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The Face of the Waters
The Face of the Waters
The Face of the Waters
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The Face of the Waters

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“This is hard sci-fi done right.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review). “One of the enduring classics of science fiction.” —George R.R. Martin

Deep in the future, natives of the planet Hydros, an ocean planet whose inhabitants live on artificial floating islands, force the entire human population of the island of Sorve into exile, leaving the outcasts to ponder their fate, their past, and the true purpose of humanity.

After a human offense against the natives of Hydros, the human population of the island of Sorve are ordered to leave. Forbidden on all other islands, in a flotilla of ships they seek the semi-mythical island of the Face of the Waters. During their journey they are forced to learn more about themselves, leading to questions about both religion and the purpose of Man. At the end of the novel Robert Silverberg addresses what it means to be human, and explores what unites and divides humanity.

This new edition of THE FACE OF THE WATERS, published with the author's full support, brings Silverberg’s brilliant novel back into the must-read science-fiction canon, after decades of being out of print.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 11, 2022
ISBN9781953103284
The Face of the Waters
Author

Robert Silverberg

Robert Silverberg’s first published story appeared in 1954 when he was a sophomore at Columbia University. Since then, he has won multiple Nebula, Hugo, and Locus awards. He has been nominated for both awards more times than any other writer. In 1999 he was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame, and in 2004 the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America gave him their Grand Master Award for career achievement. He remains one of the most imaginative and versatile writers in science fiction.

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    The Face of the Waters - Robert Silverberg

    PART ONE

    Sorve Island

    1

    IN THE NIGHT HAD COME the pure, simple conviction that he was the man of destiny, the one who could turn the trick that would make everything ever so much simpler and better for the seventy-eight humans who lived on the artificial island of Sorve on the watery world called Hydros.

    It was a cockeyed idea and Lawler knew it. But it had wrecked his sleep, and none of his usual methods seemed to work to fix that, not meditation, not multiplication tables, not even a few pink drops of the algae-derived tranquilizer on which he was perhaps becoming a little too dependent. From a little after midnight until somewhere close to dawn he lay awake, possessed by his brilliant, heroic, cockeyed idea. And then at last, in the small hours of the morning when the sky was still dark, before any patients could show up to complicate his day and ruin the purity of his sudden new vision, Lawler left the vaargh near the middle of the island where he lived by himself and went down to the sea-wall to see whether the Gillies really had managed to start up their new power plant during the night.

    He would congratulate them profusely if they had. He would call forth his whole vocabulary of sign-language gestures to tell them how impressed he was with their awesome technological prowess. He would praise them for having transformed the entire quality of life on Hydros—not just on Sorve, but on the whole planet—in a single masterly stroke.

    And then he would say, My father, the great Dr. Bernat Lawler whom you all remember so well, saw this moment coming. ‘One day,’ he would often remark to me when I was a boy, ‘our friends the Dwellers will achieve the dependable production of a steady supply of electricity. And then a new age will dawn here, when Dweller and human will work side by side in heartfelt cooperation—’

    And so on and so on and so on. Subtly intertwining his congratulations with an expression of the need for harmony between the two races. Eventually working his way around to the explicit proposition that Hydran and human should put aside all past coolness and at last begin to toil together in the name of further technological progress. Evoking the sacred name of the late beloved Dr. Bernat Lawler as often as he could, reminding them how in his day he had labored to the full extent of his formidable medical skills on behalf of Dweller and human alike, performing many a miracle of healing, devoting himself unselfishly to the needs of both island communities—laying it on thicker and thicker, making the air throb with emotion, until the Gillies, teary-eyed with newfound interspecies affection, yielded gladly to his casual suggestion that a good way to start the new era off would be to allow the humans to adapt the power plant so that it could produce a supply of fresh water as well as electricity. And then his underlying proposal: the humans would design and build the desalinization unit by themselves, the condenser, the conveyer pipes, the complete item, and hand it over to the Gillies. Here: just plug it in. It costs you nothing and we won’t be dependent on rain catch for our freshwater supply any longer. And we will all be the best of friends forever, you Dwellers and we humans.

