ger hold myself together-- " With that he vanished, and a globe of fire hung where the creature had lain. Now his words came into the mind, rather than being spoken across the air. "He bids you come to him without delay. Else, he says he will destroy this palace." "Did the three whom he burnt also take on again their own forms?" "No," replied the Rakasha. "They are no more . . ." "Describe this stranger!" ordered Siddhartha, forcing the words through his own lips. "He stands very tall," said the demon, "and he wears black breeches and boots. Above the waist he has on him a strange garment. It is like a seamless white glove, upon his right hand only, which extends all the way up his arm and across his shoulders, wrapping his neck and rising tight and smooth about his entire head. Only the lower part of his face is visible, for he wears over his eyes large black lenses which extend half a span outward from his face. At his belt he wears a short sheath of the same white material as the garment-- not containing a dagger, however, but a wand. Beneath the material of his garment, where it crosses his shoulders and comes up upon his neck, there is a hump, as if he wears there a small pack." "Lord Agni!" said Siddhartha. "You have described the God of Fire!" "Aye, this must be," said the Rakasha. "For as I looked beyond his flesh, to see the colors of his true being, I saw there a blaze like unto the heart of the sun. If there be a God of Fire, then this indeed is he." "Now must we flee," said Siddhartha, "for there is about to be a great burning. We cannot fight with this one, so let us go quickly." "I do not fear the gods," said Taraka, "and I should like to try the power of this one." "You cannot prevail against the Lord of Flame," said Siddhartha. "His fire wand is invincible. It was given him by the deathgod." "Then I shall wrest it from him and turn it against him." "None may wield it without being blinded and losing a hand in the process! This is why he wears that strange garment. Let us waste no more time here!" "I must see for myself," said Taraka. "I must." "Do not let your new found guilt force you into flirting with self-destruction." "Guilt?" said Taraka. "That puny, gnawing mind-rat of which you taught me? No, it is not guilt, Binder. It is that, where once I was supreme, save for yourself, new powers have arisen in the world. The gods were not this strong in the old days, and if they have indeed grown in power, then that power must be tested-- by myself! It is of my nature, which is power, to fight every new power which arises, and to either triumph over it or be bound by it. I must test the strength of Lord Agni, to win over him." "But we are two within this body!" "That is true. . .. If this body be destroyed, then will I bear you away with me, I promise. Already have I strengthened your flames after the manner of my own land. If this body dies, you will continue to live as a Rakasha. Our people once wore bodies, too, and I remember the art of strengthening the flames so that they may burn independent of the body. This has been done for you, so do not fear." "Thanks a lot." "Now let us confront the flame, and dampen it!" They left the royal chambers and descended the stair. Far below, prisoner in his own dungeon. Prince Videgha whimpered in his sleep. They emerged from the door that lay behind the hangings at the back of the throne. When they pushed aside these hangings, they saw that the great hall was empty, save for the sleepers within the dark grove and the one who stood in the middle of the floor, white arm folded over bare arm, a silver wand caught between the fingers of his gloved hand. "See how he stands?" said Siddhartha. "He is confident of his power, and justly so. He is Agni of the Lokapalas. He can see to the farthest unobstructed horizon, as though it lies at his fingertips. And he can reach that far. He is said one night to have scored the moons themselves with that wand. If he but touch its base against a contact within his glove, the Universal Fire will leap forward with a blinding brilliance, obliterating matter and dispersing energies which lie in its path. It is still not too late to withdraw-- " "Agni!" he heard his mouth cry out. "You have requested audience with the one who rules here?" The black lenses turned toward him. Agni's lips curled back to vanish into a smile which dissolved into words: "I thought I'd find you here," he said, his voice nasal and penetrating. "All that holiness got to be too much and you had to cut loose, eh? Shall I call you Siddhartha, or Tathagatha, or Mahasamatman-- or just plain Sam?" "You fool," he replied. "The one who was known to you as the Binder of Demons-- by all or any of those names-- is bound now