. I'm just a hired hand--not even a member of your clan. Before I could open my mouth, I'd have to be adopted into your clan and designated as a clan councilor. Even then, the tal would have to open the discussion.
       "Oh, I can talk to the Korental as an individual who wants to get help from some of his people for a hunt, sure. And we can then arrange an exchange of goods. That's between him and me. But if I tried to talk to him on this affair, he'd throw me out of the village." He rubbed his cheek thoughtfully.
       "And, come to think of it, if he thought you'd asked me to intervene, after he'd tossed me out, he'd probably feed you to the Choyneu. That, he'd regard as a selling of honor."
       Pete looked at him quizzically. "I can just see him--or any other person, monarch or no--throwing you anywhere you didn't want to go. I'd say the throwing would be the other way."
       Don laughed softly. "Oh, that." He shook his head. "Well, let's just say I don't think I'd care to try it out on a whole clan at once. Things might get a little complicated."
       * * * * *
       A short, heavily muscled man came out of the council hut. In his hands, he held his slender sling-stick. He paused as he got to the door, then shook out the thong. For a moment, he stood, glancing across the end of the valley, then he wound the thong about the stick, securing it at the end with a half-hitch.
       Again, he looked in the direction of Don and Pete. Then he held up the stick and beckoned to them.
       Don pushed himself away from the bank.
       "Well," he said, "here we go. They've come to some sort of a decision."
       They walked through the door of the hut, stopping as they came inside. An old man sat on a hide-covered stool, facing the entrance. Near him stood Jasu Waern. The old man got to his feet.
       "Waernpeto?" he asked.
       Pete stepped forward and bowed. "I am Peto of the clan Waern," he said.
       "It is good." The Korental nodded briefly, then looked at Don.
       "And Michaels. I know you," he added.
       Don looked at him curiously. There was that odd form of address again. Had he suddenly come to be regarded as clanless? What was this? He bowed.
       "I know you, Korental," he said formally.
       The old man before him nodded.
       "We are not now sure how to address you," he explained. "Your father may yet be alive, so we cannot regard you as clan head. But as your father has not been found you may, therefore, be clan head in fact. The men of clan Mal-ka have joined us in searching the gorge of the Gharu, where his flier was shot down. Thus far, nothing has been found. It is a long gorge, and deep."
       "Dad?" Don blinked. "Shot down?"
       The Korental nodded. "Two days since," he said. "A flier of the Royal Guard fired upon him and his flier weaved and dropped into the gorge. No man saw its landing place." He paused thoughtfully.
       "Nor were there flames."
       Don glanced about the hut. It was the same place he had come to many times before, when he wanted to get beaters. It was familiar. And yet it was now a place of strangeness. Suddenly, he felt rootless--disassociated from people. He struggled to regain his poise and retain the formal manner expected of him. He managed a bow of acknowledgment.
       "I thank the Korental for this information," he said. "I beg permission to await further word under his protection."
       Somehow, he couldn't imagine anyone succeeding in shooting his father out of the sky. Kent Michaels had been one of the hottest fighter men in the guard. And even if he hadn't been able to get away from the guy, he'd have taken him down with him. How...? He jerked his attention to the Korental.
       The old man had inclined his head. "My clan is yours during this time of trouble," he was saying. He looked toward Pete.
       * * * * *
       "And you are he who would be King of the Oredanu?"
       Pete nodded. "I am."
       "I see. Your father tells me of certain agreements made many years ago. He tells me of relationships, and of your possible adoption into another clan. These things are true?"
       Again Pete nodded. "These things are true."
       The old man considered him for a few seconds.
       "Among the men of the hills," he said, "the simple word of a man may be accepted. For only a clanless one would think of speaking other than the truth. But I am told the men of the low countries have no such faith. They require writings, and the speech of many witnesses. This is also true?"
       The question was obviously rhetorical. Pete smiled ruefully, but said nothing.
       The Korental allowed his lips to curl in a half smile.