    That was the fantasy that had pulled Lawler from his sleep. He wasn’t usually given to entangling himself in such farfetched enterprises as this one. His years as a doctor—not the medical genius that his father had been, but a hardworking and reasonably effective physician, who did a pretty good job, considering the difficulties—had led him to be realistic and practical about most things. But somehow he had convinced himself this night that he was the only person on the island who might actually be able to talk the Gillies into letting water-desalinization equipment be tacked onto their power plant. Yes. He would succeed where all others had failed.

    A fat chance, Lawler knew. But in the small hours of the night chances sometimes tend to look fatter than they do in the clear light of morning.

    Such electricity as the island had now came from clumsy, inefficient chemical batteries, piles of zinc and copper disks separated by strips of crawlweed paper soaked in brine. The Gillies—the Hydrans, the Dwellers, the dominant beings of the island and of the world where Lawler had spent his entire life—had been working on a better means of electrical generation as long as Lawler could remember, and by now, so the scuttlebutt in town had it, the new power plant was almost ready to go on-line—today, tomorrow, next week for sure. If the Gillies actually could manage to achieve that, it would be a tremendous thing for both species. They had already agreed, not very graciously, to let the humans make use of some of the new electricity, which everyone admitted was altogether terrific of them. But it would be even more terrific for the seventy-eight humans who scratched out narrow little subsistence-level lives on the hard narrow little place that was Sorve if the Gillies would relent and let the plant be used for water desalinization also, so that the humans wouldn’t have to depend on the random and infrequent mercies of Sorve rainfall patterns for their fresh water. It must have been obvious even to the Gillies that life would become ever so much easier for their human neighbors if they could count on a reliable and unlimited supply of water.

    But of course the Gillies had given no indication so far that they cared about that. They had never shown any particular interest in making anything easier for the handful of humans who lived in their midst. Fresh water might be vital to human needs, but it didn’t matter a damn to the Gillies. What the humans might need, or want, or hope to have, was no concern of the Gillies. And it was the vision of changing all that by single-handed persuasion that had cost Lawler his sleep this night.

    What the hell: nothing ventured, nothing gained.

    ON THIS TROPICAL NIGHT LAWLER was barefoot and wore only a twist of yellow cloth made from water-lettuce fronds around his waist. The air was warm and heavy and the sea was calm. The island, that webwork of living and semi-living and formerly living tissue drifting on the breast of the vast world-spanning ocean, swayed almost imperceptibly beneath his feet. Like all the inhabited islands of Hydros, Sorve was rootless, a free-floating wanderer, moving wherever the currents and winds and the occasional tidal surge cared to carry it. Lawler was able to feel the tightly woven withes of the flooring giving and spreading as he walked, and he heard the sea lapping at them just a couple of meters below. But he moved easily, lightly, his long lean body attuning itself automatically to the rhythms of the island’s movements. They were the most natural things in the world to him.

    The softness of the night was deceptive. Most times of the year Sorve was something other than a soft place to live. Its climate alternated between periods of hot-and-dry and cold-and-wet, with only the sweet little summer interlude when Sorve was drifting in mild, humid equatorial latitudes to provide a brief illusion of comfort and ease. This was the good time of the year, now. Food was abundant and the air was sweet. The islanders rejoiced in it. The rest of the year life was much more of a struggle.

    Unhurriedly Lawler made his way around the reservoir and down the ramp to the lower terrace. It was a gentle slope from here to the island’s rim. He went past the scattered buildings of the shipyard from which Nid Delagard ran his maritime empire and the indistinct domed shapes that were the waterfront factories, in which metals—nickel, iron, cobalt, vanadium, tin—were extracted from the tissues of low-phylum sea-creatures by slow, inefficient processes. It was hard to make out anything clearly, but after some forty years of living on this one small island Lawler had no trouble getting around any part of the place in the dark.

    The big two-story shed that housed the power plant was just to his right and a little way ahead, down at the water’s edge. He headed toward it.

