"For some first rate entertainment for
yourself, you should not miss it!"
—Magazine of Fantasy and Science-Fiction
Says the Denver Post:
"This is that rarity, a good adventure
story which is a thoughtful book as well . . . This peculiarly fascinating
novel concerns itself with what the world and its people might be like after
its near-destruction in war. Reading it is like the murderer's return to the
scene of his crime . . .
"It is 200 years after the destruction
when Fors sets off to explore the empty lands to the north. He is a member of a
clan which concerns itself with recapturing the
knowledge and skills of their ancestors. By adding to that knowledge, Fors
hopes to win a place as one of the leaders of his clan.
"The imaginative descriptions of
deserted cities, ruined highways, subhuman Beast Things all serve as a backdrop
to Fors' dangerous adventure . . ."
This
exceptional science-fiction novel, never serialized in any magazine, has won
universal praise from reviewers. More quotes on the following page.
Turn this book over for second complete^
novel.
More
reviews of this exciting book:
"Grim
and thought-provoking . . . this is a robust story with a serious theme."
—The York Times
"This is exciting fare."
—Chicago Tribune
"A fine odyssey of future adventure,
admirably detailed in its scientific and cultural backgrounds."
—New
York Herald-Tribune
"Extraordinary!"
—Washington Post
"Nicely paced, imaginative, and exciting . .
—San
Francisco Chronicle
"It is a strange picture that Andre
Norton paints ... an unusual
story."
—Ottawa Citizen
'Original and powerful."
—Hartford Courant
Daybreak-2250 A.D. (Star Mans Son)
Copyright, 1952, by Harcourt, Brace & Co., Inc.
An Ace Book, by arrangement with Harcourt,
Brace & Co., Inc.
All
Rights Reserved
Beyond Earth's Gates Copyright, 1954, by Ace Books, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
1. A THIEF BY NIGHT
A
night mist which was almost fog-thick still wrapped most of the Eyrie in a
cottony curtain. Beads of moisture gathered on the watcher's bare arms and hide
jerkin. He licked the wetness from his lips. But he made no move toward
shelter, just as he had not during any of the long black hours behind him.
Hot
anger had brought him up on this broken rock point above the village of his
tribe. And something which was very close to real heartbreak kept him there. He
propped a pointed chin — strong, cleft and stubborn — on the palm of a grimy
hand and thed to pick out the buildings which made straight angles in the mist
below.
Right
before him, of course, was the Star Hall. And as he studied its rough stone
walls, his lips drew tight in what was almost a noiseless snarl. To be one of
the Star Men, honored by all the tribe, consecrated to the gathering and
treasuring of knowledge, to the breaking of new trails and the exploration of
lost lands — he, Fors of the Puma Clan, had never dreamed of any other life. Up
until the hour of the Council Fire last night he had kept on hoping that he
would be given the right to enter the Hall. But he had been a child and a fool
to so hope when all the signs had read just the opposite. For five years he had
been passed over at the choosing of youths as if he did not exist. Why then
should his merits suddenly become diamond-bright on the sixth occasion?
Only — his head dropped and his teeth
clenched. Only — this was the last year — the very last year for him. Next year
he would be over the age limit allowed a novice. When he was passed over last
night —
Maybe
— if his father had come back from that last exploring venture — If he himself
didn't bear the stigma so plainly — His fingers clutched the thick hair on his
head, tugging painfully as if he would have it all out by the roots. His hair
was the worst! They might have forgotten about his night sight and too-keen
hearing. He could have concealed those as soon as he learned how wrong it was
to be different. But he
could not
hide the color of his close-cropped hair. And that had damned him from the day
his father had brought him here. Other men had brown or black, or, at the
worst, sun-bleached yellow, covering their heads. He had silver white, which
showed to all men that he was a mutant, different from the rest of his clan.
Mutant! Mutant!
For
more than two hundred years — ever since the black days of chaos following the
Great Blow-up, the atomic war — that cry had been enough to condemn without
trial. Fear caused it, the strong, instinctive fear of the whole race for
anyone cursed with a different physique or unusual powers.
Ugly
tales were told of what had happened to the mutants, those unfortunates born in
the first year after the Blow-up. Some tribes had taken drastic steps in those
days to see that the strain of human — or almost human — lineage be kept pure.
Here
in the Eyrie, far apart from the infection of the bombed sectors, mutation had
been almost unknown. But he, Fors, had Plains' blood — tained, unclean — and,
since he could remember at all, he had never been allowed to put that fact from
him.
While
his father had lived it had not been so bad. The other children had yelled at
him and there had been fights. But somehow, his father's confidence in him had
made even that seem natural. And in the evenings, when they had shut out the
rest of the Eyrie, there had been long hours of learning to read and write, to
map and observe, the lore of the high trails and the low. Even among the Star
Men his father had been a master instructor. And never had it appeared doubtful
to Langdon that his only son Fors would follow him into the Star Hall.
So
even after his father had failed to return from a trip to the lowlands, Fors
had been confident of the future. He had made his weapons, the long bow now
lying beside him, the short stabbing sword, the
hunting knife — all with his own hands according to the Law. He had learned the
trails and had found Lura, his great hunting cat — thus fulfilling all the
conditions for the Choosing. For five years he had come to the Fire each
season, with diminishing hope to be sure, and each time to be ignored as if he
did not exist. And now he was too old to try again.
Tomorrow
— no, today — he would have to lay aside his weapons and obey the dictates of
the Council. Their verdict would be that he live on
sufferance — which was probably all a mutant could expect — as a worker in one
of the cave-sheltered Hydro farms.
No more schooling, no fifteen or twenty years
of roving the lowlands, with further honored years to look forward to as an
instructor and guardian of knowledge — a Star Man, explorer of the wilderness
existing in the land where the Great Blowup had made a world hostile to man.
He would have no part in tracing the old cities where forgotten knowledge might
be discovered and brought back to the Eyrie, in mapping roads and trails,
helping to bring light out of darkness. He couldn't surrender that dream to the
will of the Council!
A
low questioning sound came out of the dark and absently he answered with an
assenting thought. A shadow detached itself from a jumble of rocks and crept on
velvet feet, soft belly fur dragging on the moss, to him. Then a furred shoulder
almost as wide as his own nudged against him and he dropped a hand to scratch
behind pricked ears. Lura was impatient. All the wild scents of the woods were
rich in her widened nostrils and she wanted to be on the trail. His hand on her
head was a restraint she half resented.
Lura loved freedom. What service she gave was
of her own choosing, after the manner of her kind. He had been so proud two
years ago when the most beautifully marked kitten of Kanda's last litter had
shown such a preference for his company. One day Jarl himself — the Star
Captain — had commented on it. How that had raised Fors' hopes — but nothing
had come of the incident, only Lura herself. He rubbed his hot cheek against
the furry head raised to his. She made again the little questioning sound deep
in her throat. She knew his unhappiness.
There was no sign of sunrise. Instead black
clouds were gathering above the bald top of the Big Knob. It would be a stormy
day and those below would keep within shelter. The moisture of the mist had
become a drizzle and Lura was manifestly angry at his stubbornness in not
going indoors. But if he went into any building of the Eyrie now it would be in
surrender — a surrender to the loss of the life he had been born to lead, a
surrender to all the whispers, the badge of shameful failure, to the stigma of
being mutant — not as other men. And he could not do that — he couldn't! If
Langdon had stood before the Council last night — Langdon! He could remember
his father so vividly, the tall strong body, the high-held head with its
bright, restless, seeking eyes above a tight mouth and sharp jaw. Only —
Lang-don's hair had been safely dark. It was from his unknown Plainswoman
mother that Fors had that too fair hair which branded him as one apart.
Langdon's
shoulder bag with its star badge hung now in the treasure room of the Star
Hall. It had been found with his battered body on the site of his last battle.
A fight with the Beast Things seldom ended in victory for the mountaineers.
He
had been on the track of a lost city when he had been killed. Not a "blue
city," still forbidden to men if they wished to live, but a safe place
without radiation which could be looted for the advantage of the Eyrie. For the
hundredth time Fors wondered if his father's theory concerning the tattered bit
of map was true — if a safe city did lie somewhere to the north on the edge of
a great lake, ready and waiting for the man lucky and reckless enough to search
it out.
"Ready
and waiting —" Fors repeated the words aloud. Then his hand closed almost
viciously on Lura's fur. She growled warningly at his roughness, but he did not
hear her.
Why — the answer had been before him all
along! Perhaps five years ago he could not have thed it — perhaps this eternal
waiting and disappointment had been for the best after all. Because now he was
ready — he knew it! His strength and the ability to use it, his knowledge and
his wits were all ready.
No
light yet showed below. The clouds were prolonging the night. But his time of
grace was short, he would have to move fast! The bow, the filled quiver, the sword, were hidden between two
rocks. Lura crawled in beside them to wait, his unspoken suggestion agreeing
with her own desires.
Fors crept down the twisted trail to the
Eyrie and made for the back of the Star Hall. The bunks of the Star Men on duty
were all in the forepart of the house, the storage room was almost directly
before him. And luck was favoring him as it never had before for the heavy
shutter was not bolted or even completely closed as his exploring fingers
discovered. After all — no one had ever dreamed of invading the Star Hall
unasked.
Moving as noiselessly as Lura he swung over
the high sill and stood breathing in a sort of light flutter. To the ordinary
man of the Eyrie the room would have been almost pitch dark. But, for once,
Fors' mutant night sight was an aid. He could see the long table, the benches,
without difficulty, make out the line of pouches
hanging on the far wall. These were his goal. His hand closed unerringly on one
he had helped to pack many times. But when he lifted it from its hook he detached
the gleaming bit of metal pinned to its strap.
To his father's papers and belongings he
might prove some shadowy claim. But to that Star he had no right. His lips
twisted in a bitter grimace as he laid the badge down on the edge of the long
table before clambering back into the grayness of the outer world.
Now that the pouch swung from his shoulder he
went openly to the storage house and selected a light blanket, a hunter's
canteen and a bag of traveler's corn kept in readiness there. Then, reclaiming
his weapons and the impatient Lura, he started off — not toward the narrow
mountain valleys where all of his hunting had been done, but down toward the
forbidden plains. A chill born of excitement rather than the bite of the
rising wind roughened his skin, but his step was sure and confident as he
hunted out the path blazed by Langdon more than ten years before, a path which
was not overlooked by any station of the outpost guards.
Many
times around the evening fires had the men of the Eyrie discussed the plains
below and the strange world which had felt the force of the Great Blow-up and
been turned into an alien, poisonous trap for any human not knowing its ways.
Why, in the past twenty years even the Star Men had mapped only four cities,
and one of those was "blue" and so must be avoided.
They knew the traditions of
the old times. But, Langdon had always insisted even while he was repeating the
stories to Fors, they could not judge how much of this information had been
warped and distorted by time. How could they be sure that they were of the same
race as those who had lived before the Blow-up? The radiation sickness, which
had cut the number of survivors in the Eyrie to less than half two years after
the war, might well have altered the future generations. Certainly the
misshapen Beast Things must once have had a human origin though that was
difficult for any who saw them now to believe. But they clung to the old cities
and there the worst of the change took place.
The
men of the Eyrie had records to prove that their forefathers had been a small
band of technicians and scientists engaged in some secret research, cut off
from a world which disappeared so quickly. But there were the Plainsmen of the
wide grasslands, also free from the taint of the beast, who
had survived and now roamed with their herds.
And there might be others.
Who had started the atomic war was unknown.
Fors had once seen an old book containing jotted fragments of messages which
had come out of the air through machines during a single horrible day. And
these broken messages only babbled of the death of a world.
But
that was all the men of the mountains knew of the last war. And while they
fought ceaselessly to keep alive the old skills and learning there was so much,
so very much, they no longer understood. They had old maps with pink and green,
blue and yellow patches all carefully marked. But the pink and green, blue and
yellow areas had had no defense against fire and death from the air and so had
ceased to be. Only now could men, venturing out from their pockets of safety
into the unknown, bring back bits of knowledge which they might piece together
into history.
Somewhere, within a mile or so of the trail
he had chosen, Fors knew that there was a section of pre-Blow-up road. And that
might be followed by the cautious for about a day's journey north. He had seen
and handled the various trophies brought back by his father and his father's
comrades, but he had never actually traveled the old roads or sniffed the air
of the lowlands for himself. His pace quickened to a lope and he did not even
feel the steady pour of the rain which streamed across his body plastering even
his blanket to him. Lura protested with every leap she made to keep pace with
him, but she did not go back. The excitement which drew him on at such an
unwary speed had spread to the always sensitive mind of the great cat and she
made her way through the underbrush with sinuous ease.
The old road was almost a disappointment when
he stumbled out upon it. Once it must have had a smooth surface, but time,
disuse, and the spreading greedy force of wild vegetation had seamed and broken
it. Nevertheless it was a marvel to be examined closely by one who had never
seen such footing before. Men had ridden on it once encased in machines. Fors
knew that, he had seen pictures of such machines, but their fashioning was now
a mystery. The men of the Eyrie knew facts about them, painfully dug out of the
old books brought back from city lootings, but the materials and fuels for
their production were now beyond hope of obtaining.
Lura
did not like the roadway. She tried it with a cautious paw, sniffed at the
upturned edge of a block, and went back to firm ground. But Fors stepped out on
it boldly, walking the path of the Old Ones even when it would have been easier
to take to the bush. It gave him an odd feeling of power to tread so. This
stuff beneath his hide boots had been fashioned by those of his race who had
been wiser and stronger and more learned. It was up to those of his breed to
regain that lost wisdom.
"Ho, Lura!"
The cat paused at his exultant call and swung
the dark brown mask of her face toward him. Then she meowed plaintively,
conveying the thought that she was being greatly misused by this excursion
into the dampness of an exceedingly unpleasant day.
She
was beautiful indeed. Fors' feeling of good will and happiness grew within him
as he watched her. Since he had left the last step of the mountain trail he had
felt a curious sense of freedom and for the first time in his life he did not
care about the color of his hair or feel that he must be inferior to the
others of the clan. He had all his father had taught him well in mind, and in
the pouch swinging at his side his father's greatest secret. He had a long bow
no other youth of his age could string, a bow of his own making. His sword was
sharp and balanced to suit his hand alone. There was all the lower world before
him and the best of companions to match his steps.
Lura
licked at her wet fur and Fors caught a flash of — was it her thoughts or just
emotion? None of the Eyrie dwellers had ever been able to decide how the great
cats were able to communicate with the men they chose to honor with their
company. Once there had been dogs to run with man — Fors had read of them. But
the strange radiation sickness had been fatal to the dogs of the Eyrie and
their breed had died out forever.
Because
of that same plague the cats had changed. Small domestic animals of untamable
independence had produced larger offspring with even quicker minds and greater
strength. Mating with wild felines from the tainted plains had established the
new mutation. The creature which now rubbed against Fors was the size of a
mountain lion of pre-Blow-up days, but her thick fur was of a deep shade of
cream, darkening on head, legs, and tail to a chocolate brown — after the
coloring set by a Siamese ancestor first brought into the mountains by the wife
of a research engineer. Her eyes were the deep sapphire blue of a true gem, but
her claws were cruelly sharp and she was a master hunter.
That
taste possessed her now as she drew Fors' attention to a patch of moist ground
where the slot of a deer was deep marked. The trail was fresh — even as he
studied it a bit of sand tumbled from the top into the hollow of the mark. Deer
meat was good and he had few supplies. It might be worth turning aside. He need
not speak to Lura — she knew his decision and was off on the trail at once. He
padded after her with the noiseless woods walk he had learned so long before
that he could not remember the lessons.
The
trail led off at a right angle from the remains of the old road, across the
tumbled line of a wall where old bricks protruded at crazy points from heaped
earth and brush. Water from leaves and branches doused both
hunters, gluing Fors' homespun leggings to his legs and squeezing into
his boots.
He was puzzled. By the signs, the deer had
been fleeing for its life and yet whatever menaced it had left no trace. But
Fors was not afraid. He had never met any living thing, man or animal, which
could stand against the force of his steel-tipped arrows or which he would have
hesitated to face, short sword in hand.
Between the men of the mountains and the
roving Plainsmen there was a truce. The Star Men often lived for periods of
time in the skin-walled tents of the herders, exchanging knowledge of far
places with those eternal wanderers. And his father had taken a wife among the
outlanders. Of course, there was war to the death between the humankind and the
Beast Things which skulked in the city ruins. But the latter had never been
known to venture far from their dank, evil-smelling burrows in the shattered
buildings, and certainly one need not fear meeting with them in this sort of
open country! So he followed the trail with a certain reckless disregard.
The
trail ended suddenly on the lip of a small gully. Some ten feet or so below, a
stream — swollen by the rain — frothed around green-grown rocks. Lura was on
her belly, pulling her body forward along the rim of the ravine. Fors dropped
down and inched behind a bush. He knew better than to interfere with her
skillful approach.
When
the tip of her brown tail quivered he watched for a trembling of Lura's flat
flanks which would signalize her spring. But instead the tail suddenly bristled
and the shoulders hunched as if to put a brake upon muscles already tensed. He
caught her message of bewilderment, of disgust and, yes, of fear.
He knew that he had better eyesight than
almost all of the Eyrie men,that had been proved many
times. But what had stopped Lura in her tracks was gone. True, upstream a bush
still swayed as if something had just pushed past it. But the sound of the
water covered any noise and although he strained — there was nothing to see.
Lura's
ears lay flat against her skull and her eyes were slits of blazing rage. But
beneath the rage Fors grasped another emotion — almost fear. The big cat had
come across something strange and therefore to be considered with suspicion.
Aroused by her message Fors lowered himself over the edge of the gully. Lura
made no attempt to stop him. Whatever had troubled her was gone, but he was
determined to see what traces it might have left in its passing.
The
greenish stones of the river bank were sleek and slippery with spray, and
twice he had to catch hurriedly at bushes to keep from falling into the stream.
He got to his hands and knees to move across one rock and then he was at the
edge of the bush which had fluttered.
A
red pool, sticky but already being diluted by the rain and the spray, filled a clay hollow. He tasted it with the aid of a
finger. Blood. Probably that of the deer they had been
following.
Then,
just beyond, he saw the spoor of the hunter that had brought it down. It was
stamped boldly into the clay, deeply as if the creature that made it had
balanced for a moment under a weight, perhaps the body of the deer. And it was
too clear to mistake the outline — the print of a naked foot.
No
man of the Eyrie, no Plainsman had left that track! It was narrow and the same
width from heel to toe — as if the thing which had left it was completely
flat-footed. The toes were much too long and skeleton-thin. Beyond their tips
were indentations of — not nails — but what must be real claws!
Fors'
skin crawled. It was unhealthy — that was the word which came into his mind as
he stared at the track. He was glad — and then ashamed of that same gladness —
that he had not seen the hunter in person.
Lura
pushed past him. She tasted the blood with a dainty tongue and then lapped it
once or twice before she came on to inspect his find. Again flattened ears and
wrinkled, snarling lips gave voice to her opinion of the vanished hunter. Fors
strung his bow for action. For the first time the chill of the day struck him.
He shivered as a flood of water spouted at him over the rocks.
With more caution they went back up the
slope. Lura showed no inclination to follow any trail the unknown hunter might
have left and Fors did not suggest it to her. This wild world was Lura's real
home and more than once the life of a Star Man had depended upon the instincts
of his hunting cat. If Lura saw no reason to risk her skin downriver, he would
abide by her choice.
They came back to the road. But now Fors used
hunting craft and the trail-covering tricks which normally one kept only for
the environs of a ruined city — those haunted places where death still lay in
wait to strike down the unwary. It had stopped raining but the clouds did not
lift.
Toward
noon he brought down a fat bird Lura flushed out of a tangle of brush and they
shared the raw flesh of the fowl equally.
It
was close to dusk, a shadow time coming early because of the storm, when they
came out upon a hill above the dead village the old road served.
2. INTO THE MIDST OF YESTERDAY
Even
in the pre-Blow-up days when it had been lived in, the town must have been
neither large nor impressive. But to Fors, who had never before seen any
buildings but those of the Eyrie, it was utterly strange and even a bit
frightening. The wild vegetation had made its claim and moldering houses were
now only lumps under the greenery. One water-worn pier at the edge of the river
which divided the town marked a bridge long since fallen away.
Fors
hesitated on the heights above for several long minutes. There was a
forbidding quality in that tangled wilderness below, a sort of moldy rankness
rising on the evening wind from the hollow which cupped the ruins. Wind, storm
and wild animals had had their way there too long.
On
the road to one side was a heap of rusted metal which he thought must be the
remains of a car such as the men of the old days had used for transportation.
Even then it must have been an old one. Because just before
the Blow-up they had perfected another type, powered by atom engines.
Sometimes Star Men had found those almost intact. He skirted the wreckage and,
keeping to the thread of battered road, went down into the town.
Lura trotted beside him, her head high as she
tested each passing breeze for scent. Quail took flight into the tall grass and
somewhere a cock pheasant called. Twice the scut of a rabbit showed white and
clear against the green.
There
were flowers in that tangle, defending themselves with hooked thorns, the running vines which bore them looped and
relooped into barriers he could not crash through. And all at once the setting
sun broke between cloud lines to bring their scarlet petals into angry life.
Insects chirped in the grass. The storm was over.
The
travelers pushed through into an open space bordered on all sides by crumbling
mounds of buildings. From somewhere came the sound of water and Fors beat a
path through the rank shrubbery to where a trickle of a stream fed a man-made
basin.
In
the lowlands water must always be suspect — he knew that. But the clear stream
before him was much more appetizing than the musty stuff which had sloshed all
day in the canteen at his belt. Lura lapped it unafraid, shaking her head to
free her whiskers from stray drops. So he dared to cup up a palmful and sip it
gingerly.
The
pool lay directly before a freak formation of rocks which might have once been
heaped up to suggest a cave. And the mat of leaves which had collected inside
there was dry. He crept in. Surely there would be no danger in camping here.
One never slept in any of the old houses, of course. There was no way of
telling whether the ghosts of ancient disease still lingered in their
rottenness. Men had died from that carelessness. But here — In
among the leaves he saw white bones. Some other hunter — a four-footed one —
had already dined.
Fors
kicked out the refuse and went prospecting for wood not too sodden to burn.
There were places in and among the clustered rocks where winds had piled
branches and he returned to the cave with one, then two, and finally three armloads,
which he piled within reaching distance.
Out in the plains fire could be an enemy as
well as a friend. A carelessly tended blaze in the wide grasslands might start
one of the oceans of flame which would run for miles driving all living things
before it. And in an enemy's country it was instant betrayal. So even when he had his small circle of sticks in place Fors
hesitated, flint and steel in hand. There was the mysterious hunter —
what if he were lurking now in the maze of the ruined town?
Yet
both he and Lura were chilled and soaked by the rain. To sleep cold might mean
illness to come. And, while he could stomach raw meat when he had to, he
relished it broiled much more. In the end it was the thought of the meat which
won over his caution, but even when a thread of flame arose from the center of
his wheel of sticks, his hand still hovered ready to put it out. Then Lura came
up to watch the flames and he knew that she would not be so at her ease if any
danger threatened. Lura's eyes and nose were both infinitely better than his
own.
Later,
simply by freezing into a hunter's immobility by the pool, he was able to knock
over three rabbits. Giving Lura two, he skinned and broiled the third. The
setting sun was red and by the old signs he could hope for a clear day
tomorrow. He licked his fingers, dabbled them in the
water, and wiped them on a tuft of grass. Then for the first time that day he
opened the pouch he had stolen before the dawn.
He
knew what was inside, but this was the first time in years that he held in his
hand again the sheaf of brittle old papers and read the words which had been
carefully traced across them in his father's small, even script. Yes — he was
humming a broken little tune — it was here,
the scrap of map his father had treasured so — the one which showed the city to
the north, a city which his father had hoped was safe and yet large enough to
yield rich loot for the Eyrie.
But
it was not easy to read his father's cryptic notes. Lang-don had made them for
his own use and Fors could only guess at the meaning of such directions as
"snake river to the west of barrens," "Northeast of the wide
forest" and all the rest. Landmarks on the old maps were now gone, or else
so altered by time that a man might pass a turning point and never know it. As
Fors frowned over the scrap which had led his father to his death he began to
realize a little of the enormity of the task before him. Why, he didn't even
know all the safe trails which had been blazed by the Star Men through the
years, except by hearsay. And if he became lost —
His fingers tightened around the roll of
precious papers. Lost in the lowlands! To wander off the trails — !
Silky
fur pressed against him and a round head butted his ribs. Lura had caught that
sudden nip of fear and was answering it in her own way. Fors' lungs filled
slowly. The humid air of the lowlands lacked the keen bite of the mountain
winds. But he was free and he was a man. To return to the Eyrie was to
acknowledge defeat. What if he did lose himself down here? There was a whole
wide land to make his own! Why, he could go on and on
across it until he reached the salt sea which tradition said lay at the rim of
the world. This whole land was his for the exploring!
He
delved deeper into the bag on his knee. Besides the notes and the torn map he
found the compass he had hoped would be there, a small wooden case containing
pencils, a package of bandages and wound salve, two small surgical knives, and
a roughly fashioned notebook — the daily record of a Star Man. But to his vast
disappointment the entries there were merely a record of distances. On impulse
he set down on one of the blank pages an account of his own day's travel,
trying to make a drawing of the strange footprint Then
he repacked the pouch.
Lura
stretched out on the leaf bed and he flopped down beside her, pulling the
blanket over them both. It was twilight now. He pushed the sticks in toward the
center of the fire so that the unburnt ends would be consumed. The soft rumble
of the cat's purr as she washed her paws, biting at the spaces between her claws,
made his eyes heavy. He flung an arm over her back and she favored him with a
lick of her tongue. The rasp of it across his skin was the last thing he
clearly remembered.
There were birds in the morning, a whole
flock of them, and they did not approve of Lura. Their scolding cries brought
Fors awake. He rubbed his eyes and looked out groggily at a gray world. Lura
sat in the mouth of the cave, paying no attention to the chorus over her head.
She yawned and looked back at Fors with some impatience.
He dragged himself out to join her and pulled
off his roughly dried clothes before bathing in the pool. It was cold enough to
set him sputtering and Lura withdrew to a safe distance. The birds flew away in
a black flock. Fors dressed, lacing up his sleeveless jerkin and fastening his
boots and belt with extra care.
A
more experienced explorer would not have wasted time on the forgotten town.
Long ago any useful loot it might have once contained had either been taken
away or had moldered into rubbish. But it was the first dead place Fors had
seen and he could not leave it without some examination. He followed the road
around the square. Only one building still stood unharmed
enough to allow entrance. Its stone walls were rank with ivy and moss
and its empty windows blind. He shuffled through the dried leaves and grass
which masked the broad flight of steps leading to its wide door.
There
was the whir of disturbed grasshoppers in the leaves, a wasp sang past. Lura
pawed at something which lay just within the doorway. It rolled away into the
dusk of the interior and they followed. Fors stopped to trace with an inquiring
finger the letters on a bronze plate.
"First
National Bank of Glentown."
He
read the words aloud and they echoed hollowly down the long room, through the
empty cage-like booths along the wall.
"First
National Bank," he repeated. What was a bank? He had only a vague idea —
some sort of a storage place. And this dead town must be Glentown — or once it
had been Glentown.
Lura had found again her round toy and was
batting it along the cracked flooring. It skidded to strike the base of one of
the cages just in front of Fors. Round eyeholes stared up at him accusingly
from a half-crushed skull. He stooped and picked it up to set it on the stone
shelf. Dust arose in a thick puff. A pile of coins spun and jingled in all
directions, their metallic tinkle clear.
There were lots of the coins here, all along
the shelves behind the cage fronts. He scooped up handfuls and sent them
rolling to amuse Lura. But they had no value. A piece of good, rust-proof steel
would be worth the taking — not these. The darkness of the place began to oppress
him and no matter which way he turned he thought he could feel the gaze of that
empty skull. He left, calling Lura to follow.
There
was a dankness in the heart of this town, the air here
had the faint corruption of ancient decay, mixed with the fresher scent of
rotting wood and moldering vegetation. He wrinkled his nose against it and
pushed on down a choked street, climbing over piles of rubble, heading toward
the river. That stream had to be crossed some way if he were to travel straight
to the goal his father had mapped. It would be easy for him to swim the thick
brownish water, still roily from the storm, but he knew that Lura would not
willingly venture in and he was certainly not going to leave her behind.
Fors
struck out east along the bank above the flood. A raft of some sort would be
the answer, but he would have to get away from the ruins before he could find
trees. And he chafed at the loss of time.
There
was a sun today, climbing up, striking specks of light
from the water. By turning his head he could still see the foothills and,
behind them, the blueish heights down which he had come twenty-four hours
before. But he glanced back only once, his attention was all for the river now.
Half an hour later he came across a find
which saved him hours of back-breaking labor. A sharp break in the bank outlined
a narrow cove where the river rose during the spring freshets. Now it was half
choked with drift, from big logs to delicate, sun bleached twigs he could snap
between his fingers. He had only to pick and choose.
By the end of the morning he had a raft,
crude and certainly not intended for a long voyage, but it should serve to
float them across. Lura had her objections to the foolishness of trusting to
such a crazy woven platform. But, when Fors refused to stay safely ashore, she
pulled herself aboard it, one cautious paw testing each step before she put her
full weight upon it. And in the exact middle she squatted down with a sigh as
Fors leaned hard on his pole and pushed off.
The
weird craft showed a tendency to spin around which he had to work against. And
once his pole caught in a mud bank below and he was almost jerked off into the
flood. But as the salty sweat stung across his lips and burned in his blistered
palms he could see that the current, though taking them downstream, was slowly
nudging them toward the opposite bank.
Sun rays reflected by the water made them
both warm and thirsty, and Lura gave small meowing whines of self-pity all the
rest of the hour. Still, she grew accustomed enough to the new mode of travel
to sit up and watch keen-eyed when a fish rose to snap at a fly. Once they
slipped past a mass of decayed wreckage which must have been the remains of a
boat, and twice swept between abutments of long-vanished bridges. This had been
a thickly settled territory before the Blow-up. Fors tried to imagine what it
had looked like when the towns had been lived in, the roads had been busy with
traffic, when there had been boats on the river —
Since the current was taking them in the general
direction of the route eastward he did not struggle too quickly to reach the
other side. But when a portion of their shaky raft suddenly broke off and
started a separate voyage of its own, he realized that such carelessness might
mean trouble and he worked with the pole to break the grip of the current and
reach the shore. There were bluffs along the river, cutting off easy access to
the level lands behind them and he watched anxiously for a cove or sandbank
which would give them a fair landing.
He
had to be satisfied with a very shallow notch where a landslide had brought
down a section of the bank containing two trees which now formed a partial
barrier out from the shore. The raft, after much back-breaking labor on his
part, caught against these, shivered against the pull of the water, and held.
Lura did not wait, but was gone in a single leap to the solid footing of the
tree trunks. Fors grabbed up his belongings and followed, none too soon, as
the raft split and whirled around, shaking into pieces which were carried on.
A
hard scramble up the greasy clay of the bank brought them into open country
once more. Grass grew tall, bushes spread in dusty blotches across the land and
there were thickets of saplings reclaiming the old fields. But here the wild
had not altogether conquered land tamed by centuries of the plow and the
reaper.
Lura
let him know that it had been too long since their last meal and she intended
to do something about supplies. She set off across the faint boundaries of the
old fields with grim purpose in every line of her graceful feline body. Grouse
scuttled from underfoot and there were rabbits everywhere, but she disdained to
notice such small game, pushing on, with Fors half a field behind her, toward a
slope which was crowned with a growth of trees, almost a full wood.
Halfway
up she paused, the tip of her tail quivered, the red rosette of her tongue
showed briefly between her teeth. Then she was gone again, fading away into the
tall grass as silently and effortlessly as the breeze might pass. Fors stepped
back into the shade of the nearest tree. This was Lura's hunt and he must leave
it to her.
He
looked out over the waving grass. It seemed to be some form of stunted grain,
not yet quite ripe, for it had a seed head forming. The sky was blue with small
white clouds drifting across it as if the storm winds had never torn them, although
at his feet lay a branch splintered and broken by yesterday's wind.
A
hoarse bellowing brought him out of his half dream, bow in hand. It was
followed by the spitting squall which was Lura's war cry. Fors began to run up
the slope toward the sound. But hunter's caution kept him to such shelter as
the field afforded so he did not burst rashly out onto the scene of the combat.
Lura
had tackled big game! He caught the sun flash on
her tawny fur as she leaped away from an inert red-brown body just in time to
escape the charge of a larger beast. A wild cow! And Lura had killed her calf!
Fors'
arrow was already in the air. The cow bellowed again and tossed her wickedly
homed head. She made a shambling run to the body of her calf, snorting in red
rage. Then crimson froth puffed from her wide nostrils and she stumbled to her
knees and fell on her side. Lura's round head shot up above a stand of thick
grass and she moved out to the side of her prey. Fors came from the trees where
he had taken cover. He would have echoed Lura's rasping purr had it been in his
power. That arrow had gone straight and true to the mark he had set it.
It
was a pity to have to waste all that meat. Enough to keep three Eyrie families
for a week lay there. He prodded the cow with a regretful toe before starting
to butcher the calf.
He
could, of course, try to jerk the meat. But he was unsure of the right method
and he could not carry it with him anyway. So he contented himself with
preparing v/hat he could for the next few days while Lura, after feasting,
slept under a bush, rousing now and then to snap at the gathering flies.
They made camp that night a field or two
beyond the kill, in the corner of an old wall. Piles of fallen stones turned it
into a position which could be defended if the need arose. But
neither slept well. The fresh meat they had left behind drew night
rovers. There was a scream or two which must have come from Lura's wild
relatives and she growled in answer. Then in the early dawn there was a baying
cry which Fors was unable to identify, woods learned as he was. But Lura went
wild when she heard it, spitting in sheer hate, her fur rising stiff along her
backbone.
It
was early when Fors started on, striking across the open fields in the line set
by his compass. Today he made no effort to keep cover or practice caution. He
could see no menace in these waste fields. Why had there been all the talk back
in the Eyrie about the danger in the lowlands? Of course, one did keep away
from the "blue" patches where radiation still meant death even after
all these years. And the Beast Things were always to be dreaded — had not
Langdon died in their attack? But as far as the Star Men had been able to
discover those nightmare creatures kept to the old cities and were not to be
feared in the open. Surely these fields must be as safe for man as the mountain
forests which encircled the Eyrie.
He took an easy curve and came out suddenly
on a sight which brought him up — blinking. Here was a road — but such a road!
The broken concrete was four times as wide as any he had seen — it had really
been two roads running side by side with a stretch of earth between them, two
wide roads running smoothly from one horizon to another.
But not two hundred yards from where he stood
gaping, the road was choked with a tangle of rusting metal. A barrier of
broken machines filled it from ditch to ditch. Fors approached it slowly. There
was something about that monstrous wall which was forbidding — even though he
knew that it had stood so for perhaps two hundred years. Black crickets jumped
out of the weeds before him and a mouse flashed across a stretch of clear
stone.
He
rounded the jumble of wrecked machines. They must have been traveling along the
road in a line when death had struck mysteriously, struck so that some of the
machines had rammed others or wavered off to pile up in wild wreckage. Others
stood solitary as if the dying driver had been able to bring them to a safe
halt before he succumbed. Fors thed to pick out the outlines
and associate what he saw with the ancient pictures. That
— that was certainly a "tank," one of the moving fortresses of the
Old Ones. Its gun still pointed defiantly to the sky. Two, four, five
more he counted, and then gave up.
The
column of machines stretched out in its forgotten disaster for almost a mile.
Fors brushed along beside it in the waist-high weeds which bordered the road.
He had a queer distaste for approaching the dead machines more closely, no
desire to touch any of the bits of rusted metal. Here and there he saw one of
the atom-powered vehicles, seeming almost intact. But they were dead too. All
of it was dead, in a horrible way. He experienced a vague feeling of contamination
from just walking beside the wreckage.
There
were guns on the moving forts, guns which still swung ready, and there had been
men, hundreds of men. He could see their white bones mixed with the rust and
the debris driven in by years of wind and storm. Guns and men — where had they
been going when the end came? And what was the end? There were none of the
craters he had been told were to be found where bombs had fallen — just smashed
machines and men, as if death had come as a mist or a wind.
Guns and men on the march — maybe to repel
invaders. The
book of air-borne messages treasured in the Eyrie had spoken once or twice of
invaders coming from the sky — enemies who had struck with paralyzing
swiftness. But something must have happened in turn to that enemy — or else
why had the invaders not made the land their own? Probably the answer to that
question would never be known.
Fors reached the end of the
blasted column. But he kept on
walking
along the clean earth until he topped a rise and could no longer sight the end
of a wasted war. Then he dared once more to walk the road of the Old Ones.
3. THE DARK HUNTER
About
half a mile farther on the shadow of a woodland swallowed
up the road. Fors' heart lifted when he saw it. These open fields were strange
to a mountain-born man but he felt at home in a thick cloak of trees such as
the one before him now.
He was trying to remember the points on the
big map which hung on the wall of the Star House, the map to which was added a
tiny mark at the return of each roving explorer. This northern route crossed
the wedge end of a portion of territory held loosely by Plainsmen. And the
Plainsmen had horses — useless in the mountains and so untamed by his people —
but very needful in this country of straight distances. To have a horse at his
service now —
The cool of the woods lapped him in and he
was at home at once, as was Lura. They padded on, their feet making but the
faintest whisper of sound. It was a scent carried by a tiny puff of breeze
which brought them up — Wood smoke!
Fors'
thought met Lura's and agreed. She stood for a long moment, testing the air
with her keener nostrils, and then she turned aside, pushing between two
birches. Fors scraped after her. The guiding puff of wind was gone, but he
could smell something else. They were approaching a body of water — not running
water or the sound of its passing would be heard.
There was a break in the foliage ahead. He
saw Lura flatten herself out on a rock surface which was almost the same color
as her own creamy hide, flatten and creep. And he hunkered down to follow her
example, the gritty stone biting knees and hands as he wormed out beside her.
They
were belly down on a spur of rock which overhung the surface of a woods-hemmed
lake. Not far beyond a thread of stream trickled away and he could spot two
islands, the nearest joined to the mainland by a series of stepping stones.