himself. You have the privilege of addressing Taraka of the Rakasha, Lord of Hellwell!" There was a click, and the lenses became red. "Yes, I perceive the truth of what you say," answered the other. "I look upon a case of demonic possession. Interesting. Doubtless cramped, also." He shrugged, and then added, "But I can destroy two as readily as one." "Think you so?" inquired Taraka, raising both arms before him. As he did, there was a rumbling and the black wood spread in an instant across the floor, engulfing the one who stood there, its dark branches writhing about him. The rumbling continued, and the floor moved several inches beneath their feet. From overhead, there came a creaking and the sound of snapping stone. Dust and gravel began to fall. Then there was a blinding flash of light and the trees were gone, leaving short stumps and blackened smudges upon the floor. With a groan and a mighty crash, the ceiling fell. As they stepped back through the door that lay behind the throne, they saw the figure, which still stood in the center of the hall, raise his wand directly above his head and move it in a tiny circle. A cone of brilliance shot upward, dissolving everything it touched. A smile still lay upon Agni's lips as the great stones rained down, none falling anywhere near him. The rumbling continued, and the floor cracked and the walls began to sway. They slammed the door and Sam felt a rushing giddiness as the window, which a moment before had lain at the far end of the corridor, flashed past him. They coursed upward and outward through the heavens, and a tingling, bubbling feeling filled his body, as though he were a being of liquid through whom an electrical current was passing. Looking back, with the sight of the demon who saw in all directions, he beheld Palamaidsu, already so distant that it could have been framed and hung upon the wall as a painting. On the high hill at the center of the town, the palace of Videgha was falling in upon itself, and great streaks of brilliance, like reversed lightning bolts, were leaping from the ruin into the heavens. "That is your answer, Taraka," he said. "Shall we go back and try his power again?" "I had to find out," said the demon. "Now let me warn you further. I did not jest when I said that he can see to the farthest horizon. If he should free himself soon and turn his glance in this direction, he will detect us. I do not think you can move faster than light, so I suggest you fly lower and utilize the terrain for cover." "I have rendered us invisible, Sam." "The eyes of Agni can see deeper into the red and farther into the violet ranges than can those of a man." They lost altitude then, rapidly. Before Palamaidsu, however, Sam saw that the only evidence which remained of the palace of Videgha was a cloud of dust upon a gray hillside. Moving like a whirlwind, they sped far into the north, until at last the Ratnagaris lay beneath them. When they came to the mountain called Channa, they drifted down past its peak and came to a landing upon the ledge before the opened entrance to Hellwell. They stepped within and closed the door. "Pursuit will follow," said Sam, "and even Hellwell will not stand against it." "How confident they are of their power," said Taraka, "to send only one!" "Do you feel that confidence to be unwarranted?" "No," said Taraka. "But what of the One in Red of whom you spoke, who drinks life with his eyes? Did you not think they would send Lord Yama, rather than Agni?" "Yes," said Sam, as they moved back toward the well, "I was sure that he would follow, and I still feel that he will. When last I saw him, I caused him some distress. I feel he would hunt me anywhere. Who knows, he may even now be lying in ambush at the bottom of Hellwell itself." They came to the lip of the well and entered upon the trail. "He does not wait within," Taraka announced. "I would even now be contacted by those who wait, bound, if any but the Rakasha had passed this way." "He will come," said Sam, "and when the Red One comes to Hellwell, he will not be stayed in his course." "But many will try," said Taraka. "There is the first." The first flame came into view, in its niche beside the trail. As they passed by, Sam freed it, and it sprang into the air like a bright bird and spiraled down the well. Step by step they descended, and from each niche fire spilled forth and flowed outward. At Taraka's bidding, some rose and vanished over the edge of the well, departing through the mighty door which bore the words of the gods upon its outer face. When they reached the bottom of the well, Taraka said, "Let us free those who lie locked in the caverns, also." So they made their way through the passages and deep caverns, freeing the demons locked