    There was no hint of morning yet. The sky was a deep black. Some nights Sunrise, the sister planet of Hydros, gleamed in the heavens like a great blue-green eye, but tonight Sunrise was absent on the other side of the world, casting its bright glow on the mysterious waters of the unexplored far hemisphere. One of the three moons was visible, though, a tiny point of hard white light off to the east, close to the horizon. And stars shimmered everywhere, cascades of glittering silver powder scattered across the blackness, a ubiquitous dusting of brightnesses. That infinite horde of distant suns formed a dazzling backdrop for the one mighty foreground constellation, the brilliant Hydros Cross—two blazing rows of stars that arched across the sky at right angles to each other like a double cincture, one spanning the world from pole to pole, the other marching steadfastly along above the equator.

    For Lawler these were the stars of home, the only stars he had ever seen. He was Hydros-born, fifth generation. He had never been to any other world and never would. Sorve Island was as familiar to him as his own skin. And yet he sometimes tumbled without warning into frightening moments of confusion when all sense of familiarity dissolved and he felt like a stranger here: times when it seemed to him that he had just arrived on Hydros that very day, flung down out of space like a falling star, a castaway from his true native place far away. Sometimes he saw the lost mother world of Earth shining in his mind, bright as any star, its great blue seas divided by the enormous golden-green land-masses that were called continents, and he thought, This is my home, this is my true home. Lawler wondered if any of the other humans on Hydros ever experienced something like that now and again. Probably so, though no one ever spoke of it. They were all strangers here, after all. This world belonged to the Gillies. He and everyone like him here lived on it as uninvited guests.

    HE HAD REACHED THE BRINK of the sea now. The familiar railing, rough, woody-textured like everything else on this artificial island that had neither soil nor vegetation, came up to meet his grasp as he clambered to the top of the sea-wall.

    Here at the wall the slope in the island’s topography, which ran gradually downhill from the built-up high ground in the interior and the ocean bulwark beyond it, reversed itself sharply and the flooring turned upward to form a meniscus, a crescent rim, that shielded the inner streets against all but the most severe of tidal surges. Grasping the rail, leaning forward over the dark lapping water, Lawler stood staring outward for a moment, as though offering himself to the all-surrounding ocean.

    Even in the darkness he had a complete sense of the commashaped island’s form and his exact place along its shore. The island was eight kilometers long from tip to tip, and about a kilometer across at its widest point, measuring from the bayfront to the summit of the rear bulwark that held back the open sea. He was near the center, the innermost gulf. To his right and left the island’s two curving arms stretched outward before him, the rounded one where the Gillies lived, and the narrow tapering one where the island’s little handful of human settlers clustered close together.

    Right in front of him, enclosed by that pair of unequal arms, was the bay that was the living heart of the island. The Gillie builders of the island had created an artificial bottom there, an underwater shelf of interlaced wood-kelp timbers attached to the mainland from arm to arm so that the island always would have a shallow, fertile lagoon adjacent to it, a captive pond. The wild menacing predators that haunted the open sea never entered the bay: perhaps the Gillies had made some treaty with them long ago. A lacing of spongy bottom-dwelling night-algae, needing no light, bound the underside of the bay floor together, ever protecting and renewing it with their steady stubborn growth. Above that was sand, washed in by storms from the great unknown ocean floor farther out. And above that a thicket of useful aquatic plants of a hundred different species or more, in which all manner of sea-creatures swarmed. Shellfish of many sorts inhabited its lower reaches, filtering seawater through their soft tissues and concentrating valuable minerals within themselves for the use of the islanders. Sea-worms and serpents moved among them. Plump and tender fish grazed there. Just now Lawler could see a pod of huge phosphorescent creatures moving about out there, emanating pulsating waves of blue-violet light: the great beasts known as mouths, perhaps, or perhaps they were platforms, but it was still too dark to tell. And beyond the bright green water of the bay was the great ocean sea, rolling to the horizon and past it, holding the entire world in its grasp, a gloved hand gripping a ball. Lawler, staring toward it, felt for the millionth time the weight of its immensity, its thrust and power.

    He looked now toward the power plant, solitary and massive on its little snub-nosed promontory sticking out into the bay.

    They hadn’t finished it after all. The ungainly building, shrouded in festoons of woven straw matting to shield it from the rain, still was silent and dark. A few shadowy figures were shuffling about in front of it. They had the unmistakable slope-shouldered shape of Gillies.