       "These customs of the plainsmen are not unknown to me," he said. "Men of my clan have gone to the low country and have dealt with the men of the cities. Even now, members of the Kor-en live in the cities. But on the clan days, they return to their home, here in the hills." He looked down at the matting on the floor.
       "Your father mentions a clan book," he continued. "Do you have this with you?"
       Pete looked at him, then at his father. His expression was suddenly blank.
       Jasu Waern stepped forward. "This book is in a safe place," he said, "in Riandar."
       Don closed his eyes for an instant. "Oh, Brother," he told himself, "the lights just went out! I'll bet they're tearing that house up, stone by stone, about now."
       The Korental nodded slowly. "How safe?"
       "Why," Jasu was thoughtful. "Why, the hiding place is known only to me--and to my son." He bent his head, then looked up, smiling confidently. "No, it could never be discovered by an outsider."
       "The book must be produced," the Korental told him. He resumed his seat on the stool and folded his hands over a short staff.
       "We of the clans would be happy to support a legitimate claimant to the throne of Oredan. We are not happy with the rule of this outlander who has forced himself into power. But we also recognize the rules and the customs of the nobles of the land, who must have proof of everything before they will act. We are not strangers to the conclave, you must remember. And we are familiar with the power of the outlander." He looked at Don.
       "Tell me," he said, "do you have an interest in this matter?"
       Don nodded. "I am not of the clan Waern," he said carefully. "But my interests have become tied with theirs. Should the Waernu fail, my father's lands would be lost. And the climate of this land would become unhealthy for me--as well as for my father, if he still lives."
       "Yes." The Korental regarded him. "I can understand that. We are not as uncivilized as many think us to be. We watched the broadcast of an attack upon your house." He tilted his head.
       "Tell me," he added. "The broadcast ended rather suddenly. The announcer mentioned technical difficulties. Can you explain this?"
       Don relaxed. The formal session was over for a while.
       "I took a shot at them," he said, "with a Ghar rifle."
       "Ha! They do have a weak spot, then. We'll discuss this later." The old man looked at Jasu Waern.
       "Let us suppose that this young man should ask to be adopted into your clan. What would your answer be?"
       Waern looked confused. "Why---- But he's been giving us----"
       The Korental chuckled. "I know. He has some of those characteristics attributed by legend to clan talu, and to them only." He bent his head for a moment.
       "Suppose I put it this way. When the clans and tribes meet for full consideration of your request for support, you will need strong council. And the councilor who presents your cause must be a member of your clan, of course. He must speak for you, the head of the Waernu."
       Waern looked at him. "I see," he said thoughtfully. "And here, we may find strong council." He looked across at Don.
       "You would consider this?"
       Don paused. This, he thought, was getting serious. It had been fine at first. He had just followed instructions from an experienced agent. And there had been quite a thrill at being in the middle of things. But somehow, everything was flying apart. All at once, he was on his own.
       And now--well, clan councilors were pretty responsible individuals. They were supposed to be the experts on law and custom. They were supposed to put things together--and keep them that way. He could remember daydreams he'd had once, of helping run a country. Some of them had been pretty dramatic. But--well, it was beginning to look like real trouble. If things went wrong, a councilor could get his neck on a block for sure.
       Then he smiled inwardly. So what of it? How could he get into any more trouble? He already had the entire Enforcement Corps screaming for his blood. He'd killed off a Royal Guard projector crew, an entire Enforcement crew, and a few odd news people. They didn't like him. But they wanted him. The only way out of this one would be straight ahead. He nodded.
       "Of course," he said simply.
       The Korental came to his feet and grabbed his staff. Beside his stool was a battered tone tube. He swung the staff at the dented wood and a deep tone followed the sharp crack.
       He wheeled upon the man who came through the door.
       "Tell the Korensahn to come up here," he ordered. "And have him bring five men with him. We have a clan adoption to witness."
       * * * * *
       Don flexed his back and hunched his shoulders a little to get the pack-board more comfortably settled. The darn things were heavy. He looked at the others, who walked along the road. Hang it, they seemed to swing along under their loads as though they were just taking a short walk before breakfast. He poked at the hard ground with his stick.
