Storm Over Warlock
Andre Norton
1 : DISASTER
The Throg task force struck the Terran Survey camp
without warning a few minutes after dawn. The alien invaders sent eye-searing lances
of energy flashing back and forth across the base with methodical accuracy. And
a single cowering witness, flattened on a ledge in the heights above, knew that
when the last of those yellow-red bolts fell, nothing human would be left alive
down there. His teeth clamped hard upon the thick stuff of the sleeve covering
his thin forearm, and a scream of terror and rage was stillborn in his heart.
More than caution kept him pinned on that narrow shelf
of rock. Watching that holocaust below, Shann Lantee could not force himself to
move. The sheer ruthlessness of the Throg attack left him momentarily weak. To
listen to a tale of Throgs in action, and to be an eyewitness to such action,
were two vastly different things. He shivered in spite of the warmth of the
Survey Corps uniform.
As yet he had sighted none of the aliens, only their
plateshaped flyers. They would stay aloft until their long-range weapon cleared
out all opposition. But how had they been able to annihilate the Terran force
so completely? The last report had placed the nearest Throg nest at least two
systems away from Warlock. And a patrol lane had been drawn about the Circe
system the minute that Survey had marked its second planet ready for
colonization. Somehow the beetles had slipped through that supposedly tight
cordon and would now consolidate their gains with their usual speed. Once their
energy attack finished the small Terran force, then they would simply take
over.
A month later, or maybe two months, and they could not
have done it. The grids would have been up, and any Throg ship venturing into
Warlock's amber-tinted sky would abruptly cease to be. In the race for survival
as a galactic power, Terra had that one small edge over the swarms of the
enemy. They need only stake out their new-found world and get the grids
assembled on its surface; then that planet would be locked to the beetles. The
critical period was between the first discovery of a suitable colony world and
the completion of grid control. Planets in the past had been lost during that
time lag, just as Warlock was being lost now.
Throgs and Terrans... For more than a century now,
planet time, they had been fighting their bitter war among the stars. Terrans
hunted worlds for colonization, the old hunger for land of their own driving
men from the overpopulated worlds, out of Sol's system to the far stars. And
those worlds barren of intelligent native life, open to settlers, were none too
many and widely scattered. Perhaps half a dozen were found in a quarter
century, and of that six maybe only one was suitable for human life without any
costly and lengthy adaptation of man or world. Warlock was one of the lucky
finds which came so seldom.
Throgs were predators, living on the loot they
garnered. As yet, mankind had not been able to discover whether they did indeed
swarm from any home world. Perhaps they lived eternally on board their plate
ships with no permanent base, forced into a wandering life by the destruction
of the planet on which they had originally been spawned. But they were raiders
now, laying waste to defenseless worlds, picking up the wealth of shattered
cities in which no native life remained. Although their hidden temporary bases
were looped about the galaxy, their need for worlds with an atmosphere similar
to Terra's was as necessary as that of man. For in spite of their grotesque
insectile bodies, their wholly alien minds, the Throgs were warm-blooded,
oxygen-breathing creatures.
After the first few clashes the early Terran explorers
had endeavored to promote a truce between the species, only to discover that
between Throg and man there appeared to be no meeting ground at all--a total
difference of mental processes producing insurmountable misunderstanding. There
was simply no point of communication. So the Terrans had suffered one smarting
defeat after another until they perfected the grid. And now their colonies were
safe, at least when time worked in their favor.
It had not on Warlock.
A last vivid lash of red cracked over the huddle of
domes in the valley. Shann blinked, half blinded by that glare. His jaws ached
as he unclenched his teeth. That was the finish. Breathing raggedly, he raised
his head, beginning to realize that he was the only one of his kind left alive
on a none-too-hospitable world controlled by enemies--without shelter or
supplies.
He edged back into the narrow cleft which was the
entrance to the ledge. As a representative of his species he was not
impressive, and now, with those shudders he could not master shaking his thin
body, he looked even smaller and more vulnerable. Shann drew his knees up close
under his chin. The hood of his woodsman's jacket was pushed back in spite of
the chill of the morning, and he wiped the back of his hand across his lips and
chin in an oddly childish gesture.
None of the men below who had been alive only minutes
earlier had been close friends of his. Shann had never known anyone but
acquaintances in his short, roving life. Most people had ignored him completely
except to give orders, and one or two had been actively malicious--like Garth
Thorvald. Shann grimaced at a certain recent memory, and then that grimace
faded into wonder. If young Thorvald hadn't purposefully tried to get Shann
into trouble by opening the wolverines' cage, Shann wouldn't be here now--alive
and safe for a time--he'd have been down there with the others.
The wolverines! For the first time since Shann had
heard the crackle of the Throg attack he remembered the reason he had been
heading into the hills. Of all the men on the Survey team, Shann Lantee had
been the least important. The dirty, tedious clean-up jobs, the dull routines
which required no technical training but which had to be performed to keep the
camp functioning comfortably, those had been his portion. And he had accepted
that status willingly, just to have a chance to be included among Survey
personnel. Not that he had the slightest hope of climbing up to even an
S-E-Three rating in the service.
Part of those menial activities had been to clean the
animal cages. And there Shann Lantee had found something new, something so
absorbing that most of the tiring dull labor had ceased to exist except as
tasks to finish before he could return to the fascination of the animal runs.
Survey teams had early discovered the advantage of
using mutated and highly trained Terran animals as assistants in the
exploration of strange worlds. From the biological laboratories and breeding
farms on Terra came a trickle of specialized assistants to accompany man into
space. Some were fighters, silent, more deadly than weapons a man wore at his
belt or carried in his hands. Some were keener eyes, keener noses, keener
scouts than the human kind could produce. Bred for intelligence, for size, for
adaptability to alien conditions, the animal explorers from Terra were prized.
Wolverines, the ancient "devils" of the
northlands on Terra, were being tried for the first time on Warlock. Their
caution, a quality highly developed in their breed, made them testers for new
territory. Able to tackle in battle an animal three times their size, they
should be added protection for the man they accompanied into the wilderness.
Their wide ranging, their ability to climb and swim, and above all, their
curiosity were significant assets.
Shann had begun contact by cleaning their cages; he
ended captivated by these miniature bears with long bushy tails. And to his
unbounded delight the attraction was mutual. Alone to Taggi and Togi he was a
person, an important person. Those teeth, which could tear flesh into ragged
strips, nipped gently at his fingers. They closed without any pressure on arm,
even on nose and chin in what was the ultimate caress of their kind. Since they
were escape artists of no mean ability, twice he had had to track and lead them
back to camp from forays of their own devising.
But the second time he had been caught by Fadakar, the
chief of animal control, before he could lock up the delinquents. And the
memory of the resulting interview still had the power to make him flush with
impotent anger. Shann's explanation had been contemptuously brushed aside, and
he had been delivered an ultimatum. If his carelessness occurred again, he
would be sent back on the next supply ship, to be dismissed without an official
sign-off on his work record, thus locked out of even the lowest level of Survey
for the rest of his life.
That was why Garth Thorvald's act of the night before
had made Shann brave the unknown darkness of Warlock alone when he had
discovered that the test animals were gone. He had to locate and return them
before Fadakar made his morning inspection; Garth Thorvald's attempt to get him
into bad trouble had saved his life.
Shann cowered back, striving to make his huddled body
as small as possible. One of the Throg flyers appeared silently out of the
misty amber of the morning sky, hovering over the silent camp. The aliens were
coming in to inspect the site of their victory. And the safest place for any
Terran now was as far from the vicinity of those silent domes as he could get.
Shann's slight body was an asset as he wedged through the narrow mouth of a
cleft and so back into the cliff wall. The climb before him he knew in part,
for this was the path the wolverines had followed on their two other escapes. A
few moments of tricky scrambling and he was out in a cuplike depression choked
with the purple-leaved brush of Warlock. On the other side of that was a small
cut to a sloping hillside, giving on another valley, not as wide as that in
which the camp stood, but one well provided with cover in the way of trees and
high-growing bushes.
A light wind pushed among the trees, and twice Shann
heard the harsh, rasping call of a clak-clak--one of the batlike leather-winged
flyers that laired in pits along the cliff walls. That present snap of two-tone
complaint suggested that the land was empty of strangers. For the clak-claks
vociferously and loudly resented encroachment on their chosen hunting
territory.
Shann hesitated. He was driven by the urge to put as
much distance between him and the landing Throg ship as he could. But to arouse
the attention of inquisitive clak-claks was asking for trouble. Perhaps it
would be best to keep on along the top of the cliff, rather than risk a descent
to take cover in the valley the flyers patrolled.
A patch of dust, sheltered by a tooth-shaped
projection of rock, gave the Terran his first proof that Taggi and his mate had
preceded him, for printed firmly there was the familiar paw mark of a
wolverine. Shann began to hope that both animals had taken to cover in the
wilderness ahead.
He licked dry lips. Having left secretly without any
emergency pack, he had no canteen, and now Shann inventoried his scant
possessions--a field kit, heavy-duty clothing, a short hooded jacket with
attached mittens, the breast marked with the Survey insignia. His belt
supported a sheathed stunner and bush knife, and seam pockets held three credit
tokens, a twist of wire intended to reinforce the latch of the wolverine cage,
a packet of bravo tablets, two identity and work cards, and a length of cord.
No rations--save the bravos--no extra charge for his stunner. But he did have,
weighing down a loop on the jacket, a small power torch.
The path he followed ended abruptly in a cliff drop,
and Shann made a face at the odor rising from below, even though that scent
meant he could climb down to the valley floor here without fearing any
clak-clak attention. Chemical fumes from a mineral spring funneled against the
wall, warding off any nesting in this section.
Shann drew up the hood of his jacket and snapped the
transparent face mask into place. He must get away--then find food, water, a
hiding place. That will to live which had made Shann Lantee fight innumerable
battles in the past was in command, bracing him with a stubborn determination.
The fumes swirled up in a smoke haze about his waist,
but he strode on, heading for the open valley and cleaner air. That sickly
lavender vegetation bordering the spring deepened in color to the normal purple-green,
and then he was in a grove of trees, their branches pointed skyward at sharp
angles to the rust-red trunks.
A small skitterer burst from moss-spotted ground
covering, giving an alarmed squeak, skimming out of sight as suddenly as it had
appeared. Shann squeezed between two trees and then paused. The trunk of the
larger was deeply scored with scratches dripping viscous gobs of sap, a sap
which was a bright froth of scarlet. Taggi had left his mark here, and not too
long ago.
The soft carpet of moss showed no paw marks, but he
thought he knew the goal of the animals--a lake down-valley. Shann was
beginning to plan now. The Throgs had not blasted the Terran camp entirely out
of existence; they had only made sure of the death of its occupiers. Which meant
they must have some use for the installations. For the general loot of a Survey
field camp would be relatively worthless to those who picked over the treasure
of entire cities elsewhere. Why? What did the Throgs want? And would the alien
invaders continue to occupy the domes for long?
Shann was still reeling from the shock of the Throgs'
ruthless attack. But from early childhood, when he had been thrown on his own
to scratch a living--a borderline existence of a living--on the Dumps of Tyr,
he had had to use his wits to keep life in a scrawny and undersized body.
However, since he had been eating regularly from Survey rations, he was not
quite so scrawny anymore.
His formal education was close to zero, his informal
and off-center schooling vast. And that particular toughening process which had
been working on him for years now aided in his speedy adaptation to a new set
of facts, formidable ones. He was alone on a strange and perhaps hostile world.
Water, food, safe shelter, those were important now. And once again, away from
the ordered round of the camp where he had been ruled by the desires and
requirements of others, he was thinking, planning in freedom. Later (his hand
went to the butt of his stunner) perhaps later he might just find a way of
extracting an accounting from the beetle-heads, too.
For the present, he would have to keep away from the
Throgs, which meant well away from the camp. A fleck of green showed through
the amethyst foliage before him--the lake! Shann wriggled through a last bush
barrier and stood to look out over that surface. A sleek brown head bobbed up.
Shann put fingers to his mouth and whistled. The head turned, black button eyes
regarded him, short legs began to churn water. To his relief the swimmer was
obeying his summons.
Taggi came ashore, pausing on the fine gray sand of
the verge to shake himself vigorously. Then the wolverine ran upslope at a
clumsy gallop to Shann. With an unknown feeling swelling inside him the Terran
went down on both knees, burying both hands in the coarse brown fur, warming to
the uproarious welcome Taggi gave him.
"Togi?" Shann asked as if the other could
answer. He gazed back to the lake, but Taggi's mate was nowhere in sight.
The blunt head under his hand swung around, black
button nose pointed north. Shann had never been sure just how intelligent, as
mankind measured intelligence, the wolverines were. He had come to suspect that
Fadakar and the other experts had underrated them and that both beasts
understood more than they were given credit for. Now he followed an experiment
of his own, one he had had a chance to try only a few times before and never at
length. Pressing his palm flat on Taggi's head, Shann thought of Throgs and of
their attack, trying to arouse in the animal a corresponding reaction to his
own horror and anger.
And Taggi responded. A mutter became a growl, teeth
gleamed--those cruel teeth of a carnivore to whom they were weapons of
aggression. Danger... Shann thought "danger." Then he raised his
hand, and the wolverine shuffled off, heading north. The man followed.
They discovered Togi busy in a small cove where a
jagged tangle of drift made a mat dating from the last high-water period. She
was finishing a hearty breakfast, the remains of a water rat which she was
burying thriftily against future need after the instincts of her kind. When she
was done she came to Shann, inquiry plain to read in her eyes.
There was water here, and good hunting. But the site
was too close to the Throgs. Let one of their exploring flyers sight them, and
the little group was finished. Better cover, that's what the three fugitives
must have. Shann scowled, not at Togi, but at the landscape. He was tired and
hungry, but he must keep on going.
A stream fed into the cove from the west, a guide of
sorts. With very little knowledge of the countryside, Shann was inclined to
follow that.
Overhead the sun made its usual golden haze of the
sky. A flight of vivid green streaks marked a flock of lake ducks coming for a
morning feeding. Lake duck was good eating, but Shann had no time to hunt one
now. Togi started down the bank of the stream, Taggi behind her. Either they
had caught his choice subtly through some undefined mental contact, or they had
already picked that road on their own.
Shann's attention was caught by a piece of the drift.
He twisted the length free and had his first weapon of his own manufacture, a
club. Using it to hold back a low sweeping branch, he followed the wolverines.
Within the half hour he had breakfast, too. A pair of
limp skitterers, their long hind feet lashed together with a thong of grass,
hung from his belt. They were not particularly good eating, but at least they
were meat.
The three, man and wolverines, made their way up the
stream to the valley wall and through a feeder ravine into the larger space
beyond. There, where the stream was born at the foot of a falls, they made
their first camp. Judging that the morning haze would veil any smoke, Shann
built a pocket-size fire. He seared rather than roasted the skitterers after he
had made an awkward and messy business of skinning them, and tore the meat from
the delicate bones in greedy mouthfuls. The wolverines lay side by side on the
gravel, now and again raising a head alertly to test the scent on the air, or
gaze into the distance.
Taggi made a warning sound deep in the throat. Shann
tossed handfuls of sand over the dying fire. He had only time to fling himself
face-down, hoping the drab and weathered cloth of his uniform would fade into
the color of the earth on which he lay, every muscle tense.
A shadow swung across the hillside. Shann's shoulders
hunched, and he cowered again. That terror he had known on the ledge was back
in full force as he waited for the beam to lick at him as it had earlier at his
fellows. The Throgs were on the hunt...
2 : DEATH OF A SHIP
That sigh of displaced air was not as loud as a
breeze, but it echoed monstrously in Shann's ears. He could not believe in his
luck as that sound grew fainter, drew away into the valley he had just left. With
infinite caution he raised his head from his arm, still hardly able to accept
the fact that he had not been sighted, that the Throgs and their flyer were
gone.
But that black plate was spinning out into the sun
haze. One of the beetles might have suspected that there were Terran fugitives
and ordered a routine patrol. After all, how could the aliens know that they
had caught all but one of the Survey party in camp? Though with all the Terran
scout flitters grounded on the field, the men dead in their bunks, the surprise
would seem to be complete.
As Shann moved, Taggi and Togi came to life also. They
had gone to earth with speed, and the man was sure that both beasts had sensed
danger. Not for the first time he knew a burning desire for the formal education
he had never had. In camp he had listened, dragging out routine jobs in order
to overhear reports and the small talk of specialists keen on their own
particular hobbies. But so much of the information Shann had thus picked up to
store in a retentive memory he had not understood and could not fit together.
It had been as if he were trying to solve some highly important puzzle with at
least a quarter of the necessary pieces missing, or with unrelated bits from
others intermixed. How much control did a trained animal scout have over his
furred or feathered assistants? And was part of that mastery a mental rapport
built up between man and animal?
How well would the wolverines obey him now, especially
when they would not return to camp where cages stood waiting as symbols of
human authority? Wouldn't a trek into the wilderness bring about a revolt for
complete freedom? If Shann could depend upon the animals, it would mean a great
deal. Not only would their superior hunting ability provide all three with
food, but their scouting senses, so much keener than his, might erect a slender
wall between life and death.
Few large native beasts had been discovered on Warlock
by the Terran explorers. And of those four or five different species, none had
proved hostile if unprovoked. But that did not mean that somewhere back in the
wild lands into which Shann was heading there were not heretofore unknowns,
perhaps slyer and as vicious as the wolverines when they were aroused to rage.
Then there were the "dreams," which had afforded
the prime source of camp discussion and dispute. Shann brushed coarse sand from
his boots and thought about the dreams. Did they or did they not exist? You
could start an argument any time by making a definite statement for or against
the peculiar sort of dreaming reported by the first scout to set ship on this
world.
The Circe system, of which Warlock was the second of
three planets, had first been scouted four years ago by one of those explorers
traveling solo in Survey service. Everyone knew that the First-In Scouts were a
weird breed, almost a mutation of Terran stock--their reports were rife with
strange observations.
So an alarming one concerning Circe, a solar-type
yellow sun, and her three planets was no novelty. Witch, the world nearest in
orbit to Circe, was too hot for human occupancy without drastic and too costly
world-changing. Wizard, the third out from the sun, was mostly bare rock and
highly poisonous water. But Warlock, swinging through space between two
forbidding neighbors, seemed to be just what the settlement board ordered.
Then the Survey scout, even in the cocoon safety of
his well-armed ship, began to dream. And from those dreams a horror of the
apparently empty world developed, until he fled the planet to preserve his
sanity. There had been a second visit to Warlock to confirm this--worlds so
well adapted to human emigration could not be lightly thrown away. But this
time the report was negative. There was no trace of dreams, no registration of
any outside influence on the delicate and complicated equipment the ship
carried. So the Survey team had been dispatched to prepare for the coming of
the first pioneers, and none of them had dreamed either--at least, no more than
the ordinary dreams all men accepted.
Only there were those who pointed out that the seasons
had changed between the first and second visits to Warlock. That first scout
had planeted in summer; his successors had come in fall and winter. They argued
that the final release of world for settlement should not be given until the
full year on Warlock had been sampled.
But pressure from Emigrant Control had forced their
hands, that and the fear of just what had eventually happened--an attack from
the Throgs. So they had speeded up the process of declaring Warlock open. Only
Ragnar Thorvald had protested that decision up to the last and had gone back to
headquarters on the supply ship a month ago to make a last appeal for a more
careful study.
Shann stopped brushing the sand from the tough fabric
above his knee. Ragnar Thorvald... He remembered back to the port landing apron
on another world, remembered with a sense of loss he could not define. That had
been about the second biggest day of his short life; the biggest had come
earlier when they had actually allowed him to sign on for Survey duty.
He had tumbled off the cross-continent cargo carrier,
his kit--a very meager kit--slung over his thin shoulder, a hot eagerness
expanding inside him until he thought that he could not continue to throttle
down that wild happiness. There was a waiting starship. And he--Shann Lantee
from the Dumps of Tyr, without any influence or schooling--was going to blast
off in her, wearing the brown-green uniform of Survey!
Then he had hesitated, had not quite dared cross the
few feet of apron lying between him and that compact group wearing the same
uniform--with a slight difference, that of service bars and completion badges
and rank insignia--with the unconscious self-assurance of men who had done this
many times before.
But after a moment that whole group had become in his
own shy appraisal just a background for one man. Shann had never before known
in his pinched and limited childhood, his lost boyhood, anyone who aroused in
him hero worship. And he could not have put a name to the new emotion that
added so suddenly to his burning desire to make good, not only to hold the
small niche in Survey which he had already so painfully achieved, but to climb,
until he could stand so in such a group talking easily to that tall man, his
uncovered head bronze-yellow in the sunlight, his cool gray eyes pale in his
brown face.
Not that any of those wild dreams born in that minute
or two had been realized in the ensuing months. Probably those dreams had
always been as wild as the ones reported by the first scout on Warlock. Shann
grinned wryly now at the short period of childish hope and half-confidence that
he could do big things. Only one Thorvald had ever noticed Shann's existence in
the Survey camp, and that had been Garth.
Garth Thorvald, a far less impressive--one could say
"smudged"--copy of his brother. Swaggering with an arrogance Ragnar
never showed, Garth was a cadet on his first mission, intent upon making Shann
realize the unbridgeable gulf between a labor hand and an officer-to-be. He had
appeared to know right from their first meeting just how to make Shann's life a
misery.
Now, in this slit of valley wall away from the domes,
Shann's fists balled. He pounded them against the earth in a way he had so
often hoped to plant them on Garth's smoothly handsome face, his well-muscled
body. One didn't survive the Dumps of Tyr without learning how to use fists,
and boots, and a list of tricks they didn't teach in any academy. He had always
been sure that he could take Garth if they mixed it up. But if he had loosed
the tight rein he had kept on his temper and offered that challenge, he would
have lost his chance with Survey. Garth had proved himself able to talk his way
out of any scrape, even minor derelictions of duty, and he far outranked Shann.
The laborer from Tyr had had to swallow all that the other could dish out and
hope that on his next assignment he would not be a member of young Thorvald's
team. Though, because of Garth Thorvald, Shann's toll of black record marks had
mounted dangerously high and each day the chance for any more duty tours had
grown dimmer.
Shann laughed, and the sound was ugly. That was one
thing he didn't have to worry about any longer. There would be no other
assignments for him, the Throgs had seen to that. And Garth... well, there
would never be a showdown between them now. He stood up. The Throg ship had
disappeared; they could push on.
He found a break in the cliff wall which was
climbable, and he coaxed the wolverines after him. When they stood on the
heights from which the falls tumbled, Taggi and Togi rubbed against him, cried
for his attention. They, too, appeared to need the reassurance they got from
contact with him, for they were also fugitives on this alien world, the only
representatives of their kind.
Since he did not have any definite goal in view, Shann
continued to be guided by the stream, following its wanderings across a
plateau. The sun was warm, so he carried his jacket slung across one shoulder.
Taggi and Togi ranged ahead, twice catching skitterers, which they devoured
eagerly. A shadow on a sun-baked rock sent the Terran skidding for cover until
he saw that it was cast by one of the questing falcons from the upper peaks.
But that shook his confidence, so he again sought cover, ashamed at his own
carelessness.
In the late afternoon he reached the far end of the
plateau, faced a climb to peaks which still bore cones of snow, now tinted a
soft peach by the sun. Shann studied that possible path and distrusted his own
powers to take it without proper equipment or supplies. He must turn either
north or south, though he would then have to abandon a sure water supply in the
stream. Tonight he would camp where he was. He had not realized how tired he
was until he found a likely half-cave in the mountain wall and crawled in.
There was too much danger in fire here; he would have to do without that basic
comfort of his kind.
Luckily, the wolverines squeezed in beside him to fill
the hole. With their warm furred bodies sandwiching him, Shann dozed, awoke,
and dozed again, listening to night sounds--the screams, cries, hunting calls,
of the Warlock wilds. Now and again one of the wolverines whined and moved
uneasily.
Fingers of sun picked at Shann through a shaft among
the rocks, striking his eyes. He moved, blinked blearily awake, unable for the
first few seconds to understand why the smooth plasta wall of his bunk had
become rough red stone. Then he remembered. He was alone and he threw himself
frantically out of the cave, afraid the wolverines had wandered off. Only both
animals were busy clawing under a boulder with a steady persistence which
argued there was a purpose behind that effort.
A sharp sting on the back of one hand made that
purpose only too clear to Shann, and he retreated hurriedly from the vicinity
of the excavation. They had found an earth-wasp's burrow and were hunting
grubs, naturally arousing the rightful inhabitants to bitter resentment.
Shann faced the problem of his own breakfast. He had
had the immunity shots given to all members of the team, and he had eaten game
brought in by exploring parties and labeled "safe." But how long he
could keep to the varieties of native food he knew was uncertain. Sooner or
later he must experiment for himself. Already he drank the stream water without
the aid of purifiers, and so far there had been no ill results from that
necessary recklessness. Now the stream suggested fish. But instead he chanced
upon another water inhabitant which had crawled up on land for some obscure
purpose of its own. It was a sluggish scaled thing, an easy victim to his club,
with thin, weak legs it could project at will from a finned and armor-plated
body.
Shann offered the head and guts to Togi, who had
abandoned the wasp nest. She sniffed in careful investigation and then gulped.
Shann built a small fire and seared the firm greenish flesh. The taste was
flat, lacking salt, but the food eased his emptiness. Heartened, he started
south, hoping to find water sometime during the morning.
By noon he had his optimism justified with the
discovery of a spring, and the wolverines had brought down a slender-legged
animal whose coat was close in shade to the dusky purple of the vegetation.
Smaller than a Terran deer, its head bore, not horns, but a ridge of stiffened
hair rising in a point some twelve inches above the skull dome. Shann haggled
off some ragged steaks while the wolverines feasted in earnest, carefully
burying the head afterward.
It was when Shann knelt by the spring pool to wash
that he caught the clamor of the clak-claks. He had seen or heard nothing of
the flyers since he had left the lake valley. But from the noise now rising in
an earsplitting volume, he thought there was a sizable colony near-by and that
the inhabitants were thoroughly aroused.
He crept on his hands and knees to near-by brush
cover, heading toward the source of that outburst. If the claks were announcing
a Throg scouting party, he wanted to know it.
Lying flat, with branches forming a screen over him,
the Terran gazed out on a stretch of grassland which sloped at a fairly steep
angle to the south and which must lead to a portion of countryside well below
the level he was now traversing.
The clak-claks were skimming back and forth, shrieking
their staccato war cries. Following the erratic dashes of their flight
formation, Shann decided that whatever they railed against was on the lower
level, out of his sight from that point. Should he simply withdraw, since the
disturbance was not near him? Prudence dictated that; yet still he hesitated.
He had no desire to travel north, or to try and scale
the mountains. No, south was his best path, and he should be very sure that
route was closed before he retreated.
Since any additional fuss the clak-claks might make on
sighting him would be undistinguished in their now general clamor, the Terran
crawled on to where tall grass provided a screen at the top of the slope. There
he stopped short, his hands digging into the earth in sudden braking action.
Below, the ground steamed from a rocket flare-back,
grasses burned away from the fins of a small scoutship. But even as Shann rose
to one knee, his shout of welcome choked in his throat. One of those fins sank,
canting the ship crookedly, preventing any new take-off. And over the crown of
a low hill to the west swung the ominous black plate of a Throg flyer.
The Throg ship came up in a burst of speed, and Shann
waited tensely for some countermove from the scout. Those small speedy Terran ships
were prudently provided with weapons triply deadly in proportion to their size.
He was sure that the Terran ship could hold its own against the Throg, even
eliminate the enemy. But there was no fire from the slanting pencil of the
scout. The Throg circled warily, obviously expecting a trap. Twice it darted
back in the direction from which it had come. As it returned from its second
retreat, another of its kind showed, a black coin dot against the amber of the
sky.
Shann felt sick inside. Now the Terran scout had lost
any advantage and perhaps all hope. The Throgs could box the other in, cut the
downed ship to pieces with their energy beams. He wanted to crawl away and not
witness this last disaster for his kind. But some stubborn core of will kept
him where he was.
The Throgs began to circle while beneath them the
flock of clak-claks screamed and dived at the slanting nose of the Terran ship.
Then that same slashing energy he had watched quarter the camp snapped from the
far plate across the stricken scout. The man who had piloted her, if not dead
already (which might account for the lack of defense), must have fallen victim
to that. But the Throg was going to make very sure. The second flyer halted,
remaining poised long enough to unleash a second bolt--dazzling any watching
eyes and broadcasting a vibration to make Shann's skin crawl when the last
faint ripple reached his lookout post.
What happened then caught the overconfident Throg by
surprise. Shann cried out, burying his face on his arm, as pinwheels of scarlet
light blotted out normal sight. There was an explosion, a deafening blast. He
cowered, blind, unable to hear. Then, rubbing at his eyes, he tried to see what
had happened.
Through watery blurs he made out the Throg ship, not
swinging now in serene indifference to Warlock's gravity, but whirling end over
end across the sky as might a leaf tossed in a gust of wind. Its rim caught
against a rust-red cliff, it rebounded and crumpled. Then it came down,
smashing perhaps half a mile away from the smoking crater in which lay the
mangled wreckage of the Terran ship. The disabled scout pilot must have played
a last desperate game, making his ship bait for a trap.
The Terran had taken one Throg with him. Shann rubbed
again at his eyes, just barely able to catch a glimpse of the second ship
flashing away westward. Perhaps it was only his impaired sight, but it appeared
to him that the Throg followed an erratic path, either as if the pilot feared
to be caught by a second shot, or because that ship had also suffered some
injury.
Acid smoke wreathed up from the valley making Shann
retch and cough. There could be no survivor from that Terran scout, and he did
not believe that any Throg had lived to crawl free of the crumpled plate. But
there would be other beetles swarming here soon. They would not dare to leave
the scene unsearched. He wondered about that scout. Had the pilot been aiming
for the Survey camp, the absence of any rider beam from there warning him off
so that he made the detour which brought him here? Or had the Throgs tried to
blast the Terran ship in the upper atmosphere, crippling it, making this a
forced landing? But at least this battle had cost the Throgs, settling a small
portion of the Terran debt for the lost camp.
The length of time between Shann's sighting of the
grounded ship and the attack by the Throgs had been so short that he had not
really developed any strong hope of rescue to be destroyed by the end of the
crippled ship. On the other hand, seeing the Throgs taking a beating had exploded
his subconscious acceptance of their superiority. He might not have even the
resources of a damaged scout at his command. But he did have Taggi, Togi, and
his own brain. Since he was fated to permanent exile on Warlock, there might
just be some way to make the beetles pay for that.
He licked his lips. Real action against the aliens
would take a lot of planning. Shann would have to know more about what made a
Throg a Throg, more than all the wild stories he had heard over the years.
Therehad to be some way a Terran could move effectively against a beetle-head.
And he had a lot of time, maybe the rest of his life to work out a few answers.
That Throg ship lying wrecked at the foot of the cliff... perhaps he could do a
little investigating before any rescue squad arrived. Shann decided such a move
was worth the try and whistled to the wolverines.
3 : TO CLOSE RANKS
Shann made his way at an angle to avoid the smoking
pit cradling the wreckage of the Terran ship. There were no signs of life about
the Throg plate as he approached. A quarter of its bulk was telescoped back
into the rest, and surely none of the aliens could have survived such a smash,
tough as they were reputed to be within those those horny carapaces.
He sniffed. There was a nauseous odor heavy on the
morning air, one which would make a lasting impression on any human nose. The
port door in the black ship stood open, perhaps having burst in the impact
against the cliff. Shann had almost reached it when a crackle of chain
lightning beat across the ground before him, turning the edge of the buckled
entrance panel red.
Shann dropped to the ground, drawing his stunner,
knowing at the same moment that such a weapon was about as much use in meeting
a blaster as a straw wand would be to ward off a blazing coal. A chill numbness
held him as he waited for a second blast to char the flesh between his
shoulders. So there had been a Throg survivor, after all.
But as moments passed and the Throg did not move in to
make an easy kill, Shann collected his wits. Only one shot! Was the beetle
injured, unable to make sure of even an almost defenseless prey? The Throgs
seldom took prisoners. When they did...
The Terran's lips tightened. He worked his hand under
his prone body, feeling for the hilt of his knife. With that he could speedily
remove himself from the status of Throg prisoner, and he would do it gladly if
there was no hope of escape. Had there been only one charge left in that
blaster? Shann could make half a dozen guesses as to why the other had made no
move, but that shot had come from behind him, and he dared not turn his head or
otherwise make an effort to see what the other might be doing.
Was it only his imagination, or had that stench grown
stronger during the last few seconds? Could the Throg be creeping up on him?
Shann strained his ears, trying to catch some sound he could interpret. The few
clak-claks that had survived the blast about the ship were shrieking overhead,
and Shann made one attempt at counterattack.
He whistled the wolverines' call. The pair had not
been too willing to follow him down into this valley, and they had avoided the
crater at a very wide circle. But if they would obey him now, he just might
have a chance.
There! Thathad been a sound, and the smellwas
stronger. The Throg must be coming to him. Again Shann whistled, holding in his
mind his hatred for the beetle-head, the need for finishing off that alien. If
the animals could pick either thoughts or emotions out of their human
companion, this was the time for him to get those unspoken half-orders across.
Shann slammed his hand hard against the ground, sent
his body rolling, his stunner up and ready.
And now he could see that grotesque thing, swaying
weakly back and forth on its thin legs, yet holding a blaster, bringing that
weapon up to center it on him. The Throg was hunched over and perhaps to Taggi
presented the outline of some four-footed creature to be hunted. For the
wolverine male sprang for the hard-shelled shoulders.
Under that impact the Throg sagged forward. But Taggi,
outraged at the nature of the creature he had attacked, squalled and retreated.
Shann had had his precious seconds of distraction. He fired, the core of the
stun beam striking full into the flat dish of the alien's face.
That bolt, which would have shocked a mammal into
insensibility, only slowed the Throg. Shann rolled again, gaining a temporary
cover behind the wrecked ship. He squirmed under metal hot enough to scorch his
jacket and saw the reflection of a second blaster shot which had been fired
seconds late.
Now the Throg had him tied down. But to get at the
Terran the alien would have to show himself, and Shann had one chance in fifty,
which was better than that of three minutes ago--when the odds had been set at
one in a hundred. He knew that he could not press the wolverines in again.
Taggi's distaste was too manifest; Shann had been lucky that the animal had
made one abortive attack.
Perhaps the Terran's escape and Taggi's action had
made the alien reckless. Shann had no clue to the thinking processes of the
non-human but now the Throg staggered around the end of the plate, his digits,
which were closer to claws than fingers, fumbling with his weapon. The Terran
snapped another shot from his stunner, hoping to slow the enemy down. But he
was trapped. If he turned to climb the cliff at his back, the beetle-head could
easily pick him off.
A rock hurtled from the heights above, striking with
deadly accuracy on the domed, hairless head of the Throg. His armored body crashed
forward, struck against the ship, and rebounded to the ground. Shann darted
forward to seize the blaster, kicking loose the claws which still grasped it,
before he flattened back to the cliff, the strange weapon over his arm, his
heart beating wildly.