therein. Then, after a time-- how much time, he could never tell-- they had all been freed. The Rakasha assembled then about the cavern, standing in great phalanxes of flame, and their cries all came together into one steady, ringing note which rolled and rolled and beat within his head, until he realized, startled at the thought, that they were singing. "Yes," said Taraka, "it is the first time in ages that they have done so." Sam listened to the vibrations within his skull, catching something of the meaning behind the hiss and the blaze, the feelings that accompanied it falling into words and stresses that were more familiar to his own mind: We are the legions of Hellwell, damned, The banished ones of fallen flame. We are the race undone by man. So man we curse. Forget his name! This world was ours before the gods, In days before the race of men. And when the men and gods have gone, This world will then be ours again. The mountains fall, the seas dry out, The moons shall vanish from the sky. The Bridge of Gold will one day fall, And all that breathes must one day die. But we of Hellwell shall prevail, When fail the gods, when fail the men. The legions of the damned die not. We wait, we wait, to rise again! Sam shuddered as they sang on and on, recounting their vanished glories, confident of their ability to outlast any circumstance, to meet any force with the cosmic judo of a push and a tug and a long wait, watching anything of which they disapproved turn its strength upon itself and pass. Almost, in that moment, he believed that what they sang was truth, and that one day there would be none but the Rakasha, flitting above the peeked landscape of a dead world. Then he turned his mind to other matters and forced the mood from him. But in the days that followed, and even, on occasion, years afterward, it returned to plague his efforts and mock his joys, to make him wonder, know guilt, feel sadness and so be humbled. After a time, one of the Rakasha who had left earlier re-entered and descended the well. He hovered in the air and reported what he had seen. As he spoke, his fires flowed into the shape of a tau cross. "This is the form of that chariot," he said, "which blazed through the sky and then fell, coming to rest in the valley beyond Southpeak." "Binder, do you know this vessel?" asked Taraka. "I have heard it described before," said Sam. "It is the thunder chariot of Lord Shiva. "Describe its occupant," he said to the demon. "There were four. Lord." "Four?" "Yes. There is the one you have described as Agni, Lord of the Fires. With him is one who wears the horns of a bull set upon a burnished helm-- his armor shows like aged bronze, but it is not bronze; it is worked about with the forms of many serpents, and it does not seem to burden him as he moves. In his one hand he holds a gleaming trident, and he bears no shield before his body." "This one is Shiva," said Sam. "And walking with these two there comes one all in red, whose gaze is dark. This one does not speak, but occasionally his glances fall upon the woman who walks by his side, to his left. She is fair of hair and complexion, and her armor matches his red. Her eyes are like the sea, and she smiles often with lips the color of the blood of men. About her throat she wears a necklace of skulls. She bears a bow, and upon her belt is a short sword. She holds in her hands a strange instrument, like a black scepter ending in a silver skull that is also a wheel." "These two be Yama and Kali," said Sam. "Now hear me, Taraka, mightiest of the Rakasha, while I tell you what moves against us. The power of Agni you know full well, and of the One in Red have I already spoken. Now, she who walks at the left hand of Death bears also the gaze that drinks the life it beholds. Her scepter-wheel screams like the trumpets that signalize the ending of the Yuga, and all who come before its wailing are cast down and confused. She is as much to be feared as her Lord, who is ruthless and invincible. But the one with the trident is the Lord of Destruction himself. It is true that Yama is King of the Dead and Agni Lord of the Flames, but the power of Shiva is the power of chaos. His is the force which separates atom from atom, breaking down the forms of all things upon which he turns it. Against these four, the freed might of Hellwell itself cannot stand. Therefore, let us depart this place immediately, for they are most assuredly coming here." "Did I not promise you, Binder," said Taraka, "that I would help you to fight the gods?" "Yes, but that of which I spoke was to be a surprise attack. These have taken upon themselves their Aspects now, and have raised up their Attributes. Had they chosen, without even landing the thunder chariot, Channa would no longer exist, but in the place of this mountain there would be a deep crater, here in the midst of the Ratnagaris. We must flee, to fight them another day." "Do you remember the curse of the Buddha?" asked Taraka. "Do you remember how you taught me of guilt, Siddhartha? I remember, and I feel I owe you this victory. I owe you something for your pains, and I will give these gods into your hands in payment." "No! If you would serve me at all, do it at another time than this! Serve me now by bearing me away from this place, far and fast!" "Are you afraid of this encounter. Lord Siddhartha?" "Yes, yes I am! For it is foolhardy! What of your song-- 'We wait, we wait, to rise again!'