swaying, bodiless, over a huge abyss of caverned space; chasmed, immense, limitless. Vaguely, through a sleeping distance, I heard two voices. This one was old and very tired.
âYou are mad. They will know. Narayan will know.â
âNarayan is a fool,â said the second voice.
âNarayan is the Dreamer,â the tired voice said. âHe is the Dreamer, and where the Dreamer walks he will know. But have it your way. I am very old and it does not matter. I give you this power, freelyâto spare you. But Gamineââ
âGamineââ the second voice stopped. After a long time âYou are old, and a fool, Rhys,â it said. âWhat is Gamine to me?â
Bodiless, blind, I drifted and swayed and swung in the sound of the voices. The humming, like a million high-tension wires, sang around me and I felt myself cradled in the pull of a great magnet that held me suspended surely on nothingness and drew me down into the field of some force beneath. Far below me the voices faded. I swung freeâfellâplunged downward in sickening motion, head over heels, into the abyss....
My feet struck hard flooring. I wrenched back to consciousness with a jolt. Winds blew coldly in my face; the cabin walls had been flung back to the high-lying stars. I was standing at a barred window at the very pinnacle of a tall tower, in the lap of a weird blueness that arched flickeringly in the night. I caught a glimpse of a startled face, a lean tired old face beneath a peaked hood, in the moment before my knees gave way and I fell, striking my head against the bars of the window.
I was lying on a narrow, high bed in a room filled with doors and bars. I could see the edge of a carved mirror set in a frame, and the top of a chest of some kind. On a bench at the edge of my field of vision there were two figures sitting. One was the old grey man, hunched wearily beneath his robe, wearing robes like a Tibetan Lamaâs, somber black, and a peaked hood of grey. The other was a slimmer younger figure, swathed in silken silvery veiling, with a thin opacity where the face should have been, and a sort of opalescent shine of flesh through the silvery-sapphire silks. The figure was that of a boy or a slim immature girl; it sat erect, motionless, and for a long time I studied it, curious, between half-opened lids. But when I blinked, it rose and passed through one of the multitudinous doors; at once a soft sibilance of draperies announced return. I sat up, getting my feet to the floor, or almost there; the bed was higher than a hospital bed. The blue-robe held a handled mug, like a babyâs drinking-cup, at me. I took it in my hand hesitatedâ
âNeither drug nor poison,â said the blue-robe mockingly, and the voice was as noncomittal as the veiled body; a sexless voice, soft alto, a womanâs or a boyâs. âDrink and be glad it is none of Karamyâs brewing.â
I tasted the liquid in the mug; it had an indeterminate greenish look and a faint pungent taste I could not identify, although it reminded me variously of anis and garlic. It seemed to remove the last traces of shock. I handed the cup back empty and looked sharply at the old man in the Lama costume.
âYouâreâRhys?â I said. âWhere in hell have I gotten to?â At least, thatâs what I meant to say. Imagine my surprise when I found myself askingâin a language Iâd never heard, but understood perfectlyââTo which of the domains of Zandru have I been consigned now?â At the same moment I became conscious of what I was wearing. It seemed to be an old-fashioned nightshirt, chopped off at the loins, deep crimson in color. âRed flannels yet!â I thought with a gulp of dismay. I checked my impulse to get out of bed. Who could act sane in a red nightshirt?
âYou might have the decency to explain where I am,â I said. âIf you know.â
The tiredness seemed