elude him. "It was peculiar thunder," he said with glacial calm. "There was no lightning to precede it."
"The lightning will come soon," said Lodz furtively. "I tell you so you will not be alarmed."
"You have your lightning after your thunder here? Odd. In my country it's just the other way around." He wasn't going to break—he wasn't going to swear—
"But how boring," drawled the Pole's wife. "Never a change?"
He wasn't going to break—
Then the peculiar lightning split the skies. Colt shot one staggered, incredulous glance at it, and was dazzled.
It was a word, perhaps a name, spelled out against the dead-black sky. He knew it. It was in some damned alphabet or other; fretfully he chided himself for not remembering which of the twenty-odd he could recognize it could be.
Colt realized that the Occidentals were staring at him with polite concern. He noticed a shred of meat between the teeth of Mme. Lodz as she smiled reassuringly—white, sharp teeth, they were. Colt rubbed his eyes dazedly. He knew he must be a haggard and unseemly figure to their cultured gaze—but they hadn't seen the words in the sky—or had they—?
Politely they stared at him, phrases bubbling from their lips:
"So frightfully sorry, old man—"
Wouldn't upset you for the world—"
"Hate to see you lose your grip—"
Colt shook his head dazedly, as though he felt strands of sticky silk wind about his face and head. He turned and ran, hearing the voice of Raisuli Batar call after him: "Don't stray too far—"
He didn't know how long he ran or how far he strayed. Finally he fell flat, sprawled childishly, feeling sick and confused in his head. He looked up for a moment to see that the caravan fires were below some curve of rock or other, at any rate, well out of sight. They were such little lights, he thought. Good for a few feet of warm glow, then sucked into the black of High Pamir. They made not even a gleam in the night-heavy sky.
And there, on the other side of him and the caravan, he saw the tall figure of another human being. She stood on black rock between two drifts of snow.
Colt bit out the foil seal of the brandy bottle and pulled the cork with his fingers. After a warm gulp of the stuff he rose.
"Have a drink?"
She turned, She was young in her body and face, Mongoloid. Her eyes were blue-black and shining like metal. Her nose was short, Chinese, yet her skin was quite white. She did not have the eyefold of the yellow people.
Silently she extended one hand for the bottle, tilted it high. Colt saw a shudder run through her body as she swallowed and passed him the tall flask with its gold-flecked liquor.
"You must have been cold."
"By choice. Do you think I'd warm myself at either fire?"
"Either?" he asked.
"There are two caravans. Didn't you know?"
"No. I'm just here—what's the other caravan?"
"Just here, are you? Did you know that you're dead?"
Colt thought the matter over slowly, finally declared: "I guess I did. And all these others—and you—?"
"All dead. We're the detritus of High Pamir. You'll find, if you look, men who fell to death from planes within the past few years walking by the side of Neanderthalers who somehow strayed very far from their tribes and died. The greatest part of the caravans come, of course, from older caravans of the living who carried their goods from Asia to Europe for thousands of years."
Colt coughed nervously. "Have another drink," he said. "Then let's see this other caravan. I'm not too well pleased with the one I fell into."
She took his hand and guided him across the snow and black rock to back within sight of his own caravan. He stared, eager and hungry to see. As she pointed with one tapering finger it seemed that many things were clearer than they ever had been before. He saw that the long line of lights was not his caravan but another in the opposite direction, parallelling his.
"There you will see their caravan master," she said, putting her face next to his. He looked and saw a pot-bellied monster whose turban was half as high as its wearer. Its silhouette, as it passed before a fire, was indescribably unpleasant.
"Evening prayer," said his guide, with a faint tone of mockery.
He studied them as they arranged flares before a platform flung together out of planks and trestles; he also saw them assemble a sort of idol, fitting the various parts together and bolting them securely. When the thing was perhaps two-thirds assembled he turned away and covered his face, repelled.
"I won't look at the rest of it now," he said. "Perhaps later, if you wish me to."
"That's right," she said. "It isn't a thing to look at calmly. But you will see the rest of it one time or another. This is a very long caravan."
She looked down and said: "Now they are worshipping."
Colt looked. "Yes," he said flatly. They were worshipping in their own fashion, dancing and leaping uglily while some dozen of them industriously blew or sawed fantastic discords from musical instruments. Others were arranged in a choir; as they began to sing Colt felt cold nausea stirring at the pit of his belly.