? Where is the patience of the Rakasha? You say you will wait for the seas to dry and the mountains to fall, for the moons to vanish from the sky-- but you cannot wait for me to name the time and the battlefield! I know them far better than you, these gods, for once I was one of them. Do not do this rash thing now. If you would serve me, save me from this meeting!" "Very well. I hear you, Siddhartha. Your words move me, Sam. But I would try their strength. So I shall send some of the Rakasha against them. But we shall journey far, you and I, far down to the roots of the world. There we will await the report of victory. If, somehow, the Rakasha should lose the encounter, then will I bear you far away from here and restore to you your body. I would wear it a few hours more, however, to savor your passions in this fighting." Sam bowed his head. "Amen," he said, and with a tingling, bubbling sensation, he felt himself lifted from the floor and borne along vast cavernways uncharted by men. As they sped from chamber to vaulted chamber, down tunnels and chasms and wells, through labyrinths and grottoes and corridors of stone, Sam set his mind adrift, to move down the ways of memory and back. He thought upon the days of his recent ministry, when he had sought to graft the teachings of Gotama upon the stock of the religion by which the world was ruled, He thought upon the strange one, Sugata, whose hands had held both death and benediction. Over the years, their names would merge and their deeds would be mingled. He had lived too long not to know how time stirred the pots of legend. There had been a real Buddha, he knew that now. The teaching he had offered, no matter how spuriously, had attracted this true believer, this one who had somehow achieved enlightenment, marked men's minds with his sainthood, and then gone willingly into the hands of Death himself. Tathagatha and Sugata would be part of a single legend, he knew, and Tathagatha would shine in the light shed by his disciple. Only the one Dhamma would survive. Then his mind went back to the battle at the Hall of Karma, and to the machinery still cached in a secret place. And he thought then upon the countless transfers he had undergone before that time, of the battles he had fought, of the women he had loved across the ages; he thought upon what a world could be and what this world was, and why. Then he was taken again with his rage against the gods. He thought upon the days when a handful of them had fought the Rakasha and the Nagas, the Gandharvas and the People-of-the-Sea, the Kataputna demons and the Mothers of the Terrible Glow, the Dakshinis and the Pretas, the Skandas and the Pisakas, and had won, tearing a world loose from chaos and building its first city of men. He had seen that city pass through all the stages through which a city can pass, until now it was inhabited by those who could spin their minds for a moment and transform themselves into gods, taking upon them an Aspect that strengthened their bodies and intensified their wills and extended the power of their desires into Attributes, which fell with a force like magic upon those against whom they turned them. He thought upon this city and these gods, and he knew of its beauty and its tightness, its ugliness and its wrongness. He thought of its splendor and its color, in contrast to that of the rest of the world, and he wept as he raged, for he knew that he could never feel either wholly right or wholly wrong in opposing it. This was why he had waited as long as he had, doing nothing. Now, whatever he did would result in both victory and defeat, a success and a failure; and whether the outcome of all his actions would be the passing or the continuance of the dream of the city, the burden of the guilt would be his. They waited in darkness. For a long, silent while they waited. Time passed like an old man climbing a hill. They stood upon a ledge above a black pool, and waited. "Should we not have heard by now?" "Perhaps. Perhaps not." "What shall we do?" "What do you