On
the shores of this islet crouched someone very busy over a cooking fire.
The
stranger was no mountaineer, that was certain. In the
first place his wide-shouldered, muscular bronze body was bare to the waist and
at least five shades darker as to skin tint than the most deeply tanned of the
Eyrie men. The hair on his round skull was black and tightly curled. He had
strongly marked features with a wide-lipped mouth and flat cheekbones, his
large dark eyes set far apart. His only clothing was a sort of breechclout
kilt held in place by a wide belt from which hung the tassel-ornamented
scabbard of a knife. The knife itself, close to eighteen inches of blue steel,
flashed in his hand as he energetically cleaned a fresh-caught fish.
Stuck
upright in the ground close to his shoulder were three short-shafted spears, a
blanket of coarse reddish wool draped over the point of one. Smoke rose from
the fire laid on a flat stone, but there was no
indication as to whether the stranger had merely halted for a meal or had been
camping on the islet.
As he worked the fisherman sang — a low,
monotonous chant, which, as he listened to it, affected Fors queerly, sending
an odd shiver up his backbone. This was no Plainsman either. And Fors was just
as sure that he was not spying on one of the Beast Things. The few mountaineer
men who had survived a meeting with them had
painted a far different picture — they were never to be associated with
peaceful fishing and an intelligent, pleasant face.
This dark-skinned newcomer was of a different
breed. Fors rested his chin on his folded arms and tried to deduce from the
evidence this stranger's background — as was the duty of an explorer.
The
lack of clothing, now — that meant that he was accustomed to a warmer climate.
Such an outfit could only be worn here before fall closed in. He had those
spears and — yes — that was a bow lying with its quiver beyond. But it was much
shorter than the one Fors carried and did not appear to be made of wood but
from some dark substance which reflected light from the sun.
He
must come from a land where his race was all-powerful and had nothing to fear
for he camped in the open and sang while he cooked as if he did not care if he
attracted attention. And yet he did this on an island, more easily defended
from attack than the shore itself.
Just
then the fisherman impaled the cleaned fish on a sharpened twig and set it to
broil while he got to his feet and hurled a baited line back into the water.
Fors blinked. The man on the island must tower a good four or five inches over
the tallest of the Eyrie men and his thatch of upstanding hair could not
account for more than two inches of that difference. As he stood there, still
humming, his hands skillfully adjusting the fishing line, he presented a
picture of strength and power which would daunt even a Beast Thing.
The odor of the fish carried. Lura made a
faint slurping sound as it reached them. Fors hesitated. Should he hail the
dark-skinned hunter, make the peace sign, and try to establish friendly
relations or —
That question was decided for him. A shout
tore the serene silence of the lake. The dark hunter moved — so fast that Fors
was left gasping. Spears, blanket, bow — and the broiled fish — vanished with
their owner. A bush quivered and then was still. The fire burned — on a
deserted pebbled beach.
A
second shout bore down wind, reinforced by a trampling crash, and down to the edge
of the lake trotted a band of horses, mares mostly, each with a small foal
running at her side. Urging them on were two riders, bent nearly flat on the
backs of their mounts to escape the low sweeping branches of the trees. They
herded the mares to water and waited for them to drink.
Fors almost forgot the dark hunter. Horses!
He had seen pictures of them. But living horses! The age-old longing of his
race — to possess one of those for his own — made a strange ache in his thigh
muscles, as if he were already mounted upon one of the sleek backs.
One
of the horse guards had dismounted and was rubbing down the legs of his animal
with handfuls of grass pulled up from the bank. He was undoubtedly a Plainsman. His sleeveless jerkin laced across the
chest was almost twin to the one Fors wore. But his leggings were of hide and
polished by hours of riding. He wore his hair shoulder length as the sign of
free birth and it was held out of his eyes by a broad band on which was painted
the sign of his family clan and tribe. The long lance which was the terrible
weapon of the horsemen hung in its loops at his saddle and in addition he wore
at his belt the curved, slashing sword which was the badge of his nation.
For
the second time Fors wondered whether he should make overtures. But that, too,
was quickly answered. Out of the trees came a second pair of riders, both older
men. One was a chief or sub chieftain of the Plainsmen, for the metal badge in
his headband had caught the sun. But the other —
Fors'
body jerked as if an arrow had thudded home between his shoulder blades. And
Lura, catching his dismay, voiced one of her noiseless snarls.
That
was Jarl! But Jarl was the Star Captain — now exempt from travel in the
lowlands. He had not been exploring for two years or more. It was his duty to
remain at the Eyrie and portion out the tasks of other Star Men. But there he
was, riding knee to knee with the Plainsman chief as if he were any apprentice
rover. What had brought Jarl down to the lowlands against all rule and custom?
Fors
winced — there was an answer to that. Never before had the
sanctuary of the Star House been violated. His crime must have brought
Jarl out of the hills. And if he, Fors, were captured — What
would be the penalty for such a theft? He had no idea but his imagination could
supply quite a few — all of them drastic. In the meantime he could only remain
where he was and pray that he would not be detected before the herders moved.
Luckily
most of the Horses had drunk their fill and were turning away from the lake.
Fors watched them longingly. With one of them to lend four feet and save his
two, he could be well beyond Jarl's reach before the Star Captain knew of his
presence. He had too great an opinion of Jarl's skill not to believe that the
man from the Eyrie could cross his trail within a day or so.
The
second herder urged the last mares away from the water while his companion
mounted. But Jarl and the chief still sat talking and looking out idly across
the lake. Fors silently endured the bites of flies which seemed to have accompanied
the horses, but Lura growled again softly. She wanted to leave, knowing full
well that if she did not want her trail followed it would not be. Fors could
not hope for such results himself, so he hesitated until the cat's impatience
or some change in the air current changed their luck as it carried Lura's
scent down to the peaceful herd.
Within
seconds there was wild confusion. Mares squealed, wild-eyed with fright for
their foals, tramping up the bank and bursting between the riders — dashing
ahead to get away from that dangerous place. The Plainsmen had been caught off
guard. One was borne along with the rush, fighting to regain mastery of his own
mount — the other could only ride after the rout.
Lance
in hand the chief went after them. But Jarl remained where he was for a long
moment, searching the shoreline of the lake with narrowed eyes. Fors flattened
against the rock, sending a stern warning to Lura to do likewise. Fortunately
Jarl was on the opposite side of the water and the Star Captain could not match
the keen sight of his quarry. But how limited Jarl was in that respect he had
no means of telling.
Hardly
daring to draw the shallowest of breaths, cat and boy inched back. Jarl stayed,
alert, watching. Then came the 'thunder of hoofs, just as Fors' boots struck
earth. He was off at his best woods' pace, heading north, away from the camp
which must lie somewhere on the other side of the lake. He wanted a horse,
needed a horse, but not enough that he dared brave Jarl to get one. Fors had a
very hearty respect for the abilities of the Star Captain.
As
he sped away he wondered what the hunter on "the island had done and
whether he, too, was now putting some miles between himself and the Plains
camp.
At least he had that broiled fish to take with him. Fors munched a handful of
parched corn from his emergency rations as he trotted along and some shreds of
dried meat, giving the rest to Lura who downed it in a single gulp. Half-ripe
berries snatched from bushes as he passed were sauce of a sort. But there still
remained a feeling of emptiness in his middle which grew with the lengthening
shadows of the afternoon.
They had used the feeder
stream of the lake as a guide, but the thinning of the trees around them now
and the appearance of open patches where grass and bushes competed for life,
suggested that the end ofthe wood was close. Fors paused and tried to plan. He
was at home in the forest country and knew how to conceal his trail there. On
the other hand, in the open, out in the once cultivated fields, one would make
better time and be able to cover a good many miles before the daylight failed
entirely. The hunters of the plains — if human — were mounted men and any
pursuit would be easily seen. And there were plenty of the scattered clumps of
trees and running tongues of brush to give him shelter in a pinch. He decided
to venture out.
A
brown animal with a black mask about its eyes surveyed him critically from a
pile of rocks but was gone in a flash when Lura's head came out of a tall stand
of grass. That was the only living thing they saw until they skirted the
rotting timbers of a farmhouse, missing a tumble into the half-exposed cellar
only by chance.
A
sound answered Fors' exclamation and hearing it his hand swept to the hilt of
his sword. He skidded around, bare steel out. An ugly naked pink snout, still
smeared with earth and slime, protruded from a tangle of brush, and the wicked
tusks below it caught and held the light. Fors hurled pouch and bow from him
and half crouched, waiting for that most dangerous of all rushes, the attack of
a wild boar.
It
came with all the deadly ferocity he had expected, the tusks slashing for his
legs. He struck, but the creature dodged so that, though a red and dripping
line leaped out along its head and shoulder, it was not sent kicking. It
grunted loudly, and there came answers. Fors' mouth dried — he was facing a
whole pack of swine!
Behind
him was a pile of the collapsed timbers which had once been the wall of a small
building, but they were pulpy with rot and they dipped dangerously toward the
cellar. If he jumped for them he might well crash through.
From
the bushes came a squall of rage and pain. The boar tossed its tusked head and
blew foam. Its eyes in the black-and-white spotted face were red and evil.
Another squeal came from the herd and this time it was followed by an answering
snarl. Fors loosed a thankful breath.
Lura
was keeping the herd occupied. Under her ripping claws the younger and weaker
ones would certainly break and scatter. But not this old
leader. It was wily and there were scars and bare patches enough on the
hide to mark it victor in other battles. It had always won before so it was
confident now. And — The charge came again!
Fors
leaped to the left, slashing down as he moved out of danger. That stroke cut
across the grinning devil's mask of the boar, chopping off an ear and shearing
the sight out of one red eye. It shook its head, sending a spray of blood flying,
and squealed in rage and pain. Under the prod of pain it lost its cunning,
wishing now only to tusk and trample the dancing figure before it — to root the
life of the enemy away —
As Fors saw the heavy shoulders tense he took
a step backward, groping for firm footing on which to maneuver. And in so
doing he nearly lost the fight. His heel caught and was held as if a trap had
snapped on it. He was still trying to pull loose as the boar charged for the
third time.
And
that pull unbalanced him so that he fell forward almost on top of the mad
creature. There was a red dagger of pain across his leg and a foul stench
filled his nostrils. He stabbed wildly, and felt -his steel strike bone and slip
deep beneath the mangy hide. Blood fountained over both of them and then the
sword was wrenched from Fors' blood-slippery hand as the boar pulled away. It
staggered out into the full sunlight and fell heavily, the hilt of the sword
protruding behind its powerful shoulder. Fors rocked back and forth, his face
twisted with pain, his fingers trying to rip away the cloth about a
nasty-looking, freely bleeding slash down the outer side of his left leg above
the knee.
Lura emerged from the bushes. There were unpleasant
stains on her usually fastidiously kept coat and she moved with an air of
general satisfaction. As she passed the boar she snarled and gave the body a
raking clout with one front paw.
Fors
worked his heel free from the rotten board which had clamped it and crawled
toward the Star pouch. He needed water now — but Lura would sniff that out for
him. The worst would be going lame for a while. He would be lucky if he did not
have to stay where he was for a day or two.
Lura did find water, a spring a little beyond
the farmhouse. And he crawled to it painfully. With dry twigs he kindled a fire
and set a tiny pan of the clear water to boil. Now he was ready for the worst —
boar's tusks were notoriously dirty and deadly.
Setting
his teeth he cut and tore away the cloth of his leggings until the skin around
the still oozing slash was bare. Into the bubbling water he dropped a minute
portion of the wound salve from the Star pouch. The secret of that salve
belonged to the Healer of the tribe and the Captain of the Star Men alone. It
was wisdom from the old days which had saved many lives. A wound anointed with
it did not rot.
Fors
let the water cool until he could just bear it and then poured more than half
of it into that ragged tear in skin and muscle. His fingers were shaking when
he thrust them into the water left in the pan, holding them there for a minute
before tearing open the packet of bandage. With an end of the soft material he
washed and dabbed delicately along the cut. Then he smeared some of the
unheated paste across it and bound a pad tightly over it. The bleeding had
almost stopped, but the wound was like a band of stinging fire from hip socket
to ankle bone, and his eyes were misty as he worked, following the instructions
which had been drilled into him since his first hunting trip.
At last he could put out the fire and lie
quietly. Lura stretched out beside him and put a velvet-gloved paw on his arm.
She purred soothingly, once or twice drawing her rough tongue across his flesh
in her favorite caress. The burning in his leg eased, or else he was growing
accustomed to the torment. He stared into the sky. Pink and gold streamed
across it in wide swaths. It must be close to sundown. He would have to have
shelter. But it was a struggle to move and his leg had stiffened so that even
when he got up and clutched at bushes to pull himself along he made slow
progress.
Lura
went down the slope and he stumbled after her, glad, that only tall grass
covered most of it. She headed for the farmyard, but he did not call her back.
Lura was hunting shelter for them both and she would find it, if any such
existed.
She did bring him to the best housing they
had had since they had left the Eyrie, a stone-walled, single-roomed building.
He had no idea for what purpose it had been built. But there was only one door,
no windows, and part of the roof was still in place. It could be easily
defended and it was shelter.
Already small scavengers were busy about the
bodies of the pigs. And with the dark the scent of blood would draw more
formidable flesh eaters. He had not forgotten the quarrels over the bodies of
the cow and calf. So Fors pushed loose stones into a barrier about his door and
decided upon a fire. The walls would hide it from all but birds flying
overhead.
He
ate sparingly of dried corn. Lura jumped the barrier and went hunting on her
own, questing through the twilight. But Fors nursed his point of fire and
stared out into the gathering darkness. Fireflies made dancing sparks under
the straggling limbs of ancient orchard trees. He watched them as he drank
from the water in his canteen. The pain in his leg was now a steady throb which
arose into his head and settled in his temples — beat — beat — beat —
Then
Fors suddenly realized that that steady rhythm was not born of pain and fever.
There was an actual sound, hanging on the night air, low, carrying well, a measured note which bore no resemblance to any natural
noise he had heard before. Only, something in it suggested the queer crooning
song of the fisherman. If something not unlike the same series of notes was
being tapped out on the head of a drum now —
Fors
jerked upright. Bow and sword were within reach of his hand. The
night, which was never as dark for him as it was for others, was peaceful and
empty — save for that distant signal. Then it stopped, abruptly, almost
in mid-note, with a suggestion of finality. He guessed that he would not hear
it again. But what could it mean?
Sound carried well in these lowlands — even if
listeners did not have his keenness of ear. A message sent by such a drum might
carry safely across miles.
His
fingernails dug into the flesh of his palms. There was a trace of sound again —
coming from the far south — a disturbance in the air so faint it might only be
born of his imagination.
But he did not believe
that. The drummer was receiving an answer. Under his breath Fors counted off
seconds — five, ten, fifteen, and then again silence. He tried to sort out his
impressions of the fisherman — and again came to the same conclusion. He was
not native to these lowlands, which meant that he was probably a scout, an
explorer from the south. Who or what was now moving up into these lands?
4. FOUR LEGS
ARE
BETTER THAN TWO
Even
before dawn it began to rain, a steady, straight downpour which would last for
hours. Fors' wound was stiff and he had trouble crawling back into the corner
of the hut where the broken roof still afforded some protection. Lura rolled
against him and the warmth of her furry body was a comfort. But Fors was unable
to drop back into the restless, dream-broken sleep which had held him most of
the night.
It
was the thought of the day's travel still before him which plagued him. To walk
far would reopen the gash and he thought that he had a degree or so of fever.
Yet he had to have food and better shelter. And that drumming — Being disabled he wanted to get out of the near vicinity of
the drummer — fast.
As
soon as it was light enough for him to distinguish a black line on white paper
he got out his scrap of map, trying to guess his present position — if it were
on that fragment at all. There were tiny red figures printed between certain
points — the measured miles of the Old Ones who kept to the roads. By his
reckoning he might yet be at least three days' journey from the city — if, of
course, he was now where he believed himself to be. Three
days' journey for a strong and tireless traveler, not for a crippled limper.
If he had a horse now —
But
the memory of Jarl with the horse herders put that thought out of his mind. If
he went to the Plains camp and tried to trade, the Star Captain would hear of
it. And for a novice to steal a mount out of one of the well-guarded herds was
almost impossible even if he were able-bodied. But he
could not
banish his wish — even by repeating this argument of stern commonsense.
Lura went out hunting. She would bring back
her kill. Fors pulled himself up, clenching his teeth against the pain that
such movement gave his whole left side. He had to have some sort of crutch or
cane if he wanted to keep going. There was part of a sapling among the wood
within reach. It appeared almost straight and he hacked it down with his knife
and trimmed off the branches. With this aid he could get around, and the more
he moved the more the stiffness seemed to loosen. When Lura returned, a plump
bronze-feathered turkey dragging out of her jaws, he was in a better frame of
mind and ready to eat breakfast.
But
the pace at which they started out was not a speedy one. Fors hissed between
set teeth when now and again his weight shifted too heavily on the left leg. He
turned instinctively into what once had been the lane tying the farmstead to
the road, and brushed between the encroaching bushes, leaning heavily on his
cane.
Rain
made sticky mud of every patch of open ground and he was afraid of slipping and
falling. Lura kept up a steady low whine of complaint against the weather and
the slowness of their travel. But she did not go off on her own as she might
have done had he been himself. And Fors talked to her constantly.
The
lane came to the road and he turned into that since it went in the direction he
wished. Soil had drifted across the concrete and made mud patches which gave
root to spiked plants; but, even with that, it was better footing for an almost
one-legged man than the wet ground. Lura scouted ahead, weaving in and out of
the bushes and tall grass along the side of the old thoroughfare, testing the
wind for alien scents, now and then shaking head or paws vigorously to rid them
of clinging raindrops.
AH at once she bounded out of the brush to
Fors, pushing against him with her body, forcing him gently back toward the
ditch which ran nearby. He caught the urgency of her warning and scrambled to
cover with all the speed he could muster. As he lay against the greasy red clay
bank with his palms spread flat, he felt the pounding long before he heard.
the
hoofs which caused it. Then the herd came into sight, trotting at an easy pace
down the old road. For a moment or two Fors searched for the herders and then
he realized that none of the horses wore the patches of bright paint which
distinguished ownership among the Plainsmen. They must be wild. There were
several mares with foals, a snorting stallion bearing the scars of battle on
his shoulders, and some yearlings running free.
But
there was one mare who had no foal. Her rough,
un-groomed coat was a very dark red, her burr-matted tail and mane black. Now
and again she dropped to the back, stopping to snatch a mouthful of herbage, a
trick which at last earned her a sharp nip from the stallion. She squealed,
lashed out with ready hoofs, and then ran swiftly, breaking ahead of the rest
of the band. Fors watched her go with regret. If he had had his two feet under
him she might have been a possible capture. But no use
thinking of that.
Then
the herd rounded a curve and was out of sight. Fors took a moment's breather
before he pulled himself back on the road. Lura was there before him, kneading
her front paws on a mat of grass, staring after the vanished horses. To her
mind there was no difference between one of those foals and the calf she had
pulled down. Both were meat and so to be eaten. It was in her mind to trail
along behind such a wealth of food. Fors did not argue with her. He still
thought of the mare who ran free and followed her own
will.
They
came up again with the herd before the hour was past. The road made a sudden
dip into a valley which was almost cup-shaped. At the bottom rich grass grew
tall and there the herd grazed, the watching stallion standing guard halfway up
the rise.
But
what caught Fors' eyes was the shell of a building which stood almost directly
below. Fire had eaten out its interior so that only the crumbling brick of the
outer walls remained. He studied it carefully and then tried to identify the
horses beyond.
The mare was apart from the herd, grazing
close to the building. Fors wet his lips with his tongue tip. There was just a
chance — a very wild chance —
It would depend largely upon Lura's
co-operation. And that had never failed him yet. He turned to the great cat and
tried to form a mind picture of what must be done. Slowly he thought out each
point. Twice he went through it and then Lura crouched and withdrew into the
grass.
Fors
wiped sweat and rain from his forehead and started crawling in turn, edging
down into a maze of fallen bricks. They could never do it if the wind was not
just right. But fortune was favoring to that extent. He swung himself up on a
ledge above the widest gap in the broken wall and unwound from his waist the
light tough cord all mountain men carried. The weighted noose at the end was in
his hand. Good, the rain had not affected it. Now — !
He whistled, the clear
call of one of the Eyrie country birds. And he knew, rather than saw, that Lura
was in position and ready to move. If the wind would only hold — 1
Suddenly
the mare tossed up her head, snorted, and stared suspiciously at a clump of
bushes. At the same time the stallion reared and thundered forth a fierce
challenge. But he was almost the full length of the valley away, and he stopped
to send the rest of his harem out of danger before he came to the mare. She
wanted to follow but plainly the hidden menace now lay between her and
freedom. She whirled on two feet and pounded back in the direction of the ruin
where Fors waited. Twice she tried to go with her mates and both times she was
sent back on the opposite course.
Fors
coiled his rope. He had only to wait and trust to Lura's skill. But the seconds
that he was forced to do that were very long. At last the mare, her eyes
white-rimmed with terror, burst through the gap in the masonry. Fors cast and
as quickly snubbed the rope about a girder of rusting steel protruding from the
brickwork. The heart of the metal was still sound enough to hold, even against
the frantic plunges of the terri-* Bed horse. The scream of the aroused
stallion, thundering down to the rescue, shook Fors. He did not know much about
horses but he could imagine that there was danger now.
But
the stallion never reached the ruin. Out of the bushes, directly at his head,
leaped Lura, leaped and raked with cruel claws. The stallion reared, trumpeting
like a mad thing, slashing out with teeth and hoofs. But Lura was only a flash
of light fur covering steel springs and she was never there when the stallion
struck. Twice more she got home with a wicked, slashing paw, before the horse
gave up the battle and fled back down the valley, following the herd. The mare
cried after him. He turned, but Lura was there, and her snarled warning sent
him on again dripping blood.
Fors
leaned back weakly against a pile of rubble. He had the mare all right, a rope
about her neck, a rope which would hold her in spite of all her plunges and
kicks. But here was no gentled mount already broken to ride. And how was he,
with a bad leg, to conquer the fear-maddened animal?
He
made the rope fast, looking ruefully at the burns on his hands. Just now he
could not get near her. Might be well to let her become used to captivity for
an hour or so — to try to win her — But would she ever
lose her fear of Lura? That was another problem to be solved. Only — it must be
done, he could not go on in this one-legged way, and he certainly was not going
to beg shelter from the Plains camp and so fall into Jarl's hands. He believed
that he could make his own way in the lowlands — now was the time to prove
that!
After
a time the mare ceased to fight for freedom and stood with drooping head,
nervous shudders running along her sweat-encrusted limbs and flanks. Fors
stayed where he was but now he began to talk to her, using the same crooning
tone with which he called Lura. Then he ventured to limp a few steps closer.
Her head went up and she snorted. But he continued to talk to her, making an
even monotone of his voice. At last he was close enough to touch her rough coat
and as he did so he almost jumped. Still faintly sketched on the hide was a dab
or two of fading paint! Then this was a Plainsman's mount from one of the tame
herds. Fors gulped •weakly. Such luck was a little uncanny. Now, seeing that,
he dared to stroke her nose. She shivered under his touch and then she whinnied
almost inquiringly. He patted her shoulder and then she nudged him playfully
with her nose. Fors laughed, tugging at the ragged forelock which bobbed between
her eyes.
"So now you remember,
old lady? Good girl, good girl!"
There
remained the problem of Lura and that must be solved as quickly as possible. He
unfastened the rope and pulled gently. The mare came after him willingly
enough, picking her way daintily through the piles of fallen brick.
Why
hadn't she scented the cat on his clothes? Unless the rain had dampened it —But she had shown no fright at his handling.
He whistled the bird call for the second
time, after he had snubbed the mare's lead rope around a small tree. The answer
to his summons came from down valley. Apparently Lura was following the herd.
Fors stood talking to his captive as he waited. At last he ventured to rub
down her flanks with tufts of grass. Then he felt her start and tremble and he
turned.
Lura
sat in the open, her tail curled neatly over her fore-paws. She yawned, her red
tongue pointing up and out, her eyes slitted, as if she had very little
interest in the mare which her hunting companion chose to fondle so stupidly.
The
mare jerked back to the full length of the rope, her eyes showing white. Lura
took no notice of the open terror. At length she arose and stretched, then
padded to the horse. The mare reared and gave a shrill scream. Fors tried to
urge Lura back. But the big cat paced in a circle about the captive, eyeing
her speculatively from all angles. The mare dropped back on four feet and shook
her head, turning to keep her attention ever upon the cat. It seemed as if she
were now puzzled when the attack she had expected had not come.
Maybe some message passed between the animals
then. Fors never knew. But when Lura finished her inspection, she turned away
indifferently and the mare stopped trembling. However, it was more than an hour
before Fors improvised a bridle from the rope and a saddle pad from his
blanket. He climbed upon the bricks and managed to throw his good leg over the
mare's back.
She
had been well trained by the Plainsman who had owned her and her pace was so
even that Fors, awkward and inexperienced at riding as he was,, could keep his seat. He headed her back on the road which
had brought him to the valley and they came up into the rolling fields once
more.
In
spite of the nagging ache of his wound Fors knew a surge of exultation and
happiness. He had won safely out of the Eyrie, having plundered the Star House,
he dared the lowlands, had spent one night in the heart of a dead town, had
crossed a river through his own skill, spied successfully at the woods lake,
faced the savage boar from which even the best of the mountain hunters
sometimes fled, and now he had a horse under him, his weapons to hand, and the
road open before him.
Judged
unfit for the Star, cast aside by the Council was he? His even teeth gleamed in
a grin which bore some likeness to Lura's hunting snarl. Well, they would see —
see that Lang-don's son, White Hair the Mutant — was as good as their best! He
would prove that to the whole Eyrie.
Lura
drifted back and the mare side-stepped as if she were still none too pleased to
have the big cat venture so close. Fors jolted out of his daydreams, paid heed
to his surroundings.
There
were piles of rubble scattered through the brush, skeletons of old buildings,
and, all at once, the mare's unshod hoofs raised a different sort of noise. She
was picking her way across pavements in which were set long straight lines of
rusted tracks. Fors pulled her up. Ahead the ruins were closer together and
grew larger. A town — maybe even a small city.
There
was something about these ruins which made him uneasy. The farms which had been
recaptured by wild vegetation had none of this eerie strangeness about them.
He knew again the faint sickness, neither of body nor spirit, which had gripped
him on the road when he had traveled beside the wrecked convoy. Now he wiped
one hand through the mare's coarse mane as if he would like to rub away an
unpleasant smear. And yet he had touched nothing in this place. There was an
evil miasma which arose mistlike even through the steady drizzle of rain.
Mist — there was real mist, tool Ahead he saw coils of dirty white drifting in, wreathing the
tangled bulk of rotting wood and tumbled brick and stone. A fog was gathering,
thicker than the mountain ones he had known, thick and somehow frightening. His
fingers left the horse hair and flipped against his sore leg. The stab of pain
which followed made him bite out a hot exclamation. This fog would put an end
to travel for the day as far as he was concerned. Now he needed a safe place to
hole up in where he could light a fire and prepare another treatment for his
wound. And he wanted to be out of the rain for the night.
He
did not like the ruins, but now they might hold what he needed and it was wiser
to penetrate farther into them. But he heid the mare to a slow walk and it was
well that he did. For soon a break in the pavement opened before them — a
gaping black hole rimmed with jagged teeth of broken concrete. They made a
detour, edging as far from the crumbling lip as the ruins would allow. Fors
began to regret leaving the stone hut on the farm. His constant pain he could
no longer ignore. Perhaps it would have been better to have rested for a day or
two back there. But if he had done that he would not now be riding the mare! He
whistled softly and watched her ears point up in answer. No, it was worth even
the grinding in his flesh to have such a mount.
Twice
more the pavement was broken by great holes, the last being so large that it
had the dimensions of a small crater. As Fors rode slowly around it he crossed
a strip of muddy, but hard-beaten earth which came up out of its shadowed maw.
It had the appearance of a well-worn and much-used path. Lura sniffed at it and
snarled, her back fur roughened, and she spat with a violent hissing sound.
Whatever made that path she counted an enemy.
Any
creature which Lura, who would tackle a wild cow, a herd of roving swine, or a
stallion, so designated was not one which Fors cared to meet in his present
crippled state. He loosened rein and urged the mare to a brisker pace.
Some
distance beyond the crater they came to a small hill on which stood a building
of white stone, and it still possessed a roof. The slope of the hill was clear
of all save a few low bushes and from the building Fors guessed one could have
an almost unhampered view of the surrounding territory. He decided quickly in
its favor.
It
was a disappointment to discover that the roof covered only a part and that the
center was open to the storm — being a small amphitheater in which rows of wide
seats went down to a square platform.
However, there were small rooms around the
outer rim, under the roof, and in one of these he made camp. He tied the mare
to one of the pillars forming the aisle to the amphitheater and contented her
with grass pulled from the hill and some of his parched corn which she relished.
She could have been hobbled and left to graze but the memory of that worn path
by the crater kept him from doing that.
Rain
had collected in broken squares of the pavement and Lura drank eagerly from one
such pool while the mare sucked noisily at another. From the drift of
wind-driven branches caught among the pillars Fors built a fire, placed behind
a wall so that it could not be observed from below. Water boiled in his pan and
he went through the ordeal of redressing the gash in his leg. The salve was
working, for the flesh was sore and stiff but it was clean and without
infection, and the edges were already closing, though undoubtedly he would be
scarred for the rest of his life.
Lura
made no move to go hunting, although she must have been hungry. In fact, since
she had skirted the crater she had kept close to him, and now she lay beside
the fire, staring into the flames broodingly. He did not urge her to go out.
Lura was more woodswise than any man could hope to be and if she did not choose
to hunt there was good reason for her decision. Fors only wished that she
could reveal to him the exact nature of the thing she both hated and feared.
That hatred and fear came through to him when their minds held fleeting touch,
but the creature which aroused such emotions remained a secret.
So
they went hungry to bed since Fors determined to use what was left of his corn
to bind the mare to him. He kept the fire burning low for he did not want to
lie in the dark here where there were things beyond his knowledge.
For
a time he listened for the drumming of the night before. He fully expected to
hear it again. But the night was still. It had stopped raining at last, and he
could hear insects in the grass outside. There was the murmur of a breeze
through the foliage on the hill.
It
made Fors uneasy, that faint sad soughing. Lura was not asleep either. He
sensed her restlessness even before he heard the pad of her paws and saw her
move toward the door. He crawled after her, trying to spare his leg. She had
halted at the outer portico of the building and was looking down into the
blackness of the ruined city. Then he saw what held her
— a pin point of red to the north — the telltale flicker of
fire flame!
So there was other life here! Plainsmen for
the most part kept clear of the ruins — in memory of the old days when
radiation killed. And the Beast Things — did they possess the secret of fire?
No man knew how much or how little they had in the way of intelligence or
perverted civilization.
The
urge to get the mare, to crawl up on her back and cross the rubble to that
distant fire, was strong. Fire and companionship in this place of the restless
dead — they pulled at Fors now.
But before he so much as filled his lungs
again he heard it — a low chorus of yapping, barking, howling
which rose higher and higher to a frenzied bedlam. Lura's hair was stiff under
his hand. She hissed and snarled, but she did not stir. The cries were coming %om some distance — from the direction of the
fire. Whatever manner of beast made them had been drawn by that.
Fors shuddered. There was nothing he could do
to aid the fire maker. Long before he could find his slow way through the ruins
the end would have come. And now — now — there was only blackness down there!
The flicker of friendly red was gone!
5. THE CITY ON THE LAKE
Fors
dragged himself out into the morning sun. He had slept poorly, but he was
content that his wound was healing. And, after he once got to his feet, he
managed better, being able without too much effort to take the mare out to
graze on the hillside. Lura had been on duty before he roused, as the body of a
plump turkey laid on the floor by the remains of the fire testified. He broiled
it and ate, knowing all the time that when he was done he must mount and ride
across the shattered town searching out the site of that fire which had
vanished in the night.
And
he did not want to take that ride. Because he did not want to, he finished
quickly, gathering up his supplies with nervous haste. Lura came back and sat
in the broad beam of sunlight washing her fur. But she was on her feet
instantly as Fors got up on the mare and turned into the heart of the ruins.
They
clattered out into a burned area where the black stain of a vast, devouring
fire had not faded. There were flowers growing there among the sooty stones,
yellow, white, and blue. And a ragged, red-leafed weed overran old cellars. Cat
and horse moved slowly through the desolation, testing their footing.
On
the far edge of the burned space they found the scene of that night battle.
Black birds whirred up from almost under their feet, birds which had been
feasting on scraps more powerful scavengers had left them. Fors dismounted and
limped up to the trampled grass, reluctant to make investigation.
Two
well-picked piles of bones lay on the bloodstained ground. But the skulls were
not those of his own race. Those long narrow heads
with the cruel yellow teeth he had never seen before. Then the glint of metal
caught his eyes and he picked up a broken spear, the haft snapped raggedly off
not far from the head. And that spear he had seen
before! It belonged to the fisherman of the islet.
Fors
moved around the circle of the battlefield. He came across one more of the strange
skeletons, but, save for the spear, there was no other trace of the hunter.
Lura exhibited a violent distaste for the bones — as if the odd scent which
clung to them was utterly offensive. And now she stood on her hind legs and
sniffed inquiringly up the side of a heap of bricks and stone.
So
that was what had happened! The hunter had not been overwhelmed by a rush out
of the dark. He had had time to clamber up where the night-running things could
not attack in force, had been able from above to fight them off and leave the
wounded and dead to the tearing teeth of their own companions. And he must
have escaped — since his bones were not in evidence.
Fors
kicked through the underbrush a last time just to be sure. Something round and
brown rolled away from his toe. He reached for a small, well-polished drum
fashioned of dark wood, the stretched head of hide cured to an almost metallic
smoothness. The signal drum! Impulsively he tapped the head, and started at the
low throbbing note which echoed through the ruins.
When he rode on the drum went with him. Why
he did not know, except that he was fascinated by such a message-sending device
unknown to his own people.
Within
a half hour the ruins lay behind. Fors was glad to be out in the clean freedom
of the country again. All morning he rode at a leisurely pace, watching for
any signs which the hunter might leave. He was sure that the man was striking
north with almost as definite a purpose as the one which drew him in that
direction. And, with the drum gone, there would be no more signals.
The next two days were quiet. There was no
indication that the Plainsmen had ever ventured into this territory and the
land was a hunters' paradise teeming with game. Fors wasted none of his
precious arrows but left the chase to Lura who enjoyed every moment of it. And
he varied his diet with berries and the ripe grain which grew wild in the
ancient fields.
They
avoided two more small towns, cutting around when they saw the first ruins. The
dank, moldy places had little appeal and Fors had once or twice speculated as
to what might have happened that night had he been the one caught in the open
by the hunting pack, too crippled to climb to the safety the unknown had found.
Now his leg was less painful, he walked a part of each day, stretching the
muscles and toughening tender flesh. Most of the ache was gone and soon he
would be able to move as freely as ever.
On
the morning of the fourth day they came out upon a waste of sand- and
wind-carved dunes and saw the great lake of legend. There was no end to the gray-blue
expanse of water — it must be almost as large as the distant sea. High piles of
bleached driftwood lay along the shore. There must have been a recent storm for
the bodies of fish lay there too. Fors' nose wrinkled as he plowed through the
sand, the mare sinking deeply as she followed him. Lura, investigating the
fish, strayed some yards behind.
So —
this much was true — this was the lake. And somewhere along its shore must lie the city his father had sought. Right
or left, east or west — that was the question. He found shelter from the
wind behind a dune and squatted down to consult the scrap of map. When they had
avoided that last town they had gone west — so now — east. He would keep to the
shore and see —
It
was hard to travel in the sand, and after some time he
gave up in disgust and edged inland to the more solid earth. Within two yards
he was on a road! And, since the roadway hugged the shoreline, he held to it.
Shortly the familiar mounds of debris closed in. But this was the remains of no
small town. Even in his inexperience he could judge that. In the morning sun
far ahead he saw battered towers rising in the sky. This was one of the cities,
the great cities of huge sky-reaching towers! And it was not a "blue"
one either. He would have seen the sign of that taint on the sky in the night.
His
city — all his! Langdon had been right — this was an untouched storehouse
waiting to be looted for the benefit of the Eyrie. Fors allowed the mare to
amble on at her own pace as he tried to recall all the training rules.
Libraries — those were what one was to look for — and
shops, especially those which had stores of hardware or paper or kindred
supplies. One was not to touch food — no matter if it was found in unbroken
containers. Experimentation of that kind had brought death by poisoning too
many times in the past. Hospital supplies were best of all, but those had to
be selected by the trained expert. Danger lay too in unknown drugs.
For
his looting he had best take only samples of what was to be found — books,
writing supplies, maps, anything which would prove that he knew how to select
intelligently. And with the mare he ought to be able to pack out quite a lot.
Here
were signs of fire, too. He rode across a bare stretch where the rough footing
was all black ash. But the towers stood taller and they did not appear to be
too badly damaged. If this city had been bombed, would they be standing at all?
Maybe this was one of the places which had perished in the plagues which
followed the war. Maybe it had died slowly with the ebbing life of its people —
and not suddenly in explosion.
The road they had been following was now a
narrow gorge between tall ranks of broken buildings, the upper stories of which
had fallen into the street in mounds which almost blocked it completely at
places. Here were numerous surface machines in which the Old Ones had ridden in
comfort. And here, also, were bones. That single skull he had found in the old
bank had had the power to shake him a little, but here lay a nation of dead and
soon he ceased to notice them at all, even when the mare trod on brittle ribs
or kicked rolling skulls aside. Yes, now it was very apparent that the men of
this city had died of plague, or gas, or even of the radiation sickness. But
sun and wind and animals had cleared away the foulness of that death, leaving
only a framework without power to harm.
As
yet Fors did not attempt to explore those caverns which had once been the lower
floors of the buildings. Now he only wanted to get on into the very heart of
the place, to the foundations of those towers which had guided him all
morning. But before he could reach that goal a barrier was laid across his
road.