    The concept of the power plant was that it would generate electricity by taking advantage of temperature differentials in the sea. Dann Henders, who was as close to an engineer as anyone was on Sorve, had explained it to Lawler after extracting a sketchy description of the project from one of the Gillies. Warm seawater from the surface level was pulled in through vanes and entered a vacuum chamber, where its boiling point would be greatly reduced. The water, boiling violently, was supposed to yield low-density steam that would drive the turbines of the generator. Cold seawater, pumped up from the deeper levels beyond the bay, was going to be used then to condense the steam into water again, and it would be returned to the sea through discharge outlets halfway around the island from here.

    The Gillies had constructed practically the whole thing—pipes, pumps, vanes, turbines, condensers, the vacuum chamber itself—out of the various organic plastics they produced from algae and other water plants. Apparently they had used scarcely any metal in the design at all, not surprising in view of the difficulty of obtaining metals on Hydros. It was all very ingenious, especially considering that the Gillies weren’t notably technological-minded, as intelligent galactic species went. Some exceptional genius among them must have come up with the idea. Genius or not, though, they were said to be having an ungodly time making the operation work, and it was yet to produce its first watt. Most of the humans wondered if it ever would. It might have been a whole lot faster and simpler for the Gillies, Lawler thought, if they had let Dann Henders or one of the other engineering-oriented humans sit in on the design of it. But of course the Gillies weren’t in the habit of seeking advice from the unwanted strangers with whom they grudgingly shared their island, even when it might be to their advantage. They had made an exception only when an outbreak of finrot was decimating their young, and Lawler’s saintly father had come to them with a vaccine. Which had been many years ago, though, and whatever good will the former Dr. Lawler’s services had engendered among the Gillies had long since evaporated, leaving no apparent residue behind.

    That the plant still didn’t seem to be working yet was something of a setback for the grand plan that had come to Lawler in the night.

    What now? Go and talk to them anyway? Make your florid little speech, grease the Gillies up with some noble rhetoric, follow through with tonight’s visionary impulse before daybreak robs it of whatever plausibility it might have had?

    On behalf of the entire human community of Sorve Island, I, who as you know am the son of the late beloved Dr. Bernat Lawler who served you so well in the time of the fin-rot epidemic, wish to congratulate you on the imminent accomplishment of your ingenious and magnificently beneficial—

    Even though the fulfillment of this splendid dream may perhaps be still some days away, I have come on behalf of the entire human community of Sorve Island to extend to you our profoundest joy at the deep implications we see for the transformation of the quality of life on the island that we share, once you have at last succeeded in—

    At this time of rejoicing in our community over the historic achievement that is soon to be—

    Enough, he thought. He began to make his way out onto the powerplant promontory.

    AS HE DREW NEAR THE plant he took care to make plenty of noise, coughing, slapping his hands together, whistling a little tuneless tune. Gillies didn’t like humans to come upon them unexpectedly.

    He was still about fifteen meters from the power plant when he saw two Gillies shuffling out to meet him.

    In the darkness they looked titanic. They loomed high above him, formless in the dark, their little yellow eyes glowing bright as lanterns in their tiny heads.

    Lawler made the greeting-sign, elaborately over-gesturing so that there could be no doubt of his friendly intentions.

    One of the Gillies replied with a prolonged snorting vrooom that didn’t sound friendly at all.

    They were big upright bipedal creatures, two and a half meters high, covered with deep layers of rubbery black bristles that hung in dense shaggy cascades. Their heads were absurdly small, little dome-shaped structures that sat atop huge shoulders, and from there almost down to the ground their torsos sloped outward to form massive, bulky, ungainly bodies. It was generally assumed by humans that their immense cavernous chests must contain their brains as well as their hearts and lungs. Certainly those little heads had no room for them.