That rock had not bounded down the mountainside by
chance; it had been hurled with intent and aimed carefully at its target. And
no Throg would kill one of his fellows. Or would he? Suppose orders had been
issued to take a Terran prisoner and the Throg by the ship had disobeyed? Then,
why a rock and not a blaster bolt?
Shann edged along until the upslanted, broken side of
the Throg flyer provided him with protection from any overhead attack. Under
that shelter he waited for the next move from his unknown rescuer.
The clak-claks wheeled closer to earth. One lit boldly
on the carapace of the inert Throg, shuffling ungainly along that horny ridge.
Cradling the blaster, the Terran continued to wait. His patience was rewarded
when that investigating clak-clak took off uttering an enraged snap or two. He
heard what might be the scrape of boots across rock, but that might also have
come from horny skin meeting stone.
Then the other must have lost his footing not too far
above. Accompanied by a miniature landslide of stones and earth, a figure slid
down several yards away. Shann waited in a half-crouch, his looted blaster
covering the man now getting to his feet. There was no mistaking the familiar
uniform, or even the man. How Ragnar Thorvald had reached that particular spot
on Warlock or why, Shann could not know. But that he was there, there was no
denying.
Shann hurried forward. It had been when he caught his
first sight of Thorvald that he realized just how deep his unacknowledged
loneliness had bit. There were two Terrans on Warlock now, and he did not need
to know why. But Thorvald was staring back at him with the blankness of
non-recognition.
"Who are you?" The demand held something
close to suspicion.
That note in the other's voice wiped away a measure of
Shann's confidence, threatened something which had flowered in him since he had
struck into the wilderness on his own. Three words had reduced him again to
Lantee, unskilled laborer.
"Lantee. I'm from the camp..."
Thorvald's eagerness was plain in his next question:
"How many of you got away? Where are the
rest?" He gazed past Shann up the plateau slope as if he expected to see
the personnel of the camp sprout out of the cloak of grass along the verge.
"Just me and the wolverines," Shann answered
in a colorless voice. He cradled the blaster on his hip, turned a little away
from the officer.
"You... and the wolverines?" Thorvald was
plainly startled. "But... where? How?"
"The Throgs hit very early yesterday morning.
They caught the rest in camp. The wolverines had escaped from their cage, and I
was out hunting them..." He told his story baldly.
"You're sure about the rest?" Thorvald had a
thin steel of rage edging his voice. Almost, Shann thought, as if he could turn
that blade of rage against one Shann Lantee for being yet alive when more
important men had not survived.
"I saw the attack from an upper ridge," the
younger man said, having been put on the defensive. Yet he had a right to be
alive, hadn't he? Or did Thorvald believe that he should have gone running down
to meet the beetle-heads with his useless stunner? "They used energy
beams... didn't land until it was all over."
"I knew there was something wrong when the camp
didn't answer our enter-atmosphere signal," Thorvald said absently.
"Then one of those platters jumped us on braking orbit, and my pilot was
killed. When we set down on the automatics here I had just time to rig a
surprise for any trackers before I took to the hills--"
"The blast got one of them," Shann pointed
out.
"Yes, they'd nicked the booster rocket; she
wouldn't climb again. But they'll be back to pick over the remains."
Shann looked at the dead Throg. "Thanks for
taking a hand." His tone was as chill as the other's this time. "I'm
heading south..."
And, he added silently, I intend to keep on that way.
The Throg attack had dissolved the pattern of the Survey team. He didn't owe
Thorvald any allegiance. And he had been successfully on his own here since the
camp had been overrun.
"South," Thorvald repeated. "Well,
that's as good a direction as any right now."
But they were not united. Shann found the wolverines
and patiently coaxed and wheedled them into coming with him over a circuitous
route which kept them away from both ships. Thorvald went up the cliff, swung
down again, a supply bag slung over one shoulder. He stood watching as Shann
brought the animals in.
Then Thorvald's arm swept out, his fingers closing
possessively about the barrel of the blaster. Shann's own hold on the weapon
tightened, and the force of the other's pull dragged him partly around.
"Let's have that--"
"Why?" Shann supposed that because it had
been the other's well-aimed rock which had put the Throg out of commission
permanently, the officer was going to claim their only spoils of war as
personal booty, and a hot resentment flowered in the younger man.
"We don't take that away from here."
Thorvald made the weapon his with a quick twist.
To Shann's utter astonishment, the Survey officer
walked back to kneel beside the dead Throg. He worked the grip of the blaster
under the alien's lax claws and inspected the result with the care of one
arranging a special and highly important display. Shann's protest became vocal.
"We'll need that!"
"It'll do us far more good right where it
is..." Thorvald paused and then added, with impatience roughening his
voice as if he disliked the need for making any explanations, "There is no
reason for us to advertise our being alive. If the Throgs found a blaster
missing, they'd start thinking and looking around. I want to have a breathing
spell before I have to play quarry in one of their hunts."
Put that way, his action did make sense. But Shann
regretted the loss of an arm so superior to their own weapons. Now they could
not loot the plateship either. In silence he turned and started to trudge
southward, without waiting for Thorvald to catch up with him.
Once away from the blasted area, the wolverines ranged
ahead at their clumsy gallop, which covered ground at a surprising rate of
speed. Shann knew that their curiosity made them scouts surpassing any human
and that the men who followed would have ample warning of any danger to come.
Without reference to his silent trail companion, he sent the animals toward
another strip of woodland which would give them cover against the coming of any
Throg flyer.
As the hours advanced he began to cast about for a
proper night camp. The woods ought to give them a usable site.
"There's water in this wood," Thorvald said,
breaking the silence for the first time since they had left the wrecks.
Shann knew that the other had knowledge, not only of
the general countryside, but of exploring techniques which he himself did not
possess, but to be reminded of that fact was an irritant rather than a
reassurance. Without answering, the younger man bored on to locate the water
promised.
The wolverines found the small lake first and were
splashing along its shore when the Terrans caught up. Thorvald went to work,
but to Shann's surprise he did not unstrap the forceblade ax at his belt. Bending
over a sapling, he pounded away with a stone at the green wood a few inches
above the root line until he was able to break through the slender trunk. Shann
drew his own knife and bent to tackle another treelet when Thorvald stopped him
with an order: "Use a stone on that, the way I did."
Shann could see no reason for such a laborious
process. If Thorvald did not want to use his ax, that was no reason that Shann
could not put his heavy belt knife to work. He hesitated, ready to set the
blade to the outer bark of the tree.
"Look--" again that impatient edge in the
officer's tone, the need for explanation seeming to come very hard to the
other--"sooner or later, the Throgs might just trace us here and find this
camp. If so, they arenot going to discover any traces to label us
Terran--"
"But who else could we be?" protested Shann.
"There is no native race on Warlock."
Thorvald tossed his improvised stone ax from hand to
hand.
"But do the Throgs know that?"
The implications, the possibilities, in that idea struck
home to Shann. Now he began to understand what Thorvald might be planning.
"Now thereis going to be a native race."
Shann made that a statement instead of a question and saw that the other was
watching him with a new intentness, as if he had at last been recognized as a
person instead of rank and file and very low rank at that--Survey personnel.
"There is going to be a native race,"
Thorvald affirmed.
Shann resheathed his knife and went to search the pond
beach for a suitable stone to use in its place. Even so, he made harder work of
the clumsy chopping than Thorvald had. He worried at one sapling after another
until his hands were skinned and his breath came in painful gusts from under
aching ribs. Thorvald had gone on to another task, ripping the end of a long
tough vine from just under the powdery surface of the thick leaf masses fallen
in other years.
With this the officer lashed together the tops of the
poles, having planted their splintered butts in the ground, so that he achieved
a crudely conical structures. Leafy branches were woven back and forth through
this framework, with an entrance, through which one might crawl on hands and
knees, left facing the lakeside. The shelter they completed was compact and
efficient but totally unlike anything Shann had ever seen before, certainly far
removed from the domes of the camp. He said so, nursing his raw hands.
"An old form," Thorvald replied,
"native to a primitive race on Terra. Certainly the beetle-heads haven't
come across its like before."
"Are we going to stay here? Otherwise it is
pretty heavy work for one night's lodging."
Thorvald tested the shelter with a sharp shake. The
matted leaves whispered, but the framework held.
"Stage dressing. No, we won't linger here. But
it's evidence to support our play. Even a Throg isn't dense enough to believe
that natives would make a cross-country trip without leaving evidence of their
passing."
Shann sat down with a sigh he made no effort to
suppress. He had a vision of Thorvald traveling southward, methodically
erecting these huts here and there to confound Throgs who might not ever chance
upon them. But already the Survey officer was busy with a new problem.
"We need weapons--"
"We have our stunners, a force ax, and our
knives," Shann pointed out. He did not add, as he would have liked that
they could have had a blaster.
"Native weapons," Thorvald countered with
his usual snap. He went back to the beach and crawled about there, choosing and
rejecting stones picked out of the gravel.
Shann scooped out a small pit just before their hut
and set about the making of a pocket-sized fire. He was hungry and looked
longingly now and again to the supply bag Thorvald had brought with him. Dared
he rummage in that for rations? Surely the other would be carrying
concentrates.
"Who taught you how to make a fire that
way?" Thorvald was back from the pond, a selection of round stones about
the size of his fist resting between his chest and forearm.
"It's regulation, isn't it?" Shann countered
defensively.
"It's regulation," Thorvald agreed. He set
down his stones in a row and then tossed the supply bag over to his companion.
"Too late to hunt tonight. But we'll have to go easy on those rations
until we can get more."
"Where?" Did Thorvald know of some supply
cache they could raid?
"From the Throgs," the other answered matter
of factly.
"But they don't eat our kind of food..."
"All the more reason for them to leave the camp
supplies untouched."
"The camp?"
For the first time Thorvald's lips curved in a shadow
smile which was neither joyous nor warming. "A native raid on an invader's
camp. What could be more natural? And we'd better make it soon."
"But how can we?" To Shann what the other
proposed was sheer madness.
"There was once an ancient service corps on
Terra," Thorvald answered, "which had a motto something like this:
'The improbable we do at once; the impossible takes a little longer.' What did
you think we were going to do? Sulk around out here in the bush and let the
Throgs claim Warlock for one of their pirate bases without opposition?"
Since that was the only future Shann had visualized,
he was ready enough to admit the truth, only some shade of tone in the
officer's voice kept him from saying so aloud.
4 : SORTIE
Five days later they came up from the south so that
this time Shann's view of the Terran camp was from a different angle. At first
sight there had been little change in the general scene. He wondered if the
aliens were using the Terran dome shelters themselves. Even in the twilight it
was easy to pick out such landmarks as the com dome with the shaft of a
broadcaster spearing from its top and the greater bulk of the supply warehouse.
"Two of their small flyers down on the landing
field..." Thorvald materialized from the shadow, his voice a thread of
whisper.
By Shann's side the wolverines were moving restlessly.
Since Taggi's attack on the Throg neither beast would venture near any site
where they could scent the aliens. This was the nearest point to which the men
could urge either animal, which was a disappointment, for the wolverines would
have been an excellent addition to the surprise sortie they planned for
tonight, halving the danger for the men.
Shann ran his fingers across the coarse fur on the
animals' shoulders, exerting a light pressure to signal them to wait. But he
was not sure of their obedience. The foray was a crazy idea, and Shann wondered
again why he had agreed to it. Yet he had gone along with Thorvald, even
suggested a few modifications and additions of his own, such as the contents of
the crude leaf sack now resting between his knees.
Thorvald flitted away, seeking his own post to the
west. Shann was still waiting for the other's signal when there arose from the
camp a sound to chill the flesh of any listener, a wail which could not have
come from the throat of any normal living thing, intelligent being or animal.
Ululating in ear-torturing intensity, the cry sank to a faint, ominous echo of
itself, to waver up the scale again.
The wolverines went mad. Shann had witnessed their
quick kills in the wilds, but this stark ferocity of spitting, howling rage was
new. They answered that challenge from the camp, streaking out from under his
hands. Yet both animals skidded to a stop before they passed the first dome and
were lost in the gloom. A spark glowed for an instant to his right; Thorvald
was ready to go, so Shann had no time to try and recall the animals.
He fumbled for those balls of soaked moss in his leaf
bag. The chemical smell from them blotted out that alien mustiness which the
wind brought from the campsite. Shann readied the first sopping mess in his
sling, snapped his fire sparker at it, and had the ball awhirl for a toss
almost in one continuous movement. The moss burst into fire as it curved out
and fell.
To a witness it might have seemed that the missile
materialized out of the air, the effect being better than Shann had hoped.
A second ball for the sling--spark... out... down. The
first had smashed on the ground near the dome of the com station, the force of
impact flattening it into a round splatter of now fiercely burning material.
And his second, carefully aimed, lit two feet beyond.
Another wail tearing at the nerves. Shann made a third
throw, a fourth. He had an audience now. In the light of those pools of fire
the Throgs were scuttling back and forth, their hunched bodies casting weird
shadows on the dome walls. They were making efforts to douse the fires, but
Shann knew from careful experimentation that once ignited the stuff he had
skimmed from the lip of one of the hot springs would go on burning as long as a
fraction of its viscous substance remained unconsumed.
Now Thorvald had gone into action. A Throg suddenly
halted, struggled frantically, and toppled over into the edge of a fire
splotch, legs looped together by the coils of the curious weapon Thorvald had
put together on their first night of partnership. Three round stones of
comparable weight had each been fastened at the end of a vine cord, and those
cords united at a center point. Thorvald had demonstrated the effectiveness of
his creation by bringing down one of the small "deer" of the
grasslands, an animal normally fleet enough to feel safe from both human and
animal pursuit. And those weighted ropes now trapped the Throg with the same
efficiency.
Having shot his last fireball, Shann ran swiftly to
take up a new position, downgrade and to the east of the domes. Here he put
into action another of the primitive weapons Thorvald had devised, a spear
hurled with a throwing stick, giving it double range and twice as forceful
penetration power. The spears themselves were hardly more than crudely shaped
lengths of wood, their points charred in the fire. Perhaps these missiles could
neither kill nor seriously wound. But more than one thudded home in a
satisfactory fashion against the curving back carapace or the softer front
parts of a Throg in a manner which certainly shook up and bruised the target.
And one of Shann's victims went to the ground, to lie kicking in a way which
suggested he had been more than just bruised.
Fireballs, spears... Thorvald had moved too. And now
down into the somewhat frantic melee of the aroused camp fell a shower of slim
weighted reeds, each provided with a clay-ball head. The majority of those
balls broke on landing as the Terrans had intended. So, through the beetle
smell of the aliens, spread the acrid, throat-parching fumes of the hot spring
water. Whether those fumes had the same effect upon Throg breathing apparatus
as they did upon Terran, the attackers could not tell, but they hoped such a
bombardment would add to the general confusion.
Shann began to space the hurling of his crude spears
with more care, trying to place them with all the precision of aim he could
muster. There was a limit to their amount of varied ammunition, although they
had dedicated every waking moment of the past few days to manufacture and
testing. Luckily the enemy had had none of their energy beams at the domes. And
so far they had made no move to lift their flyers for retaliation blasts.
But the Throgs were pulling themselves into order.
Blaster fire cut the dusk. Most of the aliens were now flat on the ground,
sending a creeping line of fire into the perimeter of the camp area. A dark
form moved between Shann and the nearest patch of burning moss. The Terran
raised a spear to the ready before he caught a whiff of the pungent scent
emitted by a wolverine hot with battle rage. He whistled coaxingly. With the
Throgs eager to blast any moving thing, the animals were in danger if they
prowled about the scene.
That blunt head moved. Shann caught the glint of eyes
in a furred mask; it was either Taggi or his mate. Then a puff of mixed Throg
and chemical scent from the camp must have reached the wolverine. The animal
coughed and fled westward, passing Shann.
Had Thorvald had time and opportunity to make his
planned raid on the supply dome? Time during such an embroilment was hard to measure,
and Shann could not be sure. He began to count aloud, slowly, as they had
agreed. When he reached one hundred he would begin his retreat; on two hundred
he was to run for it, his goal the river a half mile from the camp.
The stream would take the fugitives to the sea where
fiords cut the coastline into a ragged fringe offering a wealth of hiding
places. Throgs seldom explored any territory on foot. For them to venture into
that maze would be putting themselves at the mercy of the Terrans they hunted.
And their flyers could comb the air above such a rocky wilderness without
result.
Shann reached the count of one hundred. Twice a
blaster bolt singed ground within distance close enough to make him wince, but
most of the fire carried well above his head. All of his spears were gone, save
for one he had kept, hoping for a last good target. One of the Throgs who
appeared to be directing the fire of the others was facing Shann's position.
And on pure chance that he might knock out that leader, Shann chose him for his
victim.
The Terran had no illusions concerning his own
marksmanship. The most he could hope for, he thought, was to have the primitive
weapon thud home painfully on the other's armored hide. Perhaps, if he were
very lucky, he could knock the other from his clawed feet. But that chance
which hovers over any battlefield turned in Shann's favor. At just the right
moment the Throg stretched his head up from the usual hunched position where
the carapace extended over his wide shoulders to protect one of the alien's few
vulnerable spots, the soft underside of his throat. And the fire-sharpened
point of the spear went deep.
Throgs were mute, or at least none of them had ever
uttered a vocal sound to be reported by Terrans. This one did not cry out. But
he staggered forward, forelimbs up, clawed digits pulling at the wooden pin
transfixing his throat just under the mandible-equipped jaw, holding his head
at an unnatural angle. Without seeming to notice the others of his kind, the
Throg came on at a shambling run, straight at Shann as if he could actually see
through the dark and had marked down the Terran for personal vengeance. There
was something so uncanny about that forward dash that Shann retreated. As his
hand groped for the knife at his belt his boot heel caught in a tangle of weed
and he struggled for balance. The wounded Throg, still pulling at the spear
shaft protruding above the swelling barrel of his chest, pounded on.
Shann sprawled backward and was caught in the elastic
embrace of a bush, so he did not strike the ground. He fought the grip of
prickly branches and kicked to gain solid earth under his feet. Then again he
heard that piercing wail from the camp, as chilling as it had been the first
time. Spurred by that, he won free. But he could not turn his back on the
wounded Throg, keeping instead to a sidewise retreat.
Already the alien had reached the dark beyond the rim
of the camp. His progress now was marked by the crashing through low brush. Two
of the Throgs back on the firing line started up after their leader. Shann
caught a whiff of their odor as the wounded alien advanced with the
single-mindedness of a robot.
It would be best to head for the river. Tall grass
twisted about the Terran's legs as he began to run. In spite of the gloom, he
hesitated to cross that open space. At night Warlock's peculiar vegetation
displayed a very alien attribute--ten... twenty varieties of grass, plant, and
tree emitted wan phosphorescence, varying in degree, but affording each an aura
of light. And the path before Shann now was dotted by splotches of that
radiance, not as brilliant as the chemical-born flames the attackers had
kindled in the camp, but as quick to betray the unwary who passed within their
dim circles. And there had never been any reason to believe that Throg powers
of sight were less than human; there was perhaps some evidence to the contrary.
Shann crouched, charting the clumps ahead for a zigzag course which would take
him to at least momentary safety in the river bed.
Perhaps a mile downstream was the transport the
Terrans had cobbled together no earlier than this afternoon, a raft Thorvald
had professed to believe would support them to the sea which lay some fifty
Terran miles to the west. But now he had to cover that mile.
The wolverines? Thorvald? There was one lure which
might draw the animals on to the rendezvous. Taggi had brought down a
"deer" just before they had left the raft. And instead of allowing
both beasts to feast at leisure, Shann had lashed the carcass to the shaky
platform of wood and brush, putting it out to swing in the current, though
still moored to the bank.
Wolverines always cached that part of the kill which
they did not consume at the first eating, usually burying it. He had hoped that
to leave the carcass in such a way would draw both animals back to the raft
when they were hungry. And they had not fed particularly well that day.
Thorvald? Well, the Survey officer had made it plain
during the past five days of what Shann had come to look upon as an uneasy
partnership that he considered himself far abler to manage in the field, while
he had grave doubts of Shann's efficiency in the direction of survival
potential.
The Terran started along the pattern of retreat he had
laid out to the river bed. His heart pounded as he ran, not because of the
physical effort he was expending, but because again from the camp had come that
blood-freezing howl. A lighter line marked the lip of the cut in which the
stream was set, something he had not foreseen. He threw himself down to crawl
the last few feet, hugging the earth.
That very pale luminescence was easily accounted for
by what lay below. Shann licked his lips and tasted the sting of sap smeared on
his face during his struggle with the bushes. While the strip of meadow behind
him now had been spotted with light plants, the cut below showed an almost
solid line of them stringing willow-wise along the water's edge. To go down at
this point was simply to spotlight his presence for any Throg on his trail. Hs
could only continue along the upper bank, hoping to finally find an end to the
growth of luminescent vegetation below.
Shann was perhaps five yards from the point where he
had come to the river, when a commotion behind made him freeze and turn his
head cautiously. The camp was half hidden, and the fires there must be dying.
But a twisting, struggling mass was rolling across the meadow in his general
direction.
Thorvald fighting off an attack? The wolverines? Shann
drew his legs under him, ready to erupt into a counteroffensive. He hesitated
between drawing stunner or knife. In his brush with the injured Throg at the
wreck the stunner had had little impression on the enemy. And now he wondered
if his blade, though it was super-steel at its toughest, could pierce any joint
in the armored bodies of the aliens.
There was surely a fight in progress. The whole
crazily weaving blot collapsed and rolled down upon three bright light plants.
Dull sheen of Throg casing was revealed... no sign of fur, flesh, or clothing.
Two of the aliens battling? But why?
One of those figures got up stiffly, bent over the
huddle still on the ground, and pulled at something. The wooden shaft of
Shann's spear was wanly visible. And the form on the ground did not stir as
that was jerked loose. The Throg leader dead? Shann hoped so. He slid his knife
back into the sheath, tapped the hilt to make sure it was firmly in place, and
crawled on. The river, twisting here and there, was a promising pool of dusky
shadow ahead. The bank of willow-things was coming to an end, and none too
soon. For when he glanced back again he saw another Throg run across the
meadow, and he watched them lift their fellow, carrying him back to camp.
The Throgs might seem indestructible, but he had put
an end to one, aided by luck and a very rough weapon. With that to bolster his
self-confidence to a higher notch, Shann dropped by cautious degrees over the
bank and down to the water's edge. When his boots splashed into the oily flood
he began to tramp downstream, feeling the pull of the water, first ankle high
and then about his calves. This early in the season they did not have to fear
floods, and hereabouts the stream was wide and shallow, save in mid-current.
Twice more he had to skirt patches of light plants,
and once a young tree stood bathed in radiance with a pinkish tinge instead of
the usual ghostly gray. Within the haze which tented the drooping branches,
flitted small glittering, flying things; and the scent of its half-open buds
was heavy on the air, neither pleasant nor unpleasant in Shann's nostrils,
merely different.
He dared to whistle, a soft call he hoped would carry
along the cut between the high banks. But, though he paused and listened until
it seemed that every cell in his thin body was occupied in that act, he heard
no answering call from the wolverines, nor any suggestion that either the
animals or Thorvald were headed in the direction of the raft.
What was he going to do if none of the others joined
him downstream? Thorvald had said not to linger there past daylight. Yet Shann
knew that unless he actually sighted a Throg patrol splashing after him he
would wait until he made sure of the others' fate. Both Taggi and Togi were as
important to him as the Survey officer. Perhaps more so, he told himself now,
because he understood them to a certain degree and found companionship in their
undemanding company which he could not claim from the man.
Whydid Thorvald insist upon their going on to the
seashore? To Shann's mind his own first plan of holing up back in the eastern
mountains was better. Those heights had as many hiding places as the fiord
country. But Thorvald had suddenly become so set on this westward trek that he
had given in. As much as he inwardly rebelled when he took them, he found
himself obeying the older man's orders. It was only when he was alone, as now,
that he began to question both Thorvald's motives and his authority.
Three sprigs of a light bush set in a triangle. Shann
paused and then climbed out on the bank, shaking the water from his boots as
Taggi might shake such drops from a furred limb. This was the sign they had set
to mark their rendezvous point, but...
Shann whirled, drawing his stunner. The raft was a
dark blob on the surface of the water some feet farther on. And now it was
bobbing up and down violently. That was not the result of any normal tug of
current. He heard an indignant squeal and relaxed with a little laugh. He need
not have worried about the wolverines; that bait had drawn them all right. Both
of them were now engaged in eating, though they had to conduct their feast on
the rather shaky foundation of the makeshift transport.
They paid no attention as he waded out, pulling at the
anchor cord as he went. The wind must have carried his familiar scent to them.
As the water climbed to his shoulders Shann put one hand on the outmost log of
the raft. One of the animals snarled a warning at being disturbed. Or had that
been at him?
Shann stood where he was, listening intently. Yes,
there was a splashing sound from upstream. Whoever followed his own recent
trail was taking no care to keep that pursuit a secret, and the pace of the
newcomer was fast enough to spell trouble.
Throgs? Tensely the Terran waited for some reaction
from the wolverines. He was sure that if the aliens had followed him, both
animals would give warning. Save when they had gone wild upon hearing that
strange wail from the camp, they avoided meeting the enemy.
But from all sounds the animals had not stopped feeding.
So the other was no beetle-head. On the other hand, why would Thorvald so
advertise his coming, unless the need for speed was greater than caution? Shann
drew taut the mooring cord, bringing out his knife to saw through that tough
length. A figure passed the three-sprig signal, ran onto the raft.
"Lantee?" The call came in a hoarse,
demanding whisper.
"Here."
"Cut loose. We have to get out of here!"
Thorvald flung himself forward, and together the men
scrambled up on the raft. The mangled carcass plunged into the water, dislodged
by their efforts. But before the wolverines could follow it, the mooring vine
snapped, and the river current took them. Feeling the raft sway and begin to
spin, the wolverines whined, crouched in the middle of what now seemed a very
frail craft.
Behind them, far away but too clear, sounded that
eerie howling, topping the sigh of the night wind.
"I saw--" Thorvald gasped, pausing as if to
catch full lungfuls of air to back his words, "they have a 'hound'! That's
what you hear."
5 : PURSUIT
As the raft revolved slowly it also slipped downstream
at a steadily increasing pace, for the current had them in hold. The wolverines
pressed close to Shann until the musky scent of their fur, their animal warmth,
enveloped him. One growled deep in its throat, perhaps in answer to that
wind-borne wail.
"Hound?" Shann asked.
Beside him in the dark Thorvald was working loose one
of the poles they had readied to help control the raft's voyaging. The current
carried them along, but there was a need for the length of sapling to keep them
free from rocks and water-buried snags.
"What hound?" the younger man demanded more
sharply when there came no immediate answer.
"The Throgs' tracker. But why did they import
one?" Thorvald's puzzlement was plain in his tone. He added a moment
later, with some of his usual firmness, "We may be in for bad trouble now.
Use of a hound means an attempt to take prisoners--"
"Then they do not know that we are here, as
Terrans, I mean?"
Thorvald seemed to be sorting out his thoughts when he
replied to that. "They could have brought a hound here just on chance that
they might miss one of us in the initial mop-up. Or, if they believe we are
natives, they could want a specimen for study."
"Wouldn't they just blast down Terrans on sight?"
Shann saw the dark blot which was Thorvald's head
shake in negation.
"They might need a live Terran--badly and
soon."
"Why?"
"To operate the camp call beam."
Shann's momentary bewilderment vanished. He knew
enough of Survey procedure to guess the reason for such a move on the part of
the aliens.
"The settler transport?"
"Yes, the ship. She won't planet here without the
proper signal. And the Throgs can't give that. If they don't take her, their
time's run out before they have even made a start here."
"But how could they know that the transport is
nearly due? When we intercept their calls they're pure gibberish to us. Can
they read our codes?"
"The supposition is that they can't. Only,
concerning Throgs, all we know is supposition. Anyway, they do know the routine
for establishing a Terran colony, and we can't alter that procedure except in
small nonessentials," Thorvald said grimly. "If that transport
doesn't pick up the proper signal to set down here on schedule, her captain
will call in the patrol escort... then exit one Throg base. But if the
beetle-heads can trick the ship in and take her, then they'll have a clear five
or six more months here to consolidate their own position. After that it would
take more than just one patrol cruiser to clear Warlock; it will require a
fleet. So the Throgs will have another world to play with, and an important
one. This lies on a direct line between the Odin and Kulkulkah systems. A Throg
base on such a trade route could eventually cut us right out of this quarter of
the galaxy."
"So you think they want to capture us in order to
bring the transport in?"
"By our type of reasoning, that would be a
logical move--ifthey know we are here. They haven't too many of those hounds,
and they don't risk them on petty jobs. I'd hoped we'd covered our trail well.
But we had to risk that attack on the camp... I needed the map case!"
Again Thorvald might have been talking to himself. "Time... and the right
maps--" he brought his fist down on the raft, making the platform
tremble--"that's what I have to have now."
Another patch of light-willows stretched along the
riverbanks, and as they sailed through that ribbon of ghostly radiance they
could see each other's faces. Thorvald's was bleak, hard, his eyes on the
stream behind them as if he expected at any moment to see a Throg emerge from
the surface of the water.
"Suppose that thing--" Shann pointed
upstream with his chin--"follows us? What is it anyway?"
"Hound" suggested Terran dog, but he couldn't stretch his imagination
to believe in a working co-operation between Throg and any mammal.
"A rather spectacular combination of toad and
lizard, with a few other grisly touches, is about as close as you can get to a
general description. And that won't be too accurate, because like the Throgs
its remote ancestors must have been of the insect family. If the thing follows
us, and I think we can be sure that it will, we'll have to take steps. There is
always this advantage--those hounds cannot be controlled from a flyer, and the
beetle-heads never take kindly to foot slogging. So we won't have to expect any
speedy chase. If it slips its masters in rough country, we can try to ambush
it." In the dim light Thorvald was frowning. "I flew over the
territory ahead on two sweeps, and it is a crazy mixture. If we can reach the
rough country bordering the sea, we'll have won the first round. I don't
believe that the Throgs will be in a hurry to track us in there. They'll try
two alternatives to chasing us on foot. One, use their energy beams to rake any
suspect valley, and since there are hundreds of valleys all pretty much alike,
that will take some time. Or they can attempt to shake us out with a dumdum
should they have one here, which I doubt."
Shann tensed. The stories of the effects of the
Throgs' dumdum weapon were anything but pretty.
"And to get a dumdum," Thorvald continued as
if he were discussing a purely theoretical matter and not a threat of something
worse than death, "they'll have to bring in one of their major ships.
Which they will hesitate to do with a cruiser near at hand. Our own danger spot
now is the section we should strike soon after dawn tomorrow if the rate of
this current is what I have timed it. There is a band of desert on this side of
the mountains. The river gorge deepens there and the land is bare. Let them
send a ship over and we could be as visible as if we were sending up
flares--"
"How about taking cover now and going on only at
night?" suggested Shann.
"Ordinarily, I'd say yes. But with time pressing
us now, no. If we keep straight on, we could reach the foothills in about forty
hours, maybe less. And we have to stay with the river. To strike across country
there without good supplies and on foot is sheer folly."
Two days. With perhaps the Throgs unleashing their
hound on land, combing from their flyers. With a desert... Shann put out his
hands to the wolverines. The prospect certainly didn't seem anywhere near as
simple as it had the night before when Thorvald had planned this escape. But
then the Survey officer had left out quite a few points which were not
pertinent. Was he also leaving out other essentials? Shann wanted to ask, but
somehow he could not.
After a while he dozed, his head resting on his knees.
He awoke, roused out of a vivid dream, a dream so detailed and so deeply
impressed in a picture on his mind that he was confused when he blinked at the
riverbank visible in the half-light of early dawn.
Instead of that stretch of earth and ragged vegetation
now gliding past him as the raft angled along, he should have been fronting a
vast skull stark against the sky--a skull whose outlines were oddly inhuman.
From its eyeholes issued and returned flying things while its sharply
protruding lower jaw was lapped by water. The skull's color had been a violent
clash of blood-red and purple. Shann blinked again at the riverbank, seeing
transposed on it still that ghostly haze of bone-bare dome, cavernous eyeholes
and nose slit, fanged jaws. That skull was a mountain, or a mountain was a
skull--and it was important to him; he must locate it!
He moved stiffly, his legs and arms cramped but not
cold. The wolverines stirred on either side of him. Thorvald continued to
sleep, curled up beyond, the pole still clasped in his hands. A flat map case
was slung by a strap about his neck, its thin envelope between his arm and his
body as if for safekeeping. On the smooth flap was the Survey seal, and it was
fastened with a finger lock.
Thorvald had lost some of the bright hard surface he
had shown at the spaceport where Shann had first sighted him. There were
hollows in his cheeks, sending into high relief those bone ridges beneath his
eye sockets, giving him a faint resemblance to the skull of Shann's dream. His
face was grimed, his field uniform stained and torn. Only his hair was as bright
as ever.
Shann smeared the back of his hand across his own
face, not doubting that he must present an even more disreputable appearance.
He leaned forward cautiously to look into the water, but that surface was not
quiet enough to act as a mirror.
Getting to his feet as the raft bobbed under his shift
of weight, Shann studied the territory now about them. He could not match
Thorvald's inches, just as he must have a third less bulk than the officer, but
standing, he could sight something of what now lay beyond the rising banks of
the cut. That grass which had been so thick in the meadowlands around the camp
had thinned into separate clumps, pale lavender in color. And the scrawniness
of stem and blade suggested dehydration and poor soil. The earth showing between
those clumps was not of the usual blue, but pallid, too, bleached to gray,
while the bushes along the stream's edge were few and smaller. They must have
crossed the line into the desert Thorvald had promised.
Shann edged around to face west. There was light
enough in the sky to sight tall black pyramids waiting. They had to reach those
distant mountains, mountains whose other side rested in sea water. He studied
them carefully, surveying each peak he could separate from its fellows.
Did the skull lie among them? The conviction that the
place he had seen in his dreams was real, that it was to be found on Warlock,
persisted. Not only was it a definite feature of the landscape somewhere in the
wild places of this world, but it was also necessary for him to locate it. Why?
Shann puzzled over that, with a growing uneasiness which was not quite fear,
not yet, anyway.
Thorvald moved. The raft tilted and the wolverines
growled. Shann sat down, one hand out to the officer's shoulder in warning.
Feeling that touch Thorvald shifted, one hand striking out blindly in a blow
which Shann was just able to avoid while with the other he pinned the map case
yet tighter to him.
"Take it easy!" Shann urged.
The other's eyelids flickered. He looked up, but not
as if he saw Shann at all.
"The Cavern of the Veil--" he muttered.
"Utgard..." Then his eyes focused and he sat up, gazing around him
with a frown.
"We're in the desert," Shann announced.
Thorvald got up, balancing on feet planted a little
apart, looking to the faded expanse of the waste spreading from the river cut.
He stared at the mountains before he squatted down to fumble with the lock of
the map case.
The wolverines were growing restless, though they
still did not try to move about too freely on the raft. They greeted Shann with
vocal complaint. He and Thorvald could satisfy their hunger with a handful of
concentrates from the survival kit. But those dry tablets could not serve the
animals. Shann studied the terrain with more knowledge than he had possessed a
week earlier. This was not hunting land, but there remained the bounty of the
river.