There
was a gash breaking the city in two, a deep valley which nursed a twisted river
in its middle. Bridges spanned it. He came to the lip of one such span and he
could see two others. But before him was a mass of rusting wreckage piled into
a fantastic wall. Machines — not in ones and twos or even in tens, but in
hundreds — were packed as they must have crashed and telescoped into one
another, driven by men who feared some danger behind enough to drive in crazy
flight. The bridge was now one gigantic crack-up. Fors might be able to
scramble across but the mare could not. It would be best to descend into the
valley and cross there — because as far as he could see the other bridges were
also choked with rust-eaten metal.
There
was a side road down into the valley, and machines filled it too. Men had taken
that same trail when the bridge jammed. But the three of them — horse, cat and
man — worked their way through to reach the river level. Tracks were rust-red
lines and on them were trains — the first he had ever seen. Two had crashed
together, the engine of one plowing into the other. Those who had tried to
escape by train had been little better off than their brothers in the stalled
cars above. It was difficult for Fors to imagine what that last wild day of
flight must have been — the trains, the machines. He knew of them only from the
old books. But the youngsters of the Eyrie sometimes stirred up nests of black
ants and watched them boil up and out. So this city must have boiled — but few
had been able to win out.
And
those who had — what became of them in the end? What could help a handful of
panic-stricken refugees scattered over a countryside,
perhaps dropping dead of the plague as they fled? Fors shivered as he picked
his way along beside the wrecked trains. But when he found a narrow path
through the jumble he was in luck. There had been barges on the river and they
had drifted and sunk to form a shaky bridge across the water. Horse, man, and
cat started over it, testing each step. There was a gap in the middle through
which the stream still fought its way. But the mare, under the urging of Fors'
heels in her ribs, jumped it and Lura went sailing over with her usual agility.
More
dark streets with blank-eyed buildings lining them, and then there was a road
leading up at a sharp angle. They took it to find themselves at last close to
the towers. Birds wheeled overhead, crying out in thin sharp voices, and Fors
caught a glimpse of a brownish animal slithering out of sight through a broken
doorway. Then he came up to a wall which was part glass, miraculously unbroken,
but so besmeared by the dust and wind-driven grime of the years that he could
not see what lay behind it. He dismounted and went over, rubbing his hands
across that strange smoothness. The secret of fashioning such perfect glass was
gone — with so many other secrets of the Old Ones.
What
he saw beyond his peephole nearly made him retreat, until he remembered the
Star Men's tales. Those were not the Old Ones standing within the shadowed
cavern, but effigies of themselves which they put up in shops to show off
clothing. He pasted his nose to the glass and stared his fill at the three tall
women and the draperies of rotting fabric still wreatried about them. None of
that would, he knew, survive his touch.
It
always turned to dust in the grasp of any explorer who tried to handle it.
There
were other deep show windows about him but all had been denuded of their glass
and were empty. Through them one could get into the stores behind. But Fors was
not yet ready to go hunting, and probably there would be little there now worth
carrying away.
The
building to his left was topped with a tall tower which reached higher into the
heavens than any other around it. From the top of that a man might see the
whole city, to measure its size and environs. But he knew that the Old Ones
had movable cars rising in such buildings, the power for which was dead. There
might not be any steps — and if there were his lame leg was not yet ready for
climbing. Maybe before he left the city — It would be a workmanlike project to
make a sketch of the city as seen from that tower — an excellent embellishment
to a formal report.
That
was the nearest he came to admitting even to himself that he had hopes of a
future within the Eyrie, that he dreamed of standing before the elders of the
Council and proving that he, the rejected mutant, had accomplished what others
had been trained for all their lives long. When he thought of that he was warm
deep inside. A new city — the one his father had sought — all mapped and
explored, ready for the systematic looting of the Eyrie — what could a man who
reported that ask for as a reward? Just about what he wanted —
Fors
went on slowly, afoot now, with the mare trailing him and Lura scouting ahead.
Neither animal appeared to want to stray too far. The sound of a rolling stone,
the cries of the birds, all echoed through the empty buildings eerily. For the
first time Fors wished for a companion of his own breed — in a place where only
the dead had lain so long it would be good to call upon the living.
The sun was overhead and it was reflected
from a shelf in the forepart of a shop. Fors swung over a strip of iron embedded
in concrete to investigate. Rings lay there, rows of them, set with brilliant
white stones — diamonds he guessed. He sorted them out of the dust and litter.
Most of them were too small to fit any of his fingers, but he chose four of the
largest stones to take along — with some vague idea of surprising the young of
the Eyrie. Among them was one broader band with a deep red gem and this slipped
on to his third finger as if it had been fashioned for it.
He turned it around, pleased with the deep crimson shade of the stone. It was a
good omen, discovering it, as if the long dead craftsmen had made it for him.
He would wear it for luck.
But
food would be more useful than sparkling stones now. The mare must eat and they
would not find grazing hereabouts. In this section there was only a wild waste
of ruins. He must head out toward the edge of the city if he wanted a real
camping place. Not through the valley of the trains, though. It would be better
to measure the extent of the city by trying to get through it to the opposite
side — if he could do that by nightfall.
Fors
did not stop to explore any more of the shops, but he made mental notes about
those which might be worth a second visit. It was slow work breaking a trail
through the blocked streets, and the heat reflected back from the buildings
brought sweat dripping from his face to plaster his clothing Jo him. He had to
mount again as his leg began to ache, and the hollow feeling in his middle grew
worse. Lura protested — she wanted to get away from this wilderness of stone,
into the fields where one could hunt.
Three
hours of steady traveling brought them through to the edge of the enchanted
wood, for that was what it seemed. It was a band of living green cutting across
the pitiless heat and barrenness of the ruins. Once it had been a park, but now
it arose a true forest which Lura welcomed with an
open meow of delight. The mare whinnied, bursting
through bushes until she came into what was undoubtedly a game trail leading
down a gentle slope. Fors dismounted and let the mare go on, her pace now a
trot. They reached the end of the trail, a lake. The mare stood, nose- and
hock-deep, in the green water. Long red-gold fish swam away from the
disturbance, she caused.
Fors dropped down on a wide stone and pulled
off his boots to dabble his burning feet in the coolness. There was a breeze
across the water which dried his damp body and lifted the leaves of the wild
shrubs around them. He looked across the lake. Opposite him there was a flight
of broad white steps, cracked and moss-grown, and he caught a glimpse of a
building at their head. But that could be explored later. Just now it was good
to sit in the cool. The mare came out of the lake and tore up mouthfuls of the
long grass. A duck quacked and fled from under her hoofs, sailing out on the
water, swimming energetically toward the steps.
The
evening was long, the twilight soft about the hidden lake. While there was
still light enough to see Fors ventured into the tall, pillared building at the
head of the stairs and discovered that his luck was still holding. It was a
museum — one of those treasure houses which rated very high on the Star Men's
list of desirable finds. He wandered through the high-ceiled rooms, his boots
making splotchy tracks in the fine dust crisscrossed with the spoor of small
animals. He brushed the dust from the tops of cases and tried to spell out the
blotched and faded signs. Grotesque stone heads leered or stared blindly
through the murk, and tatters of powdery canvas hung dismally from worm-eaten
frames in what had once been picture galleries.
But
the dark drove him out to shelter in the forecourt. Tomorrow would be time to
estimate the worth of what lay within. Tomorrow — why, he had limitless time
before him to discover and assess all that this city held! He had not even
begun to explore.
It
was warm and he allowed his cooking fire to burn down to a handful of coals.
The forest was coming to life. He identified the bark of a questing fox, the
mournful call of night birds. In the city streets he could almost imagine the
gathering of wistful, hungry ghosts seeking what was gone forever. But here,
where man had never lived, it was very peaceful and like the glens of his own
mountain land. His hand fell on the pouch of the Star Men. Had Langdon actually
walked here before him, had it been on a return trip from this place that his
father had been killed? Fors hoped that was true — that Langdon had known the
joy of proving his theory right — that his map had led him here before his
death.
Lura
appeared out of the shadows, padding lightly up the mossy steps from the
water's edge. And the mare moved in without urging, her hoofs ringing on the
broken marble as she came to join them. It was almost — Fors straightened, regarded
the gathering night more intently — almost as if they feared an alien world
enough to seek company against it. And yet he did not feel the unease he had
known in those other ruins — this slice of woodland held no terrors.
Nevertheless
be roused and went to gather as much wood as he could find and he worked with mounting
haste until it was too dark to see at all, ending with a pile of broken
branches and storm drift which might have been gathered to withstand a siege.
Lura watched him — and beyond him — sitting sentry-wise at the head of the
stairs. Nor did the mare move again into the open.
At
last, his hands shaking a little with fatigue, the odd drive still urging him
to some sort of effort, Fors strung his bow and set it close to hand, loosened
his sword in its sheath. The wind had gone down. It was almost sultry. Above
the water the birds had ceased to wheel.
There
was a sudden thunder clap and a flash of violet lightning crossed the southern
sky. Heat lightning, but there might be another storm on the way. That was
probably what made the air seem electric. But Fors did not deceive himself.
Something besides a storm was brooding out in that night.
Back
in the Eyrie — when they watched the wintertime singplays — just before they
drew up the big screen and the play began, he had had a queer feeling like
this. A sort of excited waiting — that was it. And
something else was waiting now — holding its breath a little. He squirmed. His
imagination — he was cursed with too much of that!
A
little was good. Langdon had always said that imagination was a tool to be
used and no Star Man was any good without it. But when a man had too much —
then it fed the dark fears way down inside and there was always an extra foe to
fight in any battle.
But
now, thinking of Langdon had not banished his strange feeling. Something was
outside, dark and formless, brooding, watching — watching a tiny Fors beside a
spark of puny fire — watching for some action —
He
poked at the fire viciously. Getting as silly as a moon-mad woodsrunner! There
must be a madness which lay in wait in these dead cities to trap a man's
thoughts and poison him. A more subtle poison it was than any the Old Ones had
distilled to fight their disastrous wars. He must break that grip on his mind
— and do it quickly!
Lura
watched him from across the fire, her blue eyes fired with topaz by the flames.
She purred hoarsely, reassuringly.
Fors
relaxed a fraction of his guard. Lura's mood was an antidote. From the pouch he
brought out the route book and began to enter — with painstaking attention and
his best script — observations on the day's journey. If it was ever to be laid
before Jarl it must measure up to the standard of such reports. The dark made a
black circle beyond the reaches of the firelight.
6. MANTRAP
The
next day gave threat of being sultry. Fors awakened beset with a dull headache
and vague memories of unpleasant dreams. His leg pained him. But when he
examined the healing wound it showed no signs of the infection he dreaded. He
longed for a swim in the lake but dared not try it until the throbbing seam had
totally closed, being forced to content himself with
splashing in the shallows.
Inside
the museum the air was dead and there was a faint taint of decay hanging in the
long chill corridors. Sightless masks hung on the walls and when he tested some
of the displayed swords and knives they broke in brittle fragments.
In
the end he took very little — much of the exhibit was too delicate to transport
or too large. He chose some tiny figurines from a case where the dusty card
said something about "Egypt" and a clumsy finger ring set with a
carving of a beetle from a neighboring shelf. Last of all was a small sleek
black panther, smooth and cool to his fingers, which he fell in love with and
could not bear to leave behind. He did not venture into the side wings — not
with all the city waiting for him.
But
the museum was safe. Here were no falling walls and the alcove where he had
spent the night was excellent shelter. He piled up his supplies in one corner
before he sallied forth.
The mare was reluctant to leave the woods and
the lake, but Fors' steady pull on her lead rope brought her back to the edge
of the ruins. They went at a slow pace as he wanted to see what lay behind the
spear points of glass which still clung in the shattered frames of the windows.
These had all once been shops. How much of the wares they displayed were still worth plundering he could not guess. But he
turned away in disappointment from fabrics eaten by insects and rotted by time.
In the fourth shop he entered was something
much better. An unbroken glass case contained a
treasure even greater than all the museum had to offer. Shut out from dust and
most of the destruction of time were boxes of paper — whole boxes with blocks
of separate sheets — and also pencils!
Of course the paper was brittle, yellowed,
and easily torn. But in the Eyrie it could be pulped and re-worked into serviceable
sections. And the pencils! There were few good substitutes for those. And the
third box he opened held colored ones! He sharpened two with his hunting knife
and made glorious red and green lines on the dusty floor. All of these must go
with him. In the back of the shop he found a metal box which still seemed
sturdy enough and into it he crammed all that he could. This — from just one
shop! What riches could be expected from the city!
Why, here the men of the Eyrie could explore
and loot perhaps for years before they exhausted all the supplies to be found.
The only safe cities they had discovered before had been known to other tribes
and were combed almost clean — or else they had been held by the Beast Things
and were unsafe.
Fors
tramped on, bits of glass crunching under his boots,
skirting piles of rubble he could not clamber over. Such piles barricaded some
shops entirely or else the roofs were unsafe. He was several blocks beyond the
shop of the paper before he came to a second easy to enter. It had been another dealing in rings and gems. But the interior was in
wild disorder as if it had been looted before. Cases lay smashed and the glass
mingled with metal and stones on the floor. He stood in the doorway — it would
take a long time to sort through that litter and the effort was not necessary.
Only — as he turned away — he caught sight of something else on the floor which
brought him back.
There was a patch of mud, dried brick-hard.
And pressed deep into its surface, holding the pattern as if in a cast, was
part of a footprint. He had seen its like before, near the pool of fresh deer
blood. Those long narrow toe marks with the talon nail indentations could never
be forgotten. That other print had been fresh. This was old. It might have been
made months, even years before. The mud which held it crumbled under the prod
of his finger tip. Fors backed out of the shop and stood with his back to a
tumbling wall. The instinctive reaction which had made him do
that also sent his eyes up and down the street.
Birds
nested in the broken windows of the building across from him, flitting in and
out on their own concerns. And not ten feet away a large gray rat sat on a pile
of brick combing its fur and watching him with almost intelligent interest. It
was a very large rat and a singularly fearless one. But no rat had made that
footprint.
Fors summoned Lura from her ranging. With the
cat to scout for him he would feel safer against attack. But he was still
conscious of the many places where death could lurk, behind walls, in the pits
which broke the street, in the open store fronts.
In
the next hour he went about a mile, keeping to the main street and visiting
only those buildings which Lura declared safe. The mare carried an odd
assortment of bundles and he realized that he could not hope to transport more
than a few selected samples of the abundance. He must cache part of his
morning's finds in the museum and take only the cream of his gleanings south.
Now that the city was discovered the men from the Eyrie would "work"
it with greater efficiency,, sending experts to choose
and dismantle what they needed most and could best use. So the sooner he
started back with the news, the more time they would have to work here before
the coming of the bad weather in the fall.
The
day grew even warmer and big black flies came out of the crevices of the stones
to bite viciously, making the mare so crazy he could hardly control her. He had
best head back now to the green and the lake and there sort over his loot. But,
as they passed the place where he had found the wealth of paper, he stepped in
for a last check upon all he must leave behind. The sun made a bright bar
across the floor bringing into prominence the pencil marks he had made there.
But — he was certain he had not used a yellow or blue pencil, although there
had been a few.
Now
— yellow and blue lines crisscrossed the red and green ones he had left —
almost challengingly. The boxes of pencils he had piled for later
transportation had been opened and two were gone!
He
could see the tracks in the floor dust — his own boot-heel pattern and across
that a more shapeless outline. And in the corner by the door someone had spit
out the stone of a cherry 1
Fors
whistled in Lura. She examined the evidence on the floor and waited for
instructions. But she was displaying none of the disgust with which she had
greeted that earlier spoor. This might have been left by a roving Plainsman who
was exploring the city on his own. If that were so, it behooved Fors to move
quickly. He must get back to the Eyrie and return with help before some other
tribe staked out a fair claim to the riches here. Once or
twice before the mountaineers had been so disappointed.
Now there would be no question about leaving
most of the spoil he had gathered. He must cache it in the museum and travel as
light as possible to make time. Frowning, he stamped out of the shop and jerked
at the mare's lead rope.
They
came into the woods, cutting across a glade in the general direction of the
museum. The mare snorted as they passed the end of the lake. Fors tugged her
along by main force, bringing her up the steps to be relieved of her load. He
packed the bundles into the room he now considered his own and freed the mare
for grazing. Lura would keep watch until he had time to get everything in
order.
But
when Fors spread out the morning's loot on the floor he found it very difficult
to pick and choose. If he took this — then he could not carry that — and that might make a greater impression upon the experts of the Eyrie. He made
piles, only to completely change their contents three and four times over. But
in the end he made up a pack which he hoped would best display to the mountain
clan the quality of this find and be a good example of
his own powers of selection. The rest could be easily concealed somewhere in
the rambling halls of this building until he returned.
He sighed as he began to sort the discards
into order. There was so much to be left behind — why, he should have a pack
train of horses, such as the Plains tribes used to carry their gear on the
march. The drum rolled and he picked it up, rubbing his fingers across its top
to hear again the queer pulsing sound. Then he tapped with his nails and the
sound echoed weirdly through the halls.
This
must have been the drum which had sounded through the night after his fight
with the boar. A signal — ! He could not resist other
experimental thumps — and then tried out the rhythm of one of his own mountain
hunting songs. But this strong music was more eerie than any from the flute or
the three- and four-stringed harps his people knew.
As
the frightening rumble died away Lura flowed in, her eyes uncannily aglow,
haste and urgency expressed in every dark hair on her head. He must come with
her and at once. Fors dropped the drum and reached for his bow. Lura stood by
the door, her tail tip flicking.
She
went down the steps in two bounds and he went after her, not sparing his leg.
The mare was standing in the shallows of the lake undisturbed. Lura glided on,
between trees and bushes and into the thick depths of the wood. Fors followed
at a slower pace, not being able to move so quickly through the green
obstruction.
But before he had gone out of sight of the
lake he heard it — a faint moaning cry, almost a sigh, which had been wrung out
of real suffering. It arose to a hoarse croak, framing muffled words he did not
understand. But human lips had shaped them, he was sure of that. Lura would not
have guided him to one of the Beast Things.
The
gabble of strange words died away into another moan which seemed to rise out of
the ground before him. Fors shied away from an expanse of dried grass and
leaves which lay there. Lura had dropped to her belly, reaching out with a
fore-paw to feel delicately of the ground, not advancing into the small
clearing.
One
of the pits which he had found throughout the city was Fors' first thought — at
any rate a hole of some sort. Now he could see a break
through at the opposite end of this cleared space. He started to edge around,
treading on the half-exposed roots of trees and bushes and holding on firmly to
anything which looked sturdy.
From the torn gap in the mat of dried grass
and brush rose a sickening stench. Trying to spare his leg he went to his knees
and peered into the dusk below. What he saw there set his stomach to churning.
It
was a wicked trap — that pit — a trap artfully constructed and skillfully
concealed with the matted covering. And it held its victims. The small deer had
been dead for days, but the other body which, as his eyes adjusted to the dim
light, he saw writhe weakly, must have lain there for a shorter time. The blood
on the impaled shoulder still ran free.
Sharp-pointed
stakes had been set in the earth at the bottom, pointing upward to catch and
hold the fallen for a tortured death. And the man who half hung, half lay
there now had escaped that death by less than six inches.
He
had struggled to free himself, as the gaping wound in his own flesh testified,
but all his strength had not brought him loose. Fors measured the space between
the stakes and then looked around for a good-sized tree. This would not be easy
—
It
did not take long to fetch what was left of his climbing rope and make a noose
in it. The man in the pit looked up with glazed eyes. Whether he could see or understand
what his rescuer was planning Fors did not know. He fastened the end of the
cord to an arrow and shot the line over the branch which hung the closest to
the trap.
To make one end of the rope fast to the tree
took only an instant. Then, with the other in his hand, Fors lowered himself
cautiously over the edge of the pit, using his elbows to break his speed as he
slipped down to the smeared stakes. Black flies rose in a noxious cloud and he
had to beat them off as he reached the side of the prisoner. The belt about the
fellow's middle was tight enough and he knotted the rope.
The
way out of the pit was more difficult, since the makers had fashioned it with
every precaution against that very operation. But a landslide at one end gave
some footing and Fors fought his way back to the top. It was plain that whoever
had set that pitfall had not visited it for some time and Fors left the sentry
duty to Lura.
This
was going to be a nasty business, but it was the only way he could see of
saving the sufferer below. He untied the rope end on the tree and twisted it
about his wrists. Lura came without being summoned and seized the dangling tip
in her jaws. Together they gave their weight to a quick jerk which was answered
by a wild scream of agony. But Fors did not lessen the steady pull and Lura
matched him step by step as he crept back.
Out
of the black hole rose the lolling head and bloody shoulders of the stranger.
When he swung clear Fors made fast the rope and hurried back to pull the limp
body away from the edge of the fiendish mantrap. His hands were slippery with
blood before he got the unconscious man free. He could not carry the fellow,
not with his bad leg. Also he must weigh more than Fors by forty pounds. For,
now that he lay in the sunlight, Fors recognized him as the dark-skinned hunter
of the island. But his big body was flaccid and his face greenish white under
its brown pigment. At least the blood was not spurting from that wound — no
artery had been touched. He must get the stranger back to the museum where he
could see to the ugly tear —
There
was a crashing in the brush. Fors hurled himself for the bow which lay where he
had dropped it. But it was Lura who came out, urging the mare before her. The
scent of blood made the mare roll her eyes and circle away, but Fors wanted no
nonsense now and Lura was of a like mind. She walked up to the horse and gave
several low snarls. The mare stood still, sweating, her eyes showing white. But
she did not rear as Fors somehow got his patient across her back.
Once
back in the shelter of the museum he gave a sigh of relief and rolled the
stranger onto his blanket. The other's eyes were open again and this time with
the light of reason in their dark brown depths. The hunter was very young. Now that he was so helpless this was plain. He could not
count many more years than did Fors himself — in spite of his big frame and
wide, well-muscled shoulders. He lay in quiet patience watching Fors make a
fire and prepare the salve, but he said nothing, even when the mountaineer went
to work with his crude surgery.
The
stake had passed through the skin of the shoulder, tearing a wicked gouge,
but, Fors saw with relief, breaking no bones. If infection did not develop the
stranger would recover.
His
handling of that torn flesh must have caused the stranger agony but he made no
sound, although when Fors finished at last beads of bright crimson showed along
the other's lower lip. He made a gesture with his good hand toward the pouch at
his belt and Fors unfastened it. He selected with fumbling fingers a small bag
of white material and pushed it into his rescuer's hand, jerking his thumb at
the pannikin of water Fors had used during his surgery. There was a coarse
brownish meal in the bag. Fors drew fresh water, shook in a little of the
stuff and set it back on the fire. His patient nodded and smiled weakly. Then
he stabbed himself in the chest with a forefinger and said:
"Arskane — "
"Fors,"
and then pointing to Lura the mountaineer added, "Lura."
Arskane
nodded his head and added a sentence in a deep, almost rolling voice which had
a drum note in it. Fors frowned. Some of those words-—yes, they were like his own speech. The accent, though, was different — there
was a slurring of certain sounds. He tried in his turn.
"I
am Fors of the Puma Clan from the Smoking Mountains — "
He tried gestures to piece out meaning.
But Arskane sighed. His face was drawn and
tired and his eyes closed wearily. Plainly he could not make the effort for
coherent speech now. Fors' chin rested on the palm of his hand and he stared
into the fire. This was going to alter his own plans
drastically. He could not go away and leave Arskane alone, unable to fend for
himself. And the big man might not be able to travel for days. He would have to
think about this.
The boiling water began to give off a
fragrant odor — new to his nostrils but enticing. He sniffed the steam as the
water turned brown. When the liquid was quite dark he took a chance and pulled
the pan off to cool. Arskane stirred and turned his head. He smiled at the
steam arising from the water and gestured that when it was ready he would
drink.
This, then, must be the medicine of his own people. Fors waited, tested it with a cautious
finger tip, and then raised the dark head on his arm, holding the pan to those
bitten lips. Half the liquid was gone before Arskane signed he had enough. He
motioned for Fors to try it too, but a single bitter mouthful was enough to
satisfy the mountaineer. It tasted far worse than it smelled.
For
the rest of the afternoon Fors was busy. He hunted with Lura, bringing back the
best parts of a deer they surprised at the end of the lake, and some of the
quail flushed out of the grass. He added an uncounted number of armloads to the
stack of firewood. There were berries, too, won from a briary thicket. And,
when at last he threw himself down beside the fire and stretched out his aching
leg, he was so tired he thought that he could not move again. But now they were
provisioned for more than one day ahead. The mare had shown a tendency to
wander off, so he shut her into one of the long corridors for the night.
Arskane
was awake again after the fitful feverish sleep of the afternoon, and he
watched as Fors prepared the birds for broiling. He ate, but not as much as
Fors offered. The mountaineer was worried. There might have been poison upon
those trap stakes. And he had nothing with which to combat that. He heated up
the bitter brown water and made Arskane drink it fo
the dregs. If there was any virtue in the stuff the big man needed all its help
now.
As
it grew dark Fors' patient fell asleep again but his attendant hunched close
to the fire, even though the evening was warm. The mantrap was occupying his
thoughts. True, all the evidence pointed to its not being visited for a long
time by those who had set it. The trapped deer in it had been dead for days and
there had been another skeleton, picked clean by insects and birds, at the
other end of the hole. But someone or something had spent much labor and time
in its construction, and it had been devised by a mind both cunning and cruel.
No Plainsman he had ever heard of followed that crafty method of hunting, and
it was certainly not to the taste of the men of the Eyrie. It was new to
Arskane, or he would not have fallen a victim to it.
So that meant others — not of the plains or of the mountains or of Arskane's
tribe — others roaming this city at their will. And in the cities there lived
at ease only — the Beast Things!
Fors' mouth was dry,
he rubbed his hands across his knees. Langdon had died under the throwing darts
and the knives of the Beast Things. Others of the Star Men had met them — and
had not returned from that meeting. Jarl wore a crooked red seam down his
forearm which was the result of a brush with one of their scouts. They were
horrible, monstrous — not human. Fors was mutant — yes. But he was still human.
These were not. And it was because of the Beast Things that mutants were so
feared. For the first time he began to understand that. There was a purpose
behind the hatred of the mutants. But he was human! And the Beast Things were
not!
He
had never seen one, and the Star Men who had and survived never talked about
them to the commoners of the Eyrie. Legend made them boogies of the dark — ogres
— foul things of the night.
What
if it had been a Beast Thing trap Arskane had been caught in? Then the Things
must live here. There were thousands upon thousands of hiding places in the
ruins to shelter them. And only Lura's instinct and hunting skill,
and his own ears and eyes to guard them. He looked out into the dusk and
shivered. Ears and eyes, bow and sword, claws and teeth — maybe none of those
would be enough!
7. DEATH PLAYS HIDE AND SEEK
For
four days Arskane lay in the cool hall of the museum while Fors hunted for the
pot or ranged in scouting trips through the woodland, never venturing too far
from the white building. And at night across the fire they grew familiar with
each other's speech and exchanged stories of their past.
"Our Old Ones were flying men,"
Arskane's deep voice rolled across the room. "After the Last Battle they
came down from the sky to their homeland and found it blasted into nothing.
Then they turned their machines and fled south and when the machines would no longer
bear them in the sky they landed in a narrow desert valley. And after a time
they took to wife the women of that country. So did my tribe spring forth —
"On the fringes of the
desert,, life is very hard, but my
people
learned to use the waste for what it will give man and later they held much
good land. Until twice twelve moons ago did they hold it — then the earth
trembled and shook so that a man could not stand upright. From the mountains to
our southland came fire and many evil smells. Talu of the Long Beard and Mack
the Three Fingered died of coughing in the death fog which came down upon the
village. And in the morning the world shook again just as the dawn light broke
and this time the mountains spewed forth burning rock which flowed down to
engulf the best of our hard-won fields and pastures. So we gathered what we
might and fled before it, all the tribe together, driving our sheep and taking
with us only what might be carried in the pony carts and on our backs.
"We
struck to the north and discovered that the earth had broken in other places
also so that to the east the sea had eaten into the land. Then we must flee
from the rising waters as we had fled from the fire. And it seemed that nowhere
might we find a place to call our own again. Until at last we
came into this territory where so many of the Old Ones once had lived.
Then divers of the young warriors, myself among them,
were sent on to scout and mark out fields for our sowing and a place to build
anew the Village of Birds. This is a fair country — "
Arskane's hand gestured south. "I saw much and should have returned
with my news, but, having come so far, my heart would not let me rest until I
saw more and more of its wonders. I watched in secret the comings and goings of
the Plainspeople, but they are not as my folk. It is in their hearts to live in
houses of skin which may be set up in any field they choose and taken down
again when they grow weary. Your mountain breed I do not know — we have little
liking for high places since our mountains brought destruction upon us.
"These
cities of the dead have their uses. One can find treasures here — as you know
well. One can also find worse things." He touched the bandage pad on his
shoulder. "I do not think my people will have a liking for the cities.
Now, when I can again walk a straight trail, I must go back to report to the
tribe. And maybe it shall follow that we will settle along some river valley
where the soil is black and rich.
And
there shall we open up old fields to the seed grain, and turn out our sheep to
graze on the hillsides. Then shall the Village of Birds again take root, in a
fair and fruitful land." He sighed.
"You
have named yourself a warrior," Fors said slowly. "Against whom do
you war? Are there Beast Things also in your deserts?"
Arskane
smiled grimly. "In the days of the Great Blow-up the Old Ones loosed
certain magic they could not control. Our wise ones know not the secret, having
only to guide them the tales of our fathers, the flying men. But this magic
acted in strange and horrible ways. There were things in the desert which were
born enemy to man, scaled creatures most horrible to look upon. The magic made
these both cunning and quick so that it was ever war to the death between them
and all humankind. But as yet they seem few and perhaps the molten rock from
the mountains has eaten them up entirely. For we have seen none of their breed
since we left."
"Radiation." Fors played with the hilt of his short sword. "Radiation mutations
— but sometimes it worked well. Lura's kind was born of such magic!"
The
dark-skinned southerner looked at the cat who sprawled at ease beyond.
"That was good — not evil — magic. I wish that my people had friends such
as that to protect them in their wanderings. For we have had to fight many
times against beasts and men. The Plainspeople have not shown themselves
friends to us. There is always danger to watch for. One night when I was in a
dead place I was set upon by a pack of nightmare creatures. Had I not been able
to climb beyond their reach and use my knife well they would have stripped the
flesh from my bones."
"That
I know." Fors brought out the drum and put it into the other's hands and
Arskane gave a little cry of pure delight.
"Now
can I talk with the Master of Scouts!" His
fingers started to tap out a complicated beat on the head but Fors' hand shot
out and clamped about his wrist.
"No!"
The mountaineer forced the fingers away from the drum. "That might signal
others — as well as your people. It was a thing unknown to me which dug that
trap — "
The scowl which twisted Arskane's black brows
smoothed away as the mountaineer continued:
"I
believe that that is the work of the Beast Things. And if they still skulk in
this city your drum would bring them in — "
"The trap was old — "
"Yes. But never yet have we found Beast
Things living together in great numbers. He who set it may now be still
dwelling only the length of these ruins from us. This is a large city and all
the men of the Eyrie would not be enough to search it well."
"Your tongue is as straight as your
wit." Arskane set aside the drum. "We shall get free of this dwelling
place of shadows before I try to speak with the tribe. Tomorrow I shall be
able to take the trail. Let us be off with the dawn light. There is an evil in
these old places which seems to clog the nostrils. I like better the cleanness
of the open land."
Fors
made up a small bundle of the city loot, caching what remained in an inner
room. His leg was fully healed and Arskane could ride the mare for the next day
or two. Regretfully the mountaineer looked upon the pile of his gleanings
before he covered them up. But at least he had the map he had made and the
journal of his explorations both packed away in the Star pouch, along with some
of the colored pencils and the small figures from the museum case.
Arskane wandered through the building most of
the afternoon, trying his legs he said, but also interested in what lay there.
Now he turned on one wrist a wide band of wrought gold and carried a massive
club with the head of a spike embedded in a ball which he had found in a room
devoted to implements of war. His throwing spears and bow had been recovered
from the depths of the trap but the shafts of the spears were broken and he
could not draw the bow until his shoulder healed.
The sultry heat of the past days had not yet
closed in when they ate their last meal in the museum at dawn the next day and
stamped out the fire. Arskane protested against riding but Fors argued him up
on the mare and they started out along the one trail the mountaineer had
mapped, the one which had brought him into the city. They made no stops,
traveling at their best pace down the littered street — with before them the
cluster of tall buildings which had been Fors' goal on his first day in the
city. If fortune favored them he was sure they could be almost out of the
circle of the ruins by nightfall.
Arskane
used his hands as sun shields and watched with wonder the towering buildings
they moved among.
"Mountains
— man made — that is what we see here. But why did the Old Ones love to huddle
together in such a fashion? Did they fear their own magic so that they must
live cheek to cheek with their kind lest it eat them up when it was loosed — as
it did? Well, they died of it in the end, poor Old Ones. And now we have a
better life — "
"Do
we?" Fors kicked at a loose stone. "They had such knowledge — we are
groping in the dark for only crumbs of what they knew —
"
"But
they did not use all their learning for good!" Arskane indicated the
ruins. "This city came out of their brains and then it was also destroyed
by them. They built only to tear down again. I think it better to build than to
blast."
As the murmur of his words died away Fors'
head snapped around. He had caught a whisper of sound, a faint pattering. And
had he, or had he not, seen the loathsome outline of a bloated rat body
slipping into a shattered window? There were sounds among the stones — almost
as if some thing — or things — were following them.
Lura's
ears were flat to her skull, her eyes only battle slits in her brown mask. She
stood with her forepaws planted upon a fallen column staring back along the
track they had come, the tip of her tail quivering.
Arskane caught their unease.
"What is — "
At first Fors thought that the scream which
answered that half question came from the throat of a bird. And then the mare
swung up her head and gave a second wild cry. Arskane threw himself off just as
she reared to crash back on the stones. Then Fors saw the dart rising and
falling in the gaping wound which had torn open her throat.
"In
— !" Arskane's hand about his wrist jerked him
into a cavern opening in the front of the highest tower. As they fled Lura's
blood-chilling war cry ripped the air. But a second later she too was with
them pushing back into the dark center of the building.
They
paused at the top of a ramp which led down into murky shadows. There were
floors below. Fors could see a bit of them. But Arskane pointed to the floor.
Beaten in the dust and dried mud was a regular path of footprints — made by
feet too narrow — clawed feet!
Lura
backed away from that highway spitting and snarling. So — they had not escaped
but come straight into the stronghold of the enemy! And it did not need the
cry of triumph from without, coming in shrill inhuman exultation, to confirm
that.
But
the trail led down — they might still go up! Lura and Arskane shared Fors'
thought, for both ran for the left hand corridor which was parallel to the street
level. There were heavy doors along the hall, and no matter how hard they
pushed none of these gave. Only one at the very end was open and they crowded
up to look down a shaft into utter darkness. But Fors had glimpsed something
else.
"Hold my belt!" he ordered Arskane.
"There is something to the left — "
With
the southerner's fingers hooked in his belt he dared to swing over the edge of
the opening. He was right, a ladder of metal strips protruded from the wall.
And when he looked up he could see a square of dull light above which must mean
another open door maybe a floor or two above. But could Lura and Arskane climb
too?
Arskane
flexed his arms as Fors explained, testing his shoulder.
"How far above is the opening?" he
wanted to know. "Perhaps two floors — "
While
they hesitated Lura edged to the lip of the shaft, measured with her eyes the
reach to the ladder, and then was gone before Fors could stop her. They heard
the rasp of her claws on the metal — a sound to be drowned out by another
— a shuffling noise of many feet. The
inhabitants of the lower depths were issuing out to hunt. Arskane tested the
lashing which held his war club to his belt. Then he smiled
—
if a bit crookedly.
"Two floors should not be beyond my
strength. And we can only try, my friend."
He
judged his distance as the cat had done and then swung away. With a pounding
heart Fors waited where he was, not daring to watch that ascent. But the sound
he dreaded most to hear — that of a falling body — did not follow. He fitted an
arrow to his bow cord and waited.
And
that wait was not long. A grayish shadow at the far corner of the corridor was
target enough. He shot, pinning the gray patch to the wall with the steel-headed
war arrow. Something screeched and tried to jerk free. But before it did Fors
had shouldered his bow and had pushed off for the ladder. The strips remained
firm under his weight — his minor nightmare had been their breaking loose after
taking the strain of the cat and the big southerner — and he scrambled up at a
furious pace, his breathing sounding a hurricane in his own ears. He pulled
himself through that other gray space to find Lura and Arskane both anxiously
waiting for him.
They
were in a second corridor fronted by rows of doors, but some of these were
already open. Arskane disappeared through the nearest while Fors lay belly down
on the floor, his head at the opening of the shaft, listening to the sounds
from below. The wailing of the thing he had wounded faded away but the
shuffling noise was louder and there were growls which might or might not have
been speech. So far the creatures below had not discovered how the quarry had
fled.
Fors
scrambled to his feet and caught at the door which had once closed the shaft —
now it stood a few inches out from where it slid into the wall. Under his
tugging it gave a little with a faint grating sound. The mountaineer exerted
his full strength and gained a foot more.
But
the grating must have betrayed them. There was a shout below and a dart sped up
the shaft, to spin harmlessly back again. Arskane came up pushing before him a
collection of moldering furniture.
Odd
noises arose from the shaft but Fors was not tricked into looking over the
edge. He continued his silent struggle with the door. Arskane stood to help
him. Together they fought the stubborn metal, salt sweat stung in their eyes
and dripped from their chins.
In
the shaft the sounds grew louder. Several more darts skimmed into the light and
fell. One, aimed with more skill or luck, skidded out across the floor between
Fors' feet. Arskane turned to his erection of furniture and gave it one mighty
push, toppling the whole pile over. There was a terrified yell in answer and a
distant crash. Arskane rubbed a dusty hand across his wet jaw.
"One of them, by the
Horned Lizard, climbs no more!"
They
had the door halfway across the shaft opening now. And all at once its
resistance ended with a snap which almost sent them both flying. Fors cried out
triumphantly — but too soon. A foot was all they had gained. There still
remained open space enough for a body to squeeze through.
Arskane
drew off and considered the door for a long moment. Then he slapped it with
the flat of his hand, putting behind that blow all the force he could muster.
Again it gave and came forward a few inches. But the sounds in the shaft had
begun again. The hunters had not been deterred by the fate of their companion.
