













































Erik
looked up from his easel as Birkala approached. He was a blond man of noble
face and bearing, looking to be Birkala's own age. Yet this Earthman had lived
and traveled the stars before Birkala's great grandfather was conceived in the
womb.
Spira sat nude on the edge of a fountain pool, one knee bent and
one hand dipped gracefully in the sparkling water. She sat patiently and kept
her wide golden eyes fixed on Erik's face, but recognized Birkala's approach
with a faint smile. The sunlight glinted from her yellow-green hair and burnt
orange skin.
Birkala stood at Erik's shoulder, his feet apart and his hands
clasped behind him, and studied the unfinished painting critically. With a
sure, light brush, Erik had captured the innocence of a young woman seated by a
fountain. The style was so simple as to be almost calligraphic, yet a few lines
and spots of paint portrayed to the eye the long curve of Spira's thigh, the
tilt of her breasts, the candor and loveliness of her face.
Birkala's eyes dropped from the canvas to Erik's seated figure,
and his expression altered from unwilling admiration to defiant scorn. The
Earthman's short-sleeved smock was agape and exposed Erik's perfectly muscled
body to the warm sunshine.
"Why are Earthmen so obsessed with nudity?" demanded
Birkala. Birkala himself wore loose trousers, shiny boots with curled toes, a
shirt with flowing sleeves, a scarf about his throat. Beneath this was
under-clothing.
"We are not obsessed with nudity, Birkala," replied Erik
gently. "The human body is natural and it is beautiful. We see nothing
shameful about it, and we wear clothing only when needed for protection against
the elements."
"That is all right for you to say. It would be all right for
me to believe. But can you say a hunched body like Direka's is beautiful?"
"Not to unsympathetic eyes, perhaps. Poor Direka! But there
will be a day when on Orcti, as on Earth, no one is born with a deformed
body."
Birkala sat down on a rock, crushing a bunch of purple minita
flowers beside it.
"Always in the future," he said bitterly. "Always
promises, in the dim, distant future. You Earthmen know many things and have
many things that you promise us, but why must these promises always be for our
grandchildren's grandchildren?"
"We found you in mud huts, and now you live in clean
cities," reproved Erik, beginning to wipe his brushes clean. "We
found you driving oxen, and now you ride spaceships to the other planets of
your system."
"Your lives are centuries long, and ours are three-score and
ten," countered Birkala. "It is true we have spaceships, but you step
into a beam transmitter and cross the galaxy in seconds."
"That is because you are not ready," replied Erik
mildly.
Birkala sat silent, his anger building up in him. Spira, seeing
that Erik was finished with painting for the moment, arose in a graceful flow
of motion and came to them. She stood beside Erik, one hand on his shoulder,
and studied the canvas without speaking.
"You're the only Earthman on all Orcti," Birkala began
again. "Since I was a child I've heard of Erik, the Earthman who lives in
the garden in the heart of the city. Since I was a child I've heard that Erik,
the Earthman, watches over us like a noble god. Why do you really stay on
Orcti, Erik? To prevent us from progressing too swiftly and challenging the
position of Earth?"
"Why do you carp at Erik?" demanded Spira, and there was
a note of anger to her soft voice. "Erik has always been a friend to us,
Birkala."
"Ah, yes, and especially a friend to pretty little
Spira," replied Birkala with deep irony. "She is my sister, Erik.
Should I be honored that the great Earthman takes my sister as a
mistress?"
Spira flushed, for the term "mistress" was not a
respectable one on Orcti.
"I love Spira, like a daughter and a wife at once," said
Erik. "I think you know that, Birkala. No one was happier than you when
she came to me. I do not marry her because I am forbidden to be bound by the
laws of Orcti, but I shall cherish her all of her life."
"Yes. I know the schedule. And then another young woman shall
grace the garden of the always-young Earthman. How nice for the Earthman!"
"Why are you so savage today, Birkala?" asked Spira,
genuinely puzzled. "I know that you have been restless for a long time,
but we knew as children that other women had been in my place long before I was
born."
"Birkala is angry because he is a good scientist,"
explained Erik with an understanding smile. "Birkala thought yesterday
that he had discovered the principle on which the beam transmitter is based,
and I showed him that his theory is wrong. He is angry with himself for having
been mistaken."
Birkala spat into the fountain.
"I am not so sure I was wrong," he retorted. "I
think it could be that you tried to direct me away from my theory because you
don't want me to find the truth."
He turned and strode from the garden, frowning, his face hot.
Turning right from the garden gate along the street, he passed in
front of Erik's house, which was flush with the sidewalk. As he did so, he was
surprised to see the door ajar and Direka sitting in it.
Direka evidently had been waiting for Birkala to appear. He rose
quickly, almost stumbling down the steps, and gestured eagerly at Birkala.
"Come quickly, Birkala!" he chattered. "I have
found a way into the part of the Earthman's house which is forbidden!"
