Flight In Yiktor.txt

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;       void, cold. Fold in the legs÷do not move.
',       Cold÷pain÷the big one was using the prod again÷pain.
Stand÷jump÷but it is cold÷so÷÷cold.

The small body edged between the two large woven bas-
I    kets uttered a mewing cry. Then one claw hand flew to
ð    provide a gag against any more sound. But shivers continued
|    to shake the too thin body.

Cold÷where is cold÷where is pain?

^       The curled body jerked as if a tormenting lash had been
i    applied to the wrinkled greenish skin only too visible through
'.    the tatters which were not true clothing. No one had shouted
'    those words. Yet they had come as clear and loud as if
Russtif his ugly self were standing over the hider. In the
head÷not in the ear. Talking in the head!
^      The small one tried to wedge even more out of sight, and
;    now the shudders of fear were worse.
;       Where is cold? Where is pain?

The demand came again, imperative÷to be obeyed.
Wrinkled hands covered ears, but that did not keep the ques-
tions from opening like dry and curled leaves under the touch

1

2            .     Andre Norton

of water÷an opening in the head. Once more the body

jerked÷

Pain÷Russtif was using the prod on the other side of the

tent wall, using it with the skill of a trained showman to stir
up a sulky or frightened beast. And, like the words out of the
air, the pain reached the lurker with a hot burst that brought a
second whimper.

"Here!"
There were legs beyond the crack where the small one

crouched÷two pairs of them in space boots.

"No harm÷there is nothing to fear."

A pallid tongue licked cracked lips. But there was some-
thing that made the fear less, lulled it a little. Beyond the
wall Russtif growled and spat threats. His anger and love of
tormenting that which could not fight back was like a spurt of

fire.

"Nothing to fear." Again the words spun into a mind that

had to listen even if the ears were stoppered against sound.
Nor did either pair of boots move toward or away from the
lurker. Crouch, wait for a hand to reach down and jerk out
the small body, perhaps cuff hard for being there÷for exist-
ing at all.

But this was not Russtif and the boots did not move.
Slowly the head, covered with dry tangles of thick hair, came
up, drawn against all will by the new note÷the very strange
note÷in that mind voice. Large eyes looked up and out.

Very far from Russtif these two. There were always strang-
ers about, some of them as odd in their way as Russtif's
imprisoned performers. So it was not their difference, rather
the way they stood shoulder to shoulder looking down. Not
with disgust nor cruel curiosity but in another way the lurker

could not understand.

"Do not be afraid." It was the male who spoke now,
uttering words in the trade lingo that was common speech all

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through this quarter which catered to the entertainment of
ship people.

He was very fair of skin and his hair was white÷though
he was not an old man. Those eyebrows so pale even against
his skin ran up at the temples to join the hairline, and his
eyes were green, luminous as if there were tiny fires behind
each.

"There is nothing to fear." That was the other one, the
female, who spoke now. Beside the fairness of her compan-
ion she was a fire glowing÷hair as red as one of Russtifs oil
lamps was braided and looped about her head to look like a
heavy crown. She was÷

The small body uncoiled. Claw hands went out to the big
basket and drew the hunched body up as far as nature would
let it. For it was a very crooked body, hunched forward by a
misshapen burden at shoulder level, so that the head had to
be raised to an uncomfortable angle to see the other two at
all.

Arms and legs were thin, their greenish skin encrusted
with dirt. The mass of uncombed hair was black, gray with
dust at places, but black underneath.

"A child." It was the spaceman who said that aloud.
"What÷"

The woman made a gesture with one hand. There was a
listening look about her. Could she hear Toggor, too?

"This one, yes," she said. "But also another. Is that not
so, little one?"

The answer was pulled out by the intent gaze of her
eyes÷coming before thought muffled it with caution.

"He÷Russtif÷he would make Toggor play. It is cold÷
too cold. Toggor hurts from the cold÷from the pain whip."

"So?"

She stooped to set a hand beneath the chin of the small,
bent and maimed figure. From her touch, from the tips of her

4                   Andre Norton

fingers, something warm and good flooded right into the

shaking body.

"Toggor is what?"
"My÷my friend." That was not quite the way of it either,

but they were the closest words could be found.

There was a hiss of breath from the man; the woman's lips
fitted tightly together. She was angry÷not like Russtif, all
noise and quick to aim a blow÷but neither was her anger

turned toward the one before her.