Something
flipped out of the dark, landing close to Fors' foot. It was a hand, but
skeleton thin and covered with wrinkled grayish skin. As it scrabbled with
twisted claws for a hold it seemed more a rat's paw than a hand. Fors raised
his foot and stamped, grinding the boot, nailed to cross mountain trails, into
the very center of the monstrosity. The scream which answered that came from
the mouth of the shaft. They threw themselves in a last furious attack upon the
door, their nails breaking and tearing on the metal — and it gave — snapping into
the groove awaiting it in the opposite wall.
For
a long moment they leaned panting against the wall of the corridor, holding
their bruised and bleeding hands out before them. Fists were beating against
that door but it did not move.
"That will stay closed," Arskane
gasped at last. "They cannot hang upon the wall ladder and force it. If
there is no other way up we are safe — for a time — "
Lura
came down the hallway, threading her way in and out of the rooms along it. And
there was no menace there. They would have a breathing spell. Or were they now
caught in a trap as cruel as the one which had engulfed Arskane in the museum
wood?
The
southerner turned to the front of the building and Fors followed him to one of
the tall windows, long bare of glass, which gave them sight of the street
below. They could see the body of the mare but the pack she had carried had
been stripped off and there was something queer about the way she lay —
"So — they are meat
eaters — "
Fors
gagged at Arskane's words. The mare was meat — maybe they, too, were — meat! He
raised sick eyes and saw that the same thought lay in the big man's mind. But
Arskane's hand was also on the club he had taken from the museum.
"Before
this meat goes into any pot, it will have to be taken. And the hunting of it is
going to cost them sore. These are truly the Beast Things of which you have
spoken, comrade?"
"I believe so. And
they are reputed to be crafty — "
"Then must we, too, be sly. Now, since
we cannot go down — let us see what may lie above us."
Fors watched the pigeons wheeling about the
ruins. The floor under their feet was white with bird droppings.
"We have no wings — "
"No
— but I am bred of a race which once flew," Arskane answered with a sort
of quiet humor coloring his tone. "We shall find a way out of here that
that offal below cannot follow. Let us now seek it."
They
passed out of one hall into another, looking into the rooms along the way. Here
were only decaying sticks of furniture and bones. In the third hall were more
of the shaft doors — all closed. Then, in the far end
of one back hall, Arskane pushed open a last door and they came upon stairs
which led both up and down.
Lura
brushed past them and went down, fading away with her customary skill and
noiselessness. They squatted down in the shadows to wait her report.
Arskane's face showed a grayish tinge which
was not born of the lack of light. The struggle up that ladder and with the
door had left its marks on him. He grunted and settled his bad shoulder
gingerly against the wall. Fors edged forward. Now that they were quiet his
ears could work for him. He heard the pattering which was Lura on her way, the
trickle of powdered rubble which her paws had disturbed somewhere.
There
was no sign hereabout that the Beast Things had used this stair. But — Lura had
stopped! Fors closed his eyes, blanking out his own thoughts, trying as he
never had before to catch the emanations of the big cat's mind. She was not in
any danger but she was baffled. The path before her was closed in such a manner
that she could not win through. And when her brown head appeared again above
the top step Fors knew that they could not escape by that route. He said as
much to Arskane.
The tall man pulled himself
to his feet with a weary sigh.
"So.
Then let us climb — but gently, comrade. These stairs of the Old Ones beat a
man's breath out of his body!"
Fors pulled Arskane's arm over his shoulder,
taking some of the weight of the larger man.
"Slow shall it be — we
have the full day before us — "
"And perhaps the night, too, and some
other days.
Well, climb — comrade."
Five
floors higher Arskane sank down, pulling Fors with him. And the mountaineer was
glad of the rest. They' had gone slowly, to be sure, but now his leg ached and
his breath sobbed in a band of pain beneath his small ribs.
For
a space they simply sat there, taking deep breaths and resting. Then Fors
noticed with dismay that the sunlight was fading in the patches on the floor.
He crawled to a window and looked out. Through the jagged teeth of broken
buildings he could see the waters of the lake and the sun was far into the
west. It must be late afternoon.
Arskane shook himself awake at that
information.
"Now
we come," he observed, "to the matter of food. And perhaps we have
too often refreshed ourselves from your canteen — "
Water!
Fors had forgotten that. And where inside this maze would they find either food
or drink? But Arskane was on his feet now and going through the door which must
lead to the rest of that floor. Birds — Fors remembered the evidences of their
nesting here — that would be the answer — birds!
But
they came into a long room where some soft fabric lay under their feet. There
were many tables set in rows down its length, each encircled by chairs. Fors
caught the glint of metal laid out in patterns on the nearest. He picked up an
unmistakable fork! This then had been an eating place of the Old Ones. But the
food — any food would be long since gone.
He said that aloud only to
have Arskane shake his head.
"Not so, comrade. Rather do I say that we are favored with such luck as few men have. In my journey north I chanced upon just such a place
as this and in the smaller rooms behind I found many jars of food left by the
Old Ones, but still good. That night did I feast as might a chieftain when the
Autumn Dances begin — "
"To eat food found in the old places is
to choose death. That is the law!" repeated Fors stubbornly. But he did
trail along behind as Arskane moved purposely toward the door at the other end
of the room.
"There are foods of many kinds. This I
can reason — the container which holds it must be perfect — without blemish.
Even I, who have not the lore of these dead places, can guess that. But I live,
do I not, and I have eaten of the bounty left by the Old Ones. We can do no
less than seek for it here."
Arskane,
wise from his earlier experience, brought them into a room where shelves stood
around the walls. Jars of glass and metal containers were arranged in rows
along the shelves and Fors marveled at the abundance. But the southerner
walked slowly around, peering intently at the glass jars, paying no attention
to the metal red with rust. He came back at last with a half dozen bottles in
his arms and put them down on the table in the center of the room.
"Look well at the topping, comrade. If
you see no signs of decay there, then strike it off and eat!"
Ten
minutes later they were sucking sticky fingers, gorged on fruit which had been
there for generations before their birth. The juice appeased their thirst and
Fors listened to
sounds
from the rooms ahead. Lura feasted too — so birds did nest here.
Arskane used his belt knife to snap the top
from another jar.
"We need not worry for our food. And
tomorrow we shall discover a way out of here. For once the Beast Things of the
dead places have found their match!"
And
Fors, gorged and content, met that confidence with his own.
8.
WHERE ONCE MEN FLEW-
They
slept fitfully that night on piles of moldering fabrics they dragged together, and on rousing ate and drank again from the
supplies in the storeroom. Then they climbed once more until the steps ended in
a platform which had once been walled by large glass windows. Below the city
spread out in all its broken glory. Fors identified the route he had pioneered
on entering and pointed it out. And Arskane did the same for the one he had
followed in the east.
"South should be our
road now — straight south — "
Fors laughed shortly at
that observation.
"We
have yet to win free of this one building," he objected. But Arskane was
ready with an answer to that.
"Come!" One of his big hands cupped
the mountaineer's shoulder as he drew Fors to the empty window space facing
east. Far below lay the broad roof of a neighbor building,
its edge tight against the side of the tower.
"You
have this." Arskane flipped the end of the mountain rope still wrapping
Fors' belt. "We must go down to those windows just above that roof and
swing through to it. See, south lies a road of roofs across which we may travel
for a space. These Beast Things may be cunning but perhaps they do not watch the
sky route against escape — it hangs above the ways they seem to like best. It
is in my mind that they hug the ground on their journeyings —
"
"It
is said that they best love to slink in the burrows," confirmed Fors.
"And they are supposed to be none too fond of the open light of day — "
Arskane plucked his full lower lip between
forefinger and thumb. "Night fighters — eh? Well
then, day is the time for us — the light is in our favor."
They
made the long climb down with lighter hearts. A story above the neighboring
roof they found a window in the center of the hallway which faced in the right
direction, broke out the few splinters of glass still
set dagger-wise in the frame, and leaned out to reconnoiter.
"The
rope will not be needed after all," Arskane commented. "That drop is
easy." He took a strong grip on the window frame and flexed his muscles.
Fors
crossed to the next window and set an arrow on his bow cord. But, as far as he
could see, the roof below, the silent blank windows were empty of menace. Only
— he could not cover all of those. And death might fly from any one of the
hundreds of black holes, above, below —
But
this was their best — maybe their only chance of escape. Arskane grunted with
pain from his shoulder. Then he was out, tumbling down to the surface below. As
quickly as he had taken the leap he dodged behind the high parapet.
For
a long moment they both waited, frozen. Then, in a flash of brown and cream,
Lura went through, making a more graceful landing. She sped across the roof, a
streak of light fur.
So far — so good. Fors freed himself from quiver, Star Man's pouch, and bow, tossing them
through in the general direction of Arskane. Then he hoisted himself on the
sill and swung. He heard Arskane's shout of warning just as he let go.
Startled, he could not prepare for a proper landing but fell hard — with a
force which jarred him.
He squirmed over on his back. A dart quivered
in the frame of the window where his hand had rested. He rolled into 'the
safety of the parapet with a force which brought him up with a crack against
Arskane's knees.
"Where did that come
from?"
"There!" The southerner pointed at
the row of windows in the building across the street. "From one of those — " "Let us go — "
Belly
flat, Fors started a snake's progress toward the opposite end of the roof.
They could not go back now — to try to climb up to that window would be to
present a target which even a fumbling marksman could not miss. But now the
hunt was on and they would have to make a running fight of it through a maze
which the enemy knew intimately and they did not know at all — a maze which
might be studded with traps more subtle and more cruel
than the one which had imprisoned Arskane —
A
thin fluting — like the piping of a child's reed whistle — cut the air
somewhere behind. Fors guessed it to be what he had dreaded most to hear — the
signal that the quarry had been flushed out of hiding and was now to be pursued
in the open.
Arskane
had forged ahead. And because the big man seemed to know just what he was going
to do next Fors accepted his lead. They came into a corner of the parapet
between the east and south sides of the roof. Lura had already gone over it;
she called softly from below.
"Now
we must trust to luck, comrade — and to the favor of Fortune. Slip over quickly
on the same instant that I move. It may be that if we give them two targets they
will not be able to choose either. Are you ready?"
"Yes!"
"Then — go!"
Fors
reached up and caught the top of the parapet at the same moment Arskane moved.
Together their bodies went over and they let themselves roll across the second
roof, painfully shedding some skin in the process. Here the surface was not
clear. Blocks, fallen from a taller building beyond, made a barrier which
Arskane greeted with an exclamation of satisfaction. Both gained the protection
of the rubble and squatted down to listen. The pipe of the whistle sounded
again, imperatively. Arskane rubbed dust off his hands.
"Beyond here lies another street, and
below is the river valley which you crossed — "
Fors
nodded. He, too, could remember what they had seen from the tower. The river valley
made a curve, cutting due east at this point. He shut his eyes for an instant
the better to visualize the old train yards, the clustered buildings —
"Well," Arskane shook himself,
"if we give them more time they will be better able to greet us in a
manner we shall not relish. Therefore, we must keep on the move. Now that they
expect to find us on roof tops it might be wise to seek the street level — "
"See
here." Fors had been examining the rubbish about them. "This did not
fall from above." He dug into the pile of rubble. Set in the roof was a
slanted door. Arskane pounced upon it joyfully.
They
dug as furiously as ground squirrels in autumn until they cleared it. Then they
tugged it open and looked down into a musty darkness from which old evil odors
arose. There were stairs, almost ladder steep. They used them.
Long hallways and more stairs. Although all three walked with the silence
of forest hunters their passing sent small thuds and old sighings through the
deserted building. Now and again they stopped to listen. But Lura manifested no
signs of uneasiness and Fors could hear nothing beyond the fall of plaster, the
shifting of old boards their tread had disturbed.
"Wait!"
He caught Arskane as the latter started down the last flight of stairs. Fors'
swinging hand had struck lightly against a door in the wall and something in
the hollow sound which had followed that blow seemed promising. He opened the
door. They stepped out on a kind of ledge above a wide cavern of a place.
"By the Great Horned Lizard!" Arskane was shaken and Fors gripped the rail
which framed the platform.
They looked down into what once must have
been a storage place for the heavy trucks which the Old Ones had used for
transportation of goods. Ten — fifteen of the monsters stood in line waiting
for the masters who were long gone. And several were of the sealed engine type
which had been the last invention of the Old Ones. These appeared un-blighted
by time, still perfect and ready for use.
One of them had its nose almost against a
wide closed door. A door, decided Fors instantly, which must give upon the
street. A wild idea began to flower in his mind. He turned to Arskane.
"There was a road leading down into the
valley of the trains — a road which was mostly steep slope —
"
"True — "
"See that machine — the one by the gate?
If we could start it out it would roll down that street and nothing could stop
it!"
Arskane licked his lips. "The machine is
probably dead. Its motor would not run and we could not push it — "
"We might not need to push. And do not
be sure that the motor would not serve us. Jarl of the Star Men once piloted a
sealed motor car a full quarter of a mile before it died again. If this would
only bring us to the top of the slope it would be enough. At least we can try..It would be a safe and easy way to gain the valley — "
"As
you say — we can try!" Arskane bounded down the steps and headed for the
truck.
The
door to the driver's seat hung open as if to welcome them. Fors slid across the
disintegrating pad to sit behind the controls — just as if he were one of the
Old Ones who had used this marvel as a matter of course.
Arskane
crowded in beside him and was leaning forward to examine the rows of dials and
buttons confronting them. He touched one.
"This locks the wheels
— "
"How do you
know?"
"We
have a man of learning in the tribe. He has taken apart many of the old
machines to learn the secret of their fashioning. Only we have no longer the
fuel to run them and so they are of no use to us. But from Unger I have learned
something concerning their powers."
Fors
yielded his place, not without some reluctance, and watched Arskane delicately
test the controls. At last the southerner stamped with his foot upon a
floor-set button and what they had believed in their hearts would never happen,
did. The ancient engine came to life. The sealed engine was not dead!
"The door!" Arskane's face was white beneath its brown stain, he clung to the wheel with real fear of the
terrifying power that was throbbing under him.
Fors
leaped out of the cab and dashed for the big door He pulled down on the counter
bar and it gave so that he could push back the ponderous barrier. He looked out
upon a street clear of wrecks. A glance up slope told him why. At the head —
only a few feet back from the door — one of the great trucks had slewed
sidewise, its nose smashed into the wall of a building on the opposite side —
an effective barricade. He did not linger after that fleeting examination.
Behind, the sound of the dying engine was horrible — grating and grinding out
its last few seconds of life.
Fors
gained the cabin, bringing Lura in with him. They crouched together with
pounding hearts as Arskane fumbled with the wheel. But the last spurt of power
set the big truck moving, rubber shredding away from the remains of the tires
as they turned. The engine faltered and died as they rolled out of the garage
and reached the rise, but the momentum carried on and they sped faster and
faster down the steep hill to the valley below.
Only
pure luck had given them that clear street ahead. Had it not been for the
smashed truck corking the street at its head they might have crashed into
wreckage which would have killed them all. Arskane
fought the wheel, steering only by instinct, and brought them along the
pavement at a pace which grew ever wilder as the truck gained speed.
Twice
Fors closed his eyes, only to force them open again. His hands were buried deep
in the fur of the squalling Lura who wanted none of this form of travel. But
the truck went on and on and they were at last on level land, bumping over the
rusted tracks of the railroad. The truck slowed, and at last it stopped as it
buried its front bumper in a heap of coal.
For
a moment the three simply remained where they were, shaken and weak. Then they
roused enough to tumble out. Arskane laughed, but his voice was going up scale
as he said:
"If anyone followed us they must be well
behind now. And we must labor so that such a distance grows even wider."
They took advantage of any cover afforded by
the wreckage in the train yards, and struck south at a trotting pace until, at
last, the valley of the river looped away again from the southern path they had
set themselves. Then they climbed the slope and went on across the tree-grown
ruins of the city outskirts.
The sun was overhead, hot
on head and shoulders. There was a fishy scent in the breeze which blew inland
from the lake. Arskane sniffed it loudly.
"Rain,"
was his verdict, "and we could not hope for better fortune. It will cover
our trail — "
But
the Beast Things would not follow any prey out of a city — or
would they? They must be ranging farther afield now — there was that track left
by the deer hunter. And Fors' father had been brought down by a pack, not
within a city but in the fringes of the true forest land. It was not well to
count themselves safe merely because they were drawing
out of the ruined area.
"At
least we travel without the weight of baggage," Arskane observed some
time later as they paused to rest and drink the thick juice with which Fors had
filled the canteen that morning.
Fors
thought regretfully of the mare and the plunder which she had carried only
yesterday. Not much remained now to prove his story — just the two rings on his
fingers, and the few small things in the Star pouch. But he had the map and his
travel journal to turn out before the Council when he had that accounting with
the Eyrie which he thirsted for.
Arskane
had even less than the mountaineer. The museum club in his hand was the only
weapon he still had left except his belt knife. In his pouch he carried flint
and steel, two fishhooks and a line wound about them.
"If
we but had the drum," he regretted. "Were that in my hand we should
even now be talking with my people. Without signals it will be a chancy matter
to find them — unless we cross the trail of another scout."
"Come with me — to the
Eyrie!" Fors said impulsively.
"When you told me your story, comrade,
did you not say that you fled your tribe? Will they be quicker to welcome you
back with a stranger at your heels? This is a world in which hate lives yet.
Let me tell you of my own people — this is a story of the old, old days. The
flying men who founded my tribe were born with dark skins — and so they had in
their day endured much from those born of fairer races. We are a people of
peace but there is an ancient hurt behind us and sometimes it stirs in our
memories to poison with bitterness.
"As we moved north we strove to make
friends with the Plainspeople — three times that I have knowledge of did we
send heralds unto them. And each time were we greeted
by a flight of war arrows. So now we have hardened our hearts and we stand for
ourselves if the need be. Can you promise that those of the mountains will hold
out friendly hands if we seek them out?"
Hot
blood stung Fors' cheeks. He was afraid that he knew the answer to that
question. Strangers were enemies — that was the old, old ruling. Yet why should
it be so? This land was wide and rich and men were few. Surely there was enough
of it for all — it went on and on to the sea. And in the old days men had
fashioned ships and sailed across seas to other wide lands.
He
said as much aloud and Arskane gave hearty and swift agreement.
"You
reason with straight thoughts, comrade. Why should there be distrust between
the twain of us because our skin differs in color and our tongues sound
different to the ear? My people live by tilling the land, they plant seed and
food grows from it, they herd sheep from which comes
the wool to weave our wind cloaks and night coverings. We make jars and pots
from clay and fire them into stone hardness, working with our hands and
delighting in it. The Plainspeople are hunters, they have tamed horses and run
the herds of cattle — they love to keep ever moving — to know far trails. And
your people — ?"
Fors
screwed his eyes against the sun. "My people? We
are but a small tribe of few clans and often in the winter we needs must go
lean and hungry for the mountains are a hard country. But above all do we iove knowledge, we live to loot the ruins, to try to
understand and relearn the things which made the Old Ones great in their time.
Our medicine men fight against the ills of the bodies, our teachers and Star
Men against the ignorance of the mind — "
"And yet these same people who fight
ignorance have made of you a wandering one because you differ from them — "
For
the second time Fors' skin burned red. "I am mutant. And mutant stock is
not to be trusted. The — the Beast
Things
are also mutant —" He could not choke out more
than that.
"Lura is mutant also — "
Fors blinked. The four quiet words of that
answer meant more than just a statement of fact. The tenseness went out of him.
He was warm, and not with shame, nor with the sun
which was beating down on him. It was a good warmness he had not remembered
feeling before — ever.
Arskane
propped his chin on his hand and stared out over the tangle of bush and vine.
"It seems to me," he said slowly, "that we are like the parts of
one body. My people are the busy hands, fashioning things by which life may be
made easier and more beautiful. The Plainspeople are the restless, hurrying
feet, ever itching for new trails and the strange things which might lie beyond
the sunrise and the sunset. And your clan is the head, thinking, remembering, planning for feet and hands. Together —
"
"Together," Fors breathed, "we
would make such a nation as this land has not seen since the days of the Old
Ones!"
"No,
not a nation such as the Old Ones knew!" Arskane's answer was sharp. 'They
were not one body — for they knew war. And out of that warfare came what is today.
If the body grows together again it must be because each part, knowing its own
worth and taking pride in it, recognizes also the worth of the other two. And
color of skin, or eyes, or the customs of a man's tribe must mean no more to
strangers when meeting than the dust they wash from their hands before they
take meat. We must come to one another free of such dust — or it will rise to
blind our eyes and what the Old Ones started will continue to live for ever and
ever to poison the earth."
"If that could only be
— "
"Brother," for the first time
Arskane used the more intimate word to Fors, "my people believe that all
the actions in this life have behind them some guiding power. And it seems to
me that we two were brought to this place so that we might meet thus. And from
our meeting perhaps there will be born something stronger and mightier that
what we have known before. But now we linger here too long, death may still
sniff at our heels. And it is not to my mind that we shall be turned from the path
marked out for us."
Something in the solemn tones of the big
man's voice reached into Fors. He had never had a real friend,
his alien blood had set him too far apart from the other boys of the Eyrie. And
his relationship with his father had been that of pupil with teacher. But he
knew now that he would never willingly let this dark-skinned warrior go out of
his life again, and that where Arskane chose to go, there he would follow.
When
the sun was almost overhead they were in a wilderness of trees where it was
necessary to go slowly to avoid gaping cellar holes and lengths of moldering
beams. But in this maze Lura picked up the trail of a wild heifer and within
the hour they had brought it down and were broiling fresh meat. With enough for
perhaps two more meals packed in the raw hide they went on, Fors' small compass
their guide.
Abruptly
they came out on the edge of the old place of flying men. So abruptly they were
almost shocked into dodging back into the screen of trees when they first saw
what lay there.
Both
were familiar with the pictures of such machines. But here they were real,
standing in ordered rows — some of them. And the rest were piled in battered
confusion, torn and rent or half engulfed in shell holes.
"Planes!" Arskane's eyes gleamed. "The sky-riding
planes of my fathers' fathers! Before we fled the shaking of the mountains we
went to look our last upon the ones which brought the first men of our clan to
that land — and they were like unto some of these. But here is a whole field of
planes!"
"These
were struck dead before they reached the sky," Fors pointed out. A queer
feeling of excitement burned inside him. The ground machines, even the truck
which had helped them out of the city, never moved him so. These winged
monsters — how great — how very great in knowledge must the Old Ones have
been! That they could ride among the clouds in these — where now their sons
must crawl upon the ground! Hardly knowing what he did Fors ventured out and
drew his hand sadly along the body of the nearest plane. He was so small beside
it — a whole family clan might have once ridden in its belly —
"It was with such as these that the Old
Ones sowed death over the world — "
"But
to ride in the clouds," Fors refused Arskane's somber mood, "above
the earth — They must have been godlike — the Old
Ones!"
"Say
rather devil-like! See — " Arskane took him by the arm and led him between
the two orderly rows on the edge of the field to look at the series of ragged,
ugly craters which made a churned mess of the center of the airport.
"Death came thus from the air, and men dropped that death willingly upon
their fellows. Let us remember that, brother."
They
passed around the wreckage, following the line of unwrecked planes until their
way led to a building. There were many bones here. Many men had died trying to
get the machines into the air — too late.
When
they reached the building, both turned and looked back at the path of
destruction and the two lines of curiously untouched bombers still waiting. The
sky they would never again travel was clear and blue with small, clean-cut
white clouds drifting across it in patterns. In the west other and darker
clouds were gathering. A storm was in the making.
"This,"
Arskane pointed down the devastated field, "must never happen again. No
matter what heights our sons rise to — we must not tear the earth against each
other — Do you agree, brother?"
Fors
met those dark burning eyes squarely. "It is agreed. And what I can do,
that I shall. But — where men once flew they must fly again! That
also we must swear to!"
9.
INTO THE BLOW-UP LAND
Fors
hunched over the table, leaning on his elbows, hardly daring to breathe lest
the precious cloth-backed squares he was studying crumble into powdery dust.
Maps — such a wealth of maps he had never dreamed of. He could put finger tip
to the point of blue which was the edge of the great lake — and from that he
could travel across — straight to the a-t-l-a-n-t-i-c
Ocean. Why, that was the
fabulous sea! He looked up impatiently as Arskane came into this treasure room.
"We are here — right
here!"
"And here we are like to stay forever if
we do not bestir ourselves — "
Fors straightened up.
"What — ?"
"I
have but come from the tower at the end of this building. Something
alive moves at the far end of the field of machines. It is a shadow but
it slides with too much purpose to be overlooked by a cautious — "
"A deer," began
Fors, knowing that it was not.
Arskane
gave a short bark of humor-lacking laughter. "Does a deer creep upon its
belly and spy around corners, brother? No, I think that our friends from the
city have found us out at last. And I do not like being caught in this place — no, I do not like that at all!"
Fors
left the maps regretfully. How Jarl would have delighted in them. But to
attempt to move them would be to destroy them and they would have to remain —
as they had through the countless years. He picked up his quiver and checked
the remaining arrows. Only ten left. And when they were gone he would have only
short sword and hunting knife —
Arskane
must have picked that thought right out of his companion's mind for now he was
nodding. "Come." He went back to the flight of stairs which led them
in a spiral up and up until they stood in a place that had once been completely
walled with glass. "See there — and what do you make of that?"
The southerner stabbed a finger southeast.
Fors picked out a queer scar in the vegetation there, a wide wedge of land
where nothing grew. Under the sun the soil had a strange metallic gleam. He had
seen the raw rocks of mountain gorges and the cleared land where the Old Ones
had once had concrete surfaces, but this was different. In a land where trees
and grass had reclaimed their own nothing green encroached upon the wedge.
"Desert — "
was all he could suggest doubtfully. But there should be no deserts in this
section of the country.
"That it is not! Remember, I am desert
born and that is no natural wasteland such as I have ever known. It is
something the like of which I have not stumbled upon in all my journeying!"
"Hush!" Fors' head snapped around.
He was sure of that sound, the distant scrape of metal against metal. His eyes
ran along the lines of the silent machines. And there was a flicker of movement
halfway down the second line!
He
screened his eyes against the sun, crowding up to the frame of the vanished
glass. Under the shadow of the spreading wing of a plane squatted a gray-black
blot. And it was sniffing the ground!
His
whisper hardly rose above the rasp of Arskane's quick breathing. "Only one
— "
"No. Look within the
curve of that bush — to the right — "
Yes,
the southerner was right. Against the green, one could see the bestial head.
The Beast Things almost always hunted as a pack. It was too much to hope that
this time they did not. Fors' hand dropped to his sword hilt.
"We must go!"
Arskane's
sandals already thudded on the stairs. But before he left the tower Fors saw
that gray thing dart forward from under the plane. And two more such lumps
detached themselves from the covering of trees along the ruined runway, taking
cover among the machines. The pack was closing in.
"We
must keep to the open," Arskane warned. "If we can stay ahead and not
allow them to corner us we shall have a fair chance."
There
was another door out of the building, one which gave upon the other half of the
field. Here was a maze of tangled wreckage. Shell holes pocked the runways;
machines and defense guns had been blasted too. They swung around the
sky-pointing muzzle of an anti-aircraft gun. And in the same instant the air
was rent with a horrible screech, answered by Lura's snarl of rage. A thrashing
tangle of fighting cat and her prey rolled out almost under their feet.
Arskane
swung his club with a sort of detached science. He struck down, hard. Thin,
bone-gray arms went wide and limp and Lura was clawing a dead body. A missile
from the wreckage grazed Fors' head sending him spinning against the gun. He
stumbled over the body from which came a filthy stench. Then Arskane jerked him
to his feet and pulled him under the up-ended nose of a plane.
Still
shaking his ringing head Fors allowed his companion to guide him as they turned
and dodged. Once he heard the ring of metal as Beast Thing dart struck. Arskane
pushed him to the left, the momentum of the southerner's shove carrying both of
them into cover.
"Driving
us —" Arskane panted. "They herd us like deer —
"
Fors tried to struggle free
of the other's prisoning hand.
"Lura
— ahead — " In spite of the blow which had rocked
him he caught the cat's message. "There the way lies clear — "
Arskane
did not seem disposed to leave cover but Fors tore free and wriggled through an
opening in the churned earth and broken machines. It seemed to last hours, that
crawling, twisting race with death. But in the end they came out on the edge of
that queer scar in the earth which they had sighted from the tower. And there
Lura crouched, her lips lifted in a snarl, her tail sweeping steadily to
signify her rage.
"Down
that gully — quick •— " Arskane was into the notch before he had finished
speaking.
The strange earth crunched under Fors' boots.
He took the only way left to freedom. And Lura, still giving low voice to her
dismay, swept by him.
Here
there was not even moss and the rocky outcrops had a glassy glaze. Fors shrank
from touching anything with his bare flesh. The sounds of pursuit were gone
though. It was too quiet here. He realized suddenly that what his ears missed
was the ever-present sound of insects which had been with them in the
vegetation of the healthy world.
This
country they had entered blindly was alien, with no familiar green and brown to
meet the eye, no homely sounds for the reassurance of the ear. Arskane had
paused and as Fors caught up he asked the question which was on his tongue tip.
"What is this
place?"
But
the southerner countered with a question of his own. "What have you been
told of the Blow-Up Lands?"
"Blow-Up
Lands?"
Fors tried to remember the few scanty references to such in the records of the
Eyrie. Blow-Up Lands — where atom bombs had struck to bite into the earth's
crust, where death had entered so deeply that generations must pass before man
could go that way again —
His
mouth opened and then shut quickly. He did not have to ask his question again.
He knew — and the chill horror of that knowing was worse than a Beast Thing
dart striking into his flesh. No wonder there had been no
pursuit. Even the mutant Beast Things knew better than to venture here!
"We
must go back — " he half whispered, already
knowing that they could not.
"Go back to certain death? No, brother,
and already it is too late. If the old tales be true we are even now walking
dead men with the seeds of the burning sickness in us. Instead — if we go on —
there is a chance of getting through — "
"Perhaps more than a chance." Fors' first horror faded as he recalled an
old argument long ago worn to rags by the men of the Eyrie. "Tell me, Arskane, in the early years after the Blow-Up did the people
of your tribe suffer from the radiation sickness?"
The big man's straight brows drew together.
"Yes. There was a death year. All but ten of the clan died within three
months. And the rest sickened and were ever weakly. It was not until a
generation later that we grew strong again."
"So
was it also with those of the Eyrie. Men of my clan who have studied the
ancient books say that because of this sickness we are now different from the
Old Ones who gave us birth. And perhaps because of that difference we may
venture unharmed where death would have struck them down."
"But this reasoning
has not yet been put to the proof?"
Fors
shrugged. "Now it is. And we shall see if it is correct. I know that I am
mutant."
"While I am like the others of my tribe. But that is not saying that they are the
same as the Old Ones. Well, whether it be what we hope
or not, we are set on this path. And there is truly death, and an unpleasant
one, behind us. In the meantime — that is a storm coming. We had best find shelter, this is no land to blunder across in the
dark!"
It was hard to keep one's footing on the
greasy surface and Fors guessed that if it were wet it would be worse than sand
to plow through. They held to the sides of the narrow valleys which laced the
country, looking for a cave or overhang which would afford the slightest hint
of shelter.
The
dark clouds made a sullen gray mass and a premature twilight. A bad night to go without a fire — in the open of the contaminated
land under a dripping sky.
A
jagged flash of purple lightning cracked across the heavens and both of them
shielded their eyes as it struck not far from where they stood. The rumble of
the thunder which followed almost split their ear drums. Then the rain came in
a heavy smothering curtain to close them in. They huddled together, miserable,
the three of them against the side of a narrow valley, cowering as the
lightning struck again and again and the water rose in a stream down the center
of the gully, washing the soil from the glassy rocks. Only once did Fors move.
He unhooked his canteen and pulled at Arskane's belt flask until the big man
gave it to him. These he set out in the steady downpour. The water which ran by
his feet was contaminated but the rain which had not yet touched soil or rock
might be drinkable later.
Lura, Fors decided, must be the most unhappy of the three. The rain ran from their smooth
skin and was not much held by their rags of clothing. But her fur was matted by
it and it would take hours of licking with her tongue before it was in order
again. However, she did not voice her disapproval of life as she usually did.
Since they had crossed into the atom-blasted land she had not given tongue at
all. On impulse Fors tried now to catch her thoughts. He had been able to do
that in the past — just enough times to be sure that she could communicate when
she wished. But now he met only a blank. Lura's wet fur pressed against him
now, but Lura herself had gone.
And
then he realized with a start that she was listening, listening so intently
that her body was now only one big organ for the trapping of sound. Why?
He
rested his forehead on his arms where he had crossed them on his hunched knees.
Deliberately he set about shutting out the sounds around him — the drum of the
rain,
Arskane's breathing, the gurgle of the water threading by just beyond
their toes.
Luckily the thunder had stopped. He was conscious of the pounding of his own
blood in his ears, of the hiss of his own breath. He shut them out, slowly, as
thoroughly as he could. This was a trick he had tried before but never with
such compulsion on him. It was very necessary now that he hear — and that warning might have come either from Lura or some depth within
him. He concentrated to shut out even the drive of that. urgency
— for it too was a danger.
There
was a faint plopping sound. His mind considered it briefly and rejected it for
what it was — the toppling of earth undercut by the storm-born stream. He
pushed the boundaries of his hearing farther away. Then, even as a strange dizziness began to close in, he heard it — a sound which was not
born of the wind and the rain. Lura moved, rising to her feet. Now she turned
and looked at him as he raised his head to meet her eyes.
"What
— ?" Arskane stirred uneasily, staring from one
to the other.
Fors
almost laughed at the blank bewilderment in the big man's eyes.
The
dizziness which had come from his concentration was receding fast. His eyes
adjusted to the night and the shadows. He got to his feet and put aside bow and
quiver, keeping only the belt with his sword and knife. Arskane put out a protesting hand which he eluded.
"There
is something back there. It is important that I see it. Wait here — "
But
Arskane was struggling up too. Fors saw his mouth twist with pain as he
inadvertently put weight upon his left arm. The rain must have got to the
healing wound. And seeing that, the mountaineer shook his
head.
"Listen
— I am mutant — you have never asked in what manner I differ. But it is this, I
can see in the dark — even this night is little different from the twilight for
me. And my ears are close to Lura's in keenness. Now is the hour when my
difference will serve us. Lura!" He swung around
and looked for a second time deep into those startlingly blue eyes. "Here
will you stay — with our brother. Him will you guard — as you would me!"
She
shifted her weight from one front paw to another, standing up against his will
in the recesses of her devious mind, refusing him. But he persisted. He knew
her stubborn freedom and the will for it which was born into her kind. They
called no man master and they went their own way always. But Lura had chosen
him, and because he had no friends among his own breed they had been very
close, perhaps closer than any of the Eyrie had been with the furred hunters
before. Fors did not know how much she would yield to his will but this was a
time when he must set himself against her. To leave Arskane here alone,
handicapped by his wound and his lack of night sight, would be worse than
folly. And the big man could not go with him. And the sound — that must be
investigated!
Lura's
head came up. Fors reached down his hand and felt the wetness of her fur as she
rubbed her jaw along his fist in her most intimate caress. He had a moment of
pure happiness at her acceptance of his wish. His fingers scratched behind
her ears lovingly.
"Stay here," he told them both.
"I shall return as quickly as I may. But we must know what lies there — "
Before
he finished that sentence he was off, not giving either of them time to protest
again, knowing that the rain and the darkness would hide him from Arskane within
a few feet and that Lura would be on guard until his return.
Fors
slipped and stumbled, splashing through small pools, following the route he had
memorized as they came. The rain was slacking, it
stopped entirely as he reached the top of a pinnacle of rock and looked out
again over the old airport. He could distinguish the bombed section and the
building where they had found the maps. But he was more interested in what was
directly below.
There
was no fire — although his mind kept insisting that there should be one, for it
was plain that he was spying upon a council. The circle of
hunched figures bore an uncanny and, to him, unwholesome resemblance to the
meetings of the elders in the Eyrie. The Things were squatting so that
their bodies were only blotches — for that he was glad. Somehow he had no
desire to see them more clearly. But one pranced and droned in the center of
that circle, and the sounds it uttered were what had drawn Fors there.
He could distinguish gutturals which must be
words, but they had no meaning for him. Arskane's tongue and his own had once
had a common base and it had not been difficult to learn each other's speech.
But this growling did not sound as if it were shaped by either lips or brain which were human.
What
the leader urged he could not know, but what they might do as a result of that
urging was important. The Beast Things were growing bolder with the years. At
first they had never ventured beyond the edges of the cities. But now they,
would follow a trail beyond the ruins and perhaps they were sending scouts into
the open country. They were a menace to the remaining humans —
The
leader ended his or its speech abruptly. Now its too
thin body turned and it pointed to the wasteland where Fors crouched, almost as
if it had sighted the hidden watcher. The gesture was answered by a growl from
its companions. One or two got to their feet and padded to the edge of the
Blow-Up ground where their heads sank as they sniffed warily at the polluted
soil. But it did not take them long to make up their minds. For
they were gathering up their bundles of darts and forming into a sort of crude
marching line.
Fors
stayed just long enough to be sure that they were indeed coming, that whatever
taboo had held them back no longer operated. Then he fled, skimming lightly at
his sure woods' pace, back to where he had left Lura and Arskane. The Beast
Things did not seem too cheerful about their venture and their starting pace
was slow. They walked as if they expected to find traps under their feet. There
was hope that the pursued could keep ahead of them.
The mountaineer found Arskane impatient, Lura crouched on an outcrop, her eyes glowing in
the dark. Fors grabbed up the equipment he had discarded as he gasped out his
news.
"I have been thinking," Arskane's
slower but deeper voice cut through his report. "We do not understand the
weapons of the Old Ones, those which could make a desert such as this. Was
there only one bomb which fell here, or were there
more? But the heart of such a place would be more dangerous than its lip. If
we head straight across we may be going to that death tradition promises for
those who invade the 'blue' places. But if we circle we may —
"
"There
is the matter of time. I tell you trackers run on our heels now."
"Yes,
and they track by scent. There is at hand an answer to that."