mean?" "If they do not come at all. How long shall we wait here?" "They will come, singing." "I hope so." But there came no singing, or movement. About them was the stillness of time that had no objects upon which to wear. "How long have we waited?" "I do not know. Long." "I feel that all is not well." "You may be right. Shall we rise a few levels and investigate, or shall I bear you to your freedom now?" "Let us wait awhile longer." "Very well." Again, there was silence. They paced within it. "What was that?" "What?" "A sound." "I heard nothing and we are using the same ears." "Not with the ears of the body-- there it is again!" "I heard nothing, Taraka." "It continues. It is like a scream, but it does not end." "Far?" "Yes, quite distant. Listen my way." "Yes! I believe it is the scepter of Kali. The battle, then, goes on." "This long? Then the gods are stronger than I had supposed." "No, the Rakasha are stronger than I had supposed." "Whether we win or lose, Siddhartha, the gods are presently engaged. If we can get by them, their vessel may be unattended. Do you want it?" "Steal the thunder chariot? That is a thought. . . . It is a mighty weapon, as well as transportation. What might our chances be?" "I am certain the Rakasha can hold them for as long as is necessary-- and it is a long climb up Hellwell. We need not use the trail ourself. I grow tired, but I can still bear us across the air." "Let us rise a few levels and investigate." They left their ledge by the black pool, and time beat again about them as they passed upward. As they advanced, a globe of light moved to meet them. It settled upon the floor of the cavern and grew into a tree of green fire. "How goes the battle?" asked Taraka. "We hold them," it reported, "but we cannot close with them." "Why not?" "There is that about them which repels. I do not know how to call it, but we cannot draw too near." "How then do you fight?" "A steady storm of rocks rages about them. We hurl fire and water and great spinning winds, also." "And how do they respond to this?" "The trident of Shiva cuts a path through everything. But no matter how much he destroys, we raise up more against him. So he stands like a statue, uncreating storms we will not let end. Occasionally, he swerves to kill, while the Lord of Fires holds back the attack. The scepter of the goddess slows those who face upon it. Once slowed, they meet the trident or the hand or the eyes of Death." "And you have not succeeded in harming them?" "No." "Where do they stand?" "Part way down the well wall. They are still near to the top. They descend slowly." "How many have we lost?" "Eighteen." "Then it was a mistake to end our waiting to begin this battle. The cost is too high and nothing is being gained. . .. Sam, do you want to try for the chariot?" "It is worth a risk. . .. Yes, let us try." "Go then," he instructed the Rakasha who branched and swayed before him. "Go, and we shall follow more slowly. We will rise along the side of the wall opposite them. When we begin the ascent, redouble your attack. Occupy them entirely until we have passed. Hold them then to give us time in which to steal their chariot from the valley. When this has been accomplished, I will return to you in my true form and we can put an end to the fighting." "I obey," replied the other, and he fell upon the floor to become a green serpent of light, and slithered off ahead of them. They rushed forward, running part of the way, to conserve the strength of the demon for the final necessary thrust against gravitation. They had journeyed a great distance beneath the Ratnagaris, and the return trip seemed endless. Finally, though, they came upon the floor of the well; and it was lighted sufficiently so that, even with the eyes of his body, Sam could see clearly about him. The noise was deafening. If he and Taraka had had to rely upon speech for communication, there would have been no communication. Like some fantastic orchid upon an ebon bough, the fire bloomed upon the wall of the well. As Agni waved his wand, it changed its shape, writhing. In the air, like bright insects, danced the Rakasha. The rushing of winds was one loudness, and the rattling of many stones was another. Above it all was the ululating cry of the silver skull-wheel, which Kali waved like a fan before her face; and this was even more terrible when it rose beyond the range of hearing, but still screamed. Rocks split and melted and dissolved in midair, their white-hot fragments leaping like sparks from a forge, out and downward. They bounced and rolled, and glowed redly in the shadows of Hellwell. The surrounding walls of the well were pocked and gouged and scored in the places where the flame and the chaos had touched. "Now," said