"We may have found what we seek." She spoke above

the bowed head to her companion. "And who are you?"

Again warmth flowed from her.

"The Dung one." Long ago had that name of the lowest

been accepted. There was no other. "I run errands. I do what
I can." A pride which was seldom felt made shoulders hunch

a little higher.

"For Russtif?" The man indicated the tent behind.

Dung shook his head. "Russtif has Jusas and Sem."

"Yet you are here."
"It is Toggor. I÷I bring him÷" The claw hand rumbled

in the front of the single ragged garment. Once more truth
was pulled forth by that warmth of the other. "I bring this."
He held an unwholesome-looking lump of stuff. "Russtif
does not feed Toggor enough. He wants him to fight for
food. Toggor will die"÷the sharply pointed chin quivered

÷"there!"

They could all hear the crackle of the prod and a rising

mutter of obscenities from beyond the tent wall.

"Toggor fights and they bet on him. Russtif never had so

good a clawed one before."

"So," the man said, "let us see this fighter, Maelen. Also

Russtif. He interests me."
The woman nodded. She dropped her hand from beneath

the pointed chin to lace a hold in the tatters which crossed the
bowed shoulder hump.

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What did she want with Dung?

"Come." Her hold unchanging, she urged him forward
just behind the man who walked with the swing of one who
has spent most of his years in space, and who was now
heading toward the entrance to Russtif's domain at the other
end of the tent. Whether or not the lurker wished to accom-
pany them was not asked. There was no breaking that hold
which was drawing Dung along. Somehow the thought of
fighting for freedom had vanished.

There was the thick and nasty smell which was Russtif s÷
one of uncleaned cages with weak and sickening captives÷to
fill the nose as soon as they had pushed past the open flap.
Things rustled and squeaked until Russtif roared and the
silence of fear snapped down.

He was a big man who had once been proud of his strength
but now was entombed in rolls of greasy fat. His bare skull
shone with oil in the light of the lantern he had set on the
table where there was also a cage÷Toggor's place of prison.
Now he looked up with a sullen scowl. Then that changed,
by a visible effort, into a showman's ingratiating grin.

"Gentle Fern, Gentle Homo, how can I serve you?" His
back was to the table now, and he had dropped the prod on
it. It was then he caught sight of Dung.

"Has the trash made some trouble?" He took a ponderous
step forward, his hand lifted as if to aim a blow at the

hunchback.

"What trouble is this one noted for making?" asked the

woman.
"A thief, a piece of walking dung, a monster like that?

Why, whatever comes to hand to upset honest people÷"
"Such as Beastmerchant Russtif perhaps?" asked the man.
Russtifs smile slipped and slid but still he caught it.

"Such as me and everyone else. 1 caught this sewer scum

tampering with a cage just two eves ago. Luck was with him

6                   Andre Norton

then, or else he would have smarted for a good lessoning.
Trash should be thrown away and not come to annoy others."
"Opening a cage? Is perhaps the cage that one?" The man

pointed to the one on the table.

Russtifs smile did vanish then. With the hand in sight he
made a fist which might have fallen like a hammer blow on

the hunchback.

"Why do you wonder that. Gentle Homo? Has the trash

been spewing out some vomit that you would believe?"

"You have a fighting smux is what 1 believe," the woman
cut in, and Russtif hastened to draw on his showman's smirk

again.

"The best. Gentle Fern, the best! There have been stellars

wagered on this one÷not just market coppers÷and stellars
won!" He moved along the edge of the table now so they

could better view his possession.

The woman stooped a little so she could see most of what
looked like a ball of hairy rags squatting in the center of the
cage. Under her hold Dung gave a quick start and then stood
very still. She was mind speaking to Toggor. The smux did
not answer. It was as if he did not or would not listen.

"These be÷good." Unknowingly at first. Dung's mind
reached out to become a part of that other steady stream of

reassurance.
Toggor's answer never came in words such as those that

had struck Dung. Rather it was feeling: pain, fear, and
sometimes but very seldom, a rough kind of contentment.
Thus Dung thought "good," even "help," which Toggor
somehow seized upon avidly, as if Dung had indeed flung

open his place of hopeless captivity.

The handful of legs folded tightly to the haired body was
visible. Those vicious-looking claws at the end of the first four
were clamped together as the creature answered Dung's reas-
surance rather than the more concise broadcast of the woman.

The smux was no tiling of beauty. Had he grown larger he

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might have been such a monster...
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