Arskane's
moccasins plowed through a pool, sending up spray. Fors understood. The thread
of stream might be their salvation after all. But, since the rain had ceased,
the water was shrinking rapidly in volume, almost as if the rocky soil over
which it ran was a sponge to suck it up.
Fors
started ahead, his night sight picking out the pitfalls and bad footing for
both of them. Sometimes it was only his hand which kept Arskane on his feet.
The big man stumbled stubbornly on, his breath torn out of him in harsh gasps.
Fors knew from the grip of cramp in his own leg muscles what tormented the
other. But they must gain ground — gain it while the pursuers, still suspicious
of the Blow-Up Land, traveled slowly.
Then,
long after, Arskane fell and, although Fors allowed them both a rest, he could
not get to his feet again. His head slumped forward on his chest and Fors saw
that he was either unconscious or asleep, his mouth twisted with pain. But what
was worse were the seeping stains on the bandage which
still bound the wounded shoulder.
Fors
pressed the palms of his hands against his burning eyes. He tried to think back
— was it only last night they had slept in the city tower? It seemed a week
behind them. They could not keep on at this rate, that
was certain. Now that he relaxed against a sandy bank he was afraid he could
not make the effort to get up again. He must sleep. And there was the matter of
food also. How large was this Blow-Up desert? What if they must go on and on
across it — maybe for days?
But
they would be dead before days passed. Would it be better to choose a likely
place now and make a last stand against the Beast Things? He dug his eyes
again. He dared not sleep now. Then he remembered Lura.
She lay flat on a ridge a
little above them, licking one paw,
pausing now
and then to prick her ears and listen. Lura would nap too, but in her own
fashion, and nothing could come to attack while she watched. His head fell back
against Arskane's limp arm and he slept.
10. CAPTURED!
The
glare of sun reflected from the grease-slick surface of the bare rocks made
Fors' eyes ache. It was hard to keep plodding steadily along when raw hunger
gnawed at one's middle. But they had seen no game in this weird waste. And at
the very worst he was not suffering as Arskane was. The southerner mumbled
unintelligibly, his eyes were glazed, and it was necessary to lead him by the
hand as if he were a tired child. The red stain on his bandaged shoulder was
crusted and dried — at least he no longer lost blood he could ill afford to
spare.
Where
was the end of the Blow-Up country? If they had not traveled in circles they
must have covered miles of its knife-edged valleys and rocky plateaus. And yet,
still facing them at the top of each rise, was only more and more of the sick
earth.
"Water
—" Arskane's swollen tongue pushed across cracked lips.
All
the abundance of yesterday's flood had vanished, absorbed
in the soil as if it had never existed. Fors steadied the big man against a
rock and reached for his canteen. He did it slowly, trying to keep his hand
from shaking. Not one precious drop must be spilled!
It
was Arskane who did that. His eyes suddenly focused on the canteen and he
grabbed for it. Water splashed over his hand and gathered in a depression of
the stone. Fors looked at it longingly, but he still dared not swallow the
fluid which had touched the tainted land here.
He allowed Arskane two swallows and then took
the canteen away by force. Luckily the big man's strength had ebbed so that he
could control him. As Fors fastened the canteen onto his belt he glanced at the
ground. What he saw there kept him still and staring.
From
out of the shadow cast by a rock something was moving toward the spilled water.
It was dark green, mottled with reddish-yellow patches, and man's age-long
distrust of a reptile almost made him send his boot crashing down on it. But in
time he saw that it was not a snake that writhed across the ground, it was the
long fleshy stem of a plant. Its flattened end wavered through the air and fell
upon the water drops, arching over the moisture. Now the rest of the thing
moved out to drink and Fors saw the three stiff leaves encircling a tall
middle spike which bore a red bulb. The plant drank and the suckered stem
lifted to curl back against the leaves as the whole fantastic growth withdrew
into the shade, leaving the watcher to wonder if thirst and hunger had played
tricks with his eyes. Only on the stone was a damp mark covering the hollow
where the water had been.
So
there was life here — even if it were an alien life. Somehow Fors was
heartened by that glimpse of the plant. It was true that he was used to
vegetation which remained rooted. But in a slice of land as strange as this men might well stay in place while the plants walked
abroad. He laughed at that — it seemed a very witty and enlightening thought
and he repeated it proudly to Arskane as they moved on. But the southerner
answered only with a mumble.
The
journey went on with the quality of a nightmare. Fors managed to keep going,
pulling Arskane to his feet again and again, heading
on to landmarks he established ahead. It was easier to keep moving if one
picked out a rock or one of the slippery earth dunes and held to it as a guide.
Then, when that point was achieved, there was always another ahead to fix on in
the same manner.
He was sometimes aware of movement in the
shadows which lay blue-black under rocks and ledges. Whether colonies of the
water plants lurked there or other inhabitants of this hell who spied upon
travelers, he neither knew nor cared. All that mattered was to keep going and
hope that sometime when they topped one of the ridges they would sight the
healthy green of their own world.
Now
and then Lura came into sight, her once smooth fur rough and matted,
her flanks shrunken and thin. Sometimes she would pad beside them for a few
feet and then melt away on her own road, watchful and ready. If anything had
found their back trail and was following it and them, it had not yet come
within striking distance.
It
was becoming almost impossible to keep Arskane going. Twice he would have fallen heavily full length if Fors had not steadied him, and
the second time the collapse bore the mountaineer to his knees. It was then
that he was reckless with the water, hoping to spur his companion on. And he
did get the southerner to his feet. But now the canteen was empty.
They
were struggling through a maze of knife-narrow ravines. But these led in the
general direction they had chosen and they followed them. Fors was bending
almost double under Arskane's weight when he caught a glimpse of something
which brought hope and life back into him in one great surge. Only it was
almost twilight and his eyes might have played him a trick —
No, he had been right! Those were tree tops
ahead and never had the sight of branches against an evening sky seemed so
beautiful! Fors pulled Arskane's arm about his shoulders, dropped his bow,
quiver and the Star pouch, and made that last dash.
After
what seemed like days, weeks, later he lay face down in soft and natural earth,
the good smell of leaf mold dank in his nostrils. And he heard the swish of
rising wind through leaves which were true and green and clean. At last he
raised his head. Arskane sprawled beyond. He had turned over on his back and
his eyes were closed, but he was asleep. Fors sighed.
He
must go back and recover the bow and the pouch before night closed in. But the
struggle of getting to his feet made him grit his
teeth. Odd — for the first time he noticed Lura was nowhere about. Hunting —
maybe — But he must get that pouch! It was all the proof remaining that he had
succeeded.
His
feet dragged and his head was dizzy and queer. But he could keep to the line of
footprints they had made and it was an easy guide back. He wavered on.
The walls of the first gully closed about
him. When he glanced back he could see the trees but not where Arskane lay. It
was growing darker — he must hurry.
A
splitting pain broke in his head. He knew that he was falling and tried to
throw out his hands to break that fall. But he only dimly felt the shock when
he hit the ground. Instead he whirled out into a blackness which was complete.
First
he was conscious of his body being jerked roughly, roughly enough to send pain
shooting through it to the bursting agony in his head. Then he came out of the
blackness, trying weakly to hold his thoughts together. The end to that fight
came when he fell again, struck painfully against solid rock and rolled. A kick
in the ribs brought him to a racking stop. He must have been carried and
thrown down. And the sickening stench in his nostrils told him by whom. He lay
limply, not daring to open his eyes. As long as they deemed him senseless he
might be safe for a while.
He
was bound, his wrists behind the small of his back, his ankles together.
Already his hands were numb and the bonds had cut his flesh. He could only
listen and try to guess at what his captors were doing. They appeared to be
settling down. He heard the grunt one gave, the scratching of nails across
tough hide. Then, through rank body smell, he caught the scent of smoke and
dared to peek beneath half-open lids.
Yes,
they had kindled a fire, a fire which they were feeding with handfuls of a
coarse grass they pulled up from where it grew along the sides of the valley.
One came into the full light of the flames and flung down an armload of the
water plants, still alive enough to attempt to writhe away from the heat.
But
these were speedily seized upon and the red bulbs at their centers squeezed
between yellowed fangs with snorts of satisfaction. Sucked dry, the plants were
tossed on the fire. Fors swallowed with a bruised throat — his turn next?
But one of the Beast Things turned with
inhuman swiftness and sprang to the wall behind it, clutching up something
which wriggled and squeaked shrilly. It came back holding a squirming captive
in each paw and batted the small bodies against a convenient rock until they
were limp and still. The hunter's success aroused the envy of its fellows and they
all pawed among the rocks of the valley, a few successfully.
Fors heard swift movement in the loose rocks
somewhere behind him, as if small, agile things were speeding away to safety.
The slowest of the hunters had returned to the fire grumbling and empty-handed.
When the catch was laid out on the stone Fors saw it clearly for the first time
— lizards! They resembled those he had seen all his life hiding among rocky
places — and yet there was something odd about the shape of the heads — But
before he could guess what it was the bodies had been slung over the flames to
broil.
There
were four Beast Things busy there. Either the whole clan had not after all
ventured into the Blow-Up or else the party had split. But these four were bad
enough. For the first time he was able to see them clearly.
They
were probably no taller than he but their emaciated bodies perched on stick
legs made them seem to top him. The grayish skin which was stretched tight over
their sharp bones was deep grained, almost scaly, and their bodies were bare
save for strips of filthy tattered stuff worn about their loins. But their
faces — !
Fors
forced himself to study, to study and file in memory what he saw. He tried to
view those masks of horror with detachment. In general outline they were
remotely human. But the eyes deep set in bone-rimmed pits, the elongated jaws
above which the nose was only two slits — jaws equipped with a hunting beast's
fangs — sharp fangs never fully covered by thin vestiges of lips — those were
not human. They were — he recoiled from the picture formed in his mind — they
were rats I
Fors
shivered and could not control the trembling of his aching body. Then he
tensed. Something was climbing down the slope behind him, not with the light
patter of the lizards but with the assured tread of one who knows he has
nothing to fear and is coming to meet friends. A moment later Fors felt a jar,
then soft fur rolled against him. The steps went on.
Lura lay beside him now, her eyes wild with
helpless rage, thongs about her paws, a loop holding her jaws tight together.
Her tail beat across him. But when her eyes met Fors' she relaxed slightly. He
could not move yet —
A fifth and sixth Beast
Thing joined the others by the fire and were now demanding their share of the
food. They were greeted with jeers until one growled some order and the meat was grudgingly shared. They ate in silence and when the
leader was done it wiped its clawed fingers perfunctorily across its thighs
before turning to examine some objects beside it.
Fors
recognized his bow. The leader twanged the string curiously, hitting its thumb.
With a savage growl it snapped the shaft between its fists and threw the broken
weapon into the fire. The quiver followed, but the Beast Thing appreciated the
worth of the steel arrowheads enough to break them off and put them aside.
When
the creature took up the last piece of plunder — the Star pouch — Fors bit deep
into his underlip. The precious contents were dumped out and went piece by
piece into the flames. Map, journal, everything, except the
small figures from the museum which seemed to fascinate the Beast Thing leader.
Having
so examined the spoil the creature came over to the captives. Fors lay limp,
willing each muscle to relax. Again a set of clawed toes, planted with
breath-taking force in his short ribs, rolled him away from Lura and out into
the full light of the fire. He struggled to keep under control his outrage and
nausea as foul paws stripped from him every rag and fumbled over his body. What
would come next, a knife, a blow strong enough to cave in his aching head? But strangely
he was left while Lura underwent the same sort of inspection.
Then the claws twisted a hold in the thong
which bound his wrists and he was pulled back to his former position, his back
raked raw by the gravel. Lura was writhing violently. She had not relished her
taste of the same treatment. Now she was tight against him, her thonged jaws
pushed into his shoulder.
After a while Fors slept. When he roused
again it was dim and gray with the false dawn. One of his
captors hunched by the fire nodding, now and then feeding the flames.
The rest lay curled in sodden sleep.
But
Fors' mind was alert now. And he heard again very clearly the faint sounds made
by the lizards passing among the rocks. Why should they
venture back into a danger zone, he wondered. And then he saw what ringed the
walls of the valley.
Terraces,
hundreds of them, some only a few inches, some of them several feet, wide, made
a continuous stairway up the walls of the gulch. Each had been laboriously
built up artificially, each was walled with pebbles
and small stones. And on these tiny fields grew the grass stuff with which his
captors fed their fire. They had stripped half the valley already. Even as he
noticed the terraces for the first time the fire tender pulled an armload from
its roots, denuding two more of the small fields.
Lizards
and terraces — did the lizards make them? And those black holes showing at
intervals along the topmost rim of the valley-—what were they? He was answered
by the sight of a scaled head — a sort of crest rising from its brow — which
appeared in one as jewel bright eyes inspected the valley and the invaders.
Fors,
now knowing what to look for, glanced around the rim of the valley. Heads! Heads popping in and out of the cave holes, appearing and
disappearing with reptilian speed around stones and over the edges of the
higher terraces. Always they moved almost without sound, so close to
the rock in coloring and outline that only one who suspected them might even
guess where and what they were.
If
last night the lizards, surprised by a superior force, had fled, now they were
back — with reinforcements. But at the best they stood only twenty inches high
against the iron strength and greater bulk of the Beast Things who could crack
their spines between thumb and forefinger. Why, an army would go down under the
stamping feet of the enemy. But the lizards did not seem to be overawed by the
odds against them.
Scouts advanced down the sides of the valley.
From time to time Fors sighted slender shapes shooting from one piece of cover
to another, always down toward the foe. Then he saw something else and could
hardly believe his eyes. A party of lizards was issuing boldly out of one of
the cave holes on the opposite side of the cut. They made no noise but neither
did they make any effort to conceal their march.
Instead
they pattered down to the fields which the Beast Things had not yet torn up.
They
walked on their hind legs in a curiously human stance and in the shorter front
paws they each carried something. Down into their tiny meadows they paraded and
set to work. Fors stared — they were reaping the grass, shearing off the blades
and bundling them into shocks. And they worked without a single glance at what
lay below, as if going about their business in the usual way.
Fors
wanted to get up and shout a warning to those busy workers — for them to get
away before the brutes by the fire sighted them. On the other hand, he was
aware that an army, grim and intent upon some purpose, had gathered silently at
the slope. Then he caught some glimmering of their plan and his head jerked up
to see the better.
Bait! The lizards reaping up there were to be
bait! Why, that was hard to believe. These — these little scaled creatures knew
perfectly well what they were about — they were the heroes of the clan who had
probably volunteered to man those terraces as bait. But even yet he did not
realize to what extent the lizard folk would go to save their land.
The
fire watcher yawned, belched, and stretched. Then it caught sight of the
activity above. It grinned, its stained fangs widely displayed, and, reaching
over, prodded one of the sleepers awake. At first the newly aroused one was inclined
to resent it, but when the farmers above were pointed out to it, it rubbed the
sleep from its eyes and proceeded to business.
From
the gravel at its feet it picked out a handful of walnut-sized stones. And
these both the Beast Things let fly with deadly accuracy. Two of the lizards
kicked out their lives in the fields. The resulting shout of triumph from the
hunters brought the whole camp awake.
But
surely the lizards could take to cover quicker than they did! Fors watched with
a queer sick feeling as one after another of the farmers failed to reach the
safety of the cave holes. Then he understood — they had never intended to
escape. They were giving their lives for the purpose of some plan they had
made.
He would not watch the pitiful carnage any
longer and he looked at the opposite side of the valley — just in time to see a
small round object shoot out of the side of the hill and fall close to the camp
fire. Another and another rattled down, as if brown hailstones were falling.
Once they landed among the stones and loose gravel it was almost impossible to
detect them. And if one had not rolled across a flat stone within touching
distance he would never have known what they were.
A small ball, fashioned maybe of clay, was all
he saw. But why were the small thorn points sticking out of its surface all the
way around? If it was meant to wound, why shoot it while the Beast Things were
all well away from the spot? Fors still puzzled over that as the victors came
back swinging limp bodies and proud of their killing.
In
spite of his revulsion Fors could not subdue the hunger pangs when the smell of
the roasting meat was heavy on the air. He could only faintly remember his last
meal — his stomach was one vast empty hollow. But neither did he want to
attract the attention of those who were now wolfing down the half-cooked flesh.
One of the Beast Things, while reaching for
another broiled lizard, gave a sudden exclamation and plucked something from
its arm, hurling it away with the force of annoyance. It had been pricked by
one of the lizard balls. But Fors could not see how that caused the victim any
more than momentary discomfort. He watched closely and witnessed two of the
creatures treading upon the thorn-studded globes. One of them did so when it
went for a fresh supply of the water plants. And when it returned it walked
slowly, stopping now and again to shake its narrow head and once to brush
vigorously before its eyes as if to clear some obstruction hanging there.
They
drank from the dying plants, sucked the last slender lizard bone clean, and got
to their feet. Then they turned their attention to the captives. This was it!
Fors grimaced. He had seen them impale and roast a screaming broken-legged
lizard —
The Beast Things circled around the captives.
There was a period of rough humor during which Fors was both kicked and
slapped. But they were apparently not going to kill him now. Instead the leader
stooped to slit the bonds about his ankles, the mountaineer's own knife in its
paw.
That
steel never bit into the hide. One of the brutes in the circle gave voice to a
deep roar and bit at its own arm. Flecks of white foam showed in the corners of
its jaws. It tore savagely at its own flesh and then started on an unsteady run
down the valley. With grunts of astonishment the others remained where they
were, watching their companion double up with a scream of anguish and fall into
the fire.
Poison!
Fors knew now the cleverness of the lizards, the reason for the sacrifice of
the gleaners. The thorn balls were poisoned! And there had to be time for the
poison to work. But — were they all infected?
In
the end it was the leader who lived long enough to almost reach the other end
of the valley, its paws scrabbling on the rock as it tried to drag its tortured
body out of that place of death. But it crashed back, moaned twice, and then
was as still as the rest.
Fors could hear the patter of lizard feet
before he noticed that the hillsides were alive with them, moving in a
red-brown cloud down toward the slain. He licked raw lips. Could he communicate
with them, get them to use that knife lying there to saw through his bonds? His
hands were numb and dead and so were his feet.
For
a long time he hesitated as the lizards crowded about the dead, their thin
whistling echoing up and down among the rocks. Then he ventured to make a
croaking sound which was all his dry throat and dryer mouth could shape.
His answer was a flash of movement as those
heads snapped around and cold hard eyes regarded him with detachment. He tried
again as Lura kicked for freedom to no purpose. Some of the lizards drew
together, their crested heads bent as they conferred. Then a party started
forward. Fors tried to lift himself. Then sheer horror caught at his nerves.
In each four-fingered paw they were carrying
something — a branch thick with thorns!
11. DRUMS SPEAK LOUDLY
"No!
Friend — I am friend —" Fors gabbled the words wildly. But they were words
the lizards did not recognize and the silent and menacing advance did not
falter.
What
stopped them was something else — a hissing from some point on the slope behind
the helpless mountaineer. It was as if the giant grandfather of all snakes
coiled there, resentful of the disturbance. To the lizards the hissing had
meaning. They halted almost in midstep, their threadlike tongues flickering in
and out, their ragged top crests stiff and upright, pulsing dark red.
Stones
rattled down the hill. Fors tried desperately to turn his head to see what or
who was coming. Lura's struggles increased in violence
and he wondered if he could roll to that knife which lay just out of reach.
Though his hands were dead and numb he might be able to saw through the cat's
bonds.
One
of the lizards drew ahead of the rest of the pack, but its thorn spear was
still at "ready." The scaled throat swelled and an answering hiss
sounded. That was replied to promptly and afterward came
three words which set the captive's heart to pounding.
"Can you move?"
"No.
And watch out! Poison thorns set in balls — on the ground —
"
"I
know." The answer was calm. "Keep still — "
Arskane hissed for the third time. The lizards drew back, leaving their leader
alone, alert and on guard. Then Arskane was there, stooping to slash the bonds
of both captives. Fors tried to lever himself up with dead arms which refused
to obey him.
"Can — not — make — it
— ".
But
Arskane was rubbing at the puffed and swollen ankles and the torture of
reviving circulation was almost more than the mountaineer could bear without
screaming. It seemed only a second before Arskane hauled him to his feet and
pushed him toward the back slope.
"Get up there — "
That
order had an urgency which made Fors climb in spite of himself, Lura dragging
up ahead. He dared not waste the time to look back, he
could only put all his strength to the task of getting up to the top.
If
the way had been steeper he might never have made it. And as it was Arskane
caught up to him and pulled him along the last few steps. From the southerner's
arm hung Fors' knife belt with knife and sword both in their sheaths — he had
waited to retrieve that.
Neither
of them lost time in talk, Fors glad to reel along with the larger man's
support. After a while he knew that there was real grass under his feet and
then he slumped down where water sprayed his parched skin.
He
did not know how much time passed before he roused enough to know that Arskane was
trying to pour some broth down his throat. He swallowed eagerly until his eyes
closed against his will and he drifted off again.
"How
did you get us out?" Fors lay at ease, hours later. Under him a mat of
ferns and leaves seemed almost unbelievably soft and Arskane hunched on the
other side of the fire fashioning a shaft for a short hunting spear.
"It
was easy enough — with the Beast Things gone. I will tell you this with a
straight and truthful tongue, brother." The southerner's teeth flashed
white and amused in his dark face. "Had those yet breathed, then this
venture might well have ended otherwise.
"When I awoke in this wood and found you
gone I at first thought that you were hunting — for food or water or both. But I was not happy in my mind — not happy
at all. I ate — here are rabbits, fat and foolish and without fear. And yonder
there is the brook. So did my unease grow, for with food and drink so near I
knew that you would not have gone from me and remained so long a time. So I went back along our trail —
"
Fors studied the hands lumped on his chest,
the hands which were still purplish and blue and which hurt with a nagging
pain. What would have happened if Arskane had not gone back?
"That trail was very easy to follow. And
along it I found the place where the Beast Things had lain in hiding to strike
you down. They did nothing to cover their tracks. It is in my mind that they
fear very little and see small need for caution. So came I at last to the
valley of the lizards — " "But how did you
stop their attack?"
Arskane
was examining a pile of stones he had culled out of the brook, weighing them in
his hands and separating them into two piles. The smoothed spear shaft he had
set aside.
"The lizard folk I have seen before. In
my own land — or the land we held before the shaking of the mountains drove us
forth — there was such a colony. They marched across the desert from the west
one year and made a settlement in a gulch a half day's journey from the village
of my people. We were curious about them and often watched them from a distance.
At last we even traded — giving them bits of metal in return for blue stones
they grubbed out of the earth — our women having a liking for necklaces. I do
not know what I said back there — I think it was only that my imitation of
their speech surprised them so that they let us go.
"But
it was well we got out of that place with all speed. The poison ball is their
greatest weapon. I have seen them use it against coyote and snake. They wish
only to be left alone."
"But
— but they are almost — almost human — " Fors told of the gleaners and the
sacrifice they had made for their clan.
Arskane
laid out three stones of equal size and girth. "Can we then deny that they
have a right to their valley? Could we show equal courage, I wonder?" He
became busy with some thin strips of rabbit skin, weaving them into a net
around each rock. Fors watched him, puzzled.
Just overhead there was a break in the mass
of tree tops and as he lay back flat he could see blue sky and part of a drifting
white cloud. But this morning there was a chill tooth to the wind — summer was
going. He must get back to the Eyrie soon —
Then he remembered what had happened to the
Star pouch and his puffy fingers dug into the stuff he lay upon. There was no
use in returning to the mountain hold now. When the Beast Things had destroyed
his proof they had finished his chance of buying his way back into the clan. He
had nothing left except what Arskane had brought out of the lizard valley for
him — his knife and sword. "Good!"
Fors
was too sunk to turn his head and see what had brought that note of
satisfaction into his companion's voice. Arskane did not have anything to worry
about. He would go south and find his tribe, take his place among them again —
"Now we shall have
food for the pot, brother — "
Fors
frowned but he did look around. The southerner stood there tall and straight
and around his head he whirled a queer contraption that, to the mountaineer,
seemed of no use at all. The three stones in their rabbit skin nets had been
fastened to thongs of hide and the three thongs tied together with one central
knot. This knot Arskane gripped between his fingers as he sent the stones
skimming in a circle. Having tested it he laughed at Fors' bewilderment.
"We
shall be moving south, brother, and in the level fields this will do very well,
as I shall show you. Ha, and here now is dinner — "
Lura walked up to the fire carrying a young
pig. She dropped her burden and with an almost human sigh plumped down beside
the kill to watch Arskane butcher it skillfully.
Fors
ate roasted pork and began to wonder if his lot was as hopeless as he had
thought it to be. The Beast Things were dead. He might lie up until his full
strength returned and then make a second visit to the city. Or if he did not
dally there would still be time to reach the Eyrie and lead an expedition
before winter closed in. He licked rich grease from his fingers and planned.
Arskane sang the tune of mournful notes Fors had heard him hum at the fishing lake.
Lura purred and washed her paws. It was all very peaceful.
"There faces us now," Arskane said
suddenly, "the problem of clothes for you — "
"It
faces me," Fors corrected him sleepily. "Unfortunately my wardrobe
was left to amaze the lizards. And, strangely enough, I do not find in me any
desire to reclaim it from them — "
Arskane tightened the knots on the ball and
cord weapon.
"There
you may be wrong, my friend. A visit to the lizard valley -— keeping to a safe
distance, of course — might serve us very well."
Fors sat up. "How?"
"Five of the Beast Things died there.
But how many followed us into the Blow-Up land?"
Fors
tried to remember the size of the party he had spied upon. How large had it
been? He could not truthfully say now, but he did have a disconcerting
suspicion that there had been more than five in it. If that were so — why were
they lingering here so close to the edge of the Blow-Up? His feet were good
enough to enable him to put some miles between himself and the desolate waste
which now lay only a half mile beyond them.
"Do
you think that the lizards may have added to their bag?"
Arskane
shrugged. "Now that they have been warned, perhaps they have. But we need
the spoil they took. Your bow is gone, but those arrowheads would be useful — "
"Useful
to the extent of daring the thorns?"
"Maybe." And Arskane fell to cross questioning him as
to how much of his equipment the Beast Things had destroyed.
"Everything of value to me!" Fors' old feeling of helpless inadequacy
closed in upon him. "They ripped the Star pouch to shreds and burned my
notes and map — "
"There
are the arrowheads," persisted Arskane.
"Those were not burned."
Since
he seemed to mean it when he urged such an expedition Fors began to believe
that the southerner had some purpose of his own in mind. He himself saw no
reason to return to the lizard valley. And he was still protesting within him
when they came to the top of the rise down which Arskane had gone to the
rescue. Lura had refused to accompany them any farther than the edge of the
Blow-Up and they had left her there pacing back and forth, her flattened ears
and moving tail emphatic arguments against such foolishness.
They stood looking down at a wild scene which
almost turned Fors' stomach. He gulped and balled his puffed fingers into
fists, so that the pain took his attention. The lizards might live upon the
grass of the terraces but it appeared that they were also meat eaters and they
were now making sure of the supply chance had brought them.
Two
of the Beast Things were already but skeletons and the pack of the valley's
inhabitants were fast at work on the others, a line of laden porters tramping
up to the cave entrances while their fellows below swung tiny knives with the
same skill with which the martyrs had earlier wielded their sickles.
"Look
there — to the left of that rock —" Although Arskane's touch
made pain shoot along the length of his arm Fors obediently looked.
There
was a pile of stuff there. Fors identified the remnants of his leggings and a
belt such as was worn by the Beast Things. But a glint of color just beyond the
haphazard pile of loot was more interesting. It stood in a tiny hollow of the
wall — three blue rods — just about a finger high — familiar —
Fors'
puzzlement vanished. Those rods — they were the little figures he had brought
from the museum in the Star pouch. Now they were set up — and before the feet
of each was a pile of offerings!
They
were gods. And with a sudden shock of illumination he knew why the lizard folk
did them honor.
"Arskane! Those figures — there in that hollow — they
are the ones I brought from the museum — and they are making offerings to them
— worshiping them!"
The
southerner rubbed his hand down his jaw in the familiar gesture which
signified puzzlement. Then he fumbled in the traveling pouch at his own belt
and brought out a fourth figure.
"They
do it, don't you see — because of this!" Fors indicated the small head of
the carving. Although the figure was human the head was that of a hook-billed
bird of prey.
"One
of those figures down there has the head of a lizard — or at least it looks
like a lizard!"
"So. And thus — yes — I can see it!"
Arskane started down the slope and from his
lips came the hissing cry he had used before. There was a flicker of movement.
Fors blinked. The workers were gone, had melted into the cover of the rocks
leaving the floor of the valley deserted.
The
southerner waited, with a hunter's patience, one minute, two, before he hissed
again. He was holding out between two fingers the bird-headed statue and its
blue glaze was sharp and clear. Perhaps it was that which drew the lizard
leaders from their cover.
They
came warily, gliding around stones so that only the most intent watcher could
sight them. And, Fors also saw with apprehension, they had their thorn spears
with them. But Arskane was well above the line where those balls of clay had
fallen. And now he put the blue figure down on the ground and retreated with
long-legged strides uphill.
It
was the statue which drew them. Three came together, flitting along with their
peculiar scuttle. When they were within touching distance of
the figure they stopped, their heads darting out at strange angles, as if to assure
themselves that this was no trap-bait.
As
one of them laid a paw upon the offering, Arskane moved, not toward them but in
the direction of the pile of loot. He went cautiously, examining the ground by
inches, paying no outward attention to the lizards. They stood frozen where
they were, only their eyes following him.
Deliberately
and methodically the southerner turned over what lay there. When he came back
he carried Fors' boots and what was left of the mountaineer's clothing, passing
the lizards as if they were not there. After he had passed by the leader
grabbed the blue figure and darted away around a rock, his two fellows almost
treading on his tail. Arskane came up slope with the same unhurried pace but
there were beads of moisture across his forehead and cheeks.
Fors sat down and worked the boots over his
sore feet. When he got up he looked once more into the valley. The workers were
still skulking in their holes but there were now four instead of three blue
figures standing in the rock shrine.
The
next day they started south, leaving the queer Blow-Up land well behind them.
And the second day they were deep in open fields where patches of self-sown
grain rippled ripely under the sun.
Fors
paused, half over a stone wall, to listen. The sound he had caught was too
faint and low pitched for thunder, and it kept within the boundaries of a
well-defined rhythm. "Wait!"
As
Arskane stopped Fors realized where he had heard that before — it was the voice
of a signal drum. And when he said so Arskane dropped down
beside the stones, putting his ear to the ground. But the message ended
too soon. The southerner got to his feet again, frowning.
"What — ?" ventured Fors.
"That
was the recall. Yes, you were right and it was a talking drum of my people and
what it said is all bad. Evil comes now upon them and they must call back all
spears to stand in defense of the clan — "
Arskane hesitated and Fors
plunged.
"I am not a spearman, or now even a
bowman. But still I wear a sword at my belt and I possess some skill in handling
it. Shall we go?"
"How far?" he added another question some breathless minutes
later.
Arskane had taken him at his word and the steady lope which the southerner had
set as their pace was easier matched by Lura's four feet than Fors' two.
"I
can only guess. That drum was fashioned to summon across the desert country.
Here it may be farther from us than it sounds."
Twice
more that day they heard the summons rumble across the distant hills. It would
continue to sound at intervals, Arskane said, until all the roving scouts
returned. That night the two sheltered in a grove of trees, but they did not
light a fire. And before daylight they were on the trail once more.
Fors
had not lost his sense of direction but this was new country, unknown to him
from any account of the Star Men. The trip across the Blow-Up land had taken
them so far off the territory on any map he had ever seen that he was entirely
lost. He began to wonder privately if he could have returned to the Eyrie as he
had so blithely planned, or made that trip without retracing his way through
the city. This land was wide and the known trails very, very few.
On
the third day they came to the river, the same one, Fors believed, he had
crossed before. It was swollen with rain and they spent the better part of the
day making a raft on which to cross. The current tore them off their course for
several miles before they could make the leap ashore on the opposite side.
At sunset they heard the drum again and this
time the throbbing was close to thunder. Arskane seemed to relax, he had had
his proof that they were heading in the right direction. But as he listened to
the continued roll, his hand went to the hilt of his knife.
"Danger!" He was reading the words out of the beat. "Danger — death — walks
— danger — death — in — the — night — "
"It says that?"
He
nodded. "The drum talk. But never before have I heard it speak those words. I tell you, brother, this
is no common danger which sets our drums to such warnings. Listen!"
Arskane's
upheld hand was not needed for Fors had caught the other sound before his
companion had spoken. That light tap-tap was an answer, it was less carrying
that the clan signal, but it was clear enough.
And
again Arskane read the message: "Uran here — coming— That
is Uran of the Swift Arm, the leader of our scouts. He ventured west as I came
north at the faring forth. And — "
Once
more the lighter sound of a scout's drum interrupted him.
"Balakan
comes, Balakan comes. Now," Arskane moistened his lips, "there
remains only Noraton who has not replied. Noraton — and I who
cannot!"
But,
though they waited tensely for long minutes, there was no other reply. Instead,
after the period of silence, the clan signal broke again, to roll across the
open fields, continuing so at intervals through the night.
They
paused only to eat at dawn, keeping to the steady trot. But now the drum was
silent and Fors thought that quiet ominous. He did not ask questions. Arskane's
scowl was now permanent and he pressed on almost as if he had forgotten those
who ran with him.
For
smoother footing they took to one of the Old Ones' roads which went in the
right direction and when it turned again moved into a game trail, splashing
through a brook Lura took with a single bound. Deer flashed white tails and
were gone. And now Fors saw something else. Black shapes wheeled across the
sky. As he watched one broke away and drifted to earth. He caught at Arskane's
swinging arm.
"The death birds!" He dragged the southerner to a stop. Where
the death birds fed there was always trouble.
12. WHERE SWEEP
THE
TIDES OF WAR
What
they found was a hollow pocket in the field and what lay therein on stained and
trampled ground was not a pretty sight. Arskane went down on one knee by the
limp body while Lura snarled and sprang at the foul birds that protested such
interruption with loud screeching cries.
"Dead
— a spear through him!"
"How long?" asked
Fors.
"Maybe only this morning. Do you know this marking?" Arskane did
some grisly work to hold up a broken shaft ending in a smeared leaf-shaped
point.
"Plainsman made. And it is part of one
of their lances, not a spear. But who — "
Arskane
swabbed off the disfigured
face of the dead with a handful of grass.
"Noraton!" The name was bitten off as his teeth snapped
together. The other scout, the one who had not answered the
summons.
Arskane
wiped his hands, rubbing savagely as if he did not want to think of what they
had touched. His face was stone hard.
"When
the tribe sends forth scouts, those scouts are sworn to certain things. To none
were we to show an unsheathed sword unless they first attacked us. We would
come in peace
if we
may. Noraton was a wise man and of cool, even temper. This was none of his
provoking — "
"Your
people are moving north to settle," mused Fors
slowly. "The Plainspeople are proud-hearted and high of temper. They may
see in your coming a threat to their way of life — they are much bound by
custom and old ways — "
"So
they would take to the sword to settle differences? Well, if that is as they
wish — so be it!" Arskane straightened out the body.
Fors
drew his sword, sawing through the turf. Together they worked in silence until
they had ready a grave. And afterward, above that lonely resting place they
piled up a mound to protect the sleeper. On its summit Arskane thrust deep the
long knife Noraton had worn and the shadow of its cross hilt lay straight along
the turned earth.
Now
they pushed on through a haunted world. Death had struck Noraton down and that
same death might now stand between them and the tribe. They held to cover,
sacrificing speed once more to caution. Arskane took out his weapon of balls
and thongs and carried it ready for action.
The
end to their journey came as they skirted a small ruin and saw before them a
wide stretch of open field. To use the cover afforded only at its far edge
would mean a wide detour. Arskane chose to strike boldly across. Since the
haste was his Fors accepted that decision, but he was glad that Lura scouted
ahead.
Here the grass and wild grain was waist-high
and a man could not run. It would entangle his feet and bring him down. Fors
thought of snakes just as Arskane sprawled on his face, one foot in a hidden
rabbit burrow. He sat up quickly, his mouth working a little as he rubbed his
ankle.
Fors'
throat went tight. A clot of horsemen were pounding at them out of the shadow
of the ruins, riding at a wild gallop, lance points forging a flashing wall
before them.
The mountaineer flung himself on Arskane and
they rolled just in time to escape being spitted by those iron tips, avoiding
hoofs by so thin a hair of safety that Fors could hardly believe his skin
intact. Arskane struggled out of his grasp as Fors got up, sword in hand. Just
the proper weapon, he thought bleakly, with which to face armed horsemen.
Arskane whirled the ball weapon around his
head and turned to meet the enemy. The force of their charge had taken them on
too far to rein back quickly. But they had played this game before. They
scattered out, fanning in a circle which would ring in their victims.
As
they rode they laughed and made derisive gestures. That determined Fors. Short
sword or no, he would take at least one of them down with him when the end
came. The circling riders speeded their pace around and around, making their
captives turn to face them at a dizzy rate.
But
Lura spoiled that well-practiced maneuver. She reared out of the grass and
swiped a paw full of raking claws down the smooth flank of a horse. With a
terrible scream of fright and pain the animal reared and fought against the
control of its rider. The horse won and raced out and away taking its rider
with it.
Only
— the rest were warned now and when Lura sprang again she not only missed but
suffered the bite of an expertly aimed lance. However, her attacks gave Arskane
the chance he had been waiting for. His ball weapon sang through the air and
with uncanny precision wrapped itself about the throat of one of the lancers.
He thudded limply into the tall grass.
Two
— out of eight! And they could not run — even with the circle broken. Such a
move would lead only to Noraton's death with cold steel breaking from back to
breast. The unharmed six had stopped laughing. Fors could guess what was being
planned now. They would ride down the enemy, making very certain they should
not escape.
Arskane
balanced his long knife on the palm of his hand. The riders made a line, knee
to knee. Fors jerked a hand to the left and the southerner's teeth showed in a
mirthless smile. He pointed a finger right. They stood and waited. The charge
came and they dared to watch a whole second before they moved.
Fors
flung himself to the left and went down on one knee. He slashed up at the legs
of the mount which came at him, slashed viciously with all his strength. Then
he was up again with one hand twisted in the legging of the rider who stabbed
down at him. He caught the blow on his sword and managed to hold on to the
blade although his fingers went numb with the shock.