"We'll have to feed Taggi and Togi," he
broke the silence abruptly. "If we don't, they'll be into the river and
off on their own."
Thorvald glanced up from one of the tough, thin sheets
of map skin, again as if he had been drawn back from some distance. His eyes
moved from Shann to the unpromising shore.
"How? With what?" he wanted to know. Then
the real urgency of the situation must have penetrated his mental isolation.
"You have an idea--?"
"There's those fish we found them eating back by
the mountain stream," Shann said, recalling an incident of a few days
earlier. "Rocks here, too, like those the fish were hiding under. Maybe we
can locate some of them here."
He knew that Thorvald would be reluctant to work the
raft inshore, to spare time for such hunting. But there would be no arguing
with hungry wolverines, and he did not propose to lose the animals for the
officer's whim.
However, Thorvald did not protest. They poled the raft
out of the main pull of the current, sending it in toward the southern shore in
the lee of a clump of light-willows. Shann scrambled ashore, the wolverines
after him, sniffing along at his heels while he overturned likely looking rocks
to unroof some odd underwater dwellings. The fish with the rudimentary legs
were present and not agile enough even in their native element to avoid
well-clawed paws which scooped them neatly out of the river shallows. There was
also a sleek furred creature with a broad flat head and paddle-equipped
forepaws, rather like a miniature seal, which Taggi appropriated before Shann
had a chance to examine it closely. In fact, the wolverines wrought havoc along
a half-mile section of bank before the Terran could coax them back to the raft.
As they hunted, Shann got a better idea of the land
about the river. It was sere, the vegetation dwindling except for some rough
spikes of things pushing through the parched ground like flayed fingers, their
puffed redness in contrast to the usual amethyst hues of Warlock's growing
things. Under the climbing sun that whole stretch of country was revealed in a
starkness which at first repelled, and then began to interest him.
He discovered Thorvald standing on the upper bluff,
looking out toward the waiting mountains. The officer turned as Shann urged the
wolverines to the raft, and when he jumped down the drop to join them, Shann
saw he carried a map strip unrolled in his hand.
"The situation is not as good as we hoped,"
he told the younger man. "We'll have to leave the river to cross the
heights."
"Why?"
"There's rapids--ending in a falls." The
officer squatted down, spreading out the strip and making stabs at it with a
nervous finger tip. "Here we have to leave. This is all rough ground. But
lying to the south there's a gap which may be a pass. This was made from an
aerial survey."
Shann knew enough to realize to what extent such a
guide could go wrong. Main features of the landscape would be clear enough from
aloft, but there might be insurmountable difficulties at ground level which
were not distinguishable from the air. Yet Thorvald had planned this journey as
if he had already explored their escape route and that it was as open and easy
as a stroll down Tyr's main transport way. Why was it so necessary that they
try to reach the sea? However, since he had no objection to voice except a
dislike for indefinite information, Shann did not question the other's calm
assumption of command, not yet, anyway.
As they embarked and worked back into the current,
Shann studied his companion. Thorvald had freely listed the difficulties lying
before them. Yet he did not seem in the least worried about their being able to
win through to the sea--or if he was, his outer shell of unconcern remained
uncracked. Before their first day together had ended, the younger Terran had
learned that to Thorvald he was only another tool, to be used by the Survey
officer in some project which the other believed of primary importance. And his
resentment of the valuation was under control so far. He valued Thorvald's
knowledge, but the other's attitude chilled and rebuffed his need for something
more than a half partnership of work.
Why had Thorvald come back to Warlock in the first
place? And why had it been necessary for him to risk his life--perhaps more
than his life if their theory was correct concerning the Throgs' wish to
capture a Terran--to get that set of maps from the plundered camp? When he had
first talked of that raid, his promised loot had been supplies to fill their
daily needs; there had been no mention of maps. By all signs Thorvald was
engaged on some mission. And what would happen if he, Shann, suddenly stopped
being the other's obedient underling and demanded a few explanations here and
now?
Only Shann knew enough about men to also know that he
would not get any information out of Thorvald that the latter was not ready to
give, and that such a show-down, coming prematurely, would only end in his own
discomfiture. He smiled wryly now, remembering his emotions when he had first
seen Ragnar Thorvald months ago. As if the officer ever considered the likes,
dislikes--or dreams--of one Shann Lantee. No, reality and dreams seldom
approached each other. Dreams...
"On any of those shoreline maps," he asked
suddenly, "do they have marked a mountain shaped like a skull?"
Thorvald thrust with his pole. "Skull?" he
repeated, a little absently, as he so often did in answer to Shann's questions
unless they dealt with some currently important matter.
"A peculiar sort of skull," Shann said. Just
as vividly as when he had first awakened, he could picture that skull mountain
with the flying things around its eye sockets. And that, too, was odd; dream
impressions usually faded with the passing of waking hours. "It has a
protruding jaw and the waves wash that... red-and-purple rock--"
"What?"
He had Thorvald's complete attention now.
"Where did you hear about it?" That demand
followed quickly.
"I didn't hear about it. I dreamed of it last night.
I stood there right in front of it. There were birds--or things flying like
birds--going in and out of the eyeholes--"
"What else?" Thorvald leaned across his
pole, his eyes alive, avid, as if he would pull the reply he wanted out of
Shann by force.
"That's all I remember--the skull mountain."
He did not add his other impression, that he was meant to find that skull, that
hemust find it.
"Nothing..." Thorvald paused, and then spoke
slowly, with a visible reluctance. "Nothing else? No cavern with a green
veil--a wide green veil--strung across it?"
Shann shook his head. "Just the skull
mountain."
Thorvald looked as if he didn't quite believe that,
but Shann's expression must have been convincing, for he laughed shortly.
"Well, there goes one nice neat theory up in
smoke!" he commented. "No, your skull doesn't appear on any of our
maps, and so probably my cavern does not exist either. They may both be smoke
screens--"
"What--?" But Shann never finished that
query.
A wind was rising in the desert to blow across the
slit which held the river, carrying with it a fine shifting of sand which
coasted down into the water as a gray haze, coating men, animals, and raft, and
sighing as snow sighs when it falls.
Only that did not drown out another cry, a thin cry,
diluted by the miles of land stretching behind them, but yet carrying that long
ululating howl they had heard in the Throg camp. Thorvald grinned mirthlessly.
"The hound's on trail."
He bent to the pole, using it to aid the pace of the
current. Shann, chilled in spite of the sun's heat, followed his example,
wondering if time had ceased to fight on their side.
6 : THE HOUND
The sun was a harsh ball of heat baking the ground and
then, in some odd manner, drawing back that same fieriness. In the coolness of
the eastern mountains Shann would not have believed that Warlock could hold
such heat. The men discarded their jackets early as they swung to dip the
poles. But they dared not strip off the rest of their clothing lest their skin burn.
And again gusts of wind now drove sand over the edge of the cut to blanket the
water.
Shann wiped his eyes, pausing in his tedious
push-push, to look at the rocks which they were passing in risky proximity. For
the slash which held the river had narrowed. And the rock of its walls was
naked of earth, save for sheltered pockets holding the drift of sand dust,
while boulders of all sizes cut into the path of the flowing water.
He had not been mistaken; they were going faster,
faster even than their efforts with the poles would account for. With the
narrowing of the bed of the stream, the current was taking on a new swiftness.
Shann said as much and Thorvald nodded.
"We're approaching the first of the rapids."
"Where we get off and walk around," Shann
croaked wearily. The dust gritted between his teeth, irritated his eyes.
"Do we stay beside the river?"
"As long as we can," Thorvald replied
somberly. "We have no way of transporting water."
Yes, a man could live on very slim rations of food,
continue to beat his way over a bad trail if he had the concentrate tablets
they carried. But there was no going without water, and in this heat such an
effort would finish them quickly. Always they both listened for another cry
from behind, a cry to tell them just how near the Throg hunting party had come.
"No Throg flyers yet," Shann observed. He
had expected one of those black plates to come cruising the moment the hound
had pointed the direction for their pursuers.
"Not in a storm such as this." Thorvald,
without releasing his hold on the raft pole, pointed with his chin to the
swirling haze cloaking the air above the cut walls. Here the river dug yet
deeper into the beginning of a canyon. They could breathe better. The dust
still sifted down but not as thickly as a half hour earlier. Though over their
heads the sky was now a grayish lid, shutting out the sun, bringing a portion
of coolness to the travelers.
The Survey officer glanced from side to side, watching
the banks as if hunting for some special mark or sign. At last he used his pole
as a pointer to indicate a rough pile of boulders ahead. Some former landslide
had quarter dammed the river at that point, and the drift of seasonal floods
was caught in and among the rocky pile to form a prickly peninsula.
"In there--"
They brought the raft to shore, fighting the faster
current. The wolverines, who had been subdued by the heat and the dust, flung
themselves to the rocks with the eagerness of passengers deserting a sinking
ship for certain rescue. Thorvald settled the map case more securely between
his arm and side before he took the same leap. When they were all ashore he
prodded the raft out into the stream again, pushing the platform along until it
was sucked by the current past the line of boulders.
"Listen!"
But Shann had already caught that distant rumble of
sound. It was steady, beating like some giant drum. Certainly it did not herald
a Throg ship in flight and it came from ahead, not from their back trail.
"Rapids... perhaps even the falls," Thorvald
interpreted that faint thunder. "Now, let's see what kind of a road we can
find here."
The tongue of boulders, spiked with driftwood, was
firmly based against the wall of the cut. But it sloped up to within a few feet
of the top of that gap, more than one landslide having contributed to its
fashioning. The landing stage paralleled the river for perhaps some fifty feet.
Beyond it water splashed a straight wall. They would have to climb and follow
the stream along the top of the embankment, maybe being forced well away from
the source of the water.
By unspoken consent they both knelt and drank deeply
from their cupped hands, splashing more of the liquid over their heads, washing
the dust from their skins. Then they began to climb the rough ascent up which
the wolverines had already vanished. The murk above them was less solid, but
again the fine grit streaked their faces, embedding itself in their hair.
Shann paused to scrape a film of mud from his lips and
chin. Then he made the last pull, bracing his slight body against the push of
the wind he met there. A palm struck hard between his shoulders, nearly sending
him sprawling. He had only wits enough left to recognize that as an order to
get on, and he staggered ahead until rock arched over him and the sand drift
was shut off.
His shoulder met solid stone, and rubbing the sand
from his eyes, Shann realized he was in a pocket in the cliff walls. Well
overhead he caught a glimpse of natural amber sky through a slit but here was a
twilight which thickened into complete darkness.
There was no sign of the wolverines. Thorvald moved
along the pocket southward, and Shann followed him. Once more they faced a dead
end. For the crevice, with the sheer descent to the river on the right, the
cliff wall at its back, came to an abrupt halt in a drop which caught at
Shann's stomach when he ventured to look down.
If some battleship of the interstellar fleet had aimed
a force beam across the mountains of Warlock, cutting down to what lay under
the first layer of planet-skin, perhaps the resulting wound might have
resembled that slash. What had caused such a break between the height on which
they stood and the much taller peak beyond, Shann could not guess. But it must
have been a cataclysm of spectacular dimensions. There was certainly no descending
to the bottom of that cut and reclimbing the rock face on the other side. The
fugitives would either have to return to the river with all its ominous
warnings of trouble to come, or find some other path across that gap which now
provided such an effective barrier to the west.
"Down!" Just as Thorvald had pushed him out
of the murk of the dust storm into the crevice, so now did that officer jerk
Shann from his feet, forcing him to the floor of the half cave from which they
had partially emerged.
A shadow moved across the bright band of sunlit sky.
"Back!" Thorvald caught at Shann again, his
greater strength prevailing as he literally dragged the younger man into the
dusk of the crevice. And he did not pause, nor allow Shann to do so, even when
they were well under cover again. At last they reached the dark hole in the
southern wall which they had passed earlier. And a push from Thorvald sent his
companion into that.
Then a blow greater than any the Survey officer had
aimed at him struck Shann. He was hurled against a rough wall with impetus
enough to explode the air from his lungs, the ensuing pain so great that he
feared his ribs had given under that thrust. Before his eyes fire lashed down
the slit, searing him into temporary blindness. That flash was the last thing
he remembered as thick darkness closed in, shutting him into the nothingness of
unconsciousness.
It hurt to breathe; he was slowly aware first of that
pain and then the fact that hewas breathing, that he had to endure the pain for
the sake of breath. His whole body was jarred into a dull torment as a weight
pressed upon his twisted legs. Then strong animal breath puffed into his face.
Shann lifted one hand by will power, touched thick fur, felt the rasp of a
tongue laid wetly across his fingers.
Something close to terror engulfed him for a second or
two when he knew that he could not see! The black about him was colored by
jagged flashes of red which he somehow guessed were actually inside his eyes.
He groped through that fire-pierced darkness. An animal whimper from the throat
of the shaggy body pressed against him; he answered that movement.
"Taggi?"
The shove against him was almost enough to pin him
once more to the wall, a painful crush on his aching ribs, as the wolverine
responded to his name. That second nudge from the other side must be Togi's bid
for attention.
But what had happened? Thorvald had hurled him back
just after that shadow had swung over the ledge. That shadow! Shann's wits
quickened as he tried to make sense of what he could remember. A Throg ship!
Then that fiery lash which had cut after them could only have resulted from one
of those energy bolts such as had wiped out the others of his kind at the camp.
But he was still alive--!
"Thorvald?" He called through his personal
darkness. When there was no answer, Shann called again, more urgently. Then he
hunched forward on his hands and knees, pushing Taggi gently aside, running his
hands over projecting rocks, uneven flooring.
His fingers touched what could only be cloth, before
they met the warmth of flesh. And he half threw himself against the supine body
of the Survey officer, groping awkwardly for heartbeat, for some sign that the
other was still living.
"What--?" The one word came thickly, but
Shann gave something close to a sob of relief as he caught the faint mutter. He
squatted back on his heels, pressed his forearm against his aching eyes in a
kind of fierce will to see.
Perhaps that pressure did relieve some of the
blackout, for when he blinked again, the complete dark and the fiery trails had
faded to gray, and he was sure he saw dimly a source of light to his left.
The Throg ship had fired upon them. But the aliens
could not have used the full force of their weapon or neither of the Terrans
would still be alive. Which meant, Shann's thoughts began to make sense--sense
which brought apprehension--the Throgs probably intended to disable rather than
kill. They wanted prisoners, just as Thorvald had warned.
How long did the Terrans have before the aliens would
come to collect them? There was no fit landing place hereabouts for their
flyer. The beetle-heads would have to set down at the edge of the desert land
and climb the mountains on foot. And the Throgs were not good at that. So, the
fugitives still had a measure of time.
Time to do what? The country itself held them securely
captive. That drop to the southwest was one barrier. To retreat eastward would
mean running straight into the hands of the hunters. To descend again to the
river, their raft gone, was worse than useless. There was only this side pocket
in which they sheltered. And once the Throgs arrived, they could scoop the
Terrans out at their leisure, perhaps while stunned by a controlling energy
beam.
"Taggi? Togi?" Shann was suddenly aware that
he had not heard the wolverines for some time.
He was answered by a weirdly muffled call--from the
south! Had the animals found a new exit? Was this niche more than just a niche?
A cave of some length, or even a passage running back into the interior of the
peaks? With that faint hope spurring him, Shann bent again over Thorvald, not
able to make out the other's huddled form. Then he drew the torch from the
inner loop of his coat and pressed the lowest stud.
His eyes smarted in answer to that light, watered
until tears patterned the grime and dust on his cheeks. But he could make out
what lay before them, a hole leading into the cliff face, the hole which might
furnish the door to escape.
The Survey officer moved, levering himself up, his
eyes screwed tightly shut.
"Lantee?"
"Here. And there's a tunnel--right behind you.
The wolverines went that way..."
To his surprise there was a thin ghost of a smile on
Thorvald's usually straight-lipped mouth. "And we'd better be away before
visitors arrive?"
So he, too, must have thought his way through the
sequence of past action to the same conclusion concerning the Throg movements.
"Can you see, Lantee?" The question was
painfully casual, but a note in it, almost a reaching for reassurance, cut for
the first time through the wall which had stood between them from their chance
meeting by the wrecked ship.
"Better now. I couldn't when I first came
to," Shann answered quickly.
Thorvald opened his eyes, but Shann guessed that he
was as blind as he himself had been. He caught at the officer's nearer hand,
drawing it to rest on his own belt.
"Grab hold!" Shann was giving the orders
now. "By the look of that opening we had better try crawling. I've a torch
on at low--"
"Good enough." The other's fingers fumbled
on the band about Shann's slim waist until they gripped tight at his back. He
started on into the opening, drawing Thorvald by that hold with him.
Luckily, they did not have to crawl far, for shortly
past the entrance the fault or vein they were following became a passage high
enough for even the tall Thorvald to travel without stooping. And then only a
little later he released his hold on Shann, reporting he could now see well
enough to manage on his own.
The torch beam caught on a wall and awoke from there a
glitter which hurt their eyes--a green-gold cluster of crystals. Several feet
on, there was another flash of embedded crystals. Those might promise priceless
wealth, but neither Terran paused to examine them more closely or touch their
surfaces. From time to time Shann whistled. And always he was answered by the
wolverines, their calls coming from ahead. So the men continued to hope that
they were not walking into a trap from which the Throgs could extract them.
"Snap off your torch a moment!" Thorvald
ordered.
Shann obeyed. The subdued light vanished. Yet there
was still light to be seen--ahead and above.
"Front door," Thorvald observed. "How
do we get up?"
The torch showed them that, a narrow ladder of ledges
branching off when the passage they followed took a turn to the left and east.
Afterward Shann remembered that climb with wonder that they had actually made
it, though their advance had been slow, passing the torch from one to another
to make sure of their footing.
Shann was top man when a last spurt of effort enabled
him to draw himself out into the open, his hands raw, his nails broken and
torn. He sat there, stupefied with his own weariness, to stare about.
Thorvald called impatiently, and Shann reached for the
torch to hold it for the officer. Then Thorvald crawled out; he, too, looked
around in dull surprise.
On either side, peaks cut high into the amber of the
sky. But this bowl in which the men had found refuge was rich in growing
things. Though the trees were stunted, the grass grew almost as high here as it
did on the meadows of the lowlands. Quartering the pocket valley, galloped the
wolverines, expressing in that wild activity their delight in this freedom.
"Good campsite."
Thorvald shook his head. "We can't stay
here."
And, to underline that gloomy prophecy, there issued
from that hole through which they had just come, muffled and broken, but still
threatening, the howl of the Throgs' hound.
The Survey officer caught the torch from Shann's hold
and knelt to flash it into the interior of the passage. As the beam slowly
circled that opening, he held out his other arm, measuring the size of the
aperture.
"When that things gets on a hot scent"--he
snapped off the beam--"the beetle-heads won't be able to control it. There
will be no reason for them to attempt to. Those hounds obey their first orders:
kill or capture. And I think this one operates on 'capture.' So they'll loose
it to run ahead of their party."
"And we move to knock it out?" Shann relied
now on the other's experience.
Thorvald rose. "It would need a blaster on full
power to finish off a hound. No, we can't kill it. But we can make it a
doorkeeper to our advantage." He trotted down into the valley, Shann
beside him without understanding in the least, but aware that Thorvald did have
some plan. The officer bent, searched the ground, and began to pull from under
the loose surface dirt one of those nets of tough vines which they had used for
cords. He thrust a double handful of this hasty harvest into Shann's hold with
a single curt order: "Twist these together and make as thick a rope as you
can!"
Shann twisted, discovering to his pleased surprise
that under pressure the vines exuded a sticky purple sap which not only coated
his hands, but also acted as an adhesive for the vines themselves so that his
task was not nearly as formidable as it had first seemed. With his force ax
Thorvald cut down two of the stunted pine trees and stripped them of branches,
wedging the poles into the rocks about the entrance of the hole.
They were working against time, but on Thorvald's part
with practiced efficiency. Twice more that cry of the hunter arose from the
depths behind them. As the westering sun, almost down now, shone into the
valley hollow Thorvald set up the frame of his trap.
"We can't knock it out, any more than we can
knock out a Throg. But a beam from a stunner ought to slow it up long enough
for this to work."
Taggi burst out of the grass, approaching the hole
with purpose. And Togi was right at his heels. Both of them stared into that
opening, drooling a little, the same eagerness in their pose as they had
displayed when hunting. Shann remembered how that first howl of the Throg hound
had drawn both animals to the edge of the occupied camp in spite of their
marked distaste for its alien masters.
"They're after it too." He told Thorvald
what he had noted on the night of their sortie.
"Maybe they can keep it occupied," the other
commented. "But we don't want them to actually mix with it; that might be
fatal."
A clamor broke out in the interior passage. Taggi
snarled, backing away a few steps before he uttered his own war cry.
"Ready!" Thorvald jumped to the net slung
from the poles; Shann raised his stunner.
Togi underlined her mate's challenge with a series of
snarls rising in volume. There was a tearing, scrambling sound from within.
Then Shann fired at the jack-in-the-box appearance of a monstrous head, and
Thorvald released the deadfall.
The thing squalled. Ropes beat, growing taut. The
wolverines backed from jaws which snapped fruitlessly. To Shann's relief the
Terran animals appeared content to bait the now imprisoned--or
collared--horror, without venturing to make any close attack.
But he reckoned that too soon. Perhaps the stunner had
slowed up the hound's reflexes, for those jaws stilled with a last shattering
snap, the toad-lizard mask--a head which was against all nature as the Terrans
knew it--was quiet in the strangle leash of the rope, the rest of the body
serving as a cork to fill the exit hole. Taggi had been waiting only for such a
chance. He sprang, claws ready. And Togi went in after her mate to share the
battle.
7 : UNWELCOME GUIDE
There was a small eruption of earth and stone as the
hound came alive, fighting to reach its tormentors. The resulting din was
deafening. Shann, avoiding by a hand's breadth a snap of jaws with power to
crush his leg into bone shards and mangled flesh, cuffed Togi across her nose.
He buried his hands in the fur about Taggi's throat as he heaved the male
wolverine back from the struggling monster. He shouted orders, and to his
surprise Togi did obey, leaving him free to yank Taggi away. Perhaps neither
wolverine had expected the full fury of the hound.
Though he suffered a slash across the back of one
hand, delivered by the over-excited Taggi, in the end Shann was able to get
both animals away from the hole, now corked so effectively by the slavering
thing. Thorvald was actually laughing as he watched his younger companion in
action.
"This ought to slow up the beetles! If they haul
their little doggie back, it's apt to take out some of its rage on them, and
I'd like to see them dig around it."
Considering that the monstrous head was swinging from
side to side in a collar of what seemed to be immovable rocks, Shann thought
Thorvald right. He went down on his knees beside the wolverines, soothing them
with hand and voice, trying to get them to obey his orders willingly.
"Ha!" Thorvald brought his mud-stained hands
together with a clap, the sharp sound attracting the attention of both animals.
Shann scrambled up, swung out his bleeding hand in the
simple motion which meant to hunt, being careful to signal down the valley
westward. Taggi gave a last reluctant growl at the hound, to be answered by one
of its ear-torturing howls, and then trotted off, Togi tagging behind.
Thorvald caught Shann's slashed hand, inspecting the
bleeding cut. From the aid packet at his belt he brought out powder and a strip
of protecting plasta-flesh to cleanse and bind the wound.
"You'll do," he commented. "But we'd
better get out of here before full dark."
The small paradise of the valley was no safe campsite.
It could not be so long as that monstrosity on the hillside behind them roared
and howled its rage to the darkening sky. Trailing the wolverines, the men
caught up with the animals drinking from a small spring and thankfully shared
that water. Then they pushed on, not able to forget that somewhere in the peaks
about must lurk the Throg flyer ready to attack on sight.
Only darkness could not be held off by the will of
men. Here in the open there was no chance to use the torch. As long as they
were within the valley boundaries the phosphorescent bushes marked a path. But
by the coming of complete darkness they were once more out in a region of bare
rock.
The wolverines had killed a brace of skitterers,
consuming hide and soft bones as well as the meager flesh which was not enough
to satisfy their hunger. However, to Shann's relief, they did not wander too
far ahead. And as the men stopped at last on a ledge where a fall of rock gave
them some limited shelter both animals crowded in against the humans, adding
the heat of their bodies to the slight comfort of that cramped resting place.
From time to time Shann was startled out of a troubled
half sleep by the howl of the hound. Luckily that sound never seemed any
louder. If the Throgs had caught up with their hunter, and certainly they must
have done so by now, they either could not, or would not free it from the trap.
Shann dozed again, untroubled by any dreams, to awake hearing the shrieks of
clak-claks. But when he studied the sky he was able to sight none of the
cliff-dwelling Warlockian bats.
"More likely they are paying attention to our
friend back in the valley," Thorvald said dryly, rightly reading Shann's
glance to the clouds overhead. "Ought to keep them busy."
Clak-claks were meat eaters, only they preferred their
chosen prey weak and easy to attack. The imprisoned hound would certainly
attract their kind. And those shrill cries now belling through the mountain
heights ought to draw everyone of their species within miles.
"There it is!" Thorvald, pulling himself to
his feet by a rock handhold, gazed westward, his gaunt face eager.
Shann, expecting no less than a cruising Throg ship,
searched for cover on their perch. Perhaps if they flattened themselves behind
the fall of stones, they might be able to escape attention. Yet Thorvald made
no move into hiding. And so Shann followed the line of the other's fixed stare.
Before and below them lay a maze of heights and
valleys, sharp drops, and saw-toothed rises. But on the far rim of that section
of badlands shone the green of a Warlockian sea rippling on to the only dimly
seen horizon. They were now within sight of their goal.
Had they had one of the exploration sky-flitters from
the overrun camp, they could have walked its beach sands within the hour.
Instead, they fought their way through a devil-designed country for the next
two days. Twice they had narrow escapes from the Throg ship--or ships--which
continued to sweep across the rugged line of the coast, and only a quick dive
to cover, wasting precious time cowering like trapped animals, saved them from
discovery. But at least the hound did not bay again on the tangled trail they
left, and they hoped that the trap and the clak-claks had put that monster
permanently out of service.
On the third day they came down to one of those fiords
which tongued inland, fringing the coast. There had been no lack of hunting in
the narrow valleys through which they had threaded, so both men and wolverines
were well fed. Though the animals' fur wore better than the now tattered
uniforms of the men.
"Now where?" Shann asked.
Would he now learn the purpose driving Thorvald on to
this coastland? Certainly such broken country afforded good hiding, but no
better concealment than the mountains of the interior.
The Survey officer turned slowly around on the
shingle, studying the heights behind them as well as the angle of the inlet
where the wavelets lapped almost at their battered boot tips. Opening his
treasured map case, he began a patient checking of landmarks against several of
the strips he carried. "We'll have to get on down to the true coast."
Shann leaned against the trunk of a conical branched
mountain tree, pulling absently at the shreds of wine-colored bark being shed
in seasonal change. The chill they had known in the upper valleys was succeeded
here by a humid warmth. Spring was becoming a summer such as this northern
continent knew. Even the fresh wind, blowing in from the outer sea, had already
lost some of the bite they had felt two days before when its salt-laden
mistiness had first struck them.
"Then what'll we do there?" Shann persisted.
Thorvald brought over the map, his black-rimmed nail
tracing a route down one of the fiords, slanting out to indicate a lace of
islands extending in a beaded line across the sea.
"We head for these."
To Shann that made no sense at all. Those islands...
why, they would offer less chance of establishing a safe base than the broken
land in which they now stood. Even the survey scouts had given those spots of
sea-encircled earth the most cursory examination from the air.
"Why?" he asked bluntly. So far he had
followed orders because they had for the most part made sense. But he was not
giving obedience to Thorvald as a matter of rank alone.
"Because there is something out there, something
which may make all the difference now. Warlock isn't an empty world."
Shann jerked free a long thong of loose bark, rolling
it between his fingers. Had Thorvald cracked? He knew that the officer had
disagreed with the findings of the team. He had been an unconvinced minority of
one who had refused to subscribe to the report that Warlock had no native
intelligent life and therefore was ready and waiting for human settlement
because it was technically an empty world. But to continue to cling to that
belief without a single concrete proof was certainly a sign of mental
imbalance.
And Thorvald was regarding him now with frowning
impatience. You were supposed to humor delusions, weren't you? Only, could you
surrender and humor a wild idea which might mean your death? If Thorvald wanted
to go island-hopping in chance of discovering what never had existed, Shann
need not accompany him. And if the officer tried to use force, well, Shann was
armed with a stunner, and had, he believed, more control over the wolverines.
Perhaps if he merely gave lip agreement to this project... Only he didn't
believe, noting the light deep in those gray eyes holding on him, that anybody
could talk Thorvald out of this particular obsession.
"You don't believe me, do you?" The
impatience arose hotly in that demand.
"Why shouldn't I?" Shann tried to temporize.
"You've had a lot of exploration experience; you should know about such
things. I don't pretend to be any authority."
Thorvald refolded the map and placed it in the case.
Then he pulled at the sealing of his blouse, groping in an inner secret pocket.
He uncurled his fingers to display his treasure.
On his palm lay a coin-shaped medallion, bone-white
but possessing an odd luster which bone would not normally show. And it was
carved. Shann put out a finger, though he had a strange reluctance to touch the
object. When he did he experienced a sensation close to the tingle of a mild
electric shock. And once he had made that contact, he was also impelled to pick
up that disk and examine it more closely.
The intricately carved pattern had been done with
great delicacy and skill, though the whorls, oddly shaped knobs, ribbon
tracings, made no connected design he could determine. After a moment or two of
study, Shann became aware that his eyes, following those twists and twirls, were
"fixed," that it required a distinct effort to look away from the
thing. Feeling some of that same alarm as he had known when he first heard the
wailing of the Throg hound, he let the disk fall back into Thorvald's hold,
even more disturbed when he discovered that to relinquish his grasp required
some exercise of will.
"What is it?"
Thorvald restored the coin to his hiding place.
"You tell me. I can say this much, there is no
listing for anything even remotely akin to this in the Archives."
Shann's eyes widened. He absently rubbed the fingers
which had held the bone coin--if it was a coin--back and forth across the torn
front of his blouse. That tingle... did he still feel it? Or was his
imagination at work again? But an object not listed in the exhaustive Survey
Archives would mean some totally new civilization, a new stellar race.
"It's definitely a fabricated article," the
Survey officer continued. "And it was found on the beach of one of those
sea islands."
"Throg?" But Shann already knew the answer to
that.
"Throg work--this?" Thorvald was openly
scornful. "Throgs have no conception of such art. You must have seen their
metal plates--those are the beetle-heads' idea of beauty. Have those the
slightest resemblance to this?"
"Then who made it?"
"Either Warlock has--or once had--a native race
advanced enough in a well-established form of civilization to develop such a
sophisticated type of art, or there have been other visitors from space here
before us and the Throgs. And the latter possibility I don't believe--"
"Why?"
"Because this was carved of bone or an allied
substance. We haven't been quite able to identify it in the labs, but it's an
organic material. It was found exposed to the weather and yet it is in perfect
condition, could have been carved any time within the past five years. It has
been handled, yes, but not roughly. And we have come across evidences of no
other star-cruising races or species in this sector save ourselves and the
Throgs. No, I say this was made here on Warlock, not too long ago, and by
intelligent beings of a very high level of civilization."
"But they would have cities," protested
Shann. "We've been here for months, explored all over this continent. We'd
have seen them or some traces of them."
"An old race, maybe," Thorvald mused,
"a very old race, perhaps in decline, reduced to a remnant in numbers with
good reason to retire into hiding. No, we've discovered no cities, no evidence
of a native culture past or present. But this--" he touched the front of
his blouse--"was found on the shore of an island. We may have been looking
in the wrong place for our natives."
"The sea..." Shann glanced with new interest
at the green water surging in wavelets along the edge of the fiord.
"Just so, the sea!"
"But scouts have been here for more than a year,
one team or another. And nobody saw anything or found any traces."
"All four of our base camps were set inland, our
explorations along the coast were mainly carried out by flitter, except for one
party--the one which found this. And there may be excellent local reasons why
no native ever showed himself to us. For that matter, they may not be able to
exist on land at all, any more than we could live without artificial aids in
the sea."
"Now--?"
"Now we must make a real attempt to find them if they
do exist anywhere near here. A friendly native race could make all the
difference in the world in any struggle with the Throgs."
"Then you did have more than the dreams to back
you when you argued with Fenniston!" Shann cut in.
Thorvald's eyes were on him again. "When did you
hear that, Lantee?"
To his great embarrassment, Shann found himself
flushing. "I heard you, the day you left for Headquarters," he
admitted, and then added in his own defense, "Probably half the camp did,
too."
Thorvald's gathering frown flickered away. He gave a
snort of laughter. "Yes, I guess we did rather get to the bellowing point
that morning. The dreams--" he came back to the subject--"Yes, the
dreams were--are--important. We had their warning from the start. Lorry was the
First-In Scout who charted Warlock, and he's a good man. I guess I can break
secret now to tell you this his ship was equipped with a new experimental
device which recorded--well, you might call it an 'emanation'--a radiation so
faint its source could not be traced. And it registered whenever Lorry had one
of those dreams. Unfortunately, the machine was very new, very much in the
untested stage, and its performance when checked later in the lab was erratic
enough so the powers-that-be questioned all its readings. They produced a half
dozen answers to account for that tape, and Lorry only caught the signal as
long as he was on a big bay to the south.
"Then when two check flights came in later,
carrying perfected machines and getting no recordings, it was all written off
as a mistake in the first experiment. A planet such as Warlock is too big a
find to throw away when there was no proof of occupancy. And the settlement
boys rushed matters right along."
Shann recalled his own vivid dream of the skull-rock
set in the lap of water--this sea? And another small point fell into place to
furnish the beginning of a pattern. "I was asleep on the raft when I
dreamed about that skull-mountain," he said slowly, wondering if he were
making sense.
Thorvald's hand came up with the alert stance of Taggi
on a strong game scent.
"Yes, on the raft you dreamed of a skull-rock.
And I of a cavern with a green veil. Both of us were on water--water which had
an eventual connection with the sea. Could water be a conductor? I
wonder..." Once again his hand went into his blouse. He crossed the strip
of gravel beach and dipped fingers into the water, letting the drops fall on
the carved disk he now held in his other hand.
"What are you doing?" Shann could see no
purpose in that.
Thorvald did not answer. He had pressed wet hand to
dry now, palm to palm, the coin cupped tightly between them. He turned a
quarter circle, to face the still distant open sea.
"That way." He spoke with a new odd
tonelessness.
Shann stared into the other's face. All the eager
alertness of only a moment earlier had been wiped away. Thorvald was no longer
the man he had known, but in some frightening way a husk, holding a quite
different personality. The younger Terran answered his fear with an attack from
the old days of rough in-fighting in the Dumps of Tyr. He brought his right
hand down hard in a sharp chop across the officer's wrists. The bone coin spun
to the sand and Thorvald stumbled, staggering forward a step or two. Before he
could recover balance Shann had stamped on the medallion.