Taraka, "we go!" They rose into the air and moved up the side of the well. The power of the Rakasha's attack increased, to be answered with an intensified counterattack. Sam covered his ears with his hands, but it did no good against the burning needles behind his eyes, which stirred whenever the silver skull swept in his direction. A short distance to his left, a whole section of rock vanished abruptly. "They have not detected us," said Taraka. "Yet," answered Sam. "That accursed Fire god can look through a sea of ink to spot a shifting grain of sand. If he turns in this direction, I hope you can dodge his-- " "How was that?" asked Taraka, as they were suddenly forty feet higher and somewhat farther to the left. They sped upward now, and a line of melting rock pursued them. Then this was interrupted as the demons set up a wailing and tore loose gigantic boulders, which they hurled upon the gods, with the accompaniment of hurricanes and sheets of fire. They reached the lip of the well, passed above it and scurried back out of range. "We must go all the way around now, to reach the corridor which leads to the door." A Rakasha rose from out of the well and sped to their side. "They retreat!" he cried. "The goddess has fallen. The One in Red supports her as they flee!" "They do not retreat," said Taraka. "They move to cut us off. Block their way! Destroy the trail! Hurry!" The Rakasha dropped like a meteor back into the well. "Binder, I grow tired. I do not know whether I can bear us from the ledge outside all the way to the ground below." "Can you manage it part of the way?" "Yes." "That first three hundred feet or so where the trail is narrow?" "I think so." "Good!" They ran. As they fled along the rim of Hellwell, another Rakasha rose up and kept pace with them. "I report!" he cried. "We have destroyed the trail twice. Each time, the Lord of Flames has burnt a new one!" "Then naught more can be done! Stay with us now! We need your assistance in another matter." It sped on ahead of them, a crimson wedge lighting their way. They rounded the well and raced up the tunnel. When they reached its end, they hurled the door wide and stepped out onto the ledge. The Rakasha who had led the way slammed the door behind them, saying, "They pursue!" Sam stepped over the ledge. As he fell, the door glowed for an instant, then melted above him. With the help of the second Rakasha, they descended the entire distance to the base of Channa and moved up a trail and around a bend. The foot of a mountain now shielded them from the gods. But this rock was lashed with flame in an instant. The second Rakasha shot high into the air, wheeled and vanished. They ran along the trail, heading toward the valley that held the chariot. By the time they reached it, the Rakasha had returned. "Kali and Yama and Agni descend," he stated. "Shiva stays behind, holding the corridor. Agni leads the pursuit. The One in Red helps the goddess, who is limping." Before them, in the valley, lay the thunder chariot. Slim and unadorned, the color of bronze, though it was not bronze, it stood upon a wide, grassy plain. It looked like a fallen prayer tower or a giant's house key or some necessary part of a celestial instrument of music that had slipped free of a starry constellation and dropped to the ground. It seemed to be somehow incomplete, although the eye could not fault its lines. It held that special beauty that belongs to the highest orders of weapons, requiring function to make it complete. Sam moved to its side, found the hatch, entered. "You can operate this chariot. Binder?" asked Taraka. "Make it race through the heavens, spitting destruction across the land?" "I'm sure Yama would keep the controls as simple as possible. He streamlines whenever he can. I've flown the jets of Heaven before, and I'm banking that this is of the same order." He ducked into the cabin, settled into the control seat and stared at the panel before him. "Damn!" he announced, his hand starting forward and twitching back. The other Rakasha appeared suddenly, passing through the metal wall of the ship and hovering above the console. "The gods move rapidly," he announced. "Particularly Agni." Sam snapped a series of switches and pressed a button. Lights came on all over the instrument panel and a humming sound began within it. "How far is he?" asked Taraka. "Almost halfway down. He widened the trail with his flames. He runs upon it now, as if it were a roadway. He burn obstacles. He makes a clear path." Sam drew back on a lever and adjusted a dial, reading the indicators before him. A shudder ran through the ship. "Are you ready?" asked Taraka. "I can't take off cold. It has to warm up. Also, this instrument board is trickier than I'd