stumbled across the Shield while looking for a non-matter force for construction purposes, when they discovered, to their horror, what lay beyond. The old man took the practical angle. He knew there was a fortune to be made here, more than his already formidable masses of wealth. He had only to enslave the powers already trapped behind the Shield and turn them to work for him. The Shield was maintained. But the powers could never be enslaved. To agree to slavery, the slave must have fear of his master. There was no fear in the Prisoner. Absolutely none.
Brilliant flashes of white rippled like fish through a sudden sea of smoky burgundy
His heart thudded at the bright light, even though he knew the Shield was impenetrable. Take one molecule and expand it. Expand it some more. Make it bigger and bigger and bigger-but dont disturb its natural particle balance. You have a Shield. It will hold back anything, stand against even nuclear power of the highest magnitude. But you also have a doorway into a higher dimension. A barred doorway. No, really more like an unbreakable window. But that window turns the higher dimension into a prison, squeezes it into a confined space (a law of opposites which equalizes the pressure created by the expanding first molecule). The higher dimension is then bound within the tiny limits. It and its inhabitants are trapped, unable to move or to get out.
Brilliant white on yellow like cats-eye marbles
No, his father had never sat here like this. He was too practical for melancholia. Along about the second hundred years of the Prisoners confinement, the old fellow had realized-probably with a great deal of bitterness-he could never enslave it and demand things of it. And as the years passed he came to maintain the Shield only because to let it go off would mean the end of his family and possibly all human life. The Prisoner would be seeking revenge-an omnipotent, terrible revenge of finality. By the days of Alexander the Third, this fear of the Prisoner had been compounded by a feeling of moral obligation. The sanity and progress of the empire depended on keeping the Prisoner imprisoned. Always, in the rear of his mind, was the fear that the thing would escape. Sometimes that fear surged to the fore. Times like this. He wanted to run into the streets and scream about the charge behind the Shield. But the Breadloafs had done this thing, had trapped this beast. It would be up to them to watch it for all eternity. And perhaps beyond.
Finally, when watching was not quite enough, Alexander walked to the Shield, stood with a hand upon the coursing energy. How did you, he said at length to the thing beyond, become like this?
It could only thought-speak to him when he was touching the Shield. Even then, the words were tiny and distant: Letmeout, letmeout
How did you become like this?
Letmeout, letmeout, letmeout
That was its constant cry. Sometimes there were bloodcurdling threats. But he knew-and it knew-that the threats could not be carried out. Not as long as the Shield was there. It would never answer his question: How did you become like this? Not today. It had answered previously, but only when it thought it had something to gain.
How did you become like this?
And it had said: I have always been like this
On hydro-beds, reclining, they opened their ears. The hotel room was pleasant and spacious. Gnossos lay before the door so that Sam would have to crawl over him to get out. The lights were soft but adequate, the wine sweet upon their tongues. It was certainly a time for verses.
Look through the window
to the streets below;
Its the age of sorrow,
babies in the snow.
Look through any window
across a sea of dust;
Time lies shattered
in a mobius rust
Then it was time