Thorvald whirled, his stunner drawn with a speed for
which Shann gave him high marks. But the younger man's own weapon was already
out and ready. And he talked--fast.
"That thing's dangerous! What did you do--what
did it do to you?"
His demand got through to a Thorvald who was himself
again.
"What wasI doing?" came a counter demand.
"You were acting like you were
mind-controlled."
Thorvald stared at him incredulously, then with a
growing spark of interest.
"The minute you dripped water on that thing you
changed," Shann continued.
Thorvald reholstered his stunner. "Yes," he
mused, "whydid I want to drip water on it? Something prompted me..."
He ran his still-damp hand up the angle of his jaw, across his forehead as if
to relieve some pain there. "What else did I do?"
"Faced to the sea and said 'that way,'"
Shann replied promptly.
"And why did you move in to stop me?"
Shann shrugged. "When I first touched that thing
I felt a shock. And I've seen mind-controlled people--" He could have
bitten his tongue for betraying that. The world of the mind-controlled was very
far from the life Thorvald and his kind knew.
"Very interesting," commented the other.
"For one of so few years you seem to have seen a lot, Lantee--and apparently
remembered most of it. But I would agree that you're right about this little
plaything; it carries a danger with it, being far less innocent than it
looks." He tore off one of the fluttering scraps of rag which now made up
his sleeve. "If you'll just remove your foot, we'll put it out of business
for now."
He proceeded to wrap the disk well in his bit of
cloth, taking care not to touch it again with his bare fingers while he stowed
it away.
"I don't know what we have in this--a key to
unlock a door, a trap to catch the unwary. I can't guess how or why it works.
But we can be reasonably sure it's not just some carefree maiden's locket, nor
the equivalent of a credit to spend in the nearest bar. So it pointed me to the
sea, did it? Well, that much I am willing to allow. Maybe we'll be able to
return it to the owner,after we learn who--or what--that owner is."
Shann gazed down at the green water, opaque, not to be
pierced to the depths by human sight. Anything might lurk there. Suddenly the
Throgs became normal when balanced against an unknown living in the murky
depths of an aquatic world. Another attack on the Throg-held camp could be well
preferred to such exploration as Thorvald had in mind. Yet Shann did not voice
any protest as the Survey officer faced again in the same direction as the disk
had pointed him moments before.
8 : UTGARD
A wind from the west sprang up an hour before sunset,
lashing waves inland until their spray was a salt mist in the air, a mist to
sodden clothing, plaster hair to the skull, and leave a briny slime across the
skin. Yet Thorvald hunted no shelter in spite of the promise in the rough
shoreline at their backs. The sand in which their boots slipped and slid was
coarse stuff, hardly finer than gravel, studded with nests of drift--bone-white
or grayed or pale lavender--smoothed and stored by the seasons of low tides and
high, seasonal storms and hurricanes. A wild shore and a forbidding one, that
aroused Shann's distrust, perhaps a fitting goal for that disk's guiding.
Shann had tasted loneliness in the mountains,
experienced the strange world of the river lit at night by the wan radiance of
glowing shrubs and plants, and faced the starkness of the heights. Yet through
all that journeying there had been a general resemblance to his own experience
on other worlds. A tree was a tree, whether it bore purple foliage or was
red-veined. A rock was a rock, a river a river. They were equally hard and wet
on Warlock or Tyr.
But now a veil he could not describe, even in his own
thoughts, hung between him and the sand over which he walked, between him and
the sea which sent spray to wet his torn clothing, between him and that wild
wrack of long-ago storms. He could put out his hand and touch sand, drift,
spray; yet they were a setting where something lay hidden behind that
setting--something watched, calculatingly, with intelligence, and a set of
emotions and values he did not, could not share.
"... storm coming." Thorvald paused in the
buffeting of wind and spray, watching the fury of the tossing sea. The sun was
still a pale smear just above the horizon. And it gave light enough to make out
that trickle of islands melting out to obscurity.
"Utgard--"
"Utgard?" Shann repeated, the strange word
holding no meaning for him.
"Legend of my people." Thorvald smeared
spray from his face with one hand. "Utgard, those outermost islands where
dwell the giants who are the mortal enemies of the old gods."
Those dark lumps, most of them bare rock, only a few
crowned with stunted vegetation, might well harboranything , Shann decided,
from giants to the malignant spirits of any race. Perhaps even the Throgs had
their tales of evil things in the night, beetle monsters to populate wild,
unknown lands. He caught at Thorvald's arm and suggested a practical course of
action.
"We'll need shelter before the storm
strikes." To Shann's relief the other nodded.
They trailed back across the beach, their backs now to
the sea and Utgard. That harsh-sounding name did so well fit the line of
islands and islets, Shann repeated it to himself. Here the beach was narrow, a
strip of blue sand-gravel walled by wave-worn boulders. And from that barrier
of stones piled into a breastwork by chance, interwoven with bone-bare drift,
arose the first of the cliffs, Shann studied the terrain with increasing
uneasiness. To be caught between a sea, whipped inland by a storm wind, and
that cliff would be a risk he did not like to consider, as ignorant of field
lore as he was. They must locate some break nearer than the fiord down which
they had come. And they must find it soon, before the daylight was gone and the
full fury of bad weather struck.
In the end the wolverines discovered an exit, just as
they had found the passage through the mountain. Taggi nosed into a darker line
down the face of the cliff and disappeared, Togi duplicating that feat. Shann
trailed them, finding the opening a tight squeeze.
He squirmed into dimness, his outstretched hands
meeting a rough stone surface sloping upward. After gaining a point about eight
feet above the beach he was able to look back and down through the seaward
slit. Open to the sky the crevice proved a doorway to a narrow valley, not
unlike those which housed the fiords, but provided with a thick growth of
vegetation well protected by the high walls.
Working as a now well-rehearsed team, the men set up a
shelter of saplings and brush, the back to the slit through which wind was
still able to tear a way. Walled in by stone and knowing that no Throg flyer
would attempt to fly in the face of the coming storm, they dared make a fire.
The warmth was a comfort to their bodies, just as the light of the flames,
men's age-old hearth companion, was a comfort to the fugitives' spirits. Those
dancing spears of red, for Shann at least, burned away that veil of
other-worldliness which had enwrapped the beach, providing in the night an
illusion of the home he had never really known.
But the wind and the weather did not keep truce very
long. A wailing blast around the upper peaks produced a caterwauling to equal
the voices of half a dozen Throg hounds. And in their poor shelter the Terrans
not only heard the thunderous boom of surf, but felt the vibration of that beat
pounding through the very ground on which they lay. The sea must have long
since covered the beach over which they had come and was now trying its
strength against the rock of the cliff barrier. They could not talk to each
other over that din, although shoulder touched shoulder.
The last flush of amber vanished from the sky with the
speed of a dropped curtain. Tonight no period of twilight divided night from
day, but their portion of Warlock was plunged abruptly into darkness. The
wolverines crowded into their small haven, whining deep in their throats. Shann
ran his hands along their furred bodies, trying to give them a reassurance he
himself did not feel. Never before when on stable land had he been so aware of
the unleashed terrors nature could exert, the forces against which all
mankind's powers were as nothing.
Time could no longer be measured by any set of minutes
or hours. There was only darkness, the howling winds, and the salty rain which
must be in part the breath of the sea driven in upon them. The comforting fire
vanished, chill and dankness crept up to cramp their bodies, so that now and
again they were forced to their feet, to swing arms, stamp, drive the blood
into faster circulation.
Later came a time when the wind died, no longer
driving the rain bullet-hard against and through their flimsy shelter. Then
they slept in the thick unconsciousness of exhaustion.
A red-purple skull--and from its eye sockets the
flying things--kept coming... going... Shann trod on an unsteady foundation
which dipped under his weight as had the raft of the river voyage. He was
drawing nearer to that great head, could see now how waves curled about the
angle of the lower jaw, slapping inward between gaps of missing teeth--which
were really broken fangs of rock--as if the skull now and then sucked reviving
moisture from the water. The aperture marking the nose was closer to a snout,
and the hole was dark, dark as the empty eye sockets. Yet that darkness was drawing
him past any effort to escape he could summon. And then that on which he rode
so perilously was carried forward by the waves, grated against the jawbone,
while against his own fighting will his hands arose above his head, reaching
for a hold to draw his shrinking body up the stark surface to that
snout-passage.
"Lantee!" A hand jerked him back, broke that
compulsion--and the dream. Shann opened his eyes with difficulty, his lashes
seemed glued to his cheeks.
He might have been surveying a submerged world. Thin
streamers of fog twined up from the earth as if they grew from seeds planted by
the storm. But there was no wind, no sound from the peaks. Only under his stiff
body Shann could still feel that vibration which was the sea battering against
the cliff wall.
Thorvald was crouched beside him, his hand still
urgent on the younger man's shoulder. The officer's face was drawn so finely
that his features, sharp under the tanned skin, were akin to the skull Shann
still half saw among the ascending pillars of fog.
"Storm's over."
Shann shivered as he sat up, hugging his arms to his
chest, his tattered uniform soggy under that pressure. He felt as if he would
never be warm again. When he moved sluggishly to the pit where they had kindled
their handful of fire the night before he realized that the wolverines were
missing.
"Taggi--?" His voice sounded rusty in his
own ears, as if some of the moisture thick in the air about them had affected
his vocal cords.
"Hunting." Thorvald's answer was clipped. He
was gathering a handful of sticks from the back of their lean-to, where the
protection of their own bodies had kept that kindling dry. Shann snapped a
length between his hands, dropped it into the pit.
When they did coax a blaze into being they stripped,
wringing out their clothing, propping it piece by steaming piece on sticks by
the warmth of the flames. The moist air bit at their bodies and they moved
briskly, striving to keep warm by exercise. Still the fog curled, undisturbed
by any shaft of sun.
"Did you dream?" Thorvald asked abruptly.
"Yes." Shann did not elaborate. Disturbing
as his dream had been, the feeling that it was not to be shared was also
strong, as strong as some order.
"And so did I," Thorvald said bleakly.
"You saw your skull-mountain?"
"I was climbing it when you awoke me," Shann
returned unwillingly.
"And I was going through my green veil when Taggi
took off and wakened me. You are sure your skull exists?"
"Yes."
"And so am I that the cavern of the veil is
somewhere on this world. But why?" Thorvald stood up, the firelight
marking plainly the lines between his tanned arms, his brown face and throat,
and the paleness of his lean body. "Why do we dream those particular
dreams?"
Shann tested the dryness of a shirt. He had no reason
to try and explain the wherefore of those dreams, only was he certain that he
would sometime, somewhere, find that skull, and that when he did he would climb
to the doorway of the snout, pass behind to depths where the flying things
might nest--not because he wanted to make such an expedition, but because he
must.
He drew his hands across his ribs, where pressure
still brought an aching reminder of the crushing force of the energy whip the
Throgs had wielded. There was no extra flesh on his body, yet muscles slid easily
under the skin, a darker skin than Thorvald's, deepening to a warm brown where
it had been weathered. His hair, unclipped now for a month, was beginning to
curl about his head in tight dark rings. Since he had always been the youngest
or the smallest or the weakest in the world of the Dumps, of the Service, of
the Team, Shann had very little personal vanity. He did possess a different
type of pride, born of his own stubborn achievement in winning out over a long
roster of discouragements, failures, and adverse odds.
"Why do we dream?" he repeated Thorvald's
question. "No answer, sir." He gave the traditional reply of the
Service recruit. And a little to his surprise Thorvald laughed with a tinge of
real amusement.
"Where do you come from, Lantee?" He asked
as if he were honestly interested.
"Tyr."
"Caldon mines." The Survey officer
automatically matched planet to product. "How did you come into
Service?"
Shann drew on his shirt. "Signed on as casual
labor," he returned with a spark of defiance. Thorvald had joined the
Service the right way as a cadet, then a Team man, finally an officer, climbing
that nice even ladder with every rung ready for him when he was prepared to
mount it. What did his kind know about the labor barracks where the
dull-minded, the failures, the petty criminals on the run, lived hard under a
secret social system of their own? It had taken every bit of physical endurance
and energy, every fraction of stubborn will Shann could summon, for him to
survive his first three months in those barracks--unbroken and still eager to
be Survey. He could still wonder at the unbelievable chance which had rescued
him from that merely because Training Center had needed another odd hand to
clean cages and feed troughs for the experimental animals.
And from the center he made a Team, because when
working in a smaller group his push and attention to duty had been noticed and
had paid off. Three years it had taken, but hehad made Team stature. Not that
that meant anything now. Shann pulled his boots on over the legs of rough dried
coveralls and glanced up, to find Thorvald watching him with a new, questioning
directness the younger man could not understand.
Shann sealed his blouse and stood up, knowing the bite
of hunger, dull but persistent. It was a feeling he had had so many times in
the past that now he hardly gave it a second thought.
"Supplies?" He brought the subject back to
the present and the practical. What did it matter why or how one Shann Lantee
had come to Warlock in the first place?
"What we have left of the concentrates we had
better keep for emergencies." Thorvald made no move to open the very
shrunken bag he had brought from the scoutship.
He walked over to a rocky outcrop and tugged loose a
yellowish tuft of plant, neither moss nor fungi but sharing attributes of both.
Shann recognized it without enthusiasm as one of the varieties of native
produce which could be safely digested by Terran stomachs. The stuff was almost
tasteless and possessed a rather unpleasant odor. Consumed in bulk it would
satisfy hunger for a time. Shann hoped that with the wolverines to aid they
could go back to hunting soon.
However, Thorvald showed no desire to head inland
where they might expect to locate game. He disagreed with Shann's suggestion
for tracking Taggi and Togi when those two emerged from the underbrush
obviously well fed and contented after their early morning activity.
When Shann protested with some heat, the other
countered: "Didn't you ever hear of fish, Lantee? After a storm such as
last night's, we ought to discover good pickings along the shore."
But Shann was also sure that it was not only the
thought of food which drew Thorvald back to the sea.
They crawled back through the bolt hole. The beach of
gravel-sand had vanished save for a narrow ribbon of land just at the foot of
the cliffs, where the water curled in white lace about the barrier of boulders.
There was no change in the dullness of the sky; no sun broke through the thick
lid of clouds. And the green of the sea was ashened to gray which matched that
overcast until one could strain one's eyes trying to find the horizon, unable
to mark the dividing line between air and water.
Utgard was a broken necklace, the outermost
island-beads lost, the inner ones more isolated by the rise in water, more
forbidding. Shann let out a startled hiss of breath.
The top of a near-by rock detached itself, drew up
into a hunched thing of armor-plated scales and heavy wide-jawed head. A tail
cracked into the air; a double tail split into equal forks for half-way down
its length. A leg lifted as a forefoot, webbed, clawed for a new hold. This sea
beast was the most formidable native thing he had sighted on Warlock,
approaching in its ugliness the hound of the Throgs.
Breathing in labored gusts, the thing slapped its tail
down on the stones with a limpness which suggested that the raising of that
appendage had overtaxed its limited supply of strength. The head sank forward,
resting across one of the forelimbs. Then Shann sighted the fearsome wound in
the side just before one of the larger hind legs, a ragged hole through which
pumped with every one of those breaths a dark purplish stream, licked away by
the waves as it trickled slickly down the rock.
"What is that?"
Thorvald shook his head. "Not on our
records," he replied absently, studying the dying creature with avid
attention. "Must have been driven in by the storm. This proves there is
more in the sea then we knew!"
Again the forked tail lifted and fell, the head raised
from the forelimb, stretching up and back until the white underfolds of the
throat were exposed as the snout pointed almost vertically to the sky. The jaws
opened and from between them came a moaning whistle, a complaint which was
drowned out by the wash of the waves. Then, as if that was the last effort, the
webbed, clawed feet relaxed their grip of the rock and the scaled body slid
sidewise, out of their sight, into the water. There was a feather of spume to
mark the plunge and nothing else.
Shann, watching to see if the reptile would surface
again, sighted another object, a rounded shape floating on the sea, bobbing
lightly as had their river raft.
"Look!"
Thorvald's gaze followed his pointing finger and then
before Shann could protest, the officer leaped outward from their perch on the
cliff to the broad rock where the scaled sea dweller had lain moments earlier.
He stood there, watching that drifting object with the closest attention, as
Shann made the same crossing in his wake.
The drifting thing was oval, perhaps some six feet
long and three wide, the mid point rising in a curve from the water's edge. As
far as Shann could make out in the half-light the color was a reddish-brown,
the surface rough. And he thought by the way that it moved that it must be
flotsam of the storm, buoyant enough to ride the waves with close to cork
resiliency. To Shann's dismay his companion began to strip.
"What are you going to do?"
"Get that."
Shann surveyed the water about the rock. The forked
tail had sunk just there. Was the Survey officer mad enough to think he could
swim unmenaced through a sea which might be infested with more such creatures?
It seemed that he was, for Thorvald's white body arched out in a dive. Shann
waited, half crouched and tense, as though he could in some way attack anything
rising from the depths to strike at his companion.
A brown arm flashed above the surface. Thorvald swam
strongly toward the floating object. He reached it, his outstretched hand
rasping across the surface. And it responded so quickly to that touch that
Shann guessed it was even lighter and easier to handle than he had first
thought.
Thorvald headed back, herding the thing before him.
And when he climbed out on the rock, Shann was pulling up his trophy. They
flipped the find over, to discover it hollow. They had, in effect, a ready-made
craft not unlike a canoe with blunted bows. But the substance was surely
organic. Was it shell? Shann speculated, running his finger tips over the
irregular surface.
The Survey officer dressed. "We have our
boat," he commented. "Now for Utgard--"
Use this frail thing to dare the trip to the islands?
But Shann did not protest. If the officer was determined to try such a voyage,
he would do it. And neither did the younger man doubt that he would accompany
Thorvald.
9 : ONE ALONE
Once again the beach was a wide expanse of shingle,
drying fast under a sun hotter than any Shann had yet known on Warlock. Summer
had taken a big leap forward. The Terrans worked in partial shade below a cliff
overhang, not only for the protection against the sun's rays, but also as a
precaution against any roving Throg air patrol.
Under Thorvald's direction the curious shell dragged
from the sea--if it were a shell, and the texture as well as the general shape
suggested that--was equipped with a framework to act as a stabilizing
outrigger. What resulted was certainly an odd-looking craft, but one which
obeyed the paddles and rode the waves easily.
In the full sunlight the outline of islands was
clear-cut--red-and-gray rock above an aquamarine sea. The Terrans had sighted
no more of the sea monsters, and the major evidence of native life along the
shore was a new species of clak-claks, roosting in cliff holes and scavenging
along the sands, and various curious fish and shelled things stranded in small
tide pools--to the delight of the wolverines, who fished eagerly up and down
the beach, ready to investigate all debris of the storm.
"That should serve." Thorvald tightened the
last lashing, straightening up, his fists resting on his hips, to regard the
craft with a measure of pride.
Shann was not quite so content. He had matched the
Survey officer in industry, but the need for haste still eluded him. So the
ship--such as it was--was ready. Now they would be off to explore Thorvald's
Utgard. But a small and nagging doubt inside the younger man restrained his
enthusiasm over such a voyage. Fork-tail had come out of the section of ocean
which they must navigate in this very crude transport. And Shann had no desire
to meet an uninjured and alert fork-tail in the latter's own territory.
"Which island do we head for?" Shann kept
private his personal doubts of their success. The outmost tip of that chain was
only a distant smudge lying low on the water.
"The largest... that one with trees."
Shann whistled. Since the night of the storm the
wolverines were again more amenable to the very light discipline he tried to
keep. Perhaps the fury of that elemental burst had tightened the bond between
men and animals, both alien to this world. Now Taggi and his mate padded toward
him in answer to his summons. But would the wolverines trust the boat? Shann
dared not risk their swimming, nor would he agree to leaving them behind.
Thorvald had already stored their few provisions on
board. And now Shann steadied the craft against a rock which served them as a
wharf, while he coaxed Taggi gently. Though the wolverine protested, he at last
scrambled in, to hunch at the bottom of the shell, the picture of apprehension.
Togi took longer to make up her mind. And at length Shann picked her up bodily,
soothing her with quiet speech and stroking hands, to put her beside her mate.
The shell settled under the weight of the passengers,
but Thorvald's foresight concerning the use of the outrigger proved right, for
the craft was seaworthy. It answered readily to the dip of their paddles as
they headed in a curve, keeping the first of the islands between them and the
open sea for a breakwater.
From the air, Thorvald's course would have been a
crooked one, for he wove back and forth between the scattered islands of the
chain, using their lee calm for the protection of the canoe. About two thirds
of the group were barren rock, inhabited only by clak-claks and creatures
closer to true Terran birds in that they wore a body plumage which resembled
feathers, though their heads were naked and leathery. And, Shann noted, the
clak-claks and the birds did not roost on the same islands, each choosing their
own particular home while the other species did not invade that territory.
The first large-sized island they approached was
crowned by trees, but it had no beach, no approach from sea level. Perhaps it
might be possible to climb to the top of the cliff walls. But Thorvald did not
suggest that they try it, heading on toward the next large outcrop of land and
rock.
Here white lace patterned in a ring well out from the
shore to mark a circle of reefs. They nosed their way patiently around the
outer circumference of that threatening barrier, hunting the entrance to the
lagoon. Within, there were at least two beaches with climbable ascents to the
upper reaches inland. Though Shann noted that the vegetation showing was
certainly not luxuriant, the few trees within their range of vision being
pallid growths, rather like those they had sighted on the fringe of the desert.
Leather-headed flyers wheeled out over their canoe, coasting on outspread wings
to peer down at the Terran invaders in a manner which suggested intelligent
curiosity.
A full flock gathered to escort them as they continued
along the outer line of the reef. Thorvald impatiently dug his paddle deeper.
They had explored more than half of the reef now without chancing on an
entrance channel.
"Regular fence," Shann commented. One could
begin to believe that the barrier had been deliberately reared to frustrate
visitors. Hot sunshine, reflected back from the surface of the waves, burned
their exposed skin, so they dared not discard their ragged clothing. And the
wolverines were growing increasingly restless. Shann did not know how much
longer the animals would consent to their position as passengers without
raising active protest.
"How about trying the next one?" he asked,
knowing at the same time his companion was not in any mood to accept such a suggestion
with good will.
The officer made no reply, but continued to use his
steer paddle in a fashion which spelled out his stubborn determination to find
a passage. This was a personal thing now, between Ragnar Thorvald of the Terran
Survey and a wall of rock, and the man's will was as strongly rooted as those
water-washed stones.
On the southwestern tip of the reef they discovered a
possible opening. Shann eyed the narrow space between two fanglike rocks
dubiously. To him that width of water lane seemed dangerously limited, the
sudden slam of a wave could dash them against either of those pillars, with
disastrous results, before they could move to save themselves. But Thorvald
pointed their blunt bow toward the passage with seeming confidence, and Shann
knew that as far as the officer was concerned, this was their door to the
lagoon.
Thorvald might be stubborn, but he was not a fool. And
his training and skill in such maneuvers was proved when the canoe rode in a
rising swell in and by those rocks to gain the safety, in seconds, of the calm
lagoon. Shann sighed with relief, but ventured no comment.
Now they must paddle back along the inner side of the
reef to locate the beaches, for fronting them on this side of the well-protected
island were cliffs as formidable as those which guarded the first of the chain
at which they had aimed.
Shann glanced now and then over the side of the boat,
hoping in these shallows to sight the sea bed or some of the inhabitants of
these waters. But there was no piercing that green murk. Here and there nodules
of rock awash in wavelets projected inches or feet above the surface, to be
avoided by the voyagers. Shann's shoulders ached and burned, his muscles were
unaccustomed to the steady swing of the paddles, and the fire of the sun
stabbed easily through only two layers of ragged cloth to his skin. He ran a
dry tongue over drier lips and gazed eagerly ahead in search of the first of
the beaches.
What was so important about this island that
Thorvaldhad to make a landing here? The officer's stories of a native race
which they might turn against the Throgs to their own advantage was thin, very
thin indeed. Especially now, as Shann weighed an unsupported theory against
that ache in his shoulders, the possibility of being marooned on the
inhospitable shore ahead, against the fifty probable dangers he could total up
with very little expenditure of effort. A small nagging doubt of Thorvald's
obsession began to grow in his mind. How could Shann even be sure that that
carved disk and Thorvald's hokus-pokus with it had been on the level? On the
other hand what motive would the officer have for trying such an act just to
impress Shann?
The beach at last! As they headed the canoe in that
direction the wolverines nearly brought disaster on them. The animals'
restlessness became acute as they sighted and scented the shore and knew that
they were close. Taggi reared, plunged over the side of the craft, and Shann
had just time to fling his weight in the opposite direction as a counterbalance
when Togi followed. They splashed shoreward while Thorvald swore fluently and
Shann grabbed to save the precious supply bag. In a shower of gravel the
animals made land and humped well up on the strand before pausing to shake
themselves and splatter far and wide the burden of moisture transported by
their shaggy fur.
Ashore, the canoe became a clumsy burden and, light as
the craft was, both of the men sweated to get it up on the beach without
snagging the outrigger against stones and brush. With the thought of a Throg
patrol in mind they worked swiftly to cover it.
Taggi raised an egg-patterned snout from a hollow and
licked at the stippling of greenish yolk matting his fur. The wolverines had
wasted no time in sampling the contents of a wealth of nesting places that
began just above the high-water mark, each cupping two to four tough-shelled
eggs. Treading a path among those clutches, the Terrans climbed a red-earthed
slope toward the interior of the island.
They found water, not the clear running of a mountain
spring, but a stalish pool in a stone-walled depression on the crest of a rise,
filled by the bounty of the rain. The warm liquid was brackish, but satisfied
in part their thirst, and they drank eagerly.
The outer cliff wall of the island was just that, a
wall, for there was an inner slope to match the outer. And at the bottom of it
purple-green foliage showed where plants and stunted trees fought for living
space. But there was nothing else, though they quartered that growing section
with the care of men trying to locate an enemy outpost.
That night they camped in the hollow, roasted eggs in
a fire, and ate the fishy-tasting contents because it was food, not because
they relished what they swallowed. Tonight no cloud bank hung overhead. A man,
gazing up, could see the stars. The stars and other things, for over the
distant shore of the mainland they sighted the cruising lights of a Throg ship
and waited tensely for that circle of small sparkling points to swing out
toward their own hiding hole.
"They haven't given up," Shann stated what
was obvious to them both.
"The settler transport," Thorvald reminded
him. "If they do not take a prisoner to talk her in and allay suspicion,
then--" he snapped his fingers--"the Patrol will be on their tails,
but quick!"
So just by keeping out of Throg range, they were, in a
way, still fighting. Shann settled back, his tender shoulders resting against a
tree bole. He tried to count the number of days and nights lying behind him now
since that early morning when he had watched the Terran camp die under the
aliens' weapons. But one day faded into another so that he could remember only
action parts clearly--the attack on the grounded scoutship, the sortie they had
made in turn on the occupied camp, the dust storm on the river, the escape from
the Throg ship in the mountain crevice, and their meeting with the hound. Then
that storm which had driven them to seek cover after their curious experience
with the disk. And now this day when they had safely reached the island.
"Why this island?" he asked suddenly.
"That carved piece was found here on the edge of
this valley," Thorvald returned matter-of-factly.
"But today we found nothing at all--"
"Yet this island supplies us with a starting
point."
A starting point for what? A detailed search of all
the islands, great and small, in the chain? And how did they dare continue to
paddle openly from one to the next with the Throgs sweeping the skies? They
would have provided an excellent target today as they combed that reef for an
hour or more. Wearily, Shann spread out his hands in the very faint light of
their tiny fire, poked with a finger tip at smarting points which would have
been blisters had those hands not known toughening in the past. More paddling
tomorrow? But that was tomorrow, and at least they need not worry tonight about
any Throg attack once they had doused the fire, an action which was now being
methodically attended to by Thorvald. Shann pushed down on the bed of leaves he
had heaped together. The night was quiet. He could hear only the murmur of the
sea, a lulling croon of sound to make one sleep deep, perhaps dreamlessly.
Sun struck down, making a dazzle about him. Shann
turned over drowsily in that welcome heat, stretching a little as might a cat
at ease. When he really awoke under the press of memory, the need for alertness
rode him once more. Beaten-down grass, the burnt-out embers of last night's
fire were beside him. But of Thorvald and the wolverines there were no signs.
Not only did he now lie alone, but he was possessed by
the feeling that he had not been deserted only momentarily, that Taggi, Togi
and the Survey officer were indeed gone. Shann sat up, got to his feet,
breathing faster, a prickle of uneasiness spreading in him, bringing him to that
inner slope, up it to the crest from which he could see that beach where last
night they had concealed the canoe.
Those lengths of brush and tufts of grass they had
used for a screen were strewn about as if tossed in haste. And not too long
before...
For the canoe was out in the calm waters within the
reef, the paddle blade wielded by its occupant flashing brightly in the sun. On
the shingle below, the wolverines prowled back and forth, whining in
bewilderment.
"Thorvald--!"
Shann put the full force of his lungs into that hail,
hearing the name ring from one of the small peaks at his back. But the man in
the boat did not turn his head; there was no change in the speed of that paddle
dip.
Shann leaped down the outer slope to the beach,
skidding the last few feet, saving himself from going headfirst into the water
only by a painful wrench of his body.
"Thorvald!" He tried calling again. But that
head, bright under the sun did not turn; there was no answer. Shann tore at his
clothes and kicked off his boots.
He did not think of the possibility of lurking sea
monsters as he plunged into the water, swam for the canoe edging along the
reef, plainly bound for the sea gate to the southwest. Shann was not a powerful
swimmer. His first impetus gave him a good start, but after that he had to
fight for each foot he gained, and the fear grew in him that the other would
reach the reef passage before he could catch up. He wasted no more time trying
to hail Thorvald, putting all his breath and energy into the effort of overtaking
the craft.
And he almost made it, his hand actually slipping
along the log which furnished the balancing outrigger. As his fingers tightened
on that slimy wood he looked up, and loosed that hold again in time perhaps to
save his life.
For when he ducked to let the water cover his head in
an impromptu half dive, Shann carried with him a vivid picture, a picture so
astounding that he was a little dazed.
Thorvald had stopped paddling at last, because that
paddle had to be put to another use. Had Shann not released his hold on the log
and gone under water, that crudely fashioned piece of wood might have broken
his skull. He saw only too clearly the paddle raised in both hands as an ugly
weapon, and Thorvald's face, convulsed in a spasm of ugly rage which made it as
inhuman as a Throg's.
Sputtering and choking, Shann fought up to the air
once more. The paddle was back at the task for which it had been carved, the
canoe was underway again, its occupant paying no more attention to what lay
behind than if hehad successfully disposed of the man in the water. To follow
would be only to invite another attack, and Shann might not be so lucky next
time. He was not good enough a swimmer to try any tricks such as oversetting
the canoe, not when Thorvald was an expert who could easily finish off a
fumbling opponent.
Shann swam wearily to shore where the wolverines
waited, unable yet to make sense of that attack in the lagoon. What had
happened to Thorvald? What motive had led the other to leave Shann and the
animals on this island, the island Thorvald had called a starting point in his
search for the natives of Warlock? Or had every bit of that tall tale been
invented by the Survey officer for some obscure purpose of his own, certainly
no sane purpose? Against that logic Shann could only set the carved disk, and
he had only Thorvald's word that that had been discovered here.
He dragged himself out of the water on his hands and
knees and lay, winded and gasping. Taggi came to lick his face, nuzzle him,
making a small, bewildered whimpering. While above, the leather-headed birds
called and swooped, fearful and angry for their disturbed nesting place. The
Terran retched, coughed up water, and then sat up to look around.
The spread of lagoon was bare. Thorvald must have
rounded the south point of land and be very close to the reef passage, perhaps
through it by now. Not stopping for his clothes, Shann started up the slope,
crawling part of the way on his hands and knees.
He reached the crest again and got to his feet. The
sun made an eye-dazzling glitter of the waves. But under the shade of his hands
Shann saw the canoe again, beyond the reef, heading on out along the island
chain, not back to shore as he had expected. Thorvald was still on the hunt,
but for what? A reality which existed, or a dream in his own disturbed brain?
Shann sat down. He was very hungry, for that adventure
in the lagoon had sapped his strength. And he was a prisoner along with the
wolverines, a prisoner on an island which was half the size of the valley which
held the Survey camp. As far as he knew, his only supply of drinkable water was
that tank of evil-smelling rain which would be speedily evaporated by a sun
such as the one now beating down on him. And between him and the shore was the sea,
a sea which harbored such creatures as the fork-tail he had watched die.
Thorvald was still steadily on course, not to the next
island in the chain, a small, bare knob, but to the one beyond that. He could
have been hurrying to a meeting. Where and with what?
Shann got to his feet, started down to the beach once
more, sure now that the officer had no intention of returning, that he was
again on his own with only his wits and strength to keep him alive--alive and
somehow free of this waterwashed prison.
10 : A TRAP FOR A TRAPPER
Shann took up the piece of soft chalklike stone he had
found and drew another short white mark on the rust-red of a boulder well above
tide level. That made three such marks, three days since Thorvald had marooned
him. And he was no nearer the shore now than he had been on that first morning!
He sat where he was by the boulder, aware that he should be up, trying to climb
to the less accessible nests of the sea birds. The prisoners, man and
wolverines, had cleaned out all those they had discovered on beach and cliffs.
But at the thought of more eggs, Shann's stomach knotted in pain and he began
to retch.
There had been no sign of Thorvald since Shann had
watched him steer between the two westward islands. And the younger Terran's
faint hope that the officer would return had died. On the shore a few feet away
lay his own pitiful attempt to solve the problem of escape.
The force ax had vanished with Thorvald, along with
all the rest of the meager supplies which had been the officer's original
contribution to their joint equipment. Shann had used his knife on brush and
small trees, trying to put together some kind of a raft. But he had not been
able to discover here any of those vines necessary for binding, and his best
efforts had all come to grief when he tried them in a lagoon launching. So far
he had achieved no form of raft which would keep him afloat longer than five
minutes, let alone support three of them as far as the next island.
Shann pulled listlessly at the framework of his latest
try, dully disheartened. He tried not to think of the inescapable fact that the
water in the rain tank had sunk to only an inch or so of muddy scum. Last night
he had dug in the heart of the interior valley where the rankness of the
vegetation was a promise of moisture, to uncover damp clay and then a brackish
ooze. Far too little to satisfy both him and the animals.
There were surely fish somewhere in the lagoon. Shann
wondered if the raw flesh of sea dwellers could supply the water they needed.
But lacking net, line, or hooks, how did one fish? Yesterday, using his
stunner, he had brought down a bird, to discover the carcass so rank even the
wolverines, never dainty eaters, refused to gnaw it.
The animals prowled the two beaches, and Shann guessed
they hunted shell dwellers, for at times they dug energetically in the gravel.
Togi was busied in this way now, the sand flowing from under her pumping legs,
her claws raking in good earnest.
And it was Togi's excavation which brought Shann a
first ray of hope. Her excitement was so marked that he believed she was in
quest of some worthwhile game and he moved across to inspect the pit. A patch
of brown, which had been skimmed bare by one raking paw, made him shout.
