The Call of Earth Page 0,25
"Iest your soul be in danger of destruction without your knowing it."
"Then my friend must love me indeed," said Moozh.
"I do," said Plod. "With all my heart. I love you more than any man or woman on this Earth, excepting God alone, and his holy incarnation."
Moozh regarded his dearest friend with icy calm. "Use your computer, my friend, and call the intercessor to my tent. Have him stop on the way and bring the Basilican soldier with him."'
"I'll go and get them," said Plod.
"Call them by computer."
"But what if the intercessor isn't using his computer right now?"
"Then we'll wait until he does." Moozh smiled. "But he will be using it, won't he?"
"Perhaps," said Plod. "How would I know?"
"Call them. I want the intercessor to hear my interrogation of the Basilican soldier. Then he'll know that we must go now, and not wait for word from the Imperator."
Plod nodded. "Very wise, my friend. I should have known that you wouldn't flout the will of the Imperator. The intercessor will listen to you, and he'll decide."
"We'll decide together? said Moozh.
"Of course." He pressed the keys; Moozh made no effort to watch him, but he could see the words in the air over the computer well enough to know that Plod was sending a quick, straightforward request to the intercessor.
"Alone," said Moozh. "If we decide not to act, I want no rumors to spread about Basilica."
"I already asked him to come alone," said Plod.
They waited, talking all the time of other things. Of campaigns in years past. Of officers who had served with them. Of women they had known.
"Have you ever loved a woman?" asked Moozh.
"I have a wife," said Plod.
"And you love her?"
Plod thought a moment. "When I'm with her. She's the mother of my sons."
"I have no sons," said Moozh. "No children at all, that I know of. No woman who has pleased me for more than a night."
"None?" asked Plod.
Moozh flushed with embarrassment, realizing what Plod was remembering. "I never loved her? he said. "I took her-as an act of piety."
"Once is an act of piety," said Plod, chuckling. "Two months one year, and then another month three years later-that's more than piety, that's sainthood"
"She was nothing to me," said Moozh. "I took her only for the sake of God." And it was true, though not in the way Plod understood it. The Woman had appeared as if out of nowhere, dirty and naked, and called Moozh by name. Everyone knew such women were from God. But Moozh knew that when he thought of taking her, God sent him that stupor that meant it was not God's will for Moozh to proceed. So Moozh proceeded anyway, and kept the woman-bathed her, and clothed her, and treated her as tenderly as a wife. All the while he felt God's anger boiling at the back of his mind, and he laughed at God. He kept the woman with him until she disappeared, as suddenly as she had come, leaving all her fine clothing behind, taking nothing, not even food, not even water.
"So that wasn't love," said Plod. "God honors you for your sacrifice, then, I'm sure!" Plod laughed again, and for good fellowship Moozh also joined in.
They were still laughing when there came a scratching at the tent, and Plod leapt to open it. The intercessor came in first, which was his duty-and an expression of his faith in God, since the intercessor always left himself available to be stabbed in the back, if God did not protect him. Then a stranger came in. Moozh had no memory of ever having seen the man before. By his garb he was a soldier of a fine city; by his body he was a soft soldier, a gate guard rather than a fighting man; by his familiar nod, Moozh knew that this must be the Basilican soldier, and he must indeed have spoken with him, and left the conversation on friendly terms.
The intercessor sat first, and then Moozh; only then could the others take their places.
"Let me see your blade," Moozh said to the Basilican soldier. "I want to see what kind of steel you have in Basilica."
Warily the Basilican arose from his seat, watching Plod all the while. Vaguely Moozh remembered Plod with a blade at the Basilican's throat; no wonder the man was wary now! With two fingers the man drew his short sword from its sheath, and handed it, hilt first, to Moozh.
It was a city sword, for close work, not