The
rider catapulted into his arms and fingers dug into his cheeks just below his
eyes sockets. There were tricks for close fighting, tricks which Langdon had
passed to his son. Fors got on top and stayed there — or at least he did for a
few victorious moments until he glimpsed a shadow sweeping in from the left. He
dodged, but not quickly enough, and the blow sent him rolling free from the
body of his opponent. He blinked painfully at the sky and was levering himself
up on his elbows when a circle of hide rope dropped about his shoulders
snapping his arms tight to his body.
So
he sat dumbly in the grass. When he moved his ringing head too suddenly the
world danced around in a sickening way.
" —
this time no mistake, Vocar. We have taken two of the swine — the High Chief
will be pleased — "
Fors
picked the words out of the air. The slurring drawl of the Plainsmen's speech
was strange but he had no difficulty in understanding it. He raised his head
cautiously and looked around.
" —
ham-strung White Bird! May night devils claw him into bits and hold high feast
with him!"
A
man came tramping away from a floundering horse. He walked straight to Fors and
slapped him across the face with a methodical force and a very evident desire
to hurt. Fors stared up at him and spat blood from torn lips. The fellow had a
face easy to remember — that crooked scar across the chin was a brand not to be
forgotten. And if fortune was at all good they would have a future reckoning
for those blows.
"Loose
my hands," Fors said, glad that his voice came out so steady and even.
"Loose my hands, tall hero, and worse than night devils shall have your
bones to pick!"
Another
slap answered that, but before a second could be struck his assailant's wrist
was caught and held.
"Tend
your horse, Sati. This man was defending himself as best he knew. We are not
Beast Things from the ruins to amuse ourselves with the tormenting of
prisoners."
Fors forced his aching head
up another inch so that he could see the speaker. The Plainsman was tall — he
must almost top Arskane's height — but he was slighter and the hair tied back
for riding was a warm chestnut brown. He was no green youth on his first war
trail but a seasoned warrior. Lines of good humor bracketed his well-cut mouth.
"The other one is now
awake, Vocar."
At
that call the war chief turned his attention from Fors. "Bring him hither.
We have a long trail to follow before sundown."
The
floundering horse was stilled with an expert knife. But Sati arose from that
task with the blackest of scowls for both captives.
Lura!
Fors tried to glance across the grass without betraying interest or concern.
The big cat had disappeared and since his captors did not mention her, surely
she had not been killed. They would have been quick enough to claim her hide as
a trophy. With Lura free and prepared to act there was a chance they might
escape even yet. He held to that hope as they lashed his right hand fast to his
own belt and fastened the left by a punishing loop to the saddle of one of the
riders. Not to Sati's he was glad to note. That warrior had swung onto the
horse of the man Arskane had killed with the ball loops.
And
the southerner had taken other toll too. For there were two bodies lashed to
nervous led horses. After some consultation two of the band went ahead on foot
leading the burdened mounts. Fors' guard was the third in line of march and Vocar with Arskane at his side came near the end.
Fors
looked back before the jerk at his wrist started him off. There was blood on
the southerner's face and he walked stiffly, but he did not appear to be badly
hurt. Where was Lura? He tried to send out a summoning thought and then closed
his mind abruptly.
There had long been contact between the Eyrie
and the Plainspeople. These men might well know of the big cats and their relationship
with man. Best to leave well enough alone. He had no
desire at all to watch Lura thrash out her life pinned to the hard earth by one
of those murderous lances.
The
line of march was westward, Fors noted mechanically,
forced to keep a sort of loping run as the horse he was bound to cantered. The
sun was hard and bright in their faces. He studied the paint marks of ownership
dabbed on the smooth hide of the animal beside him. It was not a sign used by
any tribe his people knew. And the speech of these men was larded with
unfamiliar words. Another tribe on the move, maybe roving far
distances. Perhaps, as Arskane's people, they had been driven out of
their own grounds by some disaster of nature and were now seeking a new
territory — or maybe they were only driven by the inborn restlessness of their
kind.
If
they were strange to this country their attitude of enmity against all comers
was not so to be wondered at. Usually it was only the Beast Things who attacked
without declaring formal war — without parley. If he only wore the Star — then
he would have a talking point when he faced their high chief. The Star Men were
known — known in far lands where they had never walked — and none had ever
raised sword against them. Fors knew the bite of his old discontent. He was not
a Star Man — he was nothing, a runaway and a wanderer who did not even dare
claim tribe protection.
The
dust pounded up by the hoofs powdered his face and body. He coughed, unable to
shield his eyes or mouth. The horses went down a bank and splashed through a
wide stream. On the other side they turned into a well-marked trail. A second
party of riders issued out of the brush and shouted questions made the air
ring.
Fors
was a center of attention and the newcomers stared at him curiously. They
discussed him with a frankness he tried to ignore and he held firmly to the
rags of his temper.
He
was not like the other one at all, was the gist of most of their comments.
Apparently they already knew of Arskane's people and had little liking for them.
But Fors, with his strange silver hair and lighter skin, was an unknown
quantity which intrigued them.
The
combined troops at last rode on, Fors thankful for the breathing spell he had
been granted by the meeting. Within a half mile they came into their camp. Fors
was amazed at the wide sweep of tent rows. This was no small family clan on the
march, but a whole tribe or nation. He counted clan flags hung before
sub-chieftains' tent homes as he was led down the wide road which divided the
sprawling settlement into two parts. He had marked down ten and there were
countless others to be seen fluttering back from this main path.
At
the sight of the dead the women of the Plains city set up the shrill ritual
wailing, but they made no move toward the prisoners who had been released from
the saddle ties to have their hands lashed behind them and to be thrust into a
small tent within the shadow of the High Chieftain's own circle.
Fors
wriggled over on his side to face Arskane. Even in that dim light he could see
that the southerner's right eye was almost swollen shut and that a shallow cut
on his neck was closed with a paste of dust and dried blood.
"Do
you know this tribe?" Arskane asked after two croaking attempts to shape
the words with a dust-clogged tongue.
"No.
Both the clan flags and their horse markings are new to me. And some of the
words they use I have never heard before. I think that they have come a long
way. The tribes the Star Men know do not attack without warning — except when
they go against the Beast Things — for always are all men's swords bare to them! This is a nation on the march — I counted the banners of ten clans and I
must have seen only a small portion of them."
"I
would like to know what use they have for us," Arskane said dryly.
"If they did not see profit in our capture we would now be awaiting the
attention of the death birds. But why do they want us?"
Fors
set himself to recall all that he had ever heard concerning the ways of the
Plainspeople. They held freedom very high, refusing to be tied to any stretch
of land lest it come to hold them. They did not lie — ever — that was part of
their code. But also did they deem themselves greater than other men, and they
had a haughty and abiding pride. They were inclined to be suspicious of new
things and were much bound by custom — in spite of their talk of freedom. Among
them a man's given word was held unbreakable, he must always hold to a promise
no matter what might come. And anyone who offended against the tribe was
solemnly pronounced dead in council. Thereafter no one could notice him and he
could claim neither food nor lodging — for the tribe he had ceased to exist.
Star Men had lived in their tents. His own
father had taken a chief's daughter to wife. But that was only because the Star
Men possessed something which the tribe reckoned to be worth having — a
knowledge of wide lands.
A
wild burst of sound broke his thoughts, a sound which grew louder, the
full-throated chanting of fighting men on the march.
"With sword and flame before us, And the lances of clans at our backs, We ride through plains
and forests Where sweep the tides of war! Eat, Death Birds, eat!
From a feast we have spread for your tearing — "
A flute carried the refrain while a small
drum beat out the savage "eat, eat." It was a wild rhythm which made
the blood race through the listener's veins. Fors felt the power of it and it
was a heady wine. His own people were a silent lot. The mountains must have
drawn out of them the desire for music, singing was
left to the women who sometimes hummed as they worked. He knew only the council
hymn which had a certain darksome power. The men of the Eyrie never went
singing into battle.
"These
fighting men sing!" Arskane's whisper echoed his own thoughts. "Do
they welcome in such a manner their high chief?"
But if it were the chief who was being so
welcomed he had no present interest in captives. Fors and Arskane remained
imprisoned as the dreary hours passed. When it was fully dark fires were
lighted at regular intervals down the main way and shortly after two men came
in, to release them from the ropes and stand alert while they rubbed stiff
hands. There were bowls of stew planked down before them. The stuff was well
cooked and they were famished — they gave the food their full attention. But
when he had licked the last drop from his lips Fors bent his tongue in the
Plains language he had learned from his father.
"Ho — good riding to you, Plainsborn.
Now, windrider, by the custom of the shelter fire and the water bowl, we would
have speech with the high chief of this tribe — "
The
guard's eyes widened. It was plain that the last thing he expected was to have
the formal greeting of ceremony from this dirty and ragged prisoner.
Recovering, he laughed and his companion joined jeeringly.
"Soon
enough will you be brought before the High One, forest filth.
And when you are that meeting will give you no pleasure!"
Again
their hands were tied and they were left alone. Fors waited until he judged
that their sentry was fully engaged in exchanging chaff with the two visitors.
He wriggled close to Arskane.
"When they fed us they made a mistake.
All Plainspeople have laws of hospitality. Should a stranger eat meat which has
been cooked at their fires and drink water from their store, then
they must hold him inviolate for a day, a night, and another day. They gave us
stew to eat and in it was cooked meat and water. Keep silent when they lead us
out and I shall claim protection under their own laws —
"
Arskane's answering whisper was as faint.
"They must believe us to be ignorant of their customs then — "
"Either
that, or someone within this camp has given us a
chance and waits now to see if we have wit enough to seize it. If that guard
repeats my greeting then perhaps such an unknown will know that we are ready.
Plainspeople visit much from tribe to tribe. There may be one or more here now
who knows the Eyrie and would so give me a fighting chance to save us."
Maybe it was that Fors' greeting had been
passed on. At any rate, not many minutes elapsed before the men came back into
the tent and the captives were pulled to their feet, to be herded between lines
of armed men into the tall hide-walled pavilion which was the center of the
city. Hundreds of deer and wild cattle had died to furnish the skins for that
council room. And within it, packed so tightly that a sword
could not lie comfortably between thigh and thigh, were the sub-chieftains,
chiefs, warriors and wise men of the whole tribe. Fors and Arskane were
pushed down the open aisle which ran from the doorway to the center. There the
ceremonial fire burned, sending out aromatic smoke as it was fed with bundles
of dried herbs and lengths of cedar wood.
By
the fire three men stood. The one, a long white cloak draped over his fighting
garb, was the man of medicine, he who tended the bodies of the tribe. His
companion who wore black was the Keeper of Records — the rememberer of past
customs and law. Between them was the High Chief.
As the captives came forward Vocar arose out
of the mass of his fellows and saluted the Chief with both hands to his
forehead.
"Captain
of Hosts, Leader of the Tribe of the Wind, Feeder of the Death Birds, these two
be those we took in fair fight when by your orders we scouted to the east. Now
we of the clan of the Raging Bull do give them into your hands that you may do
with them as you wish. I, Vocar, have spoken."
The
High Chief acknowledged that with a brief nod. He was measuring the captives
with a keen eye which missed nothing. Fors stared as boldly back.
He
saw a man of early middle age, slender and wiry, marked with a strand of white
hair which ran back across his head like a plumed crest. Old scars of many
battle wounds showed under the heavy collar of ceremony which extended halfway
down his chest. He was unmistakably a famous warrior.
But
to be High Chief of a tribe he must be more than just a fighting man. He must
also have the wit and ability to rule. Only a strong and equally wise hand
could control a turbulent Plains city.
"You"
— the Chief spoke first to Arskane — "are of those dark ones who now make
war in the south — "
Arskane's one open eye met
the Chief's without blinking.
"My
people only go out upon the battlefield when war is forced upon them. Yesterday
I found my tribesman food for the death birds and through his body there was a
Plains lance — "
But
the Chief did not answer that. He had already turned to Fors.
"And you — what tribe has spawned such
as you?"
13. RING OF FIRE
"I
am Fors of the Puma Clan, of the tribe of the Eyrie in the mountains which
smoke." Because his hands were bound he did not give the salute of a free
man to the commander of many tents. But neither did he hang his head nor show
that he thought himself not the full equal of any in that company.
"Of
this Eyrie I have never heard. And only far-riding scouts have ever seen the
mountains which smoke. If you are not of the blood of the dark ones, why do you
run with one of them?"
"We
are battle comrades, he and I. Together we have fought the Beast Things and
together we crossed the Blow-Up land — "
But
at those words all three of the leaders before him looked incredulous and he of
the white robe laughed, his mockery echoed a moment later by the High Chief, to
be taken up by the whole company until the jeering roar was a thunder in the
night.
"Now do we know that the tongue which
lies within your jaws is a crooked one. For in the
memory of men — our fathers, and our fathers' fathers, and their fathers before
them, no men have crossed a Blow-Up land and lived to boast of it. Such
territory is accursed and death comes horribly to those who venture into it.
Speak true now, woodsrunner, or we shall deem you as twisted as a Beast One,
fit only to cough out your life upon the point of a lance — and that
speedily!"
Fors
had clipped his rebel tongue between his teeth and so held it until the heat of
his first anger died. When he had control of himself he answered steadily.
"Call me what you will, Chief. But, by
whatever gods you own, will I swear that I speak the full truth. Perhaps in the
years since our fathers' fathers' fathers went into the Blow-Up and perished,
there has been a lessening of the evil blight — "
"You
call yourself of the mountains," interrupted the White Robe. "I have
heard of men from the mountains who venture forth into the empty lands to
regain lost knowledge. These are sworn to the truth and speak no warped tales.
If you be of
their
breed show us now the star which such wear upon them as the sign of their
calling. Then shall we make you welcome under custom and law —
"
"I
am of the mountains," repeated Fors grimly. "But I am not a Star
Man."
"Only
outlaws and evil livers wander far from their clan brothers." It was the
Black Robe who made that suggestion.
"And
those are without protection of the law, meat for any man's ax. These men are
not worth the trifling over — "
Now
— now he must try his one and only argument. Fors looked straight at the Chief
and interrupted him with the old, old formula his father had taught him years
before.
"By
the flame, by the water, by the flesh, by the tent right, do we now claim
refuge under the banner of this clan — we have eaten your meat and broken our
thirsting here this hour!"
There
was a sudden silence in the large tent. All the buzz of whispering from
neighbor to neighbor was stilled and when one of the guards shifted his stance
so that his sword hilt struck against another's the sound was like the call to
battle.
The
High Chief had thrust his thumbs between his wide belt and his middle and now
he drummed on the leather with his finger tips, a tattoo of impatience. But the
Black Robe moved forward a step reluctantly and gestured to the guard. So a
knife flashed and the hide thongs fell from their cramped arms. Fors rubbed his
wrists. He had won the first engagement but —
"From the hour of the lighting of the
fires on this night until the proper hour you are guests." The Chief
repeated those words as if they were bitter enough to twist his mouth.
"Against custom we have no appeal. But be assured, when the time of grace
is done, we shall have a reckoning with you — "
Fors
dared now to smile. "We ask only for what is ours by the rights of your
own custom, Chieftain and Captain of many tents." He made with his two
hands the proper salute.
The
High Chief's eyes were narrowed as he waved forward his two companions.
"And under custom these two be your guardians, strangers. You are in their care this
night."
So
they went forth from the council tent free in their persons, passing through
the crowd to another hide-walled enclosure of smaller size. On the dark skins
of which it was made various symbols were painted. Fors could make them out
with the aid of the firelight. Some he knew well. The twin snakes coiled about
a staff — that was the universal sign of the healer. And those balancing scales
— those meant the equalizing of justice. The men of the Eyrie used both of
those emblems too. The round ball with a flower of flames crowding out of its
top was new but Arskane gave an exclamation of surprise as he stopped to point
at a pair of outstretched wings supporting a pointed object between them.
"That — that is the sign of the Old Ones who were flying men. It is the chief sign of my own clan!"
And at those words of his the black-robed
Plainsman turned quickly to demand with some fierceness:
"What know you of
flying men, you creeper in the dirt?"
But Arskane was smiling proudly, his battered
face alight, his head high.
"We of my tribe are sprung from flying
men who came to rest in the deserts of the south after a great battle had
struck most of their machines from the air and blasted from the earth the field
from which they had flown. That is our sign." He touched almost lovingly
the tip of the outstretched wing. "Around his neck now does Nath-al-sal,
our High Chief, still wear such as that made of the Old One's shining metal, as
it came from the hand of his father, and his father's father, and so back to
the first and greatest of the flying men who came forth from the belly of the
dead machine on the day they found refuge in our valley of the little
river!"
As he talked the outrage faded from the Black Robe's face. He was a sadly puzzled man now.
"So does all knowledge come — in bits
and patches," he said slowly. "Come within."
But it seemed to Fors that the law man of the
Plainspeople had lost much of his hostility. And he even held aside the door
flap with his own hands as if they were in truth honored guests instead of
prisoners, reprieved but for a space.
Once inside they stared about them with frank
curiosity. A long table made of polished boards set on stakes pounded into the
earth ran down the center and on it in orderly piles were things Fors
recognized from his few visits to the Star House. A stone hollowed for the
grinding and bruising of herbs used in medicines, its pestle lying across it,
together with rows of boxes and jars — that was the healer's property. And the
dried bundles of twigs and leaves, hanging in ordered lines from the cord
along the ridge pole, were his also.
But
the books of parchment with protecting covers of thin wood, the ink horn and
the pens laid ready, those were the tools of the law
man. The records of the tribe were in his keeping, all the customs and history.
Each book bore the sign of a clan carved on its cover, each was the storehouse
of information about that family.
Arskane stabbed a finger at a piece of smoothed
hide held taut in a wooden stretcher.
"The
wide river?"
"Yes.
You know of it, too?" The law man pushed aside a pile of books and brought the hide under the hanging lantern where
oil-soaked tow burned to give light.
"This part — that is as I have seen it
with my own two eyes." The southerner traced a curved line of blue paint
which meandered across the sheet. "My tribe crossed right here. It took us
four weeks to build the rafts. And two were swept away by the current so that
we never saw those on them again. We lost twenty sheep in the flood as well.
But here — my brother scouted north and he found another curve so — " Arskane corrected the line with his finger.
"Also — when the mountains of our land poured out fire and shook the world
around them the bitter sea waters came in here and here, and no more is it now
land — only water — "
The law man frowned over his map. "So. Well, we have lived for ten tens of years along
the great river and know this of its waters — many times it changes its bed and
wanders to suit its will. There are the marks of the Old Ones' work at many
places along it, they must have tried to hold it to
its course. But that mystery we have lost — along with so much else — "
"If you have ridden
from the banks of the great river you have come far," Fors observed.
"What brought your tribe into these eastern lands?"
"Whatever
takes the Plainspeople east or west? We have the wish to see new places born in
us. North and south have we gone — from the edges of the great forests where
the snows make a net to catch the feet of our horses and only the wild
creatures may live fat in winter — to the swamp lands where scaled things hide
in the rivers to pull down the unwary drinker — we have seen the land. Two
seasons ago our High Chief died and his lance fell into the hand of Cantrul who
has always been a seeker of far lands. So now do we walk new trails and open
the world for the wonder of our children. Behold — "
He
unhooked the lamp from its supporting cord and pulled Fors with him to the
other end of the tent. There were maps, maps and pictures, pictures vivid
enough to make the mountaineer gasp with wonder. They had in them the very
magic with which the Old Ones had made their world live for one another.
"Here
— this was made in the north — in winter when a man must walk with hide webs
beneath his feet so that he sinks not into the snow to be swallowed as in
quicksands. And here — look you — this is one of the forest people — they lay
paint upon their faces and wear the hides of beasts upon their bodies but they
walk in pride and say that they are a very ancient people who once owned all
this land. And here and here — " He flipped over
the framed parchment squares, the records of their travels set down in bright
color.
"This
—" Fors drew a deep breath — "this is greater treasure than the Star
House holds. Could Jarl and the rest but look upon these!"
The law man ran his fingers along the smooth
frame of the map he held.
"In all the tribe perhaps ten of our
youth look upon these with any stir in their hearts or minds. The rest — they
care nothing for the records, for making a map of the way our feet have gone
that day. To eat and to war, to ride and hunt, to raise a son after them to do
likewise — that is the desire of the tribe. But always — always there are a few
who still strive to go back along the old roads, to try to find again what was
lost in the days of disaster. Bits and pieces we discover, a thread here and a
tattered scrap there, and we try to weave it whole."
"If
Marphy spoke now the full truth," the harsher voice of the healer broke
in, "he would say that it was because he was born a seeker of knowledge
that all this" — he waved at the array — "came to be. He it was who
started making these and he trains those of like mind to see and set down what
they have seen. All this has been done since he became keeper of the
records."
The
law man looked confused and then he smiled almost shyly. "Have I not said
that it is in our blood to be ever hunting what lies beyond? In me it has taken
this turn. In you, Fanyer, it also works so that you make your messes out of
leaves and grass, and if you dared you would cut us open just to see what lies
beneath our skins."
"Perhaps, perhaps. Dearly would I like to know what lies beneath the skins of these two
that they have crossed the Blow-Up land and yet show no signs of the burning
sickness — "
"I
thought," retorted Arskane quickly, "that
was the story you did not believe."
Fanyer
considered him through narrowed eyes, almost, Fors thought, as if he did have
the southerner opened for examination.
"So
— maybe I do not believe it. But if it is true, then this is the greatest
wonder I have yet heard of. Tell me, how did this thing happen?"
Arskane
laughed. "Very well, we shall tell our tale. And we swear that it is a
true one. But half of the tale belongs to each of us and so we tell it
together."
And
as the oil lamp sputtered overhead, guards and prisoners sat on the round
cushions and talked and listened. When Fors spoke the last word Marphy
stretched and shook himself as if he had been swimming in deep water.
"That
is the truth, I think," he commented quietly. "And it is a brave
story, fit to make a song for the singing about night fires."
"Tell me," Fanyer rounded abruptly
upon Fors, "you who were lessoned for knowledge seeking, what was the
thing which amazed you most in this journey of yours?"
Fors
did not even have to consider his answer. "That the Beast Things are
venturing forth from their dens into the open country. For, by all our
observations, they have not done so before in the memory of men. And this may
mean danger to come — "
Marphy
looked to Fanyer and their eyes locked. Then the man of medical knowledge got
to his feet and went purposefully out into the night. It was Arskane who broke
the short silence with a question of his own.
"Recorder of the past, why did your young men hunt us down? Why do you march to war against my people?
What has passed between our tribes that this is so?"
Marphy cleared his throat,
almost as if he wished for time.
"Why?
Why? Even the Old Ones never answered that. As you can see in
the tumbled stones of their cities. Your people march north seeking a
home, mine march east and south for the same reason. We are different in
custom, in speech, in bearing. And man seems to fear this difference. Young
blood is hot, there is a quarrel, a killing, from the
spilled blood springs war. But chiefly the reason is this, I think. My people
are rovers and they do not understand those who would build and root in one
place within the borders of a land they call their own. Now we hear that a town
is rising in the river bend one day's journey to the south. And that town is
being settled by men of your blood. So now the tribe is uneasy and a little
afraid of what they do not know. There are many among them who say that we must
stamp out what may be a threat to us in time to come — "
Arskane
wiped the palms of his hands across the tattered remnant of his garment, as if
he had found those palms suddenly and betrayingly damp.
"In
no way is my tribe any threat against the future of yours. We ask only for land
in which to plant our seed and to provide grazing for our sheep. Perhaps we may
be lucky to find a bank of clay to give us the material we need for our
potters' craft. We are indifferent hunters — coming from a land where there is
but little game. We have arts in our hands which might well serve others beside
ourselves."
"True, true." Marphy nodded. "This desire for war with the stranger is our curse
— perhaps the same one which was laid upon the Old Ones for their sins. But it
will take greater than either of us to make a peace now — the war drums have
sounded, the lances are ready — "
"And there, for once, you speak the full
truth, oh, weaver of legends!"
It was the High Chief who came to the table.
Laid aside were his feather helmet and cloak of office. In the guise of a
simple warrior he could walk the camp unnoted.
"You
forget this — a tribe which breeds not warriors to hold its lances will be
swallowed up. The lion preys upon the bull — if it can escape the horns. The
wolves run in packs to the kill. Kill or be killed, eat or be eaten — that is
the law upheld better than all other laws."
Something
hot rose in Fors' throat and he snapped out an answer to that which was born of
this new emotion.
"The paws of the Beast Things are
against all of us — in just that manner, oh Captain of the Tents. And they are
no lightly considered enemy. Lead your lances against them — if war you must!"
Surprise
came first into Cantrul's eyes and then the flush of anger stained his brown
cheekbones. His hand moved instinctively to the hilt of his short sword. Fors'
hands remained on his knees. The scabbard at his belt was empty and he could
not accept any challenge the Plainsman might offer.
"Our
lances move when they will and where they will, stranger. If they wish to clean
out a nest of mud-hut-dwelling vermin — "
Arskane made no move, but his one unswollen
eye calmly measured the High Chief with a control Fors admired. Cantrul wanted
an answer — preferably a hot one. When it did not come he turned to Fors with a
harsh question.
"You say that the
Beast Things march?"
"No," Fors corrected him. "I
say that for the first time in our knowledge they are coming fearlessly out of
their burrows in the cities to roam the open lands. And they are cunning
fighters with powers we have not yet fully gauged. They are not men as are we —
even if their sires' sires' sires were of our breed. So they may be greater
than we — or lesser.
How
can we yet know? But this is true — as we of the Eyrie, who have warred against
them during generations of city looting, can say — they are enemies to mankind.
My father died under their fangs. I, myself, have lain in their bonds. They are
no common enemy to be dismissed without fear, Plainsman."
"There
is this, remember." Marphy broke the short silence. "When these two
fled across the Blow-Up land a pack of the creatures sniffed their trail. If we
march south without taking care we may find ourselves with an enemy behind as
well as before — to be caught between two fires — "
Cantrul's
fingers drummed out a battle rhythm on his belt, a sharp furrow cut between his
thin brows. "We have scouts out."
"True.
You are a leader old in war knowledge. What is needful has been ordered.
Forgive me — I grow old, and conning records sometimes gives one a weary view
of life. Man makes so many mistakes — sometimes it appears that never shall he
learn — "
"In
war he learns or dies! It is plain that the Old Ones did not or could not learn
— well, they are gone, are they not? And we live — the tribe is strong. I think
that you worry too much, both of you — Fanyer, too. We ride prepared and there
is nothing that — "
But
his words were drowned in such a thunder of sound that it seemed a storm had
broken directly above the tent in which they stood. And through the general
uproar came the shouts of men and the higher screaming of frightened women and
children.
Those
in the tent were across it in an instant, elbowing each other to be first at
the door flap. The Plainsmen pushed out as Arskane pulled Fors back. As they
hesitated they saw the wild stampede of horses pound down the center lane of
the camp, threading around the fires with so little room that tents were going
down under their hoofs. Behind, across the horizon, was a wavering wall of
golden light.
Arskane's hand closed about Fors' wrist with
almost bone-crushing pressure as he dragged the slighter mountaineer back into
the tent.
"That is fire! Fire running through the prairie grass!" He
had to
shout the words in order to be heard over the tumult outside. "Our chance — "
But
Fors had already grasped that. He broke out of the other's grip and ran down
the length of the table looking for a weapon. A small spear was all he could
see to snatch up. Arskane took the pestle of the herb grinder as Fors used the
point of the spear to rip through the far wall of the tent.
Outside
they headed away from the chieftain's enclosure, running and dodging among the
tents, joining other running men in the shadows. In the stirred-up ant hill of
the camp it was ridiculously easy to get away without notice. But the sky
behind was growing steadily brighter and they knew they must get out of the
camp quickly.
"It's
sweeping around." Fors pointed out the swing of that ghastly parody of
daylight. East and west the fire made a giant mouth open and ready to engulf
the camp. There were fewer men running now and order was developing out of the
first confusion.
They
rounded the last of the tents and were out in the open, looking out for clumps
of bushes or trees among which they could take cover. Then Fors caught a
glimpse of something which brought him up short. A glare of yellow showed
before them where it should not be — reflection — but how? A moment later
Arskane verified his suspicion.
''It's a ring of
fire!"
Fors' hunter's instincts began to work as
those tongues of flame lapped skyward.
"Downhill!" He
threw the order over his shoulder.
He
could see a trampled trail marked by many hoofs, hoofs of horses led to water.
Downhill was water!
Downhill they ran.
14. ARROW'S FLIGHT
The
wind had changed and blinded by the smoke which bit at eyes and throat they
discovered the stream by falling into it. In its depths they were not alone. A
wave of rabbits and other small furry things which squeaked and scurried
flooded out of the high grass to run along the edge of the water, making small
piteous sounds of fear and terror until they plunged in to clog the water with
their bodies.
Out
in midstream the smoke did not hang so thick. Fors' night eyes adjusted and he
took the lead, heading down current, out toward where the flames bannered
high. The confused noise of the Plains camp died out as the river turned a
bend and a screen of willows closed in.
A
deer crashed through the bushes, running, and behind it came a second and a
third — then four more all together. The stream bed deepened. Fors' foot slipped
off a stone and his head went under. For a moment he knew panic and then the
art learned in mountain pools came back to him and he swam steadily, Arskane
splashing along at his shoulder.
So
they came out into the middle of a lake, a lake which ended in the straight
line of a dam. Fors blinked water out of his eyes and saw round mounds rising
above the stream line — beaver houses! He flinched as a big body floundered by
to pull out its bulk on top of one of those lodges. A very wet and very angry
wild cat crouched there, spitting at the liquid which had saved its life.
Fors trod water and looked back. Arskane's
head was bobbing along as if the big man were in
difficulties and the mountaineer turned back. Minutes later both clung to the
rough side of the nearest lodge and Fors considered their future with cool
calculation.
The beaver lake was of a good size and recent
rains had added to its contents. Also the builders of the lodges and the dam
had cleaned out the majority of the trees which had grown along its banks,
leaving only brush. Seeing this the mountaineer
relaxed. Luck had brought them to the one place which would save them. And he
was not the only living thing to believe that.
An
antlered buck swam in circles near them, its pronged head high. And smaller
creatures were arriving by the dozens to clamber over each other up the sides
of the lodges to safety. Arskane gave a violent exclamation of disgust and
jerked back his hand as a snake wriggled across it.
As
the fire crept along the shore, making the water as ruddy as blood, the
creatures in the water and on the lodges seemed to cower, sniffing in the
cindery hot breath of the flames reluctantly. A bird dropped out of the air,
struck Fors' shoulder, and plumped into the water leaving a puff of burned
feather stench behind it. The mountaineer dropped his head down on his hands,
noiding his mouth and nose only an inch or so above the water, feeling the
blistering heat whip across his shoulders.
How long they remained there, their bodies
floating in the water, their fingers dug into the stuff of the lodges, they
never knew. But when the crackle of the fire diminished Fors raised his head
again. The first of the blaze was gone. Here and there the stump of a tree
still showed stubborn coals. It would be some time before they wouid dare walk
over that still smoking ground. The water must continue to give them passage.
Fors
fended off the body of a deer which had taken too late to refuge and worked his
way to the next lodge and so on to the dam. Here the fire had eaten a hole,
taken a good bite out, so that water was spilling freely into the old channel
of the stream.
By the light of smoldering roots he could
make out the course for some distance ahead. "Holla!"
A moment later, Arskane
joined him.
"So
we follow the water, eh?" The southerner applauded. "Well, with the
fire behind us we shall not worry about pursuit. Perhaps good fortune journeys
on our right hand tonight, my brother."
Fors
grunted, climbing over the rough surface of the dam. Again they could keep
their feet. The water was only waist-deep here. But the stones in the course
made slippery footing and they crept along fearing a disastrous fall.
When
they were at last well away from the fire glow in the sky Fors stopped and
studied the stars, looking for the familiar clusters which were the unchanging
guides he had been taught. They were heading south — but from a westerly
direction and this was unknown territory.
"Will we hear the
drums now?" he asked.
"Do
not count on it. The tribe probably believes me as dead as Noraton and sounds
the call no longer."
Fors shivered, perhaps just
from the long immersion in the chill water. "This is a wide land, without a guide
we may miss them — "
"More
likely to since this is war and my people will conceal what they may of the
camp. But, brother, it is in my mind that we could not have won free so easily
from this night's captivity had there not been a mission set upon us. Head
south and let us hope that the same power will bring us to what we seek. At least
your mountains will not move themselves from their root and we can turn to them
if nothing better offers — "
But
Fors refused to answer that, giving his attention again to the stars.
For
the present they kept to the stream, stumbling between water-worn boulders and
over gravel. At length they came into a ravine where walls of gray rock closed
in as if they were entering the narrow throat of a trap. Here they pulled out
on a flat ledge to rest.
Fors dozed uneasily. The mosquitoes settled
and feasted in spite of his slaps. But at last his heavy head went flat and he
could no longer fight off the deep sleep of a worn-out body and fatigue-dulled
mind.
The murmur of water awoke him at last and he
lay listening to it before he forced open puffy eyelids. He rubbed an itching,
bite-swollen face as he focused dazedly upon moss-green rock and brown water.
Then he sat up with a snap. It must be mid-morning at least!
Arskane
still lay belly down beside him, his head pillowed on an arm. There was an
angry red brand left by a burn on his shoulder — a drifting piece of wood must
have struck there. And beyond Fors could see floating on the current other
evidence of the fire — half-consumed sticks, the battered body of a squirrel
with the fur charred from its back.
Fors retheved that before the water bore it on. Half-bumed squirrel was a rare banquet when
a man's stomach was making a too intimate acquaintance with his backbone. He
laid it out on the rock and worried off the skin with the point of the spear he
had clung to through the night.
When
he had completed that gory task he shook Arskane awake. The big man rolled over
on his back with a sleepy protest, lay staring a moment into the sky, and then
sat up.
In
the light of the day his battered face was almost a monster's mask mottled with
purple brown. But he managed a lopsided grin as he reached for the bits of
half-raw meat Fors held out to him.
"Food — and a clear
day for traveling ahead of us — "
"Half
a day only," Fors corrected him, measuring the length of sun and shadow
around them.
"Well,
then, half a day — but a man can cover a good number of miles even in a half
day. And it seems that we cannot be stopped, we two — "
Fors
thought back over the wild activity of the past days. He had lost accurate
count of time long since. There was no way of knowing how many days it had been
since he had left the Eyrie. But there was a certain point of truth in what
Arskane had just said — they had not yet been stopped — in spite of Beast
Things, and Lizard folk, and the Plainsmen. Even fire or the Blow-Up land had
not proved barriers —
"Do you remember what once I said to
you, brother — back there when we stood on the field of the flying machines?
Never again must man come to warfare with his own kind — for if he does, then
shall man vanish utterly from the earth. The Old Ones began it with their
wicked rain of death from the sky — if we continue — then are we lost and
damned!"
"I remember."
"Now
it lies in my mind," the big man continued slowly, "that we have been
shown certain things, you and I, shown these things that we may in turn show
others. These Plainsmen ride to war with my people •— yet in them, too, is the
thirst for the knowledge that the Old Ones in their stupid waste threw away.
They breed seekers such as the man Marphy — with whom I find it in my heart to
wish friendship. There is also you, who are mountain bred — yet you feel no
hatred for me or for Marphy of the Plains. In all tribes we find men of good
will — "
Fors licked his lips. "And if such men
of good will could sit down together in common council —
"
Arskane's battered face lit up. "My own thoughts spoken from your lips, brother! We
must rid this land of war or we shall in the end eat each other up and what was
begun long and long ago with the eggs of death laid by our fathers from the sky
shall end in swords and spears running sticky red — leaving the land to the
Beast Things. And that foulness I shall not believe!"
"Cantrul said that his
people must fight or die — "
"So?
Well, there are different kinds of warfare. In the desert my people fought each
day, but their enemies were sand and heat, the barren land itself. And if we
had not lost the ancient learning perhaps we might even have tamed the burning
mountains! Yes, man must fight or he becomes a soft nothing — but let him fight
to build instead of to destroy. I would see my people trading wares and
learning with those born in tents, sitting at council fires with the men of the
mountain clans. Now is the time we must act to save that dream. For if the
people of the tents march south in war they shall
light such a fire as we or no living man may put out again. And in that fire we
shall be as the trees and grass of the fields — utterly consumed."
Fors'
answer was a grim stretch of ash-powdered skin which in no way resembled a
smile. "We be but two, Arskane, and doubtless I
am proclaimed outlaw, if the men of the Eyrie have noted my flight at all. My
chance of gaining a hearing at their councils was destroyed by the Beast Things
when they burned my city records. And you — ?"
"There
is thus much, brother. I am a son of a Wearer of the Wings — though I am
youngest and least of the family clap. So perhaps some will listen to me, if
only for a space. But we must reach the tribe before the Plainsmen do."
Fors
tossed a cleaned bone into the water below. "Heigh-ho! Then it is foot
slogging again. I wish that we might have brought one of those high-stepping
pacers out of the herds. Four legs are better than two when there is speed to
consider."
"Afoot
we go." But Arskane could not suppress an exclamation of pain as he got
to his feet and Fors could see that he favored the side where the shoulder
wound still showed red. However, neither made any complaint as they jumped down
from the ledge and plodded on through the ravine.
Arskane
was dreaming a dream and it was a great dream, Fors thought, almost with a
prick of real envy. He himself drew bow cord against the Beast Things without
any squeamishness, and he could fight with everything in him when his life was
at stake as it had been when they were cornered by the Plainsmen. But he took
no joy in slaying — he never had. As a hunter he had killed only to fill his
belly or for the pots of the Eyrie. He did not like the idea of notching an
arrow against Marphy or of standing against Vocar with bare swords —• for no
good reason save a lust to battle —
Why
had the men of the Eyrie drawn apart from their kind all these years? Oh, he
knew the old legends — that they were sprung from chosen men who with their
womenkind had been hidden in the mountains to escape just such an end as tore
their civilization into bloody shreds. They had been sent there to treasure
their learning — so they did, and tried to win more.
But
had they not also come to believe themselves a superior race? If his father had
not broken the unwritten law and married with a stranger, if he himself had
been born of pure clan blood within the walls of the Eyrie — would he think now
as he did? Jarl — his father had liked Jarl, had held him in high respect, had
been the first to give him the salute when he had been raised to the Captaincy
of the Star Men. Jarl! — Jarl could speak with Marphy and they would be two
quick minds talking — hungrily. But Jarl and Cantrul — no.