Taggi shambled downslope, going to work beside his
mate with an eagerness as open as hers. Shann hovered at the edge of the pit
they were rapidly enlarging. The brown patch was larger, disclosing itself as a
hump doming up from the gravel. The Terran did not need to run his hands over
that rough surface to recognize the nature of the find. This was another shell
such as had come floating in after the storm to form the raw material of their
canoe.
However, as fast as the wolverines dug, they did not
appear to make correspondingly swift headway in uncovering their find as might
reasonably be expected. In fact, a witness could guess that the shell was
sinking at a pace only a fraction slower than the burrowers were using to free
it. Intrigued by that, Shann went back to the waterline, secured one of the lengths
he had been trying to weave into his failures, and returned to use it as a
makeshift shovel.
Now, with three of them at the digging, the brown hump
was uncovered, and Shann pried down around its edge, trying to lever it up and
over. To his amazement, his tool was caught and held, nearly jerked from his
hands. To his retaliating tug the obstruction below-ground gave way, and the
Terran sprawled back, the length of wood coming clear, to show the other end
smashed and splintered as if it had been caught between mashing gears.
For the first time he understood that they were
dealing not with an empty shell casing buried by drift under this small beach,
but with a shell still inhabited by the Warlockian creature to whom it was a
natural covering, and that that inhabitant would fight to continue ownership. A
moment's examination of that splintered wood also suggested that the shell's
present wearer was well able to defend itself.
Shann attempted to call off the wolverines, but they
were out of control now, digging frantically to get at this new prey. And he
knew that if he pulled them away by force, they were apt to turn those
punishing claws and snapping jaws on him.
It was for their protection that he returned to
digging, though he no longer tried to pry up the shell. Taggi leaped to the top
of that dome, sweeping paws downward to clear its surface, while Togi prowled
around its circumference, pausing now and then to send dirt and gravel
spattering, but treading warily as might one alert for a sudden attack.
They had the creature almost clear now, though the
shell still rested firmly on the ground, and they had no notion of what it
might protect. It was smaller, perhaps two thirds the size of the one which
Thorvald had fashioned into a seagoing craft. But it could provide them with
transportation to the mainland if Shann was able to repeat the feat of turning
it into an outrigger canoe.
Taggi joined his mate on the ground and both
wolverines padded about the dome, obviously baffled. Now and then they
assaulted the shell with a testing paw. Claws raked and did not leave any marks
but shallow scratches. They could continue that forever, as far as Shann could
see, without solving the problem in the least.
He sat back on his heels and studied the scene in
detail. The excavation holding the shelled creature was some three yards above
the high-water mark, with a few more feet separating that from the point where
lazy waves now washed the finer sand. Shann watched the slow inward slip of
those waves with growing interest. Where their combined efforts had failed to
win this odd battle, perhaps the sea itself could now be pressed into service.
Shann began his own excavation, a trough to lead from
the waterline to the pit occupied by the obstinate shell. Of course the thing
living in or under that covering might be only too familiar with salt water.
But it had placed its burrow, or hiding place, above the reach of the waves and
so might be disconcerted by the sudden appearance of water in its bed. However,
the scheme was worth trying, and he went to work doggedly, wishing he could
make the wolverines understand so they would help him.
They still prowled about their captive, scraping at
the sand about the shell casing. At least their efforts would keep the
half-prisoner occupied and prevent its escape. Shann put another piece of his
raft to work as a shovel, throwing up a shower of sand and gravel while sweat
dampened his tattered blouse and was salt and sticky on his arms and face.
He finished his trench, one which ran at an angle he
hoped would feed water into the pit rapidly once he knocked away the last
barrier against the waves. And, splashing out into the green water, he did just
that.
His calculations proved correct. Waves lapped, then
flowed in a rapidly thickening stream, puddling out about the shell as the
wolverines drew back, snarling. Shann lashed his knife fast to a stout length
of sapling, so equipping himself with a spear. He stood with it ready in his
hand, not knowing just what to expect. And when the answer to his water attack
came, the move was so sudden that in spite of his preparation he was caught
gaping.
For the shell fairly erupted out of the mess of sand
and water. A complete fringe of jointed, clawed brown limbs churned in a
forward-and-upward dash. But the water worked to frustrate that charge. For one
of the pit walls crumbled, over-balancing the creature so that the fore end of
the shell lifted from the ground, the legs clawing wildly at the air.
Shann thrust with the spear, feeling the knife point
go home so deeply that he could not pull his improvised weapon free. A limb
snapped claws only inches away from his leg as he pushed down on the haft with
all his strength. That attack along with the initial upset of balance did the
job. The shell flopped over, its rounded hump now embedded in the watery sand
of the pit while the frantic struggles of the creature to right itself only
buried it the deeper.
The Terran stared down upon a segmented under belly
where legs were paired in riblike formation. Shann could locate no head, no
good target. But he drew his stunner and beamed at either end of the oval, and
then, for good measure, in the middle, hoping in one of those three general
blasts to contact the thing's central nervous system. He was not to know which
of those shots did the trick, but the frantic wiggling of the legs slowed and
finally ended, as a clockwork toy might run down for want of winding--and at
last projected, at crooked angles, completely still. The shell creature might
not be dead, but it was tamed for now.
Taggi had only been waiting for a good chance to do
battle. He grabbed one of those legs, worried it, and then leaped to tear at
the under body. Unlike the outer shell, this portion of the creature had no
proper armor and the wolverine plunged joyfully into the business of the kill,
his mate following suit.
The process of butchery was a bloody, even beastly
job, and Shann was shaken before it was complete. But he kept at his labors,
determined to have that shell, his one chance of escape from the island. The
wolverines feasted on the greenish-white flesh, but he could not bring himself
to sample it, climbing to the heights in search of eggs, and making a happy
find of a niche filled with the edible moss-fungi.
By late afternoon he had the shell scooped fairly
clean and the wolverines had carried away for burial such portions as they had
not been able to consume at their first eating. Meanwhile, the leather-headed
birds had grown bold enough to snatch up the fragments he tossed out on the
water, struggling for that bounty against feeders arising from the depths of
the lagoon.
At the coming of dusk Shann hauled the bloodstained,
grisly trophy well up the beach and wedged it among the rocks, determined not
to lose his treasure. Then he stripped and washed, first his clothing and then
himself, rubbing his hands and arms with sand until his skin was tender. He was
still exultant at his luck. The drift would supply him with materials for an
outrigger. One more day's work--or maybe two--and he could leave. He wrung out
his blouse and gazed toward the distant line of the shore. Once he had his new
canoe ready he would try to make the trip back in the early morning while the
mists were still on the sea. That should give him cover against any Throg
flight.
That night Shann slept in the deep fog of bodily
exhaustion. There were no dreams, nothing but an unconsciousness which even a
Throg attack could not have pierced. He roused in the morning with an odd
feeling of guilt. The water hole he had scooped in the valley yielded him some
swallows tasting of earth, but he had almost forgotten the flavor of a purer
liquid. Munching on a fistful of moss, he hurried down to the shore, half
fearing to find the shell gone, his luck out once again.
Not only was the shell where he had wedged it, but he
had done better than he knew when he had left it exposed in the night. Small
things scuttled away from it into hiding, and several birds arose--scavengers
had been busy lightening his unwelcome task for that morning. And seeing how
the clean-up process had gone, Shann had a second inspiration.
Pushing the thing down the beach, he sank it in the
shallows with several rocks to anchor it. Within a few seconds the shell was
invaded by a whole school of spiny-tailed fish that ate greedily. Leaving his
find to their cleansing, Shann went back to prospect the pile of raft material,
choosing pieces which could serve for an outrigger frame. He was handicapped as
he had been all along by the absence of the vines one could use for lashings.
And he had reached the point of considering a drastic sacrifice of his clothing
to get the necessary strips when he saw Taggi dragging behind him one of the
jointed legs the wolverines had put in storage the day before.
Now and again Taggi laid his prize on the shingle,
holding it firmly pinned with his forepaws as he tried to worry loose a section
of flesh. But apparently that feat was beyond even his notable teeth, and at
length he left it lying there in disgust while he returned to a cache for more
palatable fare. Shann went to examine more closely the triple-jointed limb.
The casing was not as hard as horn or shell, he discovered
upon testing; it more resembled tough skin laid over bone. With a knife he
tried to loosen the skin--a tedious job requiring a great deal of patience,
since the tissue tore if pulled away too fast. But with care he acquired a few
thongs perhaps a foot long. Using two of these, he made a trial binding of one
stick to another, and experimented further, soaking the whole construction in
sea water and then exposing it to the direct rays of the sun.
When he examined his test piece an hour later, the
skin thongs had set into place with such success that the one piece of wood
might have been firmly glued to the other. Shann shuffled his feet in a little
dance of triumph as he went on to the lagoon to inspect the water-logged shell.
The scavengers had done well. One scraping, two at the most, would have the
whole thing clean and ready to use.
But that night Shann dreamed. No climbing of a
skull-shaped mountain this time. Instead, he was again on the beach, laboring
under an overwhelming compulsion, building something for an alien purpose he
could not understand. And he worked as hopelessly as a beaten slave, knowing
that what he made was to his own undoing. Yet he could not halt the making,
because just beyond the limit of his vision there stood a dominant will which
held him in bondage.
And he awoke on the beach in the very early dawn, not
knowing how he had come there. His body was bathed in sweat, as it had been
during his day's labors under the sun, and his muscles ached with fatigue.
But when he saw what lay at his feet he cringed. The
framework of the outrigger, close to completion the night before, was
dismantled--smashed. All those strips of hide he had so laboriously culled were
cut--into inch-long bits which could be of no service.
Shann whirled, ran to the shell he had the night
before pulled from the water and stowed in safety. Its rounded dome was dulled
where it had been battered, but there was no break in the surface. He ran his
hands anxiously over the curve to make sure. Then, very slowly, he came back to
the mess of broken wood and snipped hide. And he was sure, only too sure, of
one thing. He, himself, had wrought that destruction. In his dream he had built
to satisfy the whim of an enemy; in reality he had destroyed; and that was
also, he believed, to satisfy an enemy.
The dream was a part of it. But who or what could set
a man dreaming and so take over his body, make him in fact betray himself? But
then, what had made Thorvald maroon him here? For the first time, Shann guessed
a new, if wild, explanation for the officer's desertion. Dreams--and the disk
which had worked so strangely on Thorvald. Suppose everything the other had
surmised was the truth! Then that diskhad been found on this very island, and
here somewhere must lie a clue to the riddle.
Shann licked his lips. Suppose that Thorvald had been
sent away under just such a strong compulsion as the one which had ruled Shann
last night? Why was he left behind if the other had been moved away to protect
some secret? Was it that Shann himself was wanted here, wanted so much that
when he at last found a means of escape he was set to destroy it? That act
might have been forced upon him for two reasons: to keep him here, and to
impress upon him how powerless he was.
Powerless! A flicker of stubborn will stirred to
respond to that implied challenge. All right, the mysteriousthey had made him
do this. But they had underrated him by letting him learn, almost
contemptuously, of their presence by that revelation. So warned, he was in a
manner armed; he could prepare to fight back.
He squatted by the wreckage as he thought that
through, turning over broken pieces. And, Shann realized, he must present at
the moment a satisfactory picture of despondency to any spy. A spy, that was
it! Someone or something must have him under observation, or his activities of
the day before would not have been so summarily countered. And if there was a
spy, then there was his answer to the riddle. To trap the trapper. Such action
might be a project beyond his resources, but it was his own counterattack.
So now he had to play a role. Not only must he search
the island for the trace of his spy, but he must do it in such a fashion that
his purpose would not be plain to the enemy he suspected. The wolverines could
help. Shann arose, allowed his shoulders to droop, slouching to the slope with
all the air of a beaten man which he could assume, whistling for Taggi and
Togi.
When they came, his exploration began. Ostensibly he
was hunting for lengths of drift or suitable growing saplings to take the place
of those he had destroyed under orders. But he kept a careful watch on the
animal pair, hoping by their reactions to pick up a clue to any hidden watcher.
The larger of the two beaches marked the point where
the Terrans had first landed and where the shell thing had been killed. The
smaller was more of a narrow tongue thrust out into the lagoon, much of it
choked with sizable boulders. On earlier visits there Taggi and Togi had poked
into the hollows among these with their usual curiosity. But now both animals
remained upslope, showing no inclination to descend to the water line.
Shann caught hold of Taggi's scruff, pulling him
along. The wolverine twisted and whined, but he did not fight for freedom as he
would have upon scenting Throg. Not that the Terran had ever believed one of
those aliens was responsible for the happenings on the island.
Taggi came down under Shann's urging, but he was
plainly ill at ease. And at last he snarled a warning when the man would have
drawn him closer to two rocks which met overhead in a crude semblance of an
arch. There was a stick of drift protruding from that hollow affording Shann a
legitimate excuse to venture closer. He dropped his hold on the wolverines,
stooped to gather in the length of wood, and at the same time glanced into the
pocket.
Water lay just beyond, making this a doorway to the lagoon.
The sun had not yet penetrated into the shadow, if it ever did. Shann reached
for the wood, at the same time drawing his finger across the flat rock which
would furnish a steppingstone for anything using that door as an entrance to
the island.
Wet! Which might mean his visitor had recently
arrived, or else merely that a splotch of spray had landed there not too long
before. But in his mind Shann was convinced that he had found the spy's
entrance. Could he turn it into a trap? He added a piece of drift to his bundle
and picked up two more before he returned to the cliff ahead.
A trap... He revolved in his mind all the traps he
knew which could be used here. He already had decided upon the bait--his own
work. And if his plans went through--and hope does not die easily--then this
time he would not waste his labor either.
So he went back to the same job he had done the day
before, making do with skin strips he had considered second-best before,
smoothing, cutting. Only the trap occupied his mind, and close to sunset he
knew just what he was going to do and how.
Though the Terran did not know the nature of the
unseen opponent, he thought he could guess two weaknesses which might deliver
the other into his hands. First, the enemy was entirely confident of success in
this venture. No being who was able to control Shann as completely and ably as
had been done the night before would credit any prey with the power to strike
back in force.
Second, such a confident enemy would be unable to
resist watching the manipulation of a captive. The Terran was certain that his
opponent would be on the scene somewhere when he was led, dreaming, to destroy
his work once more.
He might be wrong on both of those counts, but
inwardly he didn't believe so. However, he had to wait until the dark to set up
his own answer, one so simple he was certain the enemy would not suspect it at
all.
11 : THE WITCH
There were patches of light in the inner valley
marking the phosphorescent plants, some creeping at ground level, others tall
as saplings. On other nights Shann had welcomed that wan radiance, but now he
lay in as relaxed a position as possible, marking each of those potential
betrayers as he tried to counterfeit the attitude of sleep and at the same time
plan out his route.
He had purposely settled in a pool of shadow, the
wolverines beside him. And he thought that the bulk of the animal's bodies
would cover his own withdrawal when the time came to move. One arm lying limply
across his middle was in reality clutching to him an intricate arrangement of
small hide straps which he had made by sacrificing most of the remainder of his
painfully acquired thongs. The trap must be set in place soon!
Now that he had charted a path to the crucial point
avoiding all light plants, Shann was ready to move. The Terran pressed his hand
on Taggi's head in the one imperative command the wolverine was apt to
obey--the order to stay where he was.
Shann sat up and gave the same voiceless instruction
to Togi. Then he inched out of the hollow, a worm's progress to that narrow way
along the cliff top--the path which anyone or anything coming up from that sea
gate on the beach would have to pass in order to watch the shoreline occupied
by the half-built outrigger.
So much of his plan was based upon luck and guesses,
but those were all Shann had. And as he worked at the stretching of his snare,
the Terran's heart pounded, and he tensed at every sound out of the night.
Having tested all the anchoring of his net, he tugged at a last knot, and then
crouched to listen not only with his ears, but with all his strength of mind
and body.
Pound of waves, whistle of wind, the sleepy complaint
of some bird... A regular splashing! One of the fish in the lagoon? Or what he
awaited? The Terran retreated as noiselessly as he had come, heading for the
hollow where he had bedded down.
He reached there breathless, his heart pumping, his
mouth dry as if he had been racing. Taggi stirred and thrust a nose inquiringly
against Shann's arm. But the wolverine made no sound, as if he, too, realized
that some menace lay beyond the rim of the valley. Would that other come up the
path Shann had trapped? Or had he been wrong? Was the enemy already stalking
him from the other beach? The grip of his stunner was slippery in his damp
hand; he hated this waiting.
The canoe... his work on it had been a careless
botching. Better to have the job done right. Why, it was perfectly clear now
how he had been mistaken! His whole work plan was wrong; he could see the right
way of doing things laid out as clear as a blueprint in his mind. A picture in
his mind!
Shann stood up and both wolverines moved uneasily,
though neither made a sound. A picture in his mind! But this time he wasn't
asleep; he wasn't dreaming a dream--to be used for his own defeat. Only (that other
could not know this) the pressure which had planted the idea of new work to be
done in his mind--an idea one part of him accepted as fact--had not taken
warning from his move. He was supposed to be under control; the Terran was sure
of that. All right, so he would play that part. He must if he would entice the
trapper into his trap.
He holstered his stunner, walked out into the open,
paying no heed now to the patches of light through which he must pass on his
way to the path his own feet had already worn to the boat beach. As he went,
Shann tried to counterfeit what he believed would be the gait of a man under
compulsion.
Now he was on the rim fronting the downslope, fighting
against his desire to turn and see for himself if anything had climbed behind.
The canoe was all wrong, a bad job which he must make better at once so that in
the morning he would be free of this island prison.
The pressure of that other's will grew stronger. And
the Terran read into that the overconfidence which he believed would be part of
the enemy's character. The one who was sending him to destroy his own work had
no suspicion that the victim was not entirely malleable, ready to be used as he
himself would use a knife or a force ax. Shann strode steadily downslope. With
a small spurt of fear he knew that in a way that unseen other was right; the
pressure was taking over, even though he was awake this time. The Terran tried
to will his hand to his stunner, but his fingers fell instead on the hilt of
his knife. He drew the blade as panic seethed in his head, chilling him from
within. He had underestimated the other's power...
And that panic flared into open fight, making him
forget his careful plans. Now hemust wrench free from this control. The knife
was moving to slash a hide lashing, directed by his hand, but not his will.
A soundless gasp, a flash of dismay rocked him, but
neither was his gasp nor his dismay. That pressure snapped off; he was free.
But the other wasn't! Knife still in fist, Shann turned and ran upslope, his
torch in his other hand. He could see a shape now writhing, fighting, outlined
against a light bush. And, fearing that the stranger might win free and
disappear, the Terran spotlighted the captive in the beam, reckless of Throg or
enemy reinforcements.
The other crouched, plainly startled by the sudden
burst of light. Shann stopped abruptly. He had not really built up any mental
picture of what he had expected to find in his snare, but this prisoner was as
weirdly alien to him as a Throg. The light of the torch was reflected off a
skin which glittered as if scaled, glittered with the brilliance of jewels in
bands and coils of color spreading from the throat down the chest, spiraling
about upper arms, around waist and thighs, as if the stranger wore a treasure house
of gems as part of a living body. Except for those patterned loops, coils, and
bands, the body had no clothing, though a belt about the slender middle
supported a pair of pouches and some odd implements held in loops.
The figure was roughly more humanoid than the Throgs.
The upper limbs were not too unlike Shann's arms, though the hands had four
digits of equal length instead of five. But the features were nonhuman, closer
to saurian in contour. It had large eyes, blazing yellow in the dazzle of the
flash, with vertical slits of green for pupils. A nose united with the jaw to
make a snout, and above the domed forehead a sharp V-point of raised spiky
growth extended back and down until behind the shoulder blades it widened and
expanded to resemble a pair of wings.
The captive no longer struggled, but sat quietly in
the tangle of the snare Shann had set, watching the Terran steadily as if there
were no difficulty in seeing through the brilliance of the beam to the man who
held it. And, oddly enough, Shann experienced no repulsion toward its reptilian
appearance as he had upon first sighting the beetlelike Throg. On impulse he
put down his torch on a rock and walked into the light to face squarely the
thing out of the sea.
Still eyeing Shann, the captive raised one limb and
gave an absent-minded tug to the belt it wore. Shann, noting that gesture, was
struck by a wild surmise, leading him to study the prisoner more narrowly.
Allowing for the alien structure of bone, the nonhuman skin; this creature was
delicate, graceful, in its way beautiful, with a fragility of limb which backed
up his suspicions. Moved by no pressure from the other, but by his own will and
sense of fitness, Shann stooped to cut the control line of his snare.
The captive continued to watch as Shann sheathed his
blade and then held out his hand. Yellow eyes, never blinking since his initial
appearance, regarded him, not with any trace of fear or dismay, but with a calm
measurement which was curiosity based upon a strong belief in its own
superiority. He did not know how he knew, but Shann was certain that the
creature out of the sea was still entirely confident, that it made no fight
because it did not conceive of any possible danger from him. And again, oddly enough,
he was not irritated by this unconscious arrogance; rather he was intrigued and
amused.
"Friends?" Shann used the basic galactic
speech devised by Survey and the Free Traders, semantics which depended upon
the proper inflection of voice and tone to project meaning when the words were
foreign.
The other made no sound, and the Terran began to
wonder if his captive had any audible form of speech. He withdrew a step or two
then pulled at the snare, drawing the cords away from the creature's slender
ankles. Rolling the thongs into a ball, he tossed the crude net back over his
shoulder.
"Friends?" he repeated again, showing his
empty hands, trying to give that one word the proper inflection, hoping the
other could read his peaceful intent in his features if not by his speech.
In one lithe, flowing movement the alien arose. Fully
erect, the Warlockian had a frail appearance. Shann, for his breed, was not
tall. But the native was still smaller, not more than five feet, that stiff V
of head crest just topping Shann's shoulder. Whether any of those fittings at
its belt could be a weapon the Terran had no way of telling. However, the other
made no move to draw any of them.
Instead, one of the four-digit hands came up. Shann
felt the feather touch of strange finger tips on his chin, across his lips, up
his cheek, to at last press firmly on his forehead at a spot just between the
eyebrows. What followed was communication of a sort, not in words or in any
describable flow of thoughts. There was no feeling of enmity--at least nothing
strong enough to be called that. Curiosity, yes, and then a growing doubt, not
of the Terran himself, but of the other's preconceived ideas concerning him.
Shann was other than the native had judged him, and the stranger was disturbed,
that self-confidence a little ruffled. And also Shann was right in his guess.
He smiled, his amusement growing--not aimed at his companion on this cliff top,
but at himself. For he was dealing with a female, a very young female, and
someone as fully feminine in her way as any human girl could be.
"Friends?" he asked for the third time.
But the other still exuded a wariness, a wariness
mixed with surprise. And the tenuous message which passed between them then
astounded Shann. To this Warlockian out of the night he was not following the
proper pattern of male behavior at all; he should have been in awe of the other
merely because of her sex. A diffidence rather than an assumption of equality
should have colored his response, judged by her standards. At first, he caught
a flash of anger at this preposterous attitude of his; then her curiosity won,
but there was still no reply to his question.
The finger tips no longer made contact between them.
Stepping back, her hands now reached for one of the pouches at her belt. Shann
watched that movement carefully. And because he did not trust her too far, he
whistled.
Her head came up. She might be dumb, but plainly she
was not deaf. And she gazed down into the hollow as the wolverines answered his
summons with growls. Her profile reminded Shann of something for an instant;
but it should have been golden-yellow instead of silver with two jeweled
patterns ringing the snout. Yes, that small plaque he had seen in the cabin of
one of the ship's officers. A very old Terran legend--"Dragon," the
officer had named the creature. Only that one had possessed a serpent's body, a
lizard's legs and wings.
Shann gave a sudden start, aware his thoughts had made
him careless, or had she in some way led him into that bypath of memory for her
own purposes? Because now she held some object in the curve of her curled
fingers, regarding him with those unblinking yellow eyes. Eyes... eyes... Shann
dimly heard the alarm cry of the wolverines. He tried to snap draw his stunner,
but it was too late.
There was a haze about him hiding the rocks, the
island valley with its radiant plants, the night sky, the bright beam of the
torch. Now he moved through that haze as one walks through a dream approaching
nightmare, striding with an effort as if wading through a deterring flood.
Sound, sight--one after another those senses were taken from him. Desperately
Shann held to one thing, his own sense of identity. He was Shann Lantee, Terran
breed, out of Tyr, of the Survey Service. Some part of him repeated those facts
with vast urgency against an almost overwhelming force which strove to defeat
that awareness of self, making him nothing but a tool--or a weapon--for
another's use.
The Terran fought, soundlessly but fiercely, on a
battleground which was within him, knowing in a detached way that his body
obeyed another's commands.
"I am Shann--" he cried without audible
speech. "I am myself. I have two hands, two legs... I think for myself! I
am aman-- "
And to that came an answer of sorts, a blow of will
striking at his resistance, a will which struggled to drown him before ebbing,
leaving behind it a faint suggestion of bewilderment, of a dawn of concern.
"I am aman !" he hurled that assertion as he
might have thrust deep with one of the crude spears he had used against the
Throgs. For against what he faced now his weapons were as crude as spears
fronting blasters. "I am Shann Lantee, Terran, man..." Those were
facts; no haze could sweep them from his mind or take away that heritage.
And again there was the lightening of the pressure,
the slight recoil, which could only be a prelude to another assault upon his
last stronghold. He clutched his three facts to him as a shield, groping for
others which might have afforded a weapon of rebuttal.
Dreams, these Warlockians dealt in and through dreams.
And the opposite of dreams are facts! His name, his breed, his sex--these were
facts. And Warlock itself was a fact. The earth under his boots was a fact. The
water which washed around the island was a fact. The air he breathed was a
fact. Flesh, blood, bones--facts, all of them. Now he was a struggling identity
imprisoned in a rebel body. But that body was real. He tried to feel it. Blood
pumped from his heart, his lungs filled and emptied; he struggled to feel those
processes.
With a terrifying shock, the envelope which had held
him vanished. Shann was choking, struggling in water. He flailed out with his
arms, kicked his legs. One hand grated painfully against stone. Hardly knowing
what he did, but fighting for his life, Shann caught at that rock and drew his
head out of water. Coughing and gasping, half drowned, he was weak with the
panic of his close brush with death.
For a long moment he could only cling to the rock
which had saved him, retching and dazed, as the water washed about his body, a
current tugging at his trailing legs. There was light of a sort here, patches
of green which glowed with the same subdued light as the bushes of the outer
world, for he was no longer under the night sky. A rock-roof was but inches
over his head; he must be in some cave or tunnel under the surface of the sea.
Again a gust of panic shook him as he felt trapped.
The water continued to pull at Shann, and in his
weakened condition it was a temptation to yield to that pull; the more he
fought it the more he was exhausted. At last the Terran turned on his back,
trying to float with the stream, sure he could no longer battle it.
Luckily those few inches of space above the surface of
the water continued, and he had air to breathe. But the fear of that ending, of
being swept under the surface, chewed at his nerves. And his bodily danger
burned away the last of the spell which had held him, brought him into this
place, wherever it might be.
Was it only his heightened imagination, or had the
current grown swifter? Shann tried to gauge the speed of his passage by the way
the patches of green light slipped by. Now he turned and began to swim slowly,
feeling as if his arms were leaden weights, his ribs a cage to bind his aching
lungs.
Another patch of light... larger... spreading across
the roof over head. Then, he was out! Out of the tunnel into a cavern so vast
that its arching roof was like a skydome far above his head. But here the
patches of light were brighter, and they were arranged in odd groups which had
a familiar look to them.
Only, better than freedom overhead, there was a shore
not too distant. Shann swam for that haven, summoning up the last rags of his
strength, knowing that if he could not reach it very soon he was finished.
Somehow he made it and lay gasping, his cheek resting on sand finer than any of
the outer world, his fingers digging into it for purchase to drag his body on.
But when he collapsed, his legs were still awash in water.
No footfall could be heard on that sand. But he knew
that he was no longer alone. He braced his hands and with painful effort
levered up his body. Somehow he made it to his knees, but he could not stand.
Instead he half tumbled back, so that he faced them from a sitting position.
Them--there were three of them--the dragon-headed ones
with their slender, jewel-set bodies glittering even in this subdued light,
their yellow eyes fastened on him with a remoteness which did not approach any
human emotion, save perhaps that of a cold and limited wonder. But behind them came
a fourth, one he knew by the patterns on her body.
Shann clasped his hands about his knees to still the
trembling of his body, and eyed them back with all the defiance he could
muster. Nor did he doubt that he had been brought here, his body as captive to
their will, as had been that of their spy or messenger in his crude snare on
the island.
"Well, you have me," he said hoarsely.
"Now what?"
His words boomed weirdly out over the water, were
echoed from the dim outer reaches of the cavern. There was no answer. They
merely stood watching him. Shann stiffened, determined to hold to his defiance
and to that identity which he now knew was his weapon against the powers they
used.
The one who had somehow drawn him there moved at last,
circling around the other three with a suggestion of diffidence in her manner.
Shann jerked back his head as her hand stretched to touch his face. And then,
guessing that she sought her peculiar form of communication, he submitted to
her finger tips, though now his skin crawled under that light but firm pressure
and he shrank from the contact.
There were no sensations this time. To his amazement a
concrete inquiry shaped itself in his brain, as clear as if the question had
been asked aloud: "Who are you?"
"Shann..." he began vocally, and then turned
words into thoughts. "Shann Lantee, Terran, man." He made his answer
the same which had kept him from succumbing to their complete domination.
"Name--Shann Lantee, man--yes." The other
accepted those. "Terran?" That was a question.
Did these people have any notion of space travel?
Could they understand the concept of another world holding intelligent beings?
"I come from another world..." He tried to
make a cleancut picture in his mind--a globe in space, a ship blasting free...
"Look!" The fingers still rested between his
eyebrows, but with her other hand the Warlockian was pointing up to the dome of
the cavern.
Shann followed her order. He studied those patches of
light which had seemed so vaguely familiar at his first sighting, studying them
closely to know them for what they were. A star map! A map of the heavens as
they could be seen from the outer crust of Warlock.
"Yes, I come from the stars," he answered,
booming with his voice.
The fingers dropped from his forehead; the scaled head
swung around to exchange glances, which were perhaps some unheard communication
with the other three. Then the hand was extended again.
"Come!"
Fingers fell from his head to his right wrist, closing
there with surprising strength; and some of that strength together with a new
energy flowed from them into him, so that he found and kept his feet as the
other drew him up.
12 : THE VEIL OF ILLUSION
Perhaps his status was that of a prisoner, but Shann
was too tired to press for an explanation. He was content to be left alone in
the unusual circular, but roofless, room of the structure to which they had
brought him. There was a thick matlike pallet in one corner, short for the
length of his body, but softer than any bed he had rested on since he had left
the Terran camp before the coming of the Throgs. Above him glimmered those
patches of light symbolizing the lost stars. He blinked at them until they all
ran together in bands like the jeweled coils on Warlockian bodies; then he
slept--dreamlessly.
The Terran awoke with all his senses alert; some
silent alarm might have triggered that instant awareness of himself and his
surroundings. There had been no change in the star pattern still overhead; no
one had entered the round chamber. Shann rolled over on his mat bed, conscious
that all his aches had vanished. Just as his mind was clearly active, so did
his body also respond effortlessly to his demands. He was not aware of any
hunger or thirst, though a considerable length of time must have passed since
he had made his mysteriously contrived exit from the outer world.
In spite of the humidity of the air, his ragged
garments had dried on his body. Shann got to his feet, trying to order the
sorry remnants of his uniform, eager to be on the move. Though to where and for
what purpose he could not have answered.
The door through which he had entered remained closed,
refusing to yield to his push. Shann stepped back, eyeing the distance to the
top of the partition between the roofless rooms. The walls were smooth with the
gloss of a sea shell's interior, but the exuberant confidence which had been
with him since his awakening refused to accept such a minor obstacle.
He made two test leaps, both times his fingers
striking the wall well below the top of the partition. Shann gathered himself
together as might a cat and tried the third time, putting into that effort
every last ounce of strength, determination and will. He made it, though his
arms jerked as the weight of his body hung from his hands. Then a scramble, a
knee hooked over the top, and he was perched on the wall, able to study the
rest of the building.
In shape, the structure was unlike anything he had
seen on his home world or reproduced in any of the tri-dee records of Survey
accessible to him. The rooms were either circular or oval, each separated from
the next by a short passage, so that the overall impression was that of ten
strings of beads radiating from a central knot of one large chamber, all with
the uniform nacre walls and a limited amount of furnishings.
As he balanced on the narrow perch, Shann could sight
no other movement in the nearest line of rooms, those connected by corridors
with his own. He got to his feet to walk the tightrope of the upper walls
toward that inner chamber which was the heart of the Warlockian--palace? town
apartment dwelling? At least it was the only structure on the island, for he
could see the outer rim of that smooth soft sand ringing it about. The island
itself was curiously symmetrical, a perfect oval, too perfect to be a natural
outcrop of sand and rock.
There was no day or night here in the cavern. The
light from the roof patches remained constantly the same, and that flow was
abetted within the building by a soft radiation from the walls. Shann reached
the next room in line, hunkering down to see within it. To all appearances the
chamber was exactly the same as the one he had just left; there were the same
unadorned walls, a thick mat bed against the far side, and no indication
whether it was in use or had not been entered for days.
He was on the next section of corridor wall when he
caught that faint taint in the air, the very familiar scent of wolverines. Now
it provided Shann with a guide as well as a promise of allies.
The next bead-room gave him what he wanted. Below him
Taggi and Togi paced back and forth. They had already torn to bits the sleeping
mat which had been the chamber's single furnishing, and their temper was none
too certain. As Shann squatted well above their range of vision, Taggi reared
against the opposite wall, his claws finding no hold on the smooth coating of
its surface. They were as completely imprisoned as if they had been dropped
into a huge fishbowl, and they were not taking to it kindly.
How had the animals been brought here? Down that water
tunnel by the same unknown method he himself had been transported until that
almost disastrous awakening in the center of the flood? The Terran did not
doubt that the doors of the room were as securely fastened as those of his own
further down the corridor. For the moment the wolverines were safe; he could
not free them. And he was growing increasingly certain that if he found any of
his native jailers, it would be at the center of that wheel of rooms and
corridors.
Shann made no attempt to attract the animals'
attention, but kept on along his tightrope path. He passed two more rooms, both
empty, both differing in no way from those he had already inspected; and then
he came to the central chamber, four times as big as any of the rest and with a
much brighter wall light.
The Terran crouched, one hand on the surface of the
partition top as an additional balance, the other gripping his stunner. For
some reason his captors had not disarmed him. Perhaps they believed they had no
necessity to fear his off-world weapon.
"Have you grown wings?"
The words formed in his brain, bringing with them a
sense of calm amusement to reduce all his bold exploration to the level of a
child's first staggering steps. Shann fought his first answering flare of pure
irritation. To lose even a fraction of control was to open a door for them. He
remained where he was as if he had never "heard" that question,
surveying the room below with all the impassiveness he could summon.
