Foreigner
by Robert J. Sawyer
Major Characters
Capital City
Afsan (Sal-Afsan) — advisor to Dy-Dybo
Cadool (Pal-Cadool) — aide to Afsan
Dybo (Dy-Dybo) — Emperor
Edklark (Det-Edklark) — Master of the Faith
Mokleb (Nav-Mokleb) — psychoanalyst
Mondark (Dar-Mondark) — palace healer
Osfik (Var-Osfik) — Arbiter of the Sequence
Pettit — Afsan’s apprentice
Geological Survey of Land
Babnol (Wab-Babnol) — team member
Biltog (Mar-Biltog) — mate aboard the
Keenir (Var-Keenir) — captain of the
Toroca (Kee-Toroca) — leader, Afsan’s son
Exodus Project
Deplas (Bar-Delpas) — project staff member
Garios (Den-Garios) — project staff member
Karshirl (Bos-Karshirl) — engineer
Novato (Wab-Novato) — leader, inventor of the far-seer
Others
Captain — sailor
Jawn — teacher
Morb — security chief
Taksan — eggling
Prologue
— Briz-Tolharb, Curator
Museum of Quintaglio Civilization
*1*
Afsan couldn’t see the sun, but he felt its noontime heat beating down. With his left hand he held the harness attached to Gork, his large monitor lizard. They were moving over paving stones, Afsan’s toeclaws making heavy clicks against them, Cork’s footfalls echoing that sound with a softer ticking. Afsan heard metal-rimmed wheels rolling over the roadway, approaching from the right.
Afsan had been blind for twenty kilodays. Det-Yenalb, the Master of the Faith, had pierced Afsan’s eyeballs with a ceremonial obsidian dagger. The priest had rotated the blade in each socket, gouging out the empty sacks.
Afsan didn’t like thinking about that long-ago day. He’d been convicted of heresy, and the blinding had been performed in Capital City’s Central Square in front of over a hundred people, a mob packed with as little as three paces between each of its members.The city had changed since then. The landquake of kiloday 7110 had destroyed many roads and buildings, and the replacements were often different from the originals. The growth and redevelopment of the city had left their marks, too. Still, Afsan always knew where he was in relation to the Central Square. Even now, having to walk through it made him anxious. But today’s journey would take him nowhere near…
Suddenly Afsan felt his middle toeclaw catch on something — a loose paving stone? — and he found himself pitching forward, his tail lifting off the ground.
Gork let out a loud hiss as Afsan, desperately trying to right himself, yanked hard on the lizard’s harness.