       How had he managed to haul himself into this one, anyway? Blasted thing had all seemed so logical, back there in Korelanni. He reviewed the steps.
       First, it had been essential that the safety and contents of the Book of the Waernu be determined. Without it, Pete's claim would be so vague as to be untenable. Especially before a conclave with the regent in active opposition.
       Second, the book would have to be placed in safekeeping where it could be immediately produced upon demand. He frowned. That was a tough one. So anyway----
       Then, there had come the question. Who was going to get this book and bring it back--or protect it? Pete was too valuable and too vulnerable. He was known, and if any of the police agencies got their hands on him ... well, that would be all. So Pete was out.
       Jasu Waern? Don grinned to himself. "Skip it," he told himself. He poked at the ground again with the stick. It was getting hot. And he was thirsty.
       "Hope that gunk they used to monkey up my complexion doesn't sweat out," he told himself. "That would do it for sure."
       He glanced up at the sky. It was getting close to midday. Ahead, he could see a few men sitting at the side of the road, leaning back against their packs. He went forward a few more paces, then selected a comfortable looking bit of moss.
       So what had happened? A little guy named Donald Michaels had been disguised as a clanless mat maker. He leaned back against the pack. And, brother, had they given him a stock of mats to sell. This clansman in Riandar would be busy for a month, just unloading all these things from his stock.
       He thought of those daydreams he had once had. A king's councilor, he had imagined, was a highly important, greatly respected individual. He had dreamed of himself, dressed in the ornate formal robes he'd seen in pictures of the old nobility. He'd pictured himself exchanging urbane chatter with other beautifully turned out characters, who hung on his every word. He'd seen himself striding between low-bowing lines of assorted courtiers and soldiery, pausing now and then to tap at the pavement with his jeweled staff. He'd---- Hah!
       He looked at the dusty trail. He'd been striding, all right, but the field reeds didn't look too much like bowing lines of---- Yeah, and his staff didn't have too many jewels, either. No pavement, even, and this fool pack didn't feel much like a finely tailored robe of office. He shrugged.
       "This is no dream," he told himself. "You let one of Stern's people get suspicious, and you'll find out just how real things can get." He twisted around to get the package of food and the water bottle which dangled from the pack.
       Distastefully, he looked at the little packet of powder which was in the food package. He glanced around quickly, then dumped the powder into his mouth, quickly gulping water to wash it down.
       "Gaah!" he growled, "does it have to taste like the inside of an old shoe? Oh, well, it'll keep me nice and dark for the next thirty hours or so." He pulled a strip of dried meat from the package. Maybe this will help take the taste out.
       He sighed and worked his jaws on the leatherlike substance. It started to soften a little.
       Well, anyway, he knew how to get to the vault where the ancestral volumes of the Waernu were kept. And he knew just which volume to pick out. Only one small problem remained. How was he going to get into the house--and on into the little pond in the inner garden? He grinned as he thought of Pete's remark.
       "It'll be simple for you," he had said enviously. "All you have to do is tell any guard you meet to stand aside and forget he ever saw you. Then you go on down to the vault. Wish I had that ability of yours."
       "Sure," he told himself, "hang your clothes on yonder bush--and get right into the water. It's just a simple matter of diving down ten feet and pushing the right rock the right number of times--in the right directions. Nothing to it. And then you go through the pressure trap, and there you are. Simple!"
       And who was going to guard the pond while he was down there? Suppose he broke surface right in front of a flock of trigger-happy Enforcers? He sighed.
       "Oh, well," he told himself. "You asked for it. Now, you've got it. Have fun." He looked into the food package and selected a meal cake.
       * * * * *
       At last, he dusted his fingers and leaned back lazily against his pack, looking into the clear sky. For a few minutes, he simply relaxed, his eyes fixed on the infinite distance, his mind a near blank.
       Other pack-laden men strode past him, intent on their destination. At last, a group swung by and the sound of their conversation brought Don out of his semitrance. Behind the group was another, who walked a little faster than the others, in an apparent effort to catch up. Don pushed himself up with the aid of his staff, drew a few deep breaths, and started pacing along behind him.