Here the walls were no smooth barrier, but honeycombed
with niches in a regular pattern. And in each of the niches rested a polished
skull, a nonhuman skull. Only the outlines of those ranked bones were familiar;
for just so had looked the great purple-red rock where the wheeling flyers
issued from the eye sockets. A rock island had been fashioned into a skull--by
design or nature?
And upon closer observation the Terran could see that
there was a difference among these ranked skulls, a mutation of coloring from
row to row, a softening of outline, perhaps by the wearing of time.
There was also a table of dull black, rising from the
flooring on legs which were not more than a very few inches high, so that from
his present perch the board appeared to rest on the pavement itself. Behind the
table in a row, as shopkeepers might await a customer, three of the
Warlockians, sat cross-legged on mats, their hands folded primly before them.
And at the side a fourth, the one whom he had trapped on the island.
Not one of those spiked heads rose to view him. But
they knew that he was there; perhaps they had known the very instant he had
left the room or cell in which they had shut him. And they were so very sure of
themselves... Once again Shann subdued a spark of anger. That same patience
with its core of stubborn determination which had brought him to Warlock backed
his moves now. The Terran swung down, landing lightly on his feet, facing the
three behind the table, towering well over them as he stood erect, yet gaining
no sense of satisfaction from that merely physical fact.
"You have come." The words sounded as if
they might be a part of some polite formula. So he replied in kind and aloud.
"I have come." Without waiting for their
bidding, he dropped into the same cross-legged pose, fronting them now on a
more equal level across their dead black table.
"And why have you come, star voyager?" That
thought seemed to be a concentrated effort from all three rather than any
individual questioning.
"And why did you bring me?" He hesitated,
trying to think of some polite form of address. Those he knew which were
appropriate to their sex on other worlds seemed incongruous when applied to the
bizarre figures now facing him. "Wise ones," he finally chose.
Those unblinking yellow eyes conveyed no emotion;
certainly his human gaze could detect no change of expression on their nonhuman
faces.
"You are a male."
"I am," he agreed, not seeing just what that
fact had to do with either diplomatic fencing or his experiences of the
immediate past.
"Where then is your thoughtguider?"
Shann puzzled over that conception, guessed at its meaning.
"I am my own thoughtguider," he returned
stoutly, with all the conviction he could manage to put into that reply.
Again he met a yellow-green stare, but he sensed a
change in them. Some of their complacency had ebbed; his reply had been as a
stone dropped into a quiet pool, sending ripples out afar to disturb the
customary mirror surface of smooth serenity.
"The star-born one speaks the truth!" That
came from the Warlockian who had been his first contact.
"It would appear that he does." The
agreement was measured, and Shann knew that he was meant to
"overhear" that.
"It would seem, Readers-of-the-rods"--the
middle one of the triumvirate at the table spoke now--"that all living
things do not follow our pattern of life. But that is possible. A male who thinks
for himself... unguided, who dreams perhaps! Or who can understand the truth of
dreaming! Strange indeed must be his people. Sharers-of-my-visions, let us
consult the Old Ones concerning this." For the first time one of those
crested heads moved, the gaze shifted from Shann to the ranks of the skulls,
pausing at one.
Shann, ready for any wonder, did not betray his
amazement when the ivory inhabitant of that particular niche moved, lifted from
its small compartment, and drifted buoyantly through the air to settle at the
right-hand corner of the table. Only when it had safely grounded did the eyes
of the Warlockian move to another niche on the other side of the curving room,
this time bringing up from close to floor level a time-darkened skull to occupy
the left corner of the table.
There was a third shifting from the weird storehouse,
a last skull to place between the other two. And now the youngest native arose
from her mat to bring a bowl of green crystal. One of her seniors took it in
both hands, making a gesture of offering it to all three skulls, and then gazed
over its rim at the Terran.
"We shall cast the rods,
man-who-thinks-without-a-guide. Perhaps then we shall see how strongyour dreams
are--to be bent to your using, or to break you for your impudence."
Her hands swayed the bowl from side to side, and there
was an answering whisper from its interior as if the contents slid loosely
there. Then one of her companions reached forward and gave a quick tap to the
bottom of that container, spilling out upon the table a shower of brightly
colored slivers each an inch or so long.
Shann, staring at the display in bewilderment, saw
that in spite of the seeming carelessness of that toss the small needles had
spread out on the blank surface to form a design in arrangement and color. And
he wondered how that skillful trick had been accomplished.
All three of the Warlockians bent their heads to study
the grouping of the tiny sticks, their young subordinate leaning forward also,
her eagerness less well controlled than her elders'. And now it was as if a
curtain had fallen between the Terran and the aliens, all sense of
communication which had been with him since he had entered the skull-lined
chamber was summarily cut off.
A hand moved, making the jeweled pattern--braceleting
wrist and extending up the arm--flash subdued fire. Fingers swept the sticks
back into the bowl; four pairs of yellow eyes raised to regard Shann once more,
but the blanket of their withdrawal still held.
The youngest Warlockian took the bowl from the elder
who held it, stood for a long moment with it resting between her palms, fixing
Shann with an unreadable stare. Then she came toward him. One of those at the
table put out a restraining hand.
This time Shann didnot master his start as he heard
the first audible voice which had not been his own. The skull at the left hand
on the table, by its yellowed color the oldest of those summoned from the
niches, was moving, moving because its jaws gaped and then snapped, emitting a
faint bleat which might have been a word or two.
She who would have halted the young Warlockian's
advance, withdrew her hand. Then her fingers curled in an unmistakable
beckoning gesture. Shann came to the table, but he could not quite force
himself near that chattering skull, even though it had stopped its jig of
speech.
The bowl of sticks was offered to him. Still no
message from mind to mind, but he could guess at what they wanted of him. The
crystal substance was not cool to the touch as he had expected; rather it was
warm, as living flesh might feel. And the colored sticks filled about two
thirds of the interior, lying all mixed together without any order.
Shann concentrated on recalling the ceremony the
Warlockian had used before the first toss. She had offered the bowl to the
skulls in turn. The skulls! But he was no consulter of skulls. Still holding
the bowl close to his chest, Shann looked up over the roofless walls at the
star map on the roof of the cavern. There, that was Rama; and to its left, just
a little above, was Tyr's system where swung the stark world of his birth, and
of which he had only few good memories, but of which he was a part. The Terran
raised the bowl to that spot of light which marked Tyr's pale sun.
Smiling with a wry twist, he lowered the bowl, and on
impulse of pure defiance he offered it to the skull that had chattered.
Immediately he realized that the move had had an electric effect upon the
aliens. Slowly at first, and then faster, he began to swing the bowl from side
to side, the needles slipping, mixing within. And as he swung it, Shann held it
out over the expanse of the table.
The Warlockian who had given him the bowl was the one
who struck it on the bottom, causing a rain of splinters. To Shann's
astonishment, mixed as they had been in the container, they once more formed a
pattern, and not the same pattern the Warlockians had consulted earlier. The
dampening curtain between them vanished; he was in touch mind to mind once
again.
"So be it." The center Warlockian spread out
her four-fingered thumbless hands above the scattered needles. "What is
read, is read."
Again a formula. He caught a chorus of answer from the
others.
"What is read, is read. To the dreamer the dream.
Let the dream be known for what it is, and there is life. Let the dream
encompass the dreamer falsely, and all is lost."
"Who can question the wisdom of the Old
Ones?" asked their leader. "We are those who read the messages they
send, out of their mercy. This is a strange thing they bid us do, man--open for
you our own initiates' road to the veil of illusion. That way has never been
for males, who dream without set purpose and have not the ability to know true
from false, have no the courage to face their dreams to the truth. Do so--if
you can!" There was a flash of mockery in that; combined with something
else--stronger than distaste, not as strong as hatred, but certainly not
friendly.
She held out her hands and Shann saw now, lying on a
slowly closing palm, a disk such as the one Thorvald had shown him. The Terran
had only one moment of fear and then came blackness, more absolute than the
dark of any night he had ever known.
Light once more, green light with an odd shimmering
quality to it. The skull-lined walls were gone; there were no walls, no
building held him. Shann strode forward, and his boots sank in sand, that
smooth, satin sand which had ringed the island in the cavern. But he was
certain he was no longer on that island, even within that cavern, though far
above him there was still a dome of roof.
The source of the green shimmer lay to his left.
Somehow he found himself reluctant to turn and face it. That would commit him
to action. But Shann turned.
A veil, a veil of rippling green. Material? No, rather
mist or light. A veil depending from some source so far over his head that its
origin was hidden in the upper gloom, a veil which was a barrier he must cross.
With every nerve protesting, Shann walked forward,
unable to keep back. He flung up his arm to protect his face as he marched into
that stuff. It was warm, and the gas--if gas it was--left no slick of moisture
on his skin in spite of its foggy consistency. And it was no veil or curtain,
for although he was already well into the murk, he saw no end to it. Blindly he
trudged on, unable to sight anything but the rolling billows of green, pausing
now and again to go down on one knee and pat the sand underfoot, reassured at
the reality of that footing.
And when he met nothing menacing, Shann began to
relax. His heart no longer labored; he made no move to draw the stunner or
knife. Where he was and for what purpose, he had no idea. But therewas a
purpose in this and that the Warlockians were behind it, he did not doubt. The
"initiates' road," the leader had said, and the conviction was steady
in his mind that he faced some test of alien devising.
A cavern with a green veil--his memory awoke.
Thorvald's dream! Shann paused, trying to remember how the other had described
this place. So he was enacting Thorvald's dream! And could the Survey officer
now be caught in Shann's dream in turn, climbing up somewhere into the nose
slit of a skull-shaped mountain?
Green fog without end, and Shann lost in it. How long
had he been here? Shann tried to reckon time, the time since his coming into
the water-world of the starred cavern. He realized that he had not eaten, nor
drank, nor desired to do so either--nor did he now. Yet he was not weak; in
fact, he had never felt such tireless energy as possessed his spare body.
Was thisall a dream? His threatened drowning in the
underground stream a nightmare? Yet there was a pattern in this, just as there
had been a pattern in the needles he had spilled across the table. One even led
to another with discernible logic; because he had tossed that particular
pattern he had come here.
According to the ambiguous instructions or warnings of
the Warlockian witch, his safety in this place would depend upon his ability to
tell true dreams from false. But how... why? So far he had done nothing except
walk through a green fog and for all he knew, he might well be traveling in
circles.
Because there was nothing else to do, Shann walked on,
his boots pressing sand, rising from each step with a small sucking sound.
Then, as he stooped to search for some indication of a path or road which might
guide him, his ears caught the slightest of noises--other small sucking
whimpers. He was not the only wayfarer in this place!
13 : HE WHO DREAMS...
The mist was not a quiet thing; it billowed and curled
until it appeared to half-conceal darker shadows, any one of which could be an
enemy. Shann remained hunkered on the sand, every sense abnormally alert,
watching the fog. He was still sure he could hear sounds which marked the
progress of another. What other? One of the Warlockians tracing him to spy? Or
was there some prisoner like himself lost out there in the murk? Could it be
Thorvald?
Now the sound had ceased. He was not even sure from
what direction it had first come. Perhaps that other was listening now, as
intent upon locating him. Shann ran his tongue over dry lips. The impulse to
call out, to try and contact any fellow traveler here, was strong. Only
hard-learned caution kept him silent. He got to his hands and knees, uncertain
as to his previous direction.
Shann crept. Someone expecting a man walking erect
might be suitably distracted by the arrival of a half-seen figure on all fours.
He halted again to listen.
He had been right! The sound of a very muffled
footfall or footfalls carried to his ears. He was sure that the sound was
louder, that the unknown was approaching. Shann stood, his hand close to his
stunner. He was almost tempted to spray that beam blindly before him, hoping to
hit the unseen by chance.
A shadow--something more swift than a shadow, more
than one of the tricks the curling fog played on eyes--was moving with purpose
and straight for him. Still, prudence restrained Shann from calling out.
The figured grew clearer. A Terran! It could be
Thorvald! But remembering how they had last parted, Shann did not hurry to meet
him.
That shadow-shape stretched out a long arm in a sweep
as if to pull aside some of the vapor concealing them from each other. Then
Shann shivered as if that fog had suddenly turned into the drive of frigid
snow. For the mist did roll back so that the two of them stood in an irregular
clearing in its midst.
And he did not front Thorvald.
Shann was caught up in the ice grip of an old fear,
frozen by it, but somehow clinging to a hope that he did not see the
unbelievable.
Those hands drawing the lash of a whip back into
striking readiness... a brutal nose broken askew, a blaster burn puckering
across cheek to misshapen ear... that evil, gloating grin of anticipation.
Flick, flick, the slight dance of the lash in a master's hand as those thick
fingers tightened about the stock of the whip. In a moment it would whirl up to
lay a ribbon of fire about Shann's defenseless shoulders. Then Logally would
laugh and laugh, his sadistic mirth echoed by those other men who played
jackals to his rogue lion.
Other men... Shann shook his head dazedly. But he did
not stand again in the Dump-sized bar of the Big Strike. And he was no longer a
terrorized youngster, fit meat for Logally's amusement. Only the whip rose, the
lash curled out, catching Shann just as it had that time years ago, delivering
a red slash of pure agony. But Logally was dead, Shann's mind screamed,
fighting frantically against the evidence of his eyes, of that pain in his
chest and shoulder. The Dump bully had been spaced by off-world miners, now
also dead, whose claims he had tried to jump out in the Ajax system.
Logally drew back the lash, preparing to strike again.
Shann faced a man five years dead who walked and fought. Or, Shann bit hard
upon his lower lip, holding desperately to sane reasoning--did he indeed face
anything? Logally was the ancient devil of his boyhood, produced anew by the
witchery of Warlock. Or had Shann himself been led to recreate both the man and
the circumstances of their first meeting with fear as a weapon to pull the
creator down? Dream true or false. Logallywas dead; therefore, this dream was
false, it had to be.
The Terran began to walk toward that grinning ogre
rising out of his old nightmares. His hand was no longer on the butt of his
stunner, but swung loosely at his side. He saw the coming lash, the wicked
promise in those small narrowed eyes. This was Logally at the acme of his
strength, when he was most to be feared, as he had continued to exist over the
years in the depths of a boy-child's memory. But Logally wasnot alive; only in
a dream could he be.
For the second time the lash bit at Shann, curling
about his body, to dissolve. There was no alteration in Logally's grin. His
muscular arm drew back as he aimed a third blow. Shann continued to walk
forward, bringing up one hand, not to strike at that sweating, bristly jaw, but
as if to push the other out of his path. And in his mind he held one thought;
this was not Logally, it could not be. Ten years had passed since they had met.
And for five of those years Logally had been dead. Here was Warlockian
witchery, to be met by sane Terran reasoning.
Shann was alone. The mist, which had formed walls,
enclosed him again. But still there was a smarting brand across his shoulder.
Shann drew aside the rags of his uniform blouse to discover a welt, raw and
red. And seeing that, his unbelief was shaken.
When he had believed in Logally and in Logally's
weapon, the other had had reality enough to strike that blow, make the lash cut
deep. But when the Terran had faced the phantom with the truth, then neither
Logally nor his lash existed. Shann shivered, trying not to think what might
lie before him. Visions out of nightmares which could put on substance! He had
dreamed of Logally in the past, many times. And he had had other dreams, just
as frightening. Must he front those nightmares, all of them--? Why? To amuse
his captors, or to prove their contention that he was a fool to challenge the
powers of such mistresses of illusion?
How did they know just what dreams to use in order to
break him? Or did he himself furnish the actors and the action, projecting old
terrors in this mist as a tri-dee tape projected a story in three dimensions
for the amusement of the viewer?
Dream true--was this progress through the mist also a
dream? Dreams within dreams... Shann put his hand to his head, uncertain, badly
shaken. But that stubborn core of determination within him was still holding.
Next time he would be prepared at once to face down any resurrected memory.
Walking slowly, pausing to listen for the slightest
sound which might herald the coming of a new illusion, Shann tried to guess
which of his nightmares might come to face him. But he was to learn that there
was more than one kind of dream. Steeled against old fears, he was met by
another emotion altogether.
There was a fluttering in the air, a little crooning
cry which pulled at his heart. Without any conscious thought, Shann held out
his hands, whistling on two notes a call which his lips appeared to remember
more quickly than his mind. The shape which winged through the fog came
straight to his waiting hold, tore at long-walled-away hurt with its once
familiar beauty. It flew with a list; one of the delicately tinted wings was
injured, had never healed straight. But the seraph nestled into the hollow of Shann's
two palms and looked up at him with all the old liquid trust.
"Trav! Trav!" He cradled the tiny creature
carefully, regarded with joy its feathered body, the curled plumes on its
proudly held head, felt the silken patting of those infinitesimal claws against
his protecting fingers.
Shann sat down in the sand, hardly daring to breathe.
Trav--again! The wonder of this never-to-be-hoped-for return filled him with a
surge of happiness almost too great to bear, which hurt in its way with as
great a pain as Logally's lash; it was a pain rooted in love, not fear and
hate.
Logally's lash...
Shann trembled. Trav raised one of those small claws
toward the Terran's face, crooning a soft caressing cry for recognition, for
protection, trying to be a part of Shann's life once more.
Trav! How could he bear to will Trav into nothingness,
to bear to summon up another harsh memory which would sweep Trav away? Trav was
the only thing Shann had ever known which he could love wholeheartedly, that
had answered his love with a return gift of affection so much greater than the
light body he now held.
"Trav!" he whispered softly. Then he made
his great effort against this second and far more subtle attack. With the same
agony which he had known years earlier, he resolutely summoned a bitter memory,
sat nursing once more a broken thing which died in pain he could not ease,
aware himself of every moment of that pain. And what was worse, this time there
clung that nagging little doubt. What if he had not forced the memory? Perhaps he
could have taken Trav with him unhurt, alive, at least for a while.
Shann covered his face with his now empty hands. To
see a nightmare flicker out after facing squarely up to its terror, that was no
great task. To give up a dream which was part of a lost heaven, that cut
cruelly deep. The Terran dragged himself to his feet, drained and weary,
stumbling on.
Was there no end to his aimless circling through a
world of green smoke? He shambled ahead, moving his feet leadenly. How long had
he been here? There was no division in time, just the unchanging light which
was a part of the fog through which he plodded.
Then he heard more than any shuffle of foot across
sand, any crooning of a long dead seraph, the rising and falling of a voice: a
human voice--not quite singing or reciting, but something between the two.
Shann paused, searching his memory, a memory which seemed bruised, for the
proper answer to match that sound.
But, though he recalled scene after scene out of the
years, that voice did not trigger any return from his past. He turned toward
its source, dully determined to get over quickly the meeting which lay behind
that signal. Only, though he walked on and on, Shann did not appear any closer
to the man behind the voice, nor was he able to make out separate words
composing that chant, a chant broken now and then by pauses, so that the Terran
grew aware of the distress of his fellow prisoner. For the impression that he
sought another captive came out of nowhere and grew as he cast wider and wider
in his quest.
Then he might have turned some invisible corner in the
mist, for the chant broke out anew in stronger volume, and now he was able to
distinguish words he knew.
"... where blow the winds between the worlds,
And hang the suns in dark of space.
For Power is given a man to use.
Let him do so well before the last accounting--"
The voice was hoarse, cracked, the words spaced with
uneven catches of breath, as if they had been repeated many, many times to
provide an anchor against madness, form a tie to reality. And hearing that
note, Shann slowed his pace. This was out of no memory of his; he was sure of
that.
"... blow the winds between the worlds,
And hang the suns in... dark--of--of--"
That harsh croak of voice was running down, as a clock
runs down for lack of winding. Shann sped on, reacting to a plea which did not
lay in the words themselves.
Once more the mist curled back, provided him with an
open space. A man sat on the sand, his fists buried wrist deep in the smooth
grains on either side of his body, his eyes set, red-rimmed, glazed, his body
rocking back and forth in time to his labored chant.
"... the dark of space--"
"Thorvald!" Shann skidded in the sand, went
down on his knees. The manner of their last parting was forgotten as he took in
the officer's condition.
The other did not stop his swaying, but his head
turned with a stiff jerk, the gray eyes making a visible effort to focus on
Shann. Then some of the strain smoothed out of the gaunt features and Thorvald
laughed softly.
"Garth!"
Shann stiffened but had no chance to protest that
mistaken identification as the other continued: "So you made class one
status, boy! I always knew you could if you'd work for it. A couple of black
marks on your record, sure. But those can be rubbed out, boy, when you're
willing to try. Thorvalds always have been Survey. Our father would have been
proud."
Thorvald's voice flattened, his smile faded, there was
a growing spark of some emotion in those gray eyes. Unexpectedly, he hurled
himself forward, his hands clawing for Shann's throat. He bore the younger man
down under him to the sand where Lantee found himself fighting desperately for
his life against a man who could only be mad.
Shann used a trick learned on the Dumps, and his
opponent doubled up with a gasp of agony to let the younger man break free. He
planted a knee on the small of Thorvald's back, digging the officer into the
sand, pinning down his arms in spite of the other's struggles. Regaining his
own breath in gulps, Shann tried to appeal to some spark of reason in the
other.
"Thorvald! This is Lantee--Lantee--" His
name echoed in the mist-walled void like an unhuman wail.
"Lantee--? No, Throg! Lantee--Throg--killed my
brother!"
Sand puffed out with the breath which expelled that
indictment. But Thorvald no longer fought, and Shann believed him close to
collapse.
Shann relaxed his hold, rolling the other man over.
Thorvald obeyed his pull limply, lying face upward, sand in his hair and
eyebrows, crusting his slack lips. The younger man brushed the dirt away gently
as the other opened his eyes to regard Shann with his old impersonal stare.
"You're alive," Thorvald stated bleakly.
"Garth's dead. You ought to be dead too."
Shann drew back, rubbed sand from his hands, his
concern dampened by the other's patent hostility. Only that angry accusation
vanished in a blink of those gray eyes. Then there was a warmer recognition in
Thorvald's expression.
"Lantee!" The younger man might just have
come into sight. "What are you doing here?"
Shann tightened his belt. "Just about what you
are." He was still aloof, giving no acknowledgment of difference in rank
now. "Running around in this fog hunting the way out."
Thorvald sat up, surveying the billowing walls of the
hole which contained them. Then he reached out a hand to draw fingers down
Shann's forearm.
"Youare real," he observed simply, and his
voice was warm, welcoming.
"Don't bet on it," Shann snapped. "The
unreal can be mighty real--here." His hand went up to the smarting brand
on his shoulder.
Thorvald nodded. "Masters of illusion," he
murmured.
"Mistresses," Shann corrected. "This
place is run by a gang of pretty smart witches."
"Witches? You've seen them? Where? And what--who
are they?" Thorvald pounced with a return of his old-time sharpness.
"They're females right enough, and they can make
the impossible happen. I'd say that classifies them as witches. One of them
tried to take me over back on the island. I set a trap and caught her; then
somehow she transported me--" Swiftly he outlined the chain of events
leading from his sudden awakening in the river tunnel to his present penetration
of this fog-world.
Thorvald listened eagerly. When the story was
finished, he rubbed his hands across his drawn face, smearing away the last of
the sand. "At least you have some idea of who they are and a suggestion of
how you got here. I don't remember that much about my own arrival. As far as I
can remember I went to sleep on the island and woke up here!"
Shann studied him and knew that Thorvald was telling
the truth. He could remember nothing of his departure in the outrigger, the way
he had fought Shann in the lagoon. The Survey officer must have been under the
control of the Warlockians then. Quickly he gave the older man his version of
the other's actions in the outer world and Thorvald was clearly astounded,
though he did not question the facts Shann presented.
"They just took me!" Thorvald said in a
husky half whisper. "But why? And why are we here? Is this a prison?"
Shann shook his head. "I think all this"--a
wave of his hand encompassed the green wall, what lay beyond it, and in
it--"is a test of some kind. This dream business... A little while ago I
got to thinking that I wasn't here at all, that I might be dreaming it all.
Then I met you."
Thorvald understood. "Yes, but thiscould be a
dream meeting. How can we tell?" He hesitated, almost diffidently, before
he asked: "Have you met anyone else here?"
"Yes." Shann had no desire to go into that.
"People out of your past life?"
"Yes." Again he did not elaborate.
"So did I." Thorvald's expression was bleak;
his encounters in the fog must have proved no more pleasant than Shann's.
"That suggests that we do trigger the hallucinations ourselves. But maybe
we can really lick it now."
"How?"
"Well, if these phantoms are born of our memories
there are about only two or three we could see together--maybe a Throg on the
rampage, or that hound we left back in the mountains. And if we do sight
anything like that, we'll know what it is. On the other hand, if we stick
together and one of us sees something that the other can't... well, that fact
alone will explode the ghost."
There was sense in what he said. Shann aided the
officer to his feet.
"I must be a better subject for their experiments
than you," the older man remarked ruefully. "They took me over
completely at the first."
"You were carrying that disk," Shann pointed
out. "Maybe that acted as a focusing lens for whatever power they use to
make us play trained animals."
"Could be!" Thorvald brought out the
cloth-wrapped bone coin. "I still have it." But he made no move to
pull off the bit of rag about it. "Now"--he gazed at the wall of
green--"which way?"
Shann shrugged. Long ago he had lost any idea of
keeping a straight course through the murk. He might have turned around any
number of times since he first walked blindly into this place. Then he pointed
to the packet Thorvald held.
"Why not flip that?" he asked. "Heads,
we go that way--" he indicated the direction in which they were
facing--"tails we do a rightabout-face."
There was an answering grin on Thorvald's lips.
"As good a guide as any we're likely to find here. We'll do it." He
pulled away the twist of cloth and with a swift snap, reminiscent of that used
by the Warlockian witch to empty the bowl of sticks, he tossed the disk into
the air.
It spun, whirled, but--to their open-jawed
amazement--it did not fall to the sand. Instead it spun until it looked like a
small globe instead of a disk. And it lost its dead white for a glow of green.
When that glow became dazzling for Terran eyes the miniature sun swung out, not
in orbit but in a straight line of flight, heading to their right.
With a muffled cry, Thorvald started in pursuit, Shann
running beside him. They were in a tunnel of the fog now, and the pace set by
the spinning coin was swift. The Terrans continued to follow it at the best
pace they could summon, having no idea of where they were headed, but each with
the hope that they finally did have a guide to lead them through this place of
confusion and into a sane world where they could face on more equal terms those
who had sent them there.
14 : ESCAPE
"Something ahead!" Thorvald did not slacken
the pace set by the brilliant spot of green they trailed. Both of the Terrans
feared to fall behind, to lose touch with that guide. Their belief that somehow
the traveling disk would bring them to the end of the mist and its attendant
illusions had grown firmer with every foot of ground they traversed.
A dark, fixed point, now partly veiled by mist, lay
beyond, and it was toward that looming half-shadow that the spinning disk
hurtled. Now the mist curled away to display its bulk--larger, blacker and four
or five times Thorvald's height. Both men stopped short, for the disk no longer
played path-finder. It still whirled on its axis in the air, faster and faster,
until it appeared to be throwing off sparks, but the sparks faded against a
monolith of dark rock unlike the native stone they had seen elsewhere. For it
was neither red nor warmly brown, but a dull, dead black. It could have been a
huge stone slab, trimmed, smoothed, set up on end as a monument or marker,
except that only infinite labor could have accomplished such a task, and there
was no valid reason for such toil as far as the Terrans could perceive.
"This is it." Thorvald moved closer.
By the disk's action, they deduced that their guide
had drawn them to this featureless black steel with the precision of a
beam-controlled ship. However, the purpose still eluded them. They had hoped
for some exit from the territory of the veil, but now they faced a solid slab
of dark stone, neither a conventional exit or entrance, as they proved by
circling its base. Beneath their boots was the eternal sand, around them the
fog.
"Now what?" Shann asked. They had made their
trip about the slab and were back again where the disk whirled with unceasing
vigor in a shower of emerald sparks.
Thorvald shook his head, scanning the rock face before
them glumly. The eagerness had gone out of his expression, a vast weariness
replacing it.
"There must have been some purpose in coming
here," he replied, but his tone had lost the assurance of moments earlier.
"Well, if we strike away from here, we'll just
get right back in again." Shann waved a hand toward the mist, waiting as
if with a hunter's watch upon them. "And we certainly can't go down."
He dug a boot toe into the sand to demonstrate the folly of that. "So,
what about up?"
He ducked under the spinning disk to lay his hands
against the surface of the giant slab. And in so doing he made a discovery,
revealed to his touch although hidden from sight. For his fingers, running
aimlessly across the cold, slightly uneven surface of the stone, slipped into a
hollow, quite a deep hollow.
Excited, half fearing that his sudden guess might be
wrong, Shann slid his hand higher in line with that hollow, to discover a
second. The first had been level with his chest, the second perhaps eighteen
inches or so above. He jumped, to draw his fingers down the rock, with damage
to his nails but getting his proof. Therewas a third niche, deep enough to hold
more than just the toe of a boot, and a fourth above that...
"We've a ladder of sorts here," he reported.
Without waiting for any answer from Thorvald, Shann began to climb. The holds
were so well matched in shape and size that he was sure they could not be
natural; they had been bored there for use--the use to which he was now putting
them--a ladder to the top of the slab. Though what he might find there was
beyond his power to imagine.
The disk did not rise. Shann passed that core of
light, climbing above it into the greater gloom. But the holes did not fail
him; each was waiting in a direct line with its companion. And to an active man
the scramble was not difficult. He reached the summit, glanced around, and made
a quick grab for a secure handhold.
Waiting for him was no level platform such as he had
confidently expected to find. The surface he had just climbed fly-fashion was
the outer wall of a well or chimney. He looked down now into a pit where black
nothingness began within a yard of the top, for the radiance of the mist did
not penetrate far into that descent.
Shann fought an attack of giddiness. It would be very
easy to lose control, to tumble over and be swallowed up in what might well be
a bottomless chasm. And what was the purpose of this well? Was it a trap to
entice a prisoner into an unwary climb and then let gravity drag him over? The
whole setup was meaningless. Perhaps meaningless only to him, Shann conceded,
with a flash of level thinking. The situation could be quite different as far
as the natives were concerned. This structure did have a reason, or it would never
have been erected in the first place.
"What's the matter?" Thorvald's voice was
rough with impatience.
"This thing's a well." Shann edged about a
fraction to call back. "The inside is open and--as far as I can tell--goes
clear to the planet's core."
"Ladder on the inside too?"
Shann squirmed. That was, of course, a very obvious
supposition. He kept a tight hold with his left hand, and with the other, he
did some exploring. Yes, here was a hollow right enough, twin to those on the
outside. But to swing over that narrow edge of safety and begin a descent into
the black of the well was far harder than any action he had taken since the
morning the Throgs had raided the camp. The green mist could hold no terrors
greater than those with which his imagination peopled the depths now waiting to
engulf him. But Shann swung over, fitted his boot into the first hollow, and
started down.
The only encouragement he gained during that nightmare
ordeal was that those holes were regularly spaced. But somehow his confidence
did not feed on that fact. There always remained the nagging fear that when he
searched for the next it would not be there and he would cling to his perch
lacking the needed strength in aching arms and legs to reclimb the inside
ladder.
He was fast losing that sense of well-being which had
been his during his travels through the fog; fatigue tugged at his arms and
weighed leaden on his shoulders. Mechanically he prospected for the next hold,
and then the next. Above, the oblong of half-light grew smaller and smaller,
sometimes half blotted out by the movement of Thorvald's body as the other
followed him down that interior way.
How farwas down? Shann giggled lightheadedly at the
humor of that, or what seemed to be humor at the moment. He was certain that
they were now below the level of the sand floor outside the slab. And yet no
end had come to the well hollow.
No break of light down here; he might have been
sightless. But just as the blind develop an extra perceptive sense of unseen
obstacles, so did Shann now find that he was aware of a change in the nature of
the space about him. His weary arms and legs held him against the solidity of a
wall, yet the impression that there was no longer another wall at his back grew
stronger with every niche which swung him downward. And he was as sure as if he
could see it, that he was now in a wide-open space, another cavern, perhaps,
but this one totally dark.
Deprived of sight, he relied upon his ears. And there
was a sound, faint, distorted perhaps by the acoustics of this place, but
keeping up a continuous murmur. Water! Not the wash of waves with their
persistent beat, but rather the rippling of a running stream. Water must lie
below!
And just as his weariness had grown with his leaving
behind the fog, so now did both hunger and thirst gnaw at Shann, all the
sharper for the delay. The Terran wanted to reach that water, could picture it
in his mind, putting away the possibility--the probability--that it might be
sea-borne and salt, and so unfit to drink.
The upper opening to the cavern of the fog was now so
far above him that he had to strain to see it. And that warmth which had been
there was gone. A dank chill wrapped him here, dampened the holds to which he
clung until he was afraid of slipping. While the murmur of the water grew
louder, until itsslap-slap sounded within arm's distance. His boot toe skidded
from a niche. Shann fought to hold on with numbed fingers. The other foot went.
He swung by his hands, kicking vainly to regain a measure of footing.
Then his arms could no longer support him, and he
cried out as he fell. Water closed about him with an icy shock which for a
moment paralyzed him. He flailed out, fighting the flood to get his head above
the surface where he could gasp in precious gulps of air.
There was a current here, a swiftly running one. Shann
remembered the one which had carried him into that cavern in which the
Warlockians had their strange dwelling. Although there were no clusters of
crystals in this tunnel to supply him with light, the Terran began to nourish a
faint hope that he was again in that same stream, that those light crystals
would appear, and that he might eventually return to the starting point of this
meaningless journey.
So he strove only to keep his head above water.
Hearing a splashing behind him, he called out: "Thorvald?"
"Lantee?" The answer came back at once; the
splashing grew louder as the other swam to catch up.
Shann swallowed a mouthful of the water lapping
against his chin. The taste was brackish, but not entirely salt, and though it
stung his lips, the liquid relieved a measure of his thirst.
Only no glowing crystals appeared to stud these walls,
and Shann's hope that they were on their way to the cavern of the island faded.
The current grew swifter, and he had to fight to keep his head above water, his
tired body reacting sluggishly to commands.
The murmur of the racing flood drummed louder in his
ears, or was that sound the same? He could no longer be sure. Shann only knew
that it was close to impossible to snatch the necessary breath as he was rolled
over and over in the hurrying flood.
In the end he was ejected into blazing, blinding
light, into a suffocation of wild water as the bullet in an ancient Terran gun
might have been fired at no specific target. Gasping, beaten, more than
half-drowned, Shann was pummeled by waves, literally driven up on a rocky
surface which skinned his body cruelly. He lay there, his arms moving feebly
until he contrived to raise himself in time to be wretchedly sick. Somehow he
crawled on a few feet farther before he subsided again, blinded by the light,
flinching from the heat of the rocks on which he lay, but unable to do more for
himself.
His first coherent thought was that his speculation
concerning the reality of this experience was at last resolved. This could not
possibly be an hallucination; at least this particular sequence of events was
not. And he was still hazily considering that when a hand fell on his shoulder,
fingers biting into his raw flesh.
Shann snarled, rolled over on his side. Thorvald,
water dripping from his rags--or rather streaming from them--his shaggy hair
plastered to his skull, sat there.