thought." "We run a close race." "Yes." From the distance, there came the sounds of several explosions rising above the growing growl of the chariot. Sam pulled the lever forward another notch, readjusted the dial. "I go to slow them," said the Rakasha, and vanished as he had come. Sam drew the lever two notches farther, and somewhere something sputtered and died. The ship stood silent once more. He pushed the lever back into its former position, spun the dial, pushed the button again. And again a shudder ran through the chariot, and somewhere a purring began. Sam drew the lever one notch forward, adjusted the dial. After a moment, he repeated it, and the purr became a soft growl "Gone," said Taraka. "Dead." "Who? What?" "The one who went to stop the Lord of Flames. He failed." There were more explosions. "Hellwell is being destroyed," said Taraka. Perspiration upon his brow, Sam waited with his hand on the lever. "He comes now-- Agni!" Sam looked through the long, slanted shield plate. The Lord of Flames came into the valley. "Good-bye, Siddhartha." "Not yet," said Sam. Agni looked at the chariot, raised his wand. Nothing happened. He stood, pointing the wand; and then he lowered it, shook it. He raised it once more. Again, no flame issued forth. He reached behind his neck with his left hand, performed some adjustment upon his pack. As he did this, light streamed from the wand, burning a huge pit in the ground at his side. He pointed the wand again. Nothing. Then he began running toward the ship. "Electrodirection?" asked Taraka. "Yes." Sam drew back upon the lever, adjusted the dial farther. A huge roaring grew about him. He pressed another button and there came a crackling sound from the rear of the vessel. He moved another dial as Agni reached the hatch. There was a flash of flame and a metallic clanging. He rose from his seat and moved out of the cabin and into the corridor. Agni had entered, and he pointed the wand. "Do not move-- Sam! Demon!" he cried, above the roar of the engines; and as he spoke, his lenses clicked red and he smiled. "Demon," he stated. "Do not move, or you and your host will burn together!" Sam sprang upon him. Agni fell easily when he struck, for he had not believed that the other would reach him. "Short circuit, eh?" said Sam, and hit him across the throat. "Or sunspots?" and he struck him in the temple. Agni fell to his side, and Sam hit him a final blow with the edge of his hand, just above the collarbone. He kicked the wand the length of the corridor, and as he moved to close the hatch he knew that it was too late. "Go now, Taraka," he said. "This is my fight from here on. You can do nothing more." "I promised my assistance." "You have none to give, now. Get out while still you can." "If such is your will. But I have a final thing to say to you -- " "Save it! Next time I'm in the neighborhood-- " "Binder, it is this thing I learned of you-- I am sorry. I - " There was a terrible twisting, wrenching sensation within his body and mind, as the death-gaze of Yama fell upon him and struck deeper than his own being. Kali, too, looked into his eyes; and as she did so, she raised her screaming scepter. It was as the lifting of one shadow and the falling of another. "Good-bye, Binder," came the words within his mind. Then the skull began its screaming. He felt himself falling. There was a throbbing. It was within his head. It was all about him. He was awakened by throbbing, and he felt himself covered with aches, as with bandages. There were chains upon his wrists and his ankles. He was half seated on the floor of a small compartment. Beside the doorway sat the One in Red, smoking. Yama nodded, said nothing. "Why am I alive?" Sam asked him. "You live for purposes of keeping an appointment made many years ago in Mahartha," said Yama. "Brahma is particularly anxious to see you once again." "But I am not especially anxious to see Brahma." "Over the years, that has become somewhat apparent." "I see you got out of the mud all right." The other smiled. "You are a nasty man," he said. "I know. I practice." "I gather your business deal fell through?" "Unfortunately, yes." "Perhaps you can try recouping your losses. We're halfway to Heaven." "Think I'd have a chance?" "You just might. Times change. Brahma could be a merciful god this week." "My occupational therapist told me to specialize in lost causes." Yama shrugged. "What of the demon?" Sam asked. "The one who was with me?" "I touched it," said Yama, "hard. I don't know whether I finished it or just drove it away. But you needn't worry about it again. I doused you with demon repellant. If the creature still lives, it will be a long time before it recovers from our contact. Maybe never. How did it happen in the