       Ahead, the group went around a curve in the path. The man ahead of Don cut over into the grass, still intent on catching up with his companions, who were not more than a few meters ahead. Don watched him casually.
       There was no use, he thought, in trying to keep up with this fellow or his companions. It was too hot. Besides, this was probably a clan group who would not welcome company--especially the company of one of no clan.
       He started to slow down to a normal pace, then his attention was caught by movement by a rock just ahead of the other. A small, greenish-brown body was vaguely outlined in the long grass nearly in the man's path.
       Don looked more closely. The animal was heavy-bodied, with rather short forelegs. Powerful hind legs were tucked under the body, twitching a little now. The forelegs pawed slightly at the grass and the flat, wide head probed out, extending toward the approaching man.
       "Hey!" yelled Don. "Look out. Gersal!" He started forward in a half run, his staff poised for a blow.
       The other jumped sideways but the furry body grazed his leg and spun, claws and teeth working furiously. The man looked down and screamed.
       Don's staff came down in a chopping blow and the animal bounced out onto the open path. Its paws raised little spurts of dust as it spun about and prepared for another spring.
       Again, Don's staff swung down. The gersal flopped about for an instant in the dust of the path, then faced toward him, an angry scream coming from its throat.
       Again, it tried to get its balance for a spring, but one hind leg dragged limply. Again, the staff swung, tumbling the beast over in the dust.
       There was a flurry of paws and the gersal struggled up to its haunches, then sat up, its brilliant red eyes fixed on Don. It stretched out short forelegs in seeming supplication, then batted futilely at the punching staff end.
       Disregarding the pleading attitude of the beast, Don continued to punch at the squirming body till it was obvious that no vestige of life could remain. Then, he looked at the other man.
       The fellow had managed to get to the center of the path before he had collapsed. He half sat, half lay against his pack, breathing raggedly. Sweat stood out on his forehead. He looked at Don vaguely, making an obvious effort to focus his eyes.
       "Thanks ... Friend," he mumbled. "You tried---- Oooh!" He closed his eyes and stiffened, his legs stretching out and his back arching.
       The men who walked ahead had been attracted by the commotion. They came back and one jerked off his pack and bent over the man in the path. He looked over at the dead animal, then glanced up at Don.
       "How many times was he bitten?"
       "I doubt if he got more than one," Don told him.
       The other nodded and looked searchingly at the victim. Then, he reached into his clothing and removed a small packet. He opened it and pulled the protective cover off a syrette.
       "There's a small chance, then," he remarked. He poked the needle of the syrette into the sufferer's forearm and squeezed the tube.
       The stricken man moved convulsively and opened one eye. His companion nodded.
       "You might make it, Delm," he said cautiously. "Only one bite, and we got to you soon." He nodded.
       "If you can hang on for just five minutes, you'll walk the trail again." He looked up at Don.
       "That was quick action," he said. "You may have saved our clan brother." He looked down at the torn place on the man's leg.
       "A couple of more bites, and he'd surely be dead by now." He got to his feet.
       "Whom do we have to thank?"
       Don looked down at the path in apparent discomfort.
       "I am Kalo," he said, "of the mountains."
       The other's eyes clouded. "Oh," he said tonelessly. He looked down at his companion, then back at the dead animal.
       "Well," he said slowly, "we are grateful, Clanless One. Go your way in peace. We will take care of our brother."
       Don started to turn away. "I hope he----"
       The other nodded curtly. "The gersal's poison is strong," he said. "But soon we shall see. May your way be safe." He turned back to his patient.
       Don turned away and went around the curve in the path. Well, maybe the Korental had been right, he thought. So long as they kept from bothering others, the clanless ones weren't molested. And they certainly didn't form any associations that might be embarrassing later on. He glanced back.
       "Hope that guy lives through it," he told himself, "but I'm glad I don't have to put up with a three-day celebration. Haven't got the time."
       In the distance, he could see the walls and towers of Riandar. The walk was nearly over now. He stepped his pace up a little, then slowed down again. There was no sense in coming through the gate all hot and sweaty, he reminded himself. It would be way out of character.