Cantrul was of a different breed. Yet he was a man whom others would follow always
— their eyes on that head, held high, with its startling plume of white hair —
a battle standard.
He
himself was a mutant, a thing of mixed strains. Could he dare to speak for
anyone save himself? At any rate he knew what he wanted now — to follow Arskane's
dream. He might not believe that that dream would ever come true. But the fight
for it would be his battle. He had wanted a star for his own — the silver star which he could hold in his two hands and wear as
a badge of honor to compel respect from the people who had rejected him. But
Arskane was showing him now something which might be greater than any star.
Wait — wait and see.
His
feet fell easily into the rhythm of those two words. The stream curved suddenly
when it issued out of the ravine. Arskane pulled himself up the steep bank by
the help of bushes. Fors gained the top in the same moment and together they
saw what lay to the south. A dense column of smoke mushroomed into the sky of
late afternoon.
For
one startled minute Fors thought of the prairie fire. But surely that had not
spread here, they had passed the line of burning hours
back. Another fire, and a localized one by the line of
smoke. One could take a route leading along the row of trees to the right,
snake through the field of tangled bushes beyond where red fruit hung heavy and
ripe, and reach the source without being exposed to attack.
Fors
felt the rake of berry thorns on his flesh, but at the same time he crammed the
tartly sweet fruit into his mouth as he crawled, staining his hands and face
with dark juice.
Halfway
across the berry patch they came upon evidence of a struggle. Under a bush lay
a tightly woven basket, spilling berries out into a mush of trampled earth and
crushed fruit. From this a trail of beaten-down grass and broken bushes led to
the other side of the field.
From the tight grasp of briers Arskane
detached a strip of cloth dyed a dull orange. He pulled it slowly through his
fingers.
"This
is of my tribal making," he said. "They were berrying here when — "
Fors
felt the point of the spear he trailed. It was not much of a weapon. He longed
fiercely for his bow — or even to hold the sword the Plainsmen had taken from
him. There were sword tricks which could serve a man well at the right
occasion.
With
the scrap of cotton caught between his teeth Arskane crawled on, giving no heed
to the thorns which ripped his arms and shoulders. Fors was conscious now of a
thin wailing sound, which did not rise or fall but kept querulously to one
ear-torturing note. It seemed to come with the smoke which the wind bore to
them.
The berry field ended in a stand of trees and
through these they looked out upon a lost battlefield. Small, two-wheeled carts
had been pulled up in a circle, or into a segment of a circle, for there was a
large gap in it now. And on these carts perched death birds, too stuffed to do
more than hold on to the wood and stare down at a feast still spread to entice
them.
A
mound of gray-white bodies lay at one side, the thick-wool on them clotted and
stiffened with blood.
Arskane
got to his feet — where the birds roosted unafraid the enemy was long gone.
That monotonous crying still filled the ears and Fors began to search for the
source. Arskane stooped suddenly and struck with a stone grabbed from the
ground. The cry was stilled and Fors saw his companion straighten up from the
still quivering body of a lamb.
There was another quest before them, a more
ghastly one. They began it with tight mouths and sick eyes — dreading to find
what must lie among the burning wagons and the mounds of dead animals. But it
was Fors who found there the first trace of the enemy.
He
half stumbled over a broken wagon wheel and beneath it was a lean body which
lay with arms outstretched and sightless eyes staring up. From the hairless
chest protruded the butt of an arrow which had gone true to its mark. And that
arrow — ! Fors touched the delicately set feathers at
the end of the shaft. He knew the workmanship — he himself set feathers in much
the same fashion. Though here was no personal mark of ownership — nothing but
the tiny silver star set so deeply into that shaft
that it could never be effaced.
"Beast Thing!" Arskane exclaimed at the sight of the corpse.
But
Fors pointed to the arrow. "That came from the quiver of a Star Man."
Arskane
did not display much interest — there were his own discoveries.
"This is the encampment of a family clan
only. Four wagons are burning, at least five escaped. They could not run with
the sheep — so they killed the flock. I have found the bodies of four more of
these vermin —" He touched the Beast Thing with the toe of his moccasin.
Fors stepped across the hind legs of a dead
pony which still lay with the harness of a cart on it. A Beast Thing dart stood
out between its ribs. From the presence of the Beast Thing corpses, Fors was
inclined to believe that the attack had been beaten off and the besieged had
been successful in the break for freedom.
A second search of the
litter equipped them with darts, and Fors snapped off the shaft of the arrow
which bore the star marking. Some wanderer from the Eyrie had made common
cause with the southerners in this attack. Did that mean that he could expect
to meet a friend — or an enemy — when he joined Arskane's people?
The
wheels of the escaping carts had cut deep ruts in the soft turf and there were
footprints clear to read beside them. The death birds settled back to the feast
as the two moved on. Arskane was breathing hard and the grimness which had cut
his mouth into a cruel line over the grave of Noraton was back.
"Four
of the Beast Things," puzzled Fors, lengthening his stride to a lope to
keep up. "And the Lizard folk killed five. How many are out roving — There has never been such an onslaught of the things before.
Why — ?"
"I
found a burned-out torch in the paw of one of them back there. Maybe the fire
of the Plains camp came from their setting. Just as they tried
here to fire the carts and drive out the clan to slaughter."
"But
never before have they come out of the ruins. Why now?"
Arskane's
lips moved as if he would spit. "Perhaps they too seek land — or war — or
merely the death of all those not of their breed. How
can we look into the minds of such? Ha!"
The cart track they followed joined another —
a deeper, wider track, such a road as must have been beaten down by the feet
and wheels of a nation on the march. The tribe was ahead now.
In
the next second, Fors checked so suddenly that he came near to tripping over
his own feet. Out of nowhere had come an arrow, to dig deep into the earth and
stand, quivering a little, an arrogant warning and a threat. He did not have to
examine it closely. He knew before he put out his hand that he would find a
star printed in its shaft.
15.
BAIT
Arskane
did not break stride but threw himself to the left and crouched in the shadow
of a bush, the darts he had picked up at the scene of the ambush in his hands,
ready. Fors on the contrary stood where he was and held up empty palms.
"We travel in peace — "
The rolling words of his
own mountain land seemed odd to mouth after all these weeks. But he was
not surprised at the identity of the man who came out of the clump of trees to
the right of the trail.
Jarl
would be imposing even in the simple garb of one of the least of the Eyrie. In
the insignia of the Star Captain he had more majesty, thought Fors proudly,
than Cantrul, for all the Plainschiefs feather helmet and collar of ceremony. As he walked toward them the sun glinted meteor bright on the Star
at his throat and on the well-polished metal of belt, sword hilt and knife
guard.
Arskane
pulled his feet under him. He was like Lura ready to spring for the kill. Fors
made a furious gesture at him. Jarl, in turn, showed no astonishment at the
sight of the two who waited for him.
"So, kinsman." He fingered his bow as if it were a councilor's staff of office.
"This is the trail you have found to follow?"
Fors
saluted him. And when Jarl did not acknowledge that courtesy he bit down hard
on the soft inner part of his lip. True, Jarl had never shown him any favor in
the past, but neither had the Star Captain ever by word or deed betrayed belief
that Fors was any different from the rest of the young of the Eyrie. And for
that he had long ago won a place apart in the boy's feelings.
"I travel with Arskane of the Dark Ones,
my brother." He snapped his fingers to bring the southerner out of the
bush. "His people are in danger now, so we join them —
"
"You realize that you
are now outlawed?"
Fors tasted the flat sweetness of the blood
from his lip. He could, in all fairness, have hoped for little less than that
sentence
after his manner of leaving the Eyrie. Nevertheless the calm mention of it now
made him cringe a little. He hoped that he did not show his discomfiture to
Jarl. The Eyrie had not been a happy home for him — he had never been welcome
there since Langdon's death. In truth they had outlawed him long since. But it
had been the only shelter he knew.
"By the lire of
Arskane is his brother always welcome!"
Jarl's
eyes, those eyes which held one on the balance scale, went from Fors to his
companion.
"Soon
the Dark Ones will not have fires or shelter to offer. You are late in your
returning, clansman. The drums of recall have been still these many
hours."
"We
were detained against our will," returned Arskane almost absently. He was
studying Jarl in his turn and, seemingly, the result was not altogether to his
liking.
"And not detained in gentleness it would
appear." Jarl must have marked every cut and bruise the two before him
boasted. "Well, fighting men are always welcome before a battle."
"Have
the Plainsmen — ?" began Fors, truly startled.
That Cantrul could have moved so quickly out of the wild confusion they had
left him in was almost beyond belief.
"Plainsmen?" He had shaken Jarl. "There are no Plainsmen in this. The Beast
Things have forsaken their ways and are boiling out of their dens. Now they
move in numbers to make war against all humankind!"
Arskane put his hand to his head. He was
tired to exhaustion, his lips showing white under the swelling which made a
lopsided lump of half his mouth. Without another word he started on doggedly
but when Fors would have followed him the Star Captain put out a hand which
brought him up short.
"What is this babble
of Plainsmen attacking — ?"
Fors found himself answering with the story
of their capture and stay in the Plains camp and their escape from Can-trul's
tent city. By the time he had finished Arskane was already out of sight. But
still Jarl made no move to let him go. Instead he was studying the patterns he
traced in the dust with the tip of his long bow. Fors impatiently shifted
weight from one foot to the other. But when the Star Captain spoke it was as
if he followed his own thoughts.
"Now
do I better understand the events of these past two days."
He whistled high and shrill between his
teeth, the sound carrying far as Fors knew.
And
he was answered when out of the grass came two lithe furry bodies. Fors did not
notice the black one that rubbed against Jarl for he was rolling across the
ground where the force of the other's welcome had sent him, rolling and
laughing a little hysterically as Lura's rough tongue explored his face and
her paws knocked him about with heavy tenderness.
"Yesterday
Nag came back from hunting and brought her with him." Jarl's hand rubbed
with steady strokes behind the ears of the huge cat whose black fur, long and silky
and almost blue in the sun, twisted in his fingers. "There is a lump on her skull. During your fight she must have been knocked
unconscious. And ever since Nag brought her in she has been trying to urge me
into some task — doubtless the single-handed rescue of your person — "
Fors
got to his feet while Lura wove about him, butting at him with her head and
rubbing against his none too steady legs with the full force of her steel tendoned
body.
"Touching sight — "
Fors winced. He knew that tone from Jarl. It
had the ability to deflate the most confident man and that speedily. With an
unspoken suggestion to Lura he started down the trail after the vanished
Arskane. Although he did not look back he knew that the Star Captain was
following him at the easy, mile-eating pace his own feet had automatically
dropped into.
Jarl did not speak again, remaining as silent
as Nag, that black shadow which slipped across the land as if he were only in
truth the projection of a bush in the sun. And Lura, purring loudly, kept close
to Fors' side as if she were afraid that should she return to her old
outflanking ways he would disappear again.
They found Arskane's people encamped in a
meadow which was encircled on three sides by a river. The two-wheeled carts were a wooden wall around the outer edges
and in the center showed the gray backs of sheep, the dun coats of ponies in
rope corrals with the lines of family cooking fires running between low tents.
There were only a few men there and those were fully armed. Fors suspected that
he must have come through some picket line unchallenged because of the Star
Captain's companionship.
It
was easy to find Arskane. A group of men and a large circle of women ringed
him. It was a crowd so intent upon the scout's report that not one of them
noted the arrival of Fors and Jarl.
Arskane
was talking to a woman. She was almost as tall as the young warrior before her
and her features were strongly marked. Two long braids of black hair swung down
upon her shoulders and now and again she raised a hand to push at them
impatiently with a gesture which had become habitual. Her long robe was dyed
the same odd shade of dusky orange as the scrap of cotton they had found in the
berry field and on her arms and about her neck was the gleam of stone-set
silver.
As
Arskane finished, she considered for a moment and then a stream of commands,
spoken too rapidly in the slurred tongue of the south for Fors to follow, sent
the circle about her apart, men and women both hurrying off on errands. When
the last of these left she caught sight of Fors and her eyes widened. Arskane
turned to see what had surprised her. Then his hand fell on the mountaineer's
shoulder and he pulled him forward.
"This is he of whom I have told you — he
has saved my life in the City of the Beast Things, and I have named him brother
— "
There was almost a touch of pleading in his
voice.
"We
be the Dark People." The woman's tone was low but
there was a lilt in it, almost as if she chanted. "We be
the Dark People, my son. He is not of our breed — "
Arskane's hands went out in a nervous
gesture. "He is my brother," he repeated stubbornly. "Were it
not for him I would have long since died the death and my clan would never have
known how or where that chanced."
"In turn," Fors
spoke to this woman chief as equal to equal, "Arskane has stood between me
and a worse passing — has he neglected to tell you that? But, Lady, you should
know this — I am outlawed and so free meat to any man's spear — "
"So?
Well, the matter of outlawry is between you and your name clan — and not for
the fingering of strangers. You have a white skin — but in the hour of danger
what matters the color of a fighting man's bone covering? The hour is coming
when we shall need every bender of bow and wielder of sword we can lay orders
upon." She stooped and caught up a pinch of the sandy loam which ridged
between her sandaled feet. And now she stretched out her hand palm up with that
bit of earth lying on it.
Fors
touched the tip of his forefinger to his lips and then to the soil. But he did
not fall to his knees in the finish of that ritual. He gave allegiance but he
did not beg entrance to a clan. The woman nodded approvingly.
"You think straight thoughts, young man.
In the name of the Silver Wings and of Those Who Once Flew, I accept your
fighting faith until the hour when we mutually agree to go our ways. Now are
you satisfied, Arskane?"
Her clansman hesitated before he answered.
There was an odd soberness on his face as he regarded Fors. Plainly he was
disappointed at the mountaineer's refusal to ask for clan standing. But at last
he said:
"I
claim him as a member of my family clan, to fight under our banner and eat at
our fire — "
"So
be it." She dismissed them both with a wave of her hand. Already she
looked beyond them to Jarl and was summoning the Star Captain imperiously.
Arskane
threaded through the camp, giving only hasty greetings to those who would have
stopped him, until he came to a tent which had two carts for walls and a wide
sweep of woolen stuff for a roof. Round shields of rough-scaled skin hung in a
row on mounts by the entrance — four of them — and above these warrior shields
the wind played with a small banner. For the second time Fors saw the pattern
of the widespread wings, and below those a scarlet shooting star.
A small, grave-eyed girl
glanced up as they came. With a
little cry she dropped the pottery jar she had been holding and came running,
to cling tightly to Arskane, her face hidden against his scarred body. He gave
a choked laugh and swept her up high.
"This is the small-small one of our hearthside, my brother.
She is named Rosann of the Bright Eyes. Ha, small one. bid
welcome my brother — "
Shy
dark eyes peered at Fors and then little hands swept back braids which would in
a few years rival those of the woman chief and an imperious voice ordered
Arskane to "put me down!" Once on her two feet again she came up to
the mountaineer, her hands outstretched. Half guessing the right response Fors
held out his in turn and she laid small palms to press his large ones.
"To
the fire on the hearth, to the roof against the night and storm, to the food
and drink within this house, are you truly welcome, brother of my
brother." She said the last word in triumph at her perfect memory and
smiled back at Arskane with no little pride.
"Well done, little sister. You are the
proper lady of this clan house — "
"I accept of your welcome, Lady
Rosann." Fors showed more courtliness than had been in his manner when he
had greeted the chieftainess.
"Now," Arskane was frowning again,
"I must go to my father, Fors. He is making the rounds of the outposts. If
you will await us here — "
Rosann had kept hold of his hand and now she
gave him the same wide smile with which she had favored her brother.
"There are berries, brother of my brother, and the new cheese and corn
cake fresh baked — "
"A feast — !" He met her smile.
"A true feast! Because Arskane has come back. Becie said that
he would not and she cried — "
"Did she?" There was an unusual
amount of interest in that comment from her tall brother. Then he was gone,
striding away between the tent lines. Rosann nodded.
"Yes,
Becie cried. But I did not. Because I knew that he would be back — "
"And why were you so sure?"
The hand tugged him closer to the shield
stands. "Arslcane is a great warrior. That — "a pink-brown finger touched the rim
of the last shield in the row, "that is made from the skin of a thunder
lizard and Arskane killed it all alone, just himself. Even my father
allowed the legend singer to put together words for that at the next singing
time — though he has many times said that the son of a chief must not be
honored above other warriors. Arskane — he is very strong —
"
And
Fors, remembering the days just past, agreed. "He
is strong and a mighty warrior and he has done other
things your legend singer must weave words about."
"You
are not of our people. Your skin" — she compared his hand with hers —
"it is light. And your hair — it is like Becie's necklace when the sun
shines upon it. You are not of us Dark People — "
Fors
shook his head. In that company of warm brown skins and black hair his own
lighter hide and silver head-capping must be doubly conspicuous.
"I
come from the mountains — far to the east —" He waved a hand.
"Then you must be of
the cat people!"
Fors'
gaze followed her pointing finger. Nag and Lura sat together at a good distance
from the sheep and the tough little ponies as they had apparently been ordered
to do. But, at Fors' welcoming thought, Lura came up, leaving Nag behind.
Rosann laughed with pure delight and threw her arms around the cat's neck,
hugging her tight. The rumble of Lura's purr was her answer and a rough pink
tongue caressed her wrist.
"Do
all you people of the mountains have the big cats for your own friends?"
"Not
all. The cat ones are not so many and it is for them to choose with whom they
will hunt. This is Lura who is my good friend and roving companion. And that
yonder is Nag who runs with the Star Captain."
"I
know — the Star Captain Jarl, he who has the kind eyes. He talks in the night
with my father."
"Kind eyes." Fors was a little startled at a description
so at variance with what he thought he knew. Though Rosann
probably did not see Jarl as he appeared to a mutant and tribal outlaw.
Smoke
was rising from the line of fires and borne with it was the fragrance of
cooking. Fors could not repress a single sniff.
"You are hungry,
brother of my brother!"
"Maybe — just a little
— "
Rosann
flushed. "I am sorry. Again have I let my tongue run and not remembered
the Three Duties. Truly am I shamed — "
Her fingers tightened on his and she pulled
him under the entrance flap of the tent. "Down!"
Fors'
heels struck against a pile of thick mats and he obediently folded up his long
legs and sat. Lura collapsed beside him as Rosann bustled about. Before Fors
could even make out the patterns of the hangings on the walls Rosann returned,
carrying before her a wide metal basin of water from which rose steam and the
spicy scent of herbs. A towel of coarse stuff lay over her arm and she held it
ready as Fors washed.
Then
came a tray
with a spoon and bowl and a small cup of the same
bitter drink he had brewed under Arskane's direction in the museum. The corn
mush had been cooked with bits of rich meat and the stimulating drink was comforting
in his middle.
He must have dozed off afterward because when
he roused it was night outside and the crimson flames of the fire and the
lesser beams of a lamp fought against the shadows. A hand placed on his
forehead had brought him awake. Arskane knelt beside him and there were two
others beyond. Fors levered himself up.
"What — " He was still half asleep.
"My father wishes to
speak with you — "
Fors gathered his wits. One of the men facing
him now was a slightly older edition of his friend. But the other wore about
his throat a pair of silver wings fastened to a chain of the same stuff.
The chieftain was smaller than his sons and
his dark skin was seamed and cracked by torrid winds and blistering suns.
Across
his chin was the ragged scar of an old and badly healed wound. Now and again he
rubbed at this with a forefinger as if it still troubled him.
"You are Fors of the
mountain clans?"
Fors
hesitated. "I was of those clans. But now I am outlaw —
"
"The Lady Nephata gave
him earth — "
Arskane
was both interrupted and effectively silenced by a single sharp look from his
father.
"My
son has told us something of your wanderings. But I would hear more of this
Plainsmen encampment and what chanced with you there — "
For
the second time Fors repeated his outline of recent events. When he had
finished the Chief favored him with the same sort of intimidating glare which
had worked on his son a few minutes before. But Fors met it forthrightly.
"You, Ranee," the Chief turned to
the young man with him, "will alert the scouts against this trouble and
make the rounds of the western outposts every hour. If an attack offers, the
two beacons on the round hills must be fired. That you must keep ever in the
minds of the men — "
"You see, rover" — the Chief spoke
over his shoulder, addressing a shadow near the door, and for the first time
Fors noted a fourth man there — "we do not go to war as to a banquet — as
these Plainsmen seem to do. But if it be necessary then we can fight! We who
have faced the wrath of the thunder lizards and taken their hides to make our
shields of ceremony — "
"Do
not greatly fear the lances of mere men." The Star Captain appeared
faintly amused. "Perhaps you are right, Lanard. But do not forget that the
Beast Things are also abroad and they are less than men — or more!"
"Since I have ordered the war drums for
more than the lifetime of this my youngest son, I do not forget one danger when
faced by another, stranger!"
"Your pardon, Lanard. Only a fool tries to teach the otter to swim. Let war be left to the
warriors — "
"Warriors
who have sat too long at their ease!" snapped the chieftain. "To your posts, all of you!"
Arskane and his brother
went, the chieftain stamping out impatiently after them. Fors started to
follow. "Wait!"
There
was the crack of a whip in that one word. Fors stiffened. Jarl
had no power of command over him — not even the faintest shadow of power
if he was a outlaw. But he dropped his hand on Lura's head and waited.
"These
people," Jarl continued with the same harsh abruptness, "may be
broken between two enemies. It is not in their nature to back trail and in
their own country there has been nothing they could not vanquish. Now they have
come into this new land and fight on strange territory against those who are
familiar with it. They face worse than they can imagine — but if that truth is
told them they will not believe it."
Fors
made no comment and after a moment the Star Captain went on:
"Langdon
was my good friend always, but there was a streak of rashness in him and he did
not always see the road ahead with clear eyes — "
At
this criticism of his father Fors stirred but he did not speak.
"You
have already, youth that you are, broken the clan laws — going your own way in
pride and stubbornness — "
"I ask for nothing of
the Eyrie's giving!"
"That
is as it may be. I have twice heard your tale — you have a liking for this
Arskane, I think. And you have eyes and a talent for getting under the skin of
a man. This Marphy is one whom we might well remember. But Cantrul is a
fighting man and of a different breed. Give him something to fight and he may
be more open to other thoughts when the victory lies behind him. Very well, it
is up to us to give him something to fight — something other than this
tribe!"
"What — ?"
Fors brought only the one word out of his vast amazement.
"Beast Things. A well-baited trail could lead them north to the Plains camp."
Fors
began to guess what was coming. He swallowed, his
mouth and throat suddenly dry. To be bait for the Beast
Things,
to run north a pace or two before the most hideous death he knew —
"Such a task could be
only ours alone — "
"You mean — not tell
Lanard?"
"It
would be best not. The plan would have no merit in their eyes now. You — you
are an outlaw — a stranger who might well have little stomach for a fight not
his. If you were to desert this camp, run away — "
Fors'
nails bit into the palms of his balled fists. To appear a skin-saving coward in
Arskane's eyes — just because Jarl had dreamed up so wild a plan — And yet part of him acknowledged the point of the Star
Captain's reasoning.
"If
the Plainsmen and this tribe fight — then it may well follow that the Beast
Things shall finish off both of them."
"You
do not have to point it out to me as one and one are two," Fors spat out.
Somewhere a childish voice was humming. And
the brother of that child had brought him whole out of the valley of the
lizards.
"When
do I march?" he asked the Star Captain, hating him and every word he
himself spoke.
16. THE HUNTED
AND
THE HUNTERS
Again
Fors was grateful for the mutation which had given him the keenness of his
night sight. For almost an hour he had been wriggling down an ancient roadside
ditch as a hanger-on of the small party of dark-skinned warriors whom Arskane
now led. The broken surface of the nearby road was steel bright in the beams of
the full moon, but he was sure that only he could see clearly what passed in
the shadows beyond.
He
was glad for the weight of bow and quiver across his shoulders — although the
bow was the short, double-stringed weapon of the southerners and not the long
one he was accustomed to. However, one sword was much like another and the new
one at his belt already fitted his hand as if it had been forged to rest
therein.
If
it had not been for Jarl's plan he could have been really happy in that hour.
To follow Arskane as one of his own tribe — to be accepted without question by
those around him — But he was now pledged to put an end to that by his own
actions — as soon as the time was right. Jarl was scouting to the west, the
same compulsion driving him. They might be able to rendezvous after their break
away from the tribe or they might never see each other again. Fors sent a
silent call to Lura. If they did strike out into the wilderness tonight he would
have to depend upon her wits and instinct — even more than upon his own.
The
old road curved around the base of a rise. Fors stopped — had he really seen a
flicker of movement in a bush halfway up that hill? His hand fell on the ankle
of the man before him and he pressed hard, knowing that that signal would be as
swiftly passed down the line.
That flash of
cream white, that must be Lura crossing the road and heading up. But what he
had caught only the faintest glimpse of had been far above that. Lura should
rout it out —
There
was a sudden scurry on the slope and Fors saw the outline of a crouching body.
The sharp line of the thing's shoulders was only too familiar.
"Beast
Thing!"
Lura's
scream tore through the air drowning out the warning he shouted. The bushes
threshed wildly at her attack. But she had had her instructions, not to kill
now — only to harry and drive. The black thing snapped up out of hiding, arms
flailing as the men around Fors went to their knees, arrows ready on strings. A
cloud of feathered shafts flew. Most, Fors guessed, had fallen woefully short.
Shooting up slope was always a tricky business.
The Beast Thing scuttled away over the crown
of the hill at a desperate speed. And it was gone before other arrows could
follow the first volley. Arskane edged along the line of disappointed archers
to join Fors.
"Was that a
scout?" he asked.
"Could be. They have always hunted in packs before. If
it was a scout, it will now report."
Arskane
chewed the tip of his thumb thoughtfully. Fors knew the worries which plagued
him now. Ambush — that was the worst fear. They knew
so little of the tactics of the Beast Things — but lying in wait in the dark
seemed to fit the nature of the foul creatures best.
In the ruined cities they had always fought from cover when they could.
In
the end Arskane did as Fors thought he would, gave the signal to push on until
they reached the boundaries of their beat, one of the hills where the beacon
had been heaped some days before. So they crawled on, Lura flanking the line of
march. And they reached the beacon
hill without interference. Once there, Arskane formally relieved the
guard on duty.
The
hour was close to dawn. A thin gray light gave ordinary trees and bushes a
queer new life as if they were now cut off from the real world by some flimsy
barrier. The beacon keepers had torn out or hacked away most of the brush and
saplings, so that the crown of the hill was bare and one could see for a good
range on all sides.
Fors
located the camp by the river first and then set about noting other landmarks
which might help him keep the proper course if he decided to make the break
north soon. The men whom they had relieved were marching in fairly good order
down the hill, ready to drop into the protection of the road ditch, when the
last one in that line threw up his arms with a startled jerk and fell without a
sound. The man nearest him spun around just in time to see him fall and started
back to his aid, only to choke and go to his knees tearing at the dart
quivering in his own throat.
They broke and ran back. But before they
could reach the miserable shelter afforded by the beacon, two more died, Beast Thing steel in their contorted bodies. Only one lived
to break through to the men above.
And they, arrows ready, stood cursing, unable
to shoot at a foe which would not show itself.
Lura bounded out of cover below. She crowded
up to Fors, her blue eyes wide. Once getting his attention her head swung
meaningly from side to side. So, they were surrounded! Maybe it was already
too late to play the game Jarl had set him. But even as that hope leaped he
knew that he would have no escape — that this was just the right sort of
background for his break through — that this would truly bring the Beast Things
out on any trail he laid for them. He must openly desert Arskane — perhaps even
to the southerner's death!
"We
are surrounded." Tonelessly he passed on Lura's report.
Arskane
nodded. "That I thought when she came to us. Well, now we may be forced to
the waiting game." He turned to the men around him. "Down on your
bellies! Crawl to the brush. We are clear targets to them now."
But
before those orders were out of his mouth, the man beside him gave a gasping
cry and held out his arm, a dart embedded in its flesh. As one man they moved
into what cover they could find, Arskane pulling the wounded tribesman with
him. But the cover of the beacon was a sorry shield.
The
worst was not being able to sight the enemy. If they had been able to fight
back it would not have been such a strain on the nerves. Picked and seasoned
warriors knew better than to waste arrows on empty tree glades where nothing
moved. It would be a battle in which patience would mean the most.
Fors
sent Lura on another scouting trip. He must learn if there was any gap in the
line the Beast Things held. If there was he should cross, break out to start
north. If he won through they would probably wait to see if he headed for the
river camp before they followed. So he must give the impression from the first
that he was confused •— then the sport of driving him might draw a portion of
them after him.
During
the morning there were two more casualties. Arskane, on making the rounds from
one hidden man to another, found one dead with a dart pinning him down, and
another with a torn leg, bandaging his own wound. When he came back to Fors he
was very sober.
"At
noon the camp will send us relief. If we light the beacon in warning they will
prepare to move camp and that may lead them straight into an ambush. But Karson
thinks he remembers something of the old smoke talk and he has volunteered to
try it. Only those who signal will be exposed to fire." The southerner
scowled at the silent woods. "We are but five now and two of those wounded.
If we die and the tribe is saved — what does it matter?"
Fors
fought his impulse to volunteer. He was sensitive to the slight hesitation with
which Arskane regarded him when he did not answer. Then the southerner turned
and crawled to the center of the beacon. Fors stirred. He might have gone after
his companion had he not caught sight of something else which brought him into
a crouch, tense and ready. Lura's head showed for the slightest instant below.
She had found the gap he had sent her to search for. Now he, too, began to work
his way around the hill to a point just above that section.
His dash would lead him across an open space
and he must not be brought down. If he could time it right his move might draw
fire which would otherwise be concentrated on the men at the beacon. He licked
dry lips. Bow and quiver must be left behind, leaving him only sword and hunting
knife.
Yes,
he had not been mistaken. Lura's brown ears showed again in outline against a
moss-grown rock. She was waiting for him. He gathered his feet under him, and,
as an arrow from a bow, he dashed out of cover and zigzagged down the slope.
There was a single shout of surprise from behind and then he was into the
woods, Lura with him.
Now he was absorbed in the task at hand. He
burst through a screen of small trees, making only the most elementary effort
to hide his trail. Lura's warning that they were now followed set his heart to
pounding. Now — now it was just his own two feet, his
hunting lore, and his sense of direction against all the cunning of the enemy.
He must be a tempting morsel always just about to fall into the pursuers'
hands, and yet he must keep from capture and lead the run into Plains territory
so that Cantrul might be provoked into action. As Jarl had outlined it the
plan was as simple as it was deadly— but was it going to work?
There
were short periods during the rest of the day when he could snatch some rest,
always after Lura assured him that something still ran the trail behind. Once
he dared verify that for himself, having climbed a cliff after crossing a
stream. He lingered in a shallow crevice at the top long enough to see three
gray shapes come out of the woods a half mile back, the first on all fours
sniffing the ground as it came.
Three — out of how many? But the beacon must have warned the camp. He must think of nothing else
now but his own task. If ever his eyes and ears served him well they must do
better than that now. As a fugitive gaining his second wind perhaps he would
dare display a little more cunning. The Beast Things might accept the idea that
sheer panic had brought him away from the beacon, but that would not prevent a
greater show of caution now. He tried several of the simpler trail-hiding
tricks and waited for Lura's verdict. It was favorable, the chase was still on.
Some
hours before evening he struck west, trying to intercept a line which must run
to the beaver lake and so to Cantrul's camp — unless the fire had driven the
Plainsmen from that base. He ate as he went, berries and handfuls of ripe grain
pulled from the ragged self-sown patches in the old fields. There were hard,
half-ripe peaches in an old orchard he pounded through and he had enough to
keep him going when washed down with water from brook and spring.
The
night was the worst. He had to lay up for rest, swinging into the branches of
a tree, close enough to an outcrop of rock to be able to leap away if the need
came. Lura catnapped on that rock, her brown and cream melting into the
weathered stone. He dozed and woke, to stretch cramped muscles and doze again.
Before morning he moved twice, putting a mile between each resting place and
choosing each for the ability to make a quick retreat.
When
the gray of dawn caught him again he was lying flat on a bluff overhanging a
stream he was sure was the outlet of the beaver lake. Pieces of charred wood
caught among the boulders below proved that. The size of the stream had dwindled, perhaps the beavers had started repairs in the
broken dam. Fors lay there, every aching joint, every exhausted muscle
protesting the move he was willing his body into making. It was as if he had
been running for days — since they had left the ruined city they had been on
the move with little or no rest. And none to look for in the immediate future
either —
Luckily he was facing downstream, with his
eyes on the moving surface, for now he saw what might have been the strangest
sight to ever appear on that forgotten shore. An animal was swimming up river,
nosing along the bank in a peculiar fashion, almost as if it were intelligently
questing. When it reached the spot between two stones where Fors had knelt to
drink before he climbed, it scrambled out of the water and sat up on its
haunches, its forepaws held close to its lighter underbelly, its head high with
sniffing nose testing the flowing air currents.
It
was a rat — one of the huge, gray-coated ones of the old breed with which man
has fought eternal warfare since the first days of time. A rat — Fors
remembered back to the sunny morning in the ruins of the old city shops when
just such a beast had sat to watch him without alarm. The rats flourished in
the cities — everyone knew that. But for the most part men did not see them —
even there. Their ways were underground, in the
noisome burrows they had hollowed and claimed from cellar to cellar, through
the old sewers and waterways.
The
rat shook itself. Then the growing light brought a flash from its throat as it
raised higher its head. A metal collar — surely that was a metal collar. But a
collar on a rat — why — who —
Who
lived in the cities? Who might tame and use rats? He knew the answer to that. But why? The rat alone was not a formidable fighter — not an
ally as good as Lura — they were only to be feared in hordes. Hordes — I
The
rat jumped to the top of a boulder and began to lick itself dry, as if it had
successfully completed a set task and could now take time for its own concerns.
Fors had not been mistaken by some trick of the light — as the beast's head
twisted and turned the collar was easy to see. It was made of flat links and
seemed flexible.
Suddenly the creature stopped its toilet and
crouched very still, its beady eyes aimed downstream. Fors could not move. He
had to see what was going to happen. And the same idea flashed to his mind from
Lura who was flattened out against the rock some feet away, her lips frozen in a snarl.
They
heard the splashing first, a sound too regular to
be natural. If he were wise he would leave now, but he could not.
An
ungainly figure came skittering through the shallows around the waterworn
rocks. Its shape was queer but Fors peered until he made out that the hunched
back of the creature was in reality a basket cage. At its coming the collared
rat showed its teeth wickedly but it did not attempt to escape.
The
Beast Thing came on, leisurely reached out a long arm and picked up the rat by
its collar while it snapped its teeth and clawed wildly. With the ease of long
practice the rat master threw his captive through a trap door into the cage and
snapped it shut again. From the wild chattering which ensued Fors deduced that
more than one rat rode therein. But Lura was gliding away from her vantage
point and he knew that she was right. It was time for them to go.
But
as he fled he continued to wonder. Why the rats? Unless the
Beast Things had rested and sent the rats to trail him during the night.
If that was true his taking to the trees must have baffled them for a good
while. Or did rats climb? He wished that he knew more about their habits. And
why had none of the Star Men discovered during their brushes with the Beast
Things this use of rats? Was it new — another manifestation of the urge which
was bringing the sub-human forces out of their century old burrows to challenge
the descendants of the Old Ones?
All
the old tales about the Beast Things went through his head as he mechanically
set a trail which would delay but not altogether throw off the pursuers. They
were supposed to be the offspring of city dwellers caught in the full strength
of the radiation waves, children so much mutant in form and mind that they were
no longer human at all. That was one explanation.
But there was another story about them too.
And that was that the Beast Things were the descendants of companies of the
invading enemy, parties of soldiers both male and female who had been landed to
occupy the country and then been forgotten when their own nation had
disappeared under retaliatory atom bombing. Soldiers,
bewildered and totally lost when no orders came, who clung stubbornly to the positions they had
been sent to occupy — remaining there in spite of the radiation. Whichever
theory was the true one, the Beast Things, though they aroused revulsion and
instinctive hatred among the humans, were also victims of the Old Ones' tragic
mistake, as shattered in their lives as the cities had been.
Fors
jogged into the first section of the fire-swept land. Ahead lay a black and
desolate waste. And there was little or no cover left. He would have to dare
discovery from the rat-carrying Beast Thing and take to the riverside again.
The
smell of burnt stuff was thick in the air, the stench making him cough as much
as the powdery ashes which drifted up between his feet. Perhaps it was best to
take to water. Here and there a fallen tree still showed a heart of glowing
coals.
Coughing,
rubbing his eyes to clear them, Fors scrambled over rocks and once even swam to
breast the current. Here water marks were high above the present level of the
stream. It was evident that the dam must have been at least partly repaired.
Then
he clambered up over that structure itself. Before him lay the lake, ringed
completely around with the black scar of fire. The beavers faced a famine
season unless they moved. It would be a full year before the saplings would begin
to sprout again and not for several generations would trees stand tall there
once more.
Fors
dove into the water. Even here the smell of smoke and the tang of burning
clung. There were bodies floating too, a deer, a wild cow, and close to the far
shore, a horse bearing on its puffed flank the painted sign of the Plains camp.
He swam by it and headed up the feeder stream down which he and Arskane had won
to freedom. But before he left the lake he glanced back.
And over the beaver dam was clambering the
hunchbacked figure of the rat carrier. Behind it three others came up. As they
hesitated on the dam, teetering as if they feared either the water or the still
smoldering footing offered ashore, five more of their kind appeared.
Fors drew back into a half
circle of rocks. Jarl's plan had succeeded. He had no way of guessing how many
of the Beast Things had ambushed the party at the beacon hill, but the pack now
running at his heels had numbers enough to interest Cantrul. The Beast Things
were dour and terrible fighters, and they were fighters who never wanted to
head an open attack. Their present openness showed how much they held him in
contempt. Fors watched, to see the rat cage unstrapped
while its bearer went over into the lake.
A
comrade tore away part of the dam's substance to make a raft to carry the cage.
Then they were all swimming, clumsily but surely, taking turns pushing the
cage before them.