first place? I thought you were the one man immune to demonic possession." "So did I. What's demon repellant?" "I found a chemical agent, harmless to us, which none of the energy beings can stand." "Handy item. Could've used it in the days of the binding." "Yes. We wore it into Hellwell." "That was quite a battle, from what I saw of it." "Yes," said Yama. "What is it like-- demonic possession? What does it feel like to have another will overriding your own?" "It is strange," said Sam, "and frightening, and rather educating at the same time." "In what ways?" "It was their world first," said Sam. "We took it away from them. Why shouldn't they be everything we hate them for being? To them, we are the demons." "But what does it feel like?" "To have one's will overridden by that of another? You should know." Yama's smile vanished, then returned. "You would like me to strike you, wouldn't you, Buddha? It would make you feel superior. Unfortunately, I'm a sadist and will not do it." Sam laughed. "Touché, Death," he said. They sat in silence for a time. "Can you spare me a cigarette?" Yama passed him one, lit it. "What's First Base like these days?" "You'll hardly recognize the place," said Yama. "If everyone in it were to die at this moment, it would still be perfect ten thousand years from now. The flowers would still bloom and the music would play and the fountains would ripple the length of the spectrum. Warm meals would still be laid within the garden pavilions. The City itself is immortal." "A fitting abode, I suppose, for those who call themselves gods." "Call themselves?" asked Yama. "You are wrong, Sam, Godhood is more than a name. It is a condition of being. One does not achieve it merely by being immortal, for even the lowliest laborer in the fields may achieve continuity of existence. Is it then the conditioning of an Aspect? No. Any competent hypnotist can play games with the self-image. Is it the raising up of an Attribute? Of course not. I can design machines more powerful and more accurate than any faculty a man may cultivate. Being a god is the quality of being able to be yourself to such an extent that your passions correspond with the forces of the universe, so that those who look upon you know this without hearing your name spoken. Some ancient poet said that the world is full of echoes and correspondences. Another wrote a long poem of an inferno, wherein each man suffered a torture which coincided in nature with those forces which had ruled his life. Being a god is being able to recognize within one's self these things that are important, and then to strike the single note that brings them into alignment with everything else that exists. Then, beyond morals or logic or esthetics, one is wind or fire, the sea, the mountains, rain, the sun or the stars, the flight of an arrow, the end of a day, the clasp of love. One rules through one's ruling passions. Those who look upon gods then say, without even knowing their names, 'He is Fire. She is Dance. He is Destruction. She is Love.' So, to reply to your statement, they do not call themselves gods. Everyone else does, though, everyone who beholds them." "So they play that on their fascist banjos, eh?" "You choose the wrong adjective." "You've already used up all the others." "It appears that our minds will never meet on this subject." "If someone asks you why you're oppressing a world and you reply with a lot of poetic crap, no. I guess there can't be a meeting of minds." "Then let us choose another subject for conversation." "I do look upon you, though, and say, 'He is Death.'" Yama did not reply. "Odd ruling passion. I've heard that you were old before you were young . . ." "You know that is true." "You were a mechanical prodigy and a weapons master. You lost your boyhood in a burst of flame, and you became an old man that same day. Did death become your ruling passion in that moment? Or was it earlier? Or later?" "It does not matter," said Yama. "Do you serve the gods because you believe what you have said to me-- or because you hate the larger portion of humanity?" "I did not lie to you." "Then Death is an idealist. Amusing." "Not so." "Or could it be. Lord Yama, that neither guess is correct? That your ruling passion-- " "You've mentioned her name before," said Yama, "in the same speech wherein you likened her to a disease. You were wrong then and you are still wrong. I do not care to hear that sermon over again, and since I am not at the moment sinking in quicksand, I will not." "Peace," said Sam. "But tell me, do the ruling passions of the gods ever change?" Yama smiled. "The goddess of dance was once the god of war. So it would seem that anything can change." "When I have died the real death," said Sam, "then