"You all right?"
Shann sat up in turn, shielding his smarting eyes. He
was bruised, battered badly enough, but he could claim no major injuries.
"I think so. Where are we?"
Thorvald's lips stretched across his teeth in what was
more a grimace than a smile. "Right off the map, any map I know. Take a
look."
They were on a scrap of beach--beach which was more
like a reef, for it lacked any covering comparable to sand except for some
cupfuls of coarse gravel locked in rock depressions. Rocks, red as the rust of
dried blood, rose in fantastic water-sculptured shapes around the small
semi-level space they had somehow won.
This space was V-shaped, washed by equal streams on
either side of the prong of rock by water which spouted from the face of a
sheer cliff not too far away, with force enough to spray several feet beyond
its exit point. Shann, seeing that and guessing at its significance, drew a
deep breath, and heard the ghost of an answering chuckle from his companion.
"Yes, that's where we came out, boy. Like to make
a return trip?"
Shann shook his head, and then wished that he had not
so rashly made that move, for the world swung in a dizzy whirl. Things had
happened too fast. For the moment it was enough that they were out of the
underground ways, back under the amber sky, feeling the bite of Warlock's sun.
Steadying his head with both hands, Shann turned
slowly, to survey what might lie at their backs. The water, pouring by on
either side, suggested that they were again on an island. Warlock, he thought
gloomily, seemed to be for Terrans a succession of islands, all hard to escape.
The tangle of rocks did not encourage any exploration.
Just gazing at them added to his weariness. They rose, tier by tier, to a
ragged crown against the sky. Shann continued to sit staring at them.
"To climb that..." His voice trailed into
the silence of complete discouragement.
"You climb--or swim," Thorvald stated. But,
Shann noted, the Survey officer was not in a hurry to make either move.
Nowhere in that wilderness of rock was there the least
relieving bit of purple foliage. Nor did any clak-claks or leather-headed birds
tour the sky over their heads. Shann's thirst might have been partially
assuaged, but his hunger remained. And it was that need which forced him at
last into action. The barren heights promised nothing in the way of food, but
remembering the harvest the wolverines had taken from under the rocks along the
river, he got to his feet and lurched out on the reef which had been their
salvation, hunting some pool which might hold an edible captive or two.
So it was that Shann made the discovery of a possible
path consisting of a ledge running toward the other end of the island, if this
were an island where they had taken refuge. The spray of the water drenched
that way, feeding small pools in the uneven surface, and strips of yellow weed
trailed in slimy ribbons back below the surface of the waves.
He called to Thorvald and gestured to his find. And
then, close together, linking hands when the going became hazardous, the men
followed the path. Twice they made finds in the pools, finned or clawed
grotesque creatures, which they killed and ate, wolfing down the few fragments
of odd-tasting flesh. Then, in a small crevice, which could hardly be dignified
by the designation of "cave," Thorvald chanced upon quite an exciting
discovery--a clutch of four greenish eggs, each as large as his doubled fist.
Their outer covering was more like a tough membrane
than a true shell, and the Terrans worried it open with difficulty. Shann shut
his eyes, trying not to think of what he mouthed as he sucked his share dry. At
least that semi-liquid stayed put in his middle, though he expected disastrous
results from the experiment.
More than a little heartened by this piece of luck,
they kept on, though the ledge changed from a reasonably level surface to a
series of rising, unequal steps, drawing them away from the water. At long last
they came to the end of that path. Shann leaned back against a convenient spur
of rock.
"Company!" he alerted Thorvald.
The Survey officer joined him to share an outcrop of
rock from which they were provided with an excellent view of the scene below.
It was a scene to hold their full attention.
That soft sweep of sand which had floored the cavern
of the fog lay here also, a gray-blue carpet sloping gently out of the sea. For
Shann had no doubt that the wide stretch of water before them was the western
ocean. Walling the beach on either side were pillars of stone that extended
well out into the water so that the farthest piles were awash except for their
crowns. All were shaped with the same finish as that slab which had provided
them a ladder of escape. And because of the regularity of their spacing, Shann
did not believe them works of nature.
Grouped between them now were the players of the
drama. One of the Warlockian witches, her gem body patterns glittering in the
sunlight, was walking backward out of the sea, her hands held palms together,
breast high, in a Terran attitude of prayer. And following her something swam
in the water, clearly not another of her own species. But her actions suggested
that by some invisible means she was drawing that water dweller after her.
Waiting on shore were two others of her kind, viewing her actions with close
attention, the attention of scholars for an instructor.
"Wyverns!"
Shann looked inquiringly at his companion. Thorvald
added a whisper of explanation. "A legend of Terra--they were supposed to
have a snake's tail instead of hind legs, but the heads... They're
Wyverns!"
Wyverns. Shann liked the sound of that word; to his
mind it well fitted the Warlockian witches. And the one they were watching in
action continued her steady backward retreat, rolling her bemused captive out
of the water. What emerged into the blaze of sunlight was one of those fork-tailed
sea dwellers such as the Terrans had seen die after the storm. The thing
crawled out of the shallows, its eyes focused in a blind stare on the praying
hands of the Wyvern.
She halted, well up on the sand, when the body of her
victim or prisoner--Shann was certain that the fork-tail was one or the
other--was completely out of the water. Then, with lightning speed, she dropped
her hands.
Instantly fork-tail came to life. Fanged jaws snapped.
Aroused, the beast was the incarnation of evil rage, a rage which had a measure
of intelligence to direct it into deadly action. And facing it, seemingly
unarmed and defenseless, were the slender, fragile Wyverns.
Yet none of the small group of natives made any
attempt to escape. Shann thought them suicidal in their indifference as the
fork-tail, short legs sending the fine sand flying in a dust cloud, made a rush
toward its enemies.
The Wyvern who had led the beast ashore did not move.
But one of her companions swung up a hand, as if negligently waving the monster
to a stop. Between her first two digits was a disk. Thorvald caught at Shann's
arm.
"See that! It's a copy of the one I had; it must
be!"
They were too far away to be sure it was a duplicate,
but it was coin-shaped and bone-white. And now the Wyvern swung it back and
forth in a metronome sweep. The fork-tail skidded to a stop, its head
beginning--reluctantly at first, and then, with increasing speed--to echo that
left-right sweep. This Wyvern had the sea beast under control, even as her
companion had earlier held it.
Chance dictated what happened next. As had her sister
charmer, the Wyvern began a backward withdrawal up the length of the beach,
drawing the sea thing in her wake. They were very close to the foot of the drop
above which the Terrans stood, fascinated, when the sand betrayed the witch.
Her foot slipped into a hole and she was thrown backward, her control disk
spinning out of her fingers.
At once the monster she had charmed shot forth its
head, snapped at that spinning trifle--and swallowed it. Then the fork-tail
hunched in a posture Shann had seen the wolverines use when they were about to
spring. The weaponless Wyvern was the prey, and both her companions were too
far away to interfere.
Why he moved he could not have explained. There was no
reason for him to go to the aid of the Warlockian, one of the same breed who
had ruled him against his will. But Shann sprang, landing in the sand on his
hands and knees.
The sea thing whipped around, undecided between two
possible victims. Shann had his knife free, was on his feet, his eyes on the
beast's, knowing that he had appointed himself dragon slayer for no good
reason.
15 : DRAGON SLAYER
"Ayeeee!" Sheer defiance, not only of the
beast he fronted, but of the Wyverns as well, brought that old rallying cry to
his lips--the call used on the Dumps of Tyr to summon gang aid against
outsiders. Fork-tail had crouched again for a spring, but that throat-crackling
blast appeared to startle it.
Shann, blade ready, took a dancing step to the right.
The thing was scaled, perhaps as well armored against frontal attack as was the
shell-creature he had fought with the aid of the wolverines. He wished he had
the Terran animals now--with Taggi and his mate to tease and feint about the
monster, as they had done with the Throg hound--for he would have a better
chance. If only the animals were here!
Those eyes--red-pitted eyes in a gargoyle head
following his every movement--perhaps those were the only vulnerable points.
Muscles tensed beneath that scaled hide. The Terran
readied himself for a sidewise leap, his knife hand raised to rake at those
eyes. A brown shape with a V of lighter fur banding its back crossed the far
range of Shann's vision. He could not believe what he saw, not even when a
snarling animal, slavering with rage, came at a lumbering gallop to stand
beside him, a second animal on its heels.
Uttering his own battle cry, Taggi attacked. The fork-tail's
head swung, imitating the movements of the wolverine as it had earlier mimicked
the swaying of the disk in the Wyvern's hand. Togi came in from the other side.
They might have been hounds keeping a bull in play. And never had they shown
such perfect team work, almost as if they could sense what Shann desired of
them.
That forked tail lashed viciously, a formidable
weapon. Bone, muscles, scaled flesh, half buried in the sand, swept up a cloud
of grit into the face of the man and the animals. Shann fell back, pawing with
his free hand at his eyes. The wolverines circled warily, trying for the attack
they favored--the spring to the shoulders, the usually fatal assault on the
spine behind the neck. But the armored head of the fork-tail, slung low, warned
them off. Again the tail lashed, and this time Taggi was caught and hurled
across the beach.
Togi uttered a challenge, made a reckless dash, and
raked down the length of the fork-tail's body, fastening on that tail, weighing
it to earth with her own poundage while the sea creature fought to dislodge
her. Shann, his eyes watering from the sand, but able to see, watched that
battle for a long second, judging that fork-tail was completely engaged in
trying to free its best weapon from the grip of the wolverine. The latter
clawed and bit with a fury which suggested Togi intended to immobilize that
weapon by tearing it to shreds.
Fork-tail wrenched its body, striving to reach its
tormentor with fangs or clawed feet. And in that struggle to achieve an
impossible position, its head slued far about, uncovering the unprotected area
behind the skull base which usually lay under the spiny collar about its
shoulders.
Shann went in. With one hand he gripped the edge of
that collar--its serrations tearing his flesh--and at the same time he drove
his knife blade deep into the soft underfolds, ripping on toward the spinal
column. The blade nicked against bone as the fork-tail's head slammed back,
catching Shann's hand and knife together in a trap. The Terran was jerked from
his feet, and flung to one side with the force of the beast's reaction.
Blood spurted up, his own blood mingled with that of
the monster. Only Togi's riding of the tail prevented Shann's being beaten to
death. The armored snout pointed skyward as the creature ground the sharp edge
of its collar down on the Terran's arm. Shann, frantic with pain, drove his
free fist into one of those eyes.
Fork-tail jerked convulsively; its head snapped down
again and Shann was free. The Terran threw himself back, keeping his feet with
an effort. Fork-tail was writhing, churning up the sand in a cloud. But it
could not rid itself of the knife Shann had planted with all his strength, and
which the blows of its own armored collar were now driving deeper and deeper
into its back.
It howled thinly, with an abnormal shrilling. Shann,
nursing his bleeding forearm against his chest, rolled free from the waves of
sand it threw about, bringing up against one of the rock pillars. With that to
steady him, he somehow found his feet, and stood weaving, trying to see through
the rain of dust.
The convulsions which churned up that concealing cloud
were growing more feeble. Then Shann heard the triumphant squall from Togi, saw
her brown body still on the torn tail just above the forking. The wolverine
used her claws to hitch her way up the spine of the sea monster, heading for
the fountain of blood spouting from behind the head. Fork-tail fought to raise
that head once more; then the massive jaw thudded into the sand, teeth snapping
fruitlessly as a flood of grit overrode the tongue, packed into the gaping
mouth.
How long had it taken--that frenzy of battle on the
bloodstained beach? Shann could have set no limit in clock-ruled time. He
pressed his wounded arm tighter to him, lurched past the still-twitching sea
thing to that splotch of brown fur on the sand, shaping the wolverine's whistle
with dry lips. Togi was still busy with the kill, but Taggi lay where that
murderous tail had thrown him.
Shann fell on his knees, as the beach around him developed
a curious tendency to sway. He put his good hand to the ruffled back fur of the
motionless wolverine.
"Taggi!"
A slight quiver answered. Shann tried awkwardly to
raise the animal's head with his own hand. As far as he could see, there were
no open wounds; but there might be broken bones, internal injuries he did not
have the skill to heal.
"Taggi?" He called again gently, striving to
bring that heavy head up on his knee.
"The furred one is not dead."
For a moment Shann was not aware that those words had
formed in his mind, had not been heard by his ears. He looked up, eyes blazing
at the Wyvern coming toward him in a graceful glide across the crimsoned sand.
And in a space of heartbeats his thrust of anger cooled into a stubborn enmity.
"No thanks to you," he said deliberately
aloud. If the Wyvern witch wanted to understand him, let her make the effort;
he did not try to touch her thoughts with his.
Taggi stirred again, and Shann glanced down quickly.
The wolverine gasped, opened his eyes, shook his miniature bear head,
scattering pellets of sand. He sniffed at a dollop of blood, the dark, alien
blood, spattered on Shann's breeches, and then his head came up with a
reassuring alertness as he looked to where his mate was still worrying the now
quiet fork-tail.
With an effort, Taggi got to his feet, Shann aiding
him. The man ran his hand down over ribs, seeking any broken bones. Taggi
growled a warning once when that examination brought pain in its wake, but
Shann could detect no real damage. As might a cat, the wolverine must have met
the shock of that whip-tail stroke relaxed enough to escape serious injury.
Taggi had been knocked out, but now he was able to navigate again. He pulled
free from Shann's grip, lumbering across the sand to the kill.
Someone else was crossing that strip of beach. Passing
the Wyverns as if he did not see them, Thorvald came directly to Shann. A few
seconds later he had the torn arm stretched across his own bent knee, examining
the still bleeding hurt.
"That's a nasty one," he commented.
Shann heard the words and they made sense, but the
instability of his surroundings was increasing, while Thorvald's handling sent
sharp stabs of pain up his arm and somehow into his head, where they ended in
red bursts to cloud his sight.
Out of the reddish mist which had fogged most of the
landscape there emerged a single object, a round white disk. And in Shann's
clouded mind a well-rooted apprehension stirred. He struck out with his one
hand, and through luck connected. The disk flew out of sight. His vision
cleared enough so he could sight the Wyvern who had been leaning over
Thorvald's shoulder centering her weird weapon on him. Making a great effort,
Shann got out the words, words which he also shaped in his mind as he said them
aloud: "You're not taking me over--again!"
There was no emotion to be read on that jewel-banded
face or in her unblinking eyes. He caught at Thorvald, determined to get across
his warning.
"Don't let them use those disks on us!"
"I'll do my best."
Only the haze had taken Thorvald again. Did one of the
Wyverns have a disk focused on them? Were they being pulled into one of those
blank periods, to awaken as prisoners once more--say, in the cavern of the
veil? The Terran fought with every ounce of will power to escape
unconsciousness, but he failed.
This time he did not awaken half-drowning in an
underground stream or facing a green mist. And there was an ache in his arm which
was somehow reassuring with the very insistence of pain. Before opening his
eyes, his fingers crossed the smooth slick of a bandage there, went on to
investigate by touch a sleep mat such as he had found in the cavern structure.
Was he back in that set of rooms and corridors?
Shann delayed opening his eyes until a kind of shame
drove him to it. He first saw an oval opening almost the length of his body as
it was stretched only a foot or two below the sill of that window. And through
its transparent surface came the golden light of the sun--no green mist, no
crystals mocking the stars.
The room in which he lay was small with smooth walls,
much like that in which he had been imprisoned on the island. And there were no
other furnishings save the mat on which he rested. Over him was a light cover
netted of fibers resembling yarn, with feathers knotted into it to provide a
downy upper surface. His clothing was gone, but the single covering was too
warm and he pushed it away from his shoulders and chest as he wriggled up to
see the view beyond the window.
His torn arm came into full view. From wrist to elbow
it was encased in an opaque skin sheath, unlike any bandage of his own world.
Surely that had not come out of any Survey aid pack. Shann gazed toward the window,
but beyond lay only a reach of sky. Except for a lemon cloud or two ruffled
high above the horizon, nothing broke that soft amber curtain. He might be
quartered in a tower well above ground level, which did not match his former
experience with Wyvern accommodations.
"Back with us again?" Thorvald, one hand
lifting a door panel, came in. His ragged uniform was gone, and he wore only
breeches of a sleek green material and his own scuffed-and-battered boots.
Shann settled back on the mat. "Where are we?"
"I think you might term this the capital
city," Thorvald answered. "In relation to the mainland, we're on an
island well out to sea--westward."
"How did we get here?" That climb in the
slab, the stream underground... Had it been an interior river running under the
bed of the sea? But Shann was not prepared for the other's reply.
"By wishing."
"Bywhat ?"
Thorvald nodded, his expression serious. "They
wished us here. Listen, Lantee, when you jumped down to mix it with that
fork-tailed thing, did you wish you had the wolverines with you?"
Shann thought back; his memories of what had occurred
before that battle were none too clear. But, yes, he had wished Taggi and Togi
present at that moment to distract the enraged beast.
"You mean I wished them?" The whole idea was
probably a part of the Wyvern jargon of dreaming and he added, "Or did I
just dream everything?" There was the bandage on his arm, the soreness
under that bandage. But also there had been Logally's lash brand back in the
cavern, which had bitten into his flesh with the pain of a real blow.
"No, you weren't dreaming. You happened to be
tuned in on one of those handy little gadgets our lady friends here use. And,
so tuned in, your desire for the wolverines being pretty powerful just then,
they came."
Shann grimaced. This was unbelievable. Yet there were
his meetings with Logally and Trav. How could anyone rationally explain them?
And how had he, in the beginning, been jumped from the top of the cliff on the
island of his marooning into the midst of an underground flood without any
conscious memory of an intermediate journey?
"How does it work?" he asked simply.
Thorvald laughed. "You tell me. They have these
disks, one to a Wyvern, and they control forces with them. Back there on the
beach we interrupted a class in such control; they were the novices learning
their trade. We've stumbled on something here which can't be defined or
understood by any of our previous standards of comparison. It's frankly magic,
judged by our terms."
"Are we prisoners?" Shann wanted to know.
"Ask me something I'm sure of. I've been free to
come and go within limits. No one's exhibited any signs of hostility; most of
them simply ignore me. I've had two interviews, via this mind-reading act of
theirs, with their rulers, or elders, or chief sorceresses--all three titles
seem to apply. They ask questions, I answer as best I can, but sometimes we
appear to have no common meeting ground. Then I ask some questions, they evade
gracefully, or reply in a kind of unintelligible double-talk, and that's as far
as our communication has progressed so far."
"Taggi and Togi?"
"Have a run of their own and as far as I can tell
are better satisfied with life than I am. Oddly enough, they respond more
quickly and more intelligently to orders. Perhaps this business of being
shunted around by the disks has conditioned them in some way."
"What about these Wyverns? Are they all
female?"
"No, but their tribal system is strictly
matriarchal, which follows a pattern even Terra once knew: the fertile earth
mother and her priestesses, who became the witches when the gods overruled the
goddesses. The males are few in number and lack the power to activate the
disks. In fact," Thorvald laughed ruefully, "one gathers that in this
civilization our opposite numbers have, more or less, the status of pets at the
best, and necessary evils at the worst. Which putus at a disadvantage from the
start."
"You think that they won't take us seriously
because we are males?"
"Might just work out that way. I've tried to get
through to them about danger from the Throgs, telling them what it would mean
to them to have the beetle-heads settle in here for good. They just brush aside
the whole idea."
"Can't you argue that the Throgs are males, too?
Or aren't they?"
The Survey officer shook his head. "That's a
point no human can answer. We've been sparring with Throgs for years and there
have been libraries of reports written about them and their behavior patterns,
all of which add up to about two paragraphs of proven facts and hundreds of
surmises beginning with the probable and skimming out into the wild fantastic.
You can claim anything about a Throg and find a lot of very intelligent souls
ready to believe you. But whether those beetle-heads squatting over on the
mainland are able to answer to 'he,' 'she,' or 'it,' your solution is just as
good as mine. We've always considered the ones we fight to be males, but they
might just as possibly be amazons. Frankly, these Wyverns couldn't care less
either; at least that's the impression they give."
"But anyway," Shann observed, "it
hasn't come to 'we're all girls together' either."
Thorvald laughed again. "Not so you can notice.
We're not the only unwilling visitor in the vicinity."
Shann sat up. "A Throg?"
"A something. Non-Warlockian, or non-Wyvern. And
perhaps trouble for us."
"You haven't seen this other?"
Thorvald sat down cross-legged. The amber light from
the window made red-gold of his hair, added ruddiness to his less-gaunt
features.
"No, I haven't. As far as I can tell, the
stranger's not right here. I caught stray thought beams twice--surprise
expressed by newly arrived Wyverns who met me and apparently expected to be
fronted by something quite physically different."
"Another Terran scout?"
"No. I imagine that to the Wyverns we must look a
lot alike. Just as we couldn't tell one of them from her sister if their body
patterns didn't differ. Discovered one thing about those patterns--the more
intricate they run, the higher the 'power,' not of the immediate wearer, but of
her ancestors. They're marked when they qualify for their disk and presented
with the rating of the greatest witch in their family line as an inducement to
live up to those deeds and surpass them if possible. Quite a bit of logic to
that. Given the right conditioning, such a system might even work in our
service."
That nugget of information was the stuff from which
Survey reports were made. But at the moment the information concerning the
other captive was of more value to Shann. He steadied his body against the wall
with his good hand and got to his feet. Thorvald watched him.
"I take it you have visions of action. Tell me,
Lantee, whydid you take that header off the cliff to mix it with the
fork-tail?"
Shann wondered himself. He had no reason for that
impulsive act. "I don't know--"
"Chivalry? Fair Wyvern in distress?" the
other prodded. "Or did the back lash from one of those disks draw you
in?"
"I don't know--"
"And why did you use your knife instead of your
stunner?"
Shann was startled. For the first time he realized
that he had fronted the greatest native menace they had discovered on Warlock
with the more primitive of his weapons. Why had he not tried the stunner on the
beast? He had just never thought of it when he had taken that leap into the
role of dragon slayer.
"Not that it would have done you any good to try
the ray; it has no effect on fork-tails."
"You tried it?"
"Naturally. But you didn't know that, or did you
pick up that information earlier?"
"No," answered Shann slowly. "No, I
don't know why I used the knife. The stunner would have been more
natural." Suddenly he shivered, and the face he turned to Thorvald was
very sober.
"How much do they control us?" he asked, his
voice dropping to a half whisper as if the walls about them could pick up those
words and relay them to other ears. "What can they do?"
"A good question." Thorvald lost his light
tone. "Yes, what can they feed into our minds without our knowledge?
Perhaps those disks are only window dressing, and they can work without them. A
great deal will depend upon the impression we can make on these witches."
He began to smile again, more wryly. "The name we gave this planet is
certainly a misnomer. A warlock is a male sorcerer, not a witch."
"And what are the chances of our becoming
warlocks ourselves?"
Again Thorvald's smile faded, but he gave a curt
little nod to Shann as if approving that thought. "That is something we
are going to look into, and now! If we have to convince some stubborn females,
as well as fight Throgs, well"--he shrugged--"we'll have a busy, busy
time."
16 : THIRD PRISONER
"Well, it works as good as new." Shann held
his hand and arm out into the full path of the sun. He had just stripped off
the skin-case bandage, to show the raw seam of a half-healed scar, but as he
flexed muscles, bent and twisted his arm, there was only a small residue of
soreness left.
"Now what, or where?" he asked Thorvald with
some eagerness. Several days' imprisonment in this room had made him impatient
for the outer world again. Like the officer, he now wore breeches of the green
fabric, the only material known to the Wyverns, and his own badly worn boots.
Oddly enough, the Terrans' weapons, stunner and knife, had been left to them, a
point which made them uneasy, since it suggested that the Wyverns believed they
had nothing to fear from clumsy alien arms.
"Your guess is as good as mine," Thorvald
answered that double question. "But it is you they want to see; they
insisted upon it, rather emphatically in fact."
The Wyvern city existed as a series of cell-like
hollows in the interior of a rock-walled island. Outside there had been no
tampering with the natural rugged features of the escarpment, and within, the
silence was almost complete. For all the Terrans could learn, the population of
the stone-walled hive might have been several thousand, or just the handful
that they had seen with their own eyes along the passages which had been
declared open territory for them.
Shann half expected to find again a skull-walled
chamber where witches tossed colored sticks to determine his future. But he
came with Thorvald into an oval room in which most of the outer wall was a
window. And seeing what lay framed in that, Shann halted, again uncertain as to
whether he actually saw that, or whether he was willed into visualizing a scene
by the choice of his hostesses.
They were lower now than the room in which he had
nursed his wound, not far above water level. And this window faced the sea.
Across a stretch of green water was his red-purple skull, the waves lapping its
lower jaw, spreading their foam in between the gaping rock-fringe which formed
its teeth. And from the eye hollows flapped the clak-claks of the sea coast,
coming and going as if they carried to some brain imprisoned within that giant
bone case messages from the outer world.
"My dream--" Shann said.
"Your dream." Thorvald had not echoed that;
the answer had come in his brain.
Shann turned his head and surveyed the Wyvern awaiting
them with a concentration which was close to the rudeness of an outright stare,
a stare which held no friendship. For by her skin patterns he knew her for the
one who had led that trio who had sent him into the cavern of the mist. And
with her was the younger witch he had trapped on the night that all this
baffling action had begun.
"We meet again," he said slowly. "To
what purpose?"
"To our purpose... and yours--"
"I do not doubt that it is to yours." The
Terran's thoughts fell easily now into a formal pattern he would not have used
with one of his own kind. "But I do not expect any good to me..."
There was no readable expression on her face; he did
not expect to see any. But in their uneven mind touch he caught a fleeting
suggestion of bewilderment on her part, as if she found his mental processes as
hard to understand as a puzzle with few leading clues.
"We mean you no ill, star voyager. You are far
more than we first thought you, for you have dreamed false and have known. Now
dream true, and know it also."
"Yet," he challenged, "you would set me
a task without my consent."
"We have a task for you, but already it was set
in the pattern of your true dreaming. And we do not set such patterns, star
man; that is done by the Greatest Power of all. Each lives within her appointed
pattern from the First Awakening to the Final Dream. So we do not ask of you
any more than that which is already laid for your doing."
She arose with that languid grace which was a part of
their delicate jeweled bodies and came to stand beside him, a child in size,
making his Terran flesh and bones awkward, clodlike in contrast. She stretched
out her four-digit hand, her slender arm ringed with gemmed circles and bands,
measuring it beside his own, bearing that livid scar.
"We are different, star man, yet still are we
both dreamers. And dreams hold power. Your dreams brought you across the dark
which lies between sun and distant sun. Our dreams carry us on even stranger
roads. And yonder"--one of her fingers stiffened to a point, indicating
the skull--"there is another who dreams with power, a power which will
destroy us all unless the pattern is broken speedily."
"And I must go to seek this dreamer?" His
vision of climbing through that nose hole was to be realized then.
"You go."
Thorvald stirred and the Wyvern turned her head to
him. "Alone," she added. "For this is your dream only, as it has
been from the beginning. There is for each his own dream, and another cannot
walk through it to alter the pattern, even to save a life."
Shann grinned crookedly, without humor. "It seems
that I'm elected," he said as much to himself as to Thorvald. "But
what do I do with this other dreamer?"
"What your pattern moves you to do. Save that you
do not slay him--"
"Throg!" Thorvald started forward. "You
can't just walk in on a Throg barehanded and be bound by orders such as
that!"
The Wyvern must have caught the sense of that vocal
protest, for her communication touched them both. "We cannot deal with
that one as his mind is closed to us. Yet he is an elder among his kind and his
people have been searching land and sea for him since his air rider broke upon
the rocks and he entered into hiding over there. Make your peace with him if
you can, and also take him hence, for his dreams are not ours, and he brings
confusion to the Reachers when they retire to run the Trails of Seeking."
"Must be an important Throg," Shann deduced.
"They could have an officer of the beetle-heads under wraps over there.
Could we use him to bargain with the rest?"
Thorvald's frown did not lighten. "We've never
been able to establish any form of contact in the past, though our best
qualified minds, reinforced by training, have tried..."
Shann did not take fire at that rather delicate
estimate of his own lack of preparation for the carrying out of diplomatic
negotiations with the enemy; he knew it was true. But there was one thing he
could try--if the Wyvern permitted.
"Will you give a disk of power to this star
man?" He pointed to Thorvald. "For he is my Elder One and a Reacher
for Knowledge. With such a focus his dream could march with mine when I go to
the Throg, and perhaps that can aid in my doing what I could not accomplish
alone. For that is the secret ofmy people, Elder One. We link our powers
together to make a shield against our enemies, a common tool for the work we
must do."
"And so it is with us also, star voyager. We are
not so unlike as the foolish might think. We learned much of you while you both
wandered in the Place of False Dreams. But our power disks are our own and can
not be given to a stranger while their owners live. However..." She turned
again with an abruptness foreign to the usual Wyvern manner and faced the older
Terran.
The officer might have been obeying an unvoiced order
as he put out his hands and laid them palm to palm on those she held up to him,
bending his head so gray eyes met golden ones. The web of communication which
had held all three of them snapped. Thorvald and the Wyvern were linked in a
tight circuit which excluded Shann.
Then the latter became conscious of movement beside
him. The younger Wyvern had joined him to watch the clak-claks in their
circling of the bare dome of the skull island.
"Why do they fly so?" Shann asked her.
"Within they nest, care for their young. Also
they hunt the rock creatures that swarm in the lower darkness."
"The rock creatures?" If the skull's
interior was infested by some other native fauna, he wanted to know it.
By some method of her own the young Wyvern conveyed a
strong impression of revulsion, which was her personal reaction to the
"rock creatures."
"Yet you imprison the Throg there--" he
remarked.
"Not so!" Her denial was instantaneous and
vehement. "The other worlder fled into that place in spite of our calling.
There he stays in hiding. Once we drew him out to the sea, but he broke the
power and fled inside again."
"Broke free--" Shann pounced upon that.
"From disk control?"
"But surely." Her reply held something of
wonder. "Why do you ask, star voyager? Did you not also break free from
the power of the disk when I led you by the underground ways, awaking in the
river? Do you then rate this other one as less than your own breed that you
think him incapable of the same action?"
"Of Throgs I know as much as this..." He
held up his hand, measuring off a fraction of space between thumb and
forefinger.
"Yet you knew them before you came to this
world."
"My people have known them for long. We have met
and fought many times among the stars."
"And never have you talked mind to mind?"
"Never. We have sought for that, but there has
been no communication between us, neither of mind nor voice."
"This one you name Throg is truly not as
you," she assented. "And we are not as you, being alien and female.
Yet, star man, you and I have shared a dream."
Shann stared at her, startled, not so much by what she
said as the human shading of those words in his mind. Or had that also been
illusion?
"In the veil... that creature which came to you
on wings when you remembered that. A good dream, though it came out of the past
and so was false in the present. But I have gathered it into my own store: such
a fine dream, one that you have cherished."
"Trav was to be cherished," he agreed
soberly. "I found her in a broken sleep cage at a spaceport when I was a
child. We were both cold and hungry, alone and hurt. So I stole and was glad
that I stole Trav. For a little space we both were very happy..." Forcibly
he stifled memory.
"So, though we are unlike in body and in mind,
yet we find beauty together if only in a dream. Therefore, between your people
and mine there canbe a common speech. And I may show you my dream store for
your enjoyment, star voyager."
A flickering of pictures, some weird, some beautiful,
all a little distorted--not only by haste, but also by the haze of alienness
which was a part of her memory pattern--crossed Shann's mind.
"Such a sharing would be a rich feast," he
agreed.
"All right!" Those crisp words in his own
tongue brought Shann away from the window to Thorvald. The Survey officer was
no longer locked hand to hand with the Wyvern witch, but his features were
alive with a new eagerness.
"We are going to try your idea, Lantee. They'll
provide me with a new, unmarked disk, show me how to use it. And I'll do what I
can to back you with it. But they insist that you go today."
"What do they really want me to do? Just root out
that Throg? Or try to talk him into being a go-between with his people?
Thatdoes come under the heading of dreaming!"
"They want him out of there, back with his own
kind if possible. Apparently he's a disruptive influence for them; he causes
some kind of a mental foul up which interferes drastically with their 'power.'
They haven't been able to get him to make any contact with them. This Elder One
is firm about your being the one ordained for the job, and that you'll know
what action to take when you get here."
"Must have thrown the sticks for me again,"
Shann commented.
"Well, they've definitely picked you to smoke out
the Throg, and they can't be talked into changing their minds about that."
"I'll be the smoked one if he has a
blaster."
"They say he's unarmed--"
"What do they know about our weapons or a
Throg's?"
"The other one has no arms." Wyvern words in
his mind again. "This fact gives him great fear. That which he has
depended upon is broken. And since he has no weapon, he is shut into a prison
of his own terrors."
But an adult Throg, even unarmed, was not to be considered
easy meat, Shann thought. Armored with horny skin, armed with claws and those
crushing mandibles of the beetle mouth... a third again as tall as he himself
was. No, even unarmed, the Throg had to be considered a menace.
Shann was still thinking along that line as he
splashed through the surf which broke about the lower jaw of the skull island,
climbed up one of the pointed rocks which masqueraded as a tooth, and reached
for a higher hold to lead him to the nose slit, the gateway to the alien's hiding
place.
The clak-claks screamed and dived about him, highly
resentful of his intrusion. And when they grew so bold as to buffet him with
their wings, threaten him with their tearing beaks, he was glad to reach the
broken rock edging his chosen door and duck inside. Once there, Shann looked
back. There was no sighting the cliff window where Thorvald stood, nor was he
aware in any way of mental contact with the Survey officer; their hope of such
a linkage might be futile.
Shann was reluctant to venture farther. His eyes had
sufficiently adjusted to the limited supply of light, and now the Terran
brought out the one aid the Wyverns had granted him, a green crystal such as
those which had played the role of stars on the cavern roof. He clipped its
simple loop setting to the front of his belt, leaving his hands free. Then,
having filled his lungs for the last time with clean, sea-washed air, he
started into the dome of the skull.
There was a fetid thickness to this air only a few
feet away from the outer world. The odor of clak-clak droppings and refuse from
their nests was strong, but there was an added staleness, as if no breeze ever
scooped out the old atmosphere to replace it with new. Fragile bones crunched
under Shann's boots, but as he drew away from the entrance, the pale glow of
the crystal increased its radiance, emitting a light not unlike that of the
phosphorescent bushes, so that he was not swallowed up by dark.
The cave behind the nose hole narrowed quickly into a
cleft, a narrow cleft which pierced into the bowl of the skull. Shann proceeded
with caution, pausing every few steps. There came a murmur rising now and again
to a shriek, issuing, he guessed, from the clak-clak rookery above. And the
pound of sea waves was also a vibration carrying through the rock. He was
listening for something else, at the same time testing the ill-smelling air for
that betraying muskiness which spelled Throg.
When a twist in the narrow passage cut off the splotch
of daylight, Shann drew his stunner. The strongest bolt from that could not
jolt a Throg into complete paralysis, but it would slow up any attack.
