"But what does that ...Oh."

"Yes. Maybe he's still getting Qushmarrahans killed."

Bel-Sidek waited patiently while the old man considered what he had said. When the General spoke, he observed, "I note that you haven't named a single name."

"I wasn't told any names."

"But you wouldn't be telling me if you didn't think you knew the man."

"Yes."

"So?"

"Your solutions tend to be abrupt and permanent. You see a threat, you extinguish it. But in this I see a great opportunity to stick it to Cado big. If the whole thing doesn't turn out to be somebody's pipe dream."

The General reflected. He said, "You're right on all counts, Khadifa. It is an opportunity. And rightfully yours to exploit-if, as you say, it isn't a pipe dream." Thank you, sir."

"But you have to know you have game afoot, for certain. Then you have to decide if you let him know you know or not. If you just feed him select lieshe'll continue hurting us elsewhere. If you try to turn him you run the riskof losing him if he panics. Either way, it's likely that Cado or Bruda willsense a change in the texture of the information he supplies. Unless you'revery careful."

"That much I know."

"What first?"

"Find out for sure."

"I have a suggestion. I have a man to do the finding out. He's the best the movement has. He'll do the job right."

Bel-Sidek smiled.

"True, you'd have to give me the name. But I've said he's yours. I think this is important enough to give to someone who won't screw it up. We have too many amateurs at the ground level. Or he might recognize someone." "I'll trade you a name for a name."

The old man thought about it. "No. I can't. His rules. You find out when I go." Bel-Sidek considered that and the General's previous remarks. "All right. You watch your man Naszif."

The General remained still for a long time. His pallor deepened. "You're sure?" "He's the one."

"We praise the gods, who are merciful, and smile upon us."

"Sir?"

"I was going to send Hadribel to take charge of the Hahr and add Naszif to the command staff of the Shu. Even if he did not recognize me himself chances are Cado would once he described the khadifa of the Shu." "Promote him, anyway, sir. You don't have to reveal yourself.

If he's running with the Herodian pack it'll give him something he'll want to report to his masters." "Yes. Bring writing materials."

Bel-Sidek waited a long time while the old man wrote. The General's efforts seemed weaker and more painful than they had been the evening before. Bel- Sidek worried silently. The old man wrote three notes.

"Take this one to the same place you went last night. Then take the others to Hadribel. This one is for him. He's to deliver the other to Naszif himself after he has supper. You go to your friend's house. Stay there till time for tonight's meeting."

"Yes, sir." Bel-Sidek went, his leg aching so badly he began mumbling, "I will not yield. I am not beaten. I am among the living."

Azel rambled in and dumped himself into a chair at the only open table in Muma's Place. Muma himself came right away, settled opposite him. "Bad day?" "Just rough. You got any of that Narbonian beer hidden in the cellar still? I feel like swilling a pail full."

"There's still a little down there. You can't drink it out here."

"I know." "You may not have time for it," Muma said, rising.

Azel watched Muma cross to the kitchen doorway. A limping man arrived there moments later. The limping man was deft of hand. Azel almost missed the passing of the message. Muma summoned one of his sons. The youngest went out with the crippled man.

After a while, Muma returned to Azel's table.

"For me?"

"For you. A sparrow."

"Let's go find that beer." Muma grinned. A few teeth were absent. "You're not going to jump on it?"

"I'm going to relax and have something to drink and eat. The pot will simmer along as nicely without me to watch." "No doubt. You serve too many masters."

"I serve only one. Myself."

"Perhaps that one is too exacting."

"Maybe." Azel thought about a couple of weeks in the silence and solitude of the sinkhole country. Qushmarrah could simmer without benefit of his watchful eye. Surely. Maybe in another week or two. Times were too interesting right now.

"A wonderful change of pace tonight," Medjhah said, staring into his bowl in feigned despair. "Raw instead of charred." "Is it wiggling?" Nogah asked.

"Too ashamed."

"Are the worms playing tag through it?"

"They're embarrassed to show themselves in this glop."

"Eat up, then. You'll grow up big and strong and brave and fierce and smartlike our beloved ..."

Some glint of mirth in the eyes of those opposite him warned Nogah. He glancedover his shoulder. "Mo'atabar. We were just talking about you."

"I heard the fierce and smart part, which touches on the truth as heavily as amaiden's blush. Meantime, your beloved leader wants, to see you and the kid.

No hurry! No hurry! I'm nothing if not civilized and compassionate. I'd beworse than a Turok savage if I denied men the once-in-a-lifetime chance tofill themselves with delicacies such as these. Eat up, Nogah. Eat hearty.

Enjoy while you can. Shall I have the cooks bring you more? They probably havea taste or two left."

"No. No. Wonderful as it is, I'll have to restrain myself. Have to set anexample for the men. Gluttony is an unforgivable and disgusting vice."

Mo'atabar went away smiling.

Yoseh said, "Fa'tad."

"Yes."

His stomach knotted. "Again."

"I'm thinking about gouging your eyes out, baby brother."

"Maybe I'll do it myself. Why does he have to see me?"

No one answered, not even to crack wise. Medjhah began muttering about how thedamned ingrate Qushmarrahan charity-case cooks were trying to poison theirbenefactors.

They downed what they could stomach, Yoseh drawing it out. Nogah told him,

"Stalling won't help. You still got to go."

The compound was more crowded than it had been the night before. They edgedaround to one side and that took them past the cause of the increasedcrowding, the pen for the prisoners taken in the maze. "Look," Yoseh said.

"Some of them are just kids."

Four children huddled in a corner of the pen, terrified. Yoseh was not good atguessing veydeen ages but figured them for five or six. Two yards from themlay a dead man. His skin had the waxy look that characterized all theprisoners except the children.

The dead man had a black arrow sticking out of his side. Nogah said, "He musthave tried something on the kids."

Yoseh grunted. He looked at the rest of the captives and decided he did notwant to find out what kind of hell existed deep in the Shu maze.

Yahada admitted them without bothering to announce them, indicating an out-ofthe- way corner where they could squat. They did so. Yoseh was so awed he kepthis gaze fixed upon his hands. His knuckles were bone-white.

Fa'tad's commanders were all crowded into his quarters. They were not discussing the arrival of the civil governor, as Yoseh expected, but what hadbeen learned from several prisoners who had been interrogated already. Havingarrived at the end, Yoseh did not follow it except to understand that duringthe next few days, while the Herodians were preoccupied, Fa'tad meant to scourthe city hidden beneath the Shu.

Yoseh got no sense of why that was important to al-Akla- except that Fa'tadwas now angry because two men had been killed and seven injured during themorning's invasion.

Fa'tad growled something about getting those damned kids out of that pen, hewanted them alive so he could parade them around in search of their parents.

Somebody went to take care of it.

"Yoseh. Come here, youngster."

Shaking, Yoseh rose and approached Fa'tad.