       * * * * *
       It was funny, Don thought, that he hadn't remembered this store when the Korental had described its location. Probably it was the use of the word "shop." This was a large department store. He'd done some shopping here at one time or another, himself. He started to go by the front, then a display in one of the windows attracted his attention. He paused.
       Someone had designed a tasteful array of furniture, set up like a nobleman's bedroom suite. One could, without too much effort, imagine himself standing on the enclosed walkway of a palace, facing away from the inner garden. The furniture, he noted, was of excellent quality. In fact, when he started refinishing the ranch, maybe he'd come in here. He glanced at the display floor. The mats were similar in design to those in his pack.
       Suddenly, he remembered his own present status and stepped back, away from the window. Simple mat makers don't concern themselves with examining displays that would cost more than they'd make in a lifetime. This window was strictly for people who could afford large platters of luxury. He turned away, looking for another, less elaborate entrance.
       Down the street, at the corner of the building, he found an inconspicuous door. A brass plate indicated that this was the employees' entrance to the Blue Mountain Mercantile Company's offices. Another plate indicated that the delivery entrance was around the corner. Don shrugged and went into the door.
       He found himself in a narrow hallway. Before him was a stairway, its lowest step blocked by a light chain. To his right, a man sat in a small cubby.
       "You're in the wrong door," he said expressionlessly. "Deliveries are received around the corner."
       "I know," Don told him. "I'm from the Kor-en. I'd like to see Korentona."
       The man frowned fleetingly. "Tell you," he said casually, "maybe it would be better if you made your delivery right now. Then you can come back later on."
       Don examined him for a moment. "You mean something is----"
       "That's right." The man nodded. "Go around to the receiving room. Drop your pack, and come back--say in about an hour." He glanced upward as footsteps sounded on the stairs.
       "Oh, oh," he added softly. "Keep quiet and let me handle this."
       A heavy-set man came down the stairs. He looked sharply at Don, taking in his appearance and the details of his pack.
       "What's this, Mora?" he demanded.
       The timekeeper shrugged casually. "Just some porter," he said negligently. "Can't read too well, I guess. Got in the wrong door. I was telling him where to drop his pack."
       "Oh?" The other looked at Don more closely. "Looks like another load of those mats from the Morek. Look, Fellow, you wouldn't be from one of those clans, would you now?"
       Don shook his head. "I am Kalo," he said, "of the mountains. I have no clan. I make mats. And twice a year I come here to Riandar to sell them."
       "Been here before?"
       "I have been in Riandar many times."
       "That's not what I mean. Have you been here--to this store--before?"
       Don shook his head. "Not to this store, no. But they told me the Blue Mountain was paying better than some others. I thought I'd try----"
       "Yeah," the other said coldly. "Sure. Now, suppose we take a little walk, you and I? Some people down the street would like to talk to you."
       Don shook his head. "I merely came here to sell mats," he insisted. "I make good mats."
       The heavy man frowned. "Maybe," he snapped. "We'll see about that after we've had a talk with you." He stepped closer. "If you're just a mat maker, nothing will happen to you. If you really have good mats, you might even get a nice price for some of your stuff. Come on."
       He reached out to take Don's sleeve. Don stepped back, his face suddenly losing its vague, apologetic expression. His features sharpened, to become hard, uncompromising.
       "Get over to that wall, Fellow," he ordered sharply. "Move!"
       The man's hand dropped. For a moment, he stared slackly at Don.
       "Come on!" Don's voice raised a little. "Get over to that wall. And then stand still." He started to shuck off the straps of his pack.
       The man before him sobbed helplessly, then shuffled away. Don knelt down and stripped the pack off. Then he stepped aside and raised a hand in a beckoning gesture.
       "Now get over here," he snapped. "Pick up that pack and take it up to Mr. Tona's office. I'll follow you."
       The man in the cubby rubbed his head for a moment, then picked up the phone. Don swung toward him. "Put that phone back," he ordered, "and come out of there. You're coming with us." _