Red--pinpoints of red--were edging a break in the rock
wall. They were gone in a flash. Eyes? Perhaps of the rock dwellers which the
Wyverns hated? More red dots, farther ahead. Shann listened for a sound he
could identify.
But smell came before sound. That trace of effluvia
which in force could sicken a Terran, was his guide. The cleft ended in a space
to which the limited gleam of the crystal could not provide a far wall. But
that faint light did show him his quarry.
The Throg was not on his feet, ready for trouble, but
hunched close to the wall. And the alien did not move at Shann's coming. Did
the beetle-head sight him? Shann wondered. He moved cautiously. And the round
head, with its bulbous eyes, turned a fraction; the mandibles about the ugly
mouth opening quivered. Yes, the Throg could see him.
But still the alien made no move to rise out of his
crouch, to come at the Terran. Then Shann saw the fall of rock, the stone which
pinned a double-kneed leg to the floor. And in a circle about the prisoner were
the small, crushed, furred things which had come to prey on the helpless to be
slain themselves by the well-aimed stones which were the Throg's only weapons
of defense.
Shann sheathed his stunner. It was plain the Throg was
helpless and could not reach him. He tried to concentrate mentally on a picture
of the scene before him, hoping that Thorvald or one of the Wyverns could pick
it up. There was no answer, no direction. Choice of action remained solely his.
The Terran made the oldest friendly gesture of his
kind; his empty hands held up, palm out. There was no answering move from the
Throg. Neither of the other's upper limbs stirred, their claws still gripping
the small rocks in readiness for throwing. All Shann's knowledge of the alien's
history argued against an unarmed advance. The Throg's marksmanship, as borne
out by the circle of small bodies, was excellent. And one of those rocks might
well thud against his own head, with fatal results. Yet he had been sent there
to get the Throg free and out of Wyvern territory.
So rank was the beetle smell of the other that Shann
coughed. What he needed now was the aid of the wolverines, a diversion to keep
the alien busy. But this time there was no disk working to produce Taggi and
Togi out of thin air. And he could not continue to just stand there staring at
the Throg. There remained the stunner. Life on the Dumps tended to make a man a
fast draw, a matter of survival for the fastest and most accurate marksman. And
now one of Shann's hands swept down with a speed which, learned early, was
never really to be forgotten.
He had the rod out and was spraying on tight beam
straight at the Throg's head before the first stone struck his shoulder and his
weapon fell from a numbed hand. But a second stone tumbled out of the Throg's
claw. The alien tried to reach for it, his movements slow, uncertain.
Shann, his arm dangling, went in fast, bracing his
good shoulder against the boulder which pinned the Throg. The alien aimed a
blow at the Terran's head, but again so slowly Shann had no difficulty in
evading it. The boulder gave, rolled, and Shann cleared out of range, back to
the opening of the cleft, pausing only to scoop up his stunner.
For a long moment the Throg made no move; his dazed
wits must have been working at very slow speed. Then the alien heaved up his
body to stand erect, favoring the leg which had been trapped. Shann tensed,
waiting for a rush. What now? Would the Throg refuse to move? If so, what could
he do about it?
With the impact of a blow, the message Shann had hoped
for struck into his mind. But his initial joy at that contact was wiped out
with the same speed.
"Throg ship... overhead."
The Throg stood away from the wall, limped out,
heading for Shann, or perhaps only the cleft in which he stood. Swinging the
stunner awkwardly in his left hand, the Terran retreated, mentally trying to
contact Thorvald once more. There was no answer. He was well up into the cleft,
moving crabwise, unwilling to turn his back on the Throg. The alien was coming
as steadily as his injured limb would allow, trying for the exit to the outer
world.
A Throg ship overhead... Had the castaway somehow
managed to call his own kind? And what if he, Shann Lantee, were to be trapped
between the alien and a landing party from the flyer? He did not expect any
assistance from the Wyverns, and what could Thorvald possibly do? From behind
him, at the entrance of the nose slit, he heard a sound--a sound which was
neither the scolding of a clak-clak nor the eternal growl of the sea.
17 : THROG JUSTICE
The musty stench was so strong that Shann could no
longer fight the demands of his outraged stomach. He rolled on his side,
retching violently until the sour smell of his vomit battled the foul odor of
the ship. His memories of how he had come into this place were vague; his body
was a mass of dull pain, as if he had been scorched. Scorched! Had the Throgs
used one of their energy whips to subdue him? The last clear thing he could
recall was that slow withdrawal down the cleft inside the skull rock, the Throg
not too far away--the sound from the entrance.
A Throg prisoner! Through the pain and the sickness
the horror of that bit doubly deep. Terrans did not fall alive into Throg
hands, not if they had the means of ending their existence within reach. But
his hands and arms were caught behind him in an unbreakable lock, some gadget
not unlike the Terran force bar used to restrain criminals, he decided
groggily.
The cubby in which he lay was black-dark. But the
quivering of the deck and the bulkheads about him told Shann that the ship was
in flight. And there could be but two destinations, either the camp where the
Throg force had taken over the Terran installations or the mother ship of the
raiders. If Thorvald's earlier surmise was true and the aliens were hunting a
Terran to talk in the transport, then they were heading for the camp.
And because a man who still lives and who is not yet
broken can also hope, Shann began to think ahead to the camp--the camp and a
faint, thin chance of escape. For on the surface of Warlock there was a thin
chance; in the mother ship of the Throgs none at all.
Thorvald--and the Wyverns! Could he hope for any help
from them? Shann closed his eyes against the thick darkness and tried to reach
out to touch, somewhere, Thorvald with his disk--or perhaps the Wyvern who had
talked of Trav and shared dreams. Shann focused his thoughts on the young
Wyvern witch, visualizing with all the detail he could summon out of memory the
brilliant patterns about her slender arms, her thin, fragile wrists, those
other designs overlaying her features. He could see her in his mind, but she
was only a puppet, without life, certainly without power.
Thorvald... Now Shann fought to build a mental picture
of the Survey officer, making his stand at that window, grasping his disk, with
the sun bringing gold to his hair and showing the bronze of his skin. Those
gray eyes which could be ice, that jaw with the tight set of a trap upon
occasion...
And Shann made contact! He touched something, a
flickering like a badly tuned tri-dee--far more fuzzy than the mind pictures
the Wyvern had paraded for him. But he had touched! And Thorvald, too, had been
aware of his contact.
Shann fought to find that thread of awareness again.
Patiently he once more created his vision of Thorvald, adding every detail he
could recall, small things about the other which he had not known that he had
noticed--the tiny arrow-shaped scar near the base of the officer's throat, the
way his growing hair curled at the ends, the look of one eyebrow slanting
abruptly toward his hairline when he was dubious about something. Shann strove
to make a figure as vividly as Logally and Trav had been in the mist of the illusion.
"... where?"
This time Shann was prepared; he did not let that mind
image dissolve in his excitement at recapturing the link. "Throg
ship," he said the words aloud, over and over, but still he held to his
picture of Thorvald.
"... will..."
Only that one word! The thread between them snapped
again. Only then did Shann become conscious of a change in the ship's
vibration. Were they setting down? And where? Let it be at the camp! It must be
the camp!
There was no jar at that landing, just that one second
the vibration told him the ship was alive and air-borne, and the next a dead
quiet testified that they had landed. Shann, his sore body stiff with tension,
waited for the next move on the part of his captors.
He continued to lie in the dark, still queasy from the
stench of the cell, too keyed up to try to reach Thorvald. There was a dull
grating over his head, and he looked up eagerly--to be blinded by a strong beam
of light. Claws hooked painfully under his arms and he was manhandled up and
out, dragged along a short passage and pitched free of the ship, falling hard
upon trodden earth and rolling over gasping as the seared skin of his body was
rasped and abraded.
The Terran lay face up now, and as his eyes adjusted
to the light, he saw a ring of Throg heads blotting out the sky as they
inspected their catch impassively. The mouth mandibles of one moved with a
faint clicking. Again claws fastened in his armpits, brought Shann to his feet,
holding him erect.
Then the Throg who had given that order moved closer.
His hand-claws clasped a small metal plate surmounted by a hoop of thin wire
over which was stretched a web of threads glistening in the sun. Holding that
hoop on a level with his mouth, the alien clicked his mandibles, and those
sounds became barely distinguishable basic galactic words.
"You Throg meat!"
For a moment Shann wondered if the alien meant that
statement literally. Or was it a conventional expression for a prisoner among
their kind.
"Do as told!"
That was clear enough, and for the moment the Terran
did not see that he had any choice in the matter. But Shann refused to make any
sign of agreement to either of those two limited statements. Perhaps the
beetle-heads did not expect any. The alien who had pulled him to his feet
continued to hold him erect, but the attention of the Throg with the translator
switched elsewhere.
From the alien ship emerged a second party. The Throg
in their midst was unarmed and limping. Although to Terran eyes one alien was
the exact counterpart of the other, Shann thought that this one was the
prisoner in the skull cave. Yet the indications now suggested that he had only
changed one captivity for another and was in disgrace among his kind. Why?
The Throg limped up to front the leader with the
translator, and his guards fell back. Again mandibles clicked, were answered,
though the sense of that exchange eluded Shann. At one point in the report--if
report it was--he himself appeared to be under discussion, for the injured
Throg waved a hand-claw in the Terran's direction. But the end to the
conference came quickly enough and in a manner which Shann found shocking.
Two of the guards stepped forward, caught at the
injured Throg's arms and drew him away, leading him out into a space beyond the
grounded ship. They dropped their hold on him, returning at a trot. The officer
clicked an order. Blasters were unholstered, and the Throg in the field
shriveled under a vicious concentration of cross bolts. Shann gasped. He
certainly had no liking for Throgs, but this execution carried overtones of a
cold-blooded ferocity which transcended anything he had known, even in the callous
brutality of the Dumps.
Limp, and more than a little sick again, he watched
the Throg officer turn away. And a moment later he was forced along in the
other's wake to the domes of the once Terran camp. Not just to the camp in
general, he discovered a minute later, but to that structure which had housed
the com unit linking them with ships cruising the solar lanes and with the
patrol. So Thorvald had been right; they needed a Terran to broadcast--to cover
their tracks here and lay a trap for the transport.
Shann had no idea how much time he had passed among
the Wyverns; the transport with its load of unsuspecting settlers might already
be in the system of Circe, plotting a landing orbit around Warlock,
broadcasting her recognition signal and a demand for a beam to ride her in.
Only, this time the Throgs were out of luck. They had picked up one prisoner
who could not help them, even if he wanted to do so. The mysteries of the
highly technical installations in this dome were just that to Shann
Lantee--complete mysteries. He had not the slightest idea of how to activate
the machines, let alone broadcast in the proper code.
A cold spot of terror gathered in his middle,
spreading outward through his smarting body. For he was certain that the Throgs
would not believe that. They would consider his protestations of ignorance as a
stubborn refusal to co-operate. And what would happen to him then would be
beyond human endurance. Could he bluff--play for time? But what would that time
buy him except to delay the inevitable? In the end, that small hope based on
his momentary contact with Thorvald made him decide to try that bluff.
There had been changes in the com dome since the
capture of the camp. A squat box on the floor sprouted a collection of tubes
from its upper surface. Perhaps that was some Throg equivalent of Terran
equipment in place on the wide table facing the door.
The Throg leader clicked into his translator:
"You call ship!"
Shann was thrust down into the operator's chair, his
bound arms still twisted behind him so that he had to lean forward to keep on
the seat at all. Then the Throg who had pushed him there, roughly forced a set
of com earphones and speech mike onto his head.
"Call ship!" clicked the alien officer.
So time must be running out. Now was the moment to
bluff. Shann shook his head, hoping that the gesture of negation was common to
both their species.
"I don't know the code," he said aloud.
The Throg's bulbous eyes gazed at his moving lips.
Then the translator was held before the Terran's mouth. Shann repeated his
words, heard them reissue as a series of clicks, and waited. So much depended
now on the reaction of the beetle-head officer. Would he summarily apply
pressure to enforce his order, or would he realize that it was possible that
all Terrans did not know that code, and so he could not produce in a captive's
head any knowledge that had never been there--with or without physical
coercion?
Apparently the latter logic prevailed for the present.
The Throg drew the translator back to his mandibles.
"When ship call--you answer--make lip talk your
words! Say had sickness here--need help. Code man dead--you talk in his place.
I listen. You say wrong, you die--you die a long time. Hurt bad all that
time--"
Clear enough. So he had been able to buy a little
time! But how soon before the incoming ship would call? The Throgs seemed to
expect it. Shann licked his blistered lips. He was sure that the Throg officer
meant exactly what he said in that last grisly threat. Only, would
anyone--Throg or human--live very long in this camp if Shann got his warning
through? The transport would have been accompanied on the big jump by a patrol
cruiser, especially now with Throgs littering deep space the way they were in
this sector. Let Shann alert the ship, and the cruiser would know; swift
punitive action would be visited on the camp. Throgs could begin to make their
helpless prisoner regret his rashness; then all of them would be blotted out
together, prisoner and captors alike, when the cruiser came in.
If that was his last chance, he'd play it that way.
The Throgs would kill him anyhow, he hadn't the least doubt of that. They kept
no long-term Terran prisoners and never had. And at least he could take this
nest of devil beetles along with him. Not that the thought did anything to
dampen the fear which made him weak and dizzy. Shann Lantee might be tough
enough to fight his way out of the Dumps, but to stand up and defy Throgs
face-to-face like a video hero was something else. He knew that he could not do
any spectacular act; if he could hold out to the end without cracking he would
be satisfied.
Two more Throgs entered the dome. They stalked to the
far end of the table which held the com equipment, and frequently pausing to
consult a Terran work tape set in a reader, they made adjustments to the
spotter beam broadcaster. They worked slowly but competently, testing each
circuit. Preparing to draw in the Terran transport, holding the large ship
until they had it helpless on the ground. The Terran began to wonder how they proposed
to take the ship over once they did have it on planet.
Transports were armed for ground fighting. Although
they rode in on a beam broadcast from a camp, they were prepared for unpleasant
surprises on a planet's surface; such were certainly not unknown in the history
of Survey. Which meant that the Throgs had in turn some assault weapon they
believed superior, for they radiated confidence now. But could they handle a
patrol cruiser ready to fight?
The Throg technicians made a last check of the beam,
reporting in clicks to the officer. The alien gave an order to Shann's guard
before following them out. A loop of wire rope dropped over the Terran's head,
tightened about his chest, dragging him back against the chair until he grunted
with pain. Two more loops made him secure in a most uncomfortable posture, and
then he was left alone in the com dome.
An abortive struggle against the wire rope taught him
the folly of such an effort. He was in deep freeze as far as any bodily
movement was concerned. Shann closed his eyes, settled to that same
concentration he had labored to acquire on the Throg ship. If there was any
chance of the Wyvern communication working again, here and now was the time for
it!
Again he built his mental picture of Thorvald, as
detailed as he had made it in the Throg ship. And with that to the forefront of
his mind, Shann strove to pick up the thread which could link them. Was the
distance between this camp and the seagirt city of the Wyverns too great? Did
the Throgs unconsciously dampen out that mental reaching as the Wyverns had
said they did when they had sent him to free the captive in the skull?
Drops gathered in the unkempt tight curls on his head,
trickled down to sting on his tender skin. He was bathed in the moisture
summoned by an effort as prolonged and severe as if he labored physically under
a hot sun at the top speed of which his body was capable.
Thorvald--
Thorvald! But not standing by the window in the Wyvern
stronghold! Thorvald with the amethyst of heavy Warlockian foliage at his back.
So clear was the new picture that Shann might have stood only a few feet away.
Thorvald there, with the wolverines at his side. And behind him sun glinted on
the gem-patterned skin of more than one Wyvern.
"Where?"
That demand from the Survey officer, curt, clear--so
perfect the word might have rung audibly through the dome.
"The camp!" Shann hurled that back, frantic
with fear that once again their contact might fail.
"They want me to call in the transport." He
added that.
"How soon?"
"Don't know. They have the guide beam set. I'm to
say there's illness here; they know I can't code."
All he could see now was Thorvald's face, intent, the
officer's eyes cold sparks of steel, bearing the impress of a will as
implacable as a Throg's. Shann added his own decision.
"I'll warn the ship off; they'll send in the
patrol."
There was no change in Thorvald's expression.
"Hold out as long as you can!"
Cold enough, no promise of help, nothing on which to
build hope. Yet the fact that Thorvald was on the move, away from the Wyvern
city, meant something. And Shann was sure that thick vegetation could be found
only on the mainland. Not only was Thorvald ashore, but there were Wyverns with
him. Could the officer have persuaded the witches of Warlock to forsake their
hands-off policy and join him in an attack on the Throg camp? No promise, not
even a suggestion that the party Shann had envisioned was moving in his
direction. Yet somehow he believed that they were.
There was a sound from the doorway of the dome. Shann
opened his eyes. There were Throgs entering, one to go to the guide beam, two
heading for his chair. He closed his eyes again in a last attempt, backed by
every remaining ounce of his energy and will.
"Ship's in range. Throgs here."
Thorvald's face, dimmer now, snapped out while a blow
on Shann's jaw rocked his head cruelly, made his ears sing, his eyes water. He
saw Throgs--Throgs only. And one held the translator.
"You talk!"
A tri-jointed arm reached across his shoulder,
triggered a lever, pressed a button. The head set cramping his ear let out a
sudden growl of sound--the com was activated. A claw jammed the mike closer to
Shann's lips, but also slid in range the webbed loop of the translator.
Shann shook his head at the incoming rattle of code.
The Throg with the translator was holding the other head set close to his own
ear pit. And the claws of the guard came down on Shann's shoulder in a cruel
grip, a threat of future brutality.
The rattle of code continued while Shann thought
furiously. This was it! He had to give a warning, and then the aliens would do
to him just what the officer had threatened. Shann could not seem to think
clearly. It was as if in his efforts to contact Thorvald, he had exhausted some
part of his brain, so that now he was dazed just when he needed quick wits the
most!
This whole scene had a weird unreality. He had seen
its like a thousand times on fiction tapes--the Terran hero menaced by aliens
intent on saving... saving...
Was it out of one of those fiction tapes he had devoured
in the past that Shann recalled that scrap of almost forgotten information?
The Terran began to speak into the mike, for there had
come a pause in the rattle of code. He used Terran, not basic, and he shaped
the words slowly.
"Warlock calling--trouble--sickness here--com
officer dead."
He was interrupted by another burst of code. The claws
of his guard twisted into the naked flesh of his shoulders in vicious warning.
"Warlock calling--" he repeated. "Need
help--"
"Who are you?"
The demand came in basic. On board the transport they
would have a list of every member of the Survey team.
"Lantee." Shann drew a deep breath. He was
so conscious of those claws on his shoulders, of what would follow.
"This is Mayday!" he said distinctly, hoping
desperately that someone in the control cabin of the ship now in orbit would
catch the true meaning of that ancient call of complete disaster.
"Mayday--beetles--over and out!"
18 : STORM'S ENDING
Shann had no answer from the transport, only the
continuing hum of a contact still open between the dome and the control cabin
miles above Warlock. The Terran breathed slowly, deeply, felt the claws of the
Throg bite his flesh as his chest expanded. Then, as if a knife slashed, the
hum of that contact was gone. He had time to know a small flash of triumph. He
had done it; he had aroused suspicion in the transport.
When the Throg officer clicked to the alien manning
the landing beam, Shann's exultation grew. The beetle-head must have accepted
that cut in communication as normal; he was still expecting the Terran ship to
drop neatly into his claws.
But Shann's respite was to be very short, only timed
by a few breaths. The Throg at the riding beam was watching the indicators. Now
he reported to his superior, who swung back to face the prisoner. Although
Shann could read no expression on the beetle's face, he did not need any clue
to the other's probable emotions. Knowing that his captive had somehow tricked
him, the alien would now proceed relentlessly to put into effect the measures
he had threatened.
How long before the patrol cruiser would planet? That
crew was used to alarms, and their speed was three or four times greater than
that of the bulkier transports. If the Throgs didn't scatter now, before they
could be caught in one attack...
The wire rope which held Shann clamped to the chair
was loosened, and he set his teeth against the pain of restored circulation.
This was nothing compared to what he faced; he knew that. They jerked him to
his feet, faced him toward the outer door, and propelled him through it with a
speed and roughness indicative of their feelings.
The hour was close to dusk and Shann glanced wistfully
at promising shadows, though he had given up hope of rescue by now. If he could
just get free of his guards, he could at least give the beetle-heads a good
run.
He saw that the camp was deserted. There was no sign
about the domes that any Throgs sheltered there. In fact, Shann saw no aliens
at all except those who had come from the com dome with him. Of course! The
rest must be in ambush, waiting for the transport to planet. What about the
Throg ship or ships? Those must have been hidden also. And the only hiding
place for them would be aloft. There was a chance that the Throgs had so flung
away their chance for any quick retreat.
Yes, the aliens could scatter over the countryside and
so escape the first blast from the cruiser. But they would simply maroon
themselves to be hunted down by patrol landing parties who would comb the
territory. The beetles could so prolong their lives for a few hours, maybe a
few days, but they were really ended on that moment when the transport cut
communication. Shann was sure that the officer, at least, understood that.
The Terran was dragged away from the domes toward the
river down which he and Thorvald had once escaped. Moving through the dusk in
parallel lines, he caught sight of other Throg squads, well armed, marching in
order to suggest that they were not yet alarmed. However, he had been right
about the ships--there were no flyers grounded on the improvised field.
Shann made himself as much of a burden as he could. At
the best, he could so delay the guards entrusted with his safekeeping; at the
worst, he could earn for himself a quick ending by blaster which would be
better than the one they had for him. He went limp, falling forward into the
trampled grass. There was an exasperated click from the Throg who had been
herding him, and the Terran tried not to flinch from a sharp kick delivered by
a clawed foot.
Feigning unconsciousness, the Terran listened to the
unintelligible clicks exchanged by Throgs standing over him. His future
depended now on how deep lay the alien officer's anger. If the beetle-head
wanted to carry out his earlier threats he would have to order Shann's
transportation by the fleeing force. Otherwise his life might well end here and
now.
Claws hooked once more on Shann. He was boosted up on
the horny carapace of a guard, the bonds on his arms taken off and his numbed
hands brought forward, to be held by his captor so that he lay helpless, a
cloak over the other's hunched shoulders.
The ghost flares of bushes and plants blooming in the
gathering twilight gave a limited light to the scene. There was no way of
counting the number of Throgs on the move. But Shann was sure that all the
enemy ships must have been emptied except for skeleton crews, and perhaps
others had been ferried in from their hidden base somewhere in Circe's system.
He could only see a little from his position on the
Throg's back, but ahead a ripple of beetle bodies slipped over the bank of the
river cut. The aliens were working their way into cover, fitting into the
dapple shadows with a skill which argued a long practice in such elusive
maneuvers. Did they plan to try to fight off a cruiser attack? That was pure
madness. Or, Shann wondered, did they intend to have the Terrans met by one of
their own major ships somewhere well above the surface of Warlock?
His bearer turned away from the stream cut, carrying
Shann out into that field which had first served the Terrans as a landing
strip, then offered the same service to the Throgs. They passed two more
parties of aliens on the move, manhandling bulky objects the Terran could not
identify. Then he was dumped unceremoniously to the hard earth, only to lie
there a few seconds before he was flopped over on a framework which grated
unpleasantly against his raw shoulders, his wrists and ankles being made fast
so that his body was spread-eagled. There was a click of orders; the frame was
raised and dropped with a jarring movement into a base, and he was held erect,
once more facing the Throg with the translator. This was it! Shann began to regret
every small chance he had had to end more cleanly. If he had attacked one of
the guards, even with his hands bound, he might have flustered the Throg into
retaliatory blaster fire.
Fear made a thicker fog about him than the green mist
of the illusion. Only this was no illusion. Shann stared at the Throg officer
with sick eyes, knowing that no one ever quite believes that at last evil will
strike at him, that he had clung to a hope which had no existence.
"Lantee!"
The call burst in his head with a painful force. His
dazed attention was outwardly on the alien with the translator, but that inner
demand had given him a shock.
"Here! Thorvald? Where?
The other struck in again with an urgent demand
singing through Shann's brain.
"Give us a fix point--away from camp but not too
far. Quick!"
A fix point--what did the Survey officer mean? A fix
point... For some reason Shann thought of the ledge on which he had lain to
watch the first Throg attack. And the picture of it was etched on his mind as
clearly as memory could paint it.
"Thorvald--" Again his voice and his mind
call were echoes of each other. But this time he had no answer. Had that demand
meant Thorvald and the Wyverns were moving in, putting to use the strange
distance-erasing power the witches of Warlock could use by desire? But why had
they not come sooner? And what could they hope to accomplish against the now
scattered but certainly unbroken enemy forces? The Wyverns had not been able to
turn their power against one injured Throg--by their own accounting--how could
they possibly cope with well-armed and alert aliens in the field?
"You die--slow--" The Throg officer clicked,
and the emotionless, toneless translation was all the more daunting for that
lack of color. "Your people come--see--"
So that was the reason they had brought him to the
landing field. He was to furnish a grisly warning to the crew of the cruiser.
However, there the Throgs were making a bad mistake if they believed that his
death by any ingenious method could scare off Terran retaliation.
"I die--you follow--" Shann tried to make
that promise emphatic.
Did the Throg officer expect the Terran to beg for his
life or a quick death? Again he made his threat--straight into the web, hearing
it split into clicks.
"Perhaps," the Throg officer returned.
"But you die the first."
"Get to it!" Shann's voice scaled up. He was
close to the ragged edge, and the last push toward the breaking point had not
been the Throg speech, but that message from Thorvald. If the Survey officer
was going to make any move in the mottled dusk, it would have to be soon.
Mottled dusk... the Throgs had moved a little away
from him. Shann looked beyond them to the perimeter of the cleared field, not
really because he expected to see any rescuers break from cover there. And when
he did see a change, Shann thought his own sight was at fault.
Those splotches of waxy light which marked certain
trees, bushes, and scrubby ground-hugging plants were spreading, running
together in pools. And from those center cores of concentrated glow, tendrils
of mist lazily curled out, as a many-armed creature of the sea might allow its
appendages to float in the water which supported it. Tendrils crossed, met, and
thickened. There was a growing river of eerie light which spread, again resembling
a sea wave licking out onto the field. And where it touched, unlike the wave,
it did not retreat, but lapped on. Was he actually seeing that? Shann could not
be sure.
Only the gray light continued to build, faster now,
its speed of advance matching its increase in bulk. Shann somehow connected it
with the veil of illusion. If it was real, there was a purpose behind it.
There was an aroused clicking from the Throgs. A
blaster bolt cracked, its spiteful, sickly yellow slicing into the nearest
tongue of gray. But that luminous fog engulfed the blast and was not dispelled.
Shann forced his head around against the support which held him. The mist crept
across the field from all quarters, walling them in.
Running at the ungainly lope which was their best
effort at speed were half a dozen Throgs emerging from the river section. Their
attitude suggested panic-stricken flight, and when one tripped on some unseen
obstruction and went down--to fall beneath a descending tongue of phosphorescence--he
uttered a strange high-pitched squeal, thin and faint, but still a note of
complete, mindless terror.
The Throgs surrounding Shann were firing at the fog,
first with precision, then raggedly, as their bolts did nothing to cut that
opaque curtain drawing in about them. From inside that mist came other
sounds--noises, calls, and cries all alien to him, and perhaps also to the
Throgs. There were shapes barely to be discerned through the swirls; perhaps
some were Throgs in flight. But certainly others were non-Throg in outline. And
the Terran was sure that at least three of those shapes, all different, had
been in pursuit of one fleeing Throg, heading him off from that small open area
still holding about Shann.
For the Throgs were being herded in from all
sides--the handful who had come from the river, the others who had brought
Shann there. And the action of the mist was pushing them into a tight knot.
Would they eventually turn on him, wanting to make sure of their prisoner
before they made a last stand against whatever lurked in the fog? To Shann's
continued relief the aliens seemed to have forgotten him. Even when one cowered
back against the very edge of the frame on which the Terran was bound, the
beetle-head did not look at this helpless prey.
They were firing wildly, with desperation in every
heavy thrust of bolt. Then one Throg threw down his blaster, raised his arms
over his head, and voicing the same high wail uttered by his comrade-in-arms
earlier, he ran straight into the mist where a shape materialized, closed in
behind him, cutting him off from his fellows.
That break demoralized the others. The Throg commander
burned down two of his company with his blaster, but three more broke past him
to the fog. One of the remaining party reversed his blaster, swung the stock
against the officer's carapace, beating him to his knees, before the attacker
raced on into the billows of the mist. Another threw himself on the ground and
lay there, pounding his claws against the baked earth. While a remaining two
continued with stolid precision to fire at the lurking shapes which could only
be half seen; and a third helped the officer to his feet.
The Throg commander reeled back against the frame, his
musky body scent filling Shann's nostrils. But he, too, paid no attention to
the Terran, though his horny arms scraped across Shann's. Holding both of his
claws to his head, he staggered on, to be engulfed by a new arm of the fog.
Then, as if the swallowing of the officer had given
the mist a fresh appetite, the wan light waved in a last vast billow over the
clear area about the frame. Shann felt its substance cold, slimy, on his skin.
This was a deadly breath of un-life.
He was weakened, sapped of strength, so that he hung
in his bonds, his head lolling forward on his breast. Warmth pressed against
him, a warm wet touch on his cold skin, a sensation of friendly concern in his
mind. Shann gasped, found that he was no longer filling his lungs with that
chill staleness which was the breath of the fog. He opened his eyes, struggling
to raise his head. The gray light had retreated, but though a Throg blaster lay
close to his feet, another only a yard beyond, there was no sign of the aliens.
Instead, standing on their hind feet to press against
him in a demand for his attention, were the wolverines. And seeing them, Shann
dared to believe that the impossible could be true; somehow he was safe.
He spoke. And Taggi and Togi answered with eager
whines. The mist was withdrawing more slowly than it had come. Here and there
things lay very still on the ground.
"Lantee!"
This time the call came not into his mind but out of
the air. Shann made an effort at reply which was close to a croak.
"Over here!"
A new shape in the fog was moving with purpose toward
him. Thorvald strode into the open, sighted Shann, and began to run.
"What did they--?" he began.
Shann wanted to laugh, but the sound which issued from
his dry throat was very little like mirth. He struggled helplessly until he
managed to get out some words which made sense.
"... hadn't started in on me yet. You were just
in time."
Thorvald loosened the wires which held the younger man
to the frame and stood ready to catch him as he slumped forward. And the
officer's hold wiped away the last clammy residue of the mist. Though he did not
seem able to keep on his feet, Shann's mind was clear.
"What happened?" he demanded.
"The power." Thorvald was examining him
hastily but with attention for every cut and bruise. "The beetle-heads
didn't really get to work on you--"
"Told you that," Shann said impatiently.
"But what brought that fog and got the Throgs?"
Thorvald smiled grimly. The ghostly light was fading
as the fog retreated, but Shann could see well enough to note that around the
other's neck hung one of the Wyvern disks.
"It was a variation of the veil of illusion. You
faced your memories under the influence of that; so did I. But it would seem
that the Throgs had ones worse than either of us could produce. You can't play
the role of thug all over the galaxy and not store up in the subconscious a
fine line of private fears and remembered enemies. We provided the means for
releasing those, and they simply raised their own devils to order. Neatest
justice ever rendered. It seems that the 'power' has a big kick--in a different
way--when a Terran will manages to spark it."
"And you did?"
"I made a small beginning. Also I had the full
backing of the Elders, and a general staff of Wyverns in support. In a way I
helped to provide a channel for their concentration. Alone they can work
'magic'; with us they can spread out into new fields. Tonight we hunted Throgs
as a united team--most successfully."
"But they wouldn't go after the one in the
skull."
"No. Direct contact with a Throg mind appears to
short-circuit them. I did the contacting; they fed me what I needed. We have
the answer to the Throgs now--one answer." Thorvald looked back over the
field where those bodies lay so still. "We can kill Throgs. Maybe someday
we can learn another trick--how to live with them." He returned abruptly
to the present. "You did contact the transport."
Shann explained what had happened in the com dome.
"I think when the ship broke contact that way they understood."
"We'll take it that they did, and be on the
move." Thorvald helped Shann to his feet. "If a cruiser berths here
shortly, I don't propose to be under its tail flames when it sets down."
The cruiser came. And a mop-up squad patrolled outward
from the reclaimed camp, picked up two living Throgs, both wandering witlessly.
But Shann only heard of that later. He slept, so deep and dreamlessly that when
he roused he was momentarily dazed.
A Survey uniform--with a cadet's badges--lay across
the wall seat facing his bunk in the barracks he had left... how many days or
weeks before? The garments fitted well enough, but he removed the insignia to
which he was not entitled. When he ventured out he saw half a dozen troopers of
the patrol, together with Thorvald, watching the cruiser lift again into the
morning sky.
Taggi and Togi, trailing leashes, galloped out of
nowhere to hurl themselves at him in uproarious welcome. And Thorvald must have
heard their eager whines even through the blast of the ship, for he turned and
waved Shann to join him.
"Where is the cruiser going?"
"To punch a Throg base out of this system,"
Thorvald answered. "They located it--on Witch."
"But we're staying on here?"
Thorvald glanced at him oddly. "There won't be
any settlement now. But we have to establish a conditional embassy post. And
the patrol has left a guard."
Embassy post. Shann digested that. Yes, of course,
Thorvald, because of his close contact with the Wyverns, would be left here for
the present to act as liaison officer-in-charge.
"We don't propose," the other was
continuing, "to allow to lapse any contact with the one intelligent alien
race we have discovered who can furnish us with full-time partnership to our
mutual benefit. And there mustn't be any bungling here!"
Shann nodded. That made sense. As soon as possible
Warlock would witness the arrival of another team, one slated this time to the
cultivation of an alien friendship and alliance, rather than preparation for
Terran colonists. Would they keep him on? He supposed not; the wolverines'
usefulness was no longer apparent.
"Don't you know your regulations?" There was
a snap in Thorvald's demand which startled Shann. He glanced up, discovered the
other surveying him critically. "You're not in uniform--"
"No, sir," he admitted. "I couldn't
find my own kit."
"Where are your badges?"
Shann's hand went up to the marks left when he had so
carefully ripped off the insignia.
"My badges? I have no rank," he replied,
bewildered.
"Every team carries at least one cadet on
strength."
Shann flushed. There had been one cadet on this team;
why did Thorvald want to remember that?
"Also," the other's voice sounded remote,
"there can be appointments made in the field--for cause. Those
appointments are left to the discretion of the officer-in-charge, and they are
never questioned. I repeat, you are not in uniform, Lantee. You will make the
necessary alteration and report to me at headquarters dome. As sole
representatives of Terra here we have a matter of protocol to be discussed with
our witches, and they have a right to expect punctuality from a pair of
warlocks, so get going!"
Shann still stood, staring incredulously at the
officer. Then Thorvald's official severity vanished in a smile which was warm
and real.
"Get going," he ordered once more,
"before I have to log you for inattention to orders."
Shann turned, nearly stumbling over Taggi, and then
ran back to the barracks in quest of some very important bits of braid he hoped
he could find in a hurry.
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