    Very likely the Gillies had been aquatic mammals once. You could see that in the gracelessness with which they moved on land and the ease with which they swam. They spent nearly as much time in the water as on land. Once Lawler had watched a Gillie swim from one side of the bay to the other without breaking the surface for breath; the journey must have taken twenty minutes. Their legs, short and stumpy, were obviously adapted from flippers. Their arms too were flipper-like—thick, powerful little limbs that they held very close to their sides. Their hands, equipped with three long fingers and an opposable thumb, were extraordinarily broad and fell naturally into deep cups well suited for pushing great volumes of water. In some unlikely and astounding act of self-redefinition these beings’ ancestors had climbed up out of the sea, millions of years ago, fashioning island homes for themselves woven out of sea-born materials and buffered by elaborate barricades against the ceaseless tidal surges that circled their planet. But they still were creatures of the ocean.

    Lawler stepped up as close to the two Gillies as he dared and signaled I-am-Lawler-the-doctor.

    When Gillies spoke it was by squeezing their arms inward against their sides, compressing air through deep gill-shaped slits in their chests to produce booming organ-like tones. Humans had never found a way to imitate Gillie sounds in a way that Gillies understood, nor did the Gillies show any interest in learning how to speak the human language. Perhaps its sounds were as impossible for them as Gillie sounds were for humans. But some communication between the races was necessary. Over the years a sign language had developed. The Gillies spoke to humans in Gillie; the humans replied in signs.

    The Gillie who had spoken before made the snort again, and added a peculiarly hostile snuffling whistling sound. It held up its flippers in what Lawler recognized as a posture of anger. No, not anger: rage. Extreme rage.

    Hey, Lawler thought. What’s up? What have I done?

    There wasn’t any doubt about the Gillie’s fury. Now it was making little brushing movements with its flippers that seemed plainly to say, Get away, clear out, get your ass out of here fast.

    Perplexed, Lawler signaled I-mean-no-intrusion. I-come-to-parley.

    The snort again, louder, deeper. It reverberated through the flooring of the path and Lawler felt the vibration in the soles of his feet.

    Gillies had been known to kill human beings who had annoyed them, and even some who hadn’t: a troublesome occasional propensity for inexplicable violence. It didn’t seem deliberate—just an irritated backhand swipe of a flipper, a quick contemptuous kick, a little thoughtless trampling. They were very large and very strong and they didn’t seem to understand, or care, how fragile human bodies could be.

    The other Gillie, the bigger of the two, took a step or two in Lawler’s direction. Its breath came with heavy, wheezing, unsociable intensity. It gave Lawler a look that he interpreted as one of aloof, absentminded hostility.

    Lawler signaled surprise and dismay. He signaled friendliness again. He signaled continued eagerness to talk.

    The first Gillie’s fiery eyes were blazing with unmistakable wrath.

    Out. Away. Go.

    No ambiguities there. Useless to attempt any further pacifying palaver. Clearly they didn’t want him anywhere near their power plant.

    All right, he thought. Have it your own way.

    He had never been brushed off like this by Gillies before; but to take time now to remind them that he was their old friend the island doctor, or that his father had once made himself very useful to them, would be dangerous idiocy. One slap of that flipper could knock him into the bay with a broken spine.

    He backed away, keeping a close eye on them, intending to leap backward into the water if they made a threatening move toward him.

    But the Gillies stayed where they were, glowering at him as he executed his slinking retreat. When he had reached the main path again they turned and went back inside their building.

    So much for that, Lawler thought.

    THE WEIRD REBUFF STUNG HIM deeply. He stood for a time by the bayfront railing, letting the tension of the strange encounter ebb from him. His great scheme of negotiating a human-Hydran treaty this night, he saw all too clearly now, had been mere romantic nonsense. It went whistling out of Lawler’s mind like the vapor it was, and a quick flash of embarrassment sent waves of heat running through his skin for a moment.

    Well, then. Back to the vaargh to wait for morning, he supposed.

    A grating bass voice behind him said, Lawler?

    CAUGHT BY SURPRISE, LAWLER WHIRLED abruptly, his heart thundering. He squinted into the graying darkness. He could just barely make out the figure of a short, stocky man with a heavy shock of long, greasy-looking hair standing in the shadows ten or twelve meters to the inland side of him.

    Delagard? That you?