Fors
took to his heels, skidding over slime-coated stones, the stream rising from
thigh to waist as he panted through it and tried to dodge the smoking timber
which had fallen across the banks here and there.
The
patch of green grass he sighted where he had come to expect only the black of
the burning was almost a shock. But there were reeds standing tall and
unscorched in a thick mass. He plunged through them to shore.
The mud bank beyond was thickly scored with hoofprints, some still fresh, good
evidence that the Plainsmen were still there. Lura's tracks overlay the others
and the marks of her claws on the clay overhang were deep. Fors grabbed for the
tough roots of a bush and pulled himself up.
He pulled himself up and took two steps. Then
he tripped and rolled, his feet jerked out from under him. And as he went down
he heard the shrilling of a vicious laughter. His hand was tight on his sword
hilt and he had the blade out almost before he had again sucked the air into
his lungs. He came up, the bare blade in swing, ready and waiting.
17. THE LAST WAR
Fors
saw what he knew would be there — a ring
of wiry gray bodies around him. The Beast Things must have been concealed in
the grass. A little beyond him, Lura — also a captive — threshed, the noose
tight about her neck as she clawed up great patches of turf in her struggle for
freedom.
Another jerk on the
trapping cord brought him sprawling
forward to
the accompaniment of inhuman laughter. There was only one thing he could do
now. Without trying to regain his feet or even to get to his knees, Fors
struggled across the ground on his belly to Lura, a move which seemed to take
his captors entirely by surprise. None of them could prevent his sword biting
through the cord which strangled her. And his order had flashed from mind to
mind in that same instant.
"Find Nag — and he who
hunts with Nag — find!"
She
would be more likely to join the other cat than go directly to Jarl. But where
the black cat ran the Star Captain would not be far away.
Lura's
powerful legs gathered under her. Then she sprang in a great arching leap,
passing over the head of one of the Beast Things. Free of their circle she went
as a streak of light fur into the grass and was lost. Fors took advantage of
the excitement to slash at the tangle of cord about his ankles and he had one
foot free before the rage of the Beast Things flamed and they concentrated
again on the remaining captive.
There
was no hope now. He wondered how many seconds of life he had before he would go
down for the last time, pin-cushioned by the darts they all held. But — when in
doubt — attack! The advice Langdon had once given him stiffened his sword arm
now. Speed — Do as much harm as he could. There was no chance of keeping alive
until Lura found Jarl but he could take some of these beasts with him.
With
the same lithe speed Lura had displayed he sprang at one of the circle, blade
up and ready to twist in the vicious thrust which was the most dangerous he
knew. And almost he made it, had his one foot not remained in bond. As it was
he laid open gray hide, not in the deep death-dealing gash he had planned, but
in a shallow cut which ran red half across the thing's bulbous paunch.
He
ducked the blow aimed at his head, ducked and struck up again. Then his sword
arm went limp, the blade falling out of his numbed fingers as a dart went home.
A cuff der livered across the side of his face before he could raise his left
hand sent him sailing back surrounded by a burst of red which turned into black
nothingness.
Pain dragged him back, a red agony of pain
which ran through his veins like fire, a fire which ran from his torn arm. He tried
to move feebly and found that his ankles and wrists were fast — he had been
tied down, spread-eagled to stakes in the ground.
It
was hard to get his eyes open, the left eyelid was glued to his cheek. But now
he was looking up into the sky. So he was not dead yet, he thought dully. And
since the tree he could see was green he must still be close to the point where
he had been captured. He tried to raise his head, had one moment of blurred
sight, and then was so sick that he dropped it flat again and shut his eyes to
hide reeling sky and heaving ground.
Later
there was noise — much of it which rang in his head until he forced his eyes open again. Beast Things were driving up another prisoner.
By his hair dress he was a Plainsman. And he was sent flat with a blow and
pegged out beside Fors. The Beast Things favored him with a couple of
rib-cracking kicks before they left, making suggestions in gestures — suggestions
which did not promise well for the future.
Fors'
head felt thick and tight, he could not force his thoughts together in the fog
which seemed to gather in his brain. It was better just to lie still and endure
the pain in his arm as best he could.
A shrill squeaking pulled him out of the fog
of pain and sickness. He turned his head to see the wicker basket of rats a few
feet away. The Beast Thing who had worn it on its back gave a sigh of relief as
it dropped its burden and joined the three or four of its fellows who were lounging
under a nearby tree. Their guttural greeting meant nothing to Fors.
But
through the open slits of the basket cage he fancied he could see sparks of
reddish light — small wicked eyes watching him with a horrid kind of
intelligence. All at once the rats were quiet, save when at intervals one or
another squeaked briefly as if making some comment to its companions.
How long did they watch each other? Time in
true measure no longer existed for Fors. After a space the Beast Things made a
fire and broiled ragged pieces of meat, some still backed with horsehide. When
the scent of that reached the rats they went wild, running about their cage
until it rocked, squeaking at the tops of their thin voices. But none of their
masters made any move to share the feast with them.
When
one was done it came over to the cage and shook it, yelling. The rats were
quiet, again their eyes showed at the open spaces, looking now only at the
prisoners — red eyes, angry, hungry eyes.
Fors
tried to tell himself that what he suspicioned was not true, that in his
torment he had no control over imagination. Surely that Beast Thing had not
made a promise then — a promise which Fors dared not believe lest he lose all
control over wits and will.
But
those red rat eyes watched and watched. He could see the sharp claws pointing
between the wicker ribs, and the gleam of teeth — And
always the watching eyes —
By
the lengthening shadow he guessed that it was far along in the afternoon when
the third and last party of Beast Things came into camp. And with them was the
leader.
He
was no taller than other members of his tribe, but a certain arrogant
confidence in his bearing and stride made him seem to overtop the others. His
hairless head was narrow with the same slit nose and protruding fanged jaws,
but the brain case was domed, larger by half again over any of the rest. His
eyes held a cunning intelligence and there was a subtle difference in the way
he looked over his world — a difference which Fors did not miss. This Beast
Thing was no true man — no, but neither was he as brutish as the pack he led.
One could almost believe that here lay the power which had brought the foul
band out to range the open lands.
Now
he came to stand between the two captives. Fors turned away from the rat cages
to meet those queer eyes firmly.
But
the mountaineer could read nothing understandable in their depths and the
protruding jaws expressed no emotion which might be deduced by a human. The
leader of the Beast Things might have been wildly elated, annoyed, or merely
curious, as he stared at first one and then the other of the staked-out
prisoners. But curiosity must have directed his next move for he dropped down
crosslegged between them and mouthed the first real words Fors had ever heard
issue from one of the city-bred monsters.
"You — where?" He demanded that of the Plainsman who could
not or would not answer.
When
he did not reply the Beast Leader leaned over and, with a deliberation which
was as cruel as the blow, slapped the captive with lip-bursting force across
the mouth. It then swung to Fors and repeated his question.
"From the south — " Fors croaked.
"South,"
the leader repeated, distorting the word oddly. "What in south?"
"Men
— many, many men. Ten
tens of tens — "
But
that sum was either beyond the calculations of the creature beside him, or the
Beast Thing did not believe in its truth, for it cackled with a ghastly
travesty of laughter and, reaching out, brought a fist down across his wounded
arm. Fors fainted, dropping into blackness with a sick swoop.
A
scream brought him back to consciousness. He had the echoes of that cry still
ringing through his head when he forced open his eyes and tried to stabilize
crazily flowing blocks of light and shade. A second cry of pain and horror
settled the world into place.
The
leader of the Beast Things still squatted between the captives and jn
outstretched hand it held the struggling body of one of the hungry rats. There
was red on the vermin's fangs and more scarlet drops spattered its breast and
forepaws as it fought like a mad thing against the hold which kept it from its
prey.
Down
the arm and side of the Plainsman a line of dripping gashes told the story. His
distorted face was a mask of tortured despair as he cursed, his words a
frenzied mumble which soared into a scream every time the Beast Leader held the
rat closer.
But a cry of pure rage cut through the
captive's breathless sobbing, a cry uttered by the leader. The rat had turned
to slash one of the fingers which held it. With a snarl the Beast Leader
twisted the writhing body. There was a cracking and the thing he threw from him
was limp and broken. He got to his feet, the torn finger at his mouth.
A respite — for how long? The Beast Things seemed to feel themselves safe in this camping site
they had chosen. They were not moving on for the night — but just as Fors
decided that, the picture changed suddenly. Two more of the enemy came out of
the bush and between them they pulled along a mangled, trodden body — the body
of one of their own kind. Over this there was a hasty consultation and then the
leader barked an order. The bearer of the rat cage took up its burden and four
of the largest of its fellows came over to the captives.
Knives
slashed free their bonds and they were pulled and slapped to their feet. When
it was apparent that neither could walk, there was a second conference. From
gestures Fors gathered that one party was in favor of killing them at once, but
that the leader opposed this. And in the end the leader carried the debate. Two
of the clan trotted off and returned shortly with stout saplings which were
trimmed of branches. And in a moment or two Fors found himself lashed to one of
these, dangling face to the ground, carried between two of the Beasts who moved
on with their deceptively easy pace.
He
never remembered much of that night. The bearers of his pole changed from time
to time, but he swung in a daze, rousing only when he was dropped painfully to
the ground during these operations. And they must have been halted for some
time when he became aware of the sound.
He
was on the ground, his ear tight to the earth. And at first he thought that the
pounding beat he heard must be the heated blood running in his own feverish
body — or else that it was but another shadowy bit of a delirious nightmare.
But it continued — steadily — alive — alive, and somehow reassuring. Once,
long before, he had heard a sound like that — it had had a meaning. But the
meaning was lost. Now he was only aware of his body, the mass of pain which had
become a thing apart from Fors. Fors was gone away — far away from that pain —
what remained could not think — could only feel and endure.
Why,
now that distant throbbing was broken by another, a deeper, heavier beat — two
sounds. And he had once known them both. But neither mattered
now. He must watch red eyes which stared at him from spaces in
wickerwork, red, hungry eyes which watched and waited, growing still more
starved and demanding. And in the end those eyes would come closer and closer
and teeth would be with them. But that did not matter very much either.
Somewhere
there was shouting, it tore a hole through his head,
made his ears ring. But it did not frighten the eyes, they still watched and
waited.
The
throbbing, now it filled the air, beating into him. Why, he was up now, being
held on his feet by rough hands. He was being tied fast again — or so he
thought, he was too numb to feel bonds. But he was standing right enough, looking
down from the crest of a hill.
And
he watched the dream roll on — the dream which had nothing to do with him.
There were horsemen down there, riding in a charging wave. Around and around
they were circling. He closed his eyes to the glare of light. Around and around
— almost they were passing in answer to the beat — almost but not quite. The
beat was not coming from the horsemen — it had another source.
Fors
hung unresisting. But a tiny spark of the real Fors was moving in the broken,
hurting body. Now he forced open his eyes and there was intelligence and
purpose looking out of them.
The horsemen were keeping in their moving
circle and as they rode they hurled spears up the grade. But among the horsemen
others tramped now, men who ran lightly with ready bows. And the arrows made a
cloud against the sun. The noose of men and horses drew smaller and tighter
about the hill.
Then Fors realized suddenly that his body was
part of the defense wall of those besieged here, that he had been fastened up
for a screen behind which the dart throwers could crouch in safety. And those
darts, expertly aimed, were taking toll below. Man and horse went down to cry
and kick or lie still. But that did not halt the circle, nor deaden the flying
arrows.
Once
there was a loud screech of anguish and a body fell out from behind the barrier
of which he was a part. On hands and knees it blundered downhill, heading for
one of the nimble archers. They met in a headlong crash of fighting rage. Then
a horseman swung low from the saddle and used his lance expertly. Both bodies
lay still as he rode on.
A heavy blow landed on
Fors' side. He forgot about the fighting as he looked down. His own arm hung there, free, a dead weight with the cut thong still ringing the purple swollen wrist.
Arrow or spear had cut that tie. He ceased to have any interest in the battle —
his v/orld narrowed in that instant to the one free hand. In the puffed flesh
there was no feeling, he could not even move it yet. So he concentrated on the
fingers, he must move his thumb, his forefinger — even a fraction of an inch —
he must!
There! He could have shouted at his success.
The arm still was limp and heavy against his side but he had clawed the fingers
against his thigh. One hand and arm free — and it was his right — the unhurt
one! He turned his head. His other wrist was fast to another sapling post
driven into the ground. But the very way the Beast Things were using him, as
part of their defense works, was now in his favor. The left arm was not
stretched full length from his shoulder. If he could bring the right fingers
up, bring them up and make them work, he was sure he could unfasten that one
too.
The
barrier of v/hich he was now a part must have screened his actions from his
captors — or else they were too occupied to take any interest in him. He was
able to bring the hand across, bring it across and force the fingers to the
bonds on his left wrist. But it was another thing to untie the cords there. His
numb fingers could not even feel and they kept slipping off.
He
fought against his own stubborn and mistreated flesh,
fought a battle as hard as the one raging about him. Arrows thudded home inches
away, one of the spears brought a gasp
of pain from him as the shaft struck full across his shin, but he willed his
hand to the work. The torture of returning circulation hit full, but he made
himself think only of those painful fingers and what he must have the courage
and patience to make them do.
Then,
all at once, something gave. He held an end of loose hide and his left arm fell
inert as he gritted his teeth against the pain brought by that sudden release.
But there was no time to nurse it now, he went down to
the ground. In their haste the Beast Things had set but one loop of the hide
around his ankles. He sawed at it with the edge of an arrowhead until it
parted.
It would be safer to stay where he was for
the moment. The Beast Things could not get at him without climbing the barrier
and thus exposing themselves. And, flat to the ground as he was, he might
escape the worst of the hail from below. So, too shaky to move or even to think
clearly, he continued to cower where he had fallen.
After
a space of time Fors was aware of another sound, coming through the din. He
turned his head a fraction of an inch and was face to face with the rat cage.
It, too, had been added to the breastworks. And the prisoners within it were
racing about, their frenzied squeaking born of fear and hate loud enough to
reach his ears. The sight of those obscene, too plump bodies aroused him as
nothing else could have done and he hitched away from the swaying cage.
Where
was the other prisoner — the Plainsman? Fors levered up cautiously on his
elbows to see some distance away a fallen head and limp body. He allowed his
head to sink back on his arms. He could move now — after a fashion — both legs
and one arm would obey him. He could roll down the hill —
But
that Plainsman — still exposed to certain death — Fors began to creep, past the
cage of rats, past a bundle of brush, a lopsided, hastily planted stockade of
saplings, past the stuff the Beast Things had grabbed up and thrown together in
an attempt to keep out arrows and spears. He traveled only a few inches at a
time and there were long pauses between those inches. But he gained ground.
A
dart struck the earth just beyond his straining hand. The Beast Things were
aware of him at last and were trying to bring him down. But the one who exposed
itself in such a try fell back choking, an arrow through its
throat. It was not wise to give the archers below even a partial target. Fors crawled on.
He was confident now that he could reach the
Plainsman. And he paid no attention to what chanced below or inside the
stockade. He must save all strength and will for his journey.
Then he was squatting at a pair of bound
ankles — reaching up for knots which held torn wrists. But his hands fell
back. Two arrows held the captive pinned more securely than any hide rope. The
Plainsman would never need help now.
Fors
sank onto the rough trampled soil. The will and purpose which had driven him
went out as strength of body flows out of an open wound. He could feel them
ebbing and he did not care.
Mountain
rocks rose up about him and across crags the gray flags of a storm flew their
tatters. He could hear the howl of wind down one of the narrow valleys, see the gathering of the black clouds. It must be
winter for those were snow clouds. It would be well to head back to the
protection of the Eyrie — back to the fires and stout stone walls — before
those winds bit and the snow fell.
Back to the Eyrie. He did not know that he was on his feet now — no more than he knew that
behind him there came cries of consternation and red rage as the Beast Thing
leader went down to death under a chance arrow. Fors did not know that he was
tottering down the slope, his empty hands out, while over the barrier behind
him boiled a rabble of maddened, long-armed things intent on taking vengeance
with fangs and claws, blind now to the precaution which had kept them safe.
Fors
was walking a mountain trail and Lura. was beside him.
She had caught his hand in her mouth to lead him — which was right for the snow
or the wind was blinding him and it was hard to keep on the trail. But the
Eyrie lay just ahead and Langdon was waiting for him. Tonight they would study
together that tiny scrap of map — a map of a city which lay on the shores of a
lake. Langdon was going to put that map to the test soon. And after he, Fors,
had been accepted by the Star Men he would also follow old maps — follow and
find —
His
hand went uncertainly to his head. Lura was hurrying him so. She wanted the
fire and the meat. It was not right to keep Langdon waiting. Because somewhere
there was a city waiting, too, a city of tall towers and filled storehouses,
cracked roads and forgotten wonders. He must tell Langdon all about it. But
that was not right — the city belonged to Langdon — not to him. He had never
seen a ruined city. The storm must be making him lightheaded.
He staggered, one of
the Beast Things aimed a blow at him as it passed to join the fighting mob
below.
So
many rocks — he had trouble keeping to his feet among these rocks. He'd best be
careful. But he was going home. There were the fires — showing brightly through
the dark. And Lura still held his hand. If the wind would only die down a
little — the sound of it was wild and strange — almost like the battle cries of
an army. But there stood the Eyrie — right there —
18. A NEW STAR SHINES
It
was late afternoon. Smoke curled up from a ceremonial fire. Fors looked down slope
to where green grass had been ground into a pulp by the pressure of many feet.
And that pulp was stained with stale splotches of red. But the men below were
squatting unconcernedly on it — their eyes only for each other. Two lines —
facing across the fire warily — weapons unsheathed and to hand. Between those
lines were the chieftains of the tribes. But both sides bore the scars of a hard fight and there were holes in the ranks which would never be filled
again.
Fors
forgot his own bruises as he watched Arskane step into place at the right of
his father. The woman chief who had given the mountaineer the rights of the
tribe was there, too, her robe a spark
of bright color among the drabness of the hide jerkins and the tanned skins of
the men.
And opposed was
Marphy and his fellow long robe. Only Cantrul was missing. The heads of family
clans had usurped the place the High Chief should have held.
"Cantrul — ?"
From beside Fors, Jarl made
answer to that half question.
"Cantrul
was a warrior — and as a warrior he entered on the long trail in a fitting
fashion — taking a goodly number of the enemy with him. They have not yet raised up a new High Chief in his place."
What
else the Star Captain might have added was blotted out in a roll from the
talking drums, a roll which wrung harsh echoes from the surrounding hills. And
when those faded,
Laniard
edged forward, though he needs must lean upon the arm of his son to spare
weight from a leg which was bandaged from knee to ankle.
"Ho — warriors!" His voice followed the drums' beat in its
force. "Here have we carried spears to a great killing and given the death
birds a feast beyond the memory of our fathers' fathers! From the south have we
marched to this war and victory is ours. Our arrows have struck full upon their
marks and our swords have been blooded to their hilts. Is this not so, my brothers?"
And
out from the ranks of his tribe behind him came a low growl of agreement. Here
and there some of the younger men cried the shrill war slogan of. a family clan.
But
from the ranks of the under chieftains in the mass of the Plainspeople arose another man and he answered with prideful words of his
own:
"Lances bite as deep as swords, and the
Plainsmen have never known fear of a fight. Death birds eat today from our
providing also. We stand shame-filled in the sight of no man!"
Someone
began the war song Fors had heard on his night of captivity among the tents.
Hands were reaching for bows and lances. Fors got to his feet, forcing his body
to obey his will. He pushed aside the hand the Star Captain put out to stay
him.
"There
is a fire breaking out here," he said slowly. "If it comes to full
flame it may eat us all up. Let me go — !"
But
as he half staggered down the slope to the council fire, he sensed that the
Star Captain was still at his back.
"You have
fought!"
From somewhere within him that clear cold
voice had come at his willing — It was a chill wind to cut through the evil
vapors of a swampland. In his head the thoughts Arskane had planted long ago
were coming to life so clearly that he was confident at last of their truth and
Tightness.
"You have
fought!"
"Ahhh —"
That answering sound was close to the purr which Lura might voice when
remembering her hunt.
"You
have fought," he repeated for the third time and knew that he had them
now. "The Beast Things are dead. These Beast
Things — "
That accented word had
riveted their full attention.
"You
have looked upon the enemy slain — is that not so?
Well, I have lain in their hands — and the horror that you know is tenfold in
my memory. But I say that you might also look in fear as well as in pride of
your victory, for there lies among them a dire
promise. My fathers' fathers fought with these creatures — when still they held
to their home burrows. My father died under their claws and fangs. Long have we
known them. But now there has been born amongst them
something stronger — something which threatens us as the burrow creepers of old
never did. Ask it of your wise men, warriors. Ask them what they found in the
circle of the dead within that barrier up there — what may come again to plague
us in future years. Tell these your people, oh, healer of bodies." He
addressed himself to the Plains white robe. "And you, oh, Lady." He
spoke to the woman chief. "What have you seen?"
It was the woman who
replied first.
"I
saw and heard many things. In the seeing there was nothing to doubt. I hope
with all my heart that your conjectures are mistaken. There lay among the
Beast dead one who was different. And if the fates are against us, then this
one will be born again among them — again and again. And, its knowledge being
greater, so will it prove a worse menace to us and all human beings. Thus,
because this may be true, I say that those who are humankind must stand
together and put a united sword wall against these things bred out of the
ancient evil of the cities which was sown by the Old Ones —
"
"It is true that mutants may come of
mutant stock." The white robe spoke after her almost against his will.
"And these Beast Things were led and ordered as never has their race been
before. When their strange chief fell they were broken, as if their knowledge
was all blotted out in that single death. If they breed more such as he, then they shall prove a force we must reckon with. We
know but little of these creatures and what their powers may be. How can we
guess now what we shall be called to go up against a year, ten years, a generation from now? This land is wide and there may be
much hiding within its vastness which is a menace to our breed — "
"The land is wide," Fors repeated.
"What do you and your tribe seek for here,
Lanard?"
"A homeland. We search out a place to build our houses and sow our fields anew, to pasture our sheep
and dwell in peace. After the burning mountains and quaking land drove us forth
from the valley of our fathers — the sacred place where their machines landed
from the sky at the end of the Old Ones' war — we have wandered many circles of
the seasons. Now in these wide fields, along the river, we have found what we
have sought for so long. And no man or beast shall drive us from it!" As
he ended, his hand was on his sword hilt and he stared straight along the ranks
of the Plainsmen.
Fors
turned now to Marphy: "And what do your people seek, Marphy of the
plains?"
The
Recorder raised his eyes from the ground where a pattern of crushed grass blades had apparently held his attention.
"Since the days of the Old Ones we of
the Plains have been a roving people. First we were so because of
the evil death which abode in the air of many quarters of the land, so that a man must be on the move to shun those places where plagues and the blue
fires waited to slay him. We are now hunters and rovers and herdsmen, warriors
who care not to be tied to any camp. It is in us to travel far, to seek new
places and new hills standing high against the sky <—
"
"So." Fors let that one word fall into the silence
of those war-torn ranks.
It
was a long minute before he spoke again. "You," he pointed to Lanard,
"wish to settle and build. That is your nature and way of life. You"
— it was Marphy he turned to now — "would move, grazing your herds and
hunting. These," he bent a stiff arm painfully to gesture up the hill to
that uneven pile of earth and stone under which lay the bodies of the Beast
Things, "live to destroy both of you if they can. And the land is wide . .
."
Lanard cleared his throat — the sound was
sharp and loud. "We would live in peace with all who raise not the sword
against us. In peace there is trade, and in trade there is good for all. When
the winter closes and the harvest has been poor, lthen may trade
save the life of a tribe."
"You are warriors and men," the
woman chief of the Dark People broke in, her head high, her eyes straight as
she measured the line of strangers facing her. "War is meat and drink at
the table of men — yes — but it was that which brought the Old Ones down! War
again, men, and you will destroy us utterly and we shall be eaten up and
forgotten so that it shall be as if man had never lived to walk these fields —
leaving our world to the holding of those!" She pointed to the Beast
Things' mound. "If now we draw sword against one another then in our folly
we shall have chosen the evil part for the last time, and it is better that we
die quickly and this earth be clean of us!"
The
Plainspeople were quiet until along the ranks of the men a murmur arose and it
spread to where their women v/ere gathered. And the voices of the women grew
louder and stronger. From their midst arose one who must have ruled a
chieftain's tent since there was gold binding her hair:
"Let there be no war between us! Let
there be no more wailing of the death song among our tents! Say it loudly, oh,
my sisters!" And her appeal was taken up by all the women, to be echoed
until it became a chant as stirring as the war song.
"No more war! No more
war between us!"
So did the cup of blood and brotherhood pass
from chief to chief on the field and the ranks of the Dark Ones and the
Plainsmen were made one by the ritual so that never again might man of one
raise lance against man of the other.
Fors
sank down upon a flat-topped rock. The strength which had upheld him drained
away. He was very tired and the excitement beyond no longer had anything to do
with him. He had no eyes for the melting of the stiff tribal lines and the mingling
of clan and people.
'This
is but a beginning!" He identified the quick eager voice oi Marphy and
looked around slowly, almost sullenly.
The
Plainsman was talking to Jarl, gesturing, his eyes bright. But the Star Captain
was his usual calm contained self.
"A beginning, yes,
Marphy. But
we still have much to master. If I may see those northern
records of yours. We of the Star House have not penetrated that far — "
"Of course. And — " Marphy seemed hesitant before he
plunged into his counter request — "that cage of rats. I have had it
brought into my tent. There are three still alive and from them we may learn — "
Fors shivered. He had no desire to see those captives.
"You claim them as
your spoil of war?"
Marphy
laughed. "That I shall do. And other spoil beside
the vermin shall we ask for — a greater gift from you. This fellow rover of
yours — "
He
touched gentle fingers to Fors' stooped shoulder. It seemed to the mountaineer
that Jarl displayed a flash of surprise.
"This
one has the gift of tongues and the mind which sees. He shall be a guide for
us." Marphy's words spilled out as if now that he had a kindred spirit in
which to confide he could no longer bottle his thoughts. "And in return we
shall show him strange lands and far places. For it is in him to be a rover —
even as are we — "
Jarl's
fingers plucked at his lower lip: "Yes, rover was he born, and in him flows Plains blood. If he — "
"You
forget." Fors did not force a smile this time. "I am mutant."
Before either man could answer someone else
came up — Arskane. His face still bore the marks of the fight and he favored
his shoulder as he moved. But when he spoke it was with an assumption of
authority which he plainly did not expect to have disregarded.
"We break camp to
march — I have come for my brotherl"
Marphy bristled. "He
rides with us!"
Fors' laugh had no humor in it. "Since I
cannot travel on my feet I shall be a drag in any company —
"
"We shall rig a pony
litter," was Arskane's quick reply.
"There are also horse
litters," began Marphy jealously.
Jarl
moved. "It seems that you now have a choice to make," he observed
dispassionately to Fors. For a moment it seemed to the younger mountain man
that only the two of them were there. And neither Arskane nor Marphy pressed
his claim farther.
Fors held his free hand to his swimming head.
He had Plains blood from his mother — that was true. And the wild free life of
the roving horsemen appealed to him. If he went with Marphy no secrets of the
ruined country would be hidden from him now — he could learn much. He could
make such maps as even the Star Men had never dreamed of possessing, see
forgotten cities and loot them for his pleasure, always going on to new country
beyond.
If
he took the hand Arskane had half offered in support a few minutes ago he would
be accepting brotherhood and the close-knit ties of a family clan such as he
had never had. He would know all warmth of affection, and go to build a town,
maybe in time a city, which would mark the first step back along the road the
sins of the Old Ones had lost for their sons. It would be a hard life but, in
its way, a rewarding one, as adventurous — though he would never rove far — as
Marphy's.
But
— there was the third road. And it ran from a choice he knew only too well.
When he thought he was dying — back there during the battle — his feet had
taken it without his will. It led to the rare coldness of the mountain heights,
into the austere chill of punishment and hurt and eternal discouragement.
So
when he raised his head he dared not look at Arskane or Marphy, but he found
and held Jarl's uncompromising eyes as he asked:
"It is true that I am
outlawed?"
"You have been called three times at the
council fire." He recognized flat truth and accepted it. But he had
another question:
"Since I was not there to answer in my
own voice I have the right of repeal for the period of six moons?"
"You have."
Fors picked at the sling which bound his left
arm across his chest. There was an even chance that it would heal straight and
strong again. The healer had promised him that after probing the wound.
"I think then," he found that he
had to stop and work out his words, to regain discipline over his voice,
"I shall go and claim that right. Six moons are not yet gone — "
The Star Captain nodded. "If you can
travel in three days' time you will make it."
"Fors!" At that protest from Arskane, the
mountaineer winced. But when he turned his head his voice still held firm.
"It was you yourself,
brother, who spoke of duty once — "
Arskane's
hand dropped. "Remember — we be brothers, you and
I. Where lies my hearth — there is your place waiting." He went and he
did not look back, he was swallowed up in the throng of his tribesmen.
Marphy
came to life. He shrugged. Already he was intent on other plans, other
enthusiasms. But he lingered long enough to say:
"From
this hour on for you there runs a mount in my herd and the promise of meat, and
shelter in my tent. Look for the Standard of the Red Fox when you have need of aid, my young friend." His hand sketched a half
salute as he strode away.
Fors spoke to the Star
Captain: "I shall go — "
"With me. I have also a report to make to the tribe — we journey together."
Was
that news good or otherwise? Under other circumstances Fors could have longed
for no greater pleasure than to travel in the company of the Star Captain. But
now he went in a manner as Jarl's prisoner. He sat glumly looking over the
battlefield — only a small scrimmage — one which the Old Ones, -with their
fleets in the air and their armed columns on land, would not even have
mentioned. Yet here a full-sized war had been fought and out of it had come an
idea — perhaps one which would prove the starting point for men. It would be a
long weary trail for them to travel — the road back to such a world as the Old
Ones had known. And maybe not even the sons' sons' sons of those who had fought
here would live to see more than the glimmerings of its beginning growth. Or
maybe the world which would come would be a better world.
The
Plainsmen and the Dark Ones were still suspicious, still wary of one- another.
Soon the tribes would separate for a space. But, perhaps in six months' time, a
party of Plainsmen would venture again to the south, to visit the bend in the
river and see with wondering eyes the cabins which stood there. And one rider
would trade a well-tanned hide for a clay
dish or a string of colored beads to take home to astonish his women. Afterward
would come others, many others, and there would in time be marriages between
tent and cabin. And in fifty years — one nation.
"There
will be one nation." Fors hunched on the riding pad of the steady old
horse Marphy had forced upon him. Two days had sped but the tramped earth would
show scars for a long time.
Jarl shot a measuring glance over the field
they crossed. "And how many years pass before such a miracle?" he
inquired with his old irony.
"Fifty — fifty years — perhaps — "
"If
nothing intervenes to stop them —yes — you may be right."
"You are thinking of the Beast Thing
mutant?"
Jarl
shrugged. "I think that he is a warning — there may be other factors to
set barriers in the way."
"I
am mutant." For the second time Fors made that bitter statement and he spoke
it again before the one person he wished had never known of his difference.
Jarl did not rise to the bait. "I have
been thinking that we may all be mutants. Who is to say now that we are of the
' same breed as the Old Ones? And I am of the belief that it is time we all
face that fact squarely. But this other — this Beast Thing — " And he
proceeded to drown Fors in a barrage of questions which drew out of him all
that he had observed while a prisoner of the enemy.
Two days later the mountains stood sharply
outlined against the sky. Fors knew that by nightfall, if they kept the pace
they had held through the journey, they would be past the outposts of the
Eyrie. He fumbled awkwardly with his one hand at his belt and pulled his sword
from the sheath. As Jarl caught up to him he held it out, hilt first.
"Now
I am your prisoner." He did not have to steady his voice, it was naturally
so. It was as if he no longer cared what happened to him during the next few
days. This was a piece of unfinished living which must be
completed before he left it behind him. But he was impatient now to have it
over, to be read out of the tribe as an outlaw, to go into the wilderness again
— he was ready and unafraid.
Jarl
took his sword without a word and Eors glanced beyond the Star Captain to the
waiting Lura. She was tugging in his mind, suddenly weary of the leash of
loyalty which had held her to him through all these days of danger. She wanted
the mountains, too, in a different way — the mountains and her freedom. He gave
it to her with a single shaft of thought and she was gone that same instant. And because he had released her so willingly he knew that she
would return as willingly when she had followed her own desire to its end.
After
that Fors rode in a kind of dream. He paid little or no attention to the men of
the Eyrie who came out of their scout posts to greet the Star Captain. They did
not speak to him and he had no wish for them to do so. His impatience to come
to the judging only burned the stronger in him.
He was alone at last in the inner chamber of
the Star House, that same chamber which he had violated. The empty hook where
Langdon's star pouch had once hung was a mute reminder of that offense. Too
bad his venture had failed so completely. He would never be able now to prove
the truth of his father's dream. But even that thought did not prick him
overmuch. He could go out again — and not by any favor of the council men.
There
was the reflection of the council fire on the naked rock of the mountain wall
out there. The elders were gathering to judge him. But it would be the Star
Men who would have the final voice against him. It was the Star House he had
looted, the Star tradition and mysteries he had flouted.
At
an almost soundless footfall in the outer room Fors turned his head. One of the
Star Novices had come for him — Stephen of the Hawk Clan. Fors followed him out
into the circle of firelight, walled in by rows of white blurs which were faces
without expression.
The
elders were together, all of them, Healer, Recorder, Master of the Fields,
Commanders of the Hunters and Defenders. And behind them were the tillers, the
hunters, the scouts and guards. On the other side was the solid block of Star
Men, Jarl at their head.
Fors came out on the smooth shelf of rock
alone, his silver head high, his back and shoulders
straight.
"Fors
of the Puma Clan — " That was Horsford, the Eyrie
Guardian.
Fors made courteous salute.
"You
stand here because you have defied the traditions of the Eyrie. But against the
wearers of the Star was your greater offense. So now it is the decision of the
Council that the Star Men shall be given the right to pronounce against you and
they shall deal with you as they see fit."
Short and to the point. And fair enough, he had expected little else. So now what did the Star
Men wish for him? It was up to Jarl. Fors turned to the tall Captain.
But
Jarl was staring beyond him at the leaping flames. And so did they wait in
silence for a long, long moment. When the Star Captain spoke it was not to pass
sentence but to catch the attention of all who gathered there.
"We
come, men of the Eyrie, to a place where two roads separate before us. And upon
our choice of them depends the future of not only the
clans gathered here, but also that of all true men in this land, perhaps on
this earth. Therefore tonight I am breaking a solemn vow, the oaths taken in my
green youth — that secret which has made of my kind men apart. Listen, all of
you, to the inner story of our Stars.
"Now we who wear them are hunters of dim
trails, seekers of lost knowledge. But once this," his
hand went to the star, bright and hot in the firelight, at his throat,
"had another meaning. Our forefathers were brought to this mountain
hiding place because they were designed to be truly men of the Stars. Here
were they being trained to a life which would be theirs on other worlds. Our
records tell us that man was on the eve of conquering space when his madness
fell upon him and he reached again for slaying weapons.
"We
who were meant to roam the stars go now on foot upon a ravaged earth. But above
us those other worlds still hang, and still they beckon. And so is the promise
still given. If we make not the mistakes of the Old Ones then shall we know in
time more than the winds of this earth and the trails of this earth. This is the secret we now publish abroad so that all
men may know what was lost to us with the dread folly of the Old Ones and to
what we may aspire if we make not the same error in our turn."
Fors'
fingers clenched until nails bit into his palms. So this was what man had
thrown away! The same longing which had torn him on the field of the dead
bombing plains came to him again. They had been so great in their dreams — the
Old Ones! Well, men must dream again.
"We stand before two roads, my
people," Jarl repeated slowly. "And this time we must take a better
choice. It is the will of the Star Men that Fors of the Puma Clan, being of
mixed blood and clan, shall no longer be held as lesser than we, in spite of
the laws of our fathers. For now has come the time to break such laws.
"From
this hour forth he shall be set apart in a different fashion. For he shall be
one who will carry the knowledge of one people to another, binding together in
peace swords which might be raised in war.
"A mutant may have skills which will
serve his tribe well. And so do we urge a new law — that a mutant be deemed a
full man. And if he is born in a clan, then is he to be counted a man of that
clan. Which of us can prove — " Jarl swung around to face the throng from
which was now arising a growing murmur, whether of assent or dissent who could
tell — "which of us can prove that we are of the same breed as the Old
Ones? Do we wish to be as the Old Ones? Our fathers threw away the stars —
remember that!"
It
was the Healer who answered him. "By nature's laws, if not man's, you
speak the truth. It is guessed that men are different today from what they once
were. A mutant — " He coughed behind his hand.
"Truly any here might be termed mutant to some degree."
Horsford
held up his hand to still the babble of sound. His powerful voice boomed around
the circle.
"There has been a weighty thing done
here tonight, brothers. The Star Men have broken faith with the past. Can we do
less? They speak of two roads — I shall speak of growing. We have put our
roots in narrow and stony ground. We have held stubbornly to it. But now comes
a time when we must move or die. For the only end to growth is death. And in
the name of the Council I am choosing growth. If the stars were once promised
us — then shall we reach for them again!"
Someone
raised a cheer — it came from the outer edges where the youths stood. And that
cheer gathered voices and grew. Men were on their feet now, their voices eager,
their eyes alight. Never had this reserved and too serious people seemed so
like their cousins of the Plains. The tribe was coming to a new life.
"So
be it," Jarl's voice broke through the din. At his gesture of command some
of it died away. "From this hour we shall walk new ways. And in
remembrance of that choice do we now set upon Fors a star which is like unto no
other worn here. And in his turn, when the time comes, he shall raise up those
who will wear it after him. Thus there will be always those among us who shall
speak with other peoples as a friend, think with neutral minds, and hold the
peace of nations in their hands!"
Jarl came to Fors holding out a chain from
which hung a star, not of five points but of many, so that it was a compass
sign pointing in all directions at once. And this fell cool and smooth below
the mutant's throat.
Then the tribe shouted the cry which was the welcome
to a Star Man newly raised up. But in this too there was a difference. For now
was born a new star and from it would follow what no man standing there that
night might rightly foresee — not even he who wore it as a trust.