    The stocky man stepped forward. Delagard, yes. The self-appointed top dog of the island, the chief mover and shaker. What the hell was he doing skulking around here at this hour?

    Delagard always seemed to be up to something tricky, even when he wasn’t. He was short but not small, a powerful figure built low to the ground, thick-necked, heavy-shouldered, paunchy. He wore an ankle-length sarong that left his broad shaggy chest bare. Even in the darkness the garment glowed in luminous ripples of scarlet and turquoise and hot pink. Delagard was the richest man in the settlement, whatever that meant on a world where money itself had no meaning, where there was hardly anything you could spend it on. He was Hydros-born, like Lawler, but he owned businesses on several islands and moved around a lot. Delagard was a few years older than Lawler, perhaps forty-eight or fifty.

    You’re out and about pretty early this morning, doc, Delagard said.

    I generally am. You know that. Lawler’s voice was tighter than usual. It’s a good time of day.

    If you like to be alone, yes. Delagard nodded toward the power plant. Checking it out, are you?

    Lawler shrugged. He would sooner throttle himself with his own hands than let Delagard have any inkling of the grandiose heroic fatuity that he had spent this long night engendering.

    Delagard said, They tell me it’ll be on-line tomorrow.

    I’ve been hearing that for a week.

    No. No, tomorrow they’ll really have it working. After all this time. They’ve generated power already, low level, and today they’ll be bringing it up to capacity.

    How do you know?

    I know, Delagard said. The Gillies don’t like me, but they tell me things, anyway. In the course of business, you understand. He came up alongside Lawler and clapped his hand down on the sea-wall railing in a confident, hearty way, as if this island were his kingdom and the railing his scepter. You haven’t asked me yet why I’m up this early.

    No. I haven’t.

    Looking for you, is why. First I went over to your vaargh, but you weren’t there. Then I looked down to the lower terrace and I caught sight of somebody moving around on the path heading down here and figured it might be you, and I came down here to find out if I was right.

    Lawler smiled sourly. Nothing in Delagard’s tone indicated that he had seen what had taken place out on the power-plant promontory.

    Very early to be paying a call on me, if it’s a professional thing, Lawler said. Or a social call, for that matter. Not that you would. He pointed to the horizon. The moon was still gleaming there. No sign of the first light of morning was visible yet. The Cross, even more brilliant than usual with Sunrise not in the sky, seemed to throb and pulse against the intense blackness. I generally don’t start my office hours before daybreak. You know that, Nid.

    A special problem, said Delagard. Couldn’t wait. Best taken care of while it’s still dark.

    Medical problem, is it?

    Medical problem, yes.

    Yours?

    Yes. But I’m not the patient.

    I don’t understand you.

    You will. Just come with me.

    Where? Lawler said.

    Shipyard.

    What the hell. Delagard seemed very strange this morning. It was probably something important. All right, said Lawler. Let’s get going, then.

    WITHOUT ANOTHER WORD DELAGARD TURNED and started along the path that ran just inside the sea-wall, heading toward the shipyard. Lawler followed him in silence. The path here followed another little promontory parallel to the one on which the power-plant structure stood, and as they moved out on it they had a clear view of the plant. Gillies were going in and out, carrying armloads of equipment.

    Those slippery fuckers, Delagard muttered. I hope their plant blows up in their faces when they start it up. If they ever get it started up at all.

    They rounded the far side of the promontory and entered the little inlet where Delagard’s shipyard stood. It was the biggest human enterprise on Sorve by far, employing more than a dozen people. Delagard’s ships constantly went back and forth between the various islands where he did business, carrying trade goods from place to place, the modest merchandise turned out by the various cottage industries that humans operated: fishhooks and chisels and mallets, bottles and jars, articles of clothing, paper and ink, hand-copied books, packaged foods, and such. The Delagard fleet also was the chief distributor of metals and plastics and chemicals and other such essential commodities that the various islands so painstakingly produced. Every few years Delagard added another island to his chain of commerce. From the very beginning of human occupation of Hydros, Delagards had been running entrepreneurial businesses here, but Nid Delagard had expanded the family operation far beyond its earlier levels.

    This way, Delagard said.

    A strand of pearly dawnlight broke suddenly across the eastern sky. The stars dimmed and the little moon on the horizon began to fade from sight as the day started to come on. The bay was taking on its emerald morning color. Lawler, following Delagard down the path into the shipyard, glanced out into it and had his first clear view of the giant phosphorescent creatures that had been cruising around out there all night. He saw now that they were mouths: immense flattened baglike creatures, close to a hundred meters in length, that traveled through the sea with their colossal jaws agape, swallowing everything that lay before them. Once a month or so, a pod of ten or twelve of them turned up in Sorve harbor and disgorged the contents of their stomachs, still alive, into huge wickerwork nets kept there for that purpose by the Gillies, who harvested them at leisure over the weeks that followed. It was a good deal for the Gillies, Lawler thought—tons and tons of free food. But it was hard to see what was in the deal for the mouths.

    Delagard said, chuckling, There’s my competition. If I could only kill off the fucking mouths, I could be hauling in all sorts of stuff myself to sell to the Gillies.

    And what would they pay you for it with?

    The same things they use to pay me now for the things I sell them, said Delagard scornfully. Useful elements. Cadmium, cobalt, copper, tin, arsenic, iodine, all the stuff this goddamn ocean is made of. But in very much bigger quantities than the dribs and drabs they dole out now, or that we’re capable of extracting ourselves. We get the mouths out of the picture somehow, and then I supply the Gillies with their meat, and they load me up with all kinds of valuable commodities in return. A very nice deal, let me tell you. Within five years I’d make them dependent on me for their entire food supply. There’d be a fortune in it.

    I thought you were worth a fortune already. How much more do you need?

    You just don’t understand, do you?

    I guess not, Lawler said. I’m only a doctor, not a businessman. Where’s this patient of yours?

    Easy, easy. I’m taking you as fast as I can, doc. Delagard gestured seaward with a quick brushing movement of his hand. You see down there, by Jolly’s Pier? Where that little fishing boat is? That’s where we’re going.

    Jolly’s Pier was a finger of rotting kelp-timber sticking out thirty meters or so beyond the sea-wall, at the far end of the shipyard. Though it was faded and warped, battered by tides and nibbled by drillworms and raspers, the pier was still more or less intact, a venerable artifact of a vanished era. A crazy old sailor had constructed it, long dead now, a grizzled weird relic of a man whose claim it had been to have journeyed solo completely around the world—even into the Empty Sea, where no one in his right mind would go, even to the borders of the Face of the Waters itself, that immense forbidden island far away, the great planetary mystery that apparently not even the Gillies dared to approach. Lawler could remember sitting out here at the end of Jolly’s Pier when he was a boy, listening to the old man spinning his wild, flamboyant tales of implausible, miraculous adventure. That was before Delagard had built his shipyard here. But for some reason Delagard had preserved the bedraggled pier. He must have liked to listen to the old man’s yarns too, once upon a time.

    One of Delagard’s fishing coracles was tied up alongside it, bobbing on the bay swells. On the pier near the place where the coracle was moored was a shed that looked old enough to have been Jolly’s house, though it wasn’t. Delagard, pausing outside it, looked up fiercely into Lawler’s eyes and said in a soft husky growl, You understand, doc, whatever you see inside here is absolutely confidential.

    Spare me the melodrama, Nid.

    I mean it. You’ve got to promise you won’t talk. It won’t just be my ass if this gets out. It could screw us all.

    If you don’t trust me, get some other doctor. But you might have some trouble finding one around here.

    Delagard gave him a surly look. Then he produced a chilly smile. All right. Whatever you say. Just come on in.

    He pushed open the door of the shed. It was utterly dark inside, and unusually humid. Lawler smelled the tart salty aroma of the sea, strong and concentrated as though Delagard had been bottling it in here, and something else, sour and pungent and disagreeable, that he didn’t recognize at all. He heard faint grunting noises, slow and rasping, like the sighs of the damned. Delagard fumbled with something just within the door that made a rough, bristly sound. After a moment he struck a match, and Lawler saw that the other man was holding a bundle of dried seaweed that had been tied at one end to form a torch, which he had ignited. A dim, smoky light spread like an orange stain through the shed.

    There they are, Delagard said.

    The middle of the shed was taken up by a crude rectangular storage tank of pitch-caulked wickerwork, perhaps three meters long and two wide, filled almost to the brim with seawater. Lawler went over to it and looked in. Three of the sleek aquatic mammals known as divers were lying in it, side by side, jammed close together like fish in a tin. Their powerful fins were contorted at impossible angles and their heads, rising stiffly above the surface of the water, were thrown back in an awkward, agonized way. The strange acrid smell Lawler had picked up at the doorway was theirs. It no longer seemed so unpleasant now. The terrible grunting noises were coming from the diver on the left. They were grunts of purest pain.

    Oh, shit, Lawler said quietly. He thought he understood the Gillies’ rage now. Their blazing eyes, that menacing snort. A quick hot burst of anger went rippling through him, setting up a brief twitching in his cheek. Shit! He looked back toward the other man in disgust, revulsion, and something close to hatred. Delagard, what have you done now?

    Listen, if you think I brought you here just so you could chew me out—

    Lawler shook his head slowly. What have you done, man? he said again, staring straight into Delagard’s suddenly flickering eyes. What the fuck have you done?

    2

    IT WAS NITROGEN ABSORPTION: LAWLER didn’t have much doubt of that. The frightful way in which the three divers were twisted up was a clear signal. Delagard must have had them working at some job deep down in the open sea, keeping them there long enough for their joints, muscles, and fatty tissues to absorb immense quantities of nitrogen; and then, unlikely as that seemed, they evidently had come to the surface without taking the proper time to decompress. The nitrogen, expanding as the pressure dropped, had escaped into their bloodstream and joints in the form of deadly bubbles.

    We brought them here as soon as we realized there was trouble, Delagard said. Figuring maybe you could do something for them. And I thought, keep them in water, they need to stay underwater, so we filled this tank and—

    Shut up, Lawler said.

    I want you to know, we made every effort—

    Shut up. Please. Just shut up.

    Lawler stripped off the water-lettuce wrap he was wearing and clambered into the tank. Water went splashing over the side as he crowded himself in next to the divers. But there wasn’t much that he could do for them. The one in the middle was dead already: Lawler put his hands to the creature’s muscular shoulders and felt the rigor starting to take hold. The other two were more or less alive—so much the worse for them; they must be in hideous pain, if they were conscious at all. The divers’ usually smooth torpedo-shaped bodies, longer than a man’s, were bizarrely knotted, each muscle straining against its neighbor, and their glistening golden skins, normally slick and satiny, felt rough, full of little lumps. Their amber eyes were dull. Their jutting underslung jaws hung slack. A gray spittle covered their snouts. The one on the left was still groaning steadily, every thirty seconds or so, wrenching the sound up from the depths of its guts in a horrifying way.

    Can you fix them somehow? Delagard asked. Is there anything you can do at all? I know you can do it, doc. I know you can. There was an urgent wheedling tone in Delagard’s voice now that Lawler couldn’t remember ever hearing in it before. Lawler was accustomed to the way sick people would cede godlike power to a doctor and beg for miracles. But why did Delagard care so much about these divers? What was going on here, really? Surely Delagard didn’t feel guilty. Not Delagard.

    Coldly Lawler said, I’m no diver doctor. Doctoring humans is all I know how to do. And I could stand to be a whole lot better even at that than I am.

    Try. Do something. Please.

    One of them’s dead already, Delagard. I was never trained to raise the dead. You want a miracle, go get your friend Quillan the priest in here.

    Christ, Delagard muttered.

    Exactly. Miracles are his specialty, not mine.

    Christ. Christ.

    Lawler felt carefully for pulses along the divers’ throats. Yes, still beating after a fashion, slow, uneven. Did that mean they were moribund? He couldn’t say. What the hell was a normal pulse for a diver? How was he supposed to know stuff like that? The only thing to do, he thought, was to put the two that were still alive back in the sea, get them down to the depths where they had been, and bring them up again, slowly enough this time so they could rid themselves of the excess nitrogen. But there was no way to manage that. And it